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The debate raging in the Senate in the autumn of 1559
was of great importance regarding relationships between Venetian institutions
and military power. The Senate discussed the opportunity to build in the city
'a refuge able in case of war to save the people of this island'. For two days
two radically opposed camps battled over the duties to be awarded to the
commanding general of the infantry Sforza Pallavicino, and finally
reached a compromise. Half of the Senate members wanted 'him to go and it
seeming right to him, he begin work... thus capable of working and starting and
continuing according to his opinion, for he being present and responsible
there, it was better than giving all the information to the "proti"
who
then do not carry to completion what is assigned them'.1 Those against this
proposal claimed instead that 'it would be much better that he, once he had
seen and assessed, should make a report, because thus also here [in Venice],
the governors could see and understand and reach a decision that seemed most
opportune to them, and because it is not right to retract authority and give it
to his subordinates, without their authority, who, they also being patrons,
might do something that then did not satisfy the governors'.2 This second
proposal shows part of the Senate's clear opposition to the creation of a
fairly independent position, liberated from institutional dictates, and the
policy directives that political accords offered.
Footnotes:
1'egli andasse e parendoli desse anco principio ad operare... che anco fosse
buono di fare e principiare secondo il suo parere et avanzare tempo, oltre che
essendo egli sopra l'opera faria meglio che mandando poi misure a' proti, che
poi non eseguiscano quanto bisogna'
2'saria molto meglio che, havendo veduto et giudicato, dovesse referire,
perchè anco de qui li signori potessero veder et intendere et far quella
resolutione che paresse loro il meglio, et che non era conveniente spogliarsi
della propria authorità et darla a' suoi ministri, che senza il consenso
loro, che pur erano patroni, havesse ad operar cosa che poi non fosse di loro
sattisfazione'
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