fbpx
Wikipedia

Venetian rule in the Ionian Islands

The Ionian Islands were an overseas possession of the Republic of Venice from the mid-14th century until the late 18th century. The conquest of the islands took place gradually. The first to be acquired was Cythera and the neighboring islet of Anticythera, indirectly in 1238 and directly after 1363. In 1386, Corfu voluntarily became part of Venice's colonies. A century later, Venice captured Zante in 1485, Cephalonia in 1500 and Ithaca in 1503. The conquest was completed in 1718 with the capture of Lefkada. Each of the islands remained part of the Venetian Stato da Màr until Napoleon Bonaparte dissolved the Republic of Venice in 1797, annexing Corfu. The Ionian Islands are situated in the Ionian Sea, off the west coast of Greece. Cythera, the southernmost, is just off the southern tip of the Peloponnese and Corfu, the northernmost, is located at the entrance of the Adriatic Sea. In modern Greek, the period of Venetian rule over Greek territory is known as Venetokratia or Enetokratia (Greek: Βενετοκρατία or Ενετοκρατία) and literally means "rule of the Venetians".[1] It is believed that the Venetian period on the Ionian Islands was agreeable, especially compared with the coinciding TourkokratiaTurkish rule over the remainder of present-day Greece.[2]

Governorate of the Ionian Islands
Ixołe Jonie
Ἰόνιοι Νῆσοι
Colony of the Republic of Venice
1363–1797
Greater arms of the Republic of Venice, including the arms of Corfu, Zakynthos, and Cephalonia

The Ionian Islands in green. Map of 1785, when the Islands were still part of the Venetian Republic.
CapitalCorfu
History
Historical eraMiddle Ages
• Fourth Crusade
1202–1204
• Established1
1363
1463–1479
1499–1503
1718
1792– 1797
• Treaty of Campo Formio
17 October 1797
Today part ofGreece
1 Each island became part of the Venetian empire in different dates. 1363 refers to Cythera and Anticythera.

The governor of the Ionian Islands during the Venetian period was the Provveditore generale da Mar, who resided on Corfu. Additionally, each island's authorities were divided into the Venetian and the domestic authorities. The economy of the islands was based on exporting local goods, primarily raisins, olive oil and wine, whereas Venetian lira, the currency of Venice, was also the currency of the islands. Some features of the culture of Venice were incorporated in the culture of the Ionian Islands, thus influencing to this day local music, cuisine and language. The Venetian language, for instance, which was introduced on the islands as the official language and was adopted by the upper class, is still popular today throughout the islands.

Relations between Venice and Byzantium

 
View of Venice in 1565

Venice was founded in 421 after the destruction of nearby communities by the Huns and the Lombards. In the shifting Italian borders of the following centuries, Venice benefited from remaining under the control of the Roman Empire - increasingly as the furthest Northwestern outpost of the now Constantinople centered power. During Justinian I's reconquest of Italy from the Visigoths, Venice was an increasingly important stronghold for the Empire's Exarchate of Ravenna.[3] The political centre of the exarchate, and the most senior military officials of the Empire, were situated in Ravenna.[4][5] The subordinate military officials who were their representatives in the Venetian lagoons were called tribunes, and only in about AD 697 were the lagoons made a separate military command under a dux (doge).[6] Notwithstanding the election of the first Doge, vassalic evidence such as honours and orders received by the doge from the Emperor implies that Venice was considered part of the Byzantine Empire even after the capture of Ravenna by the Lombards.[7] Despite the Pax Nicephori (803), which recognised Venice as Byzantine territory, the influence of the Eastern Roman Emperor slowly faded away.[7] By 814 Venice functioned as a fully independent republic.[8] Even so, Venice became a partner of the Empire and trading privileges were granted to it by the Emperors via treaties,[9] such as the Byzantine–Venetian Treaty of 1082.

The Fourth Crusade (1202–1204) was initially intended to invade Muslim-controlled areas; instead, the Crusaders attacked the capital of the Byzantine Empire, Constantinople, resulting in the temporary dissolution of the empire and the sack of its capital.[10] As Venice was one of the participants in the Crusade its relations with the Byzantine Empire were strained during this period.[11] Moreover, by styling themselves "Lord of one-quarter and one-eighth of the whole Empire of Romania" after the Crusade, the Doges of Venice contributed to the deterioration of the relations between the two states.[11][12] Efforts to improve relations, for example through the Nicaean–Venetian Treaty of 1219, proved unsuccessful.[13] A period of friendly relations only followed the Sicilian Vespers in 1282, when Venice, foreseeing the fall of Charles, the French King of Sicily, began forming closer relations with Byzantium.[14] Venice had been bound by an alliance with Charles against Byzantium in 1281.[14]

Appellation

 
A c. 1690 Venetian map of Isola di Corfu : posseduta dalla Serenissima Republica di Venetia. The map shows the fortresses of Corfu surrounded by wreaths and ribbons. Angelokastro is indicated as "Castello S. Angelo" in a ribbon below the top right wreath of the map.

The Islands were referred to, both individually and collectively, by various names. After Venice captured Cephalonia on 24 December 1500, the administration of the defense of all the islands was delegated to an official seated in Corfu. This official was being referred to as "the General Provveditore of the Three Islands" (Provveditore Generale delle Tre Isole) and resided at the fortress of Angelokastro from 1387 to the end of the 16th century.[15] The Three Islands refer to Corfu, Zante and Cephalonia.[15] The Venetian equivalent for "Ionian Islands" is Ixołe Jonie, the Italian being Isole Ionie and the Greek Ιόνια Νησιά in Modern Greek and Ἰόνιοι Νῆσοι in Katharevousa.

Below are the seven principal islands from north to south, including their Greek and Italian names in parentheses:

Cythera and Lefkada were additionally called Çuha Adası or Çuka Adası and Ayamavra respectively by the Ottomans.[20][21]

History

Roman and Byzantine period

During the Roman Empire, the Ionian Islands were variously part of the provinces of Achaea and Epirus vetus.[22] These would form, with the exception of Cythera, the Byzantine theme of Cephallenia in the late 8th century.[23] From the late 11th century, the Ionian Islands became a battleground in the Byzantine–Norman Wars. The island of Corfu was held by the Normans in 1081–1085 and 1147–1149, while the Venetians unsuccessfully besieged it in 1122–1123. The island of Cephalonia was also unsuccessfully besieged in 1085, but was plundered in 1099 by the Pisans and in 1126 by the Venetians.[24] Finally, Corfu and the rest of the theme, except for Lefkada, were captured by the Normans under William II of Sicily in 1185. Although Corfu was recovered by the Byzantines by 1191, the other islands henceforth remained lost to Byzantium, and formed a County palatine of Cephalonia and Zakynthos under William's Greek admiral Margaritus of Brindisi.[25][26]

Count Palatine Dynasties of Cephalonia and Zakynthos

The Frankokratia

Following the Fourth Crusade and the signature of the Partitio terrarum imperii Romaniae, Corfu came under Venetian rule.[27] In 1207 though, doge Pietro Ziani ceded the island as a feudum to ten Venetian nobles, provided that they demonstrate loyalty and devotion and that they pay taxes.[28] Corfu passed in the hands of the Despotate of Epirus around 1214, and was captured in 1257 by Manfred of Sicily, who put his admiral Philippe Chinard there in charge of his eastern possessions. Nonetheless, with the defeat of Manfred at Benevento and the signature of the Treaty of Viterbo on 27 May 1267, Corfu became a possession of the Angevin Kingdom of Naples.[29] Meanwhile, the rest of the islands continued to form part of the County palatine,[30][31] which throughout its existence was governed by three families: the Orsini (whose relation to the Roman Orsini family is unattested[32]), the House of Anjou and the Tocco family.[33] The rule of the family of Tocco lasted for 122 years, up until 1479, when Ottomans captured Cephalonia, Zante, Lefkada and Ithaca.[33]

The Venetian conquest

On 13 February 1386 Corfu became once more a Venetian possession and this time Venetian rule would last until the end of the Republic.[34] This was accomplished voluntary by the people of Corfu.[35] On 10 May, the Corfiotes appointed five ambassadors to submit to the Venetian senate.[34] The Ottomans made several attempts to capture Corfu, the first of which was in 1537.[36] This attack led Venice to an alliance with the Pope and Emperor Charles V, known as the Holy League, against the Ottoman Empire.[37] Another major unsuccessful Ottoman attack was that of July 1716.[38]

 
Venetian possessions in the Ionian Sea area

After the partition of the Byzantine Empire in 1204, Cythera fell into Venetian hands in 1238 through the marriage of Marco Venier with the daughter of the Greek lord of the island.[39] Cythera and Anticythera constituted part of the Stato da Màr for the first time in 1363 followed by an interruption of a three-year Turkish rule, between 1715 and 1718.[40] With the Treaty of Passarowitz Cythera and Anticythera passed to the Venetian Republic and remained under its control until its fall, in 1797.[41]

The Turkish rule in the three islands of Cephalonia, Zante and Ithaca was short-lived. In 1481, two years after the beginning of the Turkish rule, Antonio Tocco invaded and briefly occupied Cephalonia and Zante but he was soon driven out by the Venetians.[42] Zante was officially recovered by the Venetians in 1485.[43][44][45] Then, Cephalonia, after sixteen years of Turkish occupation (1484–1500), became part of the Stato da Màr on 24 December 1500, with the Siege of the Castle of St. George.[44][45] Finally, Ithaca, following the fate of Cephalonia, was conquered by Venice in 1503.[46]

Ithaca had become depopulated and rewilded during the period of Turkish rule. In 1504, the Venetians ordered official the repopulation of Ithaca with tax incentives to attract settlers from neighbouring islands.[47] The Venetian authorities found the island was already being repopulated by members of the Galatis family, who laid claim to it as their property, having received rights over Ithaca under the Tocco regime.[47]

Lefkada, part of the Despotate of Epirus since the latter's foundation in 1205, was incorporated by Leonardo I Tocco into the County of Cephalonia in 1362.[48] The Despotate of Epirus was one of the three Byzantine Empires in exile created after the Fourth Crusade in 1204.[49] Following the fate of the other central Ionian Islands, it was captured by the Turks in 1479 and then by the Venetians in 1502.[33][50] However, Venetian rule did not last, as Lefkada was given back to the Ottoman Empire one year later.[51] Turkish rule over Lefkada lasted for over 200 years, from 1479 to 1684, when Francesco Morosini attacked and subdued the island during the Morean War.[52] Lefkada, however, did not become officially Venetian until 1718, with the signature of the Treaty of Passarowitz.[53]

