|
|
![]() Helping San Diego, California and beyond since 1997.
|
|
Click here and add this page to your favorites!

|
Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: FLA-FRA |
|
|
FOSCARI, FRANCESCO (1373-1457) , doge of Venice, belonged to a noble Venetian family, and held many of the highest offices of the republicambassador, president of the Forty, member of the Council of Ten, inquisitor, procurator of St Mark, avvogadore di comun, &c. His first wife was Maria Priuli and his second Maria Nani; of his many children all save one son (Jacopo) died young.- But although a capable administrator he was ambitious and adventurous, and the reigning doge Tommaso Mocenigo
Foscari's reign bore out Mocenigo
Nauplia
confession from the accused, and so merely banished him to Candia for the rest of his life, with a pension of two hundred ducats a year. In 1456 the council received information from the rector (governor ) of Candia to the effect that Jacopo Foscari had been in treasonable correspondence with the duke of Milan and the sultan of Turkey. He was summoned to Venice, tried and condemned to a year's imprisonment, to be followed by a return to his place of exile . His aged father was allowed to see him while in prison, and to Jacopo's entreaties that he should obtain a full pardon for him, he replied advising him to bear his punishment without protest. When the year was up Jacopo returned to Candia, where he died in January 1457. The doge was overwhelmed with grief at this bereavement and became quite incapable of attending to business. Consequently the council decided to ask him to abdicate;FOSCOLO at first he refused, but was finally obliged to conform to their wishes and retired on a yearly pension of 1500 ducats. Within a week Pasquale Malipiero was elected in his place and two days later (1st of November 1457) Francesco Foscari was dead. The story is a very sad and pathetic one, but legend has added many picturesque though quite apocryphal details, most of them tending to show the iniquity and harshness of Jacopo's judges and accusers, whereas, as we have shown, he was treated with exceptional leniency. The most accurate account is contained in S. Romanin's Storia documentata di Venezia, lib. x. cap. iv. vii. and x. (Venice, 1855) ; where the original
End of Article: FOSCARI, FRANCESCO (1373-1457) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
<a href="http://jcsm.org/StudyCenter/Encyclopedia/FLA_FRA/FOSCARI_FRANCESCO_1373_1457_.html"> FOSCARI, FRANCESCO (1373-1457) </a> |
|
|
(Previous) FOSBROKE, THOMAS DUDLEY (1770-1842) |
(Next) FOSCOLO, UGO (1778-1827) |
|
Sponsored Advertisements