The Forgotten Empire of Venice Before the Tourists Arrived | Boring History for Sleep

Boring History for Sleep - Een podcast door Velvet

Before the crowds of tourists and the gondolas for show, there was another Venice. For nearly a thousand years, this unlikely city rose from the mud and water of a shallow lagoon to become one of the richest, most powerful republics in the world.Venice had no farmland, no forests, no mountains filled with silver or gold. And yet, from its wooden piers and stone palaces, it built an empire. Its shipyards launched fleets that carried Crusaders to the Holy Land. Its merchants dealt in silk, spices, and secrets. Its rulers, called doges, balanced intrigue and ceremony to hold together a city that thrived on both cooperation and competition.This story drifts slowly through that forgotten age of empire. We’ll wander into the Arsenale, where thousands of shipbuilders worked in silence and rhythm. We’ll sail with Venetian galleys across the Mediterranean, listening to the creak of oars and the flutter of sails. We’ll follow the careful deals struck in marketplaces from Constantinople to Cairo, where the wealth of nations passed through Venetian hands.And then, as centuries turn, we will watch the slow fading of this power — a decline both graceful and inevitable, like the tide that shaped the city itself. Venice would remain beautiful, but never again what it once was: the envy of the world.

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