Dissolution of the Republic and aftermath

 
Political map of Italy in the year 1789, showing the Ionian islands of the Republic of Venice in detail

Napoleon Bonaparte declared war against Venice on 3 May 1797.[54] The signing of the Treaty of Campo Formio, on 17 October 1797, marked the dissolution of the Republic of Venice and the sharing of its territories between France and Austria.[55] The lands of the Terraferma up to the River Adige, the city itself and the possessions of the Balkan peninsula of Istria and Dalmatia were yielded to Austria.[56] The Ionian Islands, part of Venetian maritime territories, were ceded to France.[57] Napoleon organized the islands into three departments: Corcyre, Ithaque, and Mer-Égée.[58][59] The first included the islands of Corfu and Paxos, as well as the former Venetian settlements of Butrint and Parga situated in Epirus.[59] The second department was formed by the islands of Cephalonia, Ithaca and Lefkada and the cities of Preveza and Vonitsa, whereas Zante and Cerigo were part of the third department.[60] The French rule, however, did not last as Russia allied with the Ottoman Empire in September 1798 and in 1799 a Russo-Ottoman naval expedition captured the islands.[61] With the signing of a treaty between Russia and the Porte on 21 March 1800, an independent island republic under the protection of both the empires was established.[62] The name of the new state was agreed to be the "Septinsular Republic" and included all the territories of the three former French departments except for the continental possessions of Parga, Preveza, Vonitsa and Butrint.[63] With the Treaty of Tilsit in 1807, the seven islands were given back to France by Russia.[64] In October 1809, the United Kingdom took possession of all the islands with the exception of Corfu and Paxos, which was only surrendered in 1814.[65][66] In 1815, the Ionian Islands became a British protectorate under the name United States of the Ionian Islands.[63]

Administration

The civil and military governor of the Ionian Islands was the Provveditore generale da Mar, who lived on Corfu and had the supreme peacetime command of the Venetian navy.[67][68] In wartime, due to his absence at the head of the fleet, he was sometimes replaced by a Provveditore generale delle Tre Isole ("Superintendent general of the Three Islands"), referring to Corfu, Zante, and Cephalonia. As a result of the two prolonged wars of the 17th century—the War of Candia (1645–1669) and the Morean War (1684–1699)—the office acquired a more permanent nature, and was renamed to Provveditore generale delle Quattro Isole after the capture of Santa Maura in 1684.[67][68]

 
The Old Fortress of Corfu in 1573

Authorities in the islands were divided into two types: the Venetian ones, occupied by Venetians and represented the sovereign state and its political and military power over the Islands, and the domestic authorities, which were appointed by the Communal Council (Consiglio della Comunità).[69] The Venetians were appointed by the Great Council of Venice. There were three officials constituting the reggimento ("regime") of each island.[70] The head of the reggimento had the title of provveditore in all the islands except for Corfu, where he was called bailo.[71] The title could only be held by a nobleman.[72] The subordinate Venetian officials were the consiglieri, two on each island, who performed administrative and judicial functions along with the provveditore of each island.[73] The provveditore's responsibilities also included security from hostile raids, taxation, religious and other issues.[74]

In Corfu the Venetian officials included a bailo, a provveditore and a capitano, two consiglieri, a capitano della cittadella and a castellano della fortezza. In Cephalonia and Zante there were only one provveditore and two consiglieri.[75] When Lefkada (Santa Maura) was incorporated a Provveditore was appointed, while the archives also record the occasional appointment of a Provveditore straordinario,[76] although, in 1595, another provveditore was appointed to the Fortress of Asso.[77] In Cythera the reggimento included both a provveditore and a castellano.[78] In imitation of the metropolis, the domestic authorities comprised both a Consiglio Maggiore and a Consiglio Minore composed of members of the local aristocracy.[72]

There were ten fortresses throughout the islands, with one on each island serving as its capital.[77] On Corfu, however, there were three fortresses; two in the town of Corfu and the Angelokastro.[77] On Cephalonia there were two, the castle of St. George or the Fortress of Cephalonia (Città di Cefalonia) and the Fortress of Asso (Fortezza d'Asso) in the northern part.[77][79]

Economy

 
Two solidi coin

The Ionian economy during the Venetian period was largely based on exporting local products.[80] The most important of the agricultural products of Corfu was olive oil.[81] On the islands of Cephalonia and Zante the main exports were raisins, olive oil and wine.[82][83] One of the most significant exports was olive oil. Groves of olive trees were planted throughout the islands during the Venetian period as olive oil was important to Venice's economy.[84] Although the production of it was successful, the Republic only allowed exportation to Venice.[84] Statistics for the years 1766–70 indicate 1,905,917 olive trees on Corfu, 113,161 on Zante, 38,516 on Cephalonia, 44,146 on Lefkada and 31,884 on Cythera.[85]

Nevertheless, raisin exports were the most important export of the islands during the Venetian rule. By the early 18th century Zante, Cephalonia, and part of Ithaca had become a major centre of the currant trade.[86] Because of the fierce competition in the raisin trade between Venice and the United Kingdom, Venice prohibited the free export of raisins from the islands.[87] Another measure was the nuova imposta, a heavy export tax for foreign ships.[88]

The currency of the islands during Venetian rule was the Venetian lira, as in Venice.[89] There was a special issue for the Islands; the observe side of it has the complete or shortened inscription CORFU/CEFALONIA/ZANTE in three lines. The reserve depicts the winged and haloed lion of Saint Marc in a front view, holding the book of the Gospel in his fore-paws.[90] The Ionian Islands formed part of the Venetian maritime trade route to the Orient.[91]

Demographics

When the central Ionian Islands were captured by Venice their population was very low and Ithaca was completely uninhabited.[92] To address this problem, a small colonisation to the islands took place. Catholic Italians from Terraferma (later called Corfiot Italians[93]) and Orthodox Greeks from the Stato da Màr were transferred to the islands as part of the colonisation.[94] The population eventually increased: in 1765–66 it had reached 111,439; in 1780, the population was 150,908.[95] Fourteen years later, there were 155,770 inhabitants throughout the islands.[95]

These are some figures concerning the population of each island during the Venetian period:[96]

Island 1470 1500 1528 1532 1568 1583 1675 1684 1760 1766
Corfu 14,246 19,221 20,000 44,333
Paxos 4,150
Lefkada 9,000 12,000 11,760
Ithaca 300 2,500
Cephalonia 14,000 25,543 21,659
Zante 17,255 14,054 25,000 25,325
Cythera 500 6,000 6,183

Language and education

During the Venetian period all public acts were drawn up in the Venetian language,[97] the official language of the Government.[98] Greek remained spoken by the peasantry whereas Venetian was adopted by the upper class and it was generally preferred within the towns (like in Corfu city, where nearly all the population spoke the Veneto de Mar).[99] Thus, the Venetian language became, if not the common language of the Ionians, at least the prestigious language.[100] The Venetians did little in the area of education,[101] mainly due to the fact that schooling was not considered a responsibility of the state at that time in Europe but a private matter.[102] Some authors believe that this was done intentionally by Venice, as part of its colonial policy.[103][better source needed] People belonging to the upper classes were more likely to be educated and to have studied at an Italian university, usually the University of Padua.[104][105] Modelled after the academies operating at that time in Venice, the first literary academy, Accademia degli Assicurati, was founded in Corfu in 1656 by individuals.[106] It had as an emblem two rocks beneath a winged lion, with an inscription His Semper hovering in the air.[106]

Religion

 
The Catholic Cathedral of Corfu

Venetians, being Catholics, retained the privileges enjoyed by the Latin bishopric of the islands under the Count Palatine dynasties.[107] The Catholics were not numerous, and during the Venetian period, they were mainly concentrated in Corfu and Cephalonia.[108] Most of them were descendants of Italian settlers but there were some conversions by Greeks to Catholicism.[109] According to the law, Greek Orthodox priests and monks had to accept the Catholics as their superiors,[109] though the Venetians placed the interests of the Republic ahead of those of the Papacy.[107] Mixed marriages between Catholic and Orthodox Christians were allowed.[108] These two were the main factors in the decline of Roman Catholicism in the Islands.[108][110]

Jews were also a native religious group to the Islands during the Venetian period. They were even fewer in number than the Catholics; in 1797 the number of Jews in Corfu appears to have been only two thousand.[111] Jewish presence in Corfu can be traced since the times of the Principality of Taranto.[112] In Cephalonia, there is evidence of Jewish habitation in the old capital, the Castle of St. George, since the early 17th century.[113] When the capital of the island was transferred to Argostoli the Jews resettled there.[114]

Social structure

The social structure of the islands followed that of Venice. The whole population was divided into three classes: the nobles (nobili), the bourgeoisie (citadini) and the common people (populari).[115]

Legacy

 
The Emblem of the Septinsular Republic, based on the Flag of Venice

Across formerly Venetian-owned Greek territory, particularly the Ionian Islands, the memory of the Republic lives on in the social consciousness of the local population with a sentiment of nostalgia despite its troubled history.[116] The sheer duration of the Venetian period has shaped modern-day Heptanesian culture into an amalgamate of its Greek and Italian heritage in all aspects of everyday life.[117] In 1800 the Septinsular Republic was established; its flag design was based on the flag of the Republic of Venice.[118] In addition, Italian was the co-official language of both the Septinsular Republic and the United States of the Ionian Islands.[119] Because of its status, Italian was also taught in schools alongside Greek and English (the Ionian Islands were a protectorate of the United Kingdom from 1815 until 1864).[120] In the first year of secondary education, for instance, Greek was taught four times a week, Italian three times and English twice.[120] In the 1907 Greek census, 4,675 people from the Ionian Islands stated Catholicism as their denomination, about 1.8% of the total population (254,494). At the same time, 2,541 Ionians (1.0%) gave Italian as their mother tongue, making it the second most frequent language by number of speakers.[121] The Italian language remains popular on the islands. The Hellenic Union of Heptanesians, a civil non-profit organization working to promote Septinsular culture, objected to the Ministry's decision to abolish the teaching of Italian in schools, arguing that students had a "right to be taught the language they wish, and especially Italian" as "the preferred language in the Ionian Islands and beyond". They defend its place on the regional curriculum as "a tradition" and deem it "necessary (…) owing to the scale of Italian tourism as well as other, e.g. cultural and commercial ties with the country".[122]

