INTRODUCTION
After years of closure and inaccessibility, the branch of the Greek state archives on Ithaca reopened in December 2021. This has allowed access to its rich collection of administrative records from the period of Venetian rule over the island (1500–1797), which have never been subjected to serious study. Only a small selection of records had been made available in the publication of the incomplete manuscripts of the Ithacan historian and archivist Athanasios Lekatsas (Reference Lekatsas1998, 11–73) from the early twentieth century. These at least indicated their breadth. Alongside the obvious impediment of the archive's intermittent accessibility over the last decades, the neglect of the island's Venetian records in the historiography of the region must also owe to the fact these records remain mostly ‘unprocessed’ and are not served by a catalogue, which means the task of studying them is inseparable from engaging with problems of classification. The foundation of this article is therefore an attempt to decipher the contents of this unprocessed ‘archive of the Venetian administration’ in its current state with a view to providing a basis for future work on Venetian Ithaca.Footnote 1 The first part of this article presents an outline of the role of the governor of Ithaca within the context of the Venetian colonial administration of the Ionian islands, based on a broad survey of the extensive archival evidence. This discussion is complemented by a list of names of governors who served in the office during the three centuries of its existence, with an account of how the list was assembled from records held at the state archives in Ithaca, Cephalonia, and Venice. This first investigation serves to introduce the forgotten Ithacan experience of Venetian rule, allowing insight into the different ways in which colonial power was exercised through different administrative formations. In particular, the Ithacan governorship represents an example of delegated power being exercised by local elites rather than by direct appointees from the colonial centre. This study reveals some of the strategies of delegated rule, in particular the ways in which the higher Venetian officials persistently attempted to reform and regulate the powers of the office in response to perceived abuses by the serving governors. This serves to enrich our understanding of the complexity of Venetian administrative practice by focussing our attention onto a corner of the Venetian maritime empire to which the historiography has long been blind.
THE ROLE OF ITHACAN GOVERNORS
The Venetian conquest of Ithaca in 1500 found the island ‘uninhabited’ and did not inherit an existing local administration. The island was resettled after a 1504 decree of the Senate granted tax concessions to new settlers.Footnote 2 Whatever the size of Ithacan society under the Neapolitan rulers who preceded the Venetians (through a short Ottoman interlude), the island fell under the jurisdiction of the larger neighbouring islands (see Nikias Reference Nikias2022a). While the island would again be subordinated to Cephalonia under the Venetians by the mid-sixteenth century, a more direct administration was imposed by Venice in the first years after the island's capture and resettlement, as explained by a fragment of 1583: ‘in the past … a governor [Capitanio] was sent from Venice, who lived there, alongside whom two men deputised as counsellors, and … they governed and gave judgment according to the necessities and needs of the place’.Footnote 3
The deputies with whom the early Venetian governors shared jurisdiction were local Ithacan electees: ‘two men of the aforesaid island of Ithaca, who are colleagues of the governor [and] who are elected from time to time to govern and give judgment together’.Footnote 4 The transition from this direct Venetian rule involving Ithacan deputies to the delegation of the jurisdiction to the Cephalonians begins around the middle of the sixteenth century. The first apparently Cephalonian appointee to the Ithacan governorship was Costa Pugliese, who had been appointed as governor and died before March 1563.Footnote 5 On his death, the Cephalonian council was conceded the right to elect governors on a yearly basis from the members of the local nobility, as one of a small number of desirable elected offices in the administration below the provveditor (the elected Venetian patrician who held the highest position in the colonial hierarchy of Cephalonia).Footnote 6
The grant of the governorship to Costa Pugliese on a personal basis – perhaps in exchange for military service – was followed by two further such appointments made after 1563, despite the Senate conceding a right over the Ithacan posting to the Cephalonian council. Two further Pugliesi were made governor outside the electoral process for durations longer than a year. A petition made direct to Venice in early 1574 by a Pasqualin Puiese (i.e. Pugliese) refers to the service of his father Nicolò, whose 10-year term as governor of Ithaca was cut short by his death in a naval battle against the Ottomans.Footnote 7 Nicolò must have been appointed by 1567, just a few years after the purported establishment of elections for the role. Pasqualin requested to be installed to serve out the four years remaining in his father's term, plus a further two (on the basis that this would allow him to earn enough money to marry off his two young sisters).Footnote 8 The secretarial annotation does not make clear the duration of the term granted. In either case, Pasqualin's service must have ended in 1578 or 1580. A familial connection to the earlier Costa Pugliese seems likely, but is not mentioned by the petition.
No closer reconstruction of the early governorship is allowed by the records of the administration held at the Ithacan archive, with inventories compiled by the seventeenth-century administrators themselves showing that the preceding century left behind no documentary legacy.Footnote 9 Nevertheless, the small amount of surviving sixteenth-century evidence from Venice shows a progression between the more direct control of a new colonial posting in the sixteenth century and its eventual delegation to Cephalonia by the end of the century. The installation of the first three Cephalonian governors for long terms represents an interventional strategy of control over the island in this first century of Venetian rule. While the Senate conceded the governorship to the Cephalonian council in 1563, and this right is cited again in the 1574 relazione of Vincenzo da Molin (Tsiknakis Reference Tsiknakis2008, 60), it was some time before elections became regular, given the interruption of the direct appointments of the two later Pugliesi. Regular annual elections could not have taken place before the last two decades of the century. The earliest surviving Cephalonian council records from 1593 provide the name of electee Nicolò Travlò in 1593 (Moschonas Reference Moschonas1979, 277). The names of two earlier electees from the 1580s attested only by the nineteenth-century literature are not confirmed by the primary sources, yet these might have been among the earliest Cephalonians elected following the stunted implementation of the concession of 1563.Footnote 10 This slow willingness to cede direct control of the posting corresponds to a period when the Venetian administrators expressed doubts over the Cephalonian nobility as a suitable ruling class. Membership of the notoriously disorderly Cephalonian council – the political organ of an inflated local nobility – was formally closed and regulated after 1593 in response to frustration with its disobedience. This was an attempt to restrict membership to suitable types, with a view to rendering the local nobility a loyal and functional political class following the model of the Venetian patriciate (see Moschonas Reference Moschonas1979; Vlassi Reference Vlassi2001; Reference Vlassi, Maltezou and Ortalli2005; Reference Vlassi, Tolomeo and Crevato-Selvaggi2018; Reference Vlassi, Capuzzo and Crevato-Selvaggi2019; Reference Vlassi, Vaiopoulos, Birtachas and Pagratis2021). Whether or not this was ever fully successful, it was only following such reforms that the Venetian eagerness to make direct interventions appears to wane. The council exerted its right over the Ithacan governorship with regularity after the 1620s, as shown by consecutive yearly appointments (see list in the Appendix and Supplementary Material). Nevertheless, the possibility of direct Venetian intervention remained on the minds of aspiring Cephalonian noble appointees who wished to sidestep electoral procedure. Several later petitions made to Venice between 1738 and 1777 contain requests for direct appointment to the desirable Ithacan posting, in every case the applicant's wish being granted.Footnote 11
The elections of Ithacan governors are recorded in some of the surviving minutes of the Cephalonian council together with elections to other administrative positions. Elections were held in the presence of the provveditor of Cephalonia and the proceedings supervised by the three Cephalonian sindici.Footnote 12 The results of the vote count in some of the recorded examples demonstrate the nature of the contest among nobles for the appointment. The electee Giorgio Metaxà in 1650 won 870 votes against 286, clearer support than the other two candidates, who divided the assembly almost equally.Footnote 13 The election of Alessandro di Orzi in 1654 reveals a tighter contest won with 169 votes against 103.Footnote 14 His defeated competitors included two former governors both trying their luck for another term.Footnote 15 The governorship was an attractive promotion for nobles who had served in other positions in the Cephalonian administration, as we see with governors di Orzi and Florio Crassan, both listed as sindici, or both Domenico and Francesco Cologna, who had separately been elected as censori.Footnote 16 Other names which appear first as deputies to the governor in the Ithacan records are encountered later as governors themselves, the experience perhaps lending insight into a strategy for election or at least a taste for colonial government.Footnote 17 These few examples of a common pattern place the Ithacan governorship squarely within a competitive market for elected offices usually occupied by a small, active elite of a large Cephalonian nobility. Two further basic restrictions on candidacy for the governorship were a minimum age requirement of 30,Footnote 18 and a moratorium on re-election for 10 years.Footnote 19 Violation of the moratorium is particularly evident from repeated names in the list (see Appendix and Supplementary Material; Vlassi Reference Vlassi, Vaiopoulos, Birtachas and Pagratis2021, 169–70). There is little diversity among family names, which represent but a small fraction of their class. Just a handful of the more prominent families shared dozens of appointments among them, particularly the Metaxà, Anino and Crassan. The repeat success of relatives in the competitive market for appointments – often sons and grandsons, as revealed by the genealogical literature surveyed in the extended list (see Supplementary Material) – shows how the major noble families could seize control over the electoral process with control over the votes of a polarised faction (see Vlassi Reference Vlassi2004; Reference Vlassi, Vaiopoulos, Birtachas and Pagratis2021). It was perhaps irregularities or tensions arising out of these contested races which led the Cephalonian council in 1654 to reassert its authority over the role. Candidates would be required to deposit 120 reali with the sindici before they would be eligible.Footnote 20 The penalty –‘to be immediately removed from this office, and forbidden to perform any act’ – reflects the authorities’ dismay at pretenders to the governorship who, despite the sanction of election, did not satisfy the necessary formalities for appointment.Footnote 21 Such disorderly behaviour was synonymous with the divisive and unruly Cephalonian council, often rendered dysfunctional by rivalries between noble factions, despite constant regulatory intervention by the Venetian authorities.
