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Coordinates: 45°26′23″N 12°20′09″E / 45.43972°N 12.33583°E / 45.43972; 12.33583, "Venezia, super hotel a Ca' da Mosto. The Ca' da Mosto currently sits empty, with the high waters of the canal having breached its basement. The Malinke were the westernmost peoples of the old Mali empire. The palace is one of the oldest on the Grand Canal, parts of it, according to John Julius Norwich, dating back even to the eleventh century. The products purchased on this website www.seventy.it (the “website”) are sold by Cà da Mosto S.p.A., with registered office in Scorzè (Venice) – Italy, via Venezia 146, VAT No., Tax Code and registration in the Venice Register of Companies under No. Copyright © 27/09/2020 Alamy Ltd. All rights reserved. The Ca' da Mosto is a 13th-century, Venetian-Byzantine style palace, the oldest on the Grand Canal, located between the Rio dei Santi Apostoli and the Palazzo Bollani Erizzo, in the sestiere of Cannaregio in Venice, Italy. Remnants of an open stairway can be seen in the public courtyard.Especially in the water floor, the brickwork is severely damaged. “Dumpy” with reference to its shape or because people dumped things there? The da Mosto, who did not build the palace, owned it from the mid of the 13th century until 1554. The 20th century has seen two major restoration campaigns, one between 1902 and 1912 following the collapse of San Marco’s Campanile and one, which is still ongoing, after the floodings of 1966. He ascended some distance up the Gambia River, but, finding the people hostile, he returned to Portugal. The oldest remaining palace on the Grand Canal, the Ca' da Mosto, was owned by the family for generations until 1603. Your Lightboxes will appear here when you have created some. Copyright © 2020 Gregory Dowling. Returning to the African shore, he sailed south from the region of the Gambia to the coast of modern Guinea-Bissau. Description: Concerning the original "byzantine" substance, the Ca' da Mosto surely is the most important example of a 13th century palace in Venice, especialy after all other palaces from that period - like the complex Loredan and Farsetti near the Rialto - have endured 19th century restorations. Terrible!' According to an interview in The Lady, the palace is the building Count Francesco da Mosto, a descendant of its eponymous former owners, would most like to restore. In 1769 and 1775 the Holy Roman Emperor and son of Maria Theresa, Joseph II, lived here during his stay in Venice. Between the 16th and the 18th centuries the Ca' da Mosto housed the well-known Albergo Leon Bianco (the White Lion Hotel). Restoration is in fact now under way; the Grand Canal façade, as can be seen here, is now splendid, while the back-entrance, looking onto a rather dismal courtyard, is still clad in scaffolding.