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Venetian Dalmatia

Venetian Dalmatia (Latin: Dalmatia Veneta) refers to parts of Dalmatia under the rule of the Republic of Venice, mainly from the 15th to the 18th centuries.[1] Dalmatia was first sold to Venice in 1409 but Venetian Dalmatia was not fully consolidated until 1420. It lasted until 1797, when the Republic of Venice fell to the forces of Napoleon Bonaparte and Habsburg Austria.

Governorate of Dalmatia
Dalmazia veneziana
Province of the Republic of Venice
1409–1797

Dalmatia as a Venetian possession in 1560
CapitalZadar
DemonymDalmatian
History
 • TypeGovernorate
History 
• Established
1409
• Disestablished
1797
Today part ofCroatia

Geography Edit

The Republic of Venice had possessions in the Balkans and in the eastern Mediterranean Sea, including Venetian Albania in the Adriatic Sea and the Venetian Ionian Islands in western Greece. Its possessions in Dalmatia stretched from the Istria peninsula to what is today coastal Montenegro: they included all the Dalmatian islands and the mainland territories from the central Velebit mountains to the northern borders of the Republic of Ragusa. With the 1718 Treaty of Passarowitz, Venice enlarged its possessions in Dalmatia to their greatest extent: it made some small advances, taking the areas of Sinj, Imotski and Vrgorac in the Dalmatian hinterland.[2]

History Edit

Middle Ages Edit

Conflicts between Venetians and Croats, as well as other Slavic nations or tribes on the Adriatic coast, including Narentines, began very early, in the 7th and 8th century, because the Venetians demanded free passage for their merchant galleys and did not want to pay taxes. Beginning with Doge Pietro II Orseolo, who ruled Venice from 991 AD, Venetian attention towards mainland Veneto was definitely overshadowed by a strong push towards the control of the Adriatic Sea. Inner strife was pacified, and trade with the Byzantine Empire boosted by the favourable treaty (Grisobolus or Golden Bull) with Emperor Basil II. The imperial edict granted Venetian traders freedom from the Kommerkion tax paid by other foreigners and the Byzantines themselves. In 1000 AD an expedition of Venetian ships in coastal Istria and Dalmatia secured Venetian suzerainty in the area, and the Narentine pirates were suppressed permanently. On this occasion Doge Orseolo named himself "Duke of Dalmatia", starting the colonial empire of Venice. He was also responsible of the establishment of the famous "Marriage of the Sea" ceremony. At this time Venice had a firm control over the Adriatic Sea, strengthened by the expedition of Pietro's son Ottone in 1017. From the 1030s however, after the fall of Doge Otto Orseolo, Croatian kings Stjepan I and his son Petar Krešimir IV succeeded in taking almost the whole coast back, so the latter carried the title King od Croatia and Dalmatia. Since 1085, following the agreement between Venice and Byzantine Empire, Venetians subsequently conquered the significant part of the Croatian coastline.

During the 12th century, after Croatia entered a personal union with the Kingdom of Hungary, kings Coloman and Béla II managed to return a considerable territory of Dalmatia and Croatian Littoral to their kingdom, but occasional conflicts almost never ceased. The creation of Venice's overseas empire began with the conquest of Dalmatia and reached its greatest nominal extent at the conclusion of the Fourth Crusade in 1204, with the declaration of the acquisition of three octaves of the Byzantine Empire.[3] Venice with the help of crusaders captured Zadar in 1202. In 1203, Pope Innocent III excommunicated the entire crusading army, along with the Venetians, for taking part in the attack. After wintering in Zadar, the Fourth Crusade continued its campaign, which led to the siege of Constantinople.[4] Hungarian king Louis the Great launched a large campaign in 1356–1358 and forced Venice to withdraw from Dalmatia. Zadar Peace Treaty was signed on 18 February 1358 and the whole coast from eastern Istria to southern Dalmatia was set free. In 1409, during the 20-year Hungarian civil war between King Sigismund and the Neapolitan House of Anjou, the losing contender, Ladislaus of Naples, sold his rights on Dalmatia to the Venetian Republic for a meager sum of 100,000 ducats. Sigismund tried to recover the territory but Venice defeated his troops in the Battle of Motta. Croatian Littoral and eastern Istria remained parts of Croatia, where Croats, together with their allies, rejected Venetian efforts to subject them. The more centralized merchant republic took control of the coastal cities by 1420 (with the exception of the Republic of Ragusa); they were to remain under Venetian rule for a period of 377 years (1420–1797).[5] The southernmost area of Dalmatia (now part of coastal Montenegro) was called Venetian Albania during that time.

Ottoman–Venetian Wars Edit

 
Venetian Dalmatia in 1558.

In the period between the start of the Ottoman–Venetian War (1499–1503) and the end of Ottoman–Venetian War (1537–40), the Ottoman Empire made significant advances in the Dalmatian hinterland - it didn't occupy the Venetian cities, but it took the Croatian possessions between Skradin and Karin, eliminating them as a buffer zone between the Ottoman and Venetian territory.[6] The economy of the Venetian cities in Dalmatia, severely impacted by the Turkish occupation of the hinterland in the previous war, recovered and held steady even throughout this war.[7]

Uskok war Edit

The Uskok War was fought by the Austrians, Slovenes, Croats, and Spanish on one side and the Venetians, Dutch, and English on the other. It is named for the Uskoks, soldiers from Croatia used by the Austrians for irregular warfare. Since the Uskoks were checked on land and were rarely paid their annual salary, they resorted to piracy. In addition to attacking Turkish ships, they attacked Venetian merchantmen. The conflict began in January 1616 in the Gorizia Hills and lasted until 1617. The Treaty of Peace (now known as the Preliminary Treaty of Paris and the Treaty of Madrid) resolved that pirates would be driven from the maritime areas of the House of Habsburg. The Venetians returned to Austrians all the places occupied by them in Istria and Friuli.

Cretan War Edit

 
During the Candian War, the Venetians in Dalmatia with the support of the local population managed to compel the Ottoman garrison of Klis Fortress to surrender.

