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ed a Parliament of representatives of all parties and classes at the Palazzo Vecchio, with a view to the composition of differences and the maintenance of public order. The Ghibellines would have none of his proposals, but privately they were divided amongst themselves, seeing which, the Cavaliere astutely announced the resignation of his office. This had the effect he expected--the Palazzo and the Piazza outside rang with the old cry--"_Liberta!_" "_Liberta!_" "_Evviva il Popolo!_" "_Evviva il Gonfaloniere!_" Salvestro de' Medici was master of the situation--the first of his family to attain the virtual, if not the real, control of the State. The revolution spread through the city; the palaces of the Ghibelline nobles were sacked and burnt. A period of discord and disaster followed, but, with the firm hand of Salvestro de' Medici upon the helm of the ship of the Republic, matters settled. In 1376 he was unanimously chosen _Capitano della Parte Guelfa_--an office of still more personal influence than the Gonfaloniership. No one questioned his authority. He was, as the historian, Michaele Bruto, has recorded, "The first of his family to show his successors how that by conciliating the middle and lower classes they could make their way to sovereignty." Another crisis in the history of Florence arose in 1378, during Cavaliere Salvestro de' Medici's second Gonfaloniership, when the _Ciompi_--"Wooden Shoes" they were called in derision--the wool-workers--rose _en masse_, and besieged the _Signoria_ sitting at the Palazzo Vecchio. They claimed to rule the city and to abolish the nobles, and a second time Salvestro was "the man of the hour!" Acting upon his advice, terms were arranged with the revolutionaries, and Michaele Lando--a common woolcarder by trade, but a born leader of men--was elected _Gonfaloniere di Giustizia_, and a new government was set up. Upon Salvestro, "the Champion of the People," was again conferred by public acclamation the accolade of knighthood; moreover, as a further mark of popular estimation, to him were allocated the rents of the shops upon the Ponte Vecchio and other prerogatives. The public spirit displayed by Cavaliere Salvestro gained for him not only personal distinction and reward, but obtained for his family recognition as the first in Florence. He married Donna Bartolommea, the daughter of Messer Oddo degli Altoviti, by whom he had many children. None of his sons seem to have add
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