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Piracy and the decline of Venice, 1580-1615.…
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Piracy and the decline of Venice, 1580-1615. (édition 1967)

par Alberto Tenenti, Brian Sebastian Pullan (Introduction), Janet Pullan (Traducteur)

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Pirate welfare played a prominent part in Mediterranean life during the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. Its influence was significant both in the decline of Venice and in the shift of the economic hegemony of Europe. Professor Tenenti maintains that Venice is a fitting focus for study of this period, for the mediterranean became and increasingly a centre of European activity. On one side was Venice which, in spite of a huge navy and a still sizable merchant fleet, observed the strictest neutrality and sought only to protect her trade. On the other were potentially or openly hostile navies, which clashed with one another and frequently also with Venetian shipping. english and Dutch navies forced their way into the area by a combination of trade and piracy and established themselves in positions of great strength. Professor Tenenti analyzes the impact of northern piracy on the trade of the Venetian republic and her failure to resist this threat. During the early seventeenth century Venetian prosperity was irreparably damaged, not only by competition from the north, but also by a severe shipbuilding crisis. He suggests that Venice wa unable to adapt the organization, equipment and discipline of her navy to the changed conditions; for these were spheres in which her pride was particularly strong and tradition enduring. He describes the different types of pirates from the Barbary pirates, the Knights of Malta and the English corsairs to the Uscocchi, whom even sophisticated Venetians regarded as necromancers. The translation of this important work fo Venetian economic history makes a valuable addition to the books on the period available to English readers. This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press's mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1961.… (plus d'informations)
Membre:Africansky1
Titre:Piracy and the decline of Venice, 1580-1615.
Auteurs:Alberto Tenenti
Autres auteurs:Brian Sebastian Pullan (Introduction), Janet Pullan (Traducteur)
Info:
Collections:Votre bibliothèque, cities, economic history and economics, Europe History (Italy and Greece , history, travel , art), Europe History(France,Germany,Spain, Portugal
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Mots-clés:Italy, Venice, history, economic history

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Piracy and the Decline of Venice 1580-1615 par Alberto Tenenti

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This was definitely a dissertation converted into a book. The chapters are brief, and well researched, but if you're not at least passably familiar with Venetian history, you probably won't finish this one.

Tenenti first addresses the various kinds of pirates that stalked Venetian waters. There were the Uskoks, who, from 1540-1640, made their base in Segna and antagonized the Turks. Venice had a delicate truce with the Turks, making this situation particularly difficult. Then there were the Barbary Corsairs, who patrolled the Ionian Sea and the Adriatic, outrunning the Church-sponsored Knights of St. John, St. Stephen and Malta. Then around 1580 the English and the Dutch arrived. Queen Elizabeth I and the Dutch Republic were against Spain, putting Venice in Spanish cross-hairs. And as we know, Elizabeth was very fond of her pirates. In 1603, it was said, Venice lost 8 million ducats to Spanish aggression.

What is fascinating though is the cultural diversity of pirate crews and the sundry goods they carried. For example, "the aggressor was an English ship, flying a Dutch flag, but with an English and Turkish crew." They carried cotton, grapes, soap, mirrors, rice, flax, slaves of various backgrounds...not exactly the popular perception of pirate booty.

The English pirates were the biggest thorn among them though. Alongside the Turks and the Spanish navy patrolling the Mediterranea, I can understand why Venice struggled so. But Tenenti neglects to discuss the Arsenale. The Venetians had a massive assembly line for constructing ships. Convoys of 200 ships could sail from Venice every 2 months. Honestly it's how Venice actually managed to stay afloat and fight back. I don't understand how a whole chapter wasn't dedicated to it. Tenenti also assumes much from the reader and most names were just that. Names. Without context the book can be tough to follow. I'll be keeping it as a reference. ( )
  asukamaxwell | Apr 21, 2024 |
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Pirate welfare played a prominent part in Mediterranean life during the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. Its influence was significant both in the decline of Venice and in the shift of the economic hegemony of Europe. Professor Tenenti maintains that Venice is a fitting focus for study of this period, for the mediterranean became and increasingly a centre of European activity. On one side was Venice which, in spite of a huge navy and a still sizable merchant fleet, observed the strictest neutrality and sought only to protect her trade. On the other were potentially or openly hostile navies, which clashed with one another and frequently also with Venetian shipping. english and Dutch navies forced their way into the area by a combination of trade and piracy and established themselves in positions of great strength. Professor Tenenti analyzes the impact of northern piracy on the trade of the Venetian republic and her failure to resist this threat. During the early seventeenth century Venetian prosperity was irreparably damaged, not only by competition from the north, but also by a severe shipbuilding crisis. He suggests that Venice wa unable to adapt the organization, equipment and discipline of her navy to the changed conditions; for these were spheres in which her pride was particularly strong and tradition enduring. He describes the different types of pirates from the Barbary pirates, the Knights of Malta and the English corsairs to the Uscocchi, whom even sophisticated Venetians regarded as necromancers. The translation of this important work fo Venetian economic history makes a valuable addition to the books on the period available to English readers. This title is part of UC Press's Voices Revived program, which commemorates University of California Press's mission to seek out and cultivate the brightest minds and give them voice, reach, and impact. Drawing on a backlist dating to 1893, Voices Revived makes high-quality, peer-reviewed scholarship accessible once again using print-on-demand technology. This title was originally published in 1961.

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