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Albania Veneta - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Albania Veneta

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Republic of Venice in 1560 and the Albania Veneta shown as the pink area south of the Republic of Ragusa around Cattaro (Kotor)
The Republic of Venice in 1560 and the Albania Veneta shown as the pink area south of the Republic of Ragusa around Cattaro (Kotor)

Albania Veneta (English: Venetian Albania) was the name for the possessions of the Republic of Venice in southern Dalmatia from 1420 to 1797. It originally covered the coastal area of what is now northern Albania and the coast of Montenegro, but the Albanian and southern Montenegrin parts were lost to the Ottomans in 1571 [1].

Contents

[edit] Name

The word "Veneta" in Albania Veneta was used to differentiate the area from the Ottoman Albania (called Albania Ottomana in those centuries), an area stretching from Kosovo to southern Albania [2].

[edit] Geography

These Venetian possessions stretched from the southern borders of the Republic of Ragusa (modern-day Dubrovnik) to Durazzo (Durres) in coastal Albania. The Venetian territories never reached more than 20 km from the Adriatic Sea. After 1573 the southern limit was moved to the village of Confin (Kufin) near Budua (Budva), because of the Ottoman conquests of Antivari (Bar), and Dulcigno (Ulcinj) in the Balkans.

The Dominions of Venice were centered around the Bay of Kotor and included the small cities of Kotor, Risan, Perast, Tivat, Herceg Novi, Budva, and Sutomore.

[edit] History

Venice started to take control of the small southern Dalmatian villages around the 10th century, assimilating quickly the Dalmatian language into the Venetian language. But only in the 14th century was the Republic of Venice able to create a territorial continuity around the Bay of Kotor. These Venetian dominions around Kotor lasted from 1420 to 1797 and were called Albania Veneta, a historical province of the Republic of Venice [3].

The "Albania Veneta" areas of Montenegro
The "Albania Veneta" areas of Montenegro

When the Turks started to conquer the Balkans in 15th century, many Christian Slavs took refuge inside Venetian Dalmatia and so even the Albania Veneta started to have a huge Serb and Albanian population. By the end of 17th century the Romance speaking population of the historical Albania Veneta was already a minority, according to Oscar Randi in his book ''Dalmazia etnica, incontri e fusioni [4].

After the Napoleonic armies conquered and put an end to the Republic of Venice in 1797, the area of the Albania veneta changed control many times: in 1805 was annexed to the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy [5], then in 1809 was part of French Illyrian Provinces and finally in 1815 was put under Habsburg control in the Dalmatia of the Austrian Empire.

In the Austrian Empire, the former venetian territories of Albania Veneta were part of the Austrian Dalmatia and in 1878 (at the Congress of Berlin) another 40 km² around Sutomore were added to this territory.

The situation in the area of what used to be Albania Veneta changed again in 1918, when was the Kingdom of Yugoslavia was formed. From 1941 to 1943 the area was occupied by Italy, annexed and organized into the Provincia di Cattaro.[6] Italian-occupied Yugoslavia was organized into the Governatorato di Dalmazia during that period.
After 1943, Italian presence in the territories that once formed Albania Veneta ceased to exist. Currently they are part of the newly independent Republic of Montenegro.

[edit] History of the Venetian speaking population of Albania Veneta

According to the Dalmatian historian Luigi Paulucci (in his book "Le Bocche di Cattaro nel 1810") the population of the Albania Veneta, during the centuries of the Republic of Venice, was mainly Venetian speaking (approximately 66%) in the urban areas (Cattaro, Perasto, Budua, ecc..) around the "Bocche di Cattaro" (Bay of Kotor).

The Venetian walls of Budva in a 1900 postcard
The Venetian walls of Budva in a 1900 postcard

But in the inland areas more than half of the population was Serbo-Croatian speaking, after the first years of the eighteenth century. Paulucci wrote even that near the border with Albania there were big communities of Albanian speaking people: Dulcigno (Ulcinj) was half Albanian, one quarter Venetian and one quarter Slavic-speaking [7].

During the French rule of the area around Kotor the schools were in Italian, when the former Albania Veneta was part of the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy [8].

The Slovenian Marko Trogrli in his essay "The French school system in French Dalmatia" wrote that "Vincenzo Dandolo, the French governor of Dalmatia as well as Bartolomeo Benincasa, an official from the local (Dalmatian) Education Department, published in May 1807 a plan for the province’s public education (Il piano generale della pubblica istruzione in Dalmazia), which had to be consistent with the education system throughout the Napoleonic Kingdom of Italy....Instruction was to be in Italian" [9].

