City of Fortune

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by Crowley, Roger


  Epilogue

  RETURN

  A few miles west of Heraklion on the coastal highway, there is a prominent rocky outcrop above the sea. If you cross the road and follow the path round its base, you pass by an archway and vaulted tunnel onto an open platform with a wide prospect of the Aegean. The Cretans call this place Paleokastro – the Old Fort. It was built by the Genoese in 1206, then developed by the Venetians to guard the seaward approaches to Candia. It’s a lonely spot. At its outer edge the stone bastion falls away steeply down the base of the cliff; there is a smell of thyme on the soft wind; the smack of sea; the ruins of arched magazines; a subterranean chapel. In the distance modern Heraklion sprawls beyond a blue bay.

  It was here in the summer of 1669, after the longest siege in world history, that the captain-general Francesco Morosini agreed the surrender of Venetian Crete. For twenty-one years, Venice engaged in a titanic struggle with the Ottomans for its hub of empire, but Priuli had been right. One by one its colonial possessions would be prised away. Cyprus, held for less than a century, was lost in 1570; Tinos, its most northern island in the Aegean, lasted until 1715; by then the rest were gone, and the trade had died. The muda system was in decline by the 1520s. The last galleys anchored in the Thames soon after. Pirates started to choke the sea.

  Only Venice’s home waters held firm. Century after century the Ottomans hammered at Corfu but the door of the Adriatic stayed shut, and when Napoleon finally marched into St Mark’s Square, burned the Bucintoro and trundled the bronze horses off to Paris in wheeled carts, there was something approaching grief along the Dalmatian coast. At Perasto, the governor made an emotional speech in the Venetian dialect and buried the flag of St Mark beneath the altar; the people wept.

  The siege of Candia 1648–69

  The visible remnants of the Stato da Mar lie scattered across the sea; hundreds of crumbling towers and forts; the impressive defences of Candia and Famagusta, with their angled bastions and deep ditches, powerless in the end against Turkish guns; neat harbours at Lepanto, Kyrenia and Hania, drawn tightly around pretty bays; churches, bell towers, arsenals and quays; countless Venetian lions, elongated, squat, tubby, winged and wingless, gruff, fierce, indignant and surprised, guard harbour walls, surmount gateways and spout water from elegant fountains. Far away, at the mouth of the Don, archaeologists still dig breastplates, crossbow bolts and Murano glass from the Ukrainian earth, but overall the traces of Venice’s imperial adventure are surprisingly light. There was always something provisional about the Stato da Mar. Like Venice itself, it lived with the idea of impermanence; harbours and ports came and went and the roots it put down on many foreign shores were not deep. The lintel of more than one collapsed Venetian house on Crete bears the Latin motto ‘The world is nothing but smoke and shadows’. As if they knew, deep down, that all the imperial razzmatazz of trumpets, ships and guns was only a mirage.

  Over centuries tens of thousands of Venetians engaged in this show – merchants, seamen, colonists, soldiers and administrators. It was mainly a world of men, but there was family life too. Like Dandolo, many never came back; they died of war and plague, were swallowed up by the sea or buried in foreign earth, but Venice was a centrist empire which retained a magnetic hold on its people. The merchant isolated in the fondaci of Alexandria, the consul watching the Mongol steppes, the galeotto working his oar – for all, the city loomed large. The idea of return was potent – the ship at last passing through the lidi again, feeling a different motion to the sea and the familiar skyline rising pale and insubstantial in the shifting light.

  People on the quays, watched, idle or intent, for approaching ships. And until a seaman standing in the prow was close enough to shout, those craning to catch his words might wait in trepidation to hear if the news was good or bad – if a husband or son had died at sea, if the deal had been done, if there would be lamentation or joy. Landfall brought all the vicissitudes of life. People returned with gold, spices, plague and grief. Failed admirals came clanking in chains, triumphant ones with trumpets and cannon fire, trailing captured banners in the sea, the gonfalon of St Mark streaming in the wind. Ordelafo Falier stepped down the gangplank with the bones of St Stephen. Pisani’s body came packed in salt. Antonio Grimani survived the disgrace of Zonchio and became a doge; so did Gritti the spy. Marco Polo, wild-eyed and anonymous, burst through the door of his house like Ulysses returned – and no one recognised him. Felix Fabri came on the spice fleet of 1480 with the weather so cold that the oars had to break the ice in the canals. He arrived in the dark, just after Christmas. The night was clear and bright; from the deck the snowy tops of the Dolomites glimmered under a large moon. No one could sleep. As dawn rose, the passengers could see the golden roof of the campanile glinting in the sun, topped by the angel Gabriel welcoming them home. All the bells of Venice were ringing for the fleet’s return. The ships were dressed with banners and flags; the galeotti started to sing and, according to custom, threw their old clothing, rotted by salt and storm, overboard. ‘And when we had paid our fare, and the charges,’ wrote Fabri,

  and tipped the servants who had looked after us, and said goodbye to everyone in our galley, both noblemen and servants, we put all our things into one boat and climbed down into it … And although we were glad of our enlargement from that uneasy prison, yet because of the companionship which had grown up between us and the rowers and others, sadness mingled with our joy.

