Academic literature on the topic 'History of Republic of Venice'

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Journal articles on the topic "History of Republic of Venice"

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Snyder, Jon R. "Venice Incognito: Masks in the Serene Republic." Social History 38, no. 1 (February 2013): 92–93. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/03071022.2013.758808.

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WAGNER, Marek. "Une source pour l'histoire de la campagne de Kamieniec en 1689." Historia i Świat 5 (September 12, 2016): 305–8. http://dx.doi.org/10.34739/his.2016.05.23.

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The campaign of Kamieniec, the year 1689 is part of the armed conflict between the Ottoman Empire and the states members of the Holy League - the Republic of Poland, the Holy Empire and the Republic of Venice - which took place in the years 1684-1699.
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Della Mea, Elisa. "Marano: una fortezza contesa." Italianistica Debreceniensis 23 (December 1, 2017): 46–59. http://dx.doi.org/10.34102/italdeb/2017/4636.

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Venice’s reconquest of Marano in 1542 was a key moment in the history of the Republic. The fortress of Marano was in fact at the top of its glory between the XV and XVI century, when it was contested between Austria and Venice. When it fell in the hands of Austria in 1513, Venice tried to reconquest it with every possible means. After years of unsuccessful attempts, the feat was carried out by Beltrame Sacchia, an ambitious and adventurous merchant from Udine, who occupied the fortress in 1542 in name of the King of France. This article analyses the repercussions of Marano’s reconquest on European political equilibrium. What happened on the morning of January 2, 1542, as well as making a turning point in the boundary dynamics between Venice and the Austrian, deeply damaged the diplomatic relations between the main powers of Europe: the Venetian Republic, France, the Empire and the Ottomans.
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Feola, Vittoria. "Paris, Rome, Venice, and Vienna in Peter Lambeck’s Network." Nuncius 31, no. 1 (2016): 107–28. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18253911-03101005.

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This article considers, first, the roles of Paris, Rome, Venice, and Vienna in the network of Peter Lambeck, the librarian of the Hapsburg emperor Leopold I, and, secondly, Lambeck’s and Vienna’s own places in the Republic of Letters during the period 1662–1680. It begins with a biographical account, in which I situate Lambeck both geographically and intellectually. The importance of Paris is contrasted with his not so positive experience in Rome. Secondly, I focus on Lambeck’s declaration of intent to link Vienna to the Republic of Letters. Thirdly, I survey the eminently Venetian networks through which Lambeck tried to fulfil his intellectual goals. The tensions between France and the Habsburg Empire crashed against Lambeck’s idealistic aims. This raises the issue of the impact of geo-politics on the production and circulation of knowledge in early modern Europe, and prompts questions about openness and secrecy in the Republic of Letters.
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Steinberg, Arthur, and Jonathan Wylie. "Counterfeiting Nature: Artistic Innovation and Cultural Crisis in Renaissance Venice." Comparative Studies in Society and History 32, no. 1 (January 1990): 54–88. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0010417500016339.

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Venice faced serious political and economic setbacks in the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries. The future of the Eternal Republic seemed bleak when, in 1509, nearly bankrupt, her commercial empire in the Aegean and the eastern Mediterranean slipping away, Venice's army was routed at Agnadello by the forces of the League of Cambrai. Even the elements seemed to have turned against Venice around this time, visiting the city with earthquake, storm, flood, famine, and the plague. Well might the prominent banker Girolamo Priuli have feared that “great God has permitted and ordered this severe ruin of the Venetian Empire”
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Wolff, Larry. "Venice and the Slavs of Dalmatia: The Drama of the Adriatic Empire in the Venetian Enlightenment." Slavic Review 56, no. 3 (1997): 428–55. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2500924.

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The earliest submission of the Dalmatian cities to Venetian sovereignty, around the medieval millennial year 1000, remained fundamental for the mythology of Venice’s political culture right up to the end of the history of the republic in 1797. Giacomo Diedo, whose history of Venice was published in 1751, focused his attention upon “the first acquisitions of the Venetians in Dalmatia, which then might serve as a base for further advances.” In fact, the coastal cities of Dalmatia would serve Venice in the most literal (and littoral) sense as bases for an imperial commercial domain that advanced beyond the Adriatic to the eastern Mediterranean, but for Diedo, and his eighteenth-century contemporaries, Dalmatia was also an ideological base on which to construct a culturally convenient vision of Venetian empire. The Dalmatians, in order “to secure themselves from the molestations of the barbarians” (the Narentani along the river Neretva), appealed for the protection of Venice, so that the Adriatic armada of the Doge Pietro II Orseolo was welcomed “with acclamations by the inhabitants who saluted him as their liberator.”
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Apellániz, Francisco. "Venetian Trading Networks in the Medieval Mediterranean." Journal of Interdisciplinary History 44, no. 2 (August 2013): 157–79. http://dx.doi.org/10.1162/jinh_a_00535.

