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{{Infobox Former Country|native_name = Serenissima Repubblica di Venezia|conventional_long_name = Most Serene Republic of Venice|common_name = Venice|continent=Europe|region = Italy|country = Italy|status= City|year_start = 697|year_end = 1797|date_end = April 17|event1=Treaty of Zara|date_event1=
June 27,
1358, [Latin, Italian language|religion =
Roman Catholic Church|capital = Venice||government_type = Republic|title_leader =
Doge of Venice|leader1 = Ludovico Manin|year_leader1 = 1789–97|event_end = Treaty of Leoben|footnotes = * Traditionally, the establishment of the Republic is dated to 697.-->
The
Most Serene Republic of Venice (, ), was an Italy state originating from the city of Venice (today in Northern Italy
Italy). It existed for one thousand one hundred years, from the 8th century until the 18th century (1797).
It is often referred to as
The Serenissima, in reference to its title in Italian, The Most Serene. It is also referred to as the Republic of Venice' or the
Venetian Republic.
History
The city of Venice originated as a collection of lagoon communities banded together for mutual defence from the
Lombards as the power of the Byzantine Empire dwindled in northern Italy in the late seventh century. Sometime in the first decades of the eighth century, the people of the lagoon elected their first leader
Orso Ipato, who was confirmed by Byzantium and given the titles of
hypatus and
dux. He was the first historical
Doge of Venice. Tradition, however, since the early 11th century, dictates that the Venetians first proclaimed one Paolo Lucio Anafesto duke in 697, though this story dates to no earlier than the chronicle of John, deacon of Venice. Whatever the case, the first doges had their power base in Eraclea.
Rise
Ursus's successor,
Teodato Ipato, moved his seat from Heraclea to Malamocco in the 740s. He was the son of Ursus and represented the attempt of his father to establish a dynasty. Such attempts were more than commonplace among the doges of the first few centuries of Venetian history, but all were ultimately unsuccessful. During the reign of Deusdedit, Venice became the only remaining Byzantine possession in the north and the changing politic of the Frankish Empire began to change the factional division of Venetia. One faction was decidedly pro-Byzantine. They desired to remain well-connected to the Empire. Another faction, republican in nature, believed in continuing along a course towards practical independence. The other main faction was pro-Frankish. Supported mostly by clergy (in line with Pope sympathies of the time), they looked towards the new
Carolingian king of the Franks,
Pepin the Short, as the best provider of defence against the Lombards. A minor, pro-Lombard, faction was opposed to close ties with any of these further-off powers and interested in maintaining peace with the neighbouring (and surrounding, but for the sea) Lombard kingdom.
Early Middle Ages
The successors of Obelerio inherited a united Venice. By the
Pax Nicephori (803), the two emperors had recognised Venetian
de facto independence, while it remained nominally Byzantine in subservience. During the reign of the Participazio, Venice grew into its modern form. Though Heraclean by birth,
Agnello Participazio, first doge of the family, was an early immigrant to Rialto and his dogeship was marked by the expansion of Venice towards the sea via the construction of bridges, canals, bulwarks, fortifications, and stone buildings. The modern Venice, at one with the sea, was being born. Agnello was succeeded by his son Giustiniano Participazio, who brought the body of Saint Mark the Evangelist to Venice from Alexandria and made him the patron saint of Venice.
During the reign of the successor of the Participazio, Pietro Tradonico, Venice began to establish its military might which would influence many a later crusade and dominate the Adriatic for centuries. Tradonico secured the sea by fighting
Slavic peoples and
Muslim conquests pirates. Tradonico's reign was long and successful (837–64), but he was succeeded by the Participazio and it appeared that a dynasty may have finally been established.
High Middle Ages
, brought as loot from Constantinople in 1204.In the High Middle Ages, Venice became extremely wealthy through its control of trade between Europe and the
Levant, and began to expand into the Adriatic Sea and beyond. Venice was involved in the
Crusades almost from the very beginning; Venetian ships assisted in capturing the coastal cities of
Syria after the
First Crusade, and in 1123 they were granted virtual autonomy in the
Kingdom of Jerusalem through the
Pactum Warmundi. In the 12th century, the Venetians also gained extensive trading privileges in the Byzantine Empire and their ships often provided the Empire with a navy. In 1182 there was an anti-Western riot in
Constantinople, of which the Venetians were the main targets. The Venetian fleet was crucial to the transportation of the
Fourth Crusade, but when the crusaders could not pay for the ships, the cunning and manipulative Doge Enrico Dandolo quickly exploited the situation and offered transport to the crusaders if they were to
Siege of Zara (Italian language:
Zara), which had rebelled against the Venetian rule in 1183, placed itself under the dual protection of the Papacy and King
Emeric of Hungary and had proven too well fortified to retake for Venice alone. Upon accomplishing this the crusade was again diverted to Constantinople, the capital of the Byzantine Empire, another rival of Venice. The city was captured and sacked in 1204; the sack has been described as one of the most profitable and disgraceful sacks of a city in history.Phillips,
The Fourth Crusade and the Sack of Constantinople, intro., xiii) The Venetians regarded the attack as a form of revenge for the massacre, several years before, of Venetian citizens living in Constantinople. Many in the Empire had become jealous of Venetian power and influence, and thus, when in
1182 the pretender
Andronikos I Komnenos marched on Constantinople, Venetian property was seized and the owners imprisoned or banished, an act which humiliated, and angered the Republic. The Byzantine Empire, which until 1204 had resisted to several attacks and kept the Islamic invaders out of
Anatolia and the
Balkans, was re-established in 1261 by
Michael VIII Palaiologos but never recovered its previous power and was eventually conquered by the Ottoman Turks, who later occupied the Balkans and Hungary and on two occasions even besieged Vienna. The Venetians, who accompanied the crusader fleet, claimed much of the plunder, including the famous Horses of Saint Mark which were brought back to adorn St. Mark's basilica. As a result of the subsequent partition of the Byzantine Empire, Venice gained a great deal of territory in the
Aegean Sea (three-eighths of the Byzantine Empire), including the islands of Crete and
Euboea. The Aegean islands came to form the Venetian Duchy of the Archipelago.
