26 Centuries of Gold
1486-1501 VENICE

Obverse:

Enlarge

Reverse:

Enlarge

Coin Details

Origin/Country: ITALY - TO 1600
Item Description: DUCAT (1486-1501) VENICE AGOSTINO BARBARIGO
Full Grade: NGC MS 64
Owner: deposito

Set Details

Custom Sets: 26 Centuries of Gold
Competitive Sets: 500 Years of Gold Ducat Coins of Venice   Score: 1654
Research: NGC Coin Price Guide
NGC World Coin Census

Owner Comments:

This is the Doge who had to get the bad news about Columbus and a new trade route that Venice would never participate in.

Agostino Barbarigo (3 June 1419 – 20 September 1501) was Doge of Venice from 1486 until his death in 1501. While he was Doge, the imposing Clock Tower in the Piazza San Marco with its archway through which the street known as the Merceria leads to the Rialto, was designed and completed. A figure of the Doge was originally shown kneeling before the lion of Venice on the top storey below the bell but this was removed by the French in 1797 after Venice had surrendered to Napoleon.
In 1496 he created an Italian coalition to push back Charles VIII of France from Italy, which led to the Battle of Fornovo during the French retreat from Italy. During his reign Venice gained several strongholds in Romagna and annexed the island of Cyprus.
His relationships with the Ottoman sultan Bayezid II were initially amicable, but they became increasingly strained starting from 1492, eventually leading to open war in 1499. The Venetian merchants in Istanbul were arrested, while Bosnian troops invaded Dalmatia and reached Zara. The Venetian fleet was defeated at the Battle of Zonchio, and the Republic lost its base in Lepanto. The latter was soon followed by Modone and Corone, which meant the loss of all the main intermediate stops for the Venetian ships sailing towards the Levante.
After four years of war, a peace treaty was signed in 1503. By it, Venice maintained in Morea only Nafplion, Patras and Monemvasia.

To follow or send a message to this user,
please log in