Ilya Muromets wrote:For all of you people wondering about the plausibility of a black man in 16th century Venice who's apparently well-off, do keep in mind that this is 1580. This was before the African slave trade really reached its peak (from the 17th to 18th centuries), and that before that trade lines between West Africa and Europe had been open for quite a while. True, there were records of black slaves in europe since the early 1500s, but it wasn't as common as it would later become. Black people in those times haven't yet become to be widely thought of only as sub-human slave labor, and quite a number of traders were quite willing to do business with them. In fact, some of the early black slaves in those eras actually were sold by African traders themselves. further ,there actually were a number of black people (mostly tradesmen and their families) living in Europe at that time (there's even records that some black African traders were residing in London).
Of course, there weren't that many of them. And we never see more than that one guy and his daughter here, so it's not like they're going overboard here. The guy's also, like many of you have mentioned, a boat builder. Boat-building and intercontinental trade basically go hand-in-hand.
EDIT: Expanded a bit on the first paragraph.
To elaborate; slavery as a 'Black' phenomenon and widespread denigration of africans is a later development - they were still enslaving white (including English, German, etc) indentures widely in the colonies and the conditions were at this time much the same. Not to say he'd be seen as normal, but he'd not be forbidden from pursuing a trade in Venice.
Though if he went around in that T-shirt for too long he might be.
It is instructive to compare and contrast Shakespere's two Venetian plays (it's speculated that he may have lived in Venice)
Othello, and
Merchant of Venice - the racism experienced by Shylock is far more extreme and ingrained in the play's treatment. Though some of that is likely to do with Othello being able to hack men in half.