Venetian nobility

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Coat of arms of Republic of Venice.svg
Coat of arms of the Republic of Venice, featuring the Lion of Saint Mark.
Joseph Heintz dJ Sala Maggior Consiglio Venezia.jpg
The Great Council in a voting session at the Doge's Palace, 1648.

The Venetian patriciate (Italian : Patriziato veneziano, Venetian : Patrisiato venesian) was one of the three social bodies into which the society of the Republic of Venice was divided, together with citizens and foreigners. Patrizio was the noble title of the members of the aristocracy ruling the city of Venice and the Republic. The title was abbreviated, in front of the name, by the initials N.H. (Nobilis Homo or Nobiluomo), together with the feminine variant N.D. (Nobilis Domina). Holding the title of a Venetian patrician was a great honour and many European kings and princes, as well as foreign noble families, are known to have asked for and obtained the prestigious title.

Contents

The patrician houses, formally recorded in the Golden Book, were primarily divided into Old Houses (Case vecchie) and New Houses (Case nuove), with the former being noted for traditionally electing the first Doge in 697 AD. The New Houses were no less significant, as many became very prominent and important in the history of the Republic of Venice. The families were furthermore divided into several other "categories", including Ducal Houses (Case ducali, whose members had become Doges), Newest Houses (Case nuovissime) raised to the patriciate in 1381, non-Venetian patrician families, and "Houses made for money" (Case fatte per soldo, usually wealthy landowning or bourgeoisie families who contributed to the state during the War of Candia and the Morean War).

Although there were numerous noble houses across Venice's Mainland Dominions and the State of the Sea, the Republic was in fact ruled as an aristocratic oligarchy by about 20 to 30 families of Venice's urban nobility, who elected the Doge of Venice, held political and military offices, and directly participated in the daily governing of the state. They were predominantly merchants, with their main source of income being trade with the East and other entrepreneurial activities, on which they became incredibly wealthy. The most important families, who dominated the politics and the history of the state, included the Contarini, Cornaro, Dandolo, Giustinian, Loredan, Mocenigo, Morosini and the Venier families. Nobles were forbidden by law to marry outside of the nobility, so the families intermarried within themselves, and from a young age followed the cursus honorum of Venetian noblemen, training in the army, the naval fleet, the law, and the affairs of state.

Characteristics

Portrait of the Loredan family, by Giovanni Bellini, 1507, Gemaldegalerie, Berlin. Leonardo Loredan, 75th Doge of Venice, ruled from 1501 until his death in 1521 and was a member of the Loredan family, one of the Republic's most prominent noble houses. His four sons are depicted wearing the typical regalia of Venetian noblemen. Doge Leonardo Loredan with Four Noblemen, by Giovanni Bellini.jpg
Portrait of the Loredan family , by Giovanni Bellini, 1507, Gemäldegalerie, Berlin. Leonardo Loredan, 75th Doge of Venice, ruled from 1501 until his death in 1521 and was a member of the Loredan family, one of the Republic's most prominent noble houses. His four sons are depicted wearing the typical regalia of Venetian noblemen.

The basic foundation of belonging to the patriciate was the exclusive possession of political power. Starting from the Great Council Lockout (Serrata del Maggior Consiglio) of 1297 and the law of 1320 which precluded the inclusion of new families, this social body became the only one to have the privilege of sitting in the Great Council, the highest governing body of the city and the state. Privilege concretised with the right for each male member of noble families, starting from the age of majority, to participate in the sessions. [2]

Within the patriciate, all members enjoyed absolute political equality. Each vote, including that of the Doge, had the same value during the voting of the councils. Everyone had, at least theoretically, the same chance of accessing any public office, up to becoming a Savio del Consiglio , Procurator of Saint Mark or the Doge. Reflection of this principle was the equal title of "Nobleman" (Nobilis Vir, Nobilis Homo, Nobil Homo) recognized to the patricians, without any distinction, throughout the Republic. Whoever wore it carried within himself a portion of that sovereignty in which every patrician was a participant, together with the other members of his class. This made the Venetian patricians, in the noble hierarchy, of a rank equal to that of the Princes of the Blood (also given the equal possibility of rising to the royal rank of Doge).

The importance of this social body was such that every aspect of the Venetian noble's life was carefully monitored and regulated by the State, which took care to carefully verify all family ties and deeds necessary to prove the registration of the nobles into the Golden Book (Libro d'Oro), the register of nobles strictly guarded in the Doge's Palace. [3] There was also a Silver Book, which registered all those families that not only had the requisites of "civilization" and "honour", but could also show that they were of ancient Venetian origin; such families furnished the manpower for the State bureaucracy – and particularly, the chancellery within the Doge's Palace itself. Both books were kept in a chest in the Scrigno room of the Doge's Palace, inside a cupboard that also contained all the documents proving the legitimacy of claims to be inscribed therein. [2]

The robe of the nobles was the toga of black cloth with wide sleeves, lined in red for the Savi, the Avogadori and the leaders of the Quarantia. The toga became completely red for the senators and the ducal councilors. The whole was completed by the squat beret (a low cylindrical hat of black cloth) and the fur indicating the rank within the magistracy. It was an absolute obligation to wear the regalia during the exercise of one's office, in the councils and in the entire area of Saint Mark's Square.

Alongside this political aspect, however, the Venetian nobility had another peculiar character in their mercantile vocation. Contrary to the feudal nobility, in fact, the patriciate in Venice based its power not on the possession of land, but on the wealth of trade with the East as the basis of the entire economy. This stimulated this social class to a remarkable dynamism and resulted in incredible wealth.

