Iacopo or Jacopo (I) Barozzi (died c. 1245) was a Venetian nobleman and official.
Iacopo Barozzi was born in Venice, in the parish of San Moisè.
[1] Beginning with Karl Hopf in the 19th century, several modern historians held that in the aftermath of the Fourth Crusade, Iacopo seized the Aegean islands of Santorini and Therasia, ruling them as their lord until his death c. 1245, when he was succeeded by his son, Andrea.
[5] In 1238, Iacopo Barozzi together with Romeo Querini concluded a treaty with al-Kamil, Saladin's nephew, that stipulated the construction of a fondaco for commercial exchanges and a mutual prohibition of acts of piracy against each other.
[5] From 1244 to 1245, he served in the high gubernatorial office of Duke of Candia, in the Venetian colony of Crete.