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result(s) for
"Architecture, Renaissance Italy Venice"
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The stones of Venice : introductory chapters and local indices (printed separately) for the use of travellers while staying in Venice and Verona
by
Ruskin, John, 1819-1900 author
in
Architecture Italy Venice
,
Architecture, Byzantine Italy Venice
,
Architecture, Gothic Italy Venice
1884
\"The Stones of Venice examines Venetian architecture in detail, describing for example over eighty churches. He discusses architecture of Venice's Byzantine, Gothic and Renaissance periods, and provides a general history of the city\"--Wikipedia, June 24, 2019. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Stones_of_Venice_(book)
Unknown
Venetian Shipping
2021
This book provides a comprehensive picture of Venice's shipping industry from the days of glory to its definitive decline, challenging the accepted hierarchy of the political, economic, and environmental factors impacting the history of the maritime republic.
\Clamber not you up to the casements\: On ghetto views and viewing
2010
On 29 March 1516 the Venetian Senate ordered all Jews residing in the city to move behind the walls of the ghetto. The mandate stipulated that Jews would be watched by Christian guards twenty-four hours a day and restricted by a nighttime curfew. In such a surveilled space, Venice's ghetto windows played an integral role in the complex and interactive networks constituting the city and its constituency. The singular status of ghetto architecture—especially the injunctions regarding its fenestration—provides an opportunity to explore the processes of ghettoization that partitioned a population and monitored the activities of Jews and Christians alike. Windows produced spatial occasions for looking and being looked at that reinforced social difference and created profound cultural fissures. This article studies the windows of the Venetian ghetto and the city's ongoing claims to obstruct them in the early modern period. To study the window is to study the demarcation between public good and private plurality, between the citizen and the subordinated Other.
Journal Article