The patricians thus served themselves and the state as captains of galleys, merchants, ambassadors, governors, public officials, and in every other form of civil and military organisation of the Republic.

Being Venetian patricians was an honour for all of European nobility and it was common with princes and kings of other states to ask for and obtain the title of N.H., including, among others, the kings of France, the Savoy, the Mancinis, the Rospigliosi, and the papal families of the Orsini and the Colonna.

Noble houses

These very ancient families died out before the Great Council Lockout of 1297, but nevertheless played a leading role in the politics of the Republic. Given their historical distance, the information and knowledge about these families is very scarce and steeped in legend.

ArmsFamilyNotable membersDescription
Stemma della famiglia Candiano.svg Candiano  [ it ] Pietro I, Pietro II, Pietro III, Pietro IV, Vitale Originally from Padua, they gave five Doges to the Republic in the 9th and 10th centuries.
Stemma della famiglia Centranico.svg Centranico Pietro Sometimes also called Barbo or Barbolano.
Coat of Arms of the House of Flabanico.svg Flabanico Domenico
Galbaio Venice shield.png Galbaio Giovanni, Maurizio The surname came from the family's reputed descent from the ancient Roman emperor Galba.
Ipato Veneto shield.png Ipato Gioviano, Orso, Teodato The surname is thought to be derived from imperial honorific hypatos , granted to Orso by Emperor Leo III the Isaurian.
Monegari Venice shield.png Monegario Domenico The surname may derive from monegarium, that is, a friar or monk, or monetarium, that is, a minter.
Coat of Arms of the House of Orseolo.svg Orseolo Frozza, Giovanni, Otto, Peter, St. Pietro I, Pietro II Descended from Orso and Teodato Ipato, they gave three Doges to the Republic and are notable for leading the Venetian expansion into Dalmatia.
Stemma della famiglia Partecipazio.svg Participazio  [ it ] Agnello, Giovanni I, Giovanni II, Giustiniano, Orso I, Orso II, Pietro A dynasty originally from Eraclea, they gave seven Doges to the Republic in the 9th and 10th centuries, also moving the capital from Malamocco to Rialto.
Tradonico shield.png Tradonico Pietro Originally from Pula, Istria (in modern Croatia), they came to Rialto via Jesolo.
Doge Tibuno Memmo.png Tribuno Pietro

Old houses

The group of Old houses, whose members were called "longhi", has been well defined since the 1350s. In the so-called "pseudo-Giustinian" Chronicle, drawn up at that time, the group is distinguished from the already substantial corpus of patricians of twenty-four (or, better,[ clarification needed ] twenty-five) families more powerful and constantly engaged in Venetian political life. In the Chronicle these patrician houses are divided into two further groups: the first includes the families Badoer, Baseggio, Contarini, Corner, Dandolo, Falier, Giustinian, Gradenigo-Dolfin, Morosini, Michiel, Polani and Sanudo; the second includes the families Barozzi, Belegno (later Bragadin), Bembo, Gauli, Memmo, Querini, Soranzo, Tiepolo, Zane, Zeno, Ziani (later Salamon) and Zorzi. [4]

The author of the paper justifies this situation by listing in detail the deeds performed by their ancestors in the foundation of Venice. Although imaginative, the information contained in the Chronicle served to distinguish an elitist nucleus from the large mass of families included after the Serrata, above all those New houses that during the fifteenth century would contend with the "longhi" for the ducal throne. [5]

It should also be noted that tradition defined twelve "apostolic" families (Contarini, Tiepolo, Morosini, Michiel, Badoer, Sanudo, Gradenigo-Dolfin, Memmo, Falier, Dandolo, Polani and Barozzi) and four other "evangelical" ones (Giustinian, Corner, Bragadin and Bembo); the history of Venice evidently wanted to be compared to that of the Church, founded on the Twelve Apostles and advocated by the Four Evangelists.

