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BUCENTAUR (Ital. bucintoro)

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Originally appearing in Volume V04, Page 713 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BUCENTAUR (Ital. bucintoro)  , the state gallery of the doges of Venice, on which, every
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year on Ascension day up to 1789, they put into the Adriatic in order to perform the ceremony of "
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wedding the sea." The name bucintoro is derived from the Ital. buzino d' oro,
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golden bark," latinized in the
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middle ages as bucentaurus on the analogy of a supposed Gr . 5'ov,Ev-ravpos, ox-centaur (from (3ovs and sfvravpos) . This led to the explanation of the name as derived from the head of an ox having served as the galley's figurehead . This derivation is, however, fanciful; the name bucentaurus is unknown in ancient
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mythology, and the figurehead of the bucentaurs, of which representations have come down to us, is the lion of St Mark . 7 See F . X . Kraus, " Die Wandgemalde von
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San Angelo in Formis," in Jahrbuch der kgl. preuss . Kunstsamml . (1893), pl. i . (From MS . R. to E . IV .

Brit .

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Mus.) The name bucentaur seems, indeed, to have been given to any
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great and sumptuous Venetian galley . Du Cange (Gloss., s.v . "Bucentaurus ") quotes from the chronicle of the
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doge Andrea Dandolo (d . 1354): cum uno artificioso et solemni Bucentauro, super quo venit usque ad S . Clementem, quo jam pervenerat principalior et solemnior Bucentaurus cum consiliariis, &c . The last and most magnificent of the bucentaurs, built in 1729, was destroyed by the French in 1798 for the
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sake of its golden decorations . Remains of it are preserved at Venice in the Museo Civico Correr and in the
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Arsenal; in the latter there is also a
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fine model of it . The "
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Marriage of the Adriatic," or more correctly " of the sea " (Sposalizio del Mar) was a ceremony symbolizing the maritime dominion of Venice . The ceremony, established about A.D . 1000 to commemorate the doge
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Orseolo II.'s
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conquest of Dalmatia, was originally one of supplication and placation, Ascension day being chosen as that on which the doge had set out on his expedition . The form it took was a solemn procession of boats, headed by' the doge's maesta
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nave, afterwards the Bucentaur (from 1311) out to sea by the Lido
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port .

A

prayer was offered that " for us and all who
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sail thereon the sea may be
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calm and quiet," whereupon the doge and the others were solemnly aspersed with
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holy
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water, the rest of which was thrown into the sea while the priests chanted " Purge me with hyssop and I shall be clean." To this ancient ceremony a sacramental character was given by Pope Alexander III. in 1177, in return for the services rendered by Venice in the struggle against the emperor Frederick I . The pope drew a ring from his
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finger and, giving it to the doge, bade him cast such a one into the sea each year on Ascension day, and so wed the sea . Henceforth the ceremonial, instead of placatory and expiatory, became nuptial . Every year the doge dropped a consecrated ring into the sea, and with the words Desponsamus te,
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mare (We wed thee, sea) declared Venice and the sea to be indissolubly one (see H . F . Brown, Venice,
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London, 1893, pp . 69, 11o) .

End of Article: BUCENTAUR (Ital. bucintoro)
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