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Network analysis can identify the crucial role that such social outcasts as Jews, Greeks, colonial subjects, and uprooted individuals played within the exclusive commercial networks of the Republic of Venice. These lower-rank merchants and brokers were able not only to manipulate legal, cultural, and religious categories to integrate themselves into the Venetian networks but also to abandon those networks when better economic opportunities arose.
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Heldman, Marilyn E. "A chalice from Venice for Emperor Dāwit of Ethiopia." Bulletin of the School of Oriental and African Studies 53, no. 3 (October 1990): 442–45. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0041977x00151341.

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The various documents concerning Emperor Dāwit's embassy to the Republic of Venice in 1402 have been brought together in Carlo Conti Rossini's article of 1927 on European influence upon Ethiopian art before the coming of Jesuit missionaries in the mid sixteenth century. The purpose of this brief paper is to expand the story of Dāwit's embassy with a short document, which sheds some light upon the motives for this and subsequent Ethiopian embassies to European nations during the period before the Adalite invasions that began in 1529.
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Huang, Ray. "The Rise of Capitalism in Venice, the Dutch Republic, and England: A Chronological Sketch." Chinese Studies in History 20, no. 1 (October 1986): 3–50. http://dx.doi.org/10.2753/csh0009-463320013.

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Finlay, Robert. "Fabius Maximus in Venice: Doge Andrea Gritti, the War of Cambrai, and the Rise of Habsburg Hegemony, 1509-1530*." Renaissance Quarterly 53, no. 4 (2000): 988–1031. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/2901454.

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As a consequence of its dismal experience in the War of Cambrai (1509-1517), the Venetian Republic adopted a military policy of avoiding battlefield encounters. As a commander in the war and as doge of Venice after 1523, Andrea Gritti was the foremost proponent of this strategy, earning for himself the appellation of "Fabius Maximus," the Roman general who opposed Hannibal by delay and defense in the Second Punic War. In the 1520s, the Republic aspired to play the role of a great power — or at least that of an independent, balancing force between France and the Spanish-Habsburg Empire; but its refusal to commit its troops to battle fatally weakened the political coalitions opposing Charles V and thereby significantly contributed to the rise of Habsburg hegemony in Italy. A major step toward Charles V's triumph was the infamous Sack of Rome in 1527, a calamity for which the Fabian policy of Venice bears some responsibility.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "History of Republic of Venice"

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Jones, Scott Lee. "Servants of the Republic : patrician lawyers in Quattrocento Venice." Thesis, Swansea University, 2010. https://cronfa.swan.ac.uk/Record/cronfa42517.

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Lawyers have widely been recognized as playing a role in the transition from the medieval to the modem state. Their presence in Renaissance Venetian politics, however, remains largely unexplored. Relying primarily on a prosopographical analysis, the thesis explores the various roles played by lawyers, dividing those roles into three main categories: diplomats, territorial governors, and domestic legislators. What emerges is a clear pattern of significant involvement by legally trained patricians in the Venetian political system. Noble lawyers were most often ambassadors, serving in many of the principal courts inside and outside of Italy as Venice was extending her influence on the Italian peninsula. They also served as administrators of Venetian rule throughout the Venetian terraferma (mainland) state. Lastly, their domestic political officeholding further confirms their continuing participation, as they held many of the most important domestic offices throughout the Quattrocento. The thesis ends with short biographies of each of the nearly three-dozen lawyers who make up this study, as well as chronologies of the offices they held. These chronologies include archival references for each office.
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Yoshioka, Masataka. "Singing the Republic: Polychoral Culture at San Marco in Venice (1550-1615)." Thesis, University of North Texas, 2010. https://digital.library.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metadc33220/.