The Thirteen
CrestNameNotable membersMember portrait
Coat of Arms of Badoer.svg Badoer Alvise, Andrea, Giacomo, Giacomo, Giovanni Alberto, Luca, Marino Gianalberto Cardinal Badoer.jpg
Coat of Arms of the House of Baseggio.svg Baseggio Cesco, Pietro
Coat of Arms of the House of Contarini.svg Contarini Albano, Alvise, Alvise, Ambrogio, Andrea, Bartolomeo, Bartolomeo, Carlo, Cecilia, Domenico I, Domenico II, Enrico, Francesco, Gasparo, Giovanni, Giovanni Matteo, Jacopo, Maddalena, Marino, Nicolò, Piero, Polissena Carlo Contarini portrait 2.jpg
Coat of Arms of the House of Corner.svg Cornaro Andrea, Andrea, Andrea, Caterina, Elena, Federico, Federico, Federico, Felicia, Francesco, Francesco, Francesco, Giorgio, Giorgio, Giorgio, Giorgio, Giovanni, Giovanni I, Giovanni II, Laura, Luigi, Luigi, Marco, Marco, Marco, Marco, Marco Antonio, Pietro, Pisana, Vitsentzos Giovanni Cornaro.jpg
Coat of Arms of the House of Dandolo.svg Dandolo Andrea, Andrea, Anna, Emilio, Enrico, Enrico, Enrico, Francesco, Giovanna, Giovanni, Marino, Raniero, Zilia Enrico Dandolo, Doge of Venice.jpg
Coat of Arms of the House of Dolfin.svg Dolfin Caterina, Dolfin, Gentile, Giampaolo, Giovanni, Giovanni, Giovanni, Giovanni, Giovanni, Giovanni, Giovanni, Pietro Daniele IV Dolfin (Tiepolo).jpg
Coat of Arms of the House of Falier.svg Falier Marino, Ordelaffo, Vitale Marino Faliero (detalle).jpg
Coat of Arms of the House of Giustinian.svg Giustinian Alicia, Giacomo, St. Lawrence, Marcantonio, Marco, Marco, Olimpia, Pantaleone, Paul, Pompeo, Sebastian, Zorzi Marcantonio Giustinian, Doge of Venice.jpg
Coat of Arms of the House of Gradenigo.svg Gradenigo  [ it ] Aluycia, Bartolomeo, Bartolomeo, Giovanni, Pietro Accademia - Doge Bartolomeo Gradenigo by Paris Bordone.jpg
Coat of Arms of the House of Morosini.svg Morosini Agostino, Aliodea, Dana, Domenico, Francesco, Giovan Francesco, Giovan Francesco, Bl. John, Lodovico, Marco, Marieta, Marino, Michele, Morosina, Sergio, Thomas, Tomasina Frari (Venice) - Chapter Room - Doge Marino Morosini by Palma il Giovane.jpg
Coat of Arms of the House of Michel (since XII century).svg Michiel  [ it ] Domenico, Giovanni, Marcantonio, Vitale I, Vitale II Domenico Michiel, Doge of Venice.jpg
Coat of Arms of the House of Polani.svg Polani  [ it ] Giovanni, Pietro Pietro Polani, Doge of Venice.jpg
Coat of Arms of the House of Sanudo.svg Sanudo Angelo, Cristina, Fiorenza, Fiorenza I, Guglielmazzo, John I, Marco, Marco, Marco I, Marco II, Maria, Marino, Marino, Nicholas I, Nicholas II, William I
The Twelve
CrestNameNotable membersMember portrait
Coat of Arms of the House of Barozzi.svg Barozzi Andrea I, Andrea II, Angelo, Elena, Francesco, Francesco, Giovanni, Iacopo I, Iacopo II, Pietro Portrait of Pietro Barozzi.jpg
Coat of Arms of the House of Belegno.svg Belegno  [ it ]
Coat of Arms of the House of Bembo.svg Bembo Bernardo, Gianfrancesco, Giovanni, Petronilla, Pietro Giovanni Bembo.jpg
Gauli shield.png Gaulo Galla
Coat of Arms of the House of Memmo.svg Memmo  [ it ] Andrea, Marcantonio, Tribuno Marcantoniomemmogemvlbassano hi.jpg
Stemma della famiglia Querini.svg Querini Angelo Maria, Elisabetta, Marina, Pietro Pinacoteca Querini Stampalia - Ritratto di Andrea Querini Provveditore generale della Dalmazia e Albania, 1794 - Bernardino Castelli.jpg
Stemma della famiglia Soranzo.svg Soranzo  [ it ] Giovanni, Vittore Portrait of Giovanni Soranzo.png
Arms of the house of Tiepolo.svg Tiepolo  [ it ] Bajamonte, Giovanni Battista, Giovanni Domenico, Jacopo, Lorenzo, Lorenzo Tintoretto Giacomo Tiepolo.jpg
Coa fam ITA zane.jpg Zane  [ it ] Lorenzo, Matteo, Paolo
Zen arms.png Zeno Antonio, Antonio, Apostolo, Carlo, Giovanni Battista, Nicolò, Nicolò, Pietro, Pietro, Reniero Renier Zen, Doge of the Republic of Venice.jpg
Ziani shield.png Ziani  [ it ] Marc'Antonio, Pietro, Pietro Andrea, Sebastiano Pietro Ziani, Doge of Venice.jpg
Coat of Arms of the House of Zorzi.svg Zorzi Alvise, Bertolome, Chiara, Francis, Jacob, Marino, Marino, Marino Giovanni, Nicholas I, Nicholas II, Nicholas III Pietro Antonio Zorzi, arcivescovo di Udine.jpg

Later, the Bragadin replaced the Belegno and the Salamon replaced the Ziani, following the two families' extinctions. [5]

CrestNameNotable membersMember portrait
Coat of Arms of the House of Bragadin.svg Bragadin Marcantonio, Marcantonio, Marcantonio Marcoantonio Cardinal Bragandin b.jpg
Coat of Arms of the House of Salamon.svg Salamon Bl. James, Marina Blessed James Salomoni.jpg

New houses

This group includes numerous patrician families who were not part of the Old houses, but were nevertheless very significant, as some became very prominent and important in the politics of the Republic.

Ducal houses

These are fifteen families of more recent nobility than the "longhi" (their members were called, not surprisingly, "curti"), as underlined by the same "pseudo-Giustinian" Chronicle. From it we learn that only the Barbarigo, the Marcello and the Moro had contributed to the foundation of Rialto by giving tribunes; Foscari, Gritti, Malipiero, Priuli, Trevisan, Tron and Venier are recognized as of non-Venetian origin; of the Donà, of the Grimani and of the Lando there is no information because they are only mentioned, while the Loredan are said to have originated from ancient Rome and were admitted to the Great Council under Doge Reniero Zeno (r. 1253–1268) or two centuries earlier, according to Jacopo Zabarella; [6] finally, the Mocenigo do not even appear.

