Patrizi, informatori, barbieri: politica e comunicazione a Venezia nella prima età moderna
In: Campi del sapere
In: Culture
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In: Campi del sapere
In: Culture
Combining cultural, urban, and political history, this book assesses the extent to which communication and politics mutually influenced each other in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century Venice, using a wide range of sources including including rumours, graffiti, spies' reports, council debates, leaks, and printed pamphlets.
In: Annales: histoire, sciences sociales, Band 71, Heft 3, S. 749-751
ISSN: 1953-8146
In: European history quarterly, Band 46, Heft 3, S. 519-544
ISSN: 1461-7110
Early modern diplomatic negotiation was conducted primarily through face-to-face encounters dominated by the oral medium, generally known as audiences. Yet ambassadors were very keen to take written records of the words spoken by themselves and their counterparts. This article considers the role of oral exchange in diplomatic audiences and the reasons why participants were so interested in recording and filing reports of those exchanges. This article begins with an analysis of diplomatic dispatches, the genre that has attracted most scholarship so far, but then goes on to trace the recording of audiences on the part of hosting sovereigns and their chanceries and secretaries. The article compares three examples: the transcripts of ambassadors' speeches by fifteenth-century Florentine chancellors, the diaries of papal masters of ceremonies in the late fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, and, the most detailed example of audience records, the Esposizioni archive of thousands of ambassadorial speeches, replies and subsequent conversation, assembled by secretaries of the Venetian republic from the mid-sixteenth century onwards. These examples enable us to perceive oral culture in unexpected settings. Moreover, the Venetian case constitutes a typical example of archival transformation: an increase in quantity accompanied by a substantial and conscious improvement in preservation methods and retrieval tools. In order to explain this transformation, this article traces the uses that were intended and made of the records at the time, not just to report on current, but to inform future negotiations.
In: Annales: histoire, sciences sociales. English Edition, Band 68, Heft 3, S. 457-485
ISSN: 2268-3763
In recent years, a new historiographical trend has focused on archives not as mere repositories of sources, but as objects of inquiry in their own right. Particular attention has been paid to how their continually evolving organization and management reflect the political presuppositions of the institutions presiding over them. This article acknowledges this archival turn and provides an example drawn from the famous case study of the Venetian chancery between the fourteenth and seventeenth centuries, at a time of substantial developments in the management of archives. It proposes a more inclusive and socially contextualized approach in order to demonstrate that archives were not just tools of power but also sites of economic, social, and political conflict. A close reading of the very document that led to the institutional view of the Venetian archive as the "heart of the state" reveals that the patrician rulers worried about both the fragility of their archive and the reliability of the notaries in charge of it. This perspective helps to explain the exalted representation of the archive in the late Middle Ages and the early modern era—a representation that, taken at face value, continues to inspire historical analysis today—by illuminating the practical difficulties surrounding archival methods at the time. The history of archives emerges as a promising field of inquiry precisely because it can shed light on both the history of the state and the social context in which the state's actions had to be negotiated.
In: European history quarterly, Band 40, Heft 2, S. 324-326
ISSN: 1461-7110
In: Urban history, Band 35, Heft 1, S. 161-163
ISSN: 1469-8706
In: Information and Communication in Venice, S. 200-248
In: Information and Communication in Venice, S. 120-156
In: Information and Communication in Venice, S. 46-85
In: Information and Communication in Venice, S. 1-17
In: Information and Communication in Venice, S. 157-199
In: Information and Communication in Venice, S. 18-45
In: Information and Communication in Venice, S. 249-258