From 1350 to 1381, Venice fought an intermittent Venetian-Genoese War. Initially defeated, they devastated the Genoese fleet at the Battle of Chioggia in 1380 and retained their prominent position in eastern Mediterranean affairs at the expense of Genoa's declining empire.
, Greece. This is one of the many forts that secured the Venetian trade routes in the Eastern
Mediterranean.
15th century
In the early fifteenth century, the Venetians also began to expand in
Italy, as well as along the
Dalmatian coast from Istria to
Albania, which was acquired from King
Ladislas of Naples during the civil war in Hungary. Ladislas was about to lose the conflict and had decided to escape to Naples, but before doing so he agreed to sell his now practically forfeit rights on the Dalmatian cities for a meager sum of 100,000 ducats. Venice exploited the situation and quickly installed nobility to govern the area, for example, Count Filippo Stipanov in Zadar. This move by the Venetians was a response to the threatening expansion of Giangaleazzo Visconti, Duke of Milan. Control over the north-east main land routes was also a necessity for the safety of the trades. By 1410, Venice had taken over most of Venetia, including such important cities as
Verona and Padua.
The situation in Dalmatia had been settled in 1408 by a truce with King Sigismund of Hungary but the difficulties of Hungary finally granted to the Republic the consolidation of its Adriatic dominions. At the expiration of the truce, Venice immediately invaded the Patriarchate of Aquileia, and subjected
Trogir, Split, Durrës and other Dalmatian cities.
Slavic people slaves were plentiful in the Italian city-states as late as the 15th century. Between 1414 and 1423, some 10,000 eastern European
slavery were sold in Venice. How To Reboot Reality — Chapter 2, Labor Welcome to Encyclopædia Britannica's Guide to History
In 1489, the island of
Cyprus, previously a crusader state (the Kingdom of Cyprus), was annexed to Venice.
League of Cambrai, Lepanto and the loss of Cyprus
The
Ottoman Empire started sea campaigns as early as 1423, when it waged a seven year war with the Venetian Republic over maritime control of the Aegean Sea and the Adriatic Sea. The wars with Venice resumed in 1463 until a favorable peace treaty was signed in 1479. In 1480 (now no longer hampered by the Venetian fleet) the Ottomans Siege of Rhodes (1480) and
Battle of Otranto. War with Venice resumed from 1499 to 1503.
In 1499, Venice allied itself with
Louis XII of France against Milan, gaining
Cremona. In the same year the Ottoman sultan moved to attack Lepanto by land, and sent a large fleet to support his offensive by sea.
Antonio Grimani, more a businessman and diplomat than a sailor, was defeated in the sea
battle of Zonchio in 1499. The Ottoman Empire once again sacked Friuli. Preferring peace to total war both against the Turks and by sea, Venice surrendered the bases of Lepanto, Modon and
Koroni.
Venice's attention was diverted from her usual maritime position by the delicate situation in Romagna, then one of the richest lands in Italy, which was nominally part of the Papal States but effectively fractionated in a series of small lordship of difficult control for Rome's troops. Eager to take some of Venice's lands, all neighbouring powers joined in the League of Cambrai in 1508, under the leadership of
Pope Julius II. The pope wanted
Romagna; Holy Roman Empire
Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor:
Friuli and Veneto; Spain: the Apulian ports; the
king of France: Cremona; the king of Hungary: Dalmatia, and each of the others some part. The offensive against the huge army enlisted by Venice was launched from France. On
14 May 1509, Venice was crushingly defeated at the battle of Agnadello, in the Ghiara d'Adda, marking one of the most delicate points of the entire Venetian history. French and imperial troops were occupying the Veneto, but Venice managed to extricate herself through diplomatic efforts. The Apulian ports were ceded in order to come to terms with Spain, and pope Julius II soon recognized the danger brought by the eventual destruction of Venice (then the only Italian power able to face kingdoms like France or empires like the Ottomans). The citizens of the mainland rose to the cry of "Marco, Marco", and
Andrea Gritti recaptured
Padua in July 1509, successfully defending it against the besieging imperial troops. Spain and the pope broke off their alliance with France, and Venice regained
Brescia and
Verona from France also. After seven years of ruinous war, the Serenissima regained her mainland dominions west to the Adda river. Although the defeat had turned into a victory, the events of 1509 marked the end of the Venetian expansion.