The Dalmatian front was a separate theater of operations, which was involved in the early phase of the war. The conditions there were almost reverse to those in Crete: for the Ottomans, it was too far away and relatively insignificant, while the Venetians operated near their own bases of supply and had undisputed control of the sea, being thus able to easily reinforce their coastal strongholds.[8] The Ottomans launched a large-scale attack in 1646, and made some significant gains, including the capture of the islands of Krk, Pag and Cres,[9] and most importantly, the supposedly impregnable fortress of Novigrad, which surrendered on 4 July, after only two days of bombardment.[10] The Turks were now able to threaten the two main Venetian strongholds in Dalmatia, Zadar and Split.[11] In the next year however, the tide turned, as the Venetian commander Leonardo Foscolo seized several forts, retook Novigrad, temporarily captured the fortress of Knin and took Klis,[12][13] while a month-long siege of the fortress of Šibenik by the Ottomans in August and September failed.[14] During the next few years, military operations stalled because of an outbreak of famine and plague amongst the Venetians at Zadar, while both sides focused their resources in the Aegean area.[15] As other fronts took priority for the Ottomans, no further operations occurred in the Dalmatian theater.[16] Peace in 1669 found the Republic of Venice with significant gains in Dalmatia, its territory tripled, and its control of the Adriatic thus secured.[17]

Morean War Edit

In October 1683, the population of Venetian Dalmatia, principally Uskoks of Ravni Kotari, took arms and together with the rayah (lower class) of the Ottoman frontier regions rose up, taking Skradin, Karin, Vrana, Benkovac and Obrovac.[18]

 
An 18th century Dalmatian militiaman.

In the Morean War, the Republic of Venice besieged Sinj in October 1684 and then again March and April 1685, but both times without success.[19] In the 1685 attempt, the Venetian armies were aided by the local militia of the Republic of Poljica, who thereby rebelled against their nominal Ottoman suzerainty that had existed since 1513.[19] In an effort to retaliate to Poljica, in June 1685, the Ottomans attacked Zadvarje, and in July 1686 Dolac and Srijane, but were pushed back, and suffered major casualties.[20] With the help of the local population of Poljica as well as the Morlachs, the fortress of Sinj finally fell to the Venetian army on 30 September 1686.[21] On 1 September 1687 the siege of Herceg Novi started, and ended with a Venetian victory on 30 September.[22] Knin was taken after a twelve-day siege on 11 September 1688.[23] The capture of the Knin Fortress marked the end of the successful Venetian campaign to expand their territory in inland Dalmatia, and it also determined much of the final border between Dalmatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina that stands today.[23] The Ottomans would besiege Sinj again in the Second Morean War, but would be repelled.

On 26 November 1690, Venice took Vrgorac, which opened the route towards Imotski and Mostar.[23] In 1694 they managed to take areas north of the Republic of Ragusa, namely Čitluk, Gabela, Zažablje, Trebinje, Popovo, Klobuk and Metković.[23] In the final peace treaty, Venice did relinquish the areas of Popovo polje as well as Klek and Sutorina, to maintain the pre-existing demarcation near Ragusa.[24]

The "Linea Mocenigo" [25] in 1718 Dalmatia was named after Sebastiano Mocenigo, one of the last famous Doges of Venice. Indeed, in Dalmatia -after the Treaty of Passarowitz- he obtained some small advances for Venice, taking the areas of Sinj and Imotski in the hinterland. That was the last enlargement of Venetian Dalmatia (that partially enjoyed the "Age of Enlightment" experienced by Venice during Illuminism) until the Napoleonic conquest in 1797.[26] However, Venetians lost Čitluk and Gabela to Ottomans according to this treaty.

Last decades Edit

In 1797 AD, during the Napoleonic wars, the Republic of Venice was dissolved. Venetian Dalmatia was included in the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy from 1805 to 1809 AD (the Republic of Ragusa was included in 1808 AD), and later in the Illyrian Provinces from 1809 AD. After the final defeat of Napoleon, the entire territory was granted to the Austrian Empire by the Congress of Vienna in 1815 AD.[27]

Demographic history Edit

Dalmatia was inhabited by autochthonous Dalmatae Illyrians. The Roman–Dalmatae Wars lasted until 33 BC when Octavian installed Roman hegemony in Dalmatia. The defeat of the Great Illyrian Revolt began the integration of Dalmatia which in turn led to the romanization of the region by the early Middle Ages. The languages spoken by the Illyrian tribes are extinct. Dalmatian language evolved from the vulgar Latin of the Illyro-Romans. After the fall of the western Roman Empire Slavic-speaking people arrived in Dalmatia, circa 640 AD. The Slavic Croatian population spoke Chakavian and Shtokavian dialects of Serbo-Croatian language which is today called Croatian language. Romance population created Dalmatian city-states in the early Middle Ages. They had already become a minority in the Middle Ages after the year 1000 AD, living mostly in the coastal areas and with smaller pockets in the hinterland. Merchants and soldiers from Venice settled the Dalmatian cities over the following centuries, mixing with the already present Romance population. During the Venetian rule in Dalmatia Venetian language became the "lingua franca" of all Dalmatia, assimilating the Dalmatian language of the Romanised Illyrians and influencing partially both Croatian[28] and Albanian[29] language.

It is possible that ethnically, the Venetians were an earlier arrival of Slavic people, given that the name Veneti has etymological connection to "Wend," the German word for "Slav", and Tacitus informs us that the "Adriatic Veneti" of his period (AD 1st c.) were related to the Germanic "Vistula Veneti," who lived near the region of Proto-Slavic homeland in Poland by the Vistula River.[30] Indeed in the 1980s and 1990s some Slovene authors proposed a theory according to which the Veneti were Proto-Slavs and bearers of the Lusatian culture along the Amber Path who settled the region between the Baltic Sea and Adriatic Sea and included the Adriatic Veneti, as presented in their book "Veneti – First Builders of European Community". This theory would place the Veneti as a pre-Celtic, pre-Latin and pre-Germanic population of Europe. The theory is rejected by mainstream historians and linguists.[31]

During Ottoman rule in the hinterlands Orthodox people, mostly Serbs, started arriving in the northern parts of the hinterland, as well as Romance-speaking Vlachs, part of whom were Orthodox and part of whom were Catholic, and after the Venetian takeover of most of the hinterland during the Great Turkish War the Croat population in the hinterlands was greatly reinforced by new Croat settlers fleeing from Ottoman Bosnia. Over time the Croats assimilated the Catholic Vlachs, while the Serbs assimilated the Orthodox ones. The Romance-speakers in the coastal areas were more resilient to assimilation (in great part due to their prestige status) and after the fall of the Republic, during the national movements of the 19th century, had mostly adopted an Italian national identity. During the period of Venetian rule in Dalmatia part of its Slavic population was italianised.

