In Describing the City, Describing the State Sandra Toffolo presents a comprehensive analysis of descriptions of the city of Venice and the Venetian Terraferma in the Renaissance, when the Venetian mainland state was being created. Working with an extensive variety of descriptions, the book demonstrates that no one narrative of Venice prevailed in the early modern European imagination, and that authors continuously adapted geographical descriptions to changing political circumstances. This in turn illustrates the importance of studying geographical representation and early modern state formation together. Moreover, it challenges the long-standing concept of the myth of Venice, by showing that Renaissance observers never saw the city of Venice and the Venetian Terraferma in a monolithic way.
Sandra Toffolo, PhD (2013, European University Institute, Florence), is a postdoctoral researcher at the University of St Andrews. Her research focuses on Venice and the Venetian mainland state in the Renaissance.
âSandra Toffoloâs work has undoubtedly identified a perspective that, until now, has been neglected by historiography. [â¦] Toffoloâs attempt to bring together the two souls of the Venetian State â sea and mainland â is also admirable. It is something that scholars have only recently started to explore. [â¦] Sandra Toffoloâs book succeeds in opening a window on the potential for further inquiries into Renaissance geographical descriptions, on the one hand, and for a stronger inclusion of mainland voices, long underrated in the study of Veniceâ
Daniele Dibello, Ghent University. In: Journal of Early Modern History, Vol. 25, Nos. 1â2 (March 2021).
Acknowledgements List of Figures A Note on the Book
Introduction
â1âGeographical Descriptions, the Myth of Venice, and the Venetian Terraferma
â2âPlacing Texts within Literary Contexts
â3âConstructing a Mainland State
â4âOutline of the Book
part 1: Perceptions of Venice in Its Urban Setting
1 Venice, Religious City
â1âGodâs Role in the Foundation of Venice
â2âDivine Protection throughout History
â3âConnections to Saint Mark
â4âExternal Religious Structures
â5âThe Piety of the Venetians
2 Venice, Centre of Material Culture
â1âA City Situated âin the Stormy Fury of the Seaâ
â2âUrban Structure
â3âWealth
â4âCommerce
â5âIndustry
â6âArt and Scholarship
3 Venice, Seat of an Ideal Government
â1âThe Development of a Political Narrative of Venice
â2âElements of a Political Venice
â3âThe Ideal of a Mixed Constitution
â4âThe Concept of Liberty
â5âPolitics and Morality
4 Venice, Morally Exemplary City
â1ââIt Presses Every Gathered Virtue to Its Bosomâ
â2âA Moral Venice from Its Foundation
â3âMorality and Poetry
part 2: Perceptions of Venice and the Terraferma as a State
5 Venetian Views on Venice and the Terraferma as a State
â1âJustifications for Mainland Expansion
â2âThe Conquest of Friuli
â3âLinks between Venice and the Terraferma
â4âPolitical Affiliation as a Factor in the Depiction of Territories
6 Viewing the Venetian Mainland State from the Mainland
â1âTwo Poems Dedicated to Local Families
â2âUbertino Posculoâs Oratio de laudibus Brixiae
â3âMichele Savonarolaâs Praise of Padua
â4âSilvestro Landoâs Preface to the Statutes of Verona
â5âA Paduan Pilgrim on His Way to the Holy Land
â6âFour Poems by Bartolomeo Pagello
â7âJacopo Sanguinacciâs Inchoronato regno sopra i regni
â8âFrancesco Corna da Soncinoâs Poem on Verona
7 Foreign Views of the Venetian State
â1ââHit Is also Vnder the Domynyon of the Venysyansâ: Views of Formal Political Affiliation
â2âPolitical and Geographical Affiliation: the Case of Greece
â3âConflicting Ideas on Venice and the Venetian State
â4âInterpreting Venice and Its Dominions in One Common Framework
Conclusion: Venice as City, Venice as State Bibliography Index
All interested in Venetian history, the Italian Renaissance, representation of geographical spaces, early modern state formation, and history of cities in the Renaissance. Keywords: Venice, Terraferma, Stato da Terra, Stato di Terra, Venetian mainland state, Renaissance, geographical descriptions, geographical representations, city descriptions, Italy, 1381-1509, regional states, early modern state formation.