READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
HISTORY OF THE RENAISSANCE
CHAPTER VIII.
VENICE
THE beginning of
the fifteenth century offers a convenient point whence to survey the growth of
the Venetian Republic. Venice had by that time become the Venice of modern
European history; a great trading city; a mart for the exchange of goods
between East and West; committed to a policy destined to make her one of the
five Italian Powers and eventually to raise up against her a coalition of all
Italy and Europe. Her constitution was fixed; her colonial system developed;
her position towards the Church defined; her aggrandizement on the Italian
mainland initiated; her wealth, her splendor, her art were beginning to attract
the attention of the civilized world. The various threads of Venetian history
are drawn together at this epoch. The Republic was about to move forward upon a
larger, more ambitious career than it had hitherto followed; a career for which
its various lines of development, the creation of a maritime empire, expansion
on the mainland, efforts for ecclesiastical independence, growth and
solidification of the constitution-, had been slowly preparing it. An
examination of each of these lines, in turn will enable us to understand the
nature of the Venetian Republic as it emerged from the Middle Ages and became,
for a time, one of the greatest factors in European history.
The growth of
Venetian maritime empire in the Levant and supremacy in the Mediterranean falls
into four well-defined periods. The Venetians began by moving slowly down the
Dalmatian coast and establishing their power in the Adriatic; they then pushed out
eastward and acquired rights in Syrian seaports, such as Sidon, Tyre, Acre;
they seized many of the islands in the archipelago as their share of the
plunder after the Fourth Crusade; finally they met, fought, and defeated their
only serious maritime rivals the Genoese.
The Adriatic is
the natural water avenue to Venice. If her commerce was to flourish, it was
essential that she should be mistress in this sea. But the eastern coast of the
Adriatic, with its deep gulfs, and numerous islands, had for long sheltered a
race of pirates who never ceased to molest Venetian traffic. It was necessary
to destroy this corsairs’ nest, and Venice embarked on the first great war she
undertook as an independent State in her own individual interests. This war was
entirely successful. The Dalmatian coast towns recognized the Doge as Duke of
Dalmatia and submitted to a nominal tribute in recognition of the supremacy of
the Republic. Venice, it is true, did not remain in undisturbed and continuous
possession of Dalmatia, but she acquired a title which she subsequently
rendered effective. She thus took the first step towards that indispensable
condition of her commercial existence, supremacy in the Adriatic. The Dalmatian
cities were now open to her merchants. The Dalmatian sea-board furnished a food
supply which the Lagoons could not; Dalmatian forests yielded timber for
building ships and houses.
With the period
of the Crusades Venice achieved a still wider expansion in the Levant. The eyes
of Europe had been attracted to the little city in the Lagoons which had
attacked and subdued the Narentine pirates, challenged and fought the Normans,
and rendered striking services to the Eastern Emperor himself. When the
Crusaders began to look about for a port of embarkation and for transport-service
to the Holy Land, the three cities of Genoa, Pisa, and Venice offered
themselves. Venice was not only the most powerful; she was also the most
easterly of the three. Her geographical position naturally led to the choice of
Venice as the port of departure. The issue of the Crusades proved that the
Republic entered upon those enterprises in a purely commercial spirit. When
Sidon fell, the Venetians received from Baldwin, King of Jerusalem, in return
for their assistance, a market-place, a district, a church, and the right to
use their own weights and measures in that city. This was in fact the nucleus
of a colony of merchants living under special treaty capitulations; and the
privileges of the Sidon treaty we find repeated and extended when Acre, Tyre,
and Ascalon were successively occupied.
The siege and
capture of Tyre mark the close of the second period in the history of Venetian
maritime expansion. With the erection of factories in Constantinople and in the
chief cities of the Syrian sea-board the Republic may be said to have embarked
upon the construction of that greater Venice, which was to be completed after
the Fourth Crusade.
But the course of
Venetian expansion was not uninterruptedly smooth. The rapid growth of her
power in the Levant procured for the Republic an enemy in the person of the
Eastern Emperor. The Emperors had always viewed with suspicion the whole
movement of the Crusades and more especially the professedly commercial
attitude assumed by Venice, who was obviously bent upon acquiring territory and
rights inside the Empire. They were aware that they could chastise her by
favoring her rivals Pisa and Genoa. The growing wealth and importance of
Venetian colonists in Constantinople, where they are said to have numbered two hundred
thousand, increased the imperial jealousy. The Venetians were accused of being
troublesome, brawling neighbors, who kept the town in an uproar. In March,
1171, all Venetians in the Empire were placed under arrest and their property
confiscated. Popular indignation at Venice swept the Republic into war with the
Emperor. One hundred galleys and twenty ships were manned in the course of a
hundred days. The issue of the campaign was disastrous for the Venetians. The
Emperor's Ambassadors induced the Doge to temporize. The plague decimated and
nearly annihilated the fleet. The shattered remnants returned to Venice where
the Doge was slain by the mob.
With the reign of
Enrico Dandolo and the Fourth Crusade we approach a memorable period in the
history of Venetian maritime empire. When Dandolo came to the throne the
affairs of the Republic as regards their maritime power stood thus. In the
imperial city their position was precarious, liable to violent changes, exposed
to the machinations of their commercial and naval rivals, Pisa and Genoa. Their
communications with their Syrian factories were not secure. Zara and the
Dalmatian coast were still in revolt. In the year 1201 the Republic discovered
that the usurping Emperor, Alexius III, was in treaty with the Genoese and
meditated conferring on them ampler trading rights. The immediate objects of
the Republic were the recovery of Zara and the suppression of their commercial
rivals in Constantinople. The story of the Fourth Crusade is the story of the
way in which the Republic accomplished its aims.
Zara was
recovered and on the fall of Constantinople, in 1204, the Republic reaped
material advantages of a preponderating kind. Her portion of the booty gave her
solid riches, with which she bought the rights of Boniface over Crete and
Salonika, and obtained leave for Venetian citizens to occupy as fiefs of the
Empire any Aegean islands not already owned by the Republic. In this way she
became possessed of the Cyclades and Sporades, and held the seaports of
Thessaly and the island of Crete. Zara and other Dalmatian towns now became
Hers both by conquest and by title; and thus the Republic acquired an unbroken
line of communication from Venice down the Adriatic to Constantinople and round
to the seaports of the Syrian coast.
But the
possession of this large maritime empire had to be made good. Venice was unable
to undertake at one and the same time the actual conquest and settlement of so
many scattered territories. She adopted a method borrowed from the feudal
system of her Frankish allies, and granted investiture of the various islands,
as fiefs, to those of her richer families who would undertake to render
effective the Venetian title and to hold the territories for the Republic at a
nominal tribute.
We have no evidence
as to how these feudatories established their title and governed their fiefs;
but when we come to deal with the growth of the Venetian constitution we shall
find that a great increase in private wealth resulted from this partition of
the Levant islands. We do know, however, the system adopted for the
colonization of the large island of Crete, which the Republic kept directly in
its own hands. Venetian citizens were tempted to settle in the island by the
gift of certain villages with their districts. These they were expected to hold
for the Republic in the case of a revolution. The Governor of the island, who
bore the title of Duke of Candia, was a Venetian noble elected in the Great
Council at Venice; he was assisted by two Councillors. Matters of importance
were decided by the Great Council of Crete, which was composed of all noble
Venetians resident in the island and all noble Cretans. The remaining
magistracies were formed upon the Venetian model; and the higher posts, such as
those of Captain-General, Commander of the Cavalry, Governors, and military
commanders in the larger towns, were filled by Venetians. The minor offices
were open to Cretans. Absolute equality was granted to both Roman and Orthodox
rites. In fact the Republic displayed at once the governing ideas of her
colonial policy, namely to interfere as little as possible with local
institutions; to develop the resources of the country; to encourage trade with
the metropolis; to retain only the very highest military and civil appointments
in her own hands as a symbol and guarantee of her supremacy.
For the defense
of these widely scattered possessions and for the preservation of
communications between Venice and her dependencies the Republic was obliged to
organize a service of patrol squadrons. The Captain of the Gulf, that is the
Adriatic, had his head-quarters at the Ionian islands, and was responsible, for
the safety of merchantmen from Venice to those islands and in the waters of the
Morea as far as Modon and Coron. From the Morea to the Dardanelles the safety
of the sea route was entrusted to the Venetian feudatories in the Greek
islands; while the Dardanelles, the Sea of Marmora, the Bosphorus, and the
Black Sea were patrolled by the Black Sea squadron.
It is obvious
that the outcome of the Fourth Crusade was of vast importance for the expansion
of Venetian maritime empire; and we are now in the presence of a Venice quite
different from anything we have encountered hitherto. The Republic assumed the
aspect of a naval Power with a large mercantile marine and organized squadrons
of warships for her protection. The crews of Venetian warships were at this
period free citizens, serving under the command of a Venetian noble. Condemned
prisoners or galley-slaves were not employed till much later, first because the
State was hardly large enough to furnish sufficient criminals to serve the oar,
and secondly because, as long as boarding formed an important operation in
naval tactics, condemned criminals could not be employed with safety as it was
dangerous to entrust them with arms. When ramming took the place of boarding,
the galley-slave, chained to his bench, could be used precisely as we use
machinery.
The expansion of
Venetian maritime empire as the outcome of the Fourth Crusade roused the jealousy
of her great rival Genoa. It was inevitable that the Genoese and the Venetians,
both occupying neighboring quarters in the Levantine cities, each competing for
a monopoly of Eastern commerce, should come to blows. The Republic was now
committed to a struggle with her western rival for supremacy in the Levant, a
deplorable conflict fraught with disaster for both parties.
A long period of
naval campaigning ensued, the fortune of war leaning now to one side, now to
the other. The breathing-space between each campaign and the next was devoted
by the Republic to the development of her commerce. Treaties were stipulated
with Milan, Bologna, Brescia, Como. Trade with England and Flanders by means of
the Flanders galleys was developed. Venetian merchants brought sugar from the
Levant, and exchanged it for wool in London. The wool was sold in Flanders and
cloth bought, which was placed on the markets of Italy and Dalmatia, as the
ships sailed east again to procure fresh cargoes for the London market.
Industries also began to take root in the city. Refugees from Lucca introduced
the silk trade, and established themselves in a quarter near the Rialto. The
glass manufacture of Murano received an impetus. The population of the city
numbered 200,000; the males fit for arms, that is between the ages of twenty
and sixty, were reckoned at 40,000.
There is proof
that, in spite of defeats by Genoa at Ayas and at Curzola, Venice had achieved
a high position in the eyes of European Princes. Edward III asked for Venetian
aid in his wars with Philip of France; he offered extensive privileges, and
invited the Doge to send his sons to the English court. Alfonso of Sicily
apologized for insults offered to Venetian merchants. The Pope proposed that
Venice should undertake the protection of Christians against the Ottoman Turks,
who were now beginning to threaten Europe, in return for which the Republic was
to enjoy the ecclesiastical tithes for three years.