These cultural remnants of the Venetian period were the pretext of Mussolini's desire to incorporate the Ionian Islands into the Kingdom of Italy.[123][124] Even before the outbreak of World War II and the Greek-Italian War, Mussolini had expressed his wish to annex the Ionian Islands as part of his wider plans for an Italian Empire centered around the Mediterranean Sea.[125] On 15 October, in a meeting in the Palazzo Venezia, he made the final decision to invade Greece.[126] His initial goal was the occupation of Corfu, Zante and Cephalonia.[127] After the fall of Greece, in early April 1941, the invaders divided its lands into three occupation zones; the Italians occupied much of the country, including the Ionians.[128] Mussolini informed General Carlo Geloso that the Ionian Islands would form a separate Italian province through a de facto annexation, but the Germans would not approve it.[129] The Italian authorities nevertheless continued to prepare the ground for the annexation.[129] Finally, on 22 April 1941, after discussions between the German and Italian rulers, German Führer Adolf Hitler agreed that Italy could proceed with a de facto annexation of the islands.[130][131] From then on, until the end of the war, the islands passed through a phase of Italianization in all areas, from their administration to their economy.[132]

See also

References

Footnotes

  1. ^ Brame, Saporta, Contreras & Newmeyer, p. 213.
  2. ^ Tsitselis, p. 529.
  3. ^ Thiriet, p. 32.
  4. ^ Mauskopf Deliyannis, p. 278.
  5. ^ Grafton, Most & Settis, p. 806.
  6. ^ Lane, p. 4.
  7. ^ a b Lane, p. 5.
  8. ^ Luttwak, p. 151.
  9. ^ Nicol, p. 16.
  10. ^ Laiou, p. 154.
  11. ^ a b Nicol, p. 66.
  12. ^ Nicol, p. 254.
  13. ^ Novoselova, p. 547.
  14. ^ a b Novoselova, p. 599.
  15. ^ a b Archivio di Stato di Venezia, p. 5.
  16. ^ a b c d Fréchet, Meghraoui & Stucchi, p. 44.
  17. ^ Smyth, p. 53.
  18. ^ Soreide, p. 48.
  19. ^ Macmillan, p. 84.
  20. ^ Davies & Davis, p. 37.
  21. ^ Archivum ottomanicum, p. 240.
  22. ^ Kazhdan, p. 1007.
  23. ^ Zakythinos, p. 529.
  24. ^ Soustal & Koder, p. 56–57, 176.
  25. ^ Kazhdan, p. 1123.
  26. ^ Soustal & Koder, p. 58, 176.
  27. ^ Herrin & Saint-Guillain, p. 82.
  28. ^ Miller, p. 88.
  29. ^ Nicol, p. 401–402.
  30. ^ Tsitselis, p. 400.
  31. ^ Mercati, p. 17-18.
  32. ^ Andreas Kiesewetter, Preludio alla Quarta Crociata? Megareites di Brindisi, Maio di Cefalonia e la signoria sulle isole ionie (1185-1250), in Gherardo Ortalli, Giorgio Ravegnani, Peter Schreiner, Quarta Crociata. Venezia - Bisanzio - Impero latino, Venice, 2006, p.340–42
  33. ^ a b c Haberstumpf, p. 57–70.
  34. ^ a b Durrell, p. 95.
  35. ^ Durrell, p. 160.
  36. ^ Black, p. 56.
  37. ^ Isom-Verhaaren, p. 40.
  38. ^ A History of the Ottoman Empire to 1730, p. 210.
  39. ^ Angold 2011, p. 60.
  40. ^ Maltezou, p. 33.
  41. ^ Miller, p. 633–638.
  42. ^ Babinger, p. 384.
  43. ^ Ward, p. 26.
  44. ^ a b McCabe, Harlaftis & Minoglou, p. 98.
  45. ^ a b Setton, p. 515.
  46. ^ Scammell, p. 119.
  47. ^ a b Zapanti, Stamatoula (1998). "Η Ιθάκη στα πρώτα χρόνια τησ Βενετοκρατίας (1500-1571)". Κεφαλληνιακά Χρονικά. 7: 129–133.
  48. ^ Heurtley, p. 57.
  49. ^ Nicol, p. 4.
  50. ^ De Roo, p. 56.
  51. ^ Miller, p. 570–571.
  52. ^ Heurtley, p. 65.
  53. ^ Foreign Office of Great Britain, p. 353.
  54. ^ Alison, p. 283.
  55. ^ Jervis-White-Jervis, p. 159.
  56. ^ Schroeder, p. 171.
  57. ^ Alison, p. 308.
  58. ^ Rodger, p. 88.
  59. ^ a b Rulhière, p. 1.
  60. ^ Rulhière, p. 2.
  61. ^ Schroeder, p. 182.
  62. ^ Pratt, p. 81.
  63. ^ a b The Quarterly review, p. 118.
  64. ^ Xenos, p. 224.
  65. ^ Fleming, p. 114.
  66. ^ Roberts, p. 306.
  67. ^ a b Da Mosto 1940, p. 19.
  68. ^ a b Arbel 2013, p. 152.
  69. ^ Miller, p. 604.
  70. ^ Dudan, p. 166.
  71. ^ Lunzi, p. 251.
  72. ^ a b Zorzi, p. 136.
  73. ^ Saint-Sauveur, p. 56–63.
  74. ^ Lunzi, p. 102, 150.
  75. ^ Da Mosto 1940, pp. 19–20.
  76. ^ Da Mosto 1940, p. 20.
  77. ^ a b c d Fréchet, Meghraoui & Stucchi, p. 46.
  78. ^ Da Mosto 1940, p. 21.
  79. ^ Fortress of Cefalonia
  80. ^ McCabe, Harlaftis & Minoglou, p. 101.
  81. ^ Thiriet, p. 174–189.
  82. ^ Partsch, p. 97–98.
  83. ^ Rulhière, p. 5.
  84. ^ a b The Portfolio, p. 112.
  85. ^ Miller, p. 614.
  86. ^ Christensen, p. 40.
  87. ^ Fusaro, p. 161-168.
  88. ^ Ortalli, p. 205.
  89. ^ Lampros, p. 11.
  90. ^ Lampros, p. 12.
  91. ^ Clayton, p. 19.
  92. ^ Sathas, p. 155.
  93. ^ History of the Corfiot Italians
  94. ^ Konomos, p. 9
  95. ^ a b Kosmatou, p. 611.
  96. ^ Paparrigopoulos, p. 213.
  97. ^ Brewster, p. 396.
  98. ^ FitzMaurice, p. 39.
  99. ^ Miller, p. 613.
  100. ^ Saint-Sauveur, p. 189–190.
  101. ^ Lunzi, p. 496.
  102. ^ Lane, p. 313.
  103. ^ Davy, p. 31. Chapter 1 Historical Notices on the Ionian Islands and Malta by John Davy: "No people or government better understood the value of the old adage, that knowledge is power, than the Venetians; and the method they pursued to retain the Ionians in ignorance, was strictly in conformity with the rest of their policy"
  104. ^ Lunzi, p. 248.
  105. ^ Augliera, p. 83–84.
  106. ^ a b Lunzi, p. 448.
  107. ^ a b Miller, p. 208.
  108. ^ a b c Miller, p. 209.
  109. ^ a b Clogg, p. 26.
  110. ^ Young, p. 96.
  111. ^ FitzMaurice, p. 52.
  112. ^ FitzMaurice, p. 47.
  113. ^ Chasiotes, p. 97.
  114. ^ FitzMaurice, p. 53.
  115. ^ Bires & Kardamitse-Adame, p. 32.
  116. ^ Zorzi, p. 229. "In the ancient Venetian kingdoms, above all in the Ionian Islands, the memory of the Republic is deeply rooted in the population, who recall it with a shade of nostalgia even after so much time and so many events."
  117. ^ Vaudoncourt & Walton, p. 409.
  118. ^ Smyth, p. 52.
  119. ^ Le tre costituzioni (1800, 1803, 1817) delle Sette Isole Jonie, p. 191.
  120. ^ a b The Quarterly journal of education, p. 83.
  121. ^ 1907 Census of the Kingdom of Greece 387 pages
  122. ^ Press Release for the abolition of the Italian language - Hellenic Union of Heptanesians, 1-8-2011
  123. ^ Rodogno, p. 72.
  124. ^ Rodogno, p. 84.
  125. ^ Knox, p. 140.
  126. ^ Hoyt, p. 190.
  127. ^ Schreiber, Stegemann & Voge, p. 410.
  128. ^ Wever, Goethem & Wouters, p. 250.
  129. ^ a b Rodogno, p. 85.
  130. ^ Corvaja & Miller, p. 170.
  131. ^ Rodogno, p. 104.
  132. ^ Rodogno, p. 258.

