Academic literature on the topic 'Venetian ambassadors'

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Journal articles on the topic "Venetian ambassadors"

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Tretyakova, Marina V. "Cities of England in the middle of the XVI century in the Relazioni of the Venetian ambassadors." Izvestiya of Saratov University. History. International Relations 24, no. 1 (March 21, 2024): 53–58. http://dx.doi.org/10.18500/1819-4907-2024-24-1-53-58.

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The article examines the data of the final reports of the Venetian ambassadors on English cities. The information of the Venetian ambassadors about the cities of England, unfortunately, is brief. The author of the article comes to the conclusion that they basically boil down to pointing out that London is the main city of the country, that other cities of England are simply listed by the Venetian ambassadors, that the testimonies of the Venetians, albeit indirectly, help to recreate the perception of the cities of the English kingdom by the Venetians.
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Koncz, Caroline. "Rehabilitating Reputation in Early Modern Venice." Explorations in Renaissance Culture 49, no. 2 (December 11, 2023): 212–41. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/23526963-04902003.

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Abstract Until the sultanate’s fall from power in 1517, the Republic of Venice spent several lucrative centuries trading with the Mamluks of present-day Egypt and Syria. Even in their final years of partnership, Venice’s close contact with the Mamluks continued, as visually described in The Reception of the Venetian Ambassadors in Damascus (1511). In the composition, the anonymous Venetian painter depicts a diplomatic meeting of these two parties. This article proposes that the contested patron of the work, Pietro Zen, had a specific agenda in commissioning the painting. As the consul in the composition, Zen had the Reception created to erase his past errors as ambassador to Damascus. By repainting history, Zen hoped to restore his reputation as a skillful Venetian diplomat as well as render for posterity his family’s legacy of working in the Levant.
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Tracy, James. "Foreign Correspondence: European Accounts of Sultan Süleyman I’s Persian Campaigns, 1548 and 1554." Turkish Historical Review 6, no. 2 (November 26, 2015): 194–219. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/18775462-00602004.

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European sources for Süleyman I’s Persians campaigns of 1548 and 1554 have been little noticed. This essay reviews a journal of a French ambassador’s campaign travels (1548), a Venetian merchant’s account of the 1553–1555 war, and the dispatches of Vienna’s ambassadors at the Porte, relaying what are said to be letters from the sultan’s camp. No definitive assessment of these sources is offered, since Ottoman and Persians sources are used only in translation. But the European accounts add unfamiliar material for a still-needed discussion of logistical problems. They corroborate one another, and they combine to give a concrete idea how difficult it was to supply a huge army in mountainous terrain 2,000 km from the Ottoman capital.
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Barrington, Robert. "A Venetian Secretary in England: an unpublished diplomatic report in the Biblioteca Marciana, Venice1." Historical Research 70, no. 172 (June 1, 1997): 170–81. http://dx.doi.org/10.1111/1468-2281.00038.

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Abstract Venetian diplomatic relazioni are a familiar source to sixteenth‐century historians. They often present a detailed philosophical and political analysis of the courts to which Venice had sent ambassadors. At their best, they are sophisticated humanist commentaries on the state. Relazioni from Tudor England were no exception. Unfortunately, the politically turbulent years of the early Reformation are marked by a break in the Venetian relazioni coinciding with the period when diplomatic representation was suspended. However, a newly‐discovered document reproduced here, from the Biblioteca Marciana in Venice, is almost certainly a secretary's report which fills this chronological gap. The document is formal in tone and follows the structure of a model relazione. The lengthy descriptions of England's history and geography and references to contemporary events suggest a date of c. 1540.
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Amighetti, Paolo. "La nobiltà di Terraferma tra Venezia e le corti europee." Quellen und Forschungen aus italienischen Archiven und Bibliotheken 102, no. 1 (November 1, 2022): 221–38. http://dx.doi.org/10.1515/qufiab-2022-0013.