But Genoa was not
yet driven from the field. It was impossible that commercial rivalries should
not lead to fresh explosions. The fur trade in the Crimea gave rise to
differences. The Venetians sent an embassy to Genoa to protest against alleged
violations of a compact by which both Republics had pledged themselves to
abstain from trading with the Tartars. The Genoese gave Venice to understand
that her presence in the Black Sea was only permitted on sufferance. War broke
out. The Republics were now embarked upon a struggle to the death, from which
one or other of the combatants must emerge finally victorious.
In the course of
that struggle the recuperative power of Venice was amply demonstrated. She lost
Negroponte; she was defeated in the Bosphorus; her whole fleet was annihilated
at Sapienza. But the result of her one great victory at Cagliari was sufficient
to counterbalance her losses, for by it she forced Genoa to surrender her
liberties to Visconti. And so, while Venice after each disaster, after Curzola
and Sapienza, was able to devote her whole energies to replacing her fleet and
reestablishing her commerce, the case was very different with her rival. The
Genoese Republic had accepted the lordship of Visconti at a moment of great
peril, and was compelled to devote any interval of peace with Venice, not to
the increase of her wealth and the augmentation of her fleet, but to efforts
for the recovery of that freedom she had surrendered. Genoa could only stand by
and watch with jealous eyes the reconstitution of her antagonist.
The steady
advance of Venice brought about the final rupture. On the threat that they
would join the Sultan Murad I and expel the Emperor John Palaeologus from his
throne, the Venetians wrung from the Emperor the concession of the island of
Tenedos. The position of that island, commanding the mouth of the Dardanelles,
made it intolerable to the Genoese that it should pass into the hands of their
enemies. War was declared again in 1378. In the following year Vettor Pisani,
the Venetian commander, was utterly defeated at Pola, though the Genoese lost
their admiral in the battle. This delayed their attack on the Lagoons; and
while they awaited the arrival of a new commander, the panic in Venice subsided
and the Republic set to work to protect the home waters from an assault which
seemed imminent day by day. In July Pietro Doria, the Genoese admiral,
reconnoitered Chioggia, and it was clear that he intended to make that Lagoon
city his head-quarters and thence to blockade and starve Venice to surrender.
Chioggia lay close to the mainland, and Doria counted on abundant supplies from
Francesco Carrara, Lord of Padua, who was at that time at open war with the
Republic and blockading her on the land side. But Chioggia had yet to be
captured.
On August 11,
1379, the assault began and was renewed till the 18th, when the town fell into
the hands of the Genoese. Carrara urged Doria to push on at once to Venice,
only about twenty miles away; and had he done so there can be little doubt but
that the flag of St George of Genoa would have floated in the Piazza, and
Carrara would have carried out his threat of biting and bridling the horses on
St Mark’s. But the Genoese admiral decided to abide by his plan of a blockade
and his decision proved the salvation of Venice. At Venice, in the face of this
imminent peril, the whole population displayed coolness, courage and tenacity.
The magistrates forewent their pay; new imposts were borne without complaint;
the people, invited to express their wishes on the question of continuing the
war, replied: “Let us man every vessel in Venice and go to fight the foe”.
The public voice
designated Vettor Pisani as leader, in spite of the disastrous defeat he had
suffered at Pola, and the government withdrew their own candidate, Taddeo
Giustinian. Thirty-four galleys were put together, and Pisani took the command.
Meanwhile Doria had resolved to withdraw his whole fleet into Chioggia for
winter quarters. Pisani grasped the situation and seized the opportunity. He
resolved to blockade the blockaders. All the channels which gave egress from
Chioggia to the sea were rendered useless by sinking across them galleys filled
with stones. Pisani then drew up his fleet in the open sea opposite the
Chioggian entrance to the Lagoons, in order to intercept any reinforcements
which might be sent from Genoa. The Genoese in Chioggia were all the while
straining every nerve to break through Pisani’s lines; his crews were kept on
guard by turns day and night; it was winter time, and a storm from the east or
south-east might easily spring up such as would probably drive Pisani on to the
lee shore. The strain on the Venetians was very great. But just when they were
on the point of abandoning the blockade, Carlo Zeno’s fleet, which had been
cruising down the Adriatic, hove in sight. The reinforcements enabled Pisani to
land troops and to occupy the point of Brondolo, whence his two great guns, the Trevisana and the Vittoria, opened on the town. A shot from one
of them brought down the Campanile and killed the Genoese admiral Doria. His
successor, Napoleone Grimaldi, withdrew all his troops into Chioggia, and
abandoned the design of cutting a new canal from the Lagoons to the sea. Carlo
Zeno with a company of mercenaries disembarked on the mainland and eventually
succeeded in cutting off the supplies which Carrara was sending into Chioggia.
The Genoese began building light boats in which they hoped to be able to sail
over the obstacles in the channels that led to the Adriatic. Twice they
attempted a sortie and failed. Famine came to close the long list of their
disasters, and on June 24t, 1380, the Genoese fleet surrendered to Venice.
The successful
issue of the war of Chioggia left the Republic of Venice the supreme naval
Power in the Mediterranean. Genoa never recovered from the blow. She fell a
prey to internal feuds, and in 1396 she renounced her independence, receiving
from Charles VI of France a governor who ruled the State in French interests.
Venetian predominance in the Mediterranean was confirmed by the recovery of
Corfu in 1386, and by the purchase of Argos and Nauplia in the Peloponnese. But
at the very moment when her power seemed indisputably established a new and
formidable rival began to loom on the horizon. Sultan Bayazid's victory at
Nikopolis in 1392 planted a Muslim mosque and a Cadi in Constantinople and presaged
for Venice that long series of wars, which were destined eventually to drain
her resources and to rob her of her maritime supremacy.
The expansion of
Venice on the mainland of Italy began somewhat later than the creation of her
maritime dominion, and was in a certain way the result of that dominion. The
Republic was originally a sea-Power whose merchants brought to her port the
various products of Eastern countries, all de transmarinis partibus
orientalium divitias. The geographical position of Venice as the seaport
nearest to the centre of Europe indicated her as a great emporium and mart for
the distribution and exchange of goods; and, further, her situation in the
shallow waters of the Lagoons gave her a monopoly of salt. Cassiodorus,
Theodoric’s secretary, when describing the growing State, points to salt as the
real riches of the young Republic; “for men may live without gold”, he says,
“but no one ever heard of their being able to do without salt”. Venice however
required an outlet for her commodities; and this led at first to the
establishment of factories in the districts of Belluno and Treviso, along the
banks of the Piave and on one of the highroads into the heart of Europe (991),
and subsequently at Ferrara (1100), and again at Fano (1130).
But these
factories did not, strictly speaking, constitute territorial possessions. They
were merely colonies of Venetian merchants living in foreign cities under
special treaty rights which conferred extra-territoriality on the Venetian
quarter. Indeed, the early policy of the Republic was to keep as far aloof as
possible from all the complications of the Italian mainland. Her real interests
lay in the East, in the Levant, in Constantinople, in Syria. Her character was
oriental rather than Latin. When Pippin, the son of Charles the Great,
attempted to compel the Republic to recognize the Frankish suzerainty he
received for answer: “We are subject of the king of the Romans (Byzantium) and
not yours”; and to the spirit of that answer the Venetians remained faithful
throughout their early career.
It is not till
the year 1300 that the Republic took a decisive and acquisitive step on the
Italian mainland. In Ferrara, as we have seen, Venice had established a
commercial colony protected by treaty rights. These were swept away when
Salinguerra held the city for the Emperor Frederick II, who was hostile to
Venice on account of the part she was playing in the Lombard League, for which
she acted as banker. Pope Gregory IX, while endeavoring to recover the city,
which he claimed as part of Countess Matilda's legacy to the Church, applied to
Venice for help. The Republic was largely instrumental in expelling the
Imperial troops and recovered all her privileges and interests in the mainland
city. These privileges and interests were destined to entangle her in the
complications of mainland politics.
The d'Este family
was established at Ferrara and held it as a fief of the Holy See. But the
Republic had been growing steadily in wealth, and strength, thanks to her
expansion in the Levant and to the consolidation of her constitution as an
oligarchy by the closing of the Great Council in 1297. She had before her the
example of other lordships rising to power on the mainland, Scala, Visconti,
Carrara, all in her neighborhood. It seems certain from the attitude of the
Doge, Pietro Gradenigo, that the government entertained the idea of taking the
place of the d'Este should a fitting occasion present itself. That moment
appeared to have arrived when Azzo d'Este lay on his death-bed. The Republic
sent three nobles to Ferrara with instructions to see that the succession was
directed in a way consonant with its aims. Azzo had no legitimate offspring;
the d'Este succession seemed likely to pass through his brothers Francesco and
Aldobrandino. But Azzo had a bastard named Fresco who had a son Folco; and Azzo
named Folco his heir. On his death the uncles of Folco tried to unseat him and
his father Fresco, who in his straits applied for help to Venice which was
given. But now the Pope, as overlord, claimed the right to direct the
succession and sent his troops into Ferrara to support Francesco and to take
over the city in the name of the Church. Thereupon Fresco in the name of his
son Folco ceded to Venice Folco’s claims in Ferrara. The papal troops entered
the city; but the Venetians held the fortress and commanded the town. The Pope
ordered the Venetians to evacuate the castle. The Doge's speech on this
occasion clearly indicates the political conceptions of the party in power and
points most emphatically to an expansion of Venice on the mainland of Italy.
Gradenigo urged that it was the duty of a loyal citizen to lose no opportunity
for the aggrandizement of his native State. In spite of opposition the Doge’s
policy carried the day, and it was resolved to retain Ferrara. On March 27,
1309, the Pope launched the excommunication and interdict. The clergy were
ordered to leave Venetian territory. But, more than this, the jealousy of
Venice which had been roused by her expansion and preponderance in the Levant
broke loose now; under the papal sanction, in England, in Asia Minor, in Italy,
Venetian merchants were threatened in their lives and despoiled of their goods.
The government held firm and ordered its officers in Ferrara to withdraw into
the castle, promising relief from Venice. But plague broke out in the city. The
papal arms pressed the castle closer and closer, till it fell and all the
Venetians were put to the sword. These disasters precipitated the great
conspiracy of Bajamonte Tiepolo -with which we shall deal when discussing the
Venetian constitution- and in 1311 the Republic made its peace with the Pope,
paid an indemnity, and received permission to resume its trading rights in
Ferrara.