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During the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries, Venetian society and politics could be considered as a "polychoral culture." The imagination of the republic rested upon a shared set of social attitudes and beliefs. The political structure included several social groups that functioned as identifiable entities; republican ideologies construed them together as parts of a single harmonious whole. Venice furthermore employed notions of the republic to bolster political and religious independence, in particular from Rome. As is well known, music often contributes to the production and transmission of ideology, and polychoral music in Venice was no exception. Multi-choir music often accompanied religious and civic celebrations in the basilica of San Marco and elsewhere that emphasized the so-called "myth of Venice," the city's complex of religious beliefs and historical heritage. These myths were shared among Venetians and transformed through annual rituals into communal knowledge of the republic. Andrea and Giovanni Gabrieli and other Venetian composers wrote polychoral pieces that were structurally homologous with the imagination of the republic. Through its internal structures, polychoral music projected the local ideology of group harmony. Pieces used interaction among hierarchical choirs - their alternation in dialogue and repetition - as rhetorical means, first to create the impression of collaboration or competition, and then to bring them together at the end, as if resolving discord into concord. Furthermore, Giovanni Gabrieli experimented with the integration of instrumental choirs and recitative within predominantly vocal multi-choir textures, elevating music to the category of a theatrical religious spectacle. He also adopted and developed richer tonal procedures belonging to the so-called "hexachordal tonality" to underscore rhetorical text delivery. If multi-choir music remained the central religious repertory of the city, contemporary single-choir pieces favored typical polychoral procedures that involve dialogue and repetition among vocal subgroups. Both repertories adopted clear rhetorical means of emphasizing religious notions of particular political significance at the surface level. Venetian music performed in religious and civic rituals worked in conjunction with the myth of the city to project and reinforce the imagination of the republic, promoting a glorious image of greatness for La Serenissima.
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Setti, Cristina. "Una repubblica per ogni porto. Venezia e lo Stato da Mar negli itinerari dei Sindici Inquisitori in Levante (secoli XVI-XVII)." Doctoral thesis, Scuola Normale Superiore, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/11384/86065.

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SIGNORI, UMBERTO. "PROTEGGERE I PRIVILEGI DELLO STRANIERO. I CONSOLI VENEZIANI NELL'IMPERO OTTOMANO TRA SEI E SETTECENTO." Doctoral thesis, Università degli Studi di Milano, 2018. http://hdl.handle.net/2434/577240.

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In recent years, the research questions of foreigners and of the commercial use of consuls has attracted renewed scholarly attention. This dissertation aims to continue the reflections of these works by focusing on rights and privileges of protected foreign subjects and consuls during the early modern period. By examining the status of Venetian subjects and consuls in early modern Ottoman society this dissertation underscores the processes of identification that determined the social inclusion or exclusion of individuals among the category of protected foreigners. The dissertation has three main goals. The first is to analyse the professional and social background of consuls in the Eastern Mediterranean between seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. This point focuses on the ability of some individuals to enjoy some privileges, from which non-Muslim “locals” were excluded, by constituting social associations with the Republic of Venice. The second goal is to examine the reasons that motivated these individuals to seek a formal recognition of their status as consuls. This examination underscores the processes of appointment of consuls and the role of candidates on the configuration of consular systems. The last goal proposes an analysis of the role played by Venetian consuls in the diffusion of legal procedures of identification and registration, and it focuses on the use of legal and diplomatic resources in identification disputes. It particularly points out which were the documents and social practices that determined one’s membership and his registration in the Venetian nation in the Ottoman Empire. Furthermore, it analyses identification disputes dating from 1670 to 1715 between Venetian consuls and Ottomans officials by focusing on how the cross-cultural diplomatic negotiations of these disputes were channeled through the Ottoman petition system. The cases presented will provide important insights on the instability of belonging, in which the classification of individuals was determined by rigid fiscal and legal categories as well as by more fluid social relations. This dissertation aims, therefore, to offer a new consideration on the utility of consuls for the different social groups that benefitted from consular services dating from 1670 to 1715. Overall, it seeks to demonstrate that the consulates in the Ottoman Empire, interpreted in their social utility, must be considered as actors able of influencing jurisdictional practices and creating new norms through constant negotiations with institutions and with individual actors. This dissertation relies on documentation preserved at the Archivio di Stato di Venezia — in most cases, letters sent by the Venetian consuls to the bailo, the permanent ambassador in Istanbul. Usually contained petitionary reports, these consular letters rhetorically requested the restoration of justice, that is to say, either the enforcement of a legal resource or the redress of unjust identification committed by the local authorities. Decrees and letters written by different Venetian institution concerning consuls, trade and migration policy will be analysed to underscore the efficiency consuls had for the Venetian government. Finally, studying legal documents produced by consulate chancellery provide an important insight into the social life of the Venetian community in the Ottoman Empire. This research casts light upon institutional resources available to social actors to produce evidence of their own identity in a context of jurisdictional competition. But it will also show how the ability to enjoy some privileges, and not only some rights, through diplomatic negotiation decided the classification of people as foreigners or subjects.
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Bottaro, Francesco. "Studium Paduanum e Ducale Dominium nel lungo Quattrocento." Doctoral thesis, Università degli studi di Padova, 2010. http://hdl.handle.net/11577/3427513.