Bibliography

  • A History of the Ottoman Empire to 1730. Cambridge University Press. 1976. ISBN 9780521099912. Retrieved 3 September 2011.
  • Alison, Archibald (1835). History of Europe from the commencement of the French Revolution in MDCCLXXXIX to the Restoration of the Bourbons in MDCCCXV, Volume III. Blackwood. Retrieved 2 September 2011.
  • Arbel, Benjamin (2013). "Venice's Maritime Empire in the Early Modern Period". A Companion to Venetian History, 1400–1797. BRILL. pp. 125–253. ISBN 978-90-04-25252-3.
  • Augliera, Letterio (1996). Libri, politica, religione nel Levante del Seicento (in Italian). Istituto veneto di scienze, lettere ed arti. ISBN 88-86166-29-X. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Angold, Michael (2011). "The Latin Empire of Constantinople, 1204–1261: Marriage Strategies". Identities and Allegiances in the Eastern Mediterranean after 1204. Farnham: Ashgate Publishing Limited. pp. 47–68. ISBN 9781409410980.
  • Archivio di Stato di Venezia (1937). L'Archivio di stato di Venezia: indice generale, storico, descrittivo ed analitico (in Italian). Biblioteca d'arte editrice. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • The Quarterly review Volume XXIII. J. Murray. 1820. Retrieved 2 September 2011.
  • Archivum ottomanicum Volume XXIII. Mouton. 2006. Retrieved 29 August 2011.
  • Babinger, Franz (1992). Mehmed the Conqueror and His Time. Bollingen Series 96. Translated from the German by Ralph Manheim. Edited, with a preface, by William C. Hickman. Princeton, New Jersey: Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-09900-6. OCLC 716361786.
  • Baghdiantz-McCabe, Ina; Harlaftis, Gelina; Pepelase Minoglou, Ioanna (2005). Diaspora entrepreneurial networks: four centuries of history. Berg. ISBN 1-85973-880-X. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Bires, Manos G.; Kardamitse-Adame, Maro (2004). Neoclassical architecture in Greece. Getty Publications. ISBN 0-89236-775-X. Retrieved 4 September 2011.
  • Black, Jeremy (2002). European warfare, 1494-1660. Routledge. ISBN 0-415-27531-8. Retrieved 4 September 2011.
  • Brame, Michael K.; Saporta, Sol; Contreras, Heles; Newmeyer, Frederick J. (1986). A Festschrift for Sol Saporta. Noit Amrofer. ISBN 0-932998-06-2. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Brewster, David (1832). The Edinburgh encyclopædia conducted by David Brewster, with the assistance of gentlemen eminent in science and literature, Volume XI. J. and E. Parker. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Chasiotes, Ioannes K.; Hidryma Meleton Chersonesou tou Haimou (1997). The Jewish communities of southeastern Europe: from the fifteenth century to the end to World War II. Institute for Balkan Studies. ISBN 960-7387-03-1. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Christensen, Peter L. (2000). Raisin production manual. ANR Publications. ISBN 1-879906-44-9. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Clayton, Charles (2005). Round the Mulberry Bush. Lulu.com. ISBN 1-4116-5396-3. Retrieved 30 August 2011.
  • Corvaja, Santi; Miller, Robert L. (2008). Hitler & Mussolini: The Secret Meetings. Enigma Books. ISBN 978-1-929631-42-1. Retrieved 23 February 2012.
  • Clogg, Richard (2002). Minorities in Greece: aspects of a plural society. C. Hurst & Co. Publishers. ISBN 1-879906-44-9. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Da Mosto, Andrea (1940). (PDF) (in Italian). Rome: Biblioteca d'arte editrice. OCLC 889222113. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 14 August 2011.
  • Davies, Siriol; Davis, Jack L. (2007). Between Venice and Istanbul:colonial landscapes in early modern Greece. ASCSA. ISBN 978-0-87661-540-9. Retrieved 28 August 2011.
  • Davy, John (1842). Notes and observations on the Ionian islands and Malta:with some remarks on Constantinople and Turkey, and on the system of quarantine as at present conducted, Volume I. Smith, Elder & co. Retrieved 4 September 2011.
  • De Roo, Peter (1924). Material for a history of Pope Alexander VI: his relatives and his time. The Universal knowledge foundation. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Dudan, Bruno (1938). Il dominio veneziano di Levante (in Italian). Zanichelli. Retrieved 14 August 2011.
  • Durrell, Lawrence (1967). Prospero's cell: a guide to the landscape and manners of the island of Corcyra. Olympia Press. ISBN 1-60872-097-7. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • FitzMaurice, 6th Earl of Orkney, George William Hamilton (1864). Four years in the Ionian Islands: Their political and social condition. With a history of the British protectorate, Volume I. Chapman and Hall. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Fleming, Katherine Elizabeth (1999). The Muslim Bonaparte: diplomacy and orientalism in Ali Pasha's Greece. Princeton University Press. ISBN 0-691-00194-4. Retrieved 5 September 2011.
  • Fréchet, Julien; Meghraoui, Mustapha; Stucchi, Massimiliano (2008). Historical seismology: interdisciplinary studies of past and recent earthquakes, Second Volume. Springer. ISBN 978-1-4020-8221-4. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Fusaro, Maria (1996). Uva passa: una guerra commerciale tra Venezia e l'Inghilterra (1540-1640) (in Italian). il Cardo. ISBN 88-8079-081-1. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Grafton, Anthony; Most, Glenn W.; Settis, Salvatore (2010). The Classical Tradition. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-03572-0. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Haberstumpf, Walter (2005). I Tocco, duchi di Leucade, e il principato d'Acaia (secoli XIV-XVI). Venezia e le Isole Ionie (in Italian).
  • Herrin, Judith; Saint-Guillain, Guillaum (2011). Identities and Allegiances in the Eastern Mediterranean After 1204. Ashgate Publishing, Ltd. ISBN 978-1-4094-1098-0. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Heurtley, W. A. (1967). A Short history of Greece from early times to 1964. CUP Archive. ISBN 0-521-09454-2. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Hoyt, Edwin Palmer (1994). Mussolini's empire: the rise and fall of the fascist vision. J. Wiley. ISBN 0-471-59151-3. Retrieved 23 February 2012.
  • Isom-Verhaaren, Christine (2001). Allies with the Infidel: The Ottoman and French Alliance in the Sixteenth Century. I.B.Tauris. ISBN 1-84885-728-4. Retrieved 3 September 2011.
  • Jervis-White-Jervis, Henry (1852). History of the island of Corfú, and of the Republic of the Ionian Islands. Colburn and co. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Kazhdan, Alexander, ed. (1991). The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium. Oxford and New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-504652-8.
  • Knox, MacGregor (1986). Mussolini unleashed, 1939-1941:politics and strategy in fascist Italy's last war. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-33835-2. Retrieved 23 February 2012.
  • Konomos, Ntinos (1968). Crete and Zakynthos (in Greek).
  • Kosmatou, Eftychia (2000). La population des îles Ioniennes XVIIIème à XIXème siècle (in French). Paris Ι.
  • Laiou, Angeliki E. (2005). Urbs capta: the Fourth Crusade and its consequences. Lethielleux. ISBN 2-283-60464-8. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Lampros, Paulos (1968). Coins and medals of the Ionian Islands. John Benjamins Publishing Company. ISBN 90-6032-311-4. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Lane, Frederic Chapin (1973). Venice, a maritime republic. JHU Press. ISBN 0-8018-1460-X. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Le tre costituzioni (1800, 1803, 1817) delle Sette Isole Jonie (in Italian). C.N. Filadelfeo. 1849. Retrieved 19 October 2011.
  • Liddell, Robert (1958). The Morea. J. Cape. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Lunzi, Ermanno (1858). Della condizione politica delle Isole Jonie sotto il dominio Veneto: preceduta da un compendio della storia delle Isole stesse dalla divisione dell'impero Bizantino (in Italian). Tip. del Commercio. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Luttwak, Edward (2009). The grand strategy of the Byzantine Empire. Harvard University Press. ISBN 978-0-674-03519-5. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Macmillan, inc (1994). Guide to the eastern Mediterranean: including Greece and the Greek islands, Constantinople, Smyrna, Ephesus, etc. Macmillan and co. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Maltezou, Chryssa (1980). Cythère: Société et économie pendant la période de la domination vénitienne (in French). Balkan Studies.
  • Mauskopf Deliyannis, Deborah (2009). Ravenna in late antiquity. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-83672-2. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Mercati, Paolo (1811). Saggio storico statistico della città et isola di Zante (in Italian).
  • Miller, William (1921). Essays on the Latin Orient. Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Miller, William (1908). The Latins in the Levant: A History of Frankish Greece (1204–1566). London: John Murray. OCLC 563022439.
  • Nicol, Donald M. (1992). Byzantium and Venice: A Study in Diplomatic and Cultural Relations. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-34157-4. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Nicol, Donald M. (2010). The Despotate of Epiros 1267-1479: A Contribution to the History of Greece. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-13089-9. Retrieved 29 August 2011.
  • Novoselova, Aleksandra Vasil'evna (1971). History of the Byzantine Empire Second Volume. University of Wisconsin Press. ISBN 0-299-80926-9. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Ortalli, Gherardo (1998). Venezia e Creta: atti del convegno internazionale di studi Iraklion-Chaniaà (in Italian). Istituto veneto di scienze, lettere ed arti. ISBN 88-86166-69-9. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Ostrogorsky, George (1956). History of the Byzantine State. Oxford: Basil Blackwell.
  • Paparrigopoulos, Constantine (1860). History of the Greek Nation, XI.
  • Partsch, Joseph (1890). Kephallenia und Ithaka :Eine geographische Monographie (in German). J. Perthes. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • The Portfolio, or, a collection of state papers: illustrative of the history of our times. James Ridgway and Sons. 1836. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Pratt, Michael (1978). Britain's Greek empire: reflections on the history of the Ionian Islands from the fall of Byzantium. Collings. ISBN 0-86036-025-3. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Roberts, Browne H. E. (1861). History of the colonial empire of Great Britain. Longman, Green, Longman, and Roberts. ISBN 9780665402500. Retrieved 2 September 2011.
  • Rodogno, Davide (2006). Fascism's European empire. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-84515-7. Retrieved 24 February 2012.
  • Rodger, Alexander Bankier (1964). The War of the Second Coalition:1798 to 1801, a strategic commentary. Clarendon Press. Retrieved 2 September 2011.
  • Rulhière, Chriseuil (1800). Essai sur les isles de Zante, de Cerigo, de Cérigotto et des Strophades : composant le département de la Mer-Egée (in French). Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Saint-Sauveur, André Grasset de (1800). Voyage historique, litteraire et pittoresque dans les isles et possessions ci-devant venitiennes du Levant (in French).
  • Sathas, Konstantinos N. (1972). Documents inédits relatifs à l'histoire de la Grèce au moyen âge (in French). Gregoriades. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Scammell, Geoffrey Vaughn (1981). The world encompassed: the first European maritime empires, c. 800-1650. University of California Press. ISBN 0-520-04422-3. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Schreiber, Gerhard; Stegemann, Bernd; Vogel, Detlef (1995). The Mediterranean, south-east Europe, and north Africa, 1939-1941: from Italy's declaration of non-belligerence to the entry of the United States into the war. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-822884-8. Retrieved 23 February 2012.
  • Schroeder, Paul W. (1996). The transformation of European politics, 1763-1848. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-820654-2. Retrieved 2 September 2011.
  • Setton, Kenneth M. (1978). The Papacy and the Levant (1204–1571), Volume II: The Fifteenth Century. Philadelphia: The American Philosophical Society. ISBN 0-87169-127-2.
  • Smyth, William Henry (1854). The Mediterranean: a memoir physical, historical, and nautical. John W. Parker and Son. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Soreide, Fredrik (2011). Ships from the Depths: Deepwater Archaeology. Texas A&M University Press. ISBN 978-1-60344-218-3. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge (Great Britain) (1831). The Quarterly journal of education, Volume 1. Charles Knight. Retrieved 19 October 2011.
  • Soustal, Peter; Koder, Johannes (1981). Tabula Imperii Byzantini, Band 3: Nikopolis und Kephallēnia (in German). Vienna: Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften. ISBN 978-3-7001-0399-8.
  • Thiriet, Freddy (1975). La Romanie Venitienne au moyen age:Le developpement et l'exploitation du domaine colonial venitien (XIIe-XVe siecles) (in French). E. de Boccard.
  • Tsitselis, Ilias A. (1960). Cephalonian Composite: contributions to the history and folklore of the island of Cephalonia, Second Volume (in Greek). Mynas Mirtides.
  • Vaudoncourt, Frédéric Guillaume de; Walton, William (1816). Memoirs on the Ionian islands. Baldwin. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Wever, Bruno de; Goethem, Herman van; Wouters, Nico (2006). Local government in occupied Europe (1939-1945). Academia Press. ISBN 90-382-0892-8. Retrieved 23 February 2012.
  • Xenos, Stefanos (1865). East and West, a diplomatic history of the annexation of the Ionian islands to the Kingdom of Greece. Trübner & Co. Retrieved 5 September 2011.
  • Ward, Sir Adolphus William (1912). The Cambridge modern history, Fourteen Volume. Macmillan. ISBN 9780521078146. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Young, Martin (1977). Corfu and the other Ionian islands. Cape. ISBN 0-224-01307-6. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Zakythinos, D. A. (1954). "Le thème de Céphalonie et la défense de l'Occident". L'Hellénisme Contemporain (in French). Athens. 4–5: 303–312.
  • Zorzi, Alvise (1983). Venice, 697-1797: city, republic, empire. Sidgwick & Jackson. ISBN 0-283-98984-X. Retrieved 10 August 2011.
  • Foreign Office of Great Britain (1850). Correspondence respecting the demands made upon the Greek Government; and respecting the Islands of Cervi and Sapienza: presented to both Houses of Parliament by Command of Her Majesty. Harrison and Son. Retrieved 10 August 2011.

