The article offers a short profile of British historian Brian Pullan (1935-2022). One of the major experts on early modern European history of the second half of the twentieth century, Pullan authored pioneering studies on the social and economic history of early modern Venice, on Catholic policies of charity, and on the relations between both conversos and Jews and the Venetian Inquisition. Ranging from works of broad synthesis to monographs revolving around case-studies on specific sub-sectors of the Venetian society, Pullan’s methodologically and theoretically rigorous scholarship has exerted major and lasting influence on the historiographic literature devoted to the Most Serene Republic.
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