In 1489, the first year of Venetian control of Cyprus, Turks attacked the Karpasia Peninsula, pillaging and taking captives to be sold into slavery. In 1539 the Turkish fleet attacked and destroyed
Limassol. Fearing the ever-expanding Ottoman Empire, the Venetians had fortified
Famagusta,
Nicosia, and Kyrenia, but most other cities were easy prey.
In the summer of 1570, the Turks struck again, but this time with a full-scale invasion rather than a raid. About 60,000 troops, including cavalry and artillery, under the command of Lala Kara Mustafa Pasha landed unopposed near Limassol on July 2, 1570, and laid siege to Nicosia. In an orgy of victory on the day that the city fell — September 9, 1570 — 20,000 Nicosian Greeks and Venetians were put to death, and every church, public building, and palace was looted. Word of the massacre spread, and a few days later Mustafa took Kyrenia without having to fire a shot. Famagusta, however, resisted and put up a heroic defense that lasted from September 1570 until August 1571.
The fall of Famagusta marked the beginning of the Ottoman period in Cyprus. Two months later, the naval forces of the Holy League (Mediterranean), composed mainly of Venetian, Spanish Empire, and Papal states ships under the command of
Don John of Austria, defeated the Turkish fleet at Battle of Lepanto (1571) in one of the decisive battles of world history. The victory over the Turks, however, came too late to help Cyprus, and the island remained under Ottoman rule for the next three centuries.
17th century
In 1605, a conflict between Venice and the
Holy See began with the arrest of two members of the clergy who were guilty of petty crimes, and with a law restricting the Church's right to enjoy and acquire landed property.
Pope Paul V held that these provisions were contrary to canon law, and demanded that they should be repealed. When this was refused, he placed Venice under an papal interdict. The Republic paid no attention to the interdict or the act of excommunication, and ordered its priests to carry out their ministry. It was supported in its decisions by the Servite monk Paolo Sarpi, a sharp polemical writer who was nominated to be the Signoria's adviser on theology and canon law in 1606. The interdict was lifted after a year, when France intervened and proposed a formula of compromise. Venice was satisfied with reaffirming the principle that no citizen was superior to the normal processes of law.
Decline
,
Neptune (mythology) offers the wealth of the sea to Venice, 1748–50. This painting is an allegory of the power of the Republic of Venice, as the wealth and power of the
Serenissima was based on the control of the sea.
In December 1714, the Turks declared war when the Peloponnese (the Morea) was "without any of those supplies which are so desirable even in countries where aid is near at hand which are not liable to attack from the sea".
The Turks took the islands of Tinos and Aegina, crossed the isthmus and took Corinth.
Daniele Dolfin, commander of the Venetian fleet, thought it better to save the fleet than risk it for the Morea. When he eventually arrived on the scene, Nauplia, Modon, Corone and Malvasia had fallen. Levkas in the
Ionian islands, and the bases of Spinalonga and Suda on
Crete which still remained in Venetian hands, were abandoned. The Turks finally landed on
Corfù, but its defenders managed to throw them back. In the meantime, the Turks had suffered a grave defeat by the Austrians at
Battle of Petrovaradin on
5 August 1716. Venetian naval efforts in the
Aegean Sea and the
Dardanelles in 1717 and 1718, however, met with little success. With the
Treaty of Passarowitz (
21 July 1718), Austria made large territorial gains, but Venice lost the Morea, for which her small gains in
Albania and Dalmatia were little compensation. This was the last war with the Ottoman Empire.
The fall of the Republic
In spring 1796,
Piedmont fell and the Austrians were beaten from
Montenotte to
Lodi, Italy. The army under Napoleon crossed the frontiers of neutral Venice in pursuit of the enemy. By the end of the year the French troops were occupying the Venetian state up to the Adige. Vicenza, Cadore and Friuli were held by the Austrians. With the campaigns of the next year, Napoleon aimed for the Austrian possessions across the
Alps. In the preliminaries to the
Treaty of Leoben, the terms of which remained secret, the Austrians were to take the Venetian possessions as the price of peace (18 April 1797).
Government
In the early years of the republic, the political system can be classified as an autocracy, with the
Doge of Venice as the almost absolute ruler. Soon the Doge was subject to the Promissione, i.e a pledge he had to take when elected, which limited his powers strongly: as a result powers were shared with the Major Council so that «He (the Doge) could do nothing without the Major Council and the Major Council could do nothing without him» (Marin Sanudo). In 1223, the aristocratic families of Rialto drastically diminished the powers of the Doge by the establishment of an advisory body, the
Signoria of Venice and a supreme tribunal, the
Quarantia. They also created two bodies called
sapientes which later grew into six bodies. The combination of
sapientes and certain other groups was called a
collegio, a kind of ministry to carry out the functions of government. A senate, called the
Consiglio dei Pregadi was organized in 1229 with sixty members elected by the
Major Councilsee entry "Venice",
Catholic Encyclopedia, 1967. Vol. XIV, p. 602.. During this period the Doge had little real power left, and actual authority was exercised by the
Great Council of Venice, an extremely limited
parliament-like body in which only members of the great aristocratic families of the republic were allowed to participate. Venice claimed that its government was a ‘classical republic’ because it was a fusion of the three basic forms present in a
mixed government: with the regal power in the Doge, the aristocratic in the senate, and the democratic in the Great Council
The Political Ideas of St. Thomas Aquinas, Dino Bigongiari ed., Hafner Publishing Company, NY, 1953. p.
xxx in footnote..
