Book Description
A companion to the best-selling Venezia by Tessa Kiros
Author : Tessa Kiros
Publisher : Allen & Unwin
Page : 193 pages
File Size : 16,40 MB
Release : 2009
Category : Cooking, Italian
ISBN : 1741966051
A companion to the best-selling Venezia by Tessa Kiros
Author : Wright Morris
Publisher :
Page : 104 pages
File Size : 32,71 MB
Release : 1972
Category : Travel
ISBN :
Author : Robert C. Davis
Publisher : JHU Press
Page : 408 pages
File Size : 27,24 MB
Release : 1991-02-01
Category : History
ISBN : 0801896096
Winner of the American Catholic Historical Association's Howard R. Marraro Prize in Italian History The master ship builders of seventeenth-century Venice formed part of what was arguably the greatest manufacturing complex in early modern Europe. As many as three thousand masters, apprentices, and laborers regularly worked in the city's enormous shipyards. This is the social history of the men and women who helped maintain not only the city's dominion over the sea but also its stability and peace. Drawing on a variety of documents that include nearly a thousand petitions from the shipbuilders to the Venetian governments as well as on parish records, inventories, and wills, Robert C. Davis offers a vivid and compelling account of these early modern workers. He explores their mentality and describes their private and public worlds (which in some ways, he argues, prefigured the factories and company towns of a later era). He uncovers the far-reaching social and cultural role played by women in this industrial community. He shows how the Venetian government formed its shipbuilders into a militia to maintain public order. And he describes the often colorful ways in which Venetians dealt with the tensions that role provoked—including officially sanctioned community fistfights on the city's bridges. The recent decision by the Italian government to return the Venetian Arsenal to civilian control has sparked renewed interest in the subject among historians. Shipbuilders of the Venetian Arsenal offers new evidence on the ways in which large, state-run manufacturing operations furthered the industrialization process, as well as on the extent of workers' influence on the social dynamics of the early modern European city.
Author : Peter Pauper Press
Publisher :
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 26,39 MB
Release : 2012-07
Category :
ISBN : 9781441310422
Bookbound. Hardcover books lie flat for ease of use. Acid-free, archival paper. A detail from G. B. Arzentis Birds Eye View depiction of early 17thcentury Venice adds continental sophistication to this journal. Embossed, iridescent highlights, ribbon bookmark.
Author : Lidia Sciama
Publisher : Berghahn Books
Page : 272 pages
File Size : 34,30 MB
Release : 2003-06-01
Category : Social Science
ISBN : 1782386149
Since the extensive floods of 1966, inhabitants of Venice's laguna areas have come to share in, and reflect upon, concerns over pressing environmental problems. Evidence of damage caused by industrial pollution has contributed to the need to recover a common culture and establish a sense of continuity with "truly Venetian traditions." Based on ethnographic and archival data, this in-depth study of the Venetian island of Burano shows how its inhabitants develop their sense of a distinct identity on the basis of their notions of gender, honor and kinship relations, their common memories, their knowledge and love of their environment and their special skills in fishing and lace making.
Author : Elizabeth Horodowich
Publisher : Cambridge University Press
Page : 345 pages
File Size : 11,81 MB
Release : 2018-09-06
Category : History
ISBN : 1108687245
Few Renaissance Venetians saw the New World with their own eyes. As the print capital of early modern Europe, however, Venice developed a unique relationship to the Americas. Venetian editors, mapmakers, translators, writers, and cosmographers represented the New World at times as a place that the city's mariners had discovered before the Spanish, a world linked to Marco Polo's China, or another version of Venice, especially in the case of Tenochtitlan. Elizabeth Horodowich explores these various and distinctive modes of imagining the New World, including Venetian rhetorics of 'firstness', similitude, othering, comparison, and simultaneity generated through forms of textual and visual pastiche that linked the wider world to the Venetian lagoon. These wide-ranging stances allowed Venetians to argue for their different but equivalent participation in the Age of Encounters. Whereas historians have traditionally focused on the Spanish conquest and colonization of the New World, and the Dutch and English mapping of it, they have ignored the wide circulation of Venetian Americana. Horodowich demonstrates how with their printed texts and maps, Venetian newsmongers embraced a fertile tension between the distant and the close. In doing so, they played a crucial yet heretofore unrecognized role in the invention of America.
Author : Francesco Tarducci
Publisher :
Page : 444 pages
File Size : 50,80 MB
Release : 1893
Category : America
ISBN :
Author : Ambrosio Bembo
Publisher : Univ of California Press
Page : 468 pages
File Size : 18,48 MB
Release : 2007-09-19
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN : 0520249399
In 1671, Ambrosio Bembo, a young nobleman bored with everyday life in Venice, decided to broaden his knowledge of the world through travel. That August he set off on a remarkable, occasionally hazardous, four-year voyage to Syria, Turkey, Iraq, Iran, and the Portuguese colonies of western India. His journal, now translated into English for the first time, is the most important new European travel account of western Asia to be published in the past hundred years. It opens an extraordinary perspective on the Near East and India at a time when few Europeans traveled to these lands. Keenly observed and engagingly written, Bembo's vivid account is filled with a high sense of adventure and curiosity and provides intriguing descriptions of people, landscapes, food, fashion, architecture, customs, cities, commerce, and more. Presented here with the original illustrations and with a rich introduction and annotations, this lively and important historical document is at last available to scholars, students, and armchair travelers alike.
Author : Patricia Fortini Brown
Publisher : Yale University Press
Page : 388 pages
File Size : 40,25 MB
Release : 1996-01-01
Category : History
ISBN : 0300067003
Inscriptions, medals, and travelers' accounts, on more learned humanist and antiquarian writings, and, most importantly, on the art of the period, Brown explores Venice's evolving sense of the past. She begins with the late middle ages, when Venice sought to invent a dignified civic past by means of object, image, and text. Moving on to the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, she discusses the collecting and recording of antiquities and the incorporation of Roman forms.
Author : Alvise Zorzi
Publisher : Rizzoli International Publications
Page : 0 pages
File Size : 24,31 MB
Release : 1990
Category : Dwellings
ISBN : 9780847812004