venetian, rule, ionian, islands, ionian, islands, were, overseas, possession, republic, venice, from, 14th, century, until, late, 18th, century, conquest, islands, took, place, gradually, first, acquired, cythera, neighboring, islet, anticythera, indirectly, 1. The Ionian Islands were an overseas possession of the Republic of Venice from the mid 14th century until the late 18th century The conquest of the islands took place gradually The first to be acquired was Cythera and the neighboring islet of Anticythera indirectly in 1238 and directly after 1363 In 1386 Corfu voluntarily became part of Venice s colonies A century later Venice captured Zante in 1485 Cephalonia in 1500 and Ithaca in 1503 The conquest was completed in 1718 with the capture of Lefkada Each of the islands remained part of the Venetian Stato da Mar until Napoleon Bonaparte dissolved the Republic of Venice in 1797 annexing Corfu The Ionian Islands are situated in the Ionian Sea off the west coast of Greece Cythera the southernmost is just off the southern tip of the Peloponnese and Corfu the northernmost is located at the entrance of the Adriatic Sea In modern Greek the period of Venetian rule over Greek territory is known as Venetokratia or Enetokratia Greek Benetokratia or Enetokratia and literally means rule of the Venetians 1 It is believed that the Venetian period on the Ionian Islands was agreeable especially compared with the coinciding Tourkokratia Turkish rule over the remainder of present day Greece 2 Governorate of the Ionian IslandsIxole Jonie Ἰonioi NῆsoiColony of the Republic of Venice1363 1797Greater arms of the Republic of Venice including the arms of Corfu Zakynthos and CephaloniaThe Ionian Islands in green Map of 1785 when the Islands were still part of the Venetian Republic CapitalCorfuHistoryHistorical eraMiddle Ages Fourth Crusade1202 1204 Established11363 First Ottoman Venetian War1463 1479 Second Ottoman Venetian War1499 1503 Treaty of Passarowitz1718 Invasion of Venice1792 1797 Treaty of Campo Formio17 October 1797Preceded by Succeeded byCounty Palatine of Cephalonia and Zakynthos French rule in the Ionian Islands 1797 1799 Today part ofGreece1 Each island became part of the Venetian empire in different dates 1363 refers to Cythera and Anticythera The governor of the Ionian Islands during the Venetian period was the Provveditore generale da Mar who resided on Corfu Additionally each island s authorities were divided into the Venetian and the domestic authorities The economy of the islands was based on exporting local goods primarily raisins olive oil and wine whereas Venetian lira the currency of Venice was also the currency of the islands Some features of the culture of Venice were incorporated in the culture of the Ionian Islands thus influencing to this day local music cuisine and language The Venetian language for instance which was introduced on the islands as the official language and was adopted by the upper class is still popular today throughout the islands Contents 1 Relations between Venice and Byzantium 2 Appellation 3 History 3 1 Roman and Byzantine period 3 2 The Frankokratia 3 3 The Venetian conquest 3 4 Dissolution of the Republic and aftermath 4 Administration 5 Economy 6 Demographics 6 1 Language and education 6 2 Religion 6 3 Social structure 7 Legacy 8 See also 9 References 9 1 Footnotes 9 2 BibliographyRelations between Venice and Byzantium Edit View of Venice in 1565 Venice was founded in 421 after the destruction of nearby communities by the Huns and the Lombards In the shifting Italian borders of the following centuries Venice benefited from remaining under the control of the Roman Empire increasingly as the furthest Northwestern outpost of the now Constantinople centered power During Justinian I s reconquest of Italy from the Visigoths Venice was an increasingly important stronghold for the Empire s Exarchate of Ravenna 3 The political centre of the exarchate and the most senior military officials of the Empire were situated in Ravenna 4 5 The subordinate military officials who were their representatives in the Venetian lagoons were called tribunes and only in about AD 697 were the lagoons made a separate military command under a dux doge 6 Notwithstanding the election of the first Doge vassalic evidence such as honours and orders received by the doge from the Emperor implies that Venice was considered part of the Byzantine Empire even after the capture of Ravenna by the Lombards 7 Despite the Pax Nicephori 803 which recognised Venice as Byzantine territory the influence of the Eastern Roman Emperor slowly faded away 7 By 814 Venice functioned as a fully independent republic 8 Even so Venice became a partner of the Empire and trading privileges were granted to it by the Emperors via treaties 9 such as the Byzantine Venetian Treaty of 1082 The Fourth Crusade 1202 1204 was initially intended to invade Muslim controlled areas instead the Crusaders attacked the capital of the Byzantine Empire Constantinople resulting in the temporary dissolution of the empire and the sack of its capital 10 As Venice was one of the participants in the Crusade its relations with the Byzantine Empire were strained during this period 11 Moreover by styling themselves Lord of one quarter and one eighth of the whole Empire of Romania after the Crusade the Doges of Venice contributed to the deterioration of the relations between the two states 11 12 Efforts to improve relations for example through the Nicaean Venetian Treaty of 1219 proved unsuccessful 13 A period of friendly relations only followed the Sicilian Vespers in 1282 when Venice foreseeing the fall of Charles the French King of Sicily began forming closer relations with Byzantium 14 Venice had been bound by an alliance with Charles against Byzantium in 1281 14 Appellation Edit A c 1690 Venetian map of Isola di Corfu posseduta dalla Serenissima Republica di Venetia The map shows the fortresses of Corfu surrounded by wreaths and ribbons Angelokastro is indicated as Castello S Angelo in a ribbon below the top right wreath of the map The Islands were referred to both individually and collectively by various names After Venice captured Cephalonia on 24 December 1500 the administration of the defense of all the islands was delegated to an official seated in Corfu This official was being referred to as the General Provveditore of the Three Islands Provveditore Generale delle Tre Isole and resided at the fortress of Angelokastro from 1387 to the end of the 16th century 15 The Three Islands refer to Corfu Zante and Cephalonia 15 The Venetian equivalent for Ionian Islands is Ixole Jonie the Italian being Isole Ionie and the Greek Ionia Nhsia in Modern Greek and Ἰonioi Nῆsoi in Katharevousa Below are the seven principal islands from north to south including their Greek and Italian names in parentheses Corfu Kerkyra Corfu 16 Paxos Paxi Passo 17 Lefkada Leucas Santa Maura or Leucade 16 Cephalonia Kefal l onia or Kefal l inia Cefalonia 16 Ithaca Ithaki or Thiaki Itaca Val di Compare or Piccola Cefalonia 18 Zante Zakynthos Zante or Zacinto 16 see the long account here Cythera Kythira Cerigo 19 Cythera and Lefkada were additionally called Cuha Adasi or Cuka Adasi and Ayamavra respectively by the Ottomans 20 21 History EditRoman and Byzantine period Edit During the Roman Empire the Ionian Islands were variously part of the provinces of Achaea and Epirus vetus 22 These would form with the exception of Cythera the Byzantine theme of Cephallenia in the late 8th century 23 From the late 11th century the Ionian Islands became a battleground in the Byzantine Norman Wars The island of Corfu was held by the Normans in 1081 1085 and 1147 1149 while the Venetians unsuccessfully besieged it in 1122 1123 The island of Cephalonia was also unsuccessfully besieged in 1085 but was plundered in 1099 by the Pisans and in 1126 by the Venetians 24 Finally Corfu and the rest of the theme except for Lefkada were captured by the Normans under William II of Sicily in 1185 Although Corfu was recovered by the Byzantines by 1191 the other islands henceforth remained lost to Byzantium and formed a County palatine of Cephalonia and Zakynthos under William s Greek admiral Margaritus of Brindisi 25 26 Count Palatine Dynasties of Cephalonia and Zakynthos Arms of the House of Anjou Durazzo Arms of the family of Tocco the last rulers of the CountyThe Frankokratia Edit Following the Fourth Crusade and the signature of the Partitio terrarum imperii Romaniae Corfu came under Venetian rule 27 In 1207 though doge Pietro Ziani ceded the island as a feudum to ten Venetian nobles provided that they demonstrate loyalty and devotion and that they pay taxes 28 Corfu passed in the hands of the Despotate of Epirus around 1214 and was captured in 1257 by Manfred of Sicily who put his admiral Philippe Chinard there in charge of his eastern possessions Nonetheless with the defeat of Manfred at Benevento and the signature of the Treaty of Viterbo on 27 May 1267 Corfu became a possession of the Angevin Kingdom of Naples 29 Meanwhile the rest of the islands continued to form part of the County palatine 30 31 which throughout its existence was governed by three families the Orsini whose relation to the Roman Orsini family is unattested 32 the House of Anjou and the Tocco family 33 The rule of the family of Tocco lasted for 122 years up until 1479 when Ottomans captured Cephalonia Zante Lefkada and Ithaca 33 The Venetian conquest Edit On 13 February 1386 Corfu became once more a Venetian possession and this time Venetian rule would last until the end of the Republic 34 This was accomplished voluntary by the people of Corfu 35 On 10 May the Corfiotes appointed five ambassadors to submit to the Venetian senate 34 The Ottomans made several attempts to capture Corfu the first of which was in 1537 36 This attack led Venice to an alliance with the Pope and Emperor Charles V known as the Holy League against the Ottoman Empire 37 Another major unsuccessful Ottoman attack was that of July 1716 38 Venetian possessions in the Ionian Sea area After the partition of the Byzantine Empire in 1204 Cythera fell into Venetian hands in 1238 through the marriage of Marco Venier with the daughter of the Greek lord of the island 39 Cythera and Anticythera constituted part of the Stato da Mar for the first time in 1363 followed by an interruption of a three year Turkish rule between 1715 and 1718 40 With the Treaty of Passarowitz Cythera and Anticythera passed to the Venetian Republic and remained under its control until its fall in 1797 41 The Turkish rule in the three islands of Cephalonia Zante and Ithaca was short lived In 1481 two years after the beginning of the Turkish rule Antonio Tocco invaded and briefly occupied Cephalonia