In 1335, a "Council of Ten" was established and became so powerful and secretive that by circa 1600 its powers had to be delimitedMachiavelli also refers to Venice as a republic. Niccolò Machiavelli,
The Prince, trans. & ed. by Robert M. Adams, W.W. Norton & Co.,
New York City, 1992. Machiavelli Balanced Government. Its powers varied over time, from subordinance to the Great Council to dominance over it.
A law of 1539 instituted the State Inquisitors, later known as the Supreme Tribunal. There were three Inquisitors, one known popularly as
Il Rosso, "the red one", who was chosen from the Dogal Councillors, who wore scarlet robes, and two from the Council of Ten, known as
I negri, "the black ones". They began as a security body at the difficult time when Venice felt herself encircled by the Habsburgs and gradually assumed some of the powers of the Council of Ten. By means of
espionage,
counterespionage and internal
surveillance, they made use of a network of informers and "confidants".
In 1556, the
provveditori ai beni inculti were also created for the improvement of agriculture by increasing the area under cultivation and encouraging private investment in agricultural improvement. The consistent rise in the price of grain during the 16th century encouraged the transfer of capital from trade to the land.
References
Bibliography
- Patricia Fortini Brown. Private Lives in Renaissance Venice: art, architecture, and the family (2004)
- Chambers, D.S. (1970). The Imperial Age of Venice, 1380–1580. London: Thames & Hudson. The best brief introduction in English, still completely reliable.
- Garrett, Martin, "Venice: a Cultural History" (2006). Revised edition of "Venice: a Cultural and Literary Companion" (2001).
- Grubb, James S. (1986). "When Myths Lose Power: Four Decades of Venetian Historiography." Journal of Modern History 58, pp. 43–94 — the classic "muckraking" essay on the myths of Venice.
- Deborah Howard and Sarah Quill. The Architectural History of Venice (2004)
- John Rigby Hale. Renaissance Venice (1974), ISBN 0571104290
- Lane, Frederic Chapin. Venice: Maritime Republic (1973) — a standard scholarly history with an emphasis on economic, political and diplomatic history; ISBN 0801814456
- Laven, Mary, "Virgins of Venice: Enclosed Lives and Broken Vows in the Renaissance Convent (2002). The most important study of the life of Renaissance nuns, with much on aristocratic family networks and the life of women more generally.
- Mallett, M. E. and Hale, J. R. The Military Organisation of a Renaissance State, Venice c. 1400 to 1617 (1984), ISBN 0521032474
- Martin, John Jeffries and Dennis Romano (eds). Venice Reconsidered. The History and Civilization of an Italian City-State, 1297–1797. (2002) Johns Hopkins UP — The most recent collection on essays, many by prominent scholars, on Venice.
- Drechsler, Wolfgang (2002). "Venice Misappropriated." Trames 6(2), pp. 192–201 — A scathing review of Martin & Romano 2000; also a good summary on the most recent economic and political thought on Venice. For more balanced, less tendentious, and scholarly reviews of the Martin–Romano anthology, see The Historical Journal (2003) and Rivista Storica Italiana (2003).
- Muir, Edward (1981). Civic Ritual in Renaissance Venice. Princeton UP — The classic of Venetian cultural studies, highly sophisticated.
- David Rosand. Myths of Venice: The Figuration of a State (2001) — how writers (especially English) have understood Venice and its art
- Manfredo Tafuri. Venice and the Renaissance (1995) — architecture
Primary sources
- Contarini, Gasparo (1599). The Commonwealth and Gouernment of Venice. Lewes Lewkenor, trsl. London: "Imprinted by I. Windet for E. Mattes." — The most important contemporary account of Venice's governance during the time of its blossoming; numerous reprint editions.
Sources
See also
{{Infobox Former Country|native_name = Serenissima Repubblica di Venezia|conventional_long_name = Most Serene Republic of Venice|common_name = Venice|continent=Europe|region = Italy|country = Italy|status= City|year_start = 697|year_end = 1797|date_end = April 17|event1=Treaty of Zara|date_event1=
June 27,
1358, [Latin, Italian language|religion = Roman Catholic Church|capital = Venice||government_type = Republic|title_leader =
Doge of Venice|leader1 = Ludovico Manin|year_leader1 = 1789–97|event_end = Treaty of Leoben|footnotes = * Traditionally, the establishment of the Republic is dated to 697.-->
The
Most Serene Republic of Venice (, ), was an Italy state originating from the city of Venice (today in Northern Italy Italy). It existed for one thousand one hundred years, from the 8th century until the 18th century (1797).
