Sign up
Forgot password?
FAQ: Login

Crowley Roger. City of Fortune: How Venice Won and Lost a Naval Empire

  • zip file
  • size 3,85 MB
  • contains epub document(s)
  • added by
  • info modified
Crowley Roger. City of Fortune: How Venice Won and Lost a Naval Empire
London: Faber and Faber, 2011. — 405 p. — ISBN 978–0–571–27923–4.
A magisterial work of gripping history, "City of Fortune" tells the story of the Venetian ascent from lagoon dwellers to the greatest power in the Mediterranean - an epic five hundred year voyage that encompassed crusade and trade, plague, sea battles and colonial adventure. In Venice, the path to empire unfolded in a series of extraordinary contests - the sacking of Constantinople in 1204, the fight to the finish with Genoa and a desperate defence against the Turks. Under the lion banner of St Mark, she created an empire of ports and naval bases which funnelled the goods of the world through its wharfs. In the process the city became the richest place on earth - a brilliant mosaic fashioned from what it bought, traded, borrowed and stole. Based on first hand accounts of trade and warfare, seafaring and piracy and the places where Venetians sailed and died, "City of Fortune" is narrative history at its finest. Beginning on Ascension Day in the year 1000 and ending with an explosion off the coast of Greece - and the calamitous news that the Portuguese had pioneered a sea route to India - it will fascinate anyone who loves Venice and the Mediterranean world.
Dedication.
Maps.
Place Names in this Book.

Prologue: Departure.
Opportunity: Merchant Crusaders.
Lords of Dalmatia.
The Blind Doge.
Thirty-four Thousand Marks.
‘A Dog Returning to its Vomit’.
At the Walls.
Four Emperors.
‘The Works of Hell’.
Ascent: Princes of the Sea.
A Quarter and Half a Quarter.
Demand and Supply.
‘In the Jaws of our Enemies’.
The Flag of St Titus.
Bridling St Mark.
Fight to the Finish.
Stato da Mar.
‘Like Water in a Fountain’.
City of Neptune.
Eclipse: The Rising Moon.
The Glass Ball.
The Shield of Christendom.
‘If Negroponte Is Lost’.
Pyramid of Fire.
Hands on the Throat of Venice.
Epilogue: Return.
Sources and Bibliography.
Plates.
By the Same Author.
  • Sign up or login using form at top of the page to download this file.
  • Sign up
Up