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Abstract In recent decades, research on the Venetian mainland state has underlined the tendency of subject elites to establish political relationships with foreign princes. This phenomenon was remarkably prominent in the cities of Brescia and Bergamo. The western periphery of the Venetian state was home to a wealthy and ambitious feudal nobility whose loyalty to the Most Serene Republic was very dubious. From the early decades of the 16th century, the Gambara family of Brescia maintained habitual contacts with the Imperial court and Spanish Lombardy to gain prestige and honour. In 1584 and 1596 two young brothers, Scipione and Lucrezio Gambara, were thus sent to the court of Emperor Rudolf II in Prague, where they served as pages. Although their brief experiences did not lead to noteworthy careers, their stay in Prague represented their family’s interest in preserving its long-standing Imperial allegiances. The rich family correspondence provides a detailed account of the two brothers’ life at the Imperial court, highlighting their family networks and relationship with courtiers and ambassadors. The Gambaras’ pro-Habsburg attitude ultimately had a negative impact on their relationship with Venice, since the Republic could not completely trust them as vassals. Nevertheless, the family’s allegiance to the House of Austria endured at least until the 1630s.
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Quiles Albero, David. "Residences as instruments of power: Venetian ambassadors’ houses in Madrid during the reigns of Philip IV and Charles II." Culture & History Digital Journal 11, no. 1 (June 21, 2022): e004. http://dx.doi.org/10.3989/chdj.2022.004.

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Against the traditional vision, the relations between the Spanish Monarchy and the Republic of Venice improved significantly during the second half of the 17th century. Once again, the war against the Ottomans in Candia (1645-1669) forced the Serenissima to look for the support of the Catholic King. For this reason, the role played by their ambassadors in Madrid, with a view to achieve the necessary assistance of Philip IV, became essential for the Venetian interests. At the same time, they pursued to ensure a relevant and closer position to the principal nucleus of power in the Spanish court. Accordingly, the continuous disputes with the members of the Spanish institutions with regard to their lodging become an essential field of study to measure the degree of influence, supremacy or immunity of these legates during the reigns of the two last monarchs of the House of Austria.
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LOVEMAN, KATE. "POLITICAL INFORMATION IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY." Historical Journal 48, no. 2 (May 27, 2005): 555–65. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x05004516.

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Reading, society and politics in early modern England. Edited by Kevin Sharpe and Steven N. Zwicker. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2003. Pp. ix+363. ISBN 0-521-82434-6. £50.00.The politics of information in early modern Europe. Edited by Brendan Dooley and Sabrina A. Baron. London and New York: Routledge, 2001. Pp. viii+310. ISBN 0-415-20310-4. £75.00.Literature, satire and the early Stuart state. By Andrew McRae. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2004. Pp. ix+250. ISBN 0-521-81495-2. £45.00.The writing of royalism, 1628–1660. By Robert Wilcher. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001. Pp. xii+403. ISBN 0-521-66183-8. £45.00.Politicians and pamphleteers: propaganda during the English civil wars and interregnum. By Jason Peacey. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2004. Pp. xi+417. ISBN 0-7546-0684-8. £59.95.The ingenious Mr. Henry Care, Restoration publicist. By Lois G. Schwoerer. Baltimore and London: Johns Hopkins University Press, 2001. Pp. xxvii+349. ISBN 0-8018-6727-4. £32.00.In 1681 the Italian newswriter Giacomo Torri incurred the wrath of the French ambassador to the Venetian Republic with his anti-French reporting. The ambassador ordered Torri to ‘cease and desist or be thrown into the canal’. Torri, who was in the pay of the Holy Roman Emperor, responded to the ambassador's threat with a report that ‘the king of France had fallen from his horse, and that this was a judgement of God’. Three of the ambassadors' men were then found attacking Torri ‘by someone who commanded them to stop in the name of the Most Excellent Heads of the Council of Ten … but they replied with certain vulgarities, saying they knew neither heads nor councils’. Discussed by Mario Infelise in Brendan Dooley and Sabrina Baron's collection, this was a very minor feud in the seventeenth-century battles over political information, but it exemplifies several of the recurring themes of the books reviewed here. First, the growing recognition by political authorities across Europe that news was a commodity worthy of investment. Secondly, the variety of official and unofficial sanctions applied in an attempt to control the market for news publications. Thirdly, the recalcitrance of writers and publishers in the face of these sanctions: whether motivated by payment or principle, disseminators of political information showed great resourcefulness in frustrating attempts to limit their activities. These six books investigate aspects of seventeenth-century news and politics or, alternatively, seventeenth-century literature and politics – the distinction between ‘news’ and certain literary genres being, as several of these authors show, often difficult to make.
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Tretyakova, М. V. "Digressions into British history in the final reports of the Venetian ambassadors in England in the 30-ies – 50-ies of 16-th century." Scientific bulletins of the Belgorod State University Series History Political science 45, no. 3 (September 30, 2018): 354–460. http://dx.doi.org/10.18413/2075-4458-2018-45-3-454-460.

