Late Middle Ages · Europe · Politics
1479
Peace of Constantinople
1479
Venice and the Ottoman Empire signed their peace treaty in Constantinople, ending sixteen years of war. Venice kept its commercial rights but paid tribute. The treaty formalized a new Mediterranean reality: the Ottomans were now its dominant naval power, and Italian city-states would trade, not rule, in its waters. Venetian merchants traded freely throughout Ottoman territories in exchange for annual tribute, formalizing commercial interdependence.