During the 19th century, according to the historian Scaglioni Marzio, the wars of independence of Italy from the Austro-Hungarian Empire created a situation of harassment against the Italian (or Venetian) speaking communities in the Austrian southern Dalmatia [10].

The result was that in 1880 there were in Kotor, according to the Austrian census, only 930 ethnic Italians (or only 32% of a total population of 2910 people).

Venetian Map of 1680 showing Cattaro (now Kotor) and the surrounding bay
Venetian Map of 1680 showing Cattaro (now Kotor) and the surrounding bay

Furthermore, in the Austrian census of 1910, the Italians were reduced to only 13.6% in that city, according to Diego De Castro in his book Dalmazia, popolazione e composizione etnica. Cenno storico sul rapporto etnico tra Italiani e Slavi nella Dalmazia [11].

There are currently 500 Italian speakers in Montenegro, mainly in the area of Kotor and [Perast]], who constitute the Italian National Community of Montenegro (Comunitá Nazionale Italiana del Montenegro).

The decrease in numbers of the Italian speaking populations in Dalmatia was nearly complete after WWII. The linguist Matteo Bartoli calculated that Italians constituted 33% of the Dalmatian population during the Napoleonic wars, while currently there are 300 Italians in Croatian Dalmatia and 500 Italians in coastal Montenegro. [12].

[edit] Population

Albanians lived in the south of the Albania veneta around Ulcinj and Durres. The area around Kotor was populated by Slavs and Latins and was fully Catholic[13].

[edit] Perasto: an enduring example

An enduring example of the Italian presence in coastal Montenegro is the small town of Perast (Perasto in Italian) in the Bay of Kotor.

Postcard showing the Venetian architecture of Perast in 1900.
Postcard showing the Venetian architecture of Perast in 1900.

Perasto was at its peak in the 18th century under the Republic of Venice, when it had as many as four active shipyards, a fleet of around one hundred ships, and 1,643 residents. At that time a number of architecturally significant buildings were constructed in this fortified town. Many ornate baroque palaces and magnificent dwelling-houses decorated the town of Perast, full of typical Venetian architecture. Citizens of the Venetian Perasto became privileged in the Venetian Republic. They were allowed to trade with large ships and to sell goods without tax on the Venetian market, which made them very rich.
As an example of the wealth of people from Perast, at the end of 18th century they managed to collect 50,000 Venetian gold coins (about 200 kg of gold) in order to pay the famous Venetian constructor Giuseppe Beati to build them the highest campanile (55 m) on the East-Adriatic coast. Right in front of Perasto there are two small islands. St George with its small church from the 12th century and the artificial island "Gospa od Skrpjela" (in venetian Madonna dello Scarpello) with a very interesting legend. On the reef whose top was 1m above the surface of the water, people from Perasto had been throwing rocks and sinking old shipwrecks for 200 years, thus creating a plateau of 3,030 square meters, which they then built a church on. Along with the impression that the island gives with its architecture, for centuries the church received many gifts and now it is a type of gallery and treasury of various objects. Beside 68 oil on canvas works done by Tripo Cocolia (the most talented baroque painter on the East-Mediterranean coast during the 17th century), on the church walls there are 2,500 golden and silver votive tablets which people from the Cattaro area donated to the church, in order to avoid various human disasters.</ref> Perasto had the privilege to keep a war-flag of the Venetian Navy in peacetime (it was called "La fedelissma Gonfaloniera")[1].

The sailors of Perasto participated in the last battle of the Venetian navy, fought in Venice in 1797[2]. On 12 May of that year, the Republic of Venice ended, but a few places in the Albania Veneta remained loyal to the Venetian Republic for several months afterwards: Perast was the last place of the Republic to surrender. On 22 August 1797 the Count Giuseppe Viscovich, Captain of Perast, lowered the Venetian war-flag pronouncing the farewell words in front of the people of the city, then buried it under the altar of the main church of Perasto.

The population afterwards decreased to 430 in 1910, and around 360 today. According to the Italian National Community of Montenegro, there are currently 140 persons who still speak at home the original Venetian dialect in Perast (called "veneto da mar"), but consider themselves Montenegrins.

[edit] Italian writers from "Albania Veneta"

Writers from XV century to the end of the XVIII century.

