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Ravenna
Q13364Ravenna: port in northern Italy, residence of several Roman emperors, capital of the Ostrogoths and Byzantine exarchs.
Early History
- Perhaps an Etruscan port on the Adriatic Sea
- Occupied by the Celtic tribe of the Senones; according to Zosimus, quoting a history of the reign of Marcus Aurelius, the name is derived from Rhene, which is indeed a Celtic word for water.note
- 234 BCE: Conquered by the Romans
- 49 BCE: Site of Caesar's departure to the river Rubico (more)
- The emperor Augustus creates the Ravenna Navy, which can bring troops from the Danube to everywhere in the Mediterranean
- c.69: Marines from the Ravenna navy, who have sided with Vespasian during his war against the emperor Vitellius, are conscripted as the Second Legion Adiutrix
- The emperor Trajan (r.98-117) builds an aqueduct
- Captured by a group of Germanic POWs during the Marcomannic Wars of Marcus Aurelius
- A citizen of Ravenna, Aspasius, raises to the rank of secretary of Greek letters of the emperor Caracalla (r.211-217)
Late Antiquity
- 306 Civil war. After the death of Constantius I Chlorus, Severus II becomes emperor, but he is forced to recognize the late ruler's son Constantine I the Great as caesar and is faced with a rebellion in Rome, which is occupied by Maxentius, the son of Maximianus. Severus marches on Rome, but Maximianus, returned from retirement, forces him to return to Ravenna, where Severus surrenders and abdicates.note
- Zosimus calls Ravenna in this age "a strong and populous city".note It is the capital of the province Flaminia.
- 402: The emperor Honorius (r.395-423) transfers his residence from Mediolanum to Ravenna, surrounded by marshes and easy to defend, his residence; his half-sister Galla Placidia and his successor Valentinian III (r.425-455) reside in Ravenna too
- 408: Execution of Stilicho
- 490-493: Last stand of Odoacer, who had deposed the last emperor of the Roman West (Romulus Augustulus), in his war against the Ostrogoths of Theodoric
- Capital of the Ostrogoths
- 535: Start of the Byzantine conquest of Italy (Belisarius)
- 540: Ravenna captured
- c.588: The emperor Maurice reorganizes the western provinces; Ravenna becomes the residence of the Byzantine exarch
Monuments
Ravenna is famous for its churches and mosaics, which are comparable to those at Porec in Istria, across the Adriatic
- Fourth or early fifth century: Orthodox Baptistry ("Baptistry of Neon"; mosaics between 451 and 475)
- 425-450: Mausoleum of Galla Placidia (she is not buried there)
- 504: Sant'Apollinare Nuovo
- c.510: Arian Baptistry
- 520: Mausoleum of Theodoric the Great
- 545: San Michele (dedicated 547)
- 548: San Vitale
- 549: Sant'Apollinare in Classe