property to a place on the same sea, called Rivo Alto,
to which they brought their women, children, and aged
persons, leaving the youth in Padua to assist in her
defense. Besides these, the people of Monselice,
with the inhabitants of the surrounding hills, driven
by similar fears, fled to the same rocks. But
after Attila had taken Aquileia, and destroyed Padua,
Monselice, Vicenza, and Verona, the people of Padua
and others who were powerful, continued to inhabit
the marshes about Rivo Alto; and, in like manner, all
the people of the province anciently called Venetia,
driven by the same events, became collected in these
marshes. Thus, under the pressure of necessity,
they left an agreeable and fertile country to occupy
one sterile and unwholesome. However, in consequence
of a great number of people being drawn together into
a comparatively small space, in a short time they
made those places not only habitable, but delightful;
and having established among themselves laws and useful
regulations, enjoyed themselves in security amid the
devastations of Italy, and soon increased both in
reputation and strength. For, besides the inhabitants
already mentioned, many fled to these places from the
cities of Lombardy, principally to escape from the
cruelties of Clefis king of the Lombards, which greatly
tended to increase the numbers of the new city; and
in the conventions which were made between Pepin, king
of France, and the emperor of Greece, when the former,
at the entreaty of the pope, came to drive the Lombards
out of Italy, the duke of Benevento and the Venetians
did not render obedience to either the one or the other,
but alone enjoyed their liberty. As necessity
had led them to dwell on sterile rocks, they were
compelled to seek the means of subsistence elsewhere;
and voyaging with their ships to every port of the
ocean, their city became a depository for the various
products of the world, and was itself filled with
men of every nation.
For many years the Venetians sought no other dominion
than that which tended to facilitate their commercial
enterprises, and thus acquired many ports in Greece
and Syria; and as the French had made frequent use
of their ships in voyages to Asia, the island of Candia
was assigned to them in recompense for these services.
While they lived in this manner, their name spread
terror over the seas, and was held in veneration throughout
Italy. This was so completely the case, that they
were generally chosen to arbitrate in controversies
between the states, as occurred in the difference
between the Colleagues, on account of the cities they
had divided among themselves; which being referred
to the Venetians, they awarded Brescia and Bergamo
to the Visconti. But when, in the course of time,
urged by their eagerness for dominion, they had made
themselves masters of Padua, Vicenza, Trevisa, and
afterward of Verona, Bergamo, and Brescia, with many
cities in Romagna and the kingdom of Naples, other
nations were impressed with such an opinion of their