JBO'C's Historical Reference

Lead up to the Venetian Embassy of 1479

Lead up to the Venetian Embassy of 1479

From The Cambridge Modern History:

In 1477 the Turks renewed their designs in this quarter by besieging Kroja, and at the same time their light cavalry (akindje) harassed Venice in the north by overrunning Friuli. The garrison of Kroja, reduced to eating their dogs, and receiving no aid from Venice, submitted in the ensuing year, and Mohammad advanced to the second siege of Scodra. The Venetian republic was hard pressed. In these days its yearly revenue did not touch 100,000 ducats; nor could the Venetians at this moment expect aid from other powers; Ferdinand of Naples was actually intriguing with the Turk, and Friuli was exposed to the inroads of the infidels from Bosnia; the plague was raging in the lagoons. Unable to relieve Scodra, Venice resolved to make peace and consented to hard conditions, resigning Scodra and Kroja, Negroponte, Lemnos and the Mainote district in Laconia. She agreed to pay a yearly sum of 10,000 ducats for free commerce in the Ottoman dominions, and recovered the right of keeping as before a Bailo (consul) at Constantinople (January, 1479).

The Cambridge modern history, Volume 1 , Baron John Emerich Edward Dalberg Acton Acton, Ernest Alfred Benians Editors; Sir Adolphus William Ward, Sir George Walter Prothero, Stanley Mordaunt Leathes, The University press, 1912

From George Castroiti Scanderbeg (1405-1468)

Venice was worn out with her prolonged and exhausting efforts, and in 1479 the peace of Constantinople brought the war to a close. Venice gave up Scutari, Kroja, Negropont, Lemnos, and her possessions in the Morea, but was allowed to retain her Levant trade and her quarter in Constantinople on payment of 15o,000 ducats down and a yearly tribute of 1o,000 ducats. Two years later, the death of Mohammed n. and the accession of a feebler sultan, freed the republic from immediate danger in the east. The close of the Middle Ages, 1272-1494, Periods of European history. Period 3 3rd Edition Sir Richard Lodge, Rivingtons, 1906 The news of Scanderbeg's death reached Venice on February 12, 1468.69 Immediately the Senate dispatched the Archbishop of Durazzo and the provisor Francesco Capello to obtain from Scanderbeg's widow and son the right to defend Croya and the other fortresses with Venetian garrisons.70 The right was granted and the city continued to hold out against the Turks until 1477. "Choirs of Albanian maidens", Sabellicus informs us, "though surrounded with the din of battle and the clang of barbarian arms, assembled regularly every eighth day in the public squares of the cities of the principality to sing hymns for their departed hero. The spirit of Scanderbeg still survived among his people although he himself had passed away. The city was starved into surrender on June 16, 1478. In spite of the solemn pledge to spare the lives of the brave defenders, Mehmed II ordered them to be massacred in cold blood while their women and children were dragged away into slavery. A year later, Scutari fell after a protracted siege by Mehmed II in person. The story of the heroic defense is told by Barletius, who witnessed it and counted the huge stone shells crashing into the city every day in ever increasing numbers and size. After the peace of 1479 Venice lost all her Albanian possessions with the exception of Durazzo, Dulcigno and Antivari. The Albanians themselves helped them out. As a class of free peasants, they hated equally feudalism under the Turkish Sultan and capitalism under the Venetian merchant princes. Under the treaty of 1479 between Venice and Turkey, Albania was ceded to Turkey. As Fallmerayer remarks, it was a cession on paper.78 The Turks took possession only of a few fortresses ' but the countryside defied their rule down to the Balkan Wars of 1912-1913, when Turkey lost almost all her European provinces. Scanderbeg died but the Albanian free Peasants remained.

George Castroiti Scanderbeg (1405-1468), Fan Stylian Noli International Universities Press, 1947

The Venetian 'embassy' to Istanbul in 1479

The Venetian 'embassy' to Istanbul in 1479, which included diplomats as well as painters, resulted in Bellini's celebrated portrait of Mehmed Fatih, dated 25 November 1480, now in the National Gallery, London, as well as a medal, several drawings and studies of figural subjects (and their ravishing costume) observed during the artist's two-year sojourn in the Ottoman capital.

Bellini's "journey to the east", and his measured and sensitive reponse to an unfamiliar 'oriental' culture, finds a counterpart in Mehmed's own fascination with the 'occidental' tradition of figural representation and his concern to express his own place within that tradition as a conqueror, and now ruler, of an empire that spanned both east and west. These preoccupations are evident in Bellini's portrait where imperial symbolism and allegory are manifest: the bust-length pose and triumphal arch harking back to imperial Roman models; the three crowns referencing the three domains of Greece, Trebizond and Asia; and the proud profile alluding to a lineage of great conquerors going back to Iskandar (Alexander). In appropriating the ancient realm of Byzantium, Mehmed consciously viewed himself as the new 'King of Rum [Rome]', heir to Alexander the Great and the Caesars.

A year after Bellini's portrait was painted Mehmed Fatih was dead. His successor, Bayezid II (1481-1512), "was as averse to figural painting as his father was fond" (Venice and the Islamic World, 2007, p.107) and, according to Giovanni Angiolello, the historian, all of Mehmed's paintings including the Bellini portrait were disposed of in the bazaar where they were acquired by Venetian merchants and brought back to Venice (Bellini and the East, 2005, p.95). The present portrait must have been painted soon after as the pose has been updated with a fashionable cross-shoulder glance in the manner of Giorgione and Titian.

Bellini's iconic image, which encapsulates the imperial ambitions of 'The Conqueror', became quite literally an icon, when in 2003 Turks of all ages queued in their tens of thousands to catch a glimpse of the painting when it returned briefly to the Turkish capital. The appearance on the market of this lesser-known but hugely important second painting provides an exceptional opportunity for a major institution or private buyer to acquire a work of outstanding public interest and historical importance.

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