Exiliados griegos en una capital de la frontera mediterránea Varriale, Gennaro In the Early Modern period, Venice was the city that housed the largest number of Greeks within its walls. Moreover, thanks to its geographical proximity to the Balkans, both the south of the Italian peninsula and Sicily became a powerful magnet for the Hellenes. With the incorporation of the Kingdom of Naples into the Empire of Charles V, this territory became even more attractive in the eyes of the Greeks, who dreamed of a military campaign by the emperor in their homelands. 2025-01-23T07:00:04Z 2025-01-23T07:00:04Z 2015 book part Gennaro Varriale, Exiliados griegos en una capital de la frontera mediterránea, in J. J. Ruíz Ibáñez e I. Pérez Tostado (eds.), Los refugiados del rey de España. Las Monarquías Ibéricas como tierra de recepción de exilios (siglos XVI-XVIII), Madrid – México, Fondo de Cultura Económica, 2015, pp. 185-206. ISBN 978-84-375-0704-0. 978-84-375-0704-0 https://hdl.handle.net/10481/100033 spa http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ embargoed access Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 4.0 Internacional Fondo de Cultura Económica