Pope Paul II
1417 CE–1471 CE · Venice
Born Pietro Barbo into a wealthy Venetian merchant family, Paul II rose through his uncle Eugene IV's patronage, becoming a cardinal young. A lover of antiquities and pageantry, he amassed a celebrated collection of gems and built the Palazzo Venezia. His reign saw friction with humanist scholars: he suppressed the Roman Academy, jailing some of its members under suspicion of paganism and conspiracy, which earned him a hostile portrait from the humanist Platina. He revived public festivals, shortened the jubilee interval to twenty-five years, and worked to resist Ottoman expansion after Constantinople's fall.
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VeniceויניציאהItaly
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About Venice
# Venice In the late fifteenth and early sixteenth centuries, Venice was the jewel of Mediterranean trade—a maritime republic whose merchant galleys connected Europe to the Ottoman Empire and beyond, ruled by an oligarchy of patrician families whose power rested on commerce and naval supremacy. The city rose from its lagoon like a dream of marble and water, its canals lined with warehouses bulging with spices, silks, and precious goods, while the great Basilica of San Marco dominated the skyline as a symbol of Venetian pride and wealth. Jews had been permitted to settle in Venice for centuries, drawn by its role as a crossroads of Christian and Muslim worlds; by the fifteenth century, the community was small but prosperous, composed largely of merchants, physicians, and moneylenders who lived under carefully negotiated restrictions and periodic renewals of their charter. Though forbidden from owning property in most of the city, Venetian Jews occupied a precarious but culturally fertile space, their status as trusted intermediaries in international trade granting them a unique visibility and protection. The Jewish scholars who gathered in Venice during these decades found in the city not only safety but access to the vast networks of information and texts flowing through its ports—a place where Hebrew learning could flourish alongside the hum of commerce, and where a Jewish sage might sit in study while the bells of San Marco rang across the water.
In Venice at the same time
In the same place & time
Sages whose lives overlapped with Pope Paul II’s in the same cities, drawn from their recorded journeys.
In the same tradition
Pope Gregory XII, Pope Callixtus III, Pope Eugene IV, Pope Nicholas V, Nicholas of Cusa, Pope Pius II, Pope Alexander VI
The world in their lifetime
Thinkers and teachers of other traditions whose lives overlapped with Pope Paul II’s — a glimpse of the wider world they lived in. Drawn purely from recorded birth and death years.
Jewish world
Works
No works attributed in the corpus yet.