The Dalmatian population adhered to Roman Catholicism in the maritime areas, the urban areas on the coast as well as much of the hinterland, while Eastern Orthodoxy was dominant in the northern part of the hinterland, as Serbs and Orthodox Vlachs settled the area from the 16th century onwards.

Administration Edit

Dalmatian administration was in the hands of a few Venetian officials, who were headed by a governor (Provveditore generale), who changed every three years. The Venetian nobility competed for this service, because it was honorable and lucrative. The provveditore generale ruled like an independent ruler, having a court in Zadar, a splendid bodyguard and a suit resembling a doge. The power of the provveditore was unlimited, and he was also the last instance for the court, finances, army, even for the church. Venetian Dalmatia was divided into districts (distretto), headed by a prince (conte) appointed by the provveditore. The prince is flanked by two officials, the chancellor (chancelliere) for judicial affairs and the camerlingo for financial affairs. The small number of Venetian officials was poorly paid, so they were forced to take from collected taxes and other public duties to the detriment of the Venetian Republic. However, the taxes were not too high, because the Republic wanted to spread discontent in the hard-won Dalmatia. They were paid only by peasants, because nobles and citizens were exempted not only from all taxes, but also from all duties. Each city municipality had its own statute, so there is no uniqueness in Dalmatia. Likewise, weights and measures differed from place to place. The municipal administration was shared by nobles and citizens, who gathered for assemblies, where municipal affairs were discussed. In some municipalities, only the nobles met for assemblies, and in some the citizens also had their own assemblies. Civil and criminal affairs were handled by the city (municipal) prince, and police affairs were carried out by grand and petty judges. Peasants met in brotherhoods in gatherings, where they discussed their needs. Otherwise, in every village there was a leader called harambaša, who was in charge of civil and military affairs. During peacetime, the peasants formed some companies, and they were called cops. Their duty was to keep an eye on the movement of border Bosnian Turks, and to watch over security at home. At that time, each district had its own colonel, with serdars and serdars as lower officers. The islanders served only in the Venetian navy. The Italian language was spoken mainly in the cities, while Croatian was used in other areas.

Legacy Edit

 
The Land Gate in Zara (today Zadar).
 
Kamerlengo Castle in Trogir.

The legacy of Venice in Dalmatia is huge and very important, mainly in the cultural and artistic area. Venice was one of the centers of the Italian Renaissance and Venetian Dalmatia enjoyed the benefits of this fact. From Giorgio da Sebenico to the influence on the early contemporary Croatian literature, Venice made its Dalmatia the most western-oriented civilized area of the Balkans, mostly in the cities.

Some architectural works from that period of Dalmatia are of European importance, and would contribute to further development of the Renaissance: the Cathedral of St James in Šibenik and the Chapel of Blessed John in Trogir.

Indeed, the Croatian renaissance, strongly influenced by Venetian and Italian literature, was thoroughly developed on the coastal parts of Croatia. The beginning of the Croatian 16th-century literal activity was marked by a Dalmatian humanist Marko Marulić and his epic book Judita, which was written by incorporating peculiar motives and events from the classical Bible, and adapting them to the contemporary literature in Europe.[32]

In 1997 the historical city-island of Trogir (called "Tragurium" in Latin when one of the Dalmatian city-states and "Traù" in Venetian) was inscribed in the UNESCO World Heritage List. "The orthogonal street plan of this island...was embellished by successive rulers with many fine public and domestic buildings and fortifications. Its beautiful Romanesque churches are complemented by the outstanding Renaissance and Baroque buildings from the Venetian period", says the UNESCO report. Trogir is the best-preserved Romanesque-Gothic complex not only in the Adriatic, but in all of Central Europe. Trogir's medieval core, surrounded by walls, comprises a venetian well-preserved castle and tower (Kamerlengo Castle) and a series of dwellings and palaces from the Romanesque, Gothic, Renaissance and Baroque periods. Trogir's grandest building is the church of St. Lawrence, whose main west portal is a masterpiece by Radovan, and the most significant work of the Romanesque-Gothic style in Croatia.

The Encyclopædia Britannica, Eleventh Edition[33] states on page 774 "Antiquities" that:

"... from Italy (and Venice) came the Romanesque. The belfry of S. Maria, at Zara, erected in 1105, is first in a long list of Romanesque buildings. At Arbe there is a beautiful Romanesque campanile which also belongs to the 12th century; but the finest example in this style is the cathedral of Trau. The 14th century Dominican and Franciscan convents in Ragusa are also noteworthy. Romanesque lingered on in Dalmatia until it was displaced by Venetian Gothic in the early years of the 15th century. The influence of Venice was then at its height. Even in the relatively hostile Republic of Ragusa the Romanesque of the custom-house and Rectors' palace is combined with Venetian Gothic, while the graceful balconies and ogee windows of the Prijeki closely follow their Venetian models. In 1441 Giorgio Orsini of Zara, summoned from Venice to design the cathedral of Sebenico, brought with him the influence of the Italian Renaissance. The new forms which he introduced were eagerly imitated and developed by other architects, until the period of decadence - which virtually concludes the history of Dalmatian art - set in during the latter half of the 17th century. Special mention must be made of the carved woodwork, embroideries and plate preserved in many churches. The silver statuette and the reliquary of St. Biagio at Ragusa, and the silver ark of St. Simeon at Zara, are fine specimens of Italian jewelers' work, ranging in date from the 11th or 12th to the 17th century ...".

After the fall of the Republic of Venice in 1797 to the Napoleon Armies, the Dalmatia was incorporated briefly (1805-1809) in the "Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy". In those years the scholastic system was expanded to all the population (following the ideals of the French Revolution) and the Italian language was instituted as the official language in the schools of Dalmatia. In the 19th century, the cultural influence from Venice and the Italian peninsula originated the editing in Zadar of the first Dalmatian newspaper, in Italian and Croatian: Il Regio Dalmata – Kraglski Dalmatin, founded and published by the Italian Bartolomeo Benincasa in 1806 AD. Furthermore, this Kraglski Dalmatin was stamped in the typography of Antonio Luigi Battara and was the first fully done in Croatian. The decision to launch a newspaper for Dalmatia was made by Napoleon himself, under the initially determined name Dalmata Veneto.

