As a vacationer, the one affordable response to Venice’s all-consuming magnificence is to gasp in admiration after rounding each nook. As an economist, one other response happens: as soon as upon a time, this metropolis should have been extremely rich. From Bruges to Kyoto, being eclipsed after making it wealthy has lengthy been a dependable method for cities to look lovely just a few centuries later. None, nevertheless, has achieved the feat fairly as utterly as Venice.
Venice was initially a group of fishermen, huddled collectively for cover on some muddy, flood-prone islands in the course of a lagoon. Invisible, ever-shifting sandbanks within the shallows that defended the early Venetians in opposition to attackers had been their solely pure benefit. They lacked wooden, minerals, metals, even arable land. And but Venice turned a significant army and financial energy, with its church buildings and palazzi demonstrating its wealth, and the heaps of looted treasure in St Mark’s Basilica bearing witness to its army dominance. How did they do it?
At a time when Elon Musk’s so-called Division of Authorities Effectivity (Doge) is hogging the headlines for trying to shred the federal authorities, I wished to study from the Doges of a unique age. I draw 5 classes, lots of them nonetheless related at the moment.
The primary is that commerce issues. Venetian wealth was constructed on commerce, on retailers roaming to Egypt, the Levant and past Constantinople to the nice river ports of the Black Sea, bringing the riches of the east into Europe. Venice by no means harboured the delusion that worldwide commerce was some form of incontinence that wanted to be stoppered. (A parenthetical bonus lesson: Venice did very nicely out of ignoring or circumventing the Pope’s commerce embargoes with the Islamic world. Free merchants usually discover a method.)
Second, commerce must be backed up with muscle. Venice’s retailers weren’t simply given the liberty to roam throughout the jap Mediterranean and the Black Sea, they had been supported by Venice’s navy and by an aggressive marketing campaign to safe buying and selling privileges in any respect the most important ports. Within the twenty first century, the place commerce seems to occur mechanically, and governments appear to contribute nothing to the method besides paperwork, it’s value remembering that pirates would discover container ships and oil tankers engaging targets, had been it not for the presence of a cruiser (typically of the US Navy) simply over the horizon.
Third, army energy requires bodily infrastructure. Probably the most dependable technique to get a warship is to not purchase it however to construct it your self. Venice’s capability to do that boggles the thoughts, with the arsenale, the nice naval manufacturing unit, occupying a lot of the jap district of town.
It was in 1201 CE that the Doge of Venice, Enrico Dandolo, was approached by crusaders asking for Venice’s assist in ferrying an huge crusader military to Cairo. Dandolo could have been each blind and in his nineties, however he was a superb operator. He contracted for a stupendous price, and Venice’s shipyards and cord factories labored across the clock for months to supply 500 vessels, together with 50 quick conflict galleys and sufficient giant ships to hold a military of 33,000 males and hundreds of horses. The end result was an impressive navy, acknowledged one of many French crusaders: “The Venetians had fulfilled their facet of the discount and extra so.” It was an astonishing feat for what was then a metropolis of about 80,000 individuals, and testomony to the talent of the labour pressure and the economies of scale gained by standardising elements. It was additionally a mark of the huge funding Venice had made in its army industrial complicated.
A fourth lesson is that governance issues. Venice was not at all a democracy, however it was much more pluralistic than the autocracies that surrounded it. The Doge was elected by Venetian patricians in an elaborate power-sharing course of, and the Doge’s authority was checked and counterbalanced by a wide range of deliberative and government councils. No one within the Venetian elite wished a well-liked dictator to grab management. The system was removed from excellent, however the separation of powers gave La Serenissima secure authorities and pragmatic coverage for hundreds of years.
Up to now, so wise. But for the excessive rollers within the new US administration, the Venetian expertise suggests a fifth lesson that they may take pleasure in. Again in 1201, it was an enormous gamble to agree a contract with the crusaders. For greater than a 12 months, Venice’s complete financial system can be dedicated to creating this nice navy. May the Venetians ship? They may. May the crusaders afford to pay? They may not. (A bonus lesson: beware deadbeats who promise the world after which don’t settle their money owed.)
Then what? Then a string of dangerous, bullying, high-stakes improvisations. Dandolo first marooned the crusader military on the Lido, the very doorstep of Venice. Then he pressured them to settle their money owed by attacking a difficult rival metropolis, Zara. After sacking Zara, the debt was nonetheless not absolutely paid, and Dandolo pushed the crusaders to hitch the Venetians in suspending the campaign to put waste to Constantinople itself. That was barbarism. As punishment for his or her escapades, the Venetians had been excommunicated by Pope Harmless III.
Nonetheless, the spoils of the victory adorn Venice to at the present time, and the buying and selling privileges they gained had been maybe extra profitable nonetheless. If there’s a remaining lesson for the twenty first century, maybe it’s this: the richest of all are those that take reckless dangers and get fortunate. That lesson, I believe we have now already learnt.
Written for and first printed within the Monetary Instances on 14 February 2025.
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