CrestNameNotable membersMember portrait
Coat of Arms of the House of Barbarigo.svg Barbarigo Agostino, Agostino, Angelo, Contarina, Giovanni Francesco, St. Gregorio, Jacomo, Marcantonio, Marco, Marco Basaiti Portrait of Doge Agostino Barbarigo.jpg
Coat of Arms of the House of Dona.svg Donà Baldassare, Francesco, Leonardo, Nicolò, Pietro Francesco Donato, Doge of Venice.jpg
Coat of Arms of the House of Foscari.svg Foscari Francesco, Girolamo, Paolo, Pietro (Venice) Portrait of the Venecian doge Francesco Foscari by Lazzaro Bastiani - Correr Museum.jpg
Coat of Arms of the House of Grimani.svg Grimani Antonio, Domenico, Edmund, Elisabetta, Giovanni, Luigi, Maria Margherita, Marino, Marino, Pietro, Vincenzo Italian (Venetian) School - Doge Antonio Grimani (1434-1523) - 608980 - National Trust.jpg
Coat of Arms of the House of Gritti.svg Gritti  [ it ] Alvise, Andrea, Triadan Ritratto del Doge Andrea Gritti - Tiziano 059.jpg
Coat of Arms of the House of Lando.svg Lando  [ it ] Pietro Pietro Lando, Doge of Venice.jpg
Coat of Arms of the House of Loredan.svg Loredan Alvise, Andrea, Andrea, Antonio, Antonio, Caterina, Fosco, Francesco, Francesco, Giacomo, Giorgio, Giovanni, Giovanni, Giovanni Francesco, Leonardo, Marco, Marco, Marco, Paolina, Pietro, Pietro, Teodoro Giovanni Bellini, portrait of Doge Leonardo Loredan.jpg
Coat of Arms of the House of Malipiero.svg Malipiero  [ it ] Domenico, Felicia, Francesco, Gian Francesco, Giovanni, Orio, Pasquale, Riccardo Gentile Bellini 010.jpeg
Coat of Arms of the House of Marcello.svg Marcello Alessandro, Benedetto, Loredana, Lorenzo, Nicolò Dogemarcello2.jpg
Coat of Arms of the House of Mocenigo.svg Mocenigo Alvise Giovanni, Alvise I, Alvise II, Andrea, Giovanni, Lazzaro, Leonardo, Marco Antonio, Pietro, Sebastiano, Tommaso Alvise IV Mocenigo.jpg
Coat of Arms of the House of Moro.svg Mòro Anton Lazzaro, Cristoforo Portrait of Doge Cristoforo Moro (1390-1471).jpg
Coat of Arms of the House of Priuli.svg Priuli Agostino, Antonio, Antonio Maria, Giovanni, Girolamo, Girolamo, Lorenzo, Lorenzo, Matteo, Matteo, Michele, Marieta Morosina, Pietro Attributed to Odoardo Fialetti (1573-1638) - Doge Antonio Priuli - RCIN 407153 - Royal Collection.jpg
Coat of Arms of the House of Trevisan.svg Trevisan  [ it ] Marcantonio, Ludovico, Vittore Benedetto Titian doge ma trevisani museum of fine art budapest.jpg
Coat of Arms of the House of Tron.svg Tron Nicolò, Nicolò Nicolo Tron, Doge of Venice.jpg
Coat of Arms of the House of Venier.svg Venier Andrea, Antonio, Cecilia, Francesco, Giacopo Antonio, Lydia, Mara, Marco, Marco, Marie, Pietro, Sebastiano, Zuan Francesco Tiziano, Portrait of Doge Francesco Venier Oil on canvas, Thyssen-Bornemisza Collection.jpg

The Vendramin family can also be counted among the ducal families who, despite having been aggregated only in 1381 after the War of Chioggia, managed to elect the doge Andrea Vendramin not even a century later. [5]

CrestNameNotable membersMember portrait
Coat of Arms of the House of Vendramin.svg Vendramin Andrea, Francesco Andrea Vendramin, by Gentile Bellini cropped.jpg

Others

Some other families considered part of the Case nuove include:

CrestNameNotable members
Coa fam ITA abramo2.jpg Abramo
Stemma della famiglia Agnusdio.svg Agnusdio
Coa fam ITA amizzo.jpg Amizzo
Coa fam ITA armer.jpg Armer
Arimondi shield.png Arimondo
Avanzago shield.png Avanzago
Baffo.png Baffo Franceschina, Giorgio Alvise
Coa fam ITA balbi3.jpg Balbi Adriano, Gasparo, Girolamo, Ludovico, Teodoro
Coat of Arms of the House of Barbaro.svg Barbaro Antonio, Cornelia, Daniele, Donato, Ermolao, Ermolao, Federico, Francesco, Francesco, Giosafat, Marcantonio, Marco, Nicolò
StemmaBarbo.svg Barbo Giovanni, Ludovico, Marco, Pantaleone, Pope Paul II
Benedetti Venice shield.png Benedetti Giambattista
Arms of the house of Bernardo.svg Bernardo
Coa fam ITA bollani.jpg Bollani Domenico
Coa fam ITA boldu.jpg Boldù
Coat of arms of the House of Bon.svg Bon Filippo, Laura
Bondumier shield.png Bodulmier
Briani shield.png Briani
Calbo coat arms.png Calbo
Coa fam ITA canali.jpg Canal Fabio, Giovanni Battista
Coat of arms of the House of Cappello.svg Cappello Andrea, Antonio, Bernardo, Bianca, Girolamo, Vettore, Vincenzo
Caravello shield.png Caravello
Coat of Arms of the House of Celsi.svg Celsi Lorenzo, Lorenzo
Civran shield.png Civran Giuseppe
Cocco shield.png Cocco
Coat of arms of the House of Correr.svg Correr Antonio, Antonio, Francesco Antonio, Gregorio, Pope Gregory XII, Pietro, Pietro, Teodoro
DaMosto shield.png Da Mosto Alvise, Francesco
Mula.png Da Mula Marco Antonio, Polissena
Coat of Arms of the House of da Ponte.svg Da Ponte Antonio, Lorenzo, Nicolò
Riva shield.png Da Riva
Diedo shield.png Diedo Antonio, Marcantonio
Duodo shield.png Duodo
Emo.png Emo Angelo, Giovanni
Coat of Arms of the House of Erizzo.svg Erizzo Francesco
Coat of Arms of the House of Foscarini.svg Foscarini Antonio, Giovanni Paolo, Marco, Michele, Giacomo
Stemma della famiglia Foscolo.svg Foscolo Leonardo, Nikolaos, Ugo
Fradello shield.png Fradello
Arms of the house of Gabrielli.svg Gabrielli Cante, Cecciolo, Domenico, Giovanni, Giovanni Maria, Giulio, Giulio, Luigi, Nicolò, Pompeo
Ghisi.png Ghisi Agnese, Andrea, Bartholomew I, Bartholomew II, George I, George II, Geremia
Giusti Venise shield.png Giusti Agostino, Alvise, Girolamo
Grioni shield.png Grioni
Gussoni.JPG Gussoni
Magno.png Magno Stefano
Manolesso coats arms.png Manolesso Emilio Maria
20210421124934!Marini shield.png Marin
Mengolo shield.png Mengolo
Miani shield.png Miani St. Gerolamo, Giovanni, Hieronimo, Valeria
Minio shield.png Minio Bartolomeo, Domenico
Minotto shield.png Minotto
Coat of Arms of the House of Molin.svg Molin Alvise, Biagio, Francesco, Giovanni, Nicolò, Raffaele
Muazzo shield.png Muazzo
Brasao Nadal.jpg Nadal Pietro
Coa fam ITA nani.jpg Nani
Navagero coats.png Navagèr Andrea, Bernardo
Coa fam IT Orio.png Orio
Blason-azur-3-bandes-or.svg Pasqualigo Lorenzo, Luigi, Nicolò
Coat of Arms of the House of Pesaro.svg Pesaro Giovanni
Coat of Arms of the House of Pisani.svg Pisani Alvise, Andrea, Carlo, Domenico, Francesco, Francesco, Luigi, Niccolò, Vettor
Pizzamano shield.png Pizzamano
Premarin shield.png Premarin
Coat of Arms of the House of Sagredo.svg Sagredo Caterina, Giovanni Francesco, Nicolò
Selvo arms.png Selvo Domenico
Semitecolo shield.png Semitecolo Niccolò
Coa Steno.png Steno Michele
Coa fam ITA storladi.jpg Storladi
Coa fam ITA stornello.jpg Stornello
Surian shield1.png Surian
Valaresso shield2.png Valaresso
Coat of Arms of the House of Valier.svg Valier Agostino, Bertuccio, Silvestro
Vitturi Tg 1.JPG Vitturi
Zancarelo shield.png Zancaruol
Centani shield.png Zantani
Zulian arms.png Zulian Girolamo, Polo

Families which can be added to these include the Albizzo, Basadonna, Coppo, dalle Boccole, da Lezze, d'Arduin, Fabriciacio, Galanti, Gambarin, Lanzuoli, Lombardo, Mazaman, Miegano, Mussolino, Navigroso, Sesendillo, Signolo, Viaro, Vielmo, Volpe, Zaguri, and the Zancani.

To these were added in 1298 some Venetian families which, at the time of the Serrata, were in the East, notably in Constantinople:

CrestNameNotable members
Acotanto shield.png Acotanto
Coa fam ITA bonomi.jpg Bonomo Bl. Giovanna Maria, Jacobello, Pietro
Mastellizi shield.png Mastalizi
Coat of Arms of the House of Ruzzini.svg Ruzzini Carlo

Other families added in 1298 include the Costantino, Donadi, Marcipian, Massoli, Ruzier, Stanieri, Tolonigo, and the Tonisto.

The remainder came from Acre and were added in 1303. These include the Barison, Benedetti (another branch), Bondulmier (another branch), Lion, Marmora, Molin (the Molin d'Oro branch) and the Surian (another branch). All but the Lion and the Surian appear to have attended the Council sometime before the Serrata. [5]

Then there were fifteen families descended from citizens who had distinguished themselves in the repression of the Tiepolo conspiracy in 1310, some of which include:

CrestNameNotable members
Coa fam ITA agadi.jpg Agadi
Caotorta shield.png Caotorta
Quintavalle shield.png Quintavalle Antonio

Other families added in 1310 include the Addoldo, Agrinal, Buoninsegna, Caroso, Diente, Diesello, Ferro, Grisoni, Mengolo (another branch), Papaciza, Sesendillo (another branch), and the Vidor.

Newest houses

Members of the Vendramin Family Venerating a Relic of the True Cross, by Titian and workshop, mid-1540s, National Gallery, London. The sitters are Gabriel Vendramin (1484 - 1552), collector of works of art, his brother, Andrea Vendramin (1481 - 1547), and the latter's seven sons. The reliquary of the True Cross on the altar that their great-great-grandfather, an earlier Andrea Vendramin, had received on behalf of the Scuola Grande di San Giovanni Evangelista in 1369, still exists. Tizian 104.jpg
Members of the Vendramin Family Venerating a Relic of the True Cross , by Titian and workshop, mid-1540s, National Gallery, London. The sitters are Gabriel Vendramin (1484 - 1552), collector of works of art, his brother, Andrea Vendramin (1481 - 1547), and the latter's seven sons. The reliquary of the True Cross on the altar that their great-great-grandfather, an earlier Andrea Vendramin, had received on behalf of the Scuola Grande di San Giovanni Evangelista in 1369, still exists.