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This research revises some key issues also from a histographic point of view and, on the bases of the public Venetian sources that means from the perspective of the people who produce the government documentation. It analizes the relathionship between Venice and Padua University as an exercise of power, existing in a state structure which changes continuously In my research I have studied the Venetian domination of Padua in the time frame of abaut a century (1405-1509). This research aims to confirm, to correct and to delve into the fundamental aspects of the relationship between the political action of the Venetian Dominio and the complex and stratified University context at Padua The sources whic have been used, mostly reported in the corpus of documents in this essay, were produced by the most important government institutions and judiciary authorities of Venice (Senato, Collegio, Signoria, Quarantia Criminale), by the Venetian rectors (Podestà and capitano) and by Civic Council of Padua. The topic of the first chapter is the financing of Studium by an ordinary budget and extraordinary found deriving from fiscal incomes and other savings. Venice tried to reduce the number of chaires and the professors salaries. In the second chapter I studied the way to do the rotulo and the istitutional process to engagement of the doctores famosi, they were in a “interuniversitary professors market”. In this context venetian rectores had the main importance part, with extensive powers of control, intervention and initiative. The relationship between universitates of students and Venetian government is the third chapter topic in which we can see the formal respect of students libertates by Venice, but also the limitation of students autonomy in the professors choise. The universitary monopoly and scholastic protectionism of Padua Studium, made by Venice since the first years of its Padua domination, are the ways to guarantee a lot of students (as Venice promises to Padua citizens in the 1406 with bolla d'oro) and also to achieve political and social meaning in the framework of Venetian Terraferma during the XVth century.
Questa ricerca rielabora alcuni nuclei problematici, anche dal punto di vista storiografico, e, sulla base delle fonti pubbliche veneziane, cioè dalla prospettiva di chi produce la documentazione di governo, analizza il rapporto tra Venezia e lo Studio padovano come esperienza di potere, inserita in una compagine statuale in continua ridefinizione. Le fonti usate, in larga misura trascritte nel Corpus documentario della presente tesi di dottorato, sono state prodotte dai massimi organi di governo e giudiziari di Venezia (Senato, Collegio, Signoria, Quarantia Criminale), dai rettori veneziani e dal Consiglio civico di Padova. La ricerca da me svolta ha studiato la dominazione veneziana di Padova nell'arco di poco più di un secolo (1405-1509). L'obiettivo del presente studio consiste nel confermare, correggere e approfondire gli aspetti fondamentali dei rapporti tra l’azione politica del Dominio veneziano e la complessa e stratificata realtà universitaria della città ormai suddita. L'argomento del primo capitolo è il finanziamento dello Studio, che avveniva attraverso lo stanziamento di un budget ordinario e di fondi straordinari derivanti da introiti fiscali e da risparmi su altri capitoli di spesa della Camera fiscale di Padova. Venezia inoltre tentò di ridurre il più possibile il numero delle cattedre finanziate con denaro della Camera fiscale di Padova gestito da Camerlenghi veneziani e l'importo degli stipendi dei docenti. Nel secondo capitolo vengono studiati i passaggi decisionali attuati per la definizione del rotulo (organigramma dei docenti) e si fa luce sui meccanismi istituzionali che portavano all'ingaggio dei doctores famosi, inseriti in un mercato dei docenti interuniversitario. Nella gestione locale di questi aspetti che riguardavano il corpo docente, ebbero un ruolo di coordinamento sempre più marcato i rettori veneziani di Padova (podestà e capitano) con poteri di controllo, intervento e iniziativa. Il rapporto tra le universitates studentesche e il governo veneziano è trattato nel terzo capitolo, nel quale si evidenzia che, pur nel rispetto formale delle tradizionali libertates studentesche sancite dagli statuti universitari, Venezia limitò alcuni fondamentali aspetti dell'autonomia degli studenti come la scelta dei professori. Inoltre il monopolio universitario e il protezionismo scolastico dello Studio di Padova, inaugurato da Venezia sin dai primissimi anni della Dominazione di Padova rientrarono tra gli espedienti per assicurare, come promesso ai cittadini di Padova nella Bolla d'oro del 1406, un maggior afflusso di studenti, ma furono anche misure che ricoprirono più ampie valenze politiche e sociali, nell'ambito di una articolata e complessa compagine statuale come la Terraferma veneta.
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Zitta, Stefania <1982&gt. "HISTORY NOVEL IN VENICE." Master's Degree Thesis, Università Ca' Foscari Venezia, 2015. http://hdl.handle.net/10579/6567.