A residual power for appointment outside of the electoral process is shown by some examples where the higher authorities intervened. In one example, the governor Giorgio Peccator was appointed in late 1653 ‘per modis provisionis’ by the provveditor general da mar.Footnote 22 While the context is not explained, the example shows that the higher colonial officials still held the power to sidestep the Cephalonian council when required.Footnote 23 This power seems to have been exercised by the provveditor general da mar rather than his Cephalonian subordinate. In another case, a governor is replaced provisionally by his own brother, apparently for a mere few weeks to fill the gap between the expiry of the former's term and the election of the new governor.Footnote 24 Such short-term appointments outside the electoral cycle appear to have been common, perhaps reflecting a misalignment between the imperative of administrative continuity and the (dys)function of the council.Footnote 25 The Cephalonian records reveal a near constant stream of interventions by the higher Venetian authorities at times when the powers it had delegated appeared to be being abused. In 1677 the provveditor general Andrea Corner made several orders to address ‘many inconveniences which arise each day, and which tend always to become greater to the grave detriment of the proper function of the [Cephalonian] council’.Footnote 26 Among these was an interdiction against the sale of the Ithacan governorship without the approval of the Senate.Footnote 27 Observance of the rule appeared to be at risk in late 1698 when the three sindici proposed a requirement for prospective candidates for the governorship to pay a large sum into the treasury to qualify for election.Footnote 28 The opinion of the provveditor general Bartolo Contarini was solicited on whether this violated the Corner interdiction.Footnote 29 The avowed justification for the inflated charge on candidates was to raise funds ‘to provide for any need which may arise which might burden the office’ of the governor of Ithaca.Footnote 30 The curious appearance of the names of all three same sindici in the list of serving governors suggests that the self-interest in securing access to the position – perhaps by pushing it beyond the reach of poorer competitors – may also have been a motive.Footnote 31 Such episodes show that the Venetians closely followed the attempts by some councillors to establish a market for the posting, but in this case Contarini decided the particular scheme did not contravene Corner's interdiction.Footnote 32 Still, the detailed record of his intervention among the council papers shows that higher officials frequently had to supervise disputes over the governorship.
The electee was titled governator e capitano del Theachi. The Ithacan jurisdiction was split between certain functions delegated to the governor and the residual powers held by the Venetian provveditor of Cephalonia. A large proportion of the volumes of governors’ records is filled by legal proceedings which show the authority of the governor in small civil disputes and criminal matters.Footnote 33 Jurisdiction in more serious cases was deferred to the higher authority of the Venetian provveditor of Cephalonia.Footnote 34 In exercise of the higher authority of the Cephalonian administration over Ithaca, representatives of the provveditor made yearly visits to Ithaca, from at least 1581.Footnote 35 The visiting party was led by a consiglier (a Venetian, not Cephalonian) – whose acts bear the title consiglier et vice gerente in visita del Teachi – together with other functionaries including notaries to execute relevant acts during the visit.Footnote 36 Already by 1590 a critical report by the provveditor Basadonna remarks that the visit's duration of one month does not allow the consiglieri to cover all the criminal matters which arose (Tsiknakis Reference Tsiknakis2008, 123–4). Despite several restatements of the object of the visit – to provide Ithacan subjects with a more practical access to justice – they also presented a convenient opportunity for the visiting functionaries to pursue their own interests.Footnote 37 Basadonna's report cites the most recent visit, when ‘a particular quantity of forest was granted to some incapable person from Cephalonia’, before the same unnamed person was elected to the Ithacan governorship, ‘and with a beginning of such a disgusting nature, commenced his rule’.Footnote 38 The revulsed provveditor doubted whether any public benefit was derived from the annual visit, which instead ‘serves to increase the income of the counsellors more than relieving the needs of [the Ithacan] subjects’.Footnote 39 It seems Basadonna is referring to the very corruption of the Venetian consiglieri themselves, but reference to the improper concession of land suggests this engaged the Cephalonians too. The visit long continued to be exploited for personal gain, as shown by the comments of the Venetian provveditor general Gerolamo Corner, whose 1683 orders reiterate that the visit is ‘intended only for the benefit of those poor inhabitants’.Footnote 40 Still, the establishment of the visits was asserted as an important reform which put a distant jurisdiction under closer supervision. An Ithacan plea in 1583 ‘to reinstate [the] former, and commendable rule’ by which two Ithacan electees shared power with the governor was rejected, with the Venetian inspectors restating the sufficiency of the established annual Cephalonian visits.Footnote 41 A check on power through the annual visit was clearly preferable to ceding further jurisdiction, with corruption being either the lesser or more manageable evil.