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Tretyakova, M. V. "The Relations of the Pope Pius IV with the Rulers оf Italian States in the First Half of the 1560s According to the Venetian Ambassadors Girolamo and Giacomo Soranzo." Series History. International Relations 16, no. 3 (2016): 313–19. http://dx.doi.org/10.18500/1819-4907-2016-16-3-313-319.

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Mailes, Alana. "‘MUCH TO DELIVER IN YOUR HONOUR'S EAR’: ANGELO NOTARI’S WORK IN INTELLIGENCE, 1616–1623." Early Music History 39 (September 4, 2020): 219–52. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/s0261127920000029.

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It has long been surmised that the Paduan singer, lutenist and composer Angelo Notari (1566–1663) was employed as a spy after immigrating to England circa 1610. In examining Venetian counterintelligence papers previously neglected by musicologists, I here confirm that Notari was indeed an intelligencer. More specifically, he was a paid informant for the Venetian State Inquisitors between 1616 and 1619 and participated in a contentious international trial concerning the Venetian ambassador to England, Antonio Foscarini. I argue that Notari's work as a musician was inextricable from his identity as an intelligencer and former Venetian citizen and demonstrate that Italian musicians in Jacobean London significantly influenced international diplomatic relations. By identifying intersections between the two highly social practices of music-making and intelligence-gathering, I encourage greater musicological attention to political networks that transmitted music across borders and, conversely, musical networks that transmitted political intelligence. I thus situate seventeenth-century musical transculturation within its broader diplomatic, confessional and economic contexts.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Venetian ambassadors"

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Beverley, Tessa. "Venetian ambassadors 1454-94 : an Italian elite." Thesis, University of Warwick, 1999. http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/36358/.

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This study is concerned with filling the gap that exists in our understanding of Venetian diplomacy. Historical works on Renaissance diplomacy have tended to be general, and the experience of Venice in the fifteenth century has been largely overlooked (partly because of the lack of extant diplomatic material). Yet this period is of key importance in the history of diplomacy; it was during the mid-fifteenth century that Italian states first used resident ambassadors, something which became accepted practice in sixteenth century Europe. My approach has been to carry out a prosopographical analysis of every patrician who was appointed by Venice as an ambassador between 1454 and 1494. This has allowed investigation into their economic standing, family connections, intellectual interests, and political importance. Such a socio-political approach not only tells us much about diplomatic practices, but also casts light on the development of elite groups in Venice. The first chapter of the study is introductory, explaining the chronological context of the study and outlining the debate over residency and the use of prosopography. Chapter two discusses elites, describes the personnel who manned Venetian missions, and explains the pattern of Venetian representation. Chapter three compares the theory and the reality of Venetian diplomatic practices. Chapters four and five focus more closely on the prosopography and consider the importance of family connections for ambassadors, their humanist interests, their political standing. The final chapter looks at the development of resident and permanent diplomacy in Venice. I argue that Venetian ambassadors were drawn from the highest echelons of Venetian society and that their elevated status affected the nature of Venetian diplomacy. The type of men appointed by the Republic meant that Venice lagged behind many of its neighbours (especially the Princely states) in the use of resident ambassadors. This was primarily due to the nature of the Republic itself; Venice did not encourage long absences abroad or diplomatic specialisation. The Venetian experience shows that the speed at which Italian states responded to changes in diplomacy varied considerably and was closely related to their own cultural and political values.
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Books on the topic "Venetian ambassadors"

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Gonzaga, Massimiliano Buzzaccarini. In the service of the Venetian Republic: Massimiliano Buzzaccarini Gonzaga's letters from Malta to Venice's magistracy of trade : 1754-1776. San Gwann: PEG Publications, 2008.

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1390-1454, Barbaro Francesco, Giustiniani, Bernardo, 1408 or 1409-1489, Barbaro Ermolao 1454-1493, and Barbaro Ermolao 1454-1493, eds. Three speeches by Venetian ambassadors 1433-1486: Francesco Barbaro, Ad Sigismundum Caesarem : Bernardo Giustinian, Ad universitatem Parisiensem : Ermolao Barbaro, Ad Federicum imperatorem / Ad Maximilianum regem Romanorum. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag, 2016.