Governors Edit

The Provveditore generale (Governor-general) was the official name of Venetian state officials supervising Dalmatia.[34] The Governors of Dalmatia were based in Zadar, while they were under direct supervision of the Provveditore Generale da Mar, who was based in Corfu and was directly controlled by the Signoria of Venice.

 
Sebastiano Venier -"Capitano Generale da Màr" (Chief Admiral) and "Procurator-Provveditore Generale dello Stato da Màr" (including Venetian Dalmatia)- at the Battle of Lepanto

Main and most famous Venetian "Provveditori generali" (Governors-general) of Dalmatia:

Governor Period Notes
Alvise Badoer 1538 – 1539 During the Ottoman–Venetian War (1537–1540)
Cristoforo Valier 1595 – 1597 "Sindico" with Francesco Erizzo
Filippo Pasqualigo 1599 – 1603
Giustin Antonio Belegno 1617 – 1622
Leonardo Foscolo 1645 – 1650 Ancestor of Italian poet Ugo Foscolo
Pietro Valier (fl. 1685) October 1684 — May 1686
Alvise Mocenigo III (1st time) Dec 1696 – 1702 He was Governor of Dalmatia and later Doge of Venice
Alvise Mocenigo III (2nd time) Apr 1717 – 1720 The "Linea Moncenigo" in 1718 Dalmatia was named after him
Alvise Foscari 1777 – 1780
Andrea Maria Querini Sep 1795 – Jun 1797 Last "Provveditore generale" of Dalmatia

See also Edit

Notes Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-11-01. Retrieved 2014-12-04.
  2. ^ Maps showing the historical evolution of the Venice empire
  3. ^ Beginning of Venetian Dalmatia
  4. ^ Sethre, Janet (2003). The souls of Venice. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland. ISBN 978-0-7864-1573-1.
  5. ^ Dalmatia history
  6. ^ Bogumil Hrabak (September 1986). "Turske provale i osvajanja na području današnje severne Dalmacije do sredine XVI. stoleća". Journal - Institute of Croatian History (in Serbian). University of Zagreb, Faculty of Philosophy, Zagreb. 19 (1). ISSN 0353-295X. Retrieved 2012-07-08.
  7. ^ Raukar, Tomislav (November 1977). "Venecija i ekonomski razvoj Dalmacije u XV i XVI stoljeću". Journal - Institute of Croatian History (in Croatian). Zagreb, Croatia: Faculty of Philosophy, Zagreb. 10 (1): 218–221. ISSN 0353-295X. Retrieved 2012-07-08.
  8. ^ Nicolle 1989, p. 40.
  9. ^ Setton (1991), p. 143.
  10. ^ Setton (1991), p. 142.
  11. ^ Setton (1991), p. 144.
  12. ^ Finkel (2006), p. 227.
  13. ^ Setton (1991), p. 148.
  14. ^ Setton (1991), p. 149.
  15. ^ Setton 1991, p. 162.
  16. ^ Duffy, Christopher (1979), Siege Warfare, Routledge, pp. 196–197, ISBN 978-0-7100-8871-0
  17. ^ Lane (1973), p. 409.
  18. ^ Radovan Samardžić (1990). Seobe srpskog naroda od XIV do XX veka: zbornik radova posvećen tristagodišnjici velike seobe Srba. Zavod za udžbenike i nastavna sredstva. ISBN 9788617015631. Становништво Млетачке Далмације, на првом месту Котарски ускоци, још у октобру 1683. дигло се на оружје заједно с ра- јом у пограничним крајевима Турске. Устаници су "сами заузели Скрадин, Карин, Врану, Бенковац и Обровац
  19. ^ a b Nazor 2002, p. 50.
  20. ^ Nazor 2002, pp. 50–51.
  21. ^ Nazor 2002, p. 51.
  22. ^ Čoralić 2001.
  23. ^ a b c d Nazor 2002, p. 52.
  24. ^ Nazor 2002, p. 53.
  25. ^ . Archived from the original on 2014-12-13. Retrieved 2014-12-12.
  26. ^ Larry Wolff: "Venice and the Slavs"
  27. ^ King, David (2008). Vienna 1814: How the Conquerors of Napoleon Made Love, War, and Peace at the Congress of Vienna. Crown Publishing Group. p. 334. ISBN 978-0-307-33716-0.
  28. ^ "Map of Serbo-Croatian Dialects". ccat.sas.upenn.edu. Retrieved 2023-09-15.
  29. ^ Varvaro, Alberto, "La preistoria delle parlate meridionali e siciliane", La preistoria dell'italiano, Berlin, New York: DE GRUYTER, retrieved 2023-09-15
  30. ^ "TACITUS GERMANY GERMANIA", Tacitus: Germania, Liverpool University Press, pp. 13–62, 1999-07-01, doi:10.2307/j.ctv102bk1m.5, ISBN 978-1-80034-609-3, retrieved 2021-05-03
  31. ^ Z. Skrbiš, 41–56 and M. Svašek, 144.
  32. ^ Dunja Fališevac, Krešimir Nemec, Darko Novaković (2000). Leksikon hrvatskih pisaca. Zagreb: Školska knjiga d.d. ISBN 953-0-61107-2.
  33. ^ Jayne, Kingsley Garland (1911). "Dalmatia" . In Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 07 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. pp. 772–776.
  34. ^ "Provveditore generale di Dalmazia e Albania".