The governor was supported by the service of advisors and functionaries who made up the cancelleria, following the model of the larger colonial reggimenti on a smaller scale (see Arbel Reference Arbel and Dursteler2013, 146–51). Here we can distinguish between those sent from Cephalonia and office-holders elected from the local population. The governor was served by another Cephalonian noble elected by the council to the post of clerk or scribe (scrivano).Footnote 42 The highest role under the governor was, however, held by his deputy, the cancellier, who in many cases executes documents in lieu of his superior and signs as vice governator. This position was appointed by the governors themselves.Footnote 43 The signatures of the deputies often bear the same family names as their superiors, showing that the governors-elect did not miss the opportunity to keep things within the family.Footnote 44 The residual powers which were not delegated to the governor were exercised during the annual visit by the Venetian consiglier, as described above.Footnote 45 This included running elections for local positions in the Ithacan administration, perhaps too great a risk if left in Cephalonian hands. The elected Ithacan office-holders were spread across the three administrative divisions of the island (ville): Vathì, Anoì and Oxoì (Βαθύ, Ἀνωγή, Ἐξωγή).Footnote 46 The offices elected were the sindici, giustizieri, provveditori alla sanità, deputati alle strade, deputati all’ estime, contestabili and cartofori. These follow the organisation of local functionaries in the administrations of the other islands, though they remain understudied.Footnote 47 A further study of the Ithacans who filled these roles would contribute much to the social history of the island, given these were the highest positions to which the Ithacans could aspire to serve under an administration filled with Cephalonian nobles under the supervision of Venetians. The governor travelled regularly around the island to engage with these local office-holders – executing acts in visita della villa Oxoì or Anoì, apparently emulating the model of the annual visit of the Cephalonian consiglier.Footnote 48 The main seat of administration, however, was associated with the southern town at Vathì, where the governor occupied a ‘pubblico palazzo’ (αφεντικό σπίτι in Greek), housing both an office and residence for the governor.Footnote 49
As perhaps already suggested by the coincidence of family names among elected governors and their appointed deputies, the corruption of the Ithacan governorship was as old as the office itself. The concession of a right over the posting to the Cephalonian council in 1563 was conditional on the promise ‘to exercise office properly’.Footnote 50 The pledge would soon be worth little, with the naked pursuit of self-interest by the Cephalonians already apparent to the inspectors Gritti and Garzoni in 1583, and to Basadonna in 1590, as discussed above. By 1656, Cephalonian elections for the prized Ithacan posting were singled out for their particular impropriety among other roles elected by the council (Vlassi Reference Vlassi, Tolomeo and Crevato-Selvaggi2018, 165). A series of orders made in 1683 by the provveditor general da mar Gerolamo Corner give an insight into how governors and their functionaries contrived to reap personal reward from the privileged position of public office.Footnote 51 Corner imposed several restrictions on the exercise of power by both visiting delegates and functionaries serving the governor. One order seeking to bar the public office-holders from involvement in currant sales suggests interference in the local export economy was a promising enterprise; another order, which prohibits the execution of public documents for profit, is apparently aimed at the fraudulent presentation by litigants of documents sold to them with the authorisation of the governor's office.Footnote 52 Maladministration was not the mere folly of a few vain governors, but rather a designed system for exploitation which further engaged their subordinates. The Ithacan plea of 1583 which made the case for increased local representation sought to relieve the islanders of the oppression of the Cephalonian functionaries: ‘so that we will not be worn out, tormented, and devoured by the officials who are deputies to our government, who wish everything for their own benefit against the mind of Your Serenity’.Footnote 53 As we have seen, the Corner decision one century later imposed several regulations aimed again at countering the abuses of the Cephalonian deputies.Footnote 54 Yet even the local Ithacan representatives in elected roles could be corrupted by their Cephalonian superiors, as intimated by a provision which expressly forbade the local officers’ employment for any function in the service of the governors or cancellieri beyond their public mandate.Footnote 55 The higher Venetian officials were clearly aware of governors misallocating their resources – in this case, their personnel – for personal gain.
This wide survey of the archival record has reconstructed the formal constitution of an office of colonial government conceded to a local elite, yet organised in the manner of the larger reggimenti. The position of Ithacan governor gave a rare opportunity for the Cephalonian nobility to rise to a rather high position among colonial administrative postings usually filled by Venetians. Among the other possessions in the Ionian islands, just the governors of Ithaca and the Paxi offered to local elites the chance of ruling over a territorial jurisdiction with such considerable powers. The intensely competitive market for election, together with thwarted attempts to create a market for the sale of the posting, speak of the desirability of the position for Cephalonian nobles. Despite the Ithacan governor's subordination to the provveditor, his power was unique among the other elected roles open for Cephalonian nobles, which had limited functions. While the provveditor general Agostin Sagredo in 1753 describes several of ‘the loftiest postings which the council may grant’, he draws attention specifically to the governor:
the role of Governor and Captain of the island of Ithaca … is one of the most profound dignities which this council confers each year to one of its citizens, and … confers to this distinguished figure not only a Public Representation, but the right to give judgment in civil and criminal matters within the prescribed limits.Footnote 56
That Sagredo was again addressing his orders to improper electoral processes reminds us that the mere dignity of power properly exercised was not the only appeal of the office. The role also provided various opportunities for appointees to enrich themselves. While one provveditor saw it perfectly acceptable for governors to ‘make an honest profit’ from the execution of official acts, things must have gotten out of hand by 1683 when Gerolamo Corner forbade the execution of public documents for profit, as we saw above.Footnote 57 Evidence for trade with the local population is found in a will of 1640 which records the governor as an outstanding debtor to the testator for currants he had bought from him.Footnote 58 Here again the provision of the 1683 Corner orders against involvement in local trade, mentioned above, suggests that some transactions may have involved improper dealing on the part of the governor or purported to give official sanction to an illicit economy (see Fusaro Reference Fusaro1996; Livitsanis Reference Livitsanis2021).
