Palazzo Ducale

EN
IT
EN
Tickets

The Chamber of the Quarantia Criminale

Housing one of the three Councils of Forty, the highest appeal courts in the Venetian Republic, this is another room used in the administration of justice. The Quarantia Criminal was set up in the fifteenth century and, as the name suggests, dealt with cases of criminal law. It was a very important body as its members, who were part of the Senate as well, also had legislative powers. The wooden stalls date from the seventeenth century.

Discover the exhibited works

The Chamber of the Quarantia Criminale

The Cuoi Room

The Cuoi Room

The room beyond the Chamber of the Quarantia Criminale served as an archive, and was presumably lined with shelves and cabinets, similar to that one can now see on the far wall. This was not part of the original furnishings, nor were the cuoridoro, the gold-embossed leather panelling one can see on the other walls.

Discover the exhibited works

The Chamber of the Magistrato alle Leggi

This chamber housed the Magistratura dei Conservatori ed esecutori delle leggi e ordini degli uffici di San Marco e di Rialto, created in 1553. This was a unique legal system in Venice, responsible for the conservation and execution of laws and orders of the offices of San Marco and Rialto.

Discover the exhibited works

The Chamber of the Magistrato alle Leggi

Atrium of the Prisons

Atrium of the Prisons

Matteo Ponzone (1583 - after 1663), "The Visit of Doge Giovanni Corner to the Church of San Vio (after 1641)". Originally created to decorate the sumptuous Sala dei Banchetti. The painting depicts Doge Giovanni Corner's visit to the Church of Saints Vito and Modesto—a ceremony held in remembrance of the foiled conspiracy of Bajamonte Tiepolo in 1310.

Discover the work