This first
attempt of Venice to establish herself in possession of mainland territory
proved a failure. But the rise of the great Lords of Verona, Padua, Milan, the
Scala, Carraresi, and Visconti, and the struggles which took place between
them, could not fail to disturb the quiet of the Lagoons and to draw Venice
once more into the mesh of Italian politics. It was impossible for Venice to be
indifferent to events which were affecting cities so close to herself and so
necessary for her commerce as Padua and Treviso.
Padua, thanks
chiefly to the ability of Jacopo da Carrara, had made herself mistress of
Vicenza, and had thus been brought into close proximity with the possessions of
the powerful family of della Scala, Lords of Verona. The Paduans in return for
Jacopo’s services elected him as her Lord. When Jacopo da Carrara died, Can
Grande della Scala attacked Marsilio da Carrara, who had succeeded his uncle,
and wrung from him Padua and the Padovano; thence the Scala spread to Feltre,
Belluno, and the territory at the foot of the Alps, and finally Treviso came to
their possession in 1329. The Republic of Venice could not be indifferent to
the growth of a Power which threatened to enclose the Lagoons and to block all
exits for Venetian merchandise. Moreover her natural position rendered her
incapable of supporting herself if food supplies from the mainland were cut
off. A contingency of this kind, if it should happen to coincide with such a
defeat at sea as Venice had sustained at Curzola or Sapienza, would, in a very
short time, have placed the Republic at the discretion of her enemies. It was
obvious therefore that Venice was face to face with a rival whom she must
either crush or be ruined. War was inevitable.
The crisis was of
vital importance to the Republic. It is true that in the War of Ferrara she had
made an attempt to establish herself on the mainland; but in attacking the Lord
of Verona, Vicenza, Brescia, Treviso, Feltre, Belluno, and Padua she was
embarking on a far more serious enterprise. Failure meant peril to her very
existence; success would compel her to occupy the nearer mainland and therefore
to sacrifice one of her great advantages, the absence of a mainland frontier to
protect. The party of the Doge, the party opposed to the War, was met and
overcome by the argument that war was the only alternative to starvation; the
want of corn for feeding the city could not be supplied in any other way.
Moreover it was urged that if Venice once attacked the Scala she would be
joined by all who were jealous of the growing power of Verona and its Lords. Such
proved to be the case. The declaration of war by Venice at once created so
strong a combination -Florence, Parma, and Venice- that Mastino della Scala was
forced to negotiate for peace. With singular want of judgment he chose as his
ambassador to Venice Marsilio da Carrara, the very man whom the Scala had
already deprived of the lordship of Padua. That lordship the Doge promised to
restore to the Carraresi, if Marsilio would admit the troops of the league into
Padua, which he held in the name of Mastino della Scala. Marsilio kept his
word, and in August, 1337, Pietro de’ Rossi, general of the confederate forces,
entered the city.
For her own part,
the Republic by the peace of 1338, thus gained possession of the marches of
Treviso, with the districts of Bassano, Castelfranco, Conegliano and Oderzo,
her first mainland possession; and the family of Carrara held Padua, which had
been captured in the name of the Republic as a quasi-fief of Venice. She was
now in command of a corn-growing district and was sure of an abundant meat
supply. But on the other hand the mainland frontier which she now acquired
exposed her to attack from the Patriarch of Aquileia or the Counts of Gorz;
while she was bound to protect her dependent Carrara beyond whom lay the
growing power and ambition of the Visconti of Milan. An attack on Carrara was
necessarily a threat to Venice, and in fact if not in appearance the Republic
had by the fall of the Scala become conterminous with Visconti.
First
possessions on the mainland. The dangers of expansion. [1369-81
We have seen how
the Republic dealt with her maritime colonies, especially in the instance of
Crete; we may now observe her method towards her newly acquired mainland
possessions. Her mild and provident sway was fruitful of many results favorable
to the Republic, and it brought her dependencies back to her of their own
accord after the disastrous wars of the League of Cambray. To use the words of
the Senate, the Republic of Venice in her relations towards her dependencies
set herself to provide taliter quod habeamus cor et amorem civium et
subditorum nostrorum, and she succeeded. Her rule was just, lenient and
wise. Alike in her maritime and in her mainland acquisitions her object was to
interfere as little as might be with local institutions, provided her own
tenure and the supremacy of the capital were maintained. In each of the more
important dependent cities she placed a civil governor, called the Podestà, and
a military commandant, called the Captain, whose duty it was to raise levies
and look after the defense of the city; these two when acting together were
called the Rectors. The local municipal councils, varying in numbers, were left
undisturbed and retained the control of such matters as lighting, roads, local
taxation. The police and imperial taxation were in the hands of the Rectors,
and they were in constant communication either with the Senate, or, in very
grave emergencies, with the Council of Ten. The smaller towns were governed by
a Podestá, a Capitano, or a Proveditore. Each town possessed its own special
code, called the Statuto, which the Rectors swore to observe. The Statuto dealt
with octroi dues, roads and bridges, wells, lighting, doctors, nurses, fires,
guilds, sanitary matters, in short with all the multifarious details of
municipal and even of private life. Peace, encouragement of trade, and comfort
of living were the chief objects aimed at. In the Courts of Justice the Podestà
or one of his three assessors merely presided; he did not constitute the Court,
which was composed of citizens. Provision was made for public instruction in
the humanities, in canon and civil law, and in medicine; primary education was
supplied by what were called schools of arithmetic. The cost of education was
charged on the revenues of the province.
The expansion of
Venice on the mainland, while it increased the prestige of the Republic,
likewise augmented her dangers. Hitherto she had been engaged in a duel with
Genoa for supremacy at sea. No other Italian Power had any motive for interfering
in the combat. But now that Venice had acquired a mainland territory she became
possessed of something that her mainland neighbors coveted, and of which they
were ready to despoil her if occasion offered. Thus during the final phases of
her war with Genoa we find the Republic called upon to face Carrara and
Hungary, banded together with Genoa to destroy the mighty city of the Lagoons
(1369). Louis I, King of Hungary, was ready to attack Venetian mainland
territory with a view to wringing from the Republic a renunciation of Dalmatia.
The Counts of Gorz viewed with alarm Venetian expansion eastward and were ready
to join the Hungarians. The Carraresi, though restored to the lordship of Padua
by the Republic, were impatient under the suzerainty which Venice imposed, and
were aspiring to an absolute independence; they too joined the Hungarians. From
their conduct at this moment Venice learned that she would not be safe until
Padua was in her possession; and thus she found that having once touched the mainland
she could not stop, but was, by the very nature of the situation, forced
further and further into the Italian terra ferma, and along a line of
action which was destined to land her in the disasters of Cambray.
It was obvious
that Carrara would not remain quiet if he found an opportunity of attacking
Venice with any prospect of success. Such an occasion presented itself in the
War of Chioggia (1379). Carrara assisted the Genoese by all the means in his
power; he bombarded Mestre and maintained the land blockade of Venice; he sent
twenty-four thousand troops to the neighborhood of Chioggia, and supplied the
Genoese forces when they took up their quarters in that town. But the surrender
of the Genoese left Carrara single-handed against Venice. lie was still in
possession of the Trevisan marches and was pressing Treviso so closely that its
fall was momently expected. Rather than allow it to pass into the hands of
Carrara, Venice made a formal surrender of the city to Duke Leopold of Austria,
who immediately occupied it. All parties, however, were weary of the war.
Venice was exhausted by her continual struggles against Hungary, Carrara,
Genoa; Carrara disgusted at being baulked of Treviso; Genoa crushed by the loss
of her fleet. Amadeo of Savoy found little difficulty in negotiating the Peace
of Turin (1381).
That Peace left
Venice little cause for self-congratulation. She resigned Tenedos, the
occupation of which had been the immediate cause of the War of Chioggia; she
lost Dalmatia; Treviso she had surrendered to Duke Leopold of Austria; on the
mainland all that she now possessed was a narrow strip of territory round the
edge of the Lagoon. But the respite granted by the peace was devoted to the
reestablishment of commerce and trade. Petrarch, from his windows on the Riva
degli Schiavoni, noted the extraordinary movement of the port: the huge vessels
“as large as my house, and with masts taller than its towers”. They lay like
mountains floating on the waters; and their cargoes were wine for England; honey
for Scythia; saffron, oil, linen for Assyria, Armenia, Persia, and Arabia; wood
went to Egypt and Greece. They brought home again various merchandise to be
distributed over all Europe. “Where the sea stops the sailors quit their ships
and travel on to trade with India and China. They cross the Caucasus and the
Ganges and reach the Eastern Ocean”.
And in the
history of Venetian mainland extension there was one task to which all this
accumulation of wealth and resources was to be dedicated; the destruction of
the Carraresi and the acquisition of Padua. Venice knew that the Lords of Padua
were permanently hostile. The action of Francesco Carrara soon proved that the
Republic could not, even if it would, leave him alone. In 1384 Carrara bought
from the Duke of Austria, Treviso, Ceneda, and Feltre, commanding the great
northern road into the Pusterthal by Cortina d'Ampezzo; he was now master of
all the mainland between the Alps and the Lagoons; nothing remained for him to
seize in that direction. But westward, between him and the Visconti of Milan,
lay the territories of Vicenza and Verona, feebly held by Antonio, the last of
the Scala family. Visconti and Carrara entered into a league to despoil
Antonio. Verona was to be added to Milan, Vicenza to Padua. The attack was
delivered simultaneously and Visconti's general entered Verona, but instead of
halting there he pushed on to Vicenza, and captured that city in his master’s
name. When too late Carrara saw what his alliance with Visconti implied. He
appealed to Venice for help. But although the Republic had no desire to see the
powerful Lord of Milan so near the Lagoons, she had still less intention of
supporting Carrara whom she knew to be treacherous. Visconti's emissaries were
already in Venice offering to restore Treviso, Ceneda, and Feltre if the
Republic would assist him to crush Carrara. The terms were accepted and Padua
fell to Visconti.
Such a powerful
prince as Gian Galeazzo was not likely to prove a less dangerous neighbour to
Venice than Carrara had been. But his rapid advance in power, and his obvious
intention to create a North-Italian kingdom, immediately produced a coalition
against him of all the threatened Princes. Venice joined the league but she had
no intention of challenging Visconti on the mainland herself; she adopted a
less costly plan and invited the Carraresi to return to Padua promising to
support their enterprise; Sir John Hawkwood, the Florentine General, was
pressing Visconti on the Adda; Visconti's forces were scattered; the Paduans weary
of his rule rose in revolt and the Carraresi recovered possession of their city
(1390).
The Peace of
Genoa which ensued (1392) was highly satisfactory to Venice. Without any cost
to herself she had recovered Treviso, Ceneda, Feltre, and consequently the
passes; she had removed Visconti from the immediate neighborhood of the
Lagoons; and replaced him by a Carrara whom dread of Visconti would certainly
keep submissive to his protector. But in 1402 Gian Galeazzo died suddenly, and
the whole aspect of the situation underwent a change. The reason for Carrara’s
loyalty to Venice, his dread of Visconti, disappeared. The value of Carrara to
Venice, as a buffer between herself and Visconti, no longer existed. The moment
had arrived for Venice to consolidate her landed possessions by the absorption
of Padua. The pretext was soon found. The Visconti possessions were now held by
his Duchess as regent for Gian Galeazzo’s infant children. The Duchess was
weak. Gian Galeazzo’s generals began to divide their late master's dominions.
This dissolution of the Visconti duchy roused the cupidity of Carrara. He
claimed Vicenza and had an eye on Verona. He sat down before Vicenza; but the
people, weary of the uneasy, shifting rule of these personal Lords, Scala,
Visconti, Carrara, declared that if they must yield to someone, they would hand
their city over to Venice. Moreover the Duchess had already invited Venice to
hold Carrara in check and the Republic had demanded as the price of her
interference Bassano, Vicenza, Verona. The Duchess consented. Armed with this
double title, Venice requested Carrara to raise the siege of Vicenza. He
refused, and mutilated the Venetian herald by cropping his ears and slitting
his nose. War was declared. Carrara was gradually beaten back into Padua. A
long siege followed. Carrara held out with great courage, hoping that aid might
come from Florence, and that his partisans in Venice might succeed in carrying
into effect a plot which they had concerted in that city. But the plague and
the fury of the populace broke down his pertinacity. The Venetians delivered an
assault and with the help of the people they entered the town (November 17,
1404). Francesco and his son were taken to Venice, where they were tried and
condemned to be strangled.
As the defeat of
Genoa secured Venetian maritime supremacy, so the fall of the Carraresi
consolidated her mainland possessions. She now held Treviso, Padua, Vicenza,
Verona, and their districts. The boundaries of the Republic were, roughly
speaking, the sea from the mouth of the Tagliamento to the mouth of the Adige,
the river Tagliamento to the east, the Alps to the north, the Adige to the west
and south. This territory she retained with brief exceptions, down to the
League of Cambray. She now entered the community of Italian States and enjoyed
all the prestige, but also confronted all the dangers, of an Italian
principality.
On the sea the
Turk was already in sight; on the mainland the Visconti of Milan, with their
claim to Verona and Vicenza, had to be faced. But before proceeding to narrate
the history of the full-grown Republic during the period of her greatest
brilliancy, we must consider for a moment two important points, her relations
to the Church, and the nature of the Venetian constitution which played so
striking a part in the creation and preservation of her glory.
The political
independence of the early Venetian State is reflected in her relations towards
the Roman Church. The fact that, through the first centuries of her career, she
was in closer touch with the Eastern Empire than with the Italian mainland,
conduced to that independent attitude towards the Curia which characterizes the
whole of Venetian history.
Some flavor of an
ecclesiastical quality seems to have attached to the office of Doge; we find
that on certain great occasions he bestowed his benediction, and the earlier
Doges claimed the right to nominate and to invest Bishops. This right was,
however, challenged at Rome.
The head of the
Church in Venice was the Patriarch of Grado. That See had been called into
existence by the same causes which created the city of Venice itself. When
Aquileia was destroyed by Attila, the Patriarch of that city and his flock
found an asylum in the Lagoons of Grado. After the return to Aquileia a Bishop
was left behind in the Lagoon City, and his flock was continually increased
-partly by the schism of the Three Chapters which divided the mainland Church,
partly by refugees from the repeated barbarian incursions. The Bishop of Grado
obtained from Pope Pelagius II a decree which erected his See into the
Metropolitan Church of the Lagoons and of Istria, though Aquileia disputed the
validity of the act. During the Lombard invasion and under the Lombard
protection the mainland Bishoprics became Arian, the Lagoon See remained
orthodox. The Metropolitan of Grado then claimed that his See was the real
Patriarchal See of the Lagoons in opposition to Arian and heretical Aquileia. A
long series of struggles between the two Patriarchates ensued. The Republic of
Venice supported the Lagoon Bishopric. Finally the Lateran Council in 732
decreed the separation of the two jurisdictions, assigning to Aquileia all the
mainland and to Grado the Lagoons and Istria, and recognized the Patriarchal
quality of that See. In 1445 the seat of the Patriarch as well as his title was
changed from Grado to Venice and the Beato Lorenzo Giustinian was the first
Patriarch of Venice, an office henceforth always filled by a Venetian noble.
The Cathedral
Church of Venice was San Pietro di Castello, not St Mark's. That magnificent
basilica was technically the Doge’s private chapel, and was served by the
Doge's chaplain, called the Primiciero, and a chapter of canons; an
arrangement not without significance, for the shrine of the patron Saint of
Venice, the most splendid monument in the city, the home of its religion, was
thereby declared to belong to the State, not to the Curia Romana, whose outward
and visible abode was that comparatively insignificant building San Pietro di
Castello, at the extreme north-eastern corner of the City.
The anti-Curial
attitude of the Republic is obvious all down her history. In 1309, during the
War of Ferrara, when Venice was lying under an interdict, the Doge Gradenigo
enunciated the principle that the Papacy had no concern in temporal affairs,
and that a misinformed Pope could not claim obedience.
She again
asserted her adherence to the Conciliar principle when in 1409 she recognized
Alexander V, the Pope elected by the Council of Pisa, against her own citizen
Gregory XII (Angelo Correr), who was deposed by that Council; and yet again
when she sent three ambassadors to the Council of Constance, who solemnly
pledged the Republic to accept its decrees. By these acts she accepted the
principle that Councils are superior to Popes, from whom an appeal may lie to a
future Council; as well as the doctrine that an appeal may lie from a Pope
ill-informed to a Pope better informed. In spite of “Execrabilis” the Republic
more than once availed herself of these rights. When Sixtus IV placed the
Republic under an interdict during the Ferrarese war in 1483, Diedo, the
Venetian Ambassador in Rome, refused to send the bull to Venice. The Patriarch
was instructed to present it to the government; he feigned to be ill, and
secretly informed the Doge and the Ten that the bull was in Venice. The Ten
ordered all clerics to continue their functions, and announced their intention
to appeal to a future Council. Five experts in Canon Law were appointed to
advise the government, and the formula of appeal was actually fixed on the
doors of San Celso in Home.
Again, in 1509,
Julius II, preparing for the combined attack of all Europe upon Venice, placed
the Republic under an interdict by the bull of April 27. The College and the
Council of Ten which undertook to deal with the situation, forbade the
publication of the bull, the guards were ordered to tear it down if it were
affixed to the walls; doctors in Canon Law were again appointed to advise, and
once again an appeal to a future Council was affixed, this time to the doors of
St Peter’s in Rome.
The position of
the Church in Venice as defined by the close of the fourteenth century was as
follows. The parish clergy were elected by the clergy and the people, and
inducted by the Ordinary. Bishops were elected in the Senate. Candidates were
balloted for until one obtained a majority. He was then presented at Rome for
confirmation. But in 1484 the Senate decreed that the temporal fruits should
not fall to anyone who was not approved of by the government. This really made
the State master of the situation; and its position was further strengthened by
a law of 1488 rendering all foreigners ineligible for the episcopate.
Venetian nobles
who were beneficed were excluded from the Maggior Consiglio; and when ecclesiastical
matters were under discussion in the Maggior Consiglio or the Senate all
members who were related to any one holding an appointment from the Curia were
obliged to retire. The minutes were marked expulsis papalistis.
The excessive
accumulation of Church property had been regulated by a law passed as early as
1286, which provided that all legacies to monastic establishments must be
registered, and the property taxed like any other.
Lay
and ecclesiastical jurisdiction.
The question of
the jurisdiction of the secular Courts over ecclesiastics was a fruitful source
of differences with the Curia. Originally it would seem that clerics were
subject to the secular Courts in civil as well as in criminal cases. Jacopo
Tiepolo granted jurisdiction to the Bishops but reserved punishment to the
secular Courts. This arrangement gave rise to constant disputes, and in 1324 a
commission was appointed to draw up regulations on the question. Finally a
convention was reached between the Patriarch of Grado and the secular
authorities, whereby it was agreed that in the case of injury done by a cleric
to a laic the secular Courts should denounce the offender to the ecclesiastical
Courts, which should try and sentence him in accordance with existing laws; and
vice versa in the case of injury inflicted by a laic on a cleric. By the bull
of Paul II in 1468 those clerics who had been tonsured after the committal of a
crime with a view to securing benefit of clergy were handed over by the Church
to the secular Courts; so too were the clerics caught in flagrante and
unfrocked. Sixtus IV, in view of the growing frequency of crime, especially of
counterfeit coining and of conspiracy on the part of clerics, instructed the
Patriarch to hand over all such offenders to the secular Courts, but to assist
at the trial in the person of his Vicar.
The independent
attitude of the Republic in matters ecclesiastical is illustrated once again in
the position occupied by the Inquisition at Venice. When the Pope, with a view
to crushing the Albigensian and Patarinian heresies, endeavored to establish
everywhere in Italy the Dominican Inquisition, the Republic resisted its
introduction into Venice. But in 1249, in the reign of the Doge Morosini, the
Holy Office was admitted, though only in a modified form. The State charged
itself to discover heretics, who when caught were examined by the Patriarch,
the Bishop of Castello, or any other Venetian Ordinary. The examining Court was
confined to a return of fact. It was called on to state whether the examinee
was or was not guilty of heresy. Punishment was reserved to the secular
authority. This arrangement did not satisfy the Court of Rome, and in 1289 a
modification took place. An Inquisitor was appointed by the Pope, but he
required the Doge's exequatur before he could act, and a board was created of
three Venetian nobles, to sit as assessors to the Holy Office. Their duty was
to guard the rights of Venetian citizens against ecclesiastical encroachment;
without their presence and their sanction no act of the Holy Office was valid
in Venice. The archive of the Sant' Uffizio is now open to inspection. Heresy
was not the sole crime submitted to the jurisdiction of this Court; witchcraft
and scandalous living furnished a large number of cases; but among all the
trials for heresy pure and simple only six cases of capital punishment can be
found, which were in each instance to be carried out by drowning or
strangulation, and in none by fire. The Inquisition in Venice was certainly no
sanguinary Office, thanks no doubt in a large degree to the independent
attitude of the State, which insisted upon the presence of lay assessors at
every trial.
But a large part
of this independence in matters ecclesiastical, along with much else, was
sacrificed at the disastrous epoch of Cambray. In order to detach Julius from
the League, the Venetians agreed to the following conditions. The Republic
renounced its appeal to a future Council, acknowledged the justice of the
excommunication; abolished the taxes on ecclesiastical property; surrendered
its right to nominate Bishops; consigned criminous clerics to ecclesiastical
Courts; granted free passage in the Adriatic to papal subjects. But in secret
the Council of Ten entered a protest against all these concessions and declared
that their assent was invalid, as it had been extorted by violence, a
reservation of which Venice availed herself in her subsequent struggle with
Pope Paul V, when, championed and directed by Fra Paolo Sarpi, the Republic
undertook to defend the rights of secular princes against the claims of the
Curia Romana.
