A Fortunate Shot: The Life of Francesco Morosini, Destroyer of the Parthenon
In the summer of 1687, a Venetian mortar round passed through the marble roof of the Parthenon and detonated the Ottoman gunpowder store within. The commander who reported the result called it a fortunate shot. His name was Francesco Morosini, and it was the most consequential decision of the most consequential military career in the final century of the Venetian Republic's existence.
A Fortunate Shot is the definitive narrative biography of this extraordinary figure: the Captain-General who reconquered the Peloponnese from the Ottoman Empire across four brilliant campaign seasons, the doge elected to his office while actively commanding in the field, the man who survived twenty-two years defending the siege of Candia only to be prosecuted for treason upon his return, and the commander who extracted the most favourable surrender terms in Venetian history from a Grand Vizier who held every military advantage. From the biological warfare plots of the Cretan War to the destruction of the Parthenon, from the runic inscriptions on the Piraeus Lion to the constitutional revolution of the dual mandate, William Burke-Larkin traces the full arc of a life lived entirely in the service of a republic already in irreversible decline.
This is the story of individual greatness in collision with institutional limits, and of a civilisation that consumed its finest servant in the very act of celebrating him.