Military Naval School Francesco Morosini
The Francesco Morosini Naval Military School is an Italian Navy education college in Venice, occupying the historic Palazzo Vendramin Grimani on the Riva degli Schiavoni. Founded in 1887 and named after the celebrated 17th-century Doge and admiral Francesco Morosini, it prepares students for entry into the Italian Naval Academy and stands as one of the few military schools in the world housed within a Renaissance palazzo on a UNESCO World Heritage waterfront.
At a glance
- Type
- Military education college (Italian Navy)
- Period
- Founded 1887; palazzo dates to the 16th century
- Style
- Venetian Renaissance palace; institutional adaptations
- Location
- Riva degli Schiavoni, Castello, Venice, Veneto, Italy
Overview
The Francesco Morosini Naval Military School is operated by the Italian Navy as a secondary-level military college, preparing cadets — known as allievi — for the competitive entrance examinations of the Naval Academy at Livorno. The school is housed in a historic palazzo on the Riva degli Schiavoni, Venice’s celebrated waterfront promenade, and its name honours Francesco Morosini (1619–1694), the last great Doge-admiral of the Venetian Republic who recaptured the Peloponnese from the Ottomans. The institution is open to both male and female students from across Italy.
History
The school was established in 1887, in the decades following Italian unification, when the new Kingdom of Italy sought to build naval power commensurate with its Mediterranean ambitions. Venice, with its deep seafaring heritage and available palazzo real estate, was the natural location. The building chosen was the Palazzo Vendramin Grimani, a 16th-century residence on the Riva degli Schiavoni. Over the 20th century the school survived two world wars and the reorganisation of Italian armed forces, retaining its distinctive Venetian address and its tradition of rigorous academic and physical training.
What you see
The school’s façade faces the wide Riva degli Schiavoni, the stone embankment that stretches east from Piazza San Marco. The palazzo exterior retains its Renaissance character — arched windows, Istrian stone cornices, a waterfront loggia — though the interior has been adapted to serve classrooms, dormitories, a chapel, and a small naval museum. The Italian Navy ensign and school flag are flown from the main portal. Cadets in uniform are a regular sight on the riva during morning exercises and ceremonial formations.
Cultural significance
The school embodies the continuity between Venice’s centuries-long naval supremacy — the Arsenal, the war galleys, the admirals and dogi — and the modern Italian Navy. Naming it after Morosini, the last great commander of the Serenissima, was a deliberate act of cultural memory at a moment when the unified Italian state was constructing its national identity. The institution’s setting on the Riva degli Schiavoni, in the city that built the Mediterranean’s most powerful medieval fleet, amplifies this symbolism.
Practical information
- Address
- Riva degli Schiavoni, Castello, 30122 Venice VE, Italy
- Public access
- The school is an active military institution; interior visits are not open to the public. The façade and waterfront are freely accessible.
- Coordinates
- 45.4265° N, 12.3648° E
Getting there
Take the ACTV vaporetto Line 1 or Line 2 to the San Zaccaria stop on the Riva degli Schiavoni; the school is a short walk east along the waterfront from Piazza San Marco. From Venice Santa Lucia railway station, board Line 1 towards Lido and alight at San Zaccaria (approximately 25 minutes). The Riva degli Schiavoni is pedestrian-only and fully accessible on foot.