Sources Edit

  • Finkel, Caroline (2006), Osman's Dream: The Story of the Ottoman Empire 1300–1923, London: John Murray, ISBN 978-0-7195-6112-2
  • Čoralić, Lovorka (2001). "Boka kotorska u doba Morejskoga rata (1684–1699)". Kolo (in Croatian). Matica hrvatska (3). ISSN 1331-0992.
  • Nicolle, David (1989), The Venetian Empire, 1200–1670, Osprey Publishing, ISBN 978-0-85045-899-2
  • Nazor, Ante (February 2002). "Poljičani u Morejskom ratu (1684.-1699.)" [Inhabitants of Poljica in the War of Morea (1684–1699)]. Povijesni Prilozi (in Croatian). Croatian Institute of History. 21 (21). ISSN 0351-9767. Retrieved 2012-07-07.
  • Norwich, John Julius. A History of Venice. New York: A.A. Knopf, 1982. ISBN 0-394-52410-1
  • Setton, Kenneth Meyer (1991), Venice, Austria, and the Turks in the Seventeenth Century, DIANE Publishing, ISBN 0-87169-192-2
  • Wolff, Larry. Venice and the Slavs: The Discovery of Dalmatia in the Age of Enlightenment. Stanford University Press. Stanford, 2002 ISBN 0804739463
  • Worldstatesmen: List of Dalmatia Governors ([1])

