This page is a stub. It will be expanded to a full-fledged article.
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)
-
Ravenna, Relief of a shipbuilder - 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
-
Ravenna, Mausoleum of Theodