About this Lecture series
Venice rose from the water of a lagoon in the upper Adriatic. From the fifth century the Adriatic Veneti sought refuge on its scattered islands from the Visigoth, Hun and Longobard invasions that overran the north-eastern Italian peninsula as the Roman world within ‘Italy’ and beyond fell apart. These intrepid people designed and built the foundations of their freedom, their future independence and what became the extraordinary mercantile city of Venice and its republic. They began by using reeds and wood, upgrading to more durable materials as opportunity and wealth allowed. Trade developed which made them wealthy through staples such as salt and a vast range of spices and luxury materials. Canals were dug and churches and palaces were built from stone and marble giving us this extraordinary city.
James Hill will present two lectures on the miracle that is the building of Venice and its Republic. In the first, he explores the city’s origins and the extraordinary innovations that helped create a city ‘on water’. In the second, he explores the remarkable rise of Venice as a trading republic and its mercantile power spread across coastal and island possessions in the easterly Adriatic coast, the eastern Mediterranean and eventually on terraferma across much of northern Italy.
James Hill will present two lectures on the miracle that is the building of Venice and its Republic. In the first, he explores the city’s origins and the extraordinary innovations that helped create a city ‘on water’. In the second, he explores the remarkable rise of Venice as a trading republic and its mercantile power spread across coastal and island possessions in the easterly Adriatic coast, the eastern Mediterranean and eventually on terraferma across much of northern Italy.