The Venetian
constitution, which, on account of its stability and efficiency, compelled the
envy and admiration of all Italian and numerous foreign statesmen, was a
product of the growth of Venice, slowly evolved to meet the growing needs of
the growing State.
Democratic in its
origin, the constitution of the Lagoon islands was at first a loose
confederation of the twelve principal townships each governed by its Tribune;
all the Tribunes meeting together for the discussion and discharge of business
which affected the whole Lagoon commonwealth. The jealousies and quarrels of
the townships and their Tribunes led to the creation of a single supreme
magistrate, the Doge. The Doge was elected in the Concione, or assembly of the
entire Venetian people; his was a democratic magistracy in its first intention;
but it soon became apparent that there was considerable danger lest the Doge
should attempt to establish an hereditary tyranny. Any such effort was resented
by the people and resulted in the murder, blinding, or expulsion of several of
the earlier Doges. On the other hand, as the State developed and pushed out
beyond the Lagoon boundaries, across to the Dalmatian coast, down the Adriatic,
and away eastward, the more able and enterprising citizens began to accumulate
wealth, and a division of classes made itself apparent, more especially after
such periods of expansion as the reign of Pietro II, Orseolo, the capture of
Tyre, and the Fourth Crusade. This wealthier class gradually drew together and
formed the nucleus of a plutocracy. The policy of this powerful class,
embracing as it did all the leading citizens, naturally pursued the lines along
which Venetian constitutional development consistently moved. This policy had a
twofold object: first, to curtail the ducal authority; secondly, to exclude the
people, and to concentrate all power in the hands of the commercial
aristocracy. The history of the Venetian constitution is the history of the way
in which the dominant party attained its ends.
The primitive
machinery of the Venetian Republic consisted, as we have seen, of the General
Assembly and the Doge. Very soon, however, under the pressure of business, two
ducal Councillors were added to aid the Doge in the discharge of his
ever-growing obligations. Further, it became customary though not necessary,
that he should invite (pregare) some of the more prominent citizens to
assist him with their advice upon grave occasions, and hence the name of what
was eventually known as the Consiglio dei Pregadi, the Venetian Senate.
But
constitutional machinery of so simple a nature could not prove adequate to the
requirements of a State whose growth was as rapid as that of Venice. In 1172
the disastrous conclusion of the campaign against the Emperor Manuel, into
which the Republic had rushed at the bidding of the Concione or General
Assembly, called the attention of Venetians to their constitution and its
defects. It seemed to them that reforms were required on two grounds: first,
because the position of the Doge was too independent, considering his
discretionary powers as to whether and as to whom he would ask for advice;
secondly, because the people in their General Assembly had become too numerous,
unruly and rash to allow of their being safely entrusted with the fortunes of
their country. A deliberative assembly of manageable size was required; and its
establishment implied a definition of the Doge’s authority on the one hand and
of the popular rights on the other. The evolution of these two ideas forms the
problem of Venetian constitutional history down to the year 1297, when that
constitution became stereotyped as a close oligarchy after the famous “Closing
of the Great Council”.
The reforms of
the year 1172 were threefold:
(1) In order to
create a manageable deliberative assembly each sestiere of the city was
required to elect two representatives; and each couple in their turn nominated
forty of the more prominent members of their district. Thus a body of four
hundred and eighty members was created. They held office for one year and at
the end of the first year the General Assembly itself named the two nominating
representatives of each sestiere. The functions of this new Assembly
were to appoint all officers of State and to prepare business to be submitted
to the General Assembly. This is virtually the germ of the Maggior Consiglio (the Great Council), the basis of the Venetian oligarchical constitution.
It had its origin in a double necessity: that of limiting the electorate,
and that of securing adequate deliberation and debate in a rapidly growing
State. Its prime function of appointing to office belonged to it from the
first. Its origin was democratic, for it sprang from election by the whole
people; but an element of a close oligarchy was contained in the provision
whereby the Assembly itself at the end of the first and of all subsequent years
elected the twelve representatives of the six quarters of the city.
(2) The Doge
continued to summon the Pregadi to assist him; but seeing that the newly
created Council undertook election to office and many matters of internal
policy, foreign affairs were chiefly reserved for the Senate; though that body
did not become organized and permanent till the Tiepoline reforms of 1229-44.
(3) With a view
to restricting the Doge’s authority, four Councillors were added to the two
already existing. Their duty was to check any attempt at personal
aggrandizement on the part of the Doge; and gradually the ducal authority was
withdrawn from the chief of the State and placed as it were, in commission in
his Council. The coronation oath or promissione of the Doge was
subjected to constant modification in the direction of restricting his
authority, till at last the Doge himself lost much of his original weight. As
his supreme power was withdrawn from him, bit by bit, the pomp and ceremony
surrounding him were steadily increased.
These reforms of
1172 display the inherent nature of the Venetian constitution. The ducal
authority is gradually curtailed; the Council shows a tendency to become a
close oligarchy; the people are removed from the centre of government, although
the complete disfranchisement of the mass of the population was not effected at
once. The newly appointed Council did indeed endeavour to elect a chief
magistrate without any appeal to the people, and a riot ensued which was only
quieted by the electors presenting the new Doge to the General Assembly with
the words “This is your Doge, as it please you”, a formula which deluded the
people into a belief that they still retained some voice in the election of the
Doge.
The tendency
displayed in the reforms of 1172 continued to make itself felt during the next
hundred years, until we come to the epoch of the Closing of the Great Council,
whereby Venice established her constitution as a close oligarchy.
The growing
wealth of the State, especially after the Fourth Crusade, served to increase
the influence of those families into whose hands the larger share of Venetian
commerce had already fallen. We find certain family names such as Contarini,
Morosini, Foscari, recurring more and more frequently and preponderating in the
Council which the law of 1172 had established. But the oligarchy was not closed
yet; the yearly election of forty members from each quarter might always bring
some new men to the front. The Closing of the Great Council, however, which
actually took place in 1297, is not to be regarded as a coup d’état; it
was rather the last step in a long process. In 1286 a motion had been made that
only those whose paternal ancestors had sat in the Great Council should be
eligible to that Council. The measure was rejected; but was brought up again
ten years later by the Doge Pietro Gradenigo, a strong partisan of the growing
oligarchy. The measure was again rejected; but early in the next year the Doge
succeeded in carrying the following resolutions:
(1) The Council
of Forty, that is the Judges of the Supreme Court, are to put up to ballot the
names of all who have, at any time during the last four years, had a seat in
the Great Council. Those who receive twelve votes and upwards are to be
included in the Great Council.
(2) On return
from absence abroad a fresh ballot is requisite.
(3) Three members
shall be appointed to submit names of new candidates for election. These
electors are to hold office for one year.
(4) The present
law may not be revoked, except with the consent of five out of six ducal
Councillors, twenty-five members of the Council of Forty, and two-thirds of the
Great Council.
The result of
these resolutions was to create a specially favored class, those who had during
the last four years sat in the Great Council. By the third resolution admission
to that caste was still left open; but the action of the Committee of three
soon completed the Serrata del Maggior Consiglio, and rendered the
oligarchy virtually a close caste; for they laid down for themselves the rule
that no one was eligible to the Great Council unless he could prove that a
paternal ancestor had sat in the Council subsequent to its creation in 1172. By
this regulation all those -and they were the vast majority- who had neither sat
themselves nor could prove that a paternal ancestor had sat in the Great
Council, were virtually disfranchised, for that Council was the root of
political life in the State, and exclusion from it meant political
annihilation. In 1315 a list of all those who were eligible for election was
compiled, and only legitimate children of parents belonging to the favored
class were allowed to appear in this register, known as the Golden Book. Thus
the Venetian aristocracy was created, and was established as the sole power in
the State.
The exclusion of
so many Venetians from all share in the government of their State led to the
only revolution which ever seriously endangered the Republic, the Conspiracy of
Bajamonte Tiepolo (1310). Thanks, however, to the decisive step then taken,
this conspiracy was crushed and the constitution of Venice was never again in
any grave peril. For it was at this moment of danger to the State that the
constitution received its final touches by the creation of the Council of Ten.
The accumulated
difficulties and dangers brought about by the War of Ferrara, the Interdict,
and the Tiepoline Conspiracy taught the Republic that the existing machinery of
the State was too cumbersome, too slow, too public, to meet and deal
successfully with extraordinary crises. A special committee to direct the
affairs of Ferrara had been appointed early during that War. When the movements
of Tiepolo and his fellow-conspirators, after their defeat, caused grave
anxiety to the government, it seemed that some more rapid, secret, and
efficient body than the Senate was required to track the operations of the
traitors and to watch over the safety of the State. It was accordingly proposed
that the Committee on Ferrarese affairs should be entrusted with the task
(1310). The proposal was rejected on the ground that the committee was fully
occupied. It was then suggested that the Great Council should elect ten of its
members, and the Doge, his Council, and the Supreme Court, should elect another
ten, and that from this body of twenty the Great Council should afterwards
elect ten; not more than one member of the same family might sit on the board, which
was at once entrusted with the protection of the public safety and the duty of
vigilance against the Tiepoline conspirators. The committee acted so admirably
and its services proved so valuable that its term of office, originally only
for a few months, was extended and it finally became permanent in 1335.
As eventually
modified the Council took the following shape and was governed by its own code
of procedure. The members were elected in the Great Council for one year only,
and were not re-eligible till a year had elapsed. Every month the Ten elected
three of its members as “Chiefs” (Capi). The “Chiefs” opened all
communications, prepared all business to be submitted to the Council, and acted
as its executive arm; they were obliged during their month of office to stay at
home, so as to avoid exposure to bribery or other illegitimate influences.
Besides the ten
actual members the Council included ex officio the Doge and his six
Councillors, to whom were added on very grave occasions a certain number of
prominent citizens, called the Zonta. Of the normal seventeen Councillors
twelve made up a quorum. One at least of the Law-officers of the State -the Avogadori
di comun- was always present, though without a vote, to prevent the Council
from taking any illegal step.
