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If I say, "Venice," do you imagine yourself gliding down the Grand Canal,
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serenaded by a gondolier?
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There's no doubt that the gondola is a symbol of Venice, Italy,
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but how did this curious banana-shaped black boat get its distinctive look?
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The origins of the Venetian gondola are lost to history,
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but by the 1500s, some 10,000 gondolas transported dignitaries, merchants, and goods
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through the city's canals.
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In fact, Venice teemed with many types of handmade boats,
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from utilitarian rafts to the Doge's own ostentatious gilded barge.
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Like a modern day taxi system, gondolas were leased to boatmen who made the rounds of the city's ferry stations.
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Passengers paid a fare to be carried from one side of the Grand Canal to the other,
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as well as to other points around the city.
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But gondoliers soon developed a bad rap.
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Historical documents describe numerous infractions involving boatmen, including cursing, gambling, extorting passengers—even occasional acts of violence.
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To minimize the unpredictability of canal travel,
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Venetian citizens who could afford it, purchased their own gondolas,
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just as a celebrity might use a private car and driver today.
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These wealthy Venetians hired two private gondoliers to ferry them around the city and maintain their boats.
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The gondolas soon became a status symbol, much like an expensive car,
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with custom fittings, carved and gilded ornamentation,
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and seasonal fabrics, like silk and velvet.
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However, the majority of gondolas seen today are black
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because in 1562, Venetian authorities decreed that all but ceremonial gondolas be painted black in order to avoid sinfully extravagant displays.
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Apparently, Venetian authorities did not believe in "pimping their rides."
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Still, some wealthy Venetians chose to pay the fines
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in order to maintain their ornamental gondolas,
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a small price to keep up appearances.
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The distinctive look of the gondola developed over many centuries.
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Each gondola was constructed in a family boatyard called a 'squero.'
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From their fathers and grandfathers, sons learned how to select and season
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pieces of beech, cherry, elm, fir, larch, lime, mahogany, oak, and walnut.
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The gondola makers began with a wooden template
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that may have been hammered into the workshop floor generations earlier.
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From this basic form, they attached fore and aft sterns,
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then formed the longitudinal planks and ribs that made up the frame
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of a boat designed to glide through shallow, narrow canals.
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A gondola has no straight lines or edges.
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Its familiar profile was achieved through an impressive fire and water process that involved warping the boards with torches made of marsh reeds set ablaze.
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However, the majority of the 500 hours that went into building a gondola
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involved the final stages:
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preparing surfaces and applying successive coats of waterproof varnish.
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The varnish was a family recipe, as closely guarded as one for risotto
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or a homemade sauce.
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Yet even with the woodwork finished, the gondola was still not complete.
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Specialized artisans supplied their gondola-making colleagues
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with elaborate covered passenger compartments,
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upholstery, and ornaments of steel and brass.
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Oar makers became integral partners to the gondola makers.
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The Venetian oarlock, or 'fórcola,' began as a simple wooden fork,
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but evolved into a high-precision tool that allowed a gondolier
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to guide the oar into many positions.
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By the late 1800s,
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gondola makers began to make the left side of the gondola wider than the right
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as a counter balance to the force created by a single gondolier.
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This modification allowed rowers to steer from the right side only,
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and without lifting the oar from the water.
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While these modifications improved gondola travel,
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they were not enough to keep pace with motorized boats.
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Today, only about 400 gondolas glide through the waterways of Venice,
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and each year, fewer authentic gondolas are turned out by hand.
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But along the alleys, street signs contain words in Venetian dialect
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for the locations of old boatyards, oar makers, and ferry stations,
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imprinting the memory of the boat-building trades
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that once kept life in the most serene republic gliding along at a steady clip.