The authority of Ithacan governors assumed a personal character. The intersection between the governors’ personal vanity and the baggage of familial prestige is shown by three visual examples. The use of a personal armorial seal among official documents reveals the moment of union between official and personal authority, a fantasy entertained nowhere less subtly than in the placement of a governor's own coat of arms beside the Lion of St Mark: see Figs 1 and 2. The pretension of the Cephalonian electees is illustrated by the rare portrait of Marin Pignator (1719), the only known image of an Ithacan governor: see Fig. 3. No clearer than here is the vanity of a class once derided by a Venetian as peasants dressed up as nobles (Vlassi Reference Vlassi, Maltezou and Ortalli2005). The Latin dedication denotes the sitter as Ithacae gubernator, choosing the island's ancient name rather than the usual form found in Venetian documents following the demotic corruption of the modern Greek form (Θιάκι > Teachi). Use of the ancient name always represented a conscious preference to associate the modern island with the ancient kingdom of Odysseus. The accounts of Venetian colonial functionaries with Ithaca made frequent association between the modern island and the epic.Footnote 59 If Homeric pretensions were strong enough to allow one late provveditor of Cephalonia to describe his own role as ‘governing the kingdom of Odysseus’, his Ithacan subordinates must too have indulged in the fantasy.Footnote 60 The role of governor was held out as a prize by the Cephalonian nobles. The names of ancestors who had served as Ithacan governors were preserved in the memory of the nobility long into the nineteenth century, representing a rich source for the nineteenth-century literature (see Pignatorre and Pignatorre Reference Pignatorre and Pignatorre1887, 1–2; Metaxas Reference Metaxas1893; Tsitselis Reference Tsitselis1904). Despite the formal electoral process offering candidacy to all members of the council, the identification of several father–son pairs in the list of governors demonstrates the influence of factional politics driven by the more powerful families. In one example, a tie to the role is maintained over seven decades: three members of the Anastasato branch of the Anino family served between 1680 and 1755, tracing the line between father, son, and grandson.Footnote 61 Many such examples allowed the major families to boast of a record of service in the role. The nine requests made to Venice for direct appointment often contain hubristic justifications given by aspiring governors who sought the deferral of elections in their favour.Footnote 62 One petitioner Marin Anino bemoans the misfortune that he would be ineligible in the upcoming election for being just a few months short of the minimum age of 30, and requests that he be appointed directly, citing ‘the supply of such illustrious documents which testify to his family's constant loyalty and submission’.Footnote 63
An appreciation of this sense of entitlement held by the grander noble families over the Ithacan governorship – and the profitable opportunities which it presented – serves to moderate the contrast between the Ithacan form of government and the larger Ionian islands which were ruled instead by appointees sent from the colonial centre at Venice proper. While the Ithacan case approximates self-rule more closely than these other Venetian possessions, it is an important example of the employment of particular technologies of government – delegation and subordination – to integrate regional elites into the colonial apparatus. The vanity of the governors can be identified as an aesthetic manifestation of their self-alignment with the ideology of empire, which fulfilled the need for the Cephalonian nobles to legitimate their right to exercise a considerable temporal and territorial jurisdiction over their fellow subjects. Despite the relative assimilation of the origins of the governors and the governed, the archival record surveyed here describes how the governorship nevertheless presented various opportunities for exploitation. In this way too, the exercise of the office mirrors the patterns of corrupt practice found throughout Venetian power structures, in spite of its delegation to the local level. Further research in the rich Ithacan archive will reveal more precisely the strategies which enabled such widespread corruption and the extent to which it involved the participation of the Ithacans themselves, in particular through the elite stratum of officeholders elected from the towns on the island.