The sittings
opened with the reading of letters addressed to the Ten. Then followed the list
of denunciations which were either public, that is signed, or secret, that is
anonymous. If public, the Council voted whether they should take the accusation
into consideration; if four-fifths voted “Aye” the case was entered on the
agenda. If the denunciation was secret the Doge and his Council and the
“Chiefs” were bound, before the question of taking it up came forward, to
declare unanimously that the matter of the accusation was of public concern;
and such a declaration required confirmation by a vote of five-sixths of the
whole Council. This being obtained, the question of taking the matter into
consideration next arose, and was decided as in the case of public
denunciations. The denunciation list having been discharged, the first case on
the trial list then came on for hearing. The Law-officers of the State (Avogadori)
read a report on the case and submitted the form of warrant for arrest. The
Council voted "to proceed" or not. If the vote was affirmative the
warrant was issued and the Chiefs gave it execution. When the accused was in
the hands of the Ten, a sub-committee or Collegia, as it was called, was
appointed to draw up the case; they were empowered to use torture only by a
special vote. The presumption was against the prisoner; he was called on to
disprove the charge. He was confronted neither with his accuser nor with
witnesses. If he pleaded incapacity he was allowed to consult one of the official
advocates established in 1443. The report of the subcommittee was read to the
Council, and a vote was taken as to whether sentence should be pronounced. If
the vote was affirmative sentence was proposed, any member being free to move a
sentence or an amendment to one. On the result of the voting the fate of the
prisoner depended. In cases of crime committed outside Venice but within the
competence of the Ten, that Council could delegate its powers and procedure to
the local magistrates who sent in the minutes of the trial to the Chiefs.
With the Closing
of the Great Council and the establishment of the Council of Ten, the Venetian
constitution reached its maturity. Some slight developments, such as the
evolution of the Three Inquisitori di Stato, of the Esecutori contro
alia Bestemmia, and the Camerlenghi, took place it is true; but on
the whole the form was fixed, and it stood thus:
(1) The Great
Council contained the whole body politic. Out of it were elected almost all the
chief officers of State. At first it possessed legislative and even some
judicial powers, but these were gradually delegated to the Senate, or the Ten,
as the Council became unmanageable in size, until at last it was left with
hardly any attributes save its original chief function, that of the electorate
of the State.
(2) Above the
Great Council came the Senate, consisting nominally of one hundred and twenty
members, not including the Doge, his Council, the Judges of the Supreme Court,
and many other officials, who sat ex officio and raised its numbers higher. The
Senate was the great legislative body in the State; it also had the chief
direction of ordinary foreign affairs and of finance; it declared war, made
peace, received dispatches from ambassadors, and sent instructions. It possessed
a certain judicial authority which, however, was seldom exercised.
(3) Parallel with
the Senate, but outside the main lines of the constitution, came the Council of
Ten. It had been established as a committee of public safety to meet a crisis,
and to supply a defect in the constitution, the want of a rapid, secret,
executive arm. Its efficiency and rapidity led to a gradual substitution of the
Ten for the Senate upon many important occasions. An order of the Ten was as
binding as a law of the Senate. Ambassadors reported secretly to the Ten; and
the instructions of the Ten would carry more weight than those of the Senate.
The judicial functions of the Ten were far higher than those of the Senate; and
indeed in its capacity as a permanent committee of public safety and guardian
of public morals there were few departments of government or of private life
where its authority would have been disallowed.
(4) Above both
Senate and Ten came the cabinet or Collegia, It was composed of the Savii or Ministers. The six Savii grandi, the three Savii di terra ferma,
the three Savii agli ordini, the Secretaries, of finance, of war, and of
marine. The Savii grandi took their functions in turn week and week about. All
business of State passed through the hands of the Collegia and was prepared by
them to be submitted to the Great Council, the Senate or the Ten according to
the nature and importance of the matter. The Collegia was the initiatory body
in the State and also the executive arm of the Maggior Consiglio and the
Senate. The Ten, as we have stated, possessed an executive of its own in its
three Chiefs.
(5) Above the
Collegio came the lesser Council composed of the six ducal Councillors;
immediately connected with the Doge; both supervising him and representing him
in all his attributes. The Doge could do nothing without his Council; a
majority of the Council could perform all the ducal functions, without the
presence of the Doge.
(6) At the head
of all came the Doge himself; the point of greatest splendor though not of
greatest weight, the apex of the constitutional pyramid. He embodied and
represented the majesty of the State; his presence was necessary everywhere, in
the Great Council, in the Senate, in the Ten, in the College. He was the voice
of Venice and in her name he replied to all ambassadors. As a statesman long
practiced in affairs and intimately acquainted with the political machinery of
the Republic he could not fail to carry weight by his personality; and at a
crisis the election of a Doge, as in the case of Francesco Foscari or, later
still, as in the case of Leonardo Donato, might determine the course of events.
But theoretically he was a symbol, not a factor in the constitution; the
outward and visible sign of all that the oligarchy meant.
Such was the
Venetian constitution, which, thanks to its efficiency and strength, commanded
the admiration and the envy of Europe and enabled Venice to assume that high
place among the nations which was hers during the fifteenth century.
The
mercantile marine.
The fifteenth
century is the period of greatest splendor in the history of the Republic.
Mature in her constitution, and with a dominion firmly established by sea and
land, Venice presented a brilliant spectacle to the eyes of Europe. Yet this
period contains the germs of her decadence. Supreme in the Mediterranean by the
defeat of Genoa, Venice was almost immediately called upon to face the Turks
and to wear herself out in a long and single-handed contest with their growing
power; firmly planted on the mainland, the Republic discovered that, with
jealous neighbors around her and frontiers to be attacked, she could not stand
still; she was compelled to advance, and found herself exposed to all the
dangers implied in the use of mercenary arms, and committed to that policy of
aggression which summoned up against her the League of Cambray.
Her mainland
territory was probably a drain on the financial resources of the Republic, not
a fountain of wealth. That territory was only acquired and held by paying for
costly troops and more costly captains of adventure. It is doubtful whether the
revenue derived from the provinces covered the cost of possession and
administration. True, on occasion, the Republic applied to her land territories
for a loan, as in 1474, when 516,000 ducats were advanced to the government;
but the fact remains that the contentment of her mainland possessions was
essential to Venetian supremacy, and that this contentment could not be secured
if they were heavily taxed.
The real wealth
of Venice, the wealth which enabled her to adorn the Capital and retain her
provinces, depended upon the sea. It was derived from her traffic as a great
emporium and mart of exchange fed by a large mercantile marine. The State built
the ships and let them out to the highest bidder at auction. Every year six
fleets were organized and despatched:
(1) to the Black
Sea,
(2) to Greece and
Constantinople,
(3) to the Syrian
ports,
(4) to Egypt,
(5) to Barbary
and the north coast of Africa,
(6) to England
and Flanders.
The route and
general instructions for each fleet (muda) were carefully discussed in
the Senate. Every officer was bound by oath to observe these instructions and
to maintain on all occasions the honor of the Republic. The government
prescribed the number of the crew for each ship, the size of the anchors,
quality of rope, etc. A compulsory load-line was established. New vessels were
allowed to load above the line for the first three years, but to a diminishing
extent each year. The ships were all built upon government measurements for two
reasons; first, because ships of identical build would behave in the same way
under stress of weather and could more easily be kept together; secondly,
because the consuls in distant ports could be sure of keeping a refit of masts,
rudders, sails, etc., when they knew the exact build of all Venetian ships
which would touch their ports. The ships were convertible from merchantmen to
men-of-war; and this explains to a certain extent how Venice was able to
replace her fleets so rapidly after such losses as those of Curzola or Sapienza.
The six State fleets are estimated to have numbered 330 ships with crews to the
amount of 36,000 men.
Venetian commerce
covered the whole civilized world. The city was a great reservoir of
merchandise, constantly filled and constantly emptied again, with eastern
luxuries flowing westward and western commodities flowing east. Upon export and
import alike the government levied taxes (tavola delli entrada e tavola dell’
insida); these, with the salt monopoly and the taxation of the guilds (tansa
della milizia, tansa insensibile, etc.), furnished the main source of her
ordinary revenue, which in the year 1500 was estimated at 1,145,580 ducats. The
importance of the sea in the economy of Venice is obvious; but during the
fifteenth century her naval and commercial sea-power both received a fatal
blow. Wars with the Turks exhausted her fighting capacity and the discovery of
the Cape route to the Indies tended to divert the whole line of the world's
traffic from the Mediterranean into the Atlantic, out of the hands of the
Venetians into the hands of the Portuguese.
The century
opened, however, with a series of triumphs for the Republic. The development
and extension of her land empire continued; her prestige at sea increased.
Dalmatia, which the Republic had surrendered by the treaty of Turin, was
recovered after a struggle; and by 1420 Venice was in possession of the whole
of Friuli. Thanks to the mountainous frontier of the province this acquisition
gave the Republic a defensible position towards the east, where she had
hitherto been very weak; it largely increased her land empire and whetted her
appetite for more.
Nor was her
achievement by sea less brilliant. The quarrels among the sons of Sultan
Bayazid I ended in the concentration of the Ottoman power in the hands of
Mohammad (1413). Venice had no desire to embark on a campaign against the
victorious Turk. She hoped to trade with them, not to fight them, and, through
her ambassador Francesco Foscari, a treaty was signed whereby she believed
herself to have secured her colonies from molestation. But Mohammad was not
able, even if he desired, to prevent his followers from regarding all
Christians as dogs. Treaty or no treaty, they chased some Venetian merchantmen
into Negroponte and menaced the island. The Venetian admiral Loredan came to a
parley with the Turkish commander, at Gallipoli (1416). But while the leaders
were in consultation, the crews fell to, and a battle became inevitable. The Venetians
were brilliantly victorious; and the Republic secured an advantageous peace, as
well as the applause of Europe, only too ready to believe that it need not mind
about the Turk as long as Venice was there to fight him.
But
contemporaneously with this fresh expansion of Venice, by the conquest of
Friuli and the heightening of her prestige after the victory of Gallipoli,
events fraught with grave consequences for the Republic were maturing to the
west. On the sudden death of Gian Galeazzo Visconti (1402), his dominions had
been seized and partitioned by his generals. Gian Galeazzo’s son, Filippo
Maria, patiently, slowly, but surely, recovered the Visconti territories. In
this task he was greatly assisted by the military skill of Francesco Bussone,
called Carmagnola from his birthplace near Turin. By 1420 the task was
accomplished, and a Visconti was once more Lord of Milan, Cremona, Crema,
Bergamo, Brescia, and Genoa, as powerful as ever Gian Galeazzo had been and not
one whit less ambitious. Florence took alarm at Visconti's attitude and asked
Venice to join her in a league against Milan. The position was a difficult one
for the Republic; Filippo Maria was undeniably menacing and he had a claim in
virtue of his father's conquest to both Verona and Vicenza, now Venetian
territory; on the other hand Venice was extremely unwilling to embark upon the
troubled waters of Italian mainland politics, and to find herself, in all
probability, committed to costly mainland campaigns which would consume the
wealth she was sweeping in from the sea.
