
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


Send us a text
April 12th, 1204 AD. A 97-year-old blind man led the assault on Constantinople—the richest city on earth—and walked away with three-eighths of an empire. His name was Enrico Dandolo, Doge of Venice. And what happened next changed the course of Western history.
This is the story of how Venice—built on mud, wooden stakes, and 118 swampy islands—became the wealthiest trading empire in medieval history. How they lasted over 1,000 years as an independent republic. How they controlled Mediterranean trade for 600+ years. And how they invented mass production six centuries before Henry Ford.
Venice didn't conquer territory. They conquered trade routes. They didn't build armies. They built the Venetian Arsenal—the world's first factory—which could produce a fully equipped warship in a single day. When King Henry III of France visited in 1574, Arsenal workers built an entire combat-ready warship during his lunch just to flex.
But Venice's real genius was understanding that wealth isn't built on land—it's built on controlling what flows across it. Infrastructure. Capital. Network effects. Financial innovation. Information advantage.
In this episode, we explore:
If you're a real estate investor, business builder, or anyone thinking long-term about wealth creation, Venice offers a masterclass in competitive advantage, infrastructure control, and what happens when your moat disappears.
Subscribe to The Timeless Investor for weekly deep dives into the builders, empires, and timeless principles that create lasting wealth.
Subscribe to the Timeless Investor Newsletter for our long-form content.
Follow the Timeless Investor Show if you want to hear more of our podcast content.
Get your own copy of Timeless Wealth: Real Estate Through the Ages.
If you want to learn about new investment opportunities through Lombard Equities Group (accredited investors only), please reach out here.
Think Well. Act Wisely. Build Something Timeless.
By Arie van GemerenSend us a text
April 12th, 1204 AD. A 97-year-old blind man led the assault on Constantinople—the richest city on earth—and walked away with three-eighths of an empire. His name was Enrico Dandolo, Doge of Venice. And what happened next changed the course of Western history.
This is the story of how Venice—built on mud, wooden stakes, and 118 swampy islands—became the wealthiest trading empire in medieval history. How they lasted over 1,000 years as an independent republic. How they controlled Mediterranean trade for 600+ years. And how they invented mass production six centuries before Henry Ford.
Venice didn't conquer territory. They conquered trade routes. They didn't build armies. They built the Venetian Arsenal—the world's first factory—which could produce a fully equipped warship in a single day. When King Henry III of France visited in 1574, Arsenal workers built an entire combat-ready warship during his lunch just to flex.
But Venice's real genius was understanding that wealth isn't built on land—it's built on controlling what flows across it. Infrastructure. Capital. Network effects. Financial innovation. Information advantage.
In this episode, we explore:
If you're a real estate investor, business builder, or anyone thinking long-term about wealth creation, Venice offers a masterclass in competitive advantage, infrastructure control, and what happens when your moat disappears.
Subscribe to The Timeless Investor for weekly deep dives into the builders, empires, and timeless principles that create lasting wealth.
Subscribe to the Timeless Investor Newsletter for our long-form content.
Follow the Timeless Investor Show if you want to hear more of our podcast content.
Get your own copy of Timeless Wealth: Real Estate Through the Ages.
If you want to learn about new investment opportunities through Lombard Equities Group (accredited investors only), please reach out here.
Think Well. Act Wisely. Build Something Timeless.