  Sources and Bibliography

  The bibliography contains all the sources quoted in the book. The sources for the quotations can be found at www.faber.co.uk/work/cityoffortune under the resources section.

  ORIGINAL SOURCES

  Andrea, Alfred J., Contemporary Sources for the Fourth Crusade, Leiden, 2008

  Angiolello, Giovan-Maria, Memoir, trans. Pierre A. Mackay, at http://angiolello.net, 2006

  Barbara, Josafa and Contarini, Ambrogio, Travels to Tana and Persia, trans. William Thomas, London, 1873

  Barbaro, Nicolo, Giornale dell’assedio di Costantinopoli 1453, ed. E. Cornet, Vienna, 1856; (in English) Diary of the Siege of Constantinople 1453, trans. J. R. Melville Jones, New York, 1969

  Canal, Martino da, Les Estoires de Venise, Florence, 1972

  Casati, Luigi, La guerra di Chioggia e la pace di Torino, saggio storico con documenti inediti, Florence, 1866

  Casola, Pietro, Canon Pietro Casola’s Pilgrimage to Jerusalem in the Year 1494, ed. and trans. M. Margaret Newett, Manchester, 1907

  Cassiodorus, Variaum libri XII, Letter 24, at www.documentacatholicaomnia.eu, 2006

  Chinazzi, Daniele, Cronaca della guerra di Chioggia, Milan, 1864

  Choniates, Niketas, Imperii Graeci Historia, Geneva, 1593; (in English) O City of Byzantium, Annals of Niketas Choniates, trans. Harry J. Magoulias, Detroit, 1984

  Clari, Robert de, La Conquête de Constantinople, trans. Pierre Charlot, Paris, 1939; (in English) The Conquest of Constantinople, trans. Edgar Holmes McNeal, New York, 1966

  Commynes, Philippe de, The Memoirs of Philippe de Commines, trans Andrew Scoble, vol. 1, London, 1855

  Comnena, Anna, The Alexiad of Anna Comnena, trans. E. R. A. Sewter, London, 1969

  Dandolo, Andrea, Chronica per Extensum Descripta, Rivista Storica Italiana, vol. 12, part 1, Bologna, 1923

  De Caresinis, Raphaynus, Raphayni de Caresinis Chronica 1343–1388, Rerum Italicarum Scriptores, vol. 12, part 2, Bologna, 1923

  De Monacis, Laurentius (Lorenzo), Chronicon de Rebus Venetis, ed. F. Cornelius, Venice, 1758

  De’ Mussi, Gabriele, ‘La peste dell’ anno 1348’, ed. and trans. A.G. Tononi, Giornale Ligustico de Archeologia, Storia e Letteratura, vol. 11, Genoa, 1884

  Délibérations des assemblées Vénitiennes concernant la Romanie, 2 vols, ed. and trans. F. Thiriet, Paris, 1971

  Die Register Innocenz’III, ed O. Hageneder and A. Haidacher, vol. 1, Graz, 1964

  Dotson, John E., Merchant Culture in Fourteenth Century Venice: the Zibaldone da Canal, New York, 1994

>   Fabri, Felix, The Book of the Wanderings of Brother Felix Fabri, trans. A. Stewart, vol. 1, London, 1892

  Gatari, Galeazzo e Bartolomeo, Cronaca Carrarese: 1318–1407, Rerum Italicarum Scriptores, vol. 17, part 1, Bologna, 1909

  Gunther of Pairis, The Capture of Constantinople: The Hystoria Constantinopolitana of Gunther of Paris, by Alfred J. Andrea, Philadelphia, 1997

  Ibn Battuta, The Travels of Ibn Battuta, AD 1325–54, trans H. A. R. Gibb, vol. 1, London, 1986

  Katip Çelebi, The History of the Maritime Wars of the Turks, trans. J. Mitchell, London, 1831 Kinnamos, John, Deeds of John and Manuel Comnenus, trans. Charles M. Brand, New York, 1976

  Locatelli, Antonio, Memorie che possono servire alla vita di Vettor Pisani, Venice, 1767