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Lejosne, Fiona. "Giovanni Battista Ramusio et la constitution d'un savoir géographique à Venise au XVIè siècle : parcours scientifique et horizon politique." Thesis, Lyon, 2016. http://www.theses.fr/2016LYSEN035/document.

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La compilation des Navigationi et viaggi, publiée à Venise en trois volumes entre 1550 et 1559, est le point d'aboutissement d'un travail de collecte et d'édition de textes géographiques effectué par le géographe humaniste Giovanni Battista Ramusio (1485-1557) au cours de la première moitié du XVIe siècle. Le compilateur entend mettre à jour la description du monde tout en proposant un nouveau modèle de constitution du savoir, dont le point de départ est l'expérience de ceux qui ont pris part aux voyages exploratoires passés et en cours. Ramusio, qui fit toute sa carrière comme secrétaire de chancellerie auprès de la République de Venise, prit appui sur un dense réseau de collaborateurs qui lui fournirent témoignages et récits de voyages. Ce travail de recherche offre pour la première fois une analyse conjointe de la figure de Ramusio comme géographe de cabinet et comme secrétaire de chancellerie, tout en inscrivant son activité dans le contexte de la Venise du début de l'âge moderne.La première partie de la thèse propose une reconstitution, fondée sur un travail d'archives, du laboratoire de Ramusio : les institutions de la République de Venise, le milieu savant italien et le monde de l'édition vénitien. Par l'étude de son statut et de sa démarche, l'interrelation entre ses intérêts propres et ses prérogatives professionnelles est mise en évidence. La deuxième partie porte sur la compilation, elle aborde à la fois les modèles suivis, les choix inédits de mise en forme et les processus de sélection des sources. Les intentions et le projet de Ramusio sont étudiés sur la base de ses propres écrits – les discorsi des Navigationi et viaggi – dans la troisième partie, où l'analyse porte sur la compilation comme ouvrage de géographie politique
The three-volume compilation, Navigationi et viaggi, published in Venice from 1550 to 1559, is the work of the humanist geographer Giovanni Battista Ramusio (1485-1557), who collected and edited geographical texts throughout the first half of the 16th century. The compiler attempted to update the description of the known world by employing new modes of knowledge, primarily based on the experiences of those who had taken part in exploratory travels. Ramusio, who served the Republic of Venice as a secretary at the chancellery, benefited from a broad network of collaborators who provided him with testimonies and travel accounts. My research offers the first joint analysis of Ramusio, the armchair geographer and secretary, within the context of early-modern Venice.Based on archival research, the first part of this work offers a reconstruction of Ramusio’s laboratory as part of the institutions of the Republic of Venice, the scholarly environment of Italy, and the world of Venetian publishing. The interrelation between his own interests and his professional prerogatives is established through a study of his scholarly approach and official role. The second part of this study focuses on the compilation, taking into account Ramusio’s influences, as well as his original choices for the organisation and selection of knowledge and sources. The objectives of this work of political geography are examined in the third part through an analysis of Ramusio’s own writings, the Navigationi et viaggi’s discorsi
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Maxson, Brian Jeffrey. "Review of Venice: An Intimate Empire." Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University, 2018. https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works/5457.

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Maxson, Brian. "The Depths of Venice: A Double Review of "Paolina's Innocence: Child Abuse in Casanova's Venice" by Larry Wolff and "Venice: A New History" by Thomas F. Madden." Digital Commons @ East Tennessee State University, 2014. https://dc.etsu.edu/etsu-works/6209.

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Kostyło, Joanna Maria. "Republic of saints : republican myth and religious reform, Venice-Poland, 1509-1609." Thesis, University of Cambridge, 2007. http://ethos.bl.uk/OrderDetails.do?uin=uk.bl.ethos.612958.

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Books on the topic "History of Republic of Venice"

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Venice: A maritime republic. Baltimore: John Hopkins University Press, 1991.

