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https://opensea.io/collection/books-39
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7858
@7858.eth
Venice Thomas F Madden deftly conveys the peculiar history of Venice. Turns out it’s a lot more Byzantine than I expected, in all senses of that word. It was effectively independent for much of its history, and its affiliations with the descendants of the Western Roman Empire and the descendants Eastern Roman Empire shifted often. It served as an interface for the two, and at times rose to the level of a peer. I also discovered, reading this book, that they beat the west to the punch on an early version of republican government. Exhaustively researched, well told, and brimming with novel information. Four stars in a highly competitive class, strongly recommended.
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Adam
@adam-
…and on the list it goes. Looks fascinating
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baker
@wardlaw
i was recommended - city of fortune - how venice won and lost a naval empire. anyone read that one?
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Nader Baydoun
@guantanamo-bae
If you're interested in the topic I also recommend A History of Venice Book by John Julius Norwich. It's an exhaustive history, and it covers the most decades and the most topics (expansion, governance, economy) But then again I don't know how much info is overlapping between the two and if it's worth reading both.
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Zephyr Whisper
@zepx
So cool!
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