The Florentine
proposals revealed two parties in the State. The Doge Mocenigo and his friends
held that it was still possible to avoid a rupture with Visconti, that Venice
might remain on good terms with her powerful neighbor and trade with Milan
instead of fighting it. Opposed to the Doge was Francesco Foscari, head of the
party of young Venice, in favor of expansion, elated by the recent acquisition
of Friuli. But Mocenigo was dying, and on his death-bed he called the principal
statesmen of the Republic about him and reminded them of the position of the
community, which had never been more flourishing. He pointed to the merchant
marine, the finest in the world, to the rapid reduction of the national debt,
from ten millions to six; to the vast commerce with the territories of the Duke
of Milan which represented ten million ducats capital with a net profit of two
millions; he insisted that at this rate Venice would soon be mistress of the
world, but that all might be lost by a rash war. Everything would depend, he
said, upon the character of the man who succeeded him. He uttered a solemn
warning against Francesco Foscari as a braggart, vainglorious, without
solidity, grasping at much, securing little; certain to involve the State in
war, to waste its wealth and leave it at the mercy of its mercenary captains.
Prophetic words, but powerless to avert the doom they foretold. Foscari was
elected (1423); and instantly set himself to support the Florentine request for
an alliance. He did not carry his point at once, for the Mocenigo party could
always urge that an alliance with Florence against Milan would draw Visconti
and Sigismund together against the Republic. But Filippo Maria's successes were
continuous; his troops were in the Romagna, and he had defeated Florence in
battle after battle, Zagonara, Val di Lamone, Rapallo, Anghiari. In desperation
the Florentines declared that if the Venetians would not help them to retain
their liberties, they would pull the house about their ears. “When we refused”
they said, “to help Genoa, she made Visconti her Lord; if you refuse to help us
we will make him King." This threat coupled with the desertion of
Visconti’s great general, Carmagnola, turned the scale. The Florentine League
was concluded and Carmagnola received the command of the Venetian forces.
Thus the Republic
embarked upon a struggle for supremacy as a land-Power in northern Italy. But
she was soon to prove the truth of Mocenigo’s dying words. The first campaign
ended in the acquisition of Brescia and the Bresciano by Venetian troops, but
not by Carmagnola. He had no sooner brought his forces under Brescia than he
asked leave to retire for his health to the Baths of Abano; and his conduct
from the very first roused those suspicions which eventually led to his doom.
The second campaign gave Bergamo to the victorious Republic. But the suspicions
of Venice were increased by finding that the Duke of Milan was in communication
with Carmagnola and was prepared to conclude a peace through him as
intermediary, suspicions confirmed by the dilatory conduct of their general
after the victory at Maclodio, when nothing lay between him and Milan. At the
opening of the third campaign against Visconti, the Republic endeavoured to
rouse their general to vigorous action by making him large promises if he would
only crush the Duke and take his capital. But nothing would stir Carmagnola
from his culpable inactivity. The truth was that he cared not a jot for
Venetian interests; like all mercenaries he was playing his own game, and that
did not counsel him to press Visconti too hard, for it was always possible that
he might one day find himself again in the Duke's service.
The patience of
the Republic was exhausted at last. Carmagnola was summoned to Venice on the
plea that the government wished to consult him. He was received with marked
honor. His suite was told that the general stayed to dine with the Doge and
that they might go home. The Doge sent to excuse himself from receiving the
Count on the score of indisposition. Carmagnola turned to go down to his
gondola. In the lower arcade of the palace he was arrested and hurried to
prison. He was tried by the Council of Ten on the charge of treason and
executed in the Piazzetta of St Mark (1432).
Notwithstanding
their difficulties with their mercenary commander, the Venetians had made very
solid acquisitions during these wars with Visconti. Brescia and Bergamo were
now permanently added to the land empire of the Republic, and the title was
confirmed by an imperial investiture at Prague in 1437, in which Venetian
dominions are defined as all the land di qua, that is east of the Adda, very
nearly the extreme limit of mainland possession ever touched by the Republic.
But the
possession of Brescia and Bergamo was not likely to be left undisputed by
Filippo Maria Visconti; and a long series of campaigns, conducted by such
generals as Gonzaga and Gattamelata, exhausting to the treasury and
unprofitable to the State, was only brought to an end by the death of the Duke of
Milan in 1447. During this period, however, Venice had converted her
guardianship of Ravenna into actual possession as remainder-heir to the
Polentani, Lords of that city; a step which brought into the field against her
the Roman Curia, and was not without important bearings on the final
combination of the Papacy with her other enemies at the League of Cambray.
The death of
Filippo Maria Visconti left Milan and the Visconti possessions without a Lord.
Visconti’s only child Bianca was married to Sforza, and in right of her he
claimed succession; but the city of Milan declared itself a republic. Venice
seized Lodi and Piacenza and offered to support the Milanese Republic if it
would recognize the capture. Milan declined. But that city was soon forced to
open its gates to Sforza; and shortly afterwards Venice and Sforza came to
terms in the Peace of Lodi (1454V), by which the Republic was confirmed in
possession of Bergamo and Brescia and acquired Crema and Treviglio as well,
thereby affording her enemies fresh proofs for that charge of insatiable greed
which they were already beginning to move against her.
But Visconti’s
death produced another result still more momentous not only for Venice but for
all Italy as well. Filippo Maria had left no heirs male; and the French
claim,-that of the house of Orleans based upon the marriage of Valentina
Visconti with the father of Charles of Orleans, was immediately advanced. It
opened a new epoch in Italian history, preparing the way for the complications
inseparable from the advent of foreign princes in Italian politics.
There were two
reasons which induced Venice to accept gladly the Treaty of Lodi. The long War
with Visconti, though it had brought her a large accession of territory, had
also cost her very dear; but it was of even greater significance that all
Europe and Venice especially, as the power most nearly concerned, had been
startled by the news that the Turks had captured Constantinople and that the
Eastern Empire was at an end forever. This event took place in 1453, the year
before the Peace of Lodi.
1453-4]
The fall of Constantinople.
We have seen
already that the real desire of the Republic was to trade with the Turks, and
not to fight them; from the very outset when she made a treaty with Sultan
Mohammad in 1410 and again after the victory of Gallipoli, her whole energies
had been directed to securing her colonies and insuring freedom of traffic. But
now, with the Mussulmans established in Constantinople and spreading down the
Levant, it was inevitable that Venice should be brought into hostile relations
with their growing power.
The fall of
Constantinople was the last external event of moment in the brilliant reign of
Francesco Foscari. Internal events also contributed to render his Dogeship
remarkable. He seems to have come to the throne as the embodiment of the new
oligarchy which had taken final shape at the closing of the Great Council, and
which had consolidated its authority by the creation of the Ten. He was the
first Doge in whose election the people had no part. In presenting him to his
subjects the old formula “This is your Doge, as it please you,” was changed to
“This is your Doge”. But, furthermore, Foscari’s election is the first in which
we find any suggestion of bribery. He was accused of having applied, while
holding the office of Procurator, a sum of money, which he found in the coffers
of that magistracy, to securing support among the poorer nobility, a class
destined to become both famous and dangerous under the name of the Barnabotti, but
of whom we hear now for the first time. Political corruption showed itself
again in 1433, when a wide-spread conspiracy to arrange election to offices was
discovered among the nobles of the Great Council. The obscure case of Jacopo
Foscari, the Doge’s son, showed to what lengths intrigue might be carried; and
the dramatic end of the Doge's reign, his deposition after so long and so
brilliant an occupation of the throne, demonstrated the absolute authority of
the Council of Ten as sovereign in Venice.
The epoch was one
of great outward splendor. Commines, who came to Venice some years later,
describes it as “the most triumphant city I have ever seen; the city that
bestows the greatest honor on ambassadors and on strangers; the city that is
most carefully governed; the city wherein the worship of God is most solemnly
conducted”.
It was thus that
Venice struck a competent observer towards the close of the fifteenth century,
and Commines is only one of the earliest in a long list of testimonies to the
vivid impression created by the Capital of the Lagoons. Venice was at the
zenith of her splendor; a city of pleasure, sumptuous in her reception of
“ambassadors and strangers”; a commonwealth of surprising solidity and power,
“most carefully governed”; a palace of pomp where the arts flourished and where
the “worship of God”, in churches, processions, pageants “was most solemnly
conducted”. Everything connected with the city, external as well as internal,
contributed to the indelible impression she produced. Her singular site; her
water streets; the beauty of her public and private buildings; the Doge’s
palace so audaciously designed, glowing with the rose and cream colored
marbles; St Mark’s, a precious casket of porphyry, mosaic and oriental cupolas;
the Hall of the Great Council adorned with records of Venetian prowess; the
rich Gothic of the Porta della Carta; the Piazza with its noble bell-tower; the
opening of the Piazzetta, the vista of San Giorgio Maggiore, the sweep of the
Riva degli Schiavoni leading away to San Nicolo and the great sea avenue of
Venice; the domestic architecture of the private palaces, that lined the Grand
and the smaller canals; the slender columns, the ogee windows, the balconies
with their sea lions for brackets, the perforated stone tracery above the
windows, the glowing color of the plaster on the walls, all combined to arrest
attention. But more than this; behind the external splendor and deep down as
the cause of it, Venice had something further to offer for the study and the
contemplation of the stranger. Her constitution was almost an ideal for
European statesmen. Her declared object was “to win the heart and the affection
of her people”, and this could only be brought about by attention to their
interests; in the interests of commerce consuls had been established as early
as 1117; in those of finance public funds and government stock had been created
in 1171; in those of order the census was introduced about the year 1300; in
those of property each holding was numbered and registered; in those of justice
the law was codified in 1229. A factory act forbade the employment of children
in dangerous trades where mercury was used. The nautical code provided for a
load-line on all shipping and insisted on the proper treatment of crews. In
most departments of practical government the Republic of Venice preceded all
other States of Europe, and offered material for reflexion to their
politicians, to whom was presented the phenomenon of a fully-matured and stable
constitution, and of a people fused together in one homogeneous whole.
For though the
Closing of the Great Council had rendered the governing class a close
oligarchy, it had not produced class hatred; Venice showed no trace of the
feudal system with its violent divisions of the State into hostile camps; every
Venetian was still a Venetian first and foremost, and though excluded from the
functions of government was still in all likelihood closely connected with
those who exercised them. The palace of the patrician was surrounded by a network
of small alleys filled with his people, his clients. The merchant prince in his
office was served by a staff of clerks who had their share in the success of
his ventures. The arrival of any merchant's galleys was a matter for rejoicing
to the whole community and was announced by the great bell of St Mark’s.
Venice, in short, from the commercial point of view was a great joint-stock
company for the exploitation of the East, and the patricians were its
directors.