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Fabris, Antonio. I dispacci di Francesco Vendramin, ultimo bailo a Costantinopoli (1796-1797). Venice: Edizioni Ca' Foscari, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.30687/978-88-6969-372-4.

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The transcripts of the 55 dispatches written by Francesco Vendramin, the last Venetian bailo of Constantinople between 1796 and 1797, appear very important to the eye of the historian. Even though they were written in Constantinople, they reflect the hardships of the political climate that the fall of the Veneta Repubblica and the establishment of the Municipalità Provvisoria brought to Venice.Moreover, they provide a unique insight into the bailo house in Constantinople. Vendramin had to explain the functioning of the bailaggio and the necessity of the diplomatic office to maintain a decorum of credibility for the State (both the Repubblica and the Municipalità). This needed to be clarified to the new rulers, who were mostly bourgeois and not experts in political issues, especially issues of an international nature, while the old rulers, the august senators, have been experts for decades in both internal and external political affairs of the Republic.The first 27 dispatches were written when the Veneta Repubblica was still alive. The remaining 28 were written after its fall (12th May 1797), when Vendramin had no official role. He was accredited with the Porta Ottomana, as the Venetian delegate of the Doge, but he never received any formal task by the Municipalità. Nevertheless the Ottoman government continued to consider Vendramin as an ambassador, not knowing how to act otherwise.The first collection of dispatches again proposes, with proper adjustments to the new situation, the schemes and the themes that characterize the Venetian-Ottoman relationship in the modern age. The second group is full of information on the Venetian colony in the Empire. As a consequence, it gives information on the functioning of the consulates and on the personal licenses given to merchants and vendors. Moreover, the figure of the French ambassador du Bayet appears strong. He stands as a supporter of many choices in the name of an effective French supremacy on Venice, that in Constantinople is shown without the shield of the Municipalità.
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Henry, Layard Austen, Michele Suriano, and Marcantonio Barbaro. Despatches of Michele Suriano and Marcantonio Barbaro: Venetian Ambassadors at the Court of France, 1560-1563. University of Cambridge ESOL Examinations, 2015.

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Henry, Layard Austen, Michele Suriano, and Marcantonio Barbaro. Despatches of Michele Suriano and Marc' Antonio Barbaro: Venetian Ambassadors at the Court of France, 1560-1563. University of Cambridge ESOL Examinations, 2015.

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1797), Venice (Republic to, and Marco Antonio Barbaro. Despatches of Michele Suriano and Marc' Antonio Barbaro, Venetian Ambassadors at the Court of France, 1560-1563... Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2023.

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1797), Venice (Republic to, and Marco Antonio Barbaro. Despatches of Michele Suriano and Marc' Antonio Barbaro, Venetian Ambassadors at the Court of France, 1560-1563... Creative Media Partners, LLC, 2023.

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Gli Ambasciatori veneti 1525-1792: Relazioni di viaggio e di missione. Milano: Longanesi, 1985.

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Williams, Gareth, Stephen Harrison, and Gesine Manuwald, eds. Ermolao Barbaro’s On Celibacy 3 and 4 and On the Duty of the Ambassador. Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781350398962.

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This book offers the first annotated translation into English of two works of the eminent Venetian humanist, Ermolao Barbaro (1454–93). Books 3 and 4 of On Celibacy seek to justify a contemplative existence at a far remove from the active life and career-path expected of a figure of Barbaro’s standing within the Venetian patriciate; Books 1 and 2 of On Celibacy are presented in the companion-piece to this second volume. The second work presented here is Barbaro’s short treatise On the Duty of Ambassador (1488): based on Barbaro’s own practical experience as a Venetian envoy abroad, this treatise outlines the conduct expected of the dedicated career diplomat. Viewed against each other, Barbaro’s On Celibacy and On the Duty of the Ambassador offer contrasting perspectives on the wider 15th-century debate about the claims of the reflective as opposed to the active life – a debate that extends all the way back to Greco-Roman antiquity. In On Celibacy the young Barbaro is committed to a life that proudly renounces civic engagement in the name of self-discovery and inner fulfilment. Yet a different Barbaro asserts himself in On the Duty of the Ambassador: he now presents himself as a committed public servant in a work that is ahead if its time in theorizing the nature of ‘modern’ Renaissance diplomacy. On a personal level, these two works capture the profound dichotomy in Barbaro’s life between his humanist devotion to scholarship on the one hand and, on the other, his call of duty to the Republic of Venice.
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Manuwald, Gesine, Akihiko Watanabe, Lucy R. Nicholas, L. B. T. Houghton, and Lucy R. Nicholas. Ermolao Barbaro’s On Celibacy 1 and 2. Edited by Gareth Williams, Stephen Harrison, Gesine Manuwald, Gesine Manuwald, Gareth Williams, Gesine Manuwald, Daniel Hadas, Lucy R. Nicholas, and Lucy R. Nicholas. Bloomsbury Publishing Plc, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.5040/9781350149465.