It is often referred to as
The Serenissima, in reference to its title in Italian, The Most Serene. It is also referred to as the Republic of Venice' or the
Venetian Republic.
History
The city of Venice originated as a collection of lagoon communities banded together for mutual defence from the
Lombards as the power of the
Byzantine Empire dwindled in
northern Italy in the late seventh century. Sometime in the first decades of the eighth century, the people of the lagoon elected their first leader
Orso Ipato, who was confirmed by Byzantium and given the titles of
hypatus and
dux. He was the first historical Doge of Venice. Tradition, however, since the early 11th century, dictates that the Venetians first proclaimed one Paolo Lucio Anafesto duke in 697, though this story dates to no earlier than the chronicle of
John, deacon of Venice. Whatever the case, the first doges had their power base in Eraclea.
Rise
Ursus's successor,
Teodato Ipato, moved his seat from Heraclea to Malamocco in the 740s. He was the son of Ursus and represented the attempt of his father to establish a dynasty. Such attempts were more than commonplace among the doges of the first few centuries of Venetian history, but all were ultimately unsuccessful. During the reign of Deusdedit, Venice became the only remaining Byzantine possession in the north and the changing politic of the
Frankish Empire began to change the factional division of Venetia. One faction was decidedly pro-Byzantine. They desired to remain well-connected to the Empire. Another faction, republican in nature, believed in continuing along a course towards practical independence. The other main faction was pro-Frankish. Supported mostly by clergy (in line with Pope sympathies of the time), they looked towards the new
Carolingian king of the
Franks,
Pepin the Short, as the best provider of defence against the Lombards. A minor, pro-Lombard, faction was opposed to close ties with any of these further-off powers and interested in maintaining peace with the neighbouring (and surrounding, but for the sea) Lombard kingdom.
Early Middle Ages
The successors of Obelerio inherited a united Venice. By the
Pax Nicephori (803), the two emperors had recognised Venetian
de facto independence, while it remained nominally Byzantine in subservience. During the reign of the Participazio, Venice grew into its modern form. Though Heraclean by birth, Agnello Participazio, first doge of the family, was an early immigrant to Rialto and his dogeship was marked by the expansion of Venice towards the sea via the construction of bridges, canals, bulwarks, fortifications, and stone buildings. The modern Venice, at one with the sea, was being born. Agnello was succeeded by his son
Giustiniano Participazio, who brought the body of
Saint Mark the Evangelist to Venice from
Alexandria and made him the patron saint of Venice.
During the reign of the successor of the Participazio,
Pietro Tradonico, Venice began to establish its military might which would influence many a later crusade and dominate the Adriatic for centuries. Tradonico secured the sea by fighting
Slavic peoples and
Muslim conquests pirates. Tradonico's reign was long and successful (837–64), but he was succeeded by the Participazio and it appeared that a dynasty may have finally been established.
High Middle Ages
, brought as loot from Constantinople in 1204.In the
High Middle Ages, Venice became extremely wealthy through its control of trade between Europe and the
Levant, and began to expand into the Adriatic Sea and beyond. Venice was involved in the Crusades almost from the very beginning; Venetian ships assisted in capturing the coastal cities of
Syria after the First Crusade, and in 1123 they were granted virtual autonomy in the Kingdom of Jerusalem through the
Pactum Warmundi. In the 12th century, the Venetians also gained extensive trading privileges in the Byzantine Empire and their ships often provided the Empire with a navy. In 1182 there was an anti-Western riot in
Constantinople, of which the Venetians were the main targets. The Venetian fleet was crucial to the transportation of the Fourth Crusade, but when the crusaders could not pay for the ships, the cunning and manipulative Doge Enrico Dandolo quickly exploited the situation and offered transport to the crusaders if they were to Siege of Zara (
Italian language:
Zara), which had rebelled against the Venetian rule in 1183, placed itself under the dual protection of the Papacy and King Emeric of Hungary and had proven too well fortified to retake for Venice alone. Upon accomplishing this the crusade was again diverted to
Constantinople, the capital of the Byzantine Empire, another rival of Venice. The city was captured and sacked in 1204; the sack has been described as one of the most profitable and disgraceful sacks of a city in history.Phillips,
The Fourth Crusade and the Sack of Constantinople, intro., xiii) The Venetians regarded the attack as a form of revenge for the massacre, several years before, of Venetian citizens living in Constantinople. Many in the Empire had become jealous of Venetian power and influence, and thus, when in 1182 the pretender
Andronikos I Komnenos marched on Constantinople, Venetian property was seized and the owners imprisoned or banished, an act which humiliated, and angered the Republic. The Byzantine Empire, which until 1204 had resisted to several attacks and kept the Islamic invaders out of Anatolia and the Balkans, was re-established in 1261 by
Michael VIII Palaiologos but never recovered its previous power and was eventually conquered by the Ottoman Turks, who later occupied the Balkans and Hungary and on two occasions even besieged Vienna. The Venetians, who accompanied the crusader fleet, claimed much of the plunder, including the famous
Horses of Saint Mark which were brought back to adorn St. Mark's basilica. As a result of the subsequent partition of the Byzantine Empire, Venice gained a great deal of territory in the Aegean Sea (three-eighths of the Byzantine Empire), including the islands of
Crete and
Euboea. The Aegean islands came to form the Venetian
Duchy of the Archipelago.
