Pietro Mocenigo

Pietro Mocenigo
Pietro Mocenigo
Doge of Venice
In office
14 December 1474 – 23 February 1476
Preceded byNicolo Marcello
Succeeded byAndrea Vendramin
Personal details
Born3 January 1406
Venice, Republic of Venice
Died23 February 1476
Venice, Republic of Venice

Pietro Mocenigo (1406–1476) was doge of Venice from 1474 to 1476.

Biography

He was one of the greatest Venetian admirals and revived the fortunes of the Venetian navy, which had fallen very low after the defeat at the Battle of Negroponte in 1470. In 1472, he captured and destroyed Smyrna; the following year he placed Catherine Cornaro, queen of Cyprus, under Venetian protection, and, by that means, the Republic obtained possession of the island in 1475. He then defeated the Turks who were besieging Scutari (now Shkodër), but he there contracted an illness of which he died. He was interred in the Basilica di San Giovanni e Paolo, a traditional burial place of the doges, with an elaborate tomb by Pietro Lombardo (illustration).

Coriolano Cippico (Koriolan Cipiko) (1425–93), one of Mocenigo's galley commanders, wrote a description of the campaign of 1474/75, providing an eye-witness account of Christian-Ottoman confrontations in the late fifteenth century.[1] Mocenigo was married to Laura Zorzi.[2]

Gallery

  • Tomb of Pietro Mocenigo, by Tullio & Pietro Lombardo
    Tomb of Pietro Mocenigo, by Tullio & Pietro Lombardo
  • Coat of arms of Pietro Mocenigo
    Coat of arms of Pietro Mocenigo
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See also

  • Mocenigo family

References

  1. ^ Cippico, Coriolano; Petkov, Kiril (2014). Kiril Petkov (ed.). The Deeds of Commander Pietro Mocenigo in Three Books (. Italica Pr. ISBN 978-1-59910-295-5.
  2. ^ Staley, Edgcumbe: The dogaressas of Venice : The wives of the doges. London : T. W. Laurie
Military offices
Preceded by
Venetian captain general
? – 1474
Succeeded by
Political offices
Preceded by Doge of Venice
1474–1476
Succeeded by
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Doges of Venice
Byzantine period (697–737)
Regime of the magistri militum (738–742)
Ducal period (742–1148)
8th century
9th century
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* deposed     † executed or assassinated     ‡ killed in battle     ♦ abdicated
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18th century
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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