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This volume offers the first annotated English translation of the first two books of On Celibacy (1473) by the eminent Venetian humanist Ermolao Barbaro (1454–93); Books 3 and 4 of On Celibacy are presented, along with Barbaro’s On the Duty of the Ambassador, in the companion piece to this first volume. Setting out the historical context that crucially conditions Barbaro’s advocacy of the celibate life in Books 1 and 2, the introduction examines how On Celibacy seeks to justify a contemplative existence that rejects the career path expected of a figure of Barbaro’s standing within the Venetian patrician class. Beyond setting out the essential facts of Ermolao Barbaro’s life-story, Gareth Williams discusses how On Celibacy is set in counterpoise to the treatise On Marriage (1415) that was composed by Ermolao’s eminent grandfather, Francesco Barbaro. If the latter’s treatise was vitally concerned with the institution of marriage as a key factor in the safeguarding of family succession and the stability of patriciate participation in government at Venice, On Celibacy presents an alternative ideal whereby the celibate can proudly renounce civic life in the name of self-discovery and the pursuit of wisdom, his abilities simply unsuited to the rigors of civic life. On Celibacy is thus implicated in a much wider 15th-century debate about the claims of the contemplative as opposed to the active life – a debate that extends all the way back to Graeco-Roman antiquity.
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Book chapters on the topic "Venetian ambassadors"

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Trebbi, Giuseppe. "The idea of Ottoman despotism in the Relazioni of the Venetian ambassadors." In Global Perspectives in Modern Italian Culture, 34–52. London: Routledge, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003031093-2.

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"Wikileaks nel Seicento: corrieri svaligiati e lettere intercettate durante la Guerra dei Trent’anni." In Studi in onore di Mario Infelise. Venice: Fondazione Università Ca’ Foscari, 2023. http://dx.doi.org/10.30687/978-88-6969-727-2/011.

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Traiano Boccalini and Ferrante Pallavicino wrote famous fictions centred on mugged couriers and opened mailbags. Actual such cases were frequent during the 30 Years War. This chapter discusses the letters of Alvise Vallaresso, Venetian ambassador in London 1622-1624. They were opened in post-masters’ offices; robbed from couriers by thieves or enemy soldiers; seized together with the ambassador’s personal archive while on the way back to Italy at the end of his mission. As in fiction, groups of readers then read and discussed letters together – including ambassadors, secretaries, ministers and the emperor himself. Such is the frequency of these events that we need to speak not of mishaps but of standard practices.
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"Front Matter." In Three Speeches by Venetian Ambassadors 1433-1486, I—IV. Harrassowitz, O, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvcwnzqf.1.

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"Text." In Three Speeches by Venetian Ambassadors 1433-1486, 41–56. Harrassowitz, O, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvcwnzqf.10.

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"Commentary." In Three Speeches by Venetian Ambassadors 1433-1486, 57–84. Harrassowitz, O, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvcwnzqf.11.

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"Introduction." In Three Speeches by Venetian Ambassadors 1433-1486, 87–94. Harrassowitz, O, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvcwnzqf.12.

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"Text of the speech to Frederick." In Three Speeches by Venetian Ambassadors 1433-1486, 95–102. Harrassowitz, O, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvcwnzqf.13.

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"Commentary of the speech to Frederick." In Three Speeches by Venetian Ambassadors 1433-1486, 103–20. Harrassowitz, O, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvcwnzqf.14.

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"Text of the speech to Maximilian." In Three Speeches by Venetian Ambassadors 1433-1486, 121–34. Harrassowitz, O, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvcwnzqf.15.

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"Commentary of the speech to Maximilian." In Three Speeches by Venetian Ambassadors 1433-1486, 135–72. Harrassowitz, O, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvcwnzqf.16.

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