The Tumultuous Relationship Between Dalmatia and Venice

Lauren Simmonds

relationship dalmatia venice

July the 24th, 2024 – Dalmatia and Venice had a strained relationship at the best of times. For the most part, this relationship was fraught with complications. Here are some things you might not have known.

almost none of them can speak italian!”

Back in 1553, Venetian representative Giovanni Battista Gistuiniani travelled through Dalmatia. He wrote the following for Sibenik: ”the costumes of the inhabitants, their speech and their customs… everything is Croatian. All of the women dress in a Croatian style and almost none of them can speak Italian!”

“they know italian, but only speak croatian, and that’s the fault of the women”

For Trogir, he wrote: ”the population of this city lives according to Croatian customs. It’s true that some of them dress in the Italian way, but these examples are rare. Everyone can speak Italian, but they still speak Croatian in their homes, and that’s because of the women, because few of them understand Italian, and if they do understand it, they won’t speak any language other than their mother tongue. The nuns in Sibenik, as well as others across Dalmatia, speak only in Croatian.”

When Venice took over Dalmatian cities, it didn’t allow the clergy access to the great noble council, nor to the popular assemblies. (According to today’s interpretation of that decision, the clergy had no influence on public and political life at the time.)

Back in the 15th century, there were not only issues between Dalmatia and Venice, but conflicts between nobles and commoners in Split, Trogir, Hvar and Sibenik.

the relationship between dalmatia and venice grew more strained: items from dalmatia must go to venice – and nowhere else

There were no serfs in Dalmatia for the Venetian authorities! People were divided into nobles and commoners. Back in the 16th century, the bourgeoisie began to form in some Dalmatian cities.

Things grew worse in the relationship between Dalmatia and Venice, and Dalmatia was dealt the hardest blow on January the 15th, 1452. The then Dalmatian Government ordered that all merchandise in Dalmatia must be exported only to Venice and to no other place.

Even before the arrival and subsequent takeover of the Venetian Government, Dalmatian cities almost all had public schools.

In 1848, Emperor Ferdinand issued a patent granting freedom of the press, determined the National Guard and the convocation of deputies of the provincial estates so that all of them together could draft the Constitution which he had determined. Dalmatian intellectuals then enthusiastically accepted the idea of ​​the Habsburg emperor.

“dalmatia belongs to croatia by law, by its history, and by its people”

Far from Dalmatia in the continental Croatian city of Varazdin, the Habsburg monarchy ruled. The then (very briefly) capital of Croatia sought the accession of Dalmatia to Croatia, because it once belonged to it. A similar law was passed by the City of Zagreb on the same day, emphasising that: “Dalmatia belongs to Croatia by law, history and people.”


 

Subscribe to our newsletter

the fields marked with * are required
Email: *
First name:
Last name:
Gender: Male Female
Country:
Birthday:
Please don't insert text in the box below!

Leave a Comment