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From its founding in the Early Middle Ages, Venice has had a fraught relationship with the sea, dependent on it for food and trade, protected from the mainland by the waters of the lagoon, yet always threatened by changing environmental conditions. Today, though, wind and water lash the palaces and churches with alarming frequency. According to The Guardian, it's only the sixth recorded time the church has flooded in the last years, but the fourth in the last 20 years.
Venice is sinking, and this time it may go under. Venetians have always recognized that human choices would shape their relationship with the natural world. The sixth-century Roman statesman Cassiodorus described the Venetians gorging themselves on fish, harvesting salt, and living in "scattered homes, not the product of Nature, but cemented by the care of man into a firm foundation. Rather, as the French historian Elizabeth Crouzet-Pavan has shown , Venetians knew that the ecology of their lagoon was fragile and that either too much or not enough water flowing in or out could spell their destruction.
They build up the thin islands that sheltered the lagoon. They engaged in complex hydrology projects to shift the flow of rivers.
They watched as the neighboring city of Torcello collapsed in the mud, plague-ridden, malarial swamp. Italian council is flooded immediately after rejecting measures on climate change. I lived in Venice during the fall and winter of , residing in a little apartment on the Street of Paradise, above an antique bookshop, right by the church of Santa Maria Formosa the beautiful.
I was studying how medieval Venetians told stories about their city, building rich narratives that linked the city's destiny to complicated networks of trade and culture that stretched across the Adriatic and Mediterranean Seas.
Every day I would walk down streets that followed medieval paths and work with both textual and visual evidence in a library across from the great Basilica.
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