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Venice Preserv'd
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==Context== The play contains a fair number of political parallels. The character of Senator Antonio is a reference to [[Anthony Ashley Cooper, 1st Earl of Shaftesbury|Shaftesbury]], and the grand plot resembles the [[Gunpowder Plot]], among others, most notably the so-called "Spanish Conspiracy" against Venice of 1618. The oceanic city of Venice had been used as a stand-in for London before, but the subtext most noticeable to contemporaries was the parallel with the [[Exclusion Crisis]] (see, for example, [[John Dryden|Dryden]]'s ''[[Absalom and Achitophel]]''). Therefore, one reason for the play's outstanding initial success was its political allusiveness. ''Venice Preserv'd'' also has several feminist issues. As the play was written in the [[English Restoration|Restoration]] period, when the legal protections for women were few, the emotional heart of the play is the vulnerability of women. Aquillina, the play's [[courtesan]], is shown very little regard by the men in the play. Her lover, Pierre, refuses to reveal the plot against the Senate to her, suggesting that women shouldn't talk out of bed, and Antonio never calls her by her name, but refers to her only as his "little Nacky" (a slang term for a woman's [[genitalia]]). Belvidera is reduced to collateral when she is left in the hands of men her husband barely knows. Jaffeir's honour takes precedence over Belvidera, and the tension over love and honour is the male characters' crisis. At the end of the play, Jaffeir chooses his devotion to his friend over his devotion to his wife, and the two men die honourably, whereas Belvidera is left to die an inglorious death resulting from her madness. Contemporary theatre-goers were sensitive to the [[tragedy|tragic]] tension between the public and private obligations of the characters. ''Venice Preserv'd'' was one of the first of the [[she-tragedy]] plays. Contemporary audiences responded to the [[pathos]] of the character of Belvidera, which was written for the tragedienne Elizabeth Barry and capitalised on Barry's phenomenal success in the role of the similarly helpless Monimia in Otway's ''[[The Orphan (play)|The Orphan]]'' (1680). Of all of the characters, Belvidera is the most powerless in the face of overwhelming social and political turmoil. Each of the characters has a conflict between the social and personal laws of class and self. Belvidera has to struggle against duty to her father and to love. Jaffeir has to struggle against "honour" and love, as well as friendship and ideals. Priuli must decide between love of daughter and personal pride. Belvidera remained a starring role for actresses because her tragic situation was most affecting for audiences.
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