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  2. History of the Republic of Venice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_Republic_of...

    The Republic of Venice in AD 1000. The republican territory is dark red, the borders in light red. The Republic of Venice (Venetian: Repùbrega Vèneta; Italian: Repubblica di Venezia) was a sovereign state and maritime republic in Northeast Italy, which existed for a millennium between the 8th century and 1797.

  3. Republic of Venice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Republic_of_Venice

    The Ottoman Empire started sea campaigns as early as 1423, when it waged a seven-year war with the Venetian Republic over maritime control of the Aegean, the Ionian, and the Adriatic Seas. The wars with Venice resumed after the Ottomans captured the Kingdom of Bosnia in 1463, and lasted until a favorable peace treaty was signed in 1479 just ...

  4. Timeline of the Republic of Venice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_the_Republic...

    1082 – Needing Venetian naval assistance, the Byzantine emperor Alexios I Komnenos grants them major trading concessions within his Empire in a chrysobull 1084 Domenico Selvo personally leads a fleet against the Normans , but is defeated and loses 9 great galleys, the largest and most heavily armed ships in the Venetian war fleet.

  5. Kingdom of the Morea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kingdom_of_the_Morea

    The Kingdom of the Morea or Realm of the Morea (Italian: Regno di Morea; Venetian: Regno de Morea; Greek: Βασίλειο του Μορέως, romanized: Vasíleio tou Moréos) was the official name the Republic of Venice gave to the Peloponnese peninsula in Southern Greece (which was more widely known as the Morea until the 19th century) when it was conquered from the Ottoman Empire during ...

  6. Venetian rule in the Ionian Islands - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venetian_rule_in_the...

    View of Venice in 1565. Venice was founded in 421 after the destruction of nearby communities by the Huns and the Lombards.In the shifting Italian borders of the following centuries, Venice benefited from remaining under the control of the Roman Empire - increasingly as the furthest Northwestern outpost of the now Constantinople centered power.

  7. Economic history of Venice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Economic_history_of_Venice

    Venetian exporters were obligated to import salt into Venice, for which they were paid a subsidy - the ordo salis. [16] The Venetian state then resold the salt at a profit - a form of Salt tax - to markets throughout Italy, Dalmatia, Slovenia, and the Stato da mar. Venice had a salt monopoly for many of these markets. The Salt Office collected ...

  8. Venetian Renaissance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Venetian_Renaissance

    Compared to the Renaissance architecture of other Italian cities, in Venice there was a degree of conservatism, especially in retaining the overall form of buildings, which in the city were usually replacements on a confined site, and in windows, where arched or round tops, sometimes with a classicized version of the tracery of Venetian Gothic architecture, remained far more heavily used than ...

  9. Fall of the Republic of Venice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fall_of_the_Republic_of_Venice

    The young French general, and future ruler of France, Napoleon Bonaparte The fall of the ancient Republic of Venice was the result of a sequence of events that followed the French Revolution (Fall of the Bastille, 14 July 1789), and the subsequent French Revolutionary Wars that pitted the First French Republic against the monarchic powers of Europe, allied in the First Coalition (1792 ...