Polo Zuliani
Polo Zuliani | |
---|---|
Duke of Candia | |
In office 1382–1382 | |
Personal details | |
Born | 14th century |
Died | after 1410[1] |
Paolo "Polo" Zuliani[2][3] (also Zulian) was a Venetian nobleman, statesman, and Duke-elect of Candia, who is remembered for having declined the title of Duke of Candia out of modesty upon his election in 1382.
Biography
[edit]Polo Zuliani was born into the Zuliani family, a Venetian patrician family. He is recorded in the 1379 estimo of the comune together with sier Franscesco Zulian. He is said to have been from Santa Fosca (Cannaregio), which was the historical abode of the Zuliani.[1][4]
Zuliani was a very prominent (notissimo[1]) figure in Venice, due to several ambassadorships. Zuliani was among the twelve ambassadors sent to Istria to meet with Doge Antonio Venier.[3] He was elected Duke of Candia in 1382, but declined out of modesty.[1][5][6] Ireneo della Croce called this a "rare example of modesty" (esempio raro di modestia).[2]
In 1410, Zuliani was elected Procurator of Saint Mark. His nephew (or grandson) Andrea was an author and translator. Andrea translated Cassius Dio into Latin, and left several orations, for which he was praised by Flavio Biondo in his Italia illustrata (Italy Illuminated).[1]
References
[edit]- ^ a b c d e Curiosità veneziane ovvero Origini delle denominazioni stradali di Venezia di Venezia Volume 2. Cecchini; Austrian National Library. 1863. p. 317.
- ^ a b della Croce, Ireneo (1698). Historia Antica, e Moderna: Sacra, e Profana, della città di Trieste, celebre colonia de'Cittadini Romani. Con la notitia di molt'arcani d'antichità, prerogative di nobiltà e gesti d'huomini illustri ... mutationi de riti, e dominj sin'à quest'anno 1698, etc. G. Albrizzi; Lyon Public Library (Bibliothèque jésuite des Fontaines). p. 690.
- ^ a b della Croce, Ireneo (1698). Historia antica, e moderna, sacra e profana della città di Trieste. A. Forni; University of Chicago. p. 690.
- ^ Mueller, Reinhold C. (2019). The Venetian Money Market Banks, Panics, and the Public Debt, 1200-1500. Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-1-4214-3142-0.
- ^ Antonio Pasini; Bartolomeo Cecchetti; Camillo Boito; Emile Molinier; Ferdinando Ongania; Frederick Home Rosenberg; William Scott (1888). La basilica di San Marco in Venezia illustrata nella storia e nell' arte da scrittori veneziani sotto la direzione di Camillo Boito Volume 6, Part 1. F. Ongania. p. 35.
- ^ Tassini, Giuseppe (1915). Curiosità veneziane. Giusto Fuga. p. 723.