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#bellunoitaliy #Bellunotravel #travelitaly From the 10th century it was the seat of a bishopric with many immunities and jurisdictions, both spiritual and temporal, subject to the power of the emperors of Saxony, Franconia and Swabia; from the 11th century onwards, together with the episcopal power, the city government was established thanks to the development of a nobility divided into four corporations (rolls), represented by several consuls, after which an annual foreign podestà would preside. During the 12th and 13th centuries it sometimes sided with the Metropolitans and sometimes with the Empire, especially due to the internal balance between the Guelph and Ghibelline factions, as well as the external influences of the larger neighbouring Metropolitans, especially that of Treviso. During the 13th century and until the early 1400s, this last influence of the lords of Treviso and Da Camino gradually weakened as did the assertion, from 1322 to 1337, of the Scaligeri family. In the period that followed Belluno saw a rapid succession of different authorities: Charles of Luxembourg from 1337 to 1342; Louis of Brandenburg from 1342 to 1346; again Charles of Luxembourg, who in the meantime had ascended the throne, from 1346 to 1361. Da Carraras, lord of Padua, then had jurisdiction and power there, together with Francesco the Elder (1361–1373); for a short period from 1373 to 1386, the Austrian Duke Leopold of Habsburg; again Da Carrara with Francesco Novello (1386–1388); then Visconti of Milan with Gian Galeazzo (1388–1402), after his death his widow, the guardian of his pupils Giovanni Maria and Filippo Maria until 1404.