From 1350 to 1381, Venice fought an intermittent
Venetian-Genoese War. Initially defeated, they devastated the Genoese fleet at the
Battle of Chioggia in 1380 and retained their prominent position in eastern Mediterranean affairs at the expense of Genoa's declining empire.
, Greece. This is one of the many forts that secured the Venetian trade routes in the Eastern
Mediterranean.
15th century
In the early fifteenth century, the Venetians also began to expand in
Italy, as well as along the Dalmatian coast from Istria to Albania, which was acquired from King
Ladislas of Naples during the civil war in Hungary. Ladislas was about to lose the conflict and had decided to escape to Naples, but before doing so he agreed to sell his now practically forfeit rights on the Dalmatian cities for a meager sum of 100,000 ducats. Venice exploited the situation and quickly installed nobility to govern the area, for example, Count Filippo Stipanov in Zadar. This move by the Venetians was a response to the threatening expansion of
Giangaleazzo Visconti, Duke of Milan. Control over the north-east main land routes was also a necessity for the safety of the trades. By 1410, Venice had taken over most of Venetia, including such important cities as Verona and Padua.
The situation in Dalmatia had been settled in 1408 by a truce with King Sigismund of Hungary but the difficulties of Hungary finally granted to the Republic the consolidation of its Adriatic dominions. At the expiration of the truce, Venice immediately invaded the Patriarchate of Aquileia, and subjected
Trogir,
Split, Durrës and other Dalmatian cities.
Slavic people slaves were plentiful in the Italian city-states as late as the 15th century. Between 1414 and 1423, some 10,000 eastern European
slavery were sold in Venice. How To Reboot Reality — Chapter 2, Labor Welcome to Encyclopædia Britannica's Guide to History
In 1489, the island of
Cyprus, previously a crusader state (the
Kingdom of Cyprus), was annexed to Venice.
League of Cambrai, Lepanto and the loss of Cyprus
The Ottoman Empire started sea campaigns as early as 1423, when it waged a seven year war with the Venetian Republic over maritime control of the
Aegean Sea and the Adriatic Sea. The wars with Venice resumed in 1463 until a favorable peace treaty was signed in 1479. In 1480 (now no longer hampered by the Venetian fleet) the Ottomans
Siege of Rhodes (1480) and Battle of Otranto. War with Venice resumed from 1499 to 1503.
In 1499, Venice allied itself with
Louis XII of France against Milan, gaining Cremona. In the same year the Ottoman sultan moved to attack Lepanto by land, and sent a large fleet to support his offensive by sea.
Antonio Grimani, more a businessman and diplomat than a sailor, was defeated in the sea
battle of Zonchio in 1499. The
Ottoman Empire once again sacked Friuli. Preferring peace to total war both against the Turks and by sea, Venice surrendered the bases of Lepanto, Modon and
Koroni.
Venice's attention was diverted from her usual maritime position by the delicate situation in Romagna, then one of the richest lands in Italy, which was nominally part of the Papal States but effectively fractionated in a series of small lordship of difficult control for Rome's troops. Eager to take some of Venice's lands, all neighbouring powers joined in the
League of Cambrai in 1508, under the leadership of Pope Julius II. The pope wanted Romagna; Holy Roman Empire Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor:
Friuli and Veneto;
Spain: the Apulian ports; the
king of France: Cremona; the king of Hungary: Dalmatia, and each of the others some part. The offensive against the huge army enlisted by Venice was launched from France. On 14 May
1509, Venice was crushingly defeated at the
battle of Agnadello, in the Ghiara d'Adda, marking one of the most delicate points of the entire Venetian history. French and imperial troops were occupying the Veneto, but Venice managed to extricate herself through diplomatic efforts. The Apulian ports were ceded in order to come to terms with Spain, and pope Julius II soon recognized the danger brought by the eventual destruction of Venice (then the only Italian power able to face kingdoms like France or empires like the Ottomans). The citizens of the mainland rose to the cry of "Marco, Marco", and Andrea Gritti recaptured Padua in July 1509, successfully defending it against the besieging imperial troops. Spain and the pope broke off their alliance with France, and Venice regained
Brescia and
Verona from France also. After seven years of ruinous war, the Serenissima regained her mainland dominions west to the Adda river. Although the defeat had turned into a victory, the events of 1509 marked the end of the Venetian expansion.
In 1489, the first year of Venetian control of Cyprus, Turks attacked the Karpasia Peninsula, pillaging and taking captives to be sold into slavery. In 1539 the Turkish fleet attacked and destroyed Limassol. Fearing the ever-expanding Ottoman Empire, the Venetians had fortified
Famagusta, Nicosia, and Kyrenia, but most other cities were easy prey.