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Venice incognito: Masks in the serene republic. Berkeley: University of California Press, 2011.

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Venice, 697-1797: A city, a republic, an empire. Woodstock, NY: Overlook Press, 2001.

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Prelli, Alberto. L' Esercito veneto nel primo '600. Venezia: Filippi, 1993.

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Favaloro, Francesco Paolo. L' esercito veneziano del '700: Ricerche e schizzi. Venezia: Filippi, 1995.

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Gli archivi del Consiglio dei dieci: Memoria e istanze di riforma nel secondo Settecento veneziano. Padova: Il poligrafo, 2009.

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Bordelon, Michael. La Serenissima: The Republic of Venice from its founding to its fall. Ojai, CA: Laureate Pub., 2001.

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Vianello, Amelia. Gli archivi del Consiglio dei dieci: Memoria e istanze di riforma nel secondo Settecento veneziano. Padova: Il poligrafo, 2009.

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Marcella, Vasconi, ed. The book of the great history of Venice: The 1,200-year-old history of the Venetian Republic. [Verona]: Demetra, 1997.

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Under two lions: On the knowledge of Persia in the Republic of Venice (ca. 1450-1797). Wien: Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, 2009.

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Book chapters on the topic "History of Republic of Venice"

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North, Michael. "Art in Republics: Venice and the Netherlands." In Palgrave Studies in Comparative Global History, 27–43. Singapore: Springer Nature Singapore, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-981-19-8417-4_2.

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Sebastian, Peter. "Ottoman Government Officials and their Relations with the Republic of Venice in the Early Sixteenth Century." In Studies in Ottoman History, edited by Colin Heywood and Colin Imber, 319–38. Piscataway, NJ, USA: Gorgias Press, 2010. http://dx.doi.org/10.31826/9781463231729-023.

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Alfani, Guido, and Matteo Di Tullio. "4 Inequality, growth and taxation in the countryside of the Republic of Venice, c. 1450 - c. 1750." In Comparative Rural History of the North Sea Area, 65–79. Turnhout, Belgium: Brepols Publishers, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1484/m.corn-eb.5.121948.

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Sebastian, Peter. "OTTOMAN GOVERNMENT OFFICIALS AND THEIR RELATIONS WITH THE REPUBLIC OF VENICE IN THE EARLY SIXTEENTH CENTURY." In Studies in Ottoman History in Honour of Professor V.L. Mélange, edited by Colin Heywood and Colin Imber, 319–38. Piscataway, NJ, USA: Gorgias Press, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.31826/9781463233723-023.

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Menichelli, Claudio. "The National Museum of Naval History." In The Venice Arsenal, 83–91. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003200055-16.

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McCullough, Christopher. "Textual History and Dates." In The Merchant of Venice, 1–8. London: Macmillan Education UK, 2005. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-0-230-80421-0_1.

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Zan, Luca. "History of management and stratigraphy of organizing." In The Venice Arsenal, 11–21. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003200055-4.

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Holderness, Graham, Nick Potter, and John Turner. "The Merchant of Venice." In Shakespeare the Play of History, 160–79. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-19069-0_11.

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Holderness, Graham, Nick Potter, and John Turner. "Epilogue: ‘This is Venice’." In Shakespeare the Play of History, 204–9. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 1987. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-19069-0_13.

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Payaslian, Simon. "The Republic of Armenia: The First Republic." In The History of Armenia, 145–70. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230608580_7.

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Conference papers on the topic "History of Republic of Venice"

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Akiz, Metin, and Ahmet Erdoğan. "EFFECTS OF EARTH’S AXIAL TILT AND ORBIT CHANGES ON HUMAN HISTORY." In 23rd International Academic Conference, Venice. International Institute of Social and Economic Sciences, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.20472/iac.2016.023.006.

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Nikolay, Baikalov. "BAM’S HISTORY IN DOCUMENTS OF THE STATE ARCHIVE OF THE REPUBLIC OF BURYATIA." In Archives in history. History in archives. Ottisk, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.32363/978-5-6041443-5-0-2018-179-187.

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Nima, Bardanov. "ARCHIVE SERVICE OF THE REPUBLIC OF BURYATIA IN THE LAST THIRD OF THE XX CENTURY." In Archives in history. History in archives. Ottisk, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.32363/978-5-6041443-5-0-2018-328-334.

