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Venice's Mediterranean Colonies: Architecture and Urbanism

Venice's Mediterranean Colonies: Architecture and Urbanism

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Maria Georgopoulou
Cambridge University Press, 11/22/2001
EAN 9780521782357, ISBN10: 052178235X

Hardcover, 400 pages, 24.4 x 17 x 2.2 cm
Language: English
Originally published in English

Originally published in 2001, this book examines the Venetian colonies of the Eastern Mediterranean and how their built environments express the close cultural ties with both Venice and Byzantium. Using the island of Crete and its capital city, Candia (modern Herakleion), as a case study, Maria Georgopoulou exposes the dynamic relationship that existed between colonizer and colony. She studies the military, administrative, and ecclesiastical monuments set up by the Venetian colonists which served as bold statements of control over the local Greek population and the Jewish communities who were ethnically, religiously, and linguistically distinct from them. Georgopoulou demonstrates how the Venetian colonists manipulated Crete's past history in order to support and legitimate colonial rule, particularly through the appropriation of older Byzantine traditions in civic and religious ceremonies.

Introduction
Venice's empire
Part I. Constructing an Empire
1. The city as locus of colonial rule
2. Signs of power
3. Venice, the heir of Byzantium
Part II. Mapping the Colonial Territory
4. Patron saints, relics, and martyria
5. The blessings of the friars
6. The Greeks and the city
7. Segregation within the walls
the Judaica
Part III. Symbols of Colonial Control
8. Ritualizing colonial practices
9. Colonialism and the metropole
Conclusion.