In the summer of 1570, the Turks struck again, but this time with a full-scale invasion rather than a raid. About 60,000 troops, including cavalry and artillery, under the command of
Lala Kara Mustafa Pasha landed unopposed near Limassol on July 2, 1570, and laid siege to Nicosia. In an orgy of victory on the day that the city fell — September 9, 1570 — 20,000 Nicosian Greeks and Venetians were put to death, and every church, public building, and palace was looted. Word of the massacre spread, and a few days later Mustafa took Kyrenia without having to fire a shot. Famagusta, however, resisted and put up a heroic defense that lasted from September 1570 until August 1571.
The fall of Famagusta marked the beginning of the Ottoman period in Cyprus. Two months later, the naval forces of the Holy League (Mediterranean), composed mainly of Venetian, Spanish Empire, and Papal states ships under the command of Don John of Austria, defeated the Turkish fleet at
Battle of Lepanto (1571) in one of the decisive battles of world history. The victory over the Turks, however, came too late to help Cyprus, and the island remained under Ottoman rule for the next three centuries.
17th century
In 1605, a conflict between Venice and the
Holy See began with the arrest of two members of the clergy who were guilty of petty crimes, and with a law restricting the Church's right to enjoy and acquire landed property.
Pope Paul V held that these provisions were contrary to canon law, and demanded that they should be repealed. When this was refused, he placed Venice under an
papal interdict. The Republic paid no attention to the interdict or the act of excommunication, and ordered its priests to carry out their ministry. It was supported in its decisions by the Servite monk Paolo Sarpi, a sharp polemical writer who was nominated to be the Signoria's adviser on theology and canon law in 1606. The interdict was lifted after a year, when France intervened and proposed a formula of compromise. Venice was satisfied with reaffirming the principle that no citizen was superior to the normal processes of law.
Decline
,
Neptune (mythology) offers the wealth of the sea to Venice, 1748–50. This painting is an allegory of the power of the Republic of Venice, as the wealth and power of the
Serenissima was based on the control of the sea.
In December 1714, the Turks declared war when the
Peloponnese (the
Morea) was "without any of those supplies which are so desirable even in countries where aid is near at hand which are not liable to attack from the sea".
The Turks took the islands of Tinos and Aegina, crossed the isthmus and took Corinth. Daniele Dolfin, commander of the Venetian fleet, thought it better to save the fleet than risk it for the Morea. When he eventually arrived on the scene, Nauplia, Modon, Corone and Malvasia had fallen. Levkas in the Ionian islands, and the bases of Spinalonga and Suda on Crete which still remained in Venetian hands, were abandoned. The Turks finally landed on
Corfù, but its defenders managed to throw them back. In the meantime, the Turks had suffered a grave defeat by the Austrians at Battle of Petrovaradin on
5 August 1716. Venetian naval efforts in the
Aegean Sea and the Dardanelles in 1717 and 1718, however, met with little success. With the Treaty of Passarowitz (
21 July 1718), Austria made large territorial gains, but Venice lost the Morea, for which her small gains in Albania and Dalmatia were little compensation. This was the last war with the Ottoman Empire.
The fall of the Republic
In spring 1796, Piedmont fell and the Austrians were beaten from
Montenotte to
Lodi, Italy. The army under Napoleon crossed the frontiers of neutral Venice in pursuit of the enemy. By the end of the year the French troops were occupying the Venetian state up to the
Adige. Vicenza, Cadore and Friuli were held by the Austrians. With the campaigns of the next year, Napoleon aimed for the Austrian possessions across the Alps. In the preliminaries to the
Treaty of Leoben, the terms of which remained secret, the Austrians were to take the Venetian possessions as the price of peace (
18 April 1797).
Government
In the early years of the republic, the
political system can be classified as an autocracy, with the
Doge of Venice as the almost absolute ruler. Soon the Doge was subject to the
Promissione, i.e a pledge he had to take when elected, which limited his powers strongly: as a result powers were shared with the Major Council so that «He (the Doge) could do nothing without the Major Council and the Major Council could do nothing without him» (Marin Sanudo). In 1223, the aristocratic families of Rialto drastically diminished the powers of the Doge by the establishment of an advisory body, the
Signoria of Venice and a supreme tribunal, the
Quarantia. They also created two bodies called
sapientes which later grew into six bodies. The combination of
sapientes and certain other groups was called a
collegio, a kind of ministry to carry out the functions of government. A senate, called the
Consiglio dei Pregadi was organized in 1229 with sixty members elected by the
Major Councilsee entry "Venice",
Catholic Encyclopedia, 1967. Vol. XIV, p. 602.. During this period the Doge had little real power left, and actual authority was exercised by the Great Council of Venice, an extremely limited parliament-like body in which only members of the great aristocratic families of the republic were allowed to participate. Venice claimed that its government was a ‘classical republic’ because it was a fusion of the three basic forms present in a mixed government: with the regal power in the Doge, the aristocratic in the senate, and the democratic in the Great Council
The Political Ideas of St. Thomas Aquinas, Dino Bigongiari ed., Hafner Publishing Company, NY, 1953. p.
xxx in footnote..
In 1335, a "
Council of Ten" was established and became so powerful and secretive that by circa 1600 its powers had to be delimitedMachiavelli also refers to Venice as a republic.
Niccolò Machiavelli,
The Prince, trans. & ed. by Robert M. Adams, W.W. Norton & Co., New York City, 1992. Machiavelli Balanced Government. Its powers varied over time, from subordinance to the Great Council to dominance over it.
