History of Ravenna Emilia Romagna Italy - Travel Guide & Information 
This description page of Ravenna in the Italian region of Emilia Romagna, will guide you planning your trip to Italy and help you find useful travel information about the history of this Italian city.
Ravenna which dates from 2 BC was built on a series of islands in a
lagoon. Occupied by both the Etruscans and the Gauls, Ravenna was originally a
remote village founded among the marshes and lagoons of I's Adriatic coast, its
houses resting on wooden piles driven into the shifting mud, as those of Venice
were to be centuries later. Here generations of fishermen and peasants lived in
precarious safety, protected by the marshlands surrounding them.
The strategically-minded Romans, realizing the location’s potential,
incorporated it into the Empire in 89 B.C. Forty years later, Caesar gathered
his armies here before crossing the nearby Rubicon to defeat Pompey.
Around the time of the birth of Christ, the Roman emperor Octavius
Augustus Caesar, seeing the 's strategic advantages, chose it as the naval base
for his eastern Mediterranean fleet. The marshes were drained and shipping
canals were dug westward and northward, effectively assuring that Ravenna would
retain her strategic importance for centuries to come. The port was named
Classis, and it became Rome’s biggest naval base in the Adriatic. Installations
had to be built for 250 ships; it was the strongest fleet in the empire. Ravenna
became a “boom town.
In 402, with Rome declining and the barbarians at the gates, Emperor
Honorius moved his court from Milan to Ravenna, which became the capital of the
Western Roman Empire and one of the great cities of Europe. He did this partly
to be in closer proximity to his father, Theodosius II, ruler of the Eastern
Roman Empire, who could come to his aid. In 409, the Goths swept down the
peninsula, invading and completely overwhelming Rome. Hono's half-sister, Galla
Placidia, was kidnapped and held in captivity for nine years.
It is said that she became an early example of what we now call the
“Stockholm” syndrome, falling in love with one of her barbarian kidnappers and
going into battle by his side. Eventually Honorius ransomed her and sent her to
Theodosius along with her barbarian captor, Theodoric. When Honorius died, Galla
was sent to act as regent in Ravenna and Theodoric was officially adopted by
Theodosius. Galla ruled for 25 years and left several impressive monuments as a
legacy, including her Mausoleum.
Rome fell, but Ravenna flourished, first under the Visigoths, and
then under the Byzantines. Great churches were built with beautiful mosaics to
decorate them. But the Byzantine dream of reuniting East and West into a single
empire was destined to fail, and Ravenna fell slowly into decline.
In the 5th and 6th centuries Roman and Byzantine cultures converged
in Ravenna and transformed it into a Western Byzantium with superb mosaics.
In 741, Ravenna was captured by the Lombards, who were in turn
defeated by Pipin the Great. In gratitude, the Pope authorized Pipin and his son
Charlemagne to take anything they wished from the city, and their armies
obliged. Ravenna never forgave Rome for this. Withdrawing into her swamps, she
cut herself off so effectively that it was the only place Dante Alighierei, the
great 14th century poet, could find sanctuary after being exiled from
Florence.
The Da Polenta family, known as D's hosts, were lords in Ravenna
from the 13th to the 15th century. After a period of Venetian domination, the
city returned to papal control in 1509. During the Italian Wars, the French
defeated Spanish and papal forces at Ravenna in 1512 and the French commander,
Gaston de Foix, died in the battle.
The port of Classis gradually silted up and was abandoned. The city
was fought over and occupied by various powers, then slowly reduced to the rank
of provincial town, isolated and economically depressed.
In 1952, after a thousand years of stagnation, extensive deposits of
methane were discovered and new port facilities and industrial complexes sprang
up.
No articles at this time
|