  • Giovanni Bona Boliris
  • Ludovico Pasquali
  • Cristoforo Ivanovich
  • Giovanni Polizza
  • Giorgio Bisanti
  • Girolamo Pima
  • Timoteo Cisilla
  • Giovanni Crussala
  • Giuseppe Bronza
  • Girolamo Panizzola
  • Bernardo Pima
  • Nicola Chiurlo
  • Luca Bisanti
  • Alberto de Gliricis
  • Domenico and Vincenzo Bucchia
  • Vincenzo Ceci
  • Antonio Zimbella
  • Francesco Moranti

[edit] Gallery

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Cecchetti, Bartolomeo. Intorno agli stabilimenti politici della repubblica veneta nell'Albania. pag. 978-983
  2. ^ Paulucci, Luigi. Le Bocche di Cattaro nel 1810. pag. 24
  3. ^ Durant, Will. The Renaissance. pag. 121
  4. ^ Randi, Oscar. Dalmazia etnica, incontri e fusioni. pag. 37-38
  5. ^ Sumrada, Janez. Napoleon na Jadranu / Napoleon dans l'Adriatique.pag. 159
  6. ^ Scaglioni Marzio. La presenza italiana in Dalmazia 1866-1943. pag 86-87
  7. ^ Paulucci, Luigi. Le Bocche di Cattaro nel 1810. pag. 74-75
  8. ^ Sumrada, Janez. Napoleon na Jadranu / Napoleon dans l'Adriatique.pag.37
  9. ^ Sumrada, Janez. Napoleon na Jadranu / Napoleon dans l'Adriatique.pag 335
  10. ^ Scaglioni Marzio La presenza italiana in Dalmazia 1866-1943. pag. 69
  11. ^ De Castro, Diego. Dalmazia, popolazione e composizione etnica. Cenno storico sul rapporto etnico tra Italiani e Slavi nella Dalmazia. pag 104
  12. ^ Bartoli, Matteo. Le parlate italiane della Venezia Giulia e della Dalmazia. pag. 46
  13. ^ Durant, Will. The Renaissance.pag. 139

[edit] Bibliography

  • Bartl, Peter. Le picciole Indie dei Veneziani. Zur Stellung Albaniens in den Handelsbeziehungen zwischen der Balkan- und der Appenninenhalbinsel. In: Münchner Zeitschrift für Balkankunde 4 (1981-1982) 1-10.
  • Bartl, Peter. Der venezianische Türkenkrieg im Jahre 1690 nach den Briefen des päpstlichen Offiziers Guido Bonaventura. In: Südost-Forschungen 26 (1967) 88-101.
  • Bartoli, Matteo. Le parlate italiane della Venezia Giulia e della Dalmazia. Tipografia italo-orientale. Grottaferrata 1919.
  • Cecchetti, Bartolomeo. Intorno agli stabilimenti politici della repubblica veneta nell'Albania. In: Atti del Regio Istituto veneto di scienze, lettere ed arti. Bd. 3, Seria 4, S. 978-998. 1874.
  • De Brodmann, Giuseppe. Memorie politico-economiche della citta e territorio di Trieste, della penisola d’Istria, della Dalmazia fu Veneta, di Ragusi e dell’Albania, ora congiunti all’Austriaco Impero. Venezia 1821.
  • De Castro, Diego. Dalmazia, popolazione e composizione etnica. Cenno storico sul rapporto etnico tra Italiani e Slavi nella Dalmazia. ISPI 1978.
  • Durant, Will. The Renaissance. MJK Books. New York, 1981.
  • Gelcich, Giuseppe. Memorie storiche sulle bocche di Cattaro. Zara 1880.
  • Martin, John Jeffries. Venice Reconsidered. The History and Civilization of an Italian City-State, 1297–1797. Johns Hopkins UP. New York, 2002.
  • Norwich, John Julius. A History of Venice. Vintage Books. New York, 1989.
  • Paulucci, Luigi. Le Bocche di Cattaro nel 1810 Edizioni Italo Svevo.Trieste, 2005.
  • Randi, Oscar. Dalmazia etnica, incontri e fusioni. Tipografie venete. Venezia 1990.
  • Scaglioni Marzio. La presenza italiana in Dalmazia 1866-1943 Histria ed. Trieste,2000.
  • Schmitt, Oliver. Das venezianische Albanien (1392 - 1479). (=Südosteuropäische Arbeiten. 110). München 2001.
  • Sumrada, Janez. Napoleon na Jadranu / Napoleon dans l'Adriatique. Zalozba Annales. Koper, 2006.
  • Tagliavini, Carlo. Le origini delle lingue neolatine. Patron Ed. Bologna 1982.
  • Trogrli, Marko. Školstvo u Dalmaciji za francuske uprave/The french school system in French Dalmatia. Knjižnica Annales Majora. Koper, 2006.

[edit] References


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