The
Byzantine-style establishment may have existed as early as the 8th century, though the present structure is usually said to have been begun in 1104 during the reign of
Ordelafo Faliero, although there is no evidence for such a precise date. It definitely existed by the early 13th century. Initially the state
dockyard worked to maintain privately built
naval ships, but in 1320 the
Arsenale Nuovo () was built, much larger than the original. It enabled all the state's navy and the larger
merchant ships to be both constructed and maintained in one place. The Arsenal became an important center for
rope manufacture, and housing for the Arsenal workers grew up outside its walls. Venice developed methods of
mass-producing warships in the Arsenal, including the
frame-first system to replace the
Roman hull-first practice. This new system was much faster and required less wood. At the peak of its efficiency in the early 16th century, the Arsenal employed some 16,000 people who apparently were able to produce nearly one
ship each day, and could fit out, arm, and provision a newly built
galley with standardized parts on a
production-line basis not seen again until the
Industrial Revolution. also developed new
firearms at an early date, beginning with
bombards in the 1370s and numerous small arms for use against the
Genoese a few years later. The muzzle velocity of
handguns was improved beyond that of the
crossbow, creating armor-piercing rounds. Arsenal-produced arms were also noteworthy for their multi-purpose utility; the Venetian
condottieri leader,
Bartolomeo Colleoni, is usually given credit as being the first to mount the Arsenal's new lighter-weight
artillery on mobile carriages for field use. above the main gate at the Arsenal The Arsenal's main gate, the
Porta Magna, was built around 1460 and was one of the first works of
Venetian Renaissance architecture. It was based on the Roman
Arch of the Sergii, a
triumphal arch in
Pula in
Istria, now in Croatia but then Venetian territory. It was perhaps built by from a design by
Jacopo Bellini. Two marble lions looted from
Piraeus near Athens, situated beside it were added in 1687. One of the lions, known as the
Piraeus Lion, has notable
runic defacements that were probably carved into it by Scandinavian mercenaries in the 11th century. In the late 16th century, the Arsenal's designers experimented with larger ships as platforms for heavy naval guns. The largest was the
galleass, already used at the
Battle of Lepanto (1571) against the
Ottoman Turks, and developed from the old merchanting "great galley". It was huge, propelled by both
sails and
oars, with guns mounted on wheeled carriages along the sides in the modern fashion. It was slow and unwieldy in battle, however, and few were ever built. The
galleon, also developed at the Arsenal, was an armed sailing ship, a slimmer version of the merchant "round ship". It was useful in major naval battles, but not in the small bays and off the extensive
lee shores of the
Dalmatian coast. Significant parts of the Arsenal were destroyed under
Napoleonic rule, and later rebuilt to enable the Arsenal's present use as a
naval base. It is also used as a research center and an exhibition venue during the
Venice Biennale, and is home to a historic boat preservation center. File:Ponti, Carlo (ca. 1823-1893) - Venezia - Portale dell'Arsenale.jpg|Entrance to the Arsenal ca. 1860–70. Photo by
Carlo Ponti File:View of the entrance to the Arsenal by Canaletto, 1732.jpg|
View of the Entrance to the Arsenal by
Canaletto, 1732 File:Venice arsenale 2 1724.JPG|Venetian Arsenal, 1724 engraving by
Joan Blaeu ==Mass production==