venetian, dalmatia, latin, dalmatia, veneta, refers, parts, dalmatia, under, rule, republic, venice, mainly, from, 15th, 18th, centuries, dalmatia, first, sold, venice, 1409, fully, consolidated, until, 1420, lasted, until, 1797, when, republic, venice, fell, . Venetian Dalmatia Latin Dalmatia Veneta refers to parts of Dalmatia under the rule of the Republic of Venice mainly from the 15th to the 18th centuries 1 Dalmatia was first sold to Venice in 1409 but Venetian Dalmatia was not fully consolidated until 1420 It lasted until 1797 when the Republic of Venice fell to the forces of Napoleon Bonaparte and Habsburg Austria Governorate of DalmatiaDalmazia venezianaProvince of the Republic of Venice1409 1797Flag Coat of armsDalmatia as a Venetian possession in 1560CapitalZadarDemonymDalmatianHistory TypeGovernorateHistory Established1409 Disestablished1797Preceded by Succeeded byCroatia in personal union with Hungary Kingdom of DalmatiaToday part ofCroatia Contents 1 Geography 2 History 2 1 Middle Ages 2 2 Ottoman Venetian Wars 2 3 Uskok war 2 4 Cretan War 2 5 Morean War 2 6 Last decades 3 Demographic history 4 Administration 5 Legacy 6 Governors 7 See also 8 Notes 9 References 10 SourcesGeography EditThe Republic of Venice had possessions in the Balkans and in the eastern Mediterranean Sea including Venetian Albania in the Adriatic Sea and the Venetian Ionian Islands in western Greece Its possessions in Dalmatia stretched from the Istria peninsula to what is today coastal Montenegro they included all the Dalmatian islands and the mainland territories from the central Velebit mountains to the northern borders of the Republic of Ragusa With the 1718 Treaty of Passarowitz Venice enlarged its possessions in Dalmatia to their greatest extent it made some small advances taking the areas of Sinj Imotski and Vrgorac in the Dalmatian hinterland 2 History EditMiddle Ages Edit Further information Dalmatian city states and Croatian Venetian wars Conflicts between Venetians and Croats as well as other Slavic nations or tribes on the Adriatic coast including Narentines began very early in the 7th and 8th century because the Venetians demanded free passage for their merchant galleys and did not want to pay taxes Beginning with Doge Pietro II Orseolo who ruled Venice from 991 AD Venetian attention towards mainland Veneto was definitely overshadowed by a strong push towards the control of the Adriatic Sea Inner strife was pacified and trade with the Byzantine Empire boosted by the favourable treaty Grisobolus or Golden Bull with Emperor Basil II The imperial edict granted Venetian traders freedom from the Kommerkion tax paid by other foreigners and the Byzantines themselves In 1000 AD an expedition of Venetian ships in coastal Istria and Dalmatia secured Venetian suzerainty in the area and the Narentine pirates were suppressed permanently On this occasion Doge Orseolo named himself Duke of Dalmatia starting the colonial empire of Venice He was also responsible of the establishment of the famous Marriage of the Sea ceremony At this time Venice had a firm control over the Adriatic Sea strengthened by the expedition of Pietro s son Ottone in 1017 From the 1030s however after the fall of Doge Otto Orseolo Croatian kings Stjepan I and his son Petar Kresimir IV succeeded in taking almost the whole coast back so the latter carried the title King od Croatia and Dalmatia Since 1085 following the agreement between Venice and Byzantine Empire Venetians subsequently conquered the significant part of the Croatian coastline During the 12th century after Croatia entered a personal union with the Kingdom of Hungary kings Coloman and Bela II managed to return a considerable territory of Dalmatia and Croatian Littoral to their kingdom but occasional conflicts almost never ceased The creation of Venice s overseas empire began with the conquest of Dalmatia and reached its greatest nominal extent at the conclusion of the Fourth Crusade in 1204 with the declaration of the acquisition of three octaves of the Byzantine Empire 3 Venice with the help of crusaders captured Zadar in 1202 In 1203 Pope Innocent III excommunicated the entire crusading army along with the Venetians for taking part in the attack After wintering in Zadar the Fourth Crusade continued its campaign which led to the siege of Constantinople 4 Hungarian king Louis the Great launched a large campaign in 1356 1358 and forced Venice to withdraw from Dalmatia Zadar Peace Treaty was signed on 18 February 1358 and the whole coast from eastern Istria to southern Dalmatia was set free In 1409 during the 20 year Hungarian civil war between King Sigismund and the Neapolitan House of Anjou the losing contender Ladislaus of Naples sold his rights on Dalmatia to the Venetian Republic for a meager sum of 100 000 ducats Sigismund tried to recover the territory but Venice defeated his troops in the Battle of Motta Croatian Littoral and eastern Istria remained parts of Croatia where Croats together with their allies rejected Venetian efforts to subject them The more centralized merchant republic took control of the coastal cities by 1420 with the exception of the Republic of Ragusa they were to remain under Venetian rule for a period of 377 years 1420 1797 5 The southernmost area of Dalmatia now part of coastal Montenegro was called Venetian Albania during that time Ottoman Venetian Wars Edit Main articles Ottoman Venetian War 1499 1503 and Ottoman Venetian War 1537 40 nbsp Venetian Dalmatia in 1558 In the period between the start of the Ottoman Venetian War 1499 1503 and the end of Ottoman Venetian War 1537 40 the Ottoman Empire made significant advances in the Dalmatian hinterland it didn t occupy the Venetian cities but it took the Croatian possessions between Skradin and Karin eliminating them as a buffer zone between the Ottoman and Venetian territory 6 The economy of the Venetian cities in Dalmatia severely impacted by the Turkish occupation of the hinterland in the previous war recovered and held steady even throughout this war 7 Uskok war Edit Main article Uskok War The Uskok War was fought by the Austrians Slovenes Croats and Spanish on one side and the Venetians Dutch and English on the other It is named for the Uskoks soldiers from Croatia used by the Austrians for irregular warfare Since the Uskoks were checked on land and were rarely paid their annual salary they resorted to piracy In addition to attacking Turkish ships they attacked Venetian merchantmen The conflict began in January 1616 in the Gorizia Hills and lasted until 1617 The Treaty of Peace now known as the Preliminary Treaty of Paris and the Treaty of Madrid resolved that pirates would be driven from the maritime areas of the House of Habsburg The Venetians returned to Austrians all the places occupied by them in Istria and Friuli Cretan War Edit Main article Cretan War 1645 69 nbsp During the Candian War the Venetians in Dalmatia with the support of the local population managed to compel the Ottoman garrison of Klis Fortress to surrender The Dalmatian front was a separate theater of operations which was involved in the early phase of the war The conditions there were almost reverse to those in Crete for the Ottomans it was too far away and relatively insignificant while the Venetians operated near their own bases of supply and had undisputed control of the sea being thus able to easily reinforce their coastal strongholds 8 The Ottomans launched a large scale attack in 1646 and made some significant gains including the capture of the islands of Krk Pag and Cres 9 and most importantly the supposedly impregnable fortress of Novigrad which surrendered on 4 July after only two days of bombardment 10 The Turks were now able to threaten the two main Venetian strongholds in Dalmatia Zadar and Split 11 In the next year however the tide turned as the Venetian commander Leonardo Foscolo seized several forts retook Novigrad temporarily captured the fortress of Knin and took Klis 12 13 while a month long siege of the fortress of Sibenik by the Ottomans in August and September failed 14 During the next few years military operations stalled because of an outbreak of famine and plague amongst the Venetians at Zadar while both sides focused their resources in the Aegean area 15 As other fronts took priority for the Ottomans no further operations occurred in the Dalmatian theater 16 Peace in 1669 found the Republic of Venice with significant gains in Dalmatia its territory tripled and its control of the Adriatic thus secured 17 Morean War Edit Main article Morean War In October 1683 the population of Venetian Dalmatia principally Uskoks of Ravni Kotari took arms and together with the rayah lower class of the Ottoman frontier regions rose up taking Skradin Karin Vrana Benkovac and Obrovac 18 nbsp An 18th century Dalmatian militiaman In the Morean War the Republic of Venice besieged Sinj in October 1684 and then again March and April 1685 but both times without success 19 In the 1685 attempt the Venetian armies were aided by the local militia of the Republic of Poljica who thereby rebelled against their nominal Ottoman suzerainty that had existed since 1513 19 In an effort to retaliate to Poljica in June 1685 the Ottomans attacked Zadvarje and in July 1686 Dolac and Srijane but were pushed back and suffered major casualties 20 With the help of the local population of Poljica as well as the Morlachs the fortress of Sinj finally fell to the Venetian army on 30 September 1686 21 On 1 September 1687 the siege of Herceg Novi started and ended with a Venetian victory on 30 September 22 Knin was taken after a twelve day siege on 11 September 1688 23 The capture of the Knin Fortress marked the end of the successful Venetian campaign to expand their territory in inland Dalmatia and it also determined much of the final border between Dalmatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina that stands today 23 The Ottomans would besiege Sinj again in the Second Morean War but would be repelled On 26 November 1690 Venice took Vrgorac which opened the route towards Imotski and Mostar 23 In 1694 they managed to take areas north of the Republic of Ragusa namely Citluk Gabela Zazablje Trebinje Popovo Klobuk and Metkovic 23 In the final peace treaty Venice did relinquish the areas of Popovo polje as well as Klek and Sutorina to maintain the pre existing demarcation near Ragusa 24 The Linea Mocenigo 25 in 1718 Dalmatia was named after Sebastiano Mocenigo one of the last famous Doges of Venice Indeed in Dalmatia after the Treaty of Passarowitz he obtained some small advances for Venice taking the areas of Sinj and Imotski in the hinterland That was the last enlargement of Venetian Dalmatia that partially enjoyed the Age of Enlightment experienced by Venice during Illuminism until the Napoleonic conquest in 1797 26 However Venetians lost Citluk and Gabela to Ottomans according to this treaty Last decades Edit In 1797 AD during the Napoleonic wars the Republic of Venice was dissolved Venetian Dalmatia was included in the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy from 1805 to 1809 AD the Republic of Ragusa was included in 1808 AD and later in the Illyrian Provinces from 1809 AD After the final defeat of Napoleon the entire territory was granted to the Austrian Empire by the Congress of Vienna in 1815 AD 27 Demographic history EditDalmatia was inhabited by autochthonous Dalmatae Illyrians The Roman Dalmatae Wars lasted until 33 BC when Octavian installed Roman hegemony in Dalmatia The defeat of the Great Illyrian Revolt began the integration of Dalmatia which in turn led to the romanization of the region by the early Middle Ages The languages spoken by the Illyrian tribes are extinct Dalmatian language evolved from the vulgar Latin of the Illyro Romans After the fall of the western Roman Empire Slavic speaking people arrived in Dalmatia circa 640 AD The Slavic Croatian population spoke Chakavian and Shtokavian dialects of Serbo Croatian language which is today called Croatian language Romance population created Dalmatian city states in the early Middle Ages They had already become a minority in the Middle Ages after the year 1000 AD living mostly in the coastal areas and with smaller pockets in the hinterland Merchants and soldiers from Venice settled the Dalmatian cities over the following centuries mixing with the already present Romance population During the Venetian rule in Dalmatia Venetian language became the lingua franca of all Dalmatia assimilating the Dalmatian language of the Romanised Illyrians and influencing partially both Croatian 28 and Albanian 29 language It is possible that ethnically the Venetians were an earlier arrival of Slavic people given that the name Veneti has etymological connection to Wend the German word for Slav and Tacitus informs us that the Adriatic Veneti of his period AD 1st c were related to the Germanic Vistula Veneti who lived near the region of Proto Slavic homeland in Poland by the Vistula River 30 Indeed in the 1980s and 1990s some Slovene authors proposed a theory according to which the Veneti were Proto Slavs and bearers of the Lusatian culture along the Amber Path who settled the region between the Baltic Sea and Adriatic Sea and included the Adriatic Veneti as presented in their book Veneti First Builders of European Community This theory would place the Veneti as a pre Celtic pre Latin and pre Germanic population of Europe The theory is rejected by mainstream historians and linguists 31 During Ottoman rule in the hinterlands Orthodox people mostly Serbs started arriving in the northern parts of the hinterland as well as Romance speaking Vlachs part of whom were Orthodox and part of whom were Catholic and after the Venetian takeover of most of the hinterland during the Great Turkish War the Croat population in the hinterlands was greatly reinforced by new Croat settlers fleeing from Ottoman Bosnia Over time the Croats assimilated the Catholic Vlachs while the Serbs assimilated the Orthodox ones The Romance speakers in the coastal areas were more resilient to assimilation in great part due to their prestige status and after the fall of the Republic during the national movements of the 19th century had mostly adopted an Italian national identity During the period of Venetian rule in Dalmatia part of its Slavic population was italianised The Dalmatian population adhered to Roman Catholicism in the maritime areas the urban areas on the coast as well as much of the hinterland while Eastern Orthodoxy was dominant in the northern part of the hinterland as Serbs and Orthodox Vlachs settled the area from the 16th century onwards Administration EditDalmatian administration was in the hands of a few Venetian officials who were headed by a governor Provveditore generale who changed every three years The Venetian nobility competed for this service because it was honorable and lucrative The provveditore generale ruled like an independent ruler having a court in Zadar a splendid bodyguard and a suit resembling a doge The power of the provveditore was unlimited and he was also the last instance for the court finances army even for the church Venetian Dalmatia was divided into districts distretto headed by a prince conte appointed by the provveditore The prince is flanked by two officials the chancellor chancelliere for judicial affairs and the camerlingo for financial affairs The small number of Venetian officials was poorly paid so they were forced to take from collected taxes and other public duties to the detriment of the Venetian Republic However the taxes were not too high because the Republic wanted to spread discontent in the hard won Dalmatia They were paid only by peasants because nobles and citizens were exempted not only from all taxes but also from all duties Each city municipality had its own statute so there is no uniqueness in Dalmatia Likewise weights and measures differed from place to place The municipal administration was shared by nobles and citizens who gathered for assemblies where municipal affairs were discussed In some municipalities only the nobles met for assemblies and in some the citizens also had their own assemblies Civil and criminal affairs were handled by the city municipal prince and police affairs were carried out by grand and petty judges Peasants met in brotherhoods in gatherings where they discussed their needs Otherwise in every village there was a leader called harambasa who was in charge of civil and military affairs During peacetime the peasants formed some companies and they were called cops Their duty was to keep an eye on the movement of border Bosnian Turks and to watch over security at home At that time each district had its own colonel with serdars and serdars as lower officers The islanders served only in the Venetian navy The Italian language was spoken mainly in the cities while Croatian was used in other areas Legacy EditSee also Dalmatian Italians nbsp The Land Gate in Zara today Zadar nbsp Kamerlengo Castle in Trogir The legacy of Venice in Dalmatia is huge and very important mainly in the cultural and artistic area Venice was one of the centers of the Italian Renaissance and Venetian Dalmatia enjoyed the benefits of this fact From Giorgio da Sebenico to the influence on the early contemporary Croatian literature Venice made its Dalmatia the most western oriented civilized area of the Balkans mostly in the cities Some architectural works from that period of Dalmatia are of European importance and would contribute to further development of the Renaissance the Cathedral of St James in Sibenik and the Chapel of Blessed John in Trogir Indeed the Croatian renaissance strongly influenced by Venetian and Italian literature was thoroughly