Da Mula Morosini Palace

Venetian Gothic villa · 15th century · Murano, Venice, Italy

Palazzo da Mula Morosini

Palazzo da Mula is a Venetian Gothic villa on the island of Murano in the Venice Lagoon, standing on the south bank of the Canale degli Angeli near the Ponte Vivarini bridge on the sub-island of San Pietro Martire. It is one of the few surviving examples of 15th-century residential architecture on Murano, an island historically renowned as the centre of Venetian glass production. The palace’s Gothic arcade facing the canal makes it one of Murano’s most photographed landmarks.

At a glance

Type
Venetian Gothic palazzo / villa
Period
15th century; associated with the da Mula and Morosini noble families
Style
Venetian Gothic
Location
San Pietro Martire, Murano, Venice Lagoon, Italy
Coordinates
45.4649° N, 12.1827° E
Current use
Government offices (Municipality of Venice)

Overview

Palazzo da Mula stands as a rare survivor of the aristocratic residential culture that once flourished on Murano, when Venetian noble families maintained villas on the island both to oversee their glass-manufacturing interests and to enjoy its gardens and relative quiet. The building’s water-facing arcade of pointed Gothic arches, set above a stone base, is characteristic of the Venetian Gothic style at its most refined. Today the building serves administrative functions for the municipality and is not open to the public interior, though its canal facade is freely visible and much admired.

History

The palace takes its name from the da Mula family, a Venetian patrician house that held significant interests in Murano’s glass industry and maintained the property through the late medieval and early Renaissance periods. It subsequently passed to the Morosini family, another powerful Venetian noble house, giving rise to the compound name by which it is sometimes known. Over the centuries the building underwent modifications that partially altered its original Gothic configuration, but the canal facade retains much of its 15th-century character. The Municipality of Venice eventually acquired the property and adapted it for civic use.

What you see

The principal feature is the multi-bay Gothic arcade on the canal elevation, where slender columns support pointed arches with carved capitals — a formal vocabulary that mirrors the great Venetian palaces on the Grand Canal in miniature. The building is set directly on the water, its base of Istrian stone rising from the canal edge in the traditional Venetian manner. The surrounding neighbourhood of San Pietro Martire, with the adjacent Dominican church of the same name and the glass-furnace district, provides rich context for understanding the building’s original social environment.

Cultural significance

Palazzo da Mula is an important document of the aristocratic culture that made Murano a prestigious address as well as an industrial centre during the height of the Venetian Republic. Its survival alongside the glass furnaces and the church of San Pietro Martire illustrates the coexistence of craft production, religious life, and patrician residence that defined Murano’s social geography for centuries. The building is listed among the architectural heritage of the Venice Lagoon.

Practical information

Address
Fondamenta Cavour, Murano, 30141 Venice, Italy
Access
Exterior freely visible from the Canale degli Angeli; interior houses municipal offices (restricted access)
Nearby
Museo del Vetro di Murano (Murano Glass Museum) — open to the public, 5 minutes walk

Getting there

Take vaporetto Line 4.1 or 4.2 from Fondamente Nove (mainland Venice) to Murano Colonna or Murano Venier stops; the palace is a short walk from either stop along the Canale degli Angeli. From the Piazzale Roma or Ferrovia (Santa Lucia station) take a direct vaporetto to Murano. The island is approximately 1.5 kilometres north-east of Venice proper.

Sources & resources

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