Venetian-Milanese War of 1429-33
1429 CE to 1433 CE
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Pope Martin V, intervening in the Venetian-Milanese War, had brought the warring parties to negotiations.
Under the peace treaty, Venice gains Brescia and the environs, Florence retakes its territory lost to Milan at the turn of the century, Savoy rules the territory it acquired from Milan, and Milan is enjoined from interfering with any state between it and Rome.
The Venetians, embroiled in this series of wars with Milan, are eventually forced to make peace with the Ottoman Turks.
The Venetians, embroiled in a series of wars with Milan, are forced to make peace with the Ottoman Turks in 1430.
Despite the Ottoman Turks' destruction of Venetian outposts along the Albanian coast and at Epirus, the Venetians remain masters of the eastern Adriatic coast from Istria to Dalmatia.
The notable church of Santi Giovanni e Paolo is completed in Venice in 1430.
A secular building known as the Ca d'Oro (Golden House), is constructed in Venice around the same time in the Late Gothic vernacular architectural style known as Venetian Gothic.
War breaks out again between Milan and Venice, and Carmagnola leads Venetian forces into battle in Cremona, where, at Soncino on the Po River, they meet defeat on June 6, 1431, at the hands of Milanese troops under Sforza.
The dilatory behavior of Venetian general Francesco Bussone da Carmagnola towards Milan lead to a determination by the Council of Ten to bring him to justice.
Summoned to Venice to discuss future operations, he arrives without suspicion on March 29, 1432.
On his arrival at the ducal palace he is seized, imprisoned, and brought to trial for treason against the republic.
Although the doge befriends him, he is condemned to death and beheaded on May 5.
The latest Venetian-Milanese conflict ends in 1433 when Milan’s Duke Filippo Maria Visconti agrees to the Peace of Ferrara, by which …
…Venice regains control of Bergamo and…
…Brescia.