and Zante but he was soon driven out by the Venetians 42 Zante was officially recovered by the Venetians in 1485 43 44 45 Then Cephalonia after sixteen years of Turkish occupation 1484 1500 became part of the Stato da Mar on 24 December 1500 with the Siege of the Castle of St George 44 45 Finally Ithaca following the fate of Cephalonia was conquered by Venice in 1503 46 Ithaca had become depopulated and rewilded during the period of Turkish rule In 1504 the Venetians ordered official the repopulation of Ithaca with tax incentives to attract settlers from neighbouring islands 47 The Venetian authorities found the island was already being repopulated by members of the Galatis family who laid claim to it as their property having received rights over Ithaca under the Tocco regime 47 Lefkada part of the Despotate of Epirus since the latter s foundation in 1205 was incorporated by Leonardo I Tocco into the County of Cephalonia in 1362 48 The Despotate of Epirus was one of the three Byzantine Empires in exile created after the Fourth Crusade in 1204 49 Following the fate of the other central Ionian Islands it was captured by the Turks in 1479 and then by the Venetians in 1502 33 50 However Venetian rule did not last as Lefkada was given back to the Ottoman Empire one year later 51 Turkish rule over Lefkada lasted for over 200 years from 1479 to 1684 when Francesco Morosini attacked and subdued the island during the Morean War 52 Lefkada however did not become officially Venetian until 1718 with the signature of the Treaty of Passarowitz 53 Dissolution of the Republic and aftermath Edit Further information Fall of the Republic of Venice Political map of Italy in the year 1789 showing the Ionian islands of the Republic of Venice in detail Napoleon Bonaparte declared war against Venice on 3 May 1797 54 The signing of the Treaty of Campo Formio on 17 October 1797 marked the dissolution of the Republic of Venice and the sharing of its territories between France and Austria 55 The lands of the Terraferma up to the River Adige the city itself and the possessions of the Balkan peninsula of Istria and Dalmatia were yielded to Austria 56 The Ionian Islands part of Venetian maritime territories were ceded to France 57 Napoleon organized the islands into three departments Corcyre Ithaque and Mer Egee 58 59 The first included the islands of Corfu and Paxos as well as the former Venetian settlements of Butrint and Parga situated in Epirus 59 The second department was formed by the islands of Cephalonia Ithaca and Lefkada and the cities of Preveza and Vonitsa whereas Zante and Cerigo were part of the third department 60 The French rule however did not last as Russia allied with the Ottoman Empire in September 1798 and in 1799 a Russo Ottoman naval expedition captured the islands 61 With the signing of a treaty between Russia and the Porte on 21 March 1800 an independent island republic under the protection of both the empires was established 62 The name of the new state was agreed to be the Septinsular Republic and included all the territories of the three former French departments except for the continental possessions of Parga Preveza Vonitsa and Butrint 63 With the Treaty of Tilsit in 1807 the seven islands were given back to France by Russia 64 In October 1809 the United Kingdom took possession of all the islands with the exception of Corfu and Paxos which was only surrendered in 1814 65 66 In 1815 the Ionian Islands became a British protectorate under the name United States of the Ionian Islands 63 Administration EditThe civil and military governor of the Ionian Islands was the Provveditore generale da Mar who lived on Corfu and had the supreme peacetime command of the Venetian navy 67 68 In wartime due to his absence at the head of the fleet he was sometimes replaced by a Provveditore generale delle Tre Isole Superintendent general of the Three Islands referring to Corfu Zante and Cephalonia As a result of the two prolonged wars of the 17th century the War of Candia 1645 1669 and the Morean War 1684 1699 the office acquired a more permanent nature and was renamed to Provveditore generale delle Quattro Isole after the capture of Santa Maura in 1684 67 68 The Old Fortress of Corfu in 1573 Authorities in the islands were divided into two types the Venetian ones occupied by Venetians and represented the sovereign state and its political and military power over the Islands and the domestic authorities which were appointed by the Communal Council Consiglio della Comunita 69 The Venetians were appointed by the Great Council of Venice There were three officials constituting the reggimento regime of each island 70 The head of the reggimento had the title of provveditore in all the islands except for Corfu where he was called bailo 71 The title could only be held by a nobleman 72 The subordinate Venetian officials were the consiglieri two on each island who performed administrative and judicial functions along with the provveditore of each island 73 The provveditore s responsibilities also included security from hostile raids taxation religious and other issues 74 In Corfu the Venetian officials included a bailo a provveditore and a capitano two consiglieri a capitano della cittadella and a castellano della fortezza In Cephalonia and Zante there were only one provveditore and two consiglieri 75 When Lefkada Santa Maura was incorporated a Provveditore was appointed while the archives also record the occasional appointment of a Provveditore straordinario 76 although in 1595 another provveditore was appointed to the Fortress of Asso 77 In Cythera the reggimento included both a provveditore and a castellano 78 In imitation of the metropolis the domestic authorities comprised both a Consiglio Maggiore and a Consiglio Minore composed of members of the local aristocracy 72 There were ten fortresses throughout the islands with one on each island serving as its capital 77 On Corfu however there were three fortresses two in the town of Corfu and the Angelokastro 77 On Cephalonia there were two the castle of St George or the Fortress of Cephalonia Citta di Cefalonia and the Fortress of Asso Fortezza d Asso in the northern part 77 79 Economy Edit Two solidi coin The Ionian economy during the Venetian period was largely based on exporting local products 80 The most important of the agricultural products of Corfu was olive oil 81 On the islands of Cephalonia and Zante the main exports were raisins olive oil and wine 82 83 One of the most significant exports was olive oil Groves of olive trees were planted throughout the islands during the Venetian period as olive oil was important to Venice s economy 84 Although the production of it was successful the Republic only allowed exportation to Venice 84 Statistics for the years 1766 70 indicate 1 905 917 olive trees on Corfu 113 161 on Zante 38 516 on Cephalonia 44 146 on Lefkada and 31 884 on Cythera 85 Nevertheless raisin exports were the most important export of the islands during the Venetian rule By the early 18th century Zante Cephalonia and part of Ithaca had become a major centre of the currant trade 86 Because of the fierce competition in the raisin trade between Venice and the United Kingdom Venice prohibited the free export of raisins from the islands 87 Another measure was the nuova imposta a heavy export tax for foreign ships 88 The currency of the islands during Venetian rule was the Venetian lira as in Venice 89 There was a special issue for the Islands the observe side of it has the complete or shortened inscription CORFU CEFALONIA ZANTE in three lines The reserve depicts the winged and haloed lion of Saint Marc in a front view holding the book of the Gospel in his fore paws 90 The Ionian Islands formed part of the Venetian maritime trade route to the Orient 91 Demographics EditWhen the central Ionian Islands were captured by Venice their population was very low and Ithaca was completely uninhabited 92 To address this problem a small colonisation to the islands took place Catholic Italians from Terraferma later called Corfiot Italians 93 and Orthodox Greeks from the Stato da Mar were transferred to the islands as part of the colonisation 94 The population eventually increased in 1765 66 it had reached 111 439 in 1780 the population was 150 908 95 Fourteen years later there were 155 770 inhabitants throughout the islands 95 These are some figures concerning the population of each island during the Venetian period 96 Island 1470 1500 1528 1532 1568 1583 1675 1684 1760 1766Corfu 14 246 19 221 20 000 44 333Paxos 4 150Lefkada 9 000 12 000 11 760Ithaca 300 2 500Cephalonia 14 000 25 543 21 659Zante 17 255 14 054 25 000 25 325Cythera 500 6 000 6 183Language and education Edit During the Venetian period all public acts were drawn up in the Venetian language 97 the official language of the Government 98 Greek remained spoken by the peasantry whereas Venetian was adopted by the upper class and it was generally preferred within the towns like in Corfu city where nearly all the population spoke the Veneto de Mar 99 Thus the Venetian language became if not the common language of the Ionians at least the prestigious language 100 The Venetians did little in the area of education 101 mainly due to the fact that schooling was not considered a responsibility of the state at that time in Europe but a private matter 102 Some authors believe that this was done intentionally by Venice as part of its colonial policy 103 better source needed People belonging to the upper classes were more likely to be educated and to have studied at an Italian university usually the University of Padua 104 105 Modelled after the academies operating at that time in Venice the first literary academy Accademia degli Assicurati was founded in Corfu in 1656 by individuals 106 It had as an emblem two rocks beneath a winged lion with an inscription His Semper hovering in the air 106 Religion Edit The Catholic Cathedral of Corfu Venetians being Catholics retained the privileges enjoyed by the Latin bishopric of the islands under the Count Palatine dynasties 107 The Catholics were not numerous and during the Venetian period they were mainly concentrated in Corfu and Cephalonia 108 Most of them were descendants of Italian settlers but there were some conversions by Greeks to Catholicism 109 According to the law Greek Orthodox priests and monks had to accept the Catholics as their superiors 109 though the Venetians placed the interests of the Republic ahead of those of the Papacy 107 Mixed marriages between Catholic and Orthodox Christians were allowed 108 These two were the main factors in the decline of Roman Catholicism in the Islands 108 110 Jews were also a native religious group to the Islands during the Venetian