  Machiavelli, Niccolò, The Prince, trans. W. K. Marriott, London, 1958

  Malipiero, D., ‘Annali veneti, 1457–1500’, ed. T. Gar and A. Sagredo, Archivio Storico Italiano, vol. 7, Florence, 1843

  Mehmed II the Conqueror and the Fall of the Franco-Byzantine Levant to the Ottoman Turks: some Western Views and Testimonies, ed. and trans. Marios Philippides, Tempe, 2007

  Pagani, Zaccaria, ‘La Relation de l’ambassade de Domenico Trevisan auprès du Soudan d’Égypte’, in Le Voyage d’Outre-mer (Égypte, Mont Sinay, Palestine) de Jean Thenaud: Suivi de la relation de l’ambassade de Domenico Trevisan auprès du Soudan d’Égypte, Paris, 1884

  Patrologia Latina, ed. J. P. Migne, vols. 214–215, Paris, 1849–55

  Pegolotti, Francesco, La practica della mercatura, ed. Allan Evans, New York, 1970

  Pertusi, Agostino, La caduta di Costantinopoli, 2 vols, Milan, 1976

  Petrarca, Francesco, Epistole di Francesco Petrarca, ed. Ugo Dotti, Turin, 1978

  —, Lettere senile di Francesco Petrarca, vol. 1, trans. Giuseppe Francassetti, Florence, 1869

  Pokorny, R., ed., ‘Zwei unedierte Briefe aus der Frühzeit des Lateinischen Kaiserreichs von Konstantinopel’, Byzantion, vol. 55, 1985

  Polo, Marco, The Travels, trans. Ronald Latham, London, 1958

  Priuli, G., ‘I diarii’, ed. A. Segre, Rerum Italicarum Scriptores, vol. 24, part 3, 2 vols, Bologna, 1921

  Raccolta degli storici italiani dal cinquecento al millecinquecento, in Rerum Italicarum Scriptores, new edition, 35 vols, ed. L. A. Muratori, Bologna, 1904–42

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  —, Venice, Cità Excelentissima: Selections from the Renaissance Diaries of Marin Sanudo, ed. and trans. Patricia H. Labalme, Laura Sanguineti White and Linda L. Carroll, Baltimore, 2008

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  MODERN WORKS

  Angold, Michael, The Fourth Crusade: Event and Context, Harlow, 2003

  Antoniadis, Sophia, ‘Le récit du combat naval de Gallipoli chez Zancaruolo en comparison avec le texte d’Antoine Morosini et les historiens grecs du XVe siècle’ in Venezia e l’Oriente fra tardo Medioevo e Rinascimento, ed. A. Pertusi, Rome, 1966

  Arbel, B., ‘Colonie d’oltremare’, Storia di Venezia, vol. 5, Rome, 1996

  Ascherson, Neal, Black Sea, London, 1995

  Ashtor, Eliyahu, ‘L’Apogée du commerce Vénitien au Levant: un nouvel essai d’explication’, in Venezia, centro di mediazione tra Oriente e Occidente (secoli XV–XVI): aspetti e problemi, vol. 1

  —, Levant Trade in the Later Middle Ages, Princeton, 1983

  Babinger, Franz, Mehmet the Conqueror and his Time, Princeton, 1978

  Balard, M., ‘La lotta contro Genova’, Storia di Venezia, vol. 3, Rome, 1997

  Berindei, Mihnea and O’Riordan, Giustiniana Migliardi, ‘Venise et la horde d’Or, fin XIIIe–début XIVe siècle’, Cahiers du Monde Russe, vol. 29, 1988

  Borsari, Silvano, ‘I Veneziani delle colonie’, Storia di Venezia, vol. 3, Rome, 1997

  Brand, Charles, M., Byzantium Confronts the West 1180–1204, Cambridge, 1968

  Bratianu, Georges I., La Mer Noire: des origines à la conquête Ottomane, Munich, 1969

  Brown, Horatio F., ‘The Venetians and the Venetian Quarter in Constantinople to the Close of the Twelfth Century’, Journal of Hellenic Studies, vol. 40, 1920

  Brown, Patricia Fortini, Venetian Narrative Painting in the Age of Carpaccio, New Haven, 1988

  Buonsanti, Michele and Galla, Alberta, Candia Venezia: Venetian Itineraries Through Crete, Heraklion, (undated)

