Venice and Its Urban Planning
Venice and Its Urban Planning
Venice and Its Urban Planning
BOOK REVIEW
VENICE
ARNAB MAJUMDER A/2514/2012 III - B
PONTE S. GIUSTINA
Around 530, when Narses the Eunuch started the incredible battle which
wrested the Italian domains of the Emperors from the Goths, the Venetians
provided for him powerful help by transporting a multitude of Lombard
soldiers of fortune from Aquileia to Ravenna. As a prize Narses sent some
Byzantine experts, who from the riches of the adversary assembled the
Church of St Theodore at Rivoalto on a plot of ground known as the Broglio
or arrangement where now stands the Basilica of St Mark.
Barely, then again, were the Goths crushed, when in 568 Alboin and his
Lombards menaced the area. Longinus, who succeeded Narses in the
exarchate of Ravenna, came to Venice and asked her support as subject to
the Emperor. He was given a respectable and bubbly welcome, however
the Venetians had purchased their opportunity at an extraordinary cost and
forcefully declined to concede his case. They proclaimed that the second
Venice which they had made in the waters was a powerful home and their
extraordinary by right of creation; that they dreaded no force of Prince or
Emperor, for it couldn't achieve them. They, then again, outfitted a boat
and sent an international safe haven with Longinus to Constantinople, and
in exchange for important exchanging rights, consented to recognize the
suzerainty of the Emperor if no formal promise were claimed. In 584 the
tidal pond society had so stretched that an extra tribune was picked for
every group. Of these Tribuni majors was structured a government
chamber, the first tribunes now serving as heads of neighbourhood
organizations. (Daru, 1821)
The brilliant age so affectionately stayed upon by the early writers was of
brief time. As of now, before the foundation of the new tribunes, family
and neighbourhood quarrels, the aspiration of the tribunes and desire of
the individuals, prompted ridiculous affrays in the Pinete (pine backwoods)
with which the lidi were dressed. Insurgency debilitated the state; groups
of Lombards under the Duke of Friuli looted the holy places of Heraclea and
Grado. The emergency was met by general society soul and insight of the
Church. (Brown, 1902)
Bibliography
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