Pietro I Candiano

Doge of the Republic of Venice in 887
Pietro I Candiano
Coat of arms of Pietro I Candiano
16th Doge of Venice
In office
887–887
Preceded byGiovanni II Participazio
Succeeded byPietro Tribuno
Personal details
Bornc. 842
Makarska, Republic of Venice (now Croatia)
Died18 September 887
Memorial stone plaque to Croatian victory over Venetian forces led by Candiano in the battle of Makarska on 18th September 887

Pietro I Candiano (c. 842 – 18 September 887) was briefly the sixteenth Doge of Venice in 887.

History

He followed Orso I Participazio and Giovanni II Participazio as Doge of Venice, elected to the throne at the side of the elderly, and beloved, Giovanni circa April 887. He launched a military attempt against the Narentines in Dalmatia, who were hostile to Venetia after 886. As soon as he became Doge, he advanced with a fleet of twelve galleys to the port of Makarska (Italian: Mokro), where he sank five Narentine ships. He landed near Mokro and advanced deeper inland, but the Narentines crushed his forces, killing him in open battle on 18 September 887.[1] He was the first Doge to die in a battle for La Serenissima (Italian for The Most Serene, referring to the Republic of Venice).

Following his death, the Venetians began to pay prince Branimir of Croatia (879–892) an annual tribute for the right to travel and trade in the Croatian part of the Adriatic; between Pietro's death in 887 and 948, no new war was recorded with the Croats, which is thought to show they paid tribute to maintain the peace.[2] Giovanni briefly ruled Venice until a successor could be found for Candiano. It was Pietro Tribuno, his great-nephew. His son, Pietro II Candiano, also later became Doge.

Sources

References

  1. ^ Harry Hearder, Jonathan Morris, Italy: a short history, pg. 61, Cambridge University Press (2002), ISBN 0-521-00072-6
  2. ^ Brković, Milko (October 2001). "The Papal Letters of the second half of the IXth Century to addressees in Croatia". Radovi (in Croatian) (43). Institute for Historical Sciences of the Croatian Academy of Sciences and Arts in Zadar: 31–32. Retrieved 2012-07-27.
Political offices
Preceded by Doge of Venice
887
Succeeded by
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* deposed     † executed or assassinated     ‡ killed in battle     ♦ abdicated
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Marino Faliero (1354–55) was convicted of treason, executed and condemned to damnatio memoriae
* Francesco Foscari (1423–57) was forced to abdicate by the Council of Ten
* Ludovico Manin (1789–97) was forced to abdicate by Napoleon leading to the Fall of the Republic of Venice
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