A law of 1539 instituted the State Inquisitors, later known as the Supreme Tribunal. There were three Inquisitors, one known popularly as
Il Rosso, "the red one", who was chosen from the Dogal Councillors, who wore scarlet robes, and two from the Council of Ten, known as
I negri, "the black ones". They began as a security body at the difficult time when Venice felt herself encircled by the Habsburgs and gradually assumed some of the powers of the Council of Ten. By means of
espionage, counterespionage and internal surveillance, they made use of a network of informers and "confidants".
In 1556, the
provveditori ai beni inculti were also created for the improvement of agriculture by increasing the area under cultivation and encouraging private investment in agricultural improvement. The consistent rise in the price of grain during the 16th century encouraged the transfer of capital from trade to the land.
References
Bibliography
- Patricia Fortini Brown. Private Lives in Renaissance Venice: art, architecture, and the family (2004)
- Chambers, D.S. (1970). The Imperial Age of Venice, 1380–1580. London: Thames & Hudson. The best brief introduction in English, still completely reliable.
- Garrett, Martin, "Venice: a Cultural History" (2006). Revised edition of "Venice: a Cultural and Literary Companion" (2001).
- Grubb, James S. (1986). "When Myths Lose Power: Four Decades of Venetian Historiography." Journal of Modern History 58, pp. 43–94 — the classic "muckraking" essay on the myths of Venice.
- Deborah Howard and Sarah Quill. The Architectural History of Venice (2004)
- John Rigby Hale. Renaissance Venice (1974), ISBN 0571104290
- Lane, Frederic Chapin. Venice: Maritime Republic (1973) — a standard scholarly history with an emphasis on economic, political and diplomatic history; ISBN 0801814456
- Laven, Mary, "Virgins of Venice: Enclosed Lives and Broken Vows in the Renaissance Convent (2002). The most important study of the life of Renaissance nuns, with much on aristocratic family networks and the life of women more generally.
- Mallett, M. E. and Hale, J. R. The Military Organisation of a Renaissance State, Venice c. 1400 to 1617 (1984), ISBN 0521032474
- Martin, John Jeffries and Dennis Romano (eds). Venice Reconsidered. The History and Civilization of an Italian City-State, 1297–1797. (2002) Johns Hopkins UP — The most recent collection on essays, many by prominent scholars, on Venice.
- Drechsler, Wolfgang (2002). "Venice Misappropriated." Trames 6(2), pp. 192–201 — A scathing review of Martin & Romano 2000; also a good summary on the most recent economic and political thought on Venice. For more balanced, less tendentious, and scholarly reviews of the Martin–Romano anthology, see The Historical Journal (2003) and Rivista Storica Italiana (2003).
- Muir, Edward (1981). Civic Ritual in Renaissance Venice. Princeton UP — The classic of Venetian cultural studies, highly sophisticated.
- David Rosand. Myths of Venice: The Figuration of a State (2001) — how writers (especially English) have understood Venice and its art
- Manfredo Tafuri. Venice and the Renaissance (1995) — architecture
Primary sources
- Contarini, Gasparo (1599). The Commonwealth and Gouernment of Venice. Lewes Lewkenor, trsl. London: "Imprinted by I. Windet for E. Mattes." — The most important contemporary account of Venice's governance during the time of its blossoming; numerous reprint editions.
Sources
See also
Republic of Venice - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The Most Serene Republic of Venice (Venetian: (Serenìsima) Repùblica Vèneta or Repùblica de Venesia, Italian: Serenissima Repubblica di Venezia) or Venetian Republic was an ...
CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Venice
Next followed the war with Hungary for the possession of Dalmatia, in which all its neighbours took sides against the republic, and Venice lost the greater part of Dalmatia (1358).
Category:Republic of Venice - Wikimedia Commons
Media in category "Republic of Venice" The following 28 files are in this category, out of 28 total.
Gamers Quest - Republic of Venice
Loads of new releases in stock now including Spinespur, Dark Age, Rezolution, Rattrap, Freebooter, Anima Tactics, Corvus Belli and lots more!
Venice - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The classic "muckraking" essay on the myths of Venice. Lane, Frederic Chapin. Venice: Maritime Republic (1973) (ISBN 0801814456) standard scholarly history; emphasis on economic ...
00006246-The Republic of Venice from c.1454-1571
UoR Home > Module Descriptions > HS3T09: The Republic of Venice from c.1454-1571 HS3T09: The Republic of Venice from c.1454-1571
Image:Flag of Most Serene Republic of Venice.svg - Wikimedia Commons
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Serene Republic of Venice
The most Serene Repvblic of Venice . T he Venetian army in Greece is an interesting and colourful blend between Western Europe and the Turkish East, with a mix of Old Byzantium ...
INEX: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (Republic of Venice)
History. The city of Venice, previously a dependency of the Byzantine Empire, had established its independence of any eastern or western emperor as early as the ninth century.
Republic of Venice - World Heritage Site
World heritage sites ... The Republic was an Italian state originating from the city of Venice. It existed from the late 7th century until the late 18th ...