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Angelina, Tokarchuk. "ON THE 95 TH ANNIVERSARY OF THE FORMATION OF THE CENTRAL ARCHIVES OF THE REPUBLIC OF BURIATIA." In Archives in history. History in archives. Ottisk, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.32363/978-5-6041443-5-0-2018-303-309.

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Baradello, L., and F. Donda. "Seismic data acquisition in shallow water: A case history In The Venice Lagoon." In 69th EAGE Conference and Exhibition - Workshop Package. European Association of Geoscientists & Engineers, 2007. http://dx.doi.org/10.3997/2214-4609.201405114.

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Tatiana, Gusakova. "DOCUMENTS OF THE NATIONAL ARCHIVE REPUBLIC OF KHAKASSIA ON THE PERIOD OF POLITICAL REPRESSION IN THE PERSONAL FUND N.S. ABDIN." In Archives in history. History in archives. Ottisk, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.32363/978-5-6041443-5-0-2018-168-171.

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Vesely, Jiri. "History of radar and surveillance technology in Czech Republic." In 2017 18th International Radar Symposium (IRS). IEEE, 2017. http://dx.doi.org/10.23919/irs.2017.8008086.

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Margarita, Boronova. "HISTORY OF SOCIAL AND ECONOMIC DEVELOPMENT OF BURYATIA 1960-1980-S IN THE DOCUMENTS OF THE STATE ARCHIVE OF THE REPUBLIC OF BURYATIA." In Archives in history. History in archives. Ottisk, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.32363/978-5-6041443-5-0-2018-194-197.

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Alexander, Pashinin. "SOURCES FOR THE GENEALOGY OF THE BAPTIZED NATIVES OF MISSIONARY ACTIVITY IN THE FUNDS OF THE STATE ARCHIVE OF THE REPUBLIC OF BURYATIA." In Archives in history. History in archives. Ottisk, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.32363/978-5-6041443-5-0-2018-251-272.

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Lyubov, Zaitseva, and Dambaev Dmitry. "FROM THE HISTORY OF CREATION OF THE FIRST HIGH SCHOOL OF BURYATIA ON THE MATERIALS OF THE STATE ARCHIVE OF THE REPUBLIC OF BURYATIA." In Archives in history. History in archives. Ottisk, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.32363/978-5-6041443-5-0-2018-95-104.

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Reports on the topic "History of Republic of Venice"

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Park, Kwonyoung. Restoring the Nexus of History-Theory-Doctrine in Military Thought: Implications for the Republic of Korea Army. Fort Belvoir, VA: Defense Technical Information Center, May 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.21236/ada589528.

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Wandji, Dieunedort, Jeremy Allouche, and Gauthier Marchais. Vernacular Resilience: An Approach to Studying Long-Term Social Practices and Cultural Repertoires of Resilience in Côte d’Ivoire and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), April 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/steps.2021.001.

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This working paper aims to situate our research project within the various debates around resilience. It advocates a historical, cultural and plural approach to understanding how communities develop and share resilient practices in contexts of multiple and protracted crises. A focus on ‘vernacular’ resilience, as embedded in social practices and cultural repertoires, is important since conventional approaches to resilience seem to have overlooked how locally embedded forms of resilience are socially constructed historically. Our approach results from a combination of two observations. Firstly, conventional approaches to resilience in development, humanitarian and peace studies carry the limitations of their own epistemic assumptions – notably the fact that they have generic conceptions of what constitutes resilience. Secondly, these approaches are often ahistorical and neglect the temporal and intergenerational dimensions of repertoires of resilience. In addition to observable social practices, culture and history are crucial in understanding the ways in which vernacular and networked knowledge operates.
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Wandji, Dieunedort, Jeremy Allouch, and Gauthier Marchais. Vernacular Resilience: An Approach to Studying Long-Term Social Practices and Cultural Repertoires of Resilience in Côte d’Ivoire and the Democratic Republic of Congo. Institute of Development Studies (IDS), May 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.19088/steps.2021.002.

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This working paper aims to situate our research project within the various debates around resilience. It advocates a historical, cultural and plural approach to understanding how communities develop and share resilient practices in contexts of multiple and protracted crises. A focus on ‘vernacular’ resilience, as embedded in social practices and cultural repertoires, is important since conventional approaches to resilience seem to have overlooked how locally embedded forms of resilience are socially constructed historically. Our approach results from a combination of two observations. Firstly, conventional approaches to resilience in development, humanitarian and peace studies carry the limitations of their own epistemic assumptions – notably the fact that they have generic conceptions of what constitutes resilience. Secondly, these approaches are often ahistorical and neglect the temporal and intergenerational dimensions of repertoires of resilience. In addition to observable social practices, culture and history are crucial in understanding the ways in which vernacular and networked knowledge operates.
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Constantin, Sergiu. ECMI Minorities Blog. Romanians and Moldovans in Ukraine and their kin states’ engagement before and after the war – towards a triadic partnership for effective minority protection? European Centre for Minority Issues, November 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.53779/kjkj1212.