THE COMPILATION OF A LIST OF GOVERNORS
Across the breadth of surviving evidence which has been surveyed in this article are found the names of many Ithacan governors who served between the sixteenth and eighteenth centuries. Their names are presented here in a list of known governors of Ithaca (see Appendix) with citations supplied in a more detailed list found in the Supplementary Material. The list offers the fullest catalogue of Ithacan governors to date, reconstructed not merely from the surviving governors’ records in the Ithacan state archive, but also from references found in documents held at Cephalonia and Venice. No list of governors is found in the major nineteenth-century historiography, with no reference to Ithaca in Carl Hopf's extensive ‘Catalogues des gouverneurs Vénitiens’ (Hopf Reference Hopf1873, 371–413).Footnote 64 The only attempt to compile the names of governors was by the Cephalonian father and son Marino and Nicolò Pignatorre in 1889 (Pignatorre and Pignatorre Reference Pignatorre and Pignatorre1889, 234–5). Their list of names was compiled with some access to the Cephalonian archive, but further relied on the private records of noble families whose ancestors had served in the role (see Pignatorre and Pignatorre Reference Pignatorre and Pignatorre1887, 1–2). The collation of the list presented here has allowed the identification of several errors in the list of the duo Pignatorre, which demonstrated the urgency of compiling the list anew from the primary sources. This was aided by a list of the bound volumes of the governors’ records in the Ithacan state archive (volumi or buste), which was published by the archivist and historian Stamatoula Zapanti (Reference Zapanti, Maltezou, Vlassi and Tzavara2010, 942–43). However Zapanti's list did not attempt to assemble the names and dates of all known serving governors across other sources. Rather, her list described the state of the Venetian records as they were left by an unfinished attempt to classify them, work done by a team of researchers from the National Hellenic Institute for Research (Εθνικό Ίδρυμα Ερευνών) before 2002. Since this incomplete task has never since been resumed, the Venetian records remain unclassified and uncatalogued (see Nikias Reference Nikiasforthcoming). Beyond the volumes listed by Zapanti is a large quantity of governors’ records denoted as ‘fragments’.Footnote 65 Among these slimmer bundles and loose leaves are found the signatures of many more governors than are represented by those whose larger bound volumes survived. While such unbound fragments are conventionally denoted as filze in Venetian archival practice to contrast them from the volumes, there is no logic to maintaining the separation here. Many of the sets of documents which constitute the volumes were evidently compiled from the collation of material which, while now fragmented, must once have been bound together (as revealed by continuous leaf numbering). The resumption of this incomplete process of assimilating the records would much reduce the quantity of those currently cast aside as mere fragments, since much of these are slim bound booklets or series of homogeneous records. The status quo represents the evidently limited time of those who had made attempts to organise the series, unable to search all the unassigned documents to identify the many signatures of governors, which are often well hidden. The pressure of time is also visible in certain errors, which it was possible to correct in the list presented here. This includes the identification of one volume with the governor Thomaso Dalladecima (1682–3), which had before been misattributed to his cancellier Zuanne Andrioni, and the separate attribution of a set of two volumes which were until now assigned to two governors jointly.Footnote 66 The discovery by the present archivist of a further volume among the series which had eluded even the catalogue by Zapanti presented a further example of the difficulties of classification. Where this volume of governor Zuanne Loverdo (1779) ought to be ordered required close inspection of the contents of the records themselves. The identification among the adjacent records of Spiridion Focà (1779–80) of a letter from the provveditor on the latter's election in late 1779 confirmed him as the successor of Loverdo, allowing the appropriate ordering of the two governors. The ‘fragments’ allowed even further discoveries for the list, particularly the attribution of a small series of legal records from 1639–41 to the governors Thomaso Montessanto and Florian Dalladecima, representing the earliest attributable governors’ records in the archive.Footnote 67 These examples serve to show how a survey of this unclassified series as a whole, not merely restricted to the assigned volumes, has allowed me to provide the fullest compilation of governors’ names possible faced with the current condition of the Ithacan state archives.
The list of governors presented here is most sparse in the first century of Venetian rule, from 1503 until the 1620s. Since regular records begin only after the 1670s, the list has further included governors whose names may only be rescued from citations in other primary sources beyond the governors’ records themselves. A handful of early seventeenth-century governors have been identified among the early notarial registers.Footnote 68 No doubt many more such notarial references await discovery in the extensive Ithacan notarial archive (see Nikias Reference Nikias2022b; Reference Nikiasforthcoming). The list has also been supplied with many names from several significant inventories of official records (inventarii) found in the libri estraordinarii of certain governors, some with extensive detail about the condition and extent of records, with their dating of several names being particularly useful.Footnote 69 These inventories have confirmed many names appearing only in secondary sources because the governors’ documents themselves have since been lost. A very small number of names were attested by archival sources but unable to be dated precisely and have therefore resisted inclusion in the list.Footnote 70 While we must hope that further work among the earliest notarial and governors’ records might encounter even earlier names, the inventories show that even the late-seventeenth-century governors would have inherited little written record of the island's administration from the first century of Venetian rule (Nikias Reference Nikiasforthcoming).
