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SANUTO (SANUDO), MARINO

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Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 197 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SANUTO (SANUDO),
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MARINO
  , the elder, of
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Torcello (c . 126o-1338), Venetian statesman, geographer, &c . He is best known for his
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life-long attempts to revive the crusading spirit and
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movement; with this
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object he wrote his
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great
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work, the Secreta (or
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Liber Secretorum) Fidelium Crucis, otherwise called Historia Hierosolymitana, Liber de expeditione Terrae Sanclae, and Opus Terrae Sanctae, the last being perhaps the proper title of the whole
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treatise as completed in three parts or " books." This work has much to say of trade and trade-routes as well as of
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political and other
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history; and through its accompanying maps and plans it occupies an important place in the development of cartography . It was begun in March 1306, and finished (in its earliest form) in
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January 1307, when it was offered to Pope Clement V. as a
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manual for true Crusaders who desired the reconquest of the
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Holy
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Land . To this
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original Liber Secretorum Sanuto added largely; two other " books " were composed between December 1312 and September 1321, when the entire work was presented by the author to Pope John XXII., together with a map of the
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world, a map of
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Palestine, a chart of the Mediterranean, Black Sea and west
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European coasts, and plans of Jerusalem,
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Antioch and Acre . A copy was also offered to the king of France, to whom Sanuto desired to commit the military and political leadership of the new crusade .
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Marino himself tells us that he had spent the best
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part of his life in Romania, the lands of the Eastern
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empire; of the Morea he had especially intimate knowledge; he had also visited Cyprus, Rhodes, parts of the Syrian, Cilician and
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Egyptian coasts, France, Flanders and north Germany, both west and east of Denmark . He had been in Acre, Alexandria, Constantinople,
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Avignon, Bruges and Sluys, as well as (apparently) in
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Hamburg,
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Lubeck,
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Wismar,
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Rostock,
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Stralsund, Greifswald and
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Stettin . Among his friends and correspondents were Guglielmo Bernardi de Furvo, a Venetian nobleman who had travelled extensively in Moslem and Mongol lands (to
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Tabriz, Bagdad,
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Damascus and Cairo), Bishop Jerome of
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Kaffa, in the Crimea, who in 1312 had been sent to reinforce the Catholic
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mission in
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China, and perhaps Peter, the
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English-born bishop of Sevastopolis or Sukhum Kale in western Caucasia, who makes an
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appeal for aid to the prelates of England in 1330 . Marino Sanuto's ancestor, Marco, had founded the greatness of his
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family after the
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Fourth Crusade as duke of the
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Archipelago and conqueror of
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Naxos, Paros, &c . (from 1207); and his descendant wrote with a
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personal
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interest in the question of crushing Moslem power in•the
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Levant . The crusading plans of the Secreta are double: first,
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Egypt and the Moslem world on the side towards
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Europe (
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Syria,
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Asia Minor, the
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Barbary States, Granada, &c.) are to be ruined by the absolute stoppage of all Christian trade with the same .

By such an

interdict Sanuto hopes that Egypt, dependent on its European and other imports of metals, provisions, weapons,
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timber, pitch and slaves, would be fatally weakened, and the way thus prepared for the second part of the campaign—the armed attack of the crusading
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fleet and army on the Nile delta . With the aid of the Mongol Tatars of Asia, natural allies of western Christendom, and of the Nubian Christians, the
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conquest of the Delta and of all Egypt was to be followed by that of Palestine, invaded and held from Egypt . Sanuto deprecates any other route for the crusade, and unfolds his plan of
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campaign, his bases of supply, his
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sources for the supply of good seamen, with great detail . Not only Mediterranean seaports, but the lakes of North Italy and central Europe, and the Hanseatic ports, are enumerated as nurseries of crusading mariners and marine skill . Finally, after the conquest of Egypt, Marino designs the establishment of a Christian fleet in the
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Indian Ocean to dominate and subjugate its coasts and islands . He also gives a sketch of the trade-routes
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crossing
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Persia and Egypt, as well as of the course of Indian trade from Coromandel and
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Gujarat to Ormuz and the Persian Gulf, and to
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Aden and the Nile . The maps and plans which illustrate the Secreta are probably (in the main, at least) the work of the great portolano-draughtsman Pietro Vesconte: practically the whole of this map-work corresponds with what Vesconte has
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left under his own name; much of it is indistinguishable . Among the plans that of Acre is of
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peculiar interest, being the most
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complete representation known of the great crusading fortress on the
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eve of its destruction, with the quarters of all its contingents of defenders (
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Templars, &c.) indicated . The chart of the Mediterranean and Euxine and of the
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Atlantic coasts of Europe is composed of five map-sheets, which together form a good example of the earliest scientific design or portolano; in the world-map a portolano of the Mediterranean world Is combined with work of pre-portolan type in remoter regions . Here the
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shore-lines of the countries well known to
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Italian mariners, from Flanders to Azov, are well laid down; the
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Caspian and the north German and Scandinavian coasts appear with an evident,though far slighter, relation to
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practical knowledge; and some idea is shown of the great
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continental rivers of the north, such as the Don, Volga, Vistula,
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Oxus and Syr Daria . Africa, away from the Mediterranean, is conventional, with its south-east projected, after the manner of Idrisi, so as to face Indian Asia, and with a western Nile traversing the continent to the Atlantic . Chinese and Indian Asia show little trace of the new knowledge which had been imparted by European pioneers from the Polos' time, and which appears so strikingly in the Catalan
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Atlas of 1375 .

Sanuto's Palestine map is remarkable for its space-defining network of lines, which roughly

answer to a kind of scheme of latitude and longitude, though properly speaking they are not scientific at all . Of the Secreta, twenty-three
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MSS. exist, of which the chief are: (I) Florence, Riccardian Library, No . 237, 162 fols . (Secreta and Letters), with maps and plans on fols . 141, v.-144, r.; (2)
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London,
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British Museum, Addt . MSS., 27,376, 178 fols. with maps, &c. on fols . 18o, v.-190, r.; (3) Paris,
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National Library, MSS .
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Lat . 4939, with maps, &c. on fols . 9, r.-I I, r . 27, 98-99 . All these are of the 14th century .

The Secreta has only once been printed entire, by

Bongars, in Gesta Dei per Francos, vol. ii. pp . 1-288 (Hanover, 1611) . See also Friedrich Kunstmann, " Studien caber Marino Sanudo den alteren, mit einem Anhange seiner ungedruckten Briefe " in Abhandlungen der historisch . Classe der Konigl . Bayerisch . Akademie der Wissenschaften, vol. vii. pp . 695-819 (Munich, 1855); Foscarini, Letteratura Veneziana; Tiraboschi, Storia della Letteratura Italiana, vol. v.; Postansque, De Marino Sanuto (
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Montpellier, 1856); C . R . Beazley, Dawn of
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Modern Geography, iii . 309-319, 391-392, 520-521, 549, 555 . (C . R .

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