At the turn of the fourteenth century, the War of Chioggia brought the Venetian economy to its knees. The Genoese fleet, deployed at the entrance to the Lagoon, had blocked all forms of commercial exchange and thus the revenue in terms of import duties. [4]

In 1379 the Venetian government decreed the granting of entry into the Patriciate to the thirty commoners who had contributed most in any way to the war effort. Many flocked to it, some making their servants, their children or themselves available, some keeping a group of soldiers, some arming galleys, some simply giving money. After the conflict, on 4 September 1381 the Senate elected the winners from a shortlist of sixty-two candidates (for a total of fifty-eight families). It is difficult to establish on the basis of which criterion this choice was made: many of the rejected had participated in the war effort with conspicuous offers, conversely there were those who were admitted with a very modest contribution. Evidently other factors weighed on them, including the marriage strategies that had allowed many non-nobles to create solid ties with the "old houses" of the aristocracy. [4]

In the list there are eleven candidates with the same surname to that of families already present in the Patriciate, and they can be presumed to belong to undocumented or illegitimate branches of those families. [5]

CrestName
Stemma della famiglia Calergi.svg Giorgio Calergi
Coa fam ITA carosini.jpg Rafaino Caresini
Arms of the house of Cavalli.svg Giacomo Cavalli
Coat of Arms of the House of Cicogna.svg Marco Cicogna
Coa fam ITA condulmari.jpg Giacomo Condulmer
Arduin shield.png Giovanni d'Arduin
Arduin shield.png Antonio d'Arduin
Della Fornase Venice shield.png Alvise dalle Fornase
Garzoni shield.png Giovanni Garzoni
Garzoni shield.png Nicolò Garzoni
Girardi shield.png Francesco Girardi
Lippomano shield.png Pietro Lippomano
Brasao Longo - Famiglie venete con le loro armi.jpg Nicolò Longo
Mezzo shield.png Francesco da Mezzo
Coa fam ITA nani.jpg Paolo Nani
Blason famille de Bournonville (ancien).svg Giovanni Negro
Orso shield.png Marco Orso
Coa fam ITA paruta.jpg Bartolomeo Paruta
Blason-azur-3-bandes-or.svg Marco Pasqualigo
Penzini Venice shield.png Pietro Penzini
Coat of arms of the House of Polo 01.svg Nicolò Polo
Coa fam ITA porto.jpg Donato da Porto
Coat of Arms of the House of Renier.svg Nicolò Renier
Coa fam ITA storladi.jpg Marco Storladi
Tagliapietra shield.png Nicolò Tagliapietra
Coat of Arms of the House of Trevisan.svg Giacomo Trevisan
Coat of Arms of the House of Trevisan.svg Paolo Trevisan
Coat of Arms of the House of Vendramin.svg Andrea Vendramin
Vizamano shield.png Giacomo Vizzamano
Coat of arms of the House of Zaccaria.svg Pietro Zaccaria
Giusti Venise shield.png Andrea Zusto

Non-Venetian patricians

Portrait of Gjergj Kastrioti Skanderbeg, by Cristofano dell'Altissimo, 1550s, Uffizi Gallery, Florence. A member of the Kastrioti family, Skanderbeg was an Albanian feudal lord and military commander who led a rebellion against the Ottoman Empire from 1443 to 1468. Ritratto di Giorgio Scanderbeg.jpg
Portrait of Gjergj Kastrioti Skanderbeg, by Cristofano dell'Altissimo, 1550s, Uffizi Gallery, Florence. A member of the Kastrioti family, Skanderbeg was an Albanian feudal lord and military commander who led a rebellion against the Ottoman Empire from 1443 to 1468.

Some time after the Serrata, the Patriciate was also conferred on those families of the mainland who had given military support to the Republic on various occasions. There are thirty-one families in all, but many never participated in Venetian politics, maintaining a merely honorific title.

CrestNameOriginAdded
Coa fam ITA anguissola5.jpg Anguissola Piacenza 1499
Coa fam ITA avogadro4.jpg Avogadro Brescia 1437
Bataglia shield.png Battagia Milan 1439
Arms of the house of Bentivoglio.svg Bentivoglio Bologna 1488
Benzon shield.png Benzon Crema 1407
Coa Kastrioti Family.svg Castriota Albania 1445
Coat of Arms of the Chernoyevitch dynasty.jpg Cernovicchi Albania 1474
Codognola Milan 1446
Coa fam ITA collalto2.jpg Collalto Treviso 1306
Arms of the house of Colleoni.svg Colleoni Bergamo 1450
Coa fam ITA arianiti comneno.jpg Comino Albania 1464
Kosace.png Cossazza Albania 1430
Arms of Gianfrancesco I Gonzaga, Marquess of Mantua.svg Gonzaga Mantua 1332
Arms of the house of Malatesta.svg Malatesta Rimini 1480
Coa fam ITA martinengo colleoni.jpg Martinengo Brescia 1448
Coa fam ITA lupi.jpg Meli Lupi Cremona 1505
Coat of arms of the House of Pallavicino.svg Pallavicino Parma 1423
Protti Vicenza 1404
CoA Riario 2.svg Riario Forlì 1481
Arms of the house of Rossi di Parma.svg Rossi Parma 1423
Coat of arms of the House of della Rovere.svg della Rovere Savona 1473
Coat of arms of the House of Savelli.svg Savelli Rome 1404
Coa fam ITA Savorgnan.png Savorgnan Friuli 1385
CoA Spadafora.jpg Spadafora Sicily 1404
Terzi stemma aa.jpg Terzi Parma 1407
CoA Dal Verme.svg dal Verme Verona 1388