  Campbell, Caroline and Chong, Alan (eds), Bellini and the East, London, 2006

  Cessi, R., La repubblica di Venezia e il problema adriatico, Naples, 1953

  —, Storia della repubblica di Venezia, vols 1 and 2, Milan, 1968

  Cessi, R. and Alberti, A., Rialto: l’isola, il ponte, il mercato, Bologna, 1934

  Chareyron, Nicole, Pilgrims to Jerusalem in the Middle Ages, trans. W. Donald Wilson, New York, 2005

  Ciggaar, Krijnie, Western Travellers to Constantinople, London, 1996

  Clot, André, Mehmed II, le conquérant de Byzance, Paris, 1990

  Coco, Carla, Venezia levantina, Venice, 1993

  Constable, Olivia Remie, Housing the Stranger in the Mediterranean World: Lodging, Trade, and Travel in Late Antiquity and the Middle Ages, Cambridge, 2004

  Crouzet-Pavan, Elisabeth, Venice Triumphant: the Horizons of a Myth, trans. Lydia G. Cochrane, Baltimore, 1999

  Crowley, Roger, Constantinople: The Last Great Siege, London, 2005

  Curatola, Giovanni, ‘Venetian Merchants and Travellers’, Alexandria, Real and Imagined, ed. Anthony Hirst and Michael Silk, Aldershot, 2004

  Davis, James C., ‘Shipping and Spying in the Early Career of a Venetian Doge, 1496–1502’, Studi veneziani, vol. 16, 1974

  Detorakis, Theocharis E., History of Crete, trans. John C. Davis, Heraklion, 1994

  Dotson, John, ‘Fleet Operations in the First Genoese–Venetian war, 1264–1266’, Viator: Medieval and Renaissance Studies, vol. 30, 1999

  —, ‘Foundations of Venetian Naval Strategy from Pietro II Orseolo to the Battle of Zonchio’, Viator: Medieval and Renaissance Studies, vol. 32, 2001

  —, ‘Venice, Genoa and Control of the Seas in the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries’, in War at Sea in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, ed. John B. Hattendorf and Richard W. Unger, Woodbridge, 2003

  Doumerc, B., ‘An Exemplary Maritime Republic: Venice at the End of the Middle Ages’, in War at Sea in the Middle Ages and the Renaissance, ed. John B. Hattendorf and Richard W. Unger, Woodbridge, 2003

  —, ‘De l’Incompétence à la trahison: les commandants de galères Vénitiens face aux Turcs (1499–1500)’, Felonie, Trahison, Reniements aux Moyen Age, Montpellier, 1997

  —, ‘Il dominio del mare’, Storia di Venezia, vol. 4, Rome, 1996

  —, ‘La difesa dell’impero’, Storia di Venezia, vol. 3, Rome, 1997

  Duby, Georges and Lobrichon, Guy, History of Venice in Painting, New York, 2007

  Dursteler, Eric R., ‘The Bailo in Constantinople; Crisis and Career in Venice’s Early Modern Diplomatic Corps’, Mediterranean Historical Review, vol. 16, no. 2, 2001

  Epstein, Steven, A., Genoa and the Genoese, 958–1528, Chapel Hill, 1996

  Fabris, Antonio, ‘From Adrianople to Constantinople: Venetian–Ottoman Diplomatic Missions, 1360–1453’, Mediterranean Historical Review, vol. 7, no. 2, 199
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  Fenlon, Iain, Piazza San Marco, Boston, 2009

  Forbes-Boyd, Eric, Aegean Quest, London, 1970

  Freedman, Paul, Out of the East: Spices and the Medieval Imagination, New Haven, 2008

  Freely, John, The Bosphorus, Istanbul, 1993

  Freeman, Charles, The Horses of St Mark’s, London, 2004

  Geary, Patrick J., Furta Sacra: Theft of Relics in the Central Middle Ages, Princeton, 1978

  Georgopoulou, Maria, Venice’s Mediterranean Colonies: Architecture and Urbanism, Cambridge, 2001

  Gertwagen, Ruthy, ‘The Contribution of Venice’s colonies to its Naval Warfare in the Eastern Mediterranean in the Fifteenth Century’, at www.storiamediterranea.it (undated)

  Gill, Joseph, ‘Franks, Venetians and Pope Innocent III 1201–1203’, Studi veneziani, vol. 12, Florence, 1971

  Goy, Richard, Chioggia and the Villages of the Lagoon, Cambridge, 1985

  Gullino, G., ‘Le frontiere navali’, Storia di Venezia, vol. 4, Rome, 1996

  Hale, J. R., ed., Renaissance Venice, London, 1973

  Hall, Richard, Empires of the Monsoon: a History of the Indian Ocean and its Invaders, London, 1996

  Harris, Jonathan, Byzantium and the Crusades, London, 2003

 

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