Further names have been identified among documents held at Cephalonia and Venice. The minutes of electoral proceedings of the Cephalonian council have provided some important information, yet most of these records are contemporary to surviving governors’ records from Ithaca.Footnote 71 Thus the Cephalonian documents have not been able to fill the many gaps before the 1620s. No known sources attest the names of the earliest appointees sent directly from Venice in the first half of the sixteenth century. A survey of relevant documents held at the State Archive of Venice was unable to recover their names.Footnote 72 A small but significant amount of information on later governors was supplied by the surviving petitions for appointment made directly to Venice.Footnote 73 The successful applicants have been listed, but it is uncertain whether they ever actually assumed office given the lack of further records and the coincidence of dates with existing records assigned to other governors.
The Supplementary Material to this article contains a more detailed version of the list which supplies citations and notes for each governor. While the list is reconstructed from the records of governors themselves and citations in other primary documents, key biographical information is supplied from the major nineteenth-century literature. Beyond the Pignatorri, important sources have been the work of the Cephalonian local historian Ilias Tsitselis (Reference Tsitselis1904) and the genealogist of the Ionian nobility Eugène Rizo Rangabè (Reference Rizo Rangabè1926).Footnote 74 These authors had access to the records and oral traditions of the noble Cephalonian families in the critical century after the fall of Venetian rule when the memory of fallen families was still maintained with stubborn pretension. Several names only attested by the secondary sources have been omitted. Nevertheless, the general reliability of such sources, excepting the noted errors, has been largely confirmed by the location of corresponding primary citations in many cases.
It should be noted that the many inconsistencies in dating throughout the list owe to the fact that many references can merely indicate a precise moment when the governor is known to have been in office through a dated signature. The apparent impossibility of dates owing to overlap in several instances is likely due to the assignment of whole bound volumes of records to a single governor, while their organisation into booklets following the division of the various administrative functions (libro delle sentenze, registro di lettere pubbliche, etc.) means they often contain documents or acts executed under their predecessors. It is important then to note that the time span of a bound volume does not necessarily match the actual dates of service of the assigned governor (in particular the commencement dates). Without a fuller electoral record from the Cephalonian council, or a close study of the entire contents of the almost 100 presently assigned volumes, some overlap is impossible to avoid. Pending such further work, I have thus preferred to date the governors after the records themselves, rather than to attempt hastily a reconstruction of the dates of service. Future work shall no doubt correct the inconsistencies and uncover new details. All dates are reproduced faithfully from the documents stile vecchio and with the more veneto (m.v., reflecting the start of the Venetian year in March) noted where appropriate in the notes in the Supplementary Material. Here I present my findings as a descriptive introduction to the archival record for Venetian Ithaca, without pretence to a comprehensive study of their content or a perfect catalogue to the unclassified records at the Ithacan state archive. This guide, I hope, will assist in the proper classification of those records and promote future engagement with them as sources for the history of the region.
ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS
For my grandmother, Angeliki Galati née Moraiti. I am indebted to the support of Christos Miaritis, who has been responsible for the function of the General State Archives in Ithaca since its reopening. My research would have been impossible without his assistance over several weeks.
SUPPLEMENTARY MATERIAL
Online-only Supplementary Materials are published alongside this paper: https://doi.org/10.1017/S0068245423000072.
APPENDIX: LIST OF GOVERNORS OF VENETIAN ITHACA
See Supplementary Material for fuller list with citations and notes.
- 1504– (?)
[Appointees from Venice]
- 1536–63(?)
Costa Pugliese
- 1567–73(?)
Nicolò Puiese
- 1574–8(?)
[Pasqualin Puiese]
- 1593
Nicolò Travlò
- 1625
Draco Crassan
- 1626
Lunardo Focà
- 1626–7
Gabriel Comi
- 1627
Theo. Lascari Megaduca
- 1628
Gabriel Peccator
- 1628
Dionisio Crassan
- 1632–3(?)
Piero Cicilian
- 1634
Nicolò Rossolimo
- 1634–5(?)
Domenico Foscardi
- 1635
Lascari Metaxà
- 1635–6(?)
Zorzi Corafan
- 1637
Gregorio Travlò
- 1639–40
Thomaso Montessanto
- 1640–1(?)
