Giorgio Loredan

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Giorgio Loredan
Count of Zadar, Chioggia and Padua
Bornbefore 1404
Venice
Died1475 (aged 71 at least)
Venice
Offices
Family House of Loredan
FatherMarco di Fantino Loredan

Giorgio Loredan (died 1475) was a Venetian nobleman, admiral, military general and politician of the Loredan family, known for investigating political crimes and scandals as head of the Council of Ten.[1]

Giorgio Loredan was born in Venice, in the parish of San Canciano, between the end of the fourteenth and the beginning of the fifteenth century, and certainly before 1404, of Marco di Fantino Loredan and a woman of unknown lineage. The name of Giorgio's wife (a daughter of Nicolò Gabriel) and the year of marriage are also unknown. This reticence of sources regarding his private life can be explained by the fact that he had no children, as well as his only brother, Andrea, for which this nucleus of the family died out with them.[1]

Giorgio was part of the conspicuous branch of the Loredan di San Cancian, who in the fifteenth century gave the Republic the most prestigious commanders of the Venetian navy, all of whom reached the dignity of Procurator of Saint Mark, so it is not surprising that the first news concerning him precisely to serve on the sea; it was not he, but the namesake brother of the Captain General Pietro Loredan, the commander of the small Cretan squad that on 14 August 1431 received the order from the Senate to cross between Corfu and Capo Colonne to intercept the Genoese ships, while the bulk of the fleet entered the Tyrrhenian Sea. This is not the only homonym one encounters in reconstructing the biography of Giorgio. In those years a Giorgio Loredan by Francesco was also politically active, so the three co-presences involve many problems of identification, especially when the sources do not specify the father's name or provide other useful information.[1]

Career

Ancestry

References

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