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Andrea Loredan

Andrea Loredan
Count of Brescia
Known forcommissioning the Ca' Loredan Vendramin Calergi
Born1440
Venice, Republic of Venice
Died1513
Creazzo, Republic of Venice
Cause of deathbeheaded in the Battle of La Motta
BuriedLoredan Chapel
NationalityVenetian
ResidenceCa' Loredan Vendramin Calergi
OfficesSenate
Council of Ten
Avogadoria de Comùn
Savi del Consiglio
Savi di Terraferma
Noble family House of Loredan
Spouse(s)Maria Badoer (d. 1530s)
HeirAndrea di Alvise Loredan (d. 1556)
FatherNicolò di Antonio di Daniele Loredan
MemorialsBust of Andrea Loredan

Andrea Loredan (1440–1513) was a Venetian nobleman of the Loredan family, known as a collector of art. He is notable for commissioning the Ca' Loredan Vendramin Calergi, a palace on the Grand Canal, to designs by Mauro Codussi. The palace was paid for by Doge Leonardo Loredan, it is known for its association with Richard Wagner and the palace today hosts the Casino of Venice.[1] Andrea is also notable for paying for the choir of the church of San Michele in Isola, also designed by Codussi.

In 1513, during the War of the League of Cambrai, he had to accept the role of quartermaster-general for the army, which had closed ranks near Vicenza. Andrea Loredan died in the Battle of La Motta in that same year, beheaded by two soldiers who fought over his body.[2] Loved and respected in Venice, the news of his death brought great sadness to the city. In 1581, his heirs obtained permission from the Council of Ten to sell off the Palace to the Duke of Brunswick for fifty thousand ducats. The Duke had to take loans to be able to afford the grand residence.

The Bust of Andrea Loredan, which is today featured in the Museo Correr, was sculptured by Antonio Rizzo, one of the greatest architects and sculptors of the Venetian Renaissance.[3][4] Joseph Lindon Smith depicted the bust in one of his paintings, which is today kept in the Harvard Art Museums.

Biography

Andrea's career can be followed from the Venetian diarist and historian Marino Sanudo’s writings and from archival sources.[5] Although he never became doge, Loredan attained the most prestigious titles in the Venetian government during his lifetime, beginning in the 1490s with his election to the Senate and appointment as the state’s attorney. In 1502 he was elected Wise Man of the Terraferma and relocated to Brescia in Lombardy to take up duties as podestà (chief magistrate) and rettore (Venetian delegate for economic and military matters) in the city. Andrea’s success in this role led to his re-election as podestà in Brescia, in which office he served in 1503 and 1504. The following year he was first elected Wise Man of the Council on the judicial board of the Venetian government, and then attained the position of head of the Council of Ten, a role to which he also held later in 1510 and 1511–12.

Painting of Andrea Loredan, by Joseph Lindon Smith, Harvard Art Museums

Just before the War of the League of Cambrai, in which Venice was led by Andrea's cousin, Doge Leonardo Loredan, he was dispatched to the city of Udine in Friuli in 1507 as a lieutenant, but refused the Senate’s request to return there in 1509. This notorious objection led to his enforced temporary retirement to the island of Mazzorbo in the Venetian Lagoon, ‘in a most esteemed residence, living very honourably, because he was rich’. He soon returned to favour, and served the first of two terms as sopragastaldo (judicial magistrate), and again on the Council of Ten in 1509–10. In 1513, as provveditore generale of the entire terraferma, he was ordered by the Senate to join the Venetian army encamped near Vicenza to rally a defence against invading Spanish and German troops. It was owing to the dangerous nature of this assignment that Loredan hastily made his will in June 1513. His fears were soon realized, for he was beheaded and died in the Battle of La Motta at Creazzo outside Vicenza several months later. According to his last wishes, he was buried in the cappella maggiore of the church of San Michele in Isola whose construction he had helped to finance.[6]

References

  1. ^ Berendt, John (2005). The City of Falling Angels. Penguin Press. ISBN 1-59420-058-0.
  2. ^ "Ca' Vendramin Calergi and the Wagner Museum: a symphony on the Grand Canal | visitvenezia.eu". www.visitvenezia.eu/en. Retrieved 2021-05-18.
  3. ^ Italian Art Masterpieces of Sculpture. 1935.
  4. ^ Gusman, Pierre (1926). Venise.
  5. ^ Muir, E. (1993). Mad Blood Stirring: Vendetta & factions in Friuli during the Renaissance. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 116–120.
  6. ^ Jewitt, James R. (28 November 2022). "Titian and textile: Rediscovering the Loredan collection between Venice and Brescia". Journal of the History of Collections. doi:10.1093/jhc/fhac046. hdl:10919/114536.