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Ukraine recognizes Romanian and Moldovan as distinct minority languages, even though the official language of the Republic of Moldova is Romanian. This distinction between Romanian and Moldovan is not merely a symbolic matter, it has practical, negative consequences for members of the minority communities concerned. Since the 1990s, Ukrainian-Romanian relations have been affected by mutual distrust rooted in historical resentments, stereotypes, and prejudice at the level of both political elites and the general public. Moldova and Ukraine have experienced ups and downs in their bilateral relations due to the complex geopolitical context and growing Russian interference. The ongoing Russian war against Ukraine has had a strong impact on Moldova and Romania as well as on their kin minority communities in Ukraine. This war marks a turning point in history. It has caused tectonic shifts in global affairs, in the Euro-Atlantic community, and in national politics and interstate relations. Ukraine, Romania, and Moldova can turn the ongoing crisis into an opportunity to reset their (dysfunctional) bilateral relations. It is high time for a paradigm shift towards a new, enhanced triadic partnership which is able to ensure an effective system of minority protection.
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London, Jonathan D. Adoption, Adaption, and the Iterative Challenges of Scaling up in Vietnam: Policy Entrepreneurship and System Coherence in a Major Pedagogical Reform. Research on Improving Systems of Education (RISE), March 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.35489/bsg-rise-misc_2023/11.

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Đặng Tự Ân played a pivotal role in the genesis, adoption, and diffusion of pedagogical and curricular reforms that are transforming teaching and learning in the Socialist Republic of Vietnam. His is a fascinating story of a career that began with the paralyzing disappointment of being assigned to study in a seemingly lowly teacher training college only to culminate, decades later, in his central role in the research, design, piloting, and scaling up of a reform that, despite numerous difficulties, would shape the most far-reaching and progressive curricular reforms in Vietnam’s long educational history. This essay uses the case of VNEN, a pedagogical and curricular reform adapted to Vietnam from the Colombian Escuela Nueva (EN) model, to advance our understanding of the challenges policy entrepreneurs and networks of policy stakeholders can encounter in efforts to institute pathbreaking reforms and of the formidable challenges they can encounter in bringing such reforms to scale. In contemporary research on the political economy of education and learning, the notion of an education system’s coherence for learning refers to the extent to which an education system develops relations of accountability that support improved learning outcomes across a range of relationships that define an education system and an array of policy design elements that education policies contain (Pritchett 2015, Kaffenberger and Spivack 2022). In the development literature, the notion of iterative adaptation speaks to a process wherein the performance of policies can improve rapidly through experimentation rather than mechanical transplantation of “best practices” (Andrews et al. 2013, Le 2018). From the standpoint of research on education systems and major reform efforts aimed at enhancing learning, the case of VNEN represents a particularly interesting instance of the innovation of pedagogical and curricular reforms that were, at their most successful moments, deeply coherent for learning, but which encountered problems at scale owing to a range of factors highlighted in this analysis. More broadly and however problematic at times, Vietnam’s VNEN experience contributed to the broad uptake and diffusion of new curricula and teaching practices. This raises questions about what we can learn from VNEN, including its successes and problems, that may have value for promoting continued improvement in Education systems performance around learning in Vietnam and other settings.
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The IDB Group in the Central American Isthmus and the Dominican Republic: Activities Report 2020. Inter-American Development Bank, February 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.18235/0003065.

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2020 was an unprecedented year for Central America and the Dominican Republic. The effect of the global COVID-19 pandemic, exacerbated by the impact of Hurricanes Eta and Iota in some countries, caused the greatest economic contraction the region has undergone in its recent history - surpassing the debt crisis of the 1980s and the international financial crisis of 2009. In 2020, the IDB Group helped the countries in the region respond to these emergencies through approvals that exceeded US$ 4,900 million and disbursements of more than US$ 4,327 million, both reaching historical records. This report highlights the Groups main activities in Central America and the Dominican Republic in 2020 at the regional and country level.
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