developed on the coastal parts of Croatia The beginning of the Croatian 16th century literal activity was marked by a Dalmatian humanist Marko Marulic and his epic book Judita which was written by incorporating peculiar motives and events from the classical Bible and adapting them to the contemporary literature in Europe 32 In 1997 the historical city island of Trogir called Tragurium in Latin when one of the Dalmatian city states and Trau in Venetian was inscribed in the UNESCO World Heritage List The orthogonal street plan of this island was embellished by successive rulers with many fine public and domestic buildings and fortifications Its beautiful Romanesque churches are complemented by the outstanding Renaissance and Baroque buildings from the Venetian period says the UNESCO report Trogir is the best preserved Romanesque Gothic complex not only in the Adriatic but in all of Central Europe Trogir s medieval core surrounded by walls comprises a venetian well preserved castle and tower Kamerlengo Castle and a series of dwellings and palaces from the Romanesque Gothic Renaissance and Baroque periods Trogir s grandest building is the church of St Lawrence whose main west portal is a masterpiece by Radovan and the most significant work of the Romanesque Gothic style in Croatia The Encyclopaedia Britannica Eleventh Edition 33 states on page 774 Antiquities that from Italy and Venice came the Romanesque The belfry of S Maria at Zara erected in 1105 is first in a long list of Romanesque buildings At Arbe there is a beautiful Romanesque campanile which also belongs to the 12th century but the finest example in this style is the cathedral of Trau The 14th century Dominican and Franciscan convents in Ragusa are also noteworthy Romanesque lingered on in Dalmatia until it was displaced by Venetian Gothic in the early years of the 15th century The influence of Venice was then at its height Even in the relatively hostile Republic of Ragusa the Romanesque of the custom house and Rectors palace is combined with Venetian Gothic while the graceful balconies and ogee windows of the Prijeki closely follow their Venetian models In 1441 Giorgio Orsini of Zara summoned from Venice to design the cathedral of Sebenico brought with him the influence of the Italian Renaissance The new forms which he introduced were eagerly imitated and developed by other architects until the period of decadence which virtually concludes the history of Dalmatian art set in during the latter half of the 17th century Special mention must be made of the carved woodwork embroideries and plate preserved in many churches The silver statuette and the reliquary of St Biagio at Ragusa and the silver ark of St Simeon at Zara are fine specimens of Italian jewelers work ranging in date from the 11th or 12th to the 17th century After the fall of the Republic of Venice in 1797 to the Napoleon Armies the Dalmatia was incorporated briefly 1805 1809 in the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy In those years the scholastic system was expanded to all the population following the ideals of the French Revolution and the Italian language was instituted as the official language in the schools of Dalmatia In the 19th century the cultural influence from Venice and the Italian peninsula originated the editing in Zadar of the first Dalmatian newspaper in Italian and Croatian Il Regio Dalmata Kraglski Dalmatin founded and published by the Italian Bartolomeo Benincasa in 1806 AD Furthermore this Kraglski Dalmatin was stamped in the typography of Antonio Luigi Battara and was the first fully done in Croatian The decision to launch a newspaper for Dalmatia was made by Napoleon himself under the initially determined name Dalmata Veneto Governors EditThis list is incomplete you can help by adding missing items October 2016 The Provveditore generale Governor general was the official name of Venetian state officials supervising Dalmatia 34 The Governors of Dalmatia were based in Zadar while they were under direct supervision of the Provveditore Generale da Mar who was based in Corfu and was directly controlled by the Signoria of Venice nbsp Sebastiano Venier Capitano Generale da Mar Chief Admiral and Procurator Provveditore Generale dello Stato da Mar including Venetian Dalmatia at the Battle of LepantoMain and most famous Venetian Provveditori generali Governors general of Dalmatia Governor Period NotesAlvise Badoer 1538 1539 During the Ottoman Venetian War 1537 1540 Cristoforo Valier 1595 1597 Sindico with Francesco ErizzoFilippo Pasqualigo 1599 1603Giustin Antonio Belegno 1617 1622Leonardo Foscolo 1645 1650 Ancestor of Italian poet Ugo FoscoloPietro Valier fl 1685 October 1684 May 1686Alvise Mocenigo III 1st time Dec 1696 1702 He was Governor of Dalmatia and later Doge of VeniceAlvise Mocenigo III 2nd time Apr 1717 1720 The Linea Moncenigo in 1718 Dalmatia was named after himAlvise Foscari 1777 1780Andrea Maria Querini Sep 1795 Jun 1797 Last Provveditore generale of DalmatiaSee also Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Venetian Dalmatia Venetian Albania Republic of Venice Kingdom of Croatia Habsburg Stato da MarNotes EditReferences Edit Map of Venetian Dalmatia in 1750 with the 21 provinces called Reggimenti Archived from the original on 2014 11 01 Retrieved 2014 12 04 Maps showing the historical evolution of the Venice empire Beginning of Venetian Dalmatia Sethre Janet 2003 The souls of Venice Jefferson N C McFarland ISBN 978 0 7864 1573 1 Dalmatia history Bogumil Hrabak September 1986 Turske provale i osvajanja na podrucju danasnje severne Dalmacije do sredine XVI stoleca Journal Institute of Croatian History in Serbian University of Zagreb Faculty of Philosophy Zagreb 19 1 ISSN 0353 295X Retrieved 2012 07 08 Raukar Tomislav November 1977 Venecija i ekonomski razvoj Dalmacije u XV i XVI stoljecu Journal Institute of Croatian History in Croatian Zagreb Croatia Faculty of Philosophy Zagreb 10 1 218 221 ISSN 0353 295X Retrieved 2012 07 08 Nicolle 1989 p 40 Setton 1991 p 143 Setton 1991 p 142 Setton 1991 p 144 Finkel 2006 p 227 Setton 1991 p 148 Setton 1991 p 149 Setton 1991 p 162 Duffy Christopher 1979 Siege Warfare Routledge pp 196 197 ISBN 978 0 7100 8871 0 Lane 1973 p 409 Radovan Samardzic 1990 Seobe srpskog naroda od XIV do XX veka zbornik radova posvecen tristagodisnjici velike seobe Srba Zavod za udzbenike i nastavna sredstva ISBN 9788617015631 Stanovnishtvo Mletachke Dalmaciјe na prvom mestu Kotarski uskoci јosh u oktobru 1683 diglo se na oruzhјe zaјedno s ra јom u pogranichnim kraјevima Turske Ustanici su sami zauzeli Skradin Karin Vranu Benkovac i Obrovac a b Nazor 2002 p 50 Nazor 2002 pp 50 51 Nazor 2002 p 51 Coralic 2001 a b c d Nazor 2002 p 52 Nazor 2002 p 53 Map of Linea Mocenigo Archived from the original on 2014 12 13 Retrieved 2014 12 12 Larry Wolff Venice and the Slavs King David 2008 Vienna 1814 How the Conquerors of Napoleon Made Love War and Peace at the Congress of Vienna Crown Publishing Group p 334 ISBN 978 0 307 33716 0 Map of Serbo Croatian Dialects ccat sas upenn edu Retrieved 2023 09 15 Varvaro Alberto La preistoria delle parlate meridionali e siciliane La preistoria dell italiano Berlin New York DE GRUYTER retrieved 2023 09 15 TACITUS GERMANY GERMANIA Tacitus Germania Liverpool University Press pp 13 62 1999 07 01 doi 10 2307 j ctv102bk1m 5 ISBN 978 1 80034 609 3 retrieved 2021 05 03 Z Skrbis 41 56 and M Svasek 144 Dunja Falisevac Kresimir Nemec Darko Novakovic 2000 Leksikon hrvatskih pisaca Zagreb Skolska knjiga d d ISBN 953 0 61107 2 Jayne Kingsley Garland 1911 Dalmatia In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 07 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 772 776 Provveditore generale di Dalmazia e Albania Sources EditFinkel Caroline 2006 Osman s Dream The Story of the Ottoman Empire 1300 1923 London John Murray ISBN 978 0 7195 6112 2 Coralic Lovorka 2001 Boka kotorska u doba Morejskoga rata 1684 1699 Kolo in Croatian Matica hrvatska 3 ISSN 1331 0992 Nicolle David 1989 The Venetian Empire 1200 1670 Osprey Publishing ISBN 978 0 85045 899 2 Nazor Ante February 2002 Poljicani u Morejskom ratu 1684 1699 Inhabitants of Poljica in the War of Morea 1684 1699 Povijesni Prilozi in Croatian Croatian Institute of History 21 21 ISSN 0351 9767 Retrieved 2012 07 07 Norwich John Julius A History of Venice New York A A Knopf 1982 ISBN 0 394 52410 1 Setton Kenneth Meyer 1991 Venice Austria and the Turks in the Seventeenth Century DIANE Publishing ISBN 0 87169 192 2 Wolff Larry Venice and the Slavs The Discovery of Dalmatia in the Age of Enlightenment Stanford University Press Stanford 2002 ISBN 0804739463 Worldstatesmen List of Dalmatia Governors 1 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Venetian Dalmatia amp oldid 1175634290, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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