period They were even fewer in number than the Catholics in 1797 the number of Jews in Corfu appears to have been only two thousand 111 Jewish presence in Corfu can be traced since the times of the Principality of Taranto 112 In Cephalonia there is evidence of Jewish habitation in the old capital the Castle of St George since the early 17th century 113 When the capital of the island was transferred to Argostoli the Jews resettled there 114 Social structure Edit The social structure of the islands followed that of Venice The whole population was divided into three classes the nobles nobili the bourgeoisie citadini and the common people populari 115 Legacy Edit The Emblem of the Septinsular Republic based on the Flag of Venice Across formerly Venetian owned Greek territory particularly the Ionian Islands the memory of the Republic lives on in the social consciousness of the local population with a sentiment of nostalgia despite its troubled history 116 The sheer duration of the Venetian period has shaped modern day Heptanesian culture into an amalgamate of its Greek and Italian heritage in all aspects of everyday life 117 In 1800 the Septinsular Republic was established its flag design was based on the flag of the Republic of Venice 118 In addition Italian was the co official language of both the Septinsular Republic and the United States of the Ionian Islands 119 Because of its status Italian was also taught in schools alongside Greek and English the Ionian Islands were a protectorate of the United Kingdom from 1815 until 1864 120 In the first year of secondary education for instance Greek was taught four times a week Italian three times and English twice 120 In the 1907 Greek census 4 675 people from the Ionian Islands stated Catholicism as their denomination about 1 8 of the total population 254 494 At the same time 2 541 Ionians 1 0 gave Italian as their mother tongue making it the second most frequent language by number of speakers 121 The Italian language remains popular on the islands The Hellenic Union of Heptanesians a civil non profit organization working to promote Septinsular culture objected to the Ministry s decision to abolish the teaching of Italian in schools arguing that students had a right to be taught the language they wish and especially Italian as the preferred language in the Ionian Islands and beyond They defend its place on the regional curriculum as a tradition and deem it necessary owing to the scale of Italian tourism as well as other e g cultural and commercial ties with the country 122 These cultural remnants of the Venetian period were the pretext of Mussolini s desire to incorporate the Ionian Islands into the Kingdom of Italy 123 124 Even before the outbreak of World War II and the Greek Italian War Mussolini had expressed his wish to annex the Ionian Islands as part of his wider plans for an Italian Empire centered around the Mediterranean Sea 125 On 15 October in a meeting in the Palazzo Venezia he made the final decision to invade Greece 126 His initial goal was the occupation of Corfu Zante and Cephalonia 127 After the fall of Greece in early April 1941 the invaders divided its lands into three occupation zones the Italians occupied much of the country including the Ionians 128 Mussolini informed General Carlo Geloso that the Ionian Islands would form a separate Italian province through a de facto annexation but the Germans would not approve it 129 The Italian authorities nevertheless continued to prepare the ground for the annexation 129 Finally on 22 April 1941 after discussions between the German and Italian rulers German Fuhrer Adolf Hitler agreed that Italy could proceed with a de facto annexation of the islands 130 131 From then on until the end of the war the islands passed through a phase of Italianization in all areas from their administration to their economy 132 See also Edit History portal Greece portal Middle Ages portalCoinage of the Republic of Venice Corfiot Italians History of the Republic of Venice Ionian School of literature Ionian School of music Ionian School of painting Ottoman wars in Europe Stato da Mar Timeline of the Republic of Venice BailoReferences EditFootnotes Edit Brame Saporta Contreras amp Newmeyer p 213 Tsitselis p 529 Thiriet p 32 Mauskopf Deliyannis p 278 Grafton Most amp Settis p 806 Lane p 4 a b Lane p 5 Luttwak p 151 Nicol p 16 Laiou p 154 a b Nicol p 66 Nicol p 254 Novoselova p 547 a b Novoselova p 599 a b Archivio di Stato di Venezia p 5 a b c d Frechet Meghraoui amp Stucchi p 44 Smyth p 53 Soreide p 48 Macmillan p 84 Davies amp Davis p 37 Archivum ottomanicum p 240 Kazhdan p 1007 Zakythinos p 529 Soustal amp Koder p 56 57 176 Kazhdan p 1123 Soustal amp Koder p 58 176 Herrin amp Saint Guillain p 82 Miller p 88 Nicol p 401 402 Tsitselis p 400 Mercati p 17 18 Andreas Kiesewetter Preludio alla Quarta Crociata Megareites di Brindisi Maio di Cefalonia e la signoria sulle isole ionie 1185 1250 in Gherardo Ortalli Giorgio Ravegnani Peter Schreiner Quarta Crociata Venezia Bisanzio Impero latino Venice 2006 p 340 42 a b c Haberstumpf p 57 70 a b Durrell p 95 Durrell p 160 Black p 56 Isom Verhaaren p 40 A History of the Ottoman Empire to 1730 p 210 Angold 2011 p 60 Maltezou p 33 Miller p 633 638 Babinger p 384 Ward p 26 a b McCabe Harlaftis amp Minoglou p 98 a b Setton p 515 Scammell p 119 a b Zapanti Stamatoula 1998 H I8akh sta prwta xronia ths Benetokratias 1500 1571 Kefallhniaka Xronika 7 129 133 Heurtley p 57 Nicol p 4 De Roo p 56 Miller p 570 571 Heurtley p 65 Foreign Office of Great Britain p 353 Alison p 283 Jervis White Jervis p 159 Schroeder p 171 Alison p 308 Rodger p 88 a b Rulhiere p 1 Rulhiere p 2 Schroeder p 182 Pratt p 81 a b The Quarterly review p 118 Xenos p 224 Fleming p 114 Roberts p 306 a b Da Mosto 1940 p 19 a b Arbel 2013 p 152 Miller p 604 Dudan p 166 Lunzi p 251 a b Zorzi p 136 Saint Sauveur p 56 63 Lunzi p 102 150 Da Mosto 1940 pp 19 20 Da Mosto 1940 p 20 a b c d Frechet Meghraoui amp Stucchi p 46 Da Mosto 1940 p 21 Fortress of Cefalonia McCabe Harlaftis amp Minoglou p 101 Thiriet p 174 189 Partsch p 97 98 Rulhiere p 5 a b The Portfolio p 112 Miller p 614 Christensen p 40 Fusaro p 161 168 Ortalli p 205 Lampros p 11 Lampros p 12 Clayton p 19 Sathas p 155 History of the Corfiot Italians Konomos p 9 a b Kosmatou p 611 Paparrigopoulos p 213 Brewster p 396 FitzMaurice p 39 Miller p 613 Saint Sauveur p 189 190 Lunzi p 496 Lane p 313 Davy p 31 Chapter 1 Historical Notices on the Ionian Islands and Malta by John Davy No people or government better understood the value of the old adage that knowledge is power than the Venetians and the method they pursued to retain the Ionians in ignorance was strictly in conformity with the rest of their policy Lunzi p 248 Augliera p 83 84 a b Lunzi p 448 a b Miller p 208 a b c Miller p 209 a b Clogg p 26 Young p 96 FitzMaurice p 52 FitzMaurice p 47 Chasiotes p 97 FitzMaurice p 53 Bires amp Kardamitse Adame p 32 Zorzi p 229 In the ancient Venetian kingdoms above all in the Ionian Islands the memory of the Republic is deeply rooted in the population who recall it with a shade of nostalgia even after so much time and so many events Vaudoncourt amp Walton p 409 Smyth p 52 Le tre costituzioni 1800 1803 1817 delle Sette Isole Jonie p 191 a b The Quarterly journal of education p 83 1907 Census of the Kingdom of Greece 387 pages Press Release for the abolition of the Italian language Hellenic Union of Heptanesians 1 8 2011 Rodogno p 72 Rodogno p 84 Knox p 140 Hoyt p 190 Schreiber Stegemann amp Voge p 410 Wever Goethem amp Wouters p 250 a b Rodogno p 85 Corvaja amp Miller p 170 Rodogno p 104 Rodogno p 258 Bibliography Edit A History of the Ottoman Empire to 1730 Cambridge University Press 1976 ISBN 9780521099912 Retrieved 3 September 2011 Alison Archibald 1835 History of Europe from the commencement of the French Revolution in MDCCLXXXIX to the Restoration of the Bourbons in MDCCCXV Volume III Blackwood Retrieved 2 September 2011 Arbel Benjamin 2013 Venice s Maritime Empire in the Early Modern Period A Companion to Venetian History 1400 1797 BRILL pp 125 253 ISBN 978 90 04 25252 3 Augliera Letterio 1996 Libri politica religione nel Levante del Seicento in Italian Istituto veneto di scienze lettere ed arti ISBN 88 86166 29 X Retrieved 10 August 2011 Angold Michael 2011 The Latin Empire of Constantinople 1204 1261 Marriage Strategies Identities and Allegiances in the Eastern Mediterranean after 1204 Farnham Ashgate Publishing Limited pp 47 68 ISBN 9781409410980 Archivio di Stato di Venezia 1937 L Archivio di stato di Venezia indice generale storico descrittivo ed analitico in Italian Biblioteca d arte editrice Retrieved 10 August 2011 The Quarterly review Volume XXIII J Murray 1820 Retrieved 2 September 2011 Archivum ottomanicum Volume XXIII Mouton 2006 Retrieved 29 August 2011 Babinger Franz 1992 Mehmed the Conqueror and His Time Bollingen Series 96 Translated from the German by Ralph Manheim Edited with a preface by William C Hickman Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 09900 6 OCLC 716361786 Baghdiantz McCabe Ina Harlaftis Gelina Pepelase Minoglou Ioanna 2005 Diaspora entrepreneurial networks four centuries of history Berg ISBN 1 85973 880 X Retrieved 10 August 2011 Bires Manos G Kardamitse Adame Maro 2004 Neoclassical architecture in Greece Getty Publications ISBN 0 89236 775 X Retrieved 4 September 2011 Black Jeremy 2002 European warfare 1494 1660 Routledge ISBN 0 415 27531 8 Retrieved 4 September 2011 Brame Michael K Saporta Sol Contreras Heles Newmeyer Frederick J 1986 A Festschrift for Sol Saporta Noit Amrofer ISBN 0 932998 06 2 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Brewster David 1832 The Edinburgh encyclopaedia conducted by David Brewster with the assistance of gentlemen eminent in science and literature Volume XI J and E Parker Retrieved 10 August 2011 Chasiotes Ioannes K Hidryma Meleton Chersonesou tou Haimou 1997 The Jewish communities of southeastern Europe from the fifteenth century to the end to World War II Institute for Balkan Studies ISBN 960 7387 03 1 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Christensen Peter L 2000 Raisin production manual ANR Publications ISBN 1 879906 44 9 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Clayton Charles 2005 Round the Mulberry Bush Lulu com ISBN 1 4116 5396 3 Retrieved 30 August 2011 Corvaja Santi Miller Robert L 2008 Hitler amp Mussolini The Secret Meetings Enigma Books ISBN 978 1 929631 42 1 Retrieved 23 February 2012 Clogg Richard 2002 Minorities in Greece aspects of a plural society C Hurst amp Co Publishers ISBN 1 879906 44 9 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Da Mosto Andrea 1940 L Archivio di Stato di Venezia Indice Generale Storico Descrittivo ed Analitico