History of Veneto Italy

History of Veneto Italy

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Veneto

My connection to Veneto goes back to several ancestors Barbarossa, the d’ Este and Carrara families and several Doges.  See the links below.

History

The population of the Veneto began around7000 years ago, and intensified during the Bronze Age, firstly in the hills around Verona, along the eastern coast of Lake Garda and near the river courses of the zone. Around 1000 B.C. the Paleovenetian civilisation developed a true culture in the territory of Este, and established links with other distant peoples such as the Greeks, Etruscans, Celts and other Transalpine races.

The Venetians quickly established a strong ethnic, cultural and political identity, and to preserve this they formed an alliance with the Romans in the 3rd century B.C. to confront the barbarian threat. This alliance led to important construction within the infrastructure and organisation and edification of urban centres. The Veneto then became completely absorbed in the Roman Empireduring the 1st century B.C. though still maintaining its distinct traits, for which Rome demonstrated great respect.

In the first centuries A.D.Germanic invasionsdealt a hard blow to the Venetians and the Romans and following the devastation of the Longobards the inhabitants began their exodus towards the lagoon area. The first nucleus of the city of Venice is datable to around the 9th -10th centuries.

The mainland settlements came under assault from the Hungarians, leading to the erection of new fortifications, which shortly after gave birth to a multitude of autonomous jurisdictions and the phenomenon of feudalism, gradually giving way to the renewal of commerce in the 12th century and the birth of the comune system. These comunes, united through the Lombard League fought against the various attempts at restoring the empire by both Frederick I (‘Barbarossa’) and Frederick II. These conflicts favoured the noble ruling families such as the da Romano, da Camino, da Carrara and d’Este, who, proclaiming themselves guardians of their respective cities, thus became elected with the title of podestà, or captain of the people.

Meanwhile Veniceescaped from the aegis of Byzantium, which had made it one of its provinces, installing an oligarchic government ruled by the Doge, and expanded its power throughout the Mediterranean by controlling the ports and trade routes of the eastern basin. The important commercial conquests of the Venetians led to hostility from Genoa, who in the 13th century began the struggle for domination of the seas, which was finally obtained by Venice. Venice’s authority spread also to the mainland, however, and at the beginning of the 15th century it was the greatest power of the Italian peninsula and consequently was able to unify the lands of the Veneto. This hegemony produced a common style of culture, language and architecture. In 1797 theVenetian Republicgave its last breath, conquered by Napoleon and then ceded to Austria with the treaty of Campoformio until 1866, when Venice was annexed to the Kingdom of Italy.

The Veneto played a highly important role during the Great War of 1914-18when the Italo-Austrian front, which had earlier stretched from the uplands of the Asiago and Dolomites as far as the hills of Gorizia, withdrew after the defeat at Caporetto (24th November 1917) to Monte Grappa and Piave, that is until the borders of the plain: a front line which was decisive for the whole conflict, and in commemoration of which is the shrine at Cima Grappa and various other war memorials throughout the territory. The armistice was signed on 3rd November 1918 at Villa Giusti in Padua.

 

The Second World Wardid not produce a huge amount of damage here, though Treviso and Verona suffered heavy bombardment, and the Germans occupied the area after8th September 1943, date of the armistice with the Allies signalling the end of Italy’s military alliance with the Nazis.

From the Venetian Side

History of Veneto

From a Roman province to a Doge Republic

Originally inhabited by Indo-European Veneti and Euganei, Veneto was conquered by the Romans in the 3rdcentury BC. After the fall of Rome, Goths and Lombards invaded the region. Many Venetians fled into the swampsof the lagoon and established settlements there – Venice was born.With the rise of the city-states in Italy, Venice conquered the eastern Mediterranean and rose to become the most important trading power in Europe. Following its the defeat at the hands of the Ottomans, Venice conquered the surrounding area of the mainland and integrated Verona and Padua into the Venetian empire. After a slow decay of power, Veneto was incorporated into the Hapsburg Empire in the 19thcentury, and finally, in 1866, into the Kingdom of Italy.

Veneti and Romans

In the first millennium BC, the Indo-European Veneti wandered into the present-day Veneto and pushed the resident Euganei into the mountain hills. Brisk trade with the Etruscans and the Greeks helped the Veneti settlers to flourish. Around 300 BC the Roman period began. With their victory against the Etruscans, the Romansfinally conqueredthe Veneto region. Many of the larger settlements such as Verona, Padua, Vicenzaand Trevisowere governed by Roman municipal law, and they became major trading centres in the new Roman province of Venetia et Histria. The capitalof the new province was Aquileia, which is located in today’s Friuli Venezia Giulia region.

After the fall of Rome, the area was ruled by the Ostrogoths. During the Great Migration, Veneto was invaded by Visigoths, Huns and Lombards. Many of the frightened people fled intothe marshy lagoons in the delta where they founded the first settlements – the hour of the birth of Venicehad struck.

The rise and fall of the Doge Republic

With the rise of the Italian city-states, Venice, Verona, Vicenza, Treviso and Padua gained their independence and became powerful economic and trade centres in Veneto. While most of the Venetian cities cooperated with Lombard cities, Venice went its own way,focusing more on the east.After defeating the Dalmatian coast in the 11thcentury, the young Doge Republic rose to a strong sea power. In numerous bloody wars, it expanded its territory throughout the eastern Mediterranean. After the sack of Byzantium, large parts of Greece, including Crete and some regions of Turkey, were part of the Venetian Republic. For two centuries Venicewas the most important trade city in Europe.

The rise of the Ottomans in the 14thcentury lead to the slow decline of the Doge Republic. When the Venetians lost many areas in the eastern Mediterranean to the Ottomans, the Doge’s focus turned more towards the mainland around Venice. First Treviso and the Istrian coast were incorporated, in 1404 Verona surrendered, and in 1405 Padua was finally conquered. In the following years the Venetians conquered the rest of today’s Veneto region and occupied cities as far away as Lombardy and Apulia. Only the Austrians, with the help of the French, could put the Venetian expansion efforts to an end in the 16thcentury. With this defeat, the slow phase of decline began, which resulted in the loss of independence in 1815.

Veneto from the 19thcentury

After a short period as part of the Lombardo-Venetian Cisalpine Republic, Veneto became a dependency of the Austrian Habsburg monarchy, together with Lombardy and Trentino Alto Adige. A long and bloody struggle for independence (Risorgimento)  began, which ended after major battles around Solferino in 1861 in the liberation from foreign rule. In 1861 the Kingdom of Italywas established; it incorporated Veneto in 1866.

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