The life of a
Venetian noble could be filled to the full if he so desired. Politics,
diplomacy, trade, arms were all open to him; and he frequently combined two or
more of these professions. At the age of twenty-five he took his seat in the
Great Council and became eligible for any of the numerous offices to which that
Council elected. He might serve his apprenticeship in the department of trade,
of finance, of health; passing thence to the Senate, he might represent his
country in Constantinople, Rome, Prague, Paris, Madrid, London. On his return
he would be made a Savio and member of the cabinet, or serve his turn of a year
on the Council of Ten, ending his days perhaps as a Doge, at least as
Procurator of St Mark. And throughout the whole of this official career he was
probably directing with the help of his brothers and sons the movement of his
private family business, trade, or banking. Nothing is commoner than to find an
ambassador petitioning to be recalled, because his family business is suffering
through his absence from Venice. There was, of course, another aspect of the
patrician class. The vicious nobles became poor, the poor corrupt, and
political and social life both suffered in consequence. The Council of Ten was
frequently called upon to punish the betrayal of State secrets and the unbridled
license of the nobility.
On the other
hand, if the people were excluded from the direction of State affairs they
found abundant scope for their energies in trade and industries and the
guild-life which these created and fostered. Every art and craft and trade in
Venice, down to the very sausage-makers, was erected into a guild. They were
self-supporting, self-governing bodies, supervised, it is true, by a government
office whose approval was necessary for the validity of the bye-laws. They were
carefully fostered by the State, which saw in them an outlet for the political
activities of the people. At his coronation each new Doge was expected to
entertain the guilds, who displayed specimens of their handiwork in the ducal
palace; on great State occasions, when Venice entertained distinguished guests,
the guilds were called upon to furnish part of the pageant; but they never
acquired, as in Florence, or other Italian cities, a voice in the government of
the State. The guilds of most Italian towns represented and protected the
people against a nobility of arms and of territory. In Venice such a nobility
never existed; the patrician was himself a merchant and very probably a member
of a trade guild.
And the
decorative and cultured side of all this teeming life found expression in the
arts. Murano produced the earliest masters of that school of painting which was
to adorn the world by the hands of the Vivarini, Carpaccio, the Bellinis,
Mantegna, Giorgione, Veronese, Titian, Palma, Cima da Conegliano, Tintoretto,
Tiepolo. Dramatic in conception, gorgeous in color, untrammelled by the effort
to express philosophic ideas or religious emotion, the art of Venice was
essentially decorative, and was dedicated to the adornment of public and
private life in the city. The great colonnade at the Rialto, the very heart of
Venetian traffic, was already covered with frescoes and possessed that famous
planisphere, or Mapamondo, showing the routes followed by Venetian commerce
throughout the world. The study of letters received a vital stimulus, thanks to
the asylum which Venice offered to refugees from Constantinople. Cardinal
Bessarion made St Mark’s Library the legatee of his inestimable treasures. The
brilliant history of the Venetian printing press was inaugurated by John of
Speyer and Windelin his brother (1469), by Nicolas Jenson, by Waldorfer and
Erhardt Radolt, and carried on by Andrea Torresano to the glories of the Aldine
Press. Coming third in chronological order, preceded by Subiaco and Rome, the
press of Venice surpassed all its Italian contemporaries in splendor and
abundance, in range of subjects, in service to scholarship.
Of literature in
the sense of belles-lettres there was but little; but the Annali of
Malipiero, the Diarii of Sanudo and the Diaries of Friuli afford
us a full, vivid, and veracious narrative of Venetian history, of life in the
city, of the wars and intrigues of the Republic during her splendor and the
beginning of her decline (1457-1535). No other Italian State can show such a
monumental record of its doings as this. Written by capable men of affairs, the
first a soldier, the second an official, the third a great merchant-banker, all
of whom took a large part in the deeds and events they recount; written, not
for publication, but to the honor and glory of that beloved San Marco “whom” to
use the phrase of a later Venetian ambassador “each of us has engraved upon his
heart”; written in dialect racy of the soil and of the people, we have here a
story, vigorous, vivacious, humorous; direct and simple as a ballad; a monument
to the city-State that produced it; an illustration of the central principle of
Venetian life that the Republic was everything, while her individual sons were
of no account.
But this
appearance of prosperity, of splendor, of pomp, during the latter half of the
fifteenth century, masked the germs of incipient decline: the corruption of the
nobles, the suspicious tyranny of the Ten, the first signs of bank failures,
the drop in the value of funds, the rise of the national debt from six to
thirteen millions. Land wars continued to drain the treasury; the Turkish wars,
conducted by Venice single-handed, curtailed her Levant trade and entailed a
continual outlay; worst of all, in 1486 came the news that Diaz had discovered
the Cape of Good Hope, and in 1497 that Vasco da Gama had rounded it, thereby
cutting the tap-root of Venetian wealth, its Mediterranean carrying-trade, and
drawing the great trade-lines of the world out of the Mediterranean into the
Atlantic. Venice could alter neither her geographical position nor her policy.
She endeavored to come to terms with the Turk, and she continued to expand on
the mainland. This course of action brought down upon her the charge of
infidelity on the one hand and of insatiable greed on the other, and ended in
the disastrous combination of Cambray.
After the fall of
Constantinople the Turkish advance was steadily continued both south and east.
Athens surrendered to the Turks in 1457; so did Sinope and Trebizond; and the
loss of the Morea in 1462 brought them into immediate collision with the
Republic. Venice perfectly understood that a struggle for her possessions in
the Levant was inevitable sooner or later; she therefore gladly embraced Pope
Pius IPs proposals for a crusade. But the lamentable failure of the
undertaking, and the Pope's death at Ancona, left the Republic to carry on,
single-handed, a war she had undertaken on the promise and in the expectation
of European support. Antonio Michiel, a Venetian merchant resident in Constantinople,
had warned his government, in 1466, that the Sultan was mustering large forces.
“I take it the fleet will number two hundred sail” he says, “and every one here
thinks Negroponte its object”. He continues in a note of serious warning that
matters must not be treated lightly to the deceiving of themselves. The Turk
has a way of exaggerating the enemy's strength and arming regardless of
expense. Venice had better do the same. This was in 1466; three years later the
blow was ready to fall, and again Venice received warning through another
merchant, Piero Dolfin, resident in Chios. Let the government, he wrote,
fortify its places in the Levant and lose no time about it; “on this depends
the safety of the State, for Negroponte once lost the rest of the Levant is in
peril”
But Venice,
exhausted by the drain of the land wars against Visconti, was unwilling to face
another and more terrible campaign by sea unless she were forced to do so. She
endeavored to open negotiations at Constantinople on the pretext that she was
acting in the name of Hungary. But in 1470 Negroponte fell. The War had already
cost considerably over a million ducats, and the government was reduced to
suspending either two-thirds or a half of all official salaries which were over
twenty-five ducats per annum. In spite of this she rejected, as extravagant,
terms of peace offered her in 1476; and faced the struggle once more. Scutari
was attacked by the Sultan in person, who, in his determination to enter the
town, blew besieged and besiegers alike to atoms before his siege guns. But the
Republic could not hold out for ever unaided; Scutari was at the last
extremity; a large army was rumoured to be on its way to attack Friuli. Venice
was forced to recognize the facts, and in 1479 she proposed terms of peace.
Scutari, and all Venetian possessions in the Morea were ceded to the Turk.
Venice agreed to pay ten thousand ducats a year for the privileges of trading,
and one hundred thousand in two years, as a war indemnity; and received
permission to keep an Agent (Bailo) in Constantinople.
The Peace of 1479
marks an epoch in the history of Venetian relations with the East, and
indicates a return to her original policy of peaceable dealings, whenever
possible, with the Turk.
In truth, the
Republic had every reason to complain of the conduct of Europe. After sixteen
years of continuous warfare, which she had undertaken on the strength of
European promises, Venice concluded a ruinous peace, by which she lost a part
of her Levantine possessions and was reduced to the position of a tributary.
Yet instantly all Europe attacked her for her perfidy to the Christian faith,
and the princes of Italy professed to believe that Venice had abandoned the
Turkish War, merely in order to devote herself to the extension of her power on
the mainland. Had she received any support from Europe or Italy, she would
never have closed the War with such a balance against herself. In truth the
Republic was too exhausted to continue the struggle. It was not her fault that,
the year after the conclusion of the Peace, Italy and all Europe were alarmed
by the news that the Turks had seized Otranto. This was the inevitable result
of the withdrawal of Venice from the struggle, a withdrawal in its turn due to
lack of any support from Italy or Europe. When invited by the Pope to join an
Italian league against the Turk, Venice, mindful of the results which had
followed on her acceptance of the last papal invitation, replied that she had
made peace with the Sultan, and confirmed the suspicion that she was in secret
understanding with the Turk. Her next step emphasized the further suspicion
that her object in coming to terms with the Turk had been to allow herself a
free hand to extend in Italy.
We have seen that
in 1441 Venice had occupied Ravenna - under protest from Rome - as heir of the
Polentani, Lords of Ravenna. She now (1481) attacked the Marquis of Ferrara on
the ground that he was infringing a Venetian monopoly by the erection of
salt-pans at the mouth of the Po. As the territory of Ferrara lay between the
Venetian frontier and Ravenna it looked as if Venice desired to unite her
possessions in that direction by the acquisition of Ferrara. This policy
induced the Duke of Milan, the Pope, and the King of Naples to combine in
support of Ferrara against Venice. The War was popular with the Venetians at
first, but the strain on both treasury and private purses soon became
insupportable, and no success crowned the Venetian arms. The distressed
condition of the Republic is described by Malipiero. Payment of the interest on
the funds was partially suspended; the shops on the Rialto were mortgaged;
private plate, and jewelry compulsorily called in; salaries cut down. The
revenue from the mainland was falling off. The arsenal was nearly empty. Famine
and plague were at the door. “We shall be forced to sue for peace and restore
all we have gained”.
Malipiero was
partially right. Venice was forced to sue for peace, but not till she had taken
the ruinous step (which other Italian princes took before and after her) of
suggesting to the French that they should make good their claims on certain
Italian provinces, Charles VIII his claim on Naples, the Duke of Orleans his
claims on Milan. Two members of the hostile League, Milan and Naples, were thus
threatened in their own possessions, with the result that peace was concluded
at Bagnolo in 1484. Venice retained Rovigo and the Polesine, but was forced to
surrender the towns she had taken in Apulia during the course of the War.
This invitation
to foreigners was fatal to all Italian princes, as events were soon to
demonstrate. The five Great Powers of Italy, Venice, Milan, Florence, the Pope
and Naples, were able to hold their own against each other, but the moment the
more potent ultramontane sovereigns appeared upon the scene, nominally in
support of one or other of the Italian States, really in pursuit of their own
aggrandizement, the balance was irretrievably upset. The sequence of these
events, culminating in the Wars of the League of Cambray, after which Venice
never again recovered her commanding place among the political communities of
Europe, has been narrated in a previous Chapter.
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