Tomo II Archivi dell Amministrazione Provinciale della Repubblica Veneta archivi delle rappresentanze diplomatiche e consolari archivi dei governi succeduti alla Repubblica Veneta archivi degli istituti religiosi e archivi minori PDF in Italian Rome Biblioteca d arte editrice OCLC 889222113 Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 14 August 2011 Davies Siriol Davis Jack L 2007 Between Venice and Istanbul colonial landscapes in early modern Greece ASCSA ISBN 978 0 87661 540 9 Retrieved 28 August 2011 Davy John 1842 Notes and observations on the Ionian islands and Malta with some remarks on Constantinople and Turkey and on the system of quarantine as at present conducted Volume I Smith Elder amp co Retrieved 4 September 2011 De Roo Peter 1924 Material for a history of Pope Alexander VI his relatives and his time The Universal knowledge foundation Retrieved 10 August 2011 Dudan Bruno 1938 Il dominio veneziano di Levante in Italian Zanichelli Retrieved 14 August 2011 Durrell Lawrence 1967 Prospero s cell a guide to the landscape and manners of the island of Corcyra Olympia Press ISBN 1 60872 097 7 Retrieved 10 August 2011 FitzMaurice 6th Earl of Orkney George William Hamilton 1864 Four years in the Ionian Islands Their political and social condition With a history of the British protectorate Volume I Chapman and Hall Retrieved 10 August 2011 Fleming Katherine Elizabeth 1999 The Muslim Bonaparte diplomacy and orientalism in Ali Pasha s Greece Princeton University Press ISBN 0 691 00194 4 Retrieved 5 September 2011 Frechet Julien Meghraoui Mustapha Stucchi Massimiliano 2008 Historical seismology interdisciplinary studies of past and recent earthquakes Second Volume Springer ISBN 978 1 4020 8221 4 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Fusaro Maria 1996 Uva passa una guerra commerciale tra Venezia e l Inghilterra 1540 1640 in Italian il Cardo ISBN 88 8079 081 1 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Grafton Anthony Most Glenn W Settis Salvatore 2010 The Classical Tradition Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 03572 0 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Haberstumpf Walter 2005 I Tocco duchi di Leucade e il principato d Acaia secoli XIV XVI Venezia e le Isole Ionie in Italian Herrin Judith Saint Guillain Guillaum 2011 Identities and Allegiances in the Eastern Mediterranean After 1204 Ashgate Publishing Ltd ISBN 978 1 4094 1098 0 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Heurtley W A 1967 A Short history of Greece from early times to 1964 CUP Archive ISBN 0 521 09454 2 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Hoyt Edwin Palmer 1994 Mussolini s empire the rise and fall of the fascist vision J Wiley ISBN 0 471 59151 3 Retrieved 23 February 2012 Isom Verhaaren Christine 2001 Allies with the Infidel The Ottoman and French Alliance in the Sixteenth Century I B Tauris ISBN 1 84885 728 4 Retrieved 3 September 2011 Jervis White Jervis Henry 1852 History of the island of Corfu and of the Republic of the Ionian Islands Colburn and co Retrieved 10 August 2011 Kazhdan Alexander ed 1991 The Oxford Dictionary of Byzantium Oxford and New York Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 504652 8 Knox MacGregor 1986 Mussolini unleashed 1939 1941 politics and strategy in fascist Italy s last war Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 33835 2 Retrieved 23 February 2012 Konomos Ntinos 1968 Crete and Zakynthos in Greek Kosmatou Eftychia 2000 La population des iles Ioniennes XVIIIeme a XIXeme siecle in French Paris I Laiou Angeliki E 2005 Urbs capta the Fourth Crusade and its consequences Lethielleux ISBN 2 283 60464 8 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Lampros Paulos 1968 Coins and medals of the Ionian Islands John Benjamins Publishing Company ISBN 90 6032 311 4 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Lane Frederic Chapin 1973 Venice a maritime republic JHU Press ISBN 0 8018 1460 X Retrieved 10 August 2011 Le tre costituzioni 1800 1803 1817 delle Sette Isole Jonie in Italian C N Filadelfeo 1849 Retrieved 19 October 2011 Liddell Robert 1958 The Morea J Cape Retrieved 10 August 2011 Lunzi Ermanno 1858 Della condizione politica delle Isole Jonie sotto il dominio Veneto preceduta da un compendio della storia delle Isole stesse dalla divisione dell impero Bizantino in Italian Tip del Commercio Retrieved 10 August 2011 Luttwak Edward 2009 The grand strategy of the Byzantine Empire Harvard University Press ISBN 978 0 674 03519 5 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Macmillan inc 1994 Guide to the eastern Mediterranean including Greece and the Greek islands Constantinople Smyrna Ephesus etc Macmillan and co Retrieved 10 August 2011 Maltezou Chryssa 1980 Cythere Societe et economie pendant la periode de la domination venitienne in French Balkan Studies Mauskopf Deliyannis Deborah 2009 Ravenna in late antiquity Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 83672 2 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Mercati Paolo 1811 Saggio storico statistico della citta et isola di Zante in Italian Miller William 1921 Essays on the Latin Orient Cambridge University Press Retrieved 10 August 2011 Miller William 1908 The Latins in the Levant A History of Frankish Greece 1204 1566 London John Murray OCLC 563022439 Nicol Donald M 1992 Byzantium and Venice A Study in Diplomatic and Cultural Relations Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 34157 4 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Nicol Donald M 2010 The Despotate of Epiros 1267 1479 A Contribution to the History of Greece Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 13089 9 Retrieved 29 August 2011 Novoselova Aleksandra Vasil evna 1971 History of the Byzantine Empire Second Volume University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 0 299 80926 9 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Ortalli Gherardo 1998 Venezia e Creta atti del convegno internazionale di studi Iraklion Chaniaa in Italian Istituto veneto di scienze lettere ed arti ISBN 88 86166 69 9 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Ostrogorsky George 1956 History of the Byzantine State Oxford Basil Blackwell Paparrigopoulos Constantine 1860 History of the Greek Nation XI Partsch Joseph 1890 Kephallenia und Ithaka Eine geographische Monographie in German J Perthes Retrieved 10 August 2011 The Portfolio or a collection of state papers illustrative of the history of our times James Ridgway and Sons 1836 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Pratt Michael 1978 Britain s Greek empire reflections on the history of the Ionian Islands from the fall of Byzantium Collings ISBN 0 86036 025 3 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Roberts Browne H E 1861 History of the colonial empire of Great Britain Longman Green Longman and Roberts ISBN 9780665402500 Retrieved 2 September 2011 Rodogno Davide 2006 Fascism s European empire Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 84515 7 Retrieved 24 February 2012 Rodger Alexander Bankier 1964 The War of the Second Coalition 1798 to 1801 a strategic commentary Clarendon Press Retrieved 2 September 2011 Rulhiere Chriseuil 1800 Essai sur les isles de Zante de Cerigo de Cerigotto et des Strophades composant le departement de la Mer Egee in French Retrieved 10 August 2011 Saint Sauveur Andre Grasset de 1800 Voyage historique litteraire et pittoresque dans les isles et possessions ci devant venitiennes du Levant in French Sathas Konstantinos N 1972 Documents inedits relatifs a l histoire de la Grece au moyen age in French Gregoriades Retrieved 10 August 2011 Scammell Geoffrey Vaughn 1981 The world encompassed the first European maritime empires c 800 1650 University of California Press ISBN 0 520 04422 3 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Schreiber Gerhard Stegemann Bernd Vogel Detlef 1995 The Mediterranean south east Europe and north Africa 1939 1941 from Italy s declaration of non belligerence to the entry of the United States into the war Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 822884 8 Retrieved 23 February 2012 Schroeder Paul W 1996 The transformation of European politics 1763 1848 Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 820654 2 Retrieved 2 September 2011 Setton Kenneth M 1978 The Papacy and the Levant 1204 1571 Volume II The Fifteenth Century Philadelphia The American Philosophical Society ISBN 0 87169 127 2 Smyth William Henry 1854 The Mediterranean a memoir physical historical and nautical John W Parker and Son Retrieved 10 August 2011 Soreide Fredrik 2011 Ships from the Depths Deepwater Archaeology Texas A amp M University Press ISBN 978 1 60344 218 3 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge Great Britain 1831 The Quarterly journal of education Volume 1 Charles Knight Retrieved 19 October 2011 Soustal Peter Koder Johannes 1981 Tabula Imperii Byzantini Band 3 Nikopolis und Kephallenia in German Vienna Verlag der Osterreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften ISBN 978 3 7001 0399 8 Thiriet Freddy 1975 La Romanie Venitienne au moyen age Le developpement et l exploitation du domaine colonial venitien XIIe XVe siecles in French E de Boccard Tsitselis Ilias A 1960 Cephalonian Composite contributions to the history and folklore of the island of Cephalonia Second Volume in Greek Mynas Mirtides Vaudoncourt Frederic Guillaume de Walton William 1816 Memoirs on the Ionian islands Baldwin Retrieved 10 August 2011 Wever Bruno de Goethem Herman van Wouters Nico 2006 Local government in occupied Europe 1939 1945 Academia Press ISBN 90 382 0892 8 Retrieved 23 February 2012 Xenos Stefanos 1865 East and West a diplomatic history of the annexation of the Ionian islands to the Kingdom of Greece Trubner amp Co Retrieved 5 September 2011 Ward Sir Adolphus William 1912 The Cambridge modern history Fourteen Volume Macmillan ISBN 9780521078146 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Young Martin 1977 Corfu and the other Ionian islands Cape ISBN 0 224 01307 6 Retrieved 10 August 2011 Zakythinos D A 1954 Le theme de Cephalonie et la defense de l Occident L Hellenisme Contemporain in French Athens 4 5 303 312 Zorzi Alvise 1983 Venice 697 1797 city republic empire Sidgwick amp Jackson ISBN 0 283 98984 X Retrieved 10 August 2011 Foreign Office of Great Britain 1850 Correspondence respecting the demands made upon the Greek Government and respecting the Islands of Cervi and Sapienza presented to both Houses of Parliament by Command of Her Majesty Harrison and Son Retrieved 10 August 2011 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Venetian rule in the Ionian Islands amp oldid 1127105626, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.