Florian Dalladecima
- 1642
Lunardo Cochino
- 1643–4
Florio Crassan
- 1646
Lorenzo Antippa
- 1646
Vincenzo Cimara
- 1646–7
Alvise Fasiol
- 1649
Theodoro Cladan
- 1650–1
Giorgio Metaxà
- 1653
Mattio Perlinghin
- 1653
Giov. Battista Metaxà
- 1653–4
Giorgio Peccator
- 1654–6
Alessandro di Orzi
- 1655
Anastasio Crassan
- 1656
Giov. Battista Metaxà
- 1657
Zuanne Melissinò
- 1658–9
Zuan Domenico Cologna
- 1659
Giov. Battista Metaxà
- 1663
Theodoro Veja
- 1663–4
Francesco Cologna
- 1665–7
Thomaso Dalladecima
- 1667
Nicolò Andronà
- 1667–8
Francesco Cologna
- 1668–73
Giov. Battista Metaxà
- 1673–8
Francesco Cologna
- 1678–9
Nicolò Policalà
- 1679–80
Stamati Lusi
- 1680–1
Anastasio Anino
- 1681–2
Gerolamo Cimara
- 1682–3
Thomaso Dalladecima
- 1684
Anastasio Metaxà
- 1684–5
Domenico Corafan
- 1685–6
Francesco Cologna
- 1687–8
Demetrio Focà
- 1688
Vangelin Anino
- 1688–90
Giacomo Metaxà
- 1690–1
Nicolò Pignator
- 1692
Costantin Tipaldo
- 1692–3
Angelo Corafan
- 1693–4
Gerolamo Cimara
- 1694–5
Attanasio Focà
- 1695–6
Domenico Corafan
- 1696–7
Demetrio Focà
- 1696–7
Alessandro Monferrato
- 1698
Gerolamo Corafan
- 1698–9
Nicolò Policalà
- 1699–1700
Stamati Lusi
- 1700–1
Andrea Anino
- 1701–2
Angelo Metaxà
- 1703–4
Demetrio Volterra
- 1704–5
Marchio Cologna
- 1705–6
Giov. Paolo Monferrato
- 1706–7
Zanetto Focà
- 1707–8
Alessandro Caruso
- 1708–9
Giorgio Assani
- 1709–10
Andrea Anino
- 1710–11
Alessandro Monferrato
- 1711–12
Giovanni Metaxà
- 1712–13
Domenico Corafan
- 1714
Marin Anino
- 1714–15
Gerolamo Dalladecima
- 1716
Marchio Cologna
- 1716–18
Giorgio Anino
- 1718–19
Marin Pignator
- 1719–20
Giorgio Assani
- 1720–1
Andrea Anino
- 1721–2
Gerolamo Dalladecima
- 1722–4
Giorgio Corafan
- 1724–5
Andrea Metaxà
- 1725–6
Nicolò Cladan
- 1726–7
Gradenigo Loverdo
- 1727–8
Zuanne Crassan
- 1728–30
Gerolamo Dalladecima
- 1730–1
Zuanne Sdrin
- 1731–2
Andrea Tipaldo
- 1733
Demetrio Caruso
- 1733–4
Demetrio Pignator
- 1735–6
Anastasio Anino
- 1737–9
Stellio Corafan
- 1739–40
Giovanni Cambici
- 1740–2
Andrea Anino
- 1742–4
Marin Anino
- 1744(?)
[Giacomo Metaxà]
- 1744–7
Marin Metaxà
- 1747–8
Zuanne Metaxà
- 1748–9
Demetrio Caruso
- 1749–50
Giov. Battista Metaxà
- 1750–2
Marco Tipaldo
- 1751–3
Zuanne Metaxà
- 1753
Marin Metaxà
- 1753(?)
[Pietro Crassan]
- 1753–4
Vincenzo Cimara
- 1754–5
Spiridion Anino
- 1756–7
Pietro Crassan
- 1757–8
Marin Focà
- 1757(?)
[Marin Anino]
- 1758–9
Giov. Spiridion Crassan
- 1759
Zuanne Policalà
- 1759–60
Nicolò Loverdo
- 1761–2
Giovanni Cambici
- 1761–3
Zuanne Tipaldo
- 1763–4
Valliano Metaxà
- 1764(?)
[Nicolò Trecca]
- 1764
Zuanne Surian Sciropulo
- 1765–6
Zuanne Avrami
- 1767
Giorgio Cazzaiti
- 1767–9
Liberal Tipaldo
- 1770
Anastasio Melissinò
- 1770–1
Gerasimo Anino
- 1772
Marin Tipaldo
- 1772–3
Pietro Schiadan
- 1773–4
Silvestro Valier
- 1775
Spiridion Cazzaiti
- 1776–7
Vittor Dalladecima
- 1777–8
Anastasio Caruso
- 1777(?)
[Zorzi Metaxà]
- 1779
Zuanne Loverdo
- 1779–80
Spiridion Focà
- 1781
Anastasio Anino
- 1782
Spiridion Loverdo
- 1783
Luigi Dalladecima
- 1784
Zuanne Anino
- 1784–5
Zorzi Loverdo
- 1786
Eustachio Metaxà
- 1786–7
Teodoro Assani
- 1788
Anastasio Tipaldo
- 1789
Pietro Schiadan
- 1790
Cristodulo Anino
- 1791
Euffemio Loverdo
- 1792
Anastasio Pilica
- 1793
Ottavio Valier
- 1794
Giov. Francesco Zulatti
- 1794–5
Marin Metaxà
- 1796
Giorgio Anino
- 1796–7
Gerasimo Policalà
Note: square brackets [] denote names of those who successfully appealed for appointment to Venice, but their actual service cannot be corroborated by other primary sources.