veneze

navigate by keyword : 1291 associated buildings center city coloumn destruction doge famous fearing fire foundries glass glassmakers glassmaking italia italy lamp lion made marco mostly move murano ordered palace pink republic reputation saint street venetian veneze venice venician with

Italy. Venice. Church degli Scalzi or Santa Maria di Nazareth Royalty Free Stock Photo
Italy. Venice. Veiw of city. Canal at night Royalty Free Stock Photo
Italy. Venice. Bell tower near Church of San Barnaba Royalty Free Stock Photo
Italy. Venice. Church of San Barnaba and bell tower Royalty Free Stock Photo
Italy. Venice. Pink street lamp. Murano glass Royalty Free Stock Photo
Italy. Venice. Veiw of city. Chuch at night Royalty Free Stock Photo
Italy. Venice. Church degli Scalzi or Santa Maria di Nazareth Royalty Free Stock Photo
Italy. Venice. Pink street lamp. Murano glass
Italy. Venice. Church degli Scalzi or Santa Maria di Nazareth at night Royalty Free Stock Photo
Italy. Venice. Church of San Barnaba and bell tower Royalty Free Stock Photo
Italy. Venice. Veiw of city. Streets Royalty Free Stock Photo
Italy. Venice. Veiw of city. Canal and boat Royalty Free Stock Photo
Italy. Venice. Streets and squares. Monument in Campo San Stefano Royalty Free Stock Photo
Italy. Venice. Streets and squares. Tourists with map near Monument Royalty Free Stock Photo
Italy. Venice. Veiw of city. Vaporetto station Royalty Free Stock Photo
Famous venician street lamp made with pink Murano glass. Murano’s reputation as a center for glassmaking was born when the Venetian Republic, fearing fire and the destruction of the city’s mostly wooden buildings, ordered glassmakers to move their foundries to Murano in 1291. Murano glass is still associated with Venetian glass. Murano`s glassmakers were soon numbered among the island’s most prominent citizens. By the fourteenth century, glassmakers were allowed to wear swords, enjoyed immunity from prosecution by the Venetian state and found their daughters married into Venice’s most affluent families. While benefiting from certain statutory privileges, glassmakers were forbidden to leave the Republic. However, many of them took the risks associated with migration and established glass furnaces in surrounding cities and farther afield - sometimes in England and the Netherlands.


Stockphotos.ro (c) 2025. All stock photos are provided by Dreamstime and are copyrighted by their respective owners.