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Keeping the past of a maritime republic alive

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  • Keeping the past of a maritime republic alive

    The Irish Times
    August 17, 2004

    Keeping the past of a maritime republic alive


    Letter from Venice/Patrick Comerford: The "Queen of the Adriatic" is
    a city of over 100 islands and 400 or more bridges. But few visitors
    give themselves a chance to get lost in its narrow alleyways or to
    discover the unique and colourful minorities that have been part of
    Venetian life for centuries.

    Jews have lived and traded in Venice since 1381. In 1516 they were
    forced to live in the New Foundry or Ghetto Nuovo, a tiny island
    still linked by three small bridges to the rest of Venice. But by
    then their numbers were being swollen by new arrivals from Spain and
    Portugal, from central Europe, and from Greece and Turkey. Europe's
    first Ghetto was soon too small for the Jewish community, which
    spilled out into the neighbouring Ghetto Vecchio and Ghetto
    Nuovissimo, and Napoleon tore down the walls and gates of the Ghetto
    in 1797.

    About 200 Venetian Jews were deported to the death camps in
    1943-1944, and only eight returned. But today there are about 400
    Jews in Venice, including 80 or so in the Ghetto, their numbers
    boosted in recent years with the arrival from Rome and New York of
    enthusiastic, pious Hasidic Jews. Four synagogues remain open in the
    Ghetto area: the Scola Tedesca and the Scola al Canton, built by
    German and French Jews between 1528 and 1531, are virtual museums.
    But the Scola Spagnola, built by Spanish Jews at the same time, still
    alternates Saturday services with the Scola Levantina, built by Greek
    Jews in 1538, complete with a hip-level screen inspired by the
    iconostasis or icon-screen of Greek churches.

    A significant Greek community has lived close to Ponte dei Greci (the
    Bridge of the Greeks) since the 11th century, when the first Greek
    artisans arrived to decorate Saint Mark's Basilica and many of the
    early churches of Venice. They expanded significantly with the influx
    of refugees following the Turkish capture of Constantinople in 1453.
    The church of San Giorgio dei Greci, with its leaning belltower, was
    built at a cost of 15,000 gold ducats between 1539 and 1573, and the
    vivid iconostasis or icon screen was painted by Michael Damaskinos,
    the greatest Cretan iconographer of the day and a contemporary of El
    Greco.

    As the Serene Republic lost its Greek colonies in the 17th and 18th
    centuries, Greeks continued to flood into Venice, and their presence
    helped to spread classical culture throughout Europe. A whole Greek
    neighbourhood took shape around the church on the banks of the Rio
    dei Greci, and at its peak the Greek community numbered 15,000
    people. But Napoleon's abolition of the Republic of Venice in 1797
    marked the beginning of the decline of this prosperous community as
    their assets and church treasures were confiscated. However, a
    convent of Greek nuns and their girls' school survived until 1834,
    and until 1905 the Greek College provided Greek communities in the
    Ottoman territories with educated priests and teachers.

    Despite their decline in recent generations, the small Greek
    community continues in Venice. The Collegio Flangini now houses the
    Hellenic Institute for Byzantine and Post-Byzantine Studies, a museum
    in the former Scuola di San Nicolo dei Greci displays a unique
    collection of icons, and San Giorgio dei Greci has became a
    cathedral, with an archbishop living in the old palace.

    Close to Saint Mark's, the Calle degli Armeni is in the heart of the
    old Armenian quarter. By the end of the 13th century, the Armenian
    community had a secure presence in Venice, finding their niche as
    tradesmen and moneylenders. The church of Santa Croce degli Armeni
    was founded in 1496 and the procurators of Saint Mark paid annual
    visits in recognition of the "well-deserving and most-favoured
    Armenian nation." The city's best-hidden church is now locked except
    for Sunday services, and the most conspicuous Armenian presence is
    out on the lagoon on the island of San Lazzaro degli Armeni, where a
    monastery was founded on the former leper colony in 1717 by a group
    of Armenian monks expelled from the Morea in Greece by the Ottoman
    Turks.

    The monks of San Lazzaro survived Napoleon's confiscations because of
    an indispensable Armenian in the imperial secretariat. Byron spent
    six months here, learning classical Armenian and compiling a
    dictionary. But, despite the proximity of the Lido, the monks are
    virtually undisturbed by visitors. On the afternoon I arrived, only
    half a dozen others got off the vaporetto. As he took me around the
    library with its 200,000 precious manuscripts and books, the museum
    with its Egyptian sarcophagus and mummy, and the gallery of Armenian
    paintings, Father Vartanes explained that there are only eight
    Armenian monks left on San Lazzaro and no more than 10 Armenian
    families in Venice.

    When evening falls and the tourists leave Venice, the dwindling
    numbers of Jews in the Ghetto, the Armenian monks on San Lazzaro and
    the remaining Greeks of San Giorgio are left alone once again.

    The proportion of native Venetians who live here continues to decline
    rapidly as wealthy Italians from Milan and Turin snap up properties
    on the market. Even the Venetians are becoming a minority in their
    own city.
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