Houses made for money

Portrait of the Valmarana family, by Giovanni Antonio Fasolo, Villa Valmarana ai Nani, Vicenza. The family of Gianalvise Valmarana, portrayed with his wife Isabella Nogarola and eight of their twelve children. In 1659 the Valmarana family led by the brothers Triffone, Stefano and Benedetto was given Venetian patrician status after they paid 100,000 ducats to help fund the Cretan War. FamigliaValmarana.jpg
Portrait of the Valmarana family, by Giovanni Antonio Fasolo, Villa Valmarana ai Nani, Vicenza. The family of Gianalvise Valmarana, portrayed with his wife Isabella Nogarola and eight of their twelve children. In 1659 the Valmarana family led by the brothers Triffone, Stefano and Benedetto was given Venetian patrician status after they paid 100,000 ducats to help fund the Cretan War.

Having become almost inaccessible for centuries, the noble body resumed opening up to new families when, with the decline of Venetian power, the State began to "sell" the title (for 100,000 ducats) to fill the public coffers, no longer supported by profitable trade with the East. Between the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries there were three openings to the aristocracy, with the aggregation of one hundred and thirty-four families such as the Medicis and the Gherardinis, (a not inconsiderable contribution, given that the nobility had been suffering from a serious demographic crisis for some time). Some of these families had already been making history in the Venetian hinterland for centuries, and their titles sometimes dated back to the Holy Roman Empire (such as the Brandolini, the Martinengo, the Piovene, the Spineda, the Valmarana). Others were bourgeoisie families enriched through trade (Benzon di San Vidal, Lin, Zanardi). [10]

Barnabotti

A particular category of patricians was constituted by the fallen nobles, called Barnabotti, who, having dissipated the family wealth, still maintained their right to vote in the Great Council. [11] They were a class of impoverished nobility whose name is derived from the fact that the group met and lived in the zone of the Campo San Barnaba (the area, being distant from the city centre, attracted lower rents). [12] Towards the end of the Republic they often represented the tip of the balance between the political factions of the council, influencing it through the trading of their votes to which they were often dedicated, usually selling them in the Orchard of Saint Mark. [13]

During the eighteenth century the Venetian political system underwent a sclerosis. The aristocracy in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries was very numerous; a high birth rate among the nobility, combined with the mercantile (and merchant-entrepreneur) profession undertaken by a large part of this class, involved a broad aristocratic government with varied interests, in which the poor nobles were a minority. There were, however, numerous events of social mobility within the class, brought about by the rapid enrichments in trade with the East and by the new factories set up in the Lagoon. During the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries the economic situation worsened, more and more after 1618, and the Venetian aristocracy was increasingly dependent on their properties in the mainland and in the colonies, as well as on public sinecures. In Europe the idea spread that trade and industry were unworthy of the aristocracy, an idea rejected by the Venetian aristocracy, but which nevertheless changed the mentality of the nobility. The wars against the Ottomans of the mid- and late-1600s decreased trade with the East for many years, as well as in the early 1700s, ruining other merchant families or those who had not been able to diversify their investments in land and real estate. Few families changed their economic status considerably and rapidly upward, allowing an increasingly small group of families to maintain a relatively large wealth, while many others were constantly losing their position, often without even the money to decently live on.

Church of San Barnaba, Venice Chiesa di San Barnaba - Venezia.jpg
Church of San Barnaba, Venice

This made the Barnabotti an evident phenomenon of Venetian society, while a reflection began on how to change forms of government. In fact, a group, the oligarchs, consisting of the richest families, managed, even by corrupting the poorest nobles, to exclude the middle and poor who were not at their service. The Venetian government, through the Council of Ten and the state inquisitors, however, prevented reforms of any kind (also because these bodies were in the hands of the oligarchy that was taking over the state, to its exclusive advantage). Attempts at reform were tried, but never implemented, in particular during the reign of Francesco Loredan, when Angelo Querini in 1761 tried to restore power to the more collegial organs of the Venetian aristocracy, while in the late 1770s Giorgio Pisani and Carlo Contarini, through the formation of a sort of "noble party", attempted an overall reform. At the center of their proposals there was precisely the social and political recovery of the poorest parts of the Venetian nobility, done through the assignment of dowries to the young patricians, especially the poor ones, increase in the salaries of the Forty and other Colleges, granting of donations for some prestigious political positions (previously free and then monopolised by rich nobles), setting a uniform for the nobles in order to distinguish them from the commoners, etc. In practice, they advocated for the creation of a "political" aristocracy and service, collectively capable of governing the city and the empire. Then there were some issues arising with the new Enlightenment ideas, such as opposition to internal espionage (which was very common in Venice), freedom of speech, defence and resumption of trade, etc. Precisely this attempt at a "noble reaction", not without populist maneuvers in favour of the Barnabotti, was crushed by the spies of the inquisitors, who, well informed, accused the two of having bought electoral votes from some Barnabottis, and also accused them of conspiring. They imprisoned Contarini in Cattaro (where he died, perhaps poisoned) and Pisani in Vicenza. When the French and the Jacobins arrived, Pisani tried to legitimise himself as an opponent of the despotism of the state inquisitors, of which he had been a victim, but, recognized for what he was, namely an aristocrat who had tried to modernise the structures of the Republic of Venice, however still remaining within the nobility, and indeed strengthening its aristocratic character, the new rulers marginalised it.

Residences

Palaces

Villas

Bibliography

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Patrician (post-Roman Europe)</span> Post-Roman European social class

Patricianship, the quality of belonging to a patriciate, began in the ancient world, where cities such as Ancient Rome had a social class of patrician families, whose members were initially the only people allowed to exercise many political functions. In the rise of European towns in the 12th and 13th centuries, the patriciate, a limited group of families with a special constitutional position, in Henri Pirenne's view, was the motive force. In 19th century Central Europe, the term had become synonymous with the upper Bourgeoisie and cannot be interchanged with the medieval patriciate in Central Europe. In the maritime republics of the Italian Peninsula as well as in German-speaking parts of Europe, the patricians were as a matter of fact the ruling body of the medieval town. Particularly in Italy, they were part of the nobility.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Contarini</span> One of the founding families of Venice

The Contarini is one of the founding families of Venice and one of the oldest families of the Italian Nobility. In total eight Doges to the Republic of Venice emerged from this family, as well as 44 Procurators of San Marco, numerous ambassadors, diplomats and other notables. Among the ruling families of the republic, they held the most seats in the Great Council of Venice from the period before the Serrata del Maggior Consiglio when Councillors were elected annually to the end of the republic in 1797. The Contarini claimed to be of Roman origin through their patrilineal descendance of the Aurelii Cottae, a branch of the Roman family Aurelia, and traditionally trace their lineage back to Gaius Aurelius Cotta, consul of the Roman Republic in 252 BC and 248 BC.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Foscari</span>

The House of Foscari was an ancient Venetian patrician family, which reached its peak in the 14th–15th centuries, culminating in the dogeship of Francesco Foscari (1423–1457).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Italian nobility</span> Former officially privileged social class in Italy

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Vendramin family</span> Italian merchant family

The House of Vendramin was a rich merchant family of Venice, Italy, who were among the case nuove or "new houses" who joined the patrician class when the Libro d'Oro was opened after the battle of Chioggia. Andrea Vendramin served as the sole Vendramin Doge from 1476–78, at the height of Venetian power, though in 1477 an Antonio Feleto was imprisoned, then banished, for remarking in public that the Council of the Forty-One must have been hard-pressed to elect a cheesemonger Doge. In his youth, Andrea and his brother Luca, in joint ventures, used to ship from Alexandria enough goods to fill a galley or a galley and a half, Malipiero recorded in retrospect: even his factors grew rich managing his affairs. At this period, mentions of Vendramins in various fields of business occur; Luca Vendramin (d.1527) founded a successful bank on the still-wooden Rialto Bridge with three Capelli brothers in 1507, but in his will of 1524 forbade his sons from continuing in banking. An early text on accounting mentions that the Vendramins' soap is so reliably good that you can buy it without inspecting it. Later they owned an important theatre.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">House of Loredan</span> Noble family and political dynasty

The House of Loredan is a Venetian noble family of supposed ancient Roman origin, which has played a significant role in shaping the history of the Mediterranean world. A political dynasty, the family has throughout the centuries produced a number of famous personalities: doges, statesmen, magnates, financiers, diplomats, procurators, military commanders, naval captains, church dignitaries, and writers.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Ca' Vendramin Calergi</span> 15th-century Venetian palace

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Great Council of Venice</span> Chief political assembly of the Venetian republic

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<span class="mw-page-title-main">Barbarigo family</span>

The Barbarigo were a patrician, noble Venetian family, whose members had an important role in the history of the Republic of Venice.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Papafava</span>

The Papafava were an aristocratic family of Padua, a junior branch of the Carraresi. It was admitted into the Venetian patriciate among the so-called Houses Made for Money.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Moro family</span> One of the founding families of Venice

The Moro family was a patrician family of the Republic of Venice.

This is an alphabetical index of people, places, things, and concepts related to or originating from the Republic of Venice. Feel free to add more, and create missing pages.

Loredan is a Venetian surname. The House of Loredan is an aristocratic Venetian family that included various doges of the Republic of Venice, and the surname is almost exclusively associated with the family. The surname most likely originated from the toponym Loreo, which itself originated from its Latin name Lauretum, meaning laurel. Another theory of the origin of the surname, though most likely legendary, is that it comes from the Latin epithet Laureati, given to ancestors of the Loredan family due to their historical glory in ancient Rome and the many victories they achieved in battles. The surname is spelled Loredano or Loredan in Italian, Lauredano or Lauredanus in Latin, and Lorentano (Λορεντάνο) in Greek, though it is also historically found as Lordas (Λορδᾶς) and Lordano (Λορδάνο). The feminine name Loredana, common in Italy and Romania, was likely inspired by the surname.

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Francesco Loredan was a Venetian magnate and nobleman of the Loredan family, and an ambassador of the Republic of Venice to Vienna during the peace negotiations between the Ottoman Empire and the Holy League, which resulted in the Treaty of Karlowitz (1699).

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Marcello (family)</span> Noble family of Venice

The House of Marcello is a noble family of Venice, once ascribed to the Venetian Patriciate.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Longhi (surname)</span> Italian surname

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References

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