1st Edition

The Revolt of Snowballs Murano Confronts Venice, 1511

By Claire Judde de Larivière Copyright 2018
    176 Pages
    by Routledge

    176 Pages
    by Routledge



    The Revolt of Snowballs unpicks a rare and turbulent event which occurred in 1511 and investigates the meaning behind it. On January 27, 1511, the island of Murano was the scene of an exceptional event during which the representative of Venice, exercising power in the island on behalf of the Serenissima, was hunted by the inhabitants under a shower of snowballs and the sound of a hostile clamour. This book uses microhistory techniques to examine the trial records of the incident and explores the lives of the Murano’s inhabitants at its heart.





    The book begins by providing a detailed introduction to life in Murano during the sixteenth century, including its political framework and the relationship it shared with Venice. Against this context, the political skills of Murano’s inhabitants are considered and key questions regarding political action are posed, including why and how people chose to protest, what sense of justice drove their actions, and what form those actions took. The latter half of the book charts the events that followed the revolt of snowballs, including the inquest and its impact on Murano’s society.





    By putting Murano under the microscope, The Revolt of Snowballs provides a window into the cultural and political world of early modern Italy, and is essential reading for historians of revolt and microhistory more broadly.

    Introduction

    Chapter 1. The Island of Murano

    Glass and Gardens

    Glassworkers and Fishermen

    Insularity and Community

    From Murano to Venice: the traghetto

    Chapter 2. Murano’s Political Community and Venice

    The Political Space of the Lagoon

    A community of risk

    A Shared Fragile Space

    The law of the podestà

    Citizens and Muranesi officials

    The Participation of the People

    Chapter 3. A Tottering Ritual

    Ritual Politics

    The Theatre of Society

    Chase off this dog who has ruined Muran!

    Chapter 4. The Revolt in its Time

    Italy at War

    Noise of Conflict

    The Great Cold

    "Semel in anno licet insanire". Once a year it is permissible to get crazy

    Vitale Vitturi

    Chapter 5. The Sense of Justice

    Justice

    Law

    Coercion

    Tribunal

    Chapter 6. The Accused

    Before the judges

    Antonio Malcanton, public crier

    Scandal

    Chapter 7. Political Actions, Political Intentions

    The appropriation of ritual

    The performance of the revolt

    Making politics

    Political acknowledgment and juridical status

    To Vote and Elect

    Chapter 8. The Trial. A Test of Truth and Persons

    Reconstructing the truths

    Denunciations

    "Io sum per neve". "I am there for the snow". On justification

    Return to Murano

    After the revolt

    Conclusion

    Biography

    Claire Judde de Larivière is Senior Lecturer at the University of Toulouse and honorary research fellow at Birkbeck, University of London. Her previous works include Naviguer, commercer, gouverner. Économie maritime et pouvoirs à Venise (XVe-XVIe siècles), 2008; "‘Le peuple est la cité’. L’idée de popolo et la condition des popolani à Venise (XVe-XVIe siècle)", Annales HSS, 2013/4 (with Rosa M. Salzberg); and, ‘The Urban Culture of the Ordinary People. Space and Identity in Renaissance Venice (fifteenth-sixteenth Centuries)’, Medieval Urban Culture, ed. by Andrew Brown and Jan Dumolyn, Turnhout, 2017.

    'For a thousand years, the Republic of Venice experienced no regime change and only modest social and political strife when compared to the upheavals that erupted across Europe. The Revolt of Snowballs interrogates the meaning of a rare outburst of popular discontent against Venetian political authorities. This excellent translation will allow English-language readers to appreciate an engaging and informative analysis of a singular episode in the history of Renaissance Venice.'

    Francesca Trivellato, Yale University, USA

    'Both a vivid reconstruction of an event, and a sparkling analysis of society and politics, The Revolt of the Snowballs reminds us of the power of microhistory. The book contributes profoundly to our understanding of pre-modern politics and revolt, of what counted as politics from different contemporary perspectives, and of what we might call a social history of political ideas. It is a great achievement, and a gripping read.'

    John H. Arnold, University of Cambridge, UK