The influence of
Islamic architecture is reflected in some features of the Venetian style, in particular the use of colour and pattern on outside walls, and sometimes stone grills on windows, and perhaps purely decorative
crenellations on rooflines. During the period the Venetian economy was heavily bound up with trade with both the Islamic world and the
Byzantine Empire, and the architectural styles of these two are somewhat entangled, especially in the early Islamic period. As an example, decorating walls with large
veneers of fancy coloured marble or other stones, which was certainly a Venetian taste, was also found in Byzantine and Islamic architecture, but both had derived it from imperial
Roman architecture. There are still examples in
Ravenna (ruled by Venice from 1440 to 1509),
Milan as well as Rome, and very likely much of the stripping of these from other surviving Roman buildings had not yet taken place. Venetians may also have regarded some aspects of Byzantine and Islamic architecture as reflecting the world of
Early Christianity – all over Italy "eastern" costume very often served for biblical figures in art, and the paintings of some Venetians, for example
St Mark Preaching at Alexandria by
Gentile Bellini () also use clearly Islamic architecture (including stone grills), although also reflecting the Byzantine styles of
Constantinople, which Bellini visited in 1479, only some twenty-five years after it became the
Ottoman capital. There were also Venetian connections with Islamic styles though
Sicily and southern Italy, and possibly
al-Andalus (Islamic Spain). Venetians probably saw the eastern elements in their architecture in a complex way, reflecting and celebrating both their history and the cause of their trade-derived wealth. Venetian traders, and those of rival cities, reached into
Persia and
Central Asia in the
Pax Mongolica after the
Mongol conquests, from roughly 1240 to 1360. There were small Venetian colonies of merchants in
Alexandria, as well as Constantinople. Venice's relations with the Byzantine Empire were still more intimate and complicated, involving many wars, treaties, and massacres. Venezia_-_Palazzo_Minotto-Barbarigo_-_facciata.jpg|
Palazzo Barbarigo Minotto (Venice) Ca' Foscari.jpg|
Ca' Foscari, built in late Venetian Gothic style Palazzo Barbaro a San Vidal.jpg|
Ca' Barbaro on the
Grand Canal Palazzo Dario.jpg|
Palazzo Dario was later renovated with Renaissance features. On the left, Palazzo Barbaro Wolkoff. Palais Bembo.jpg|
Palazzo Bembo on the Grand Canal, close to the
Rialto Bridge Basilica dei Santi Giovanni e Paolo.jpg|
Santi Giovanni e Paolo, 1340s Venise-Palazzo-Foscari-Giudecca795.jpg|
Palazzo Foscari on the island of
Giudecca Hotel Danieli-dandolo 2012.jpg|
Palazzo Dandolo, somewhat "restored" and elaborated in the 19th century Palazzo Loredan dell'Ambasciatore (Venice).jpg|
Palazzo Loredan dell'Ambasciatore. The rectangular windows of the mezzanine show this is fact a late 15th-century building, retaining a Gothic style into the Renaissance. File:Venezia - Palazzo Contarini Fasan.jpg|
Palazzo Contarini Fasan Exterior of Palazzo Molin, San Marco, Venice.jpg|
Palazzo Molin del Cuoridoro. Palazzo Pisani Moretta (Venice).jpg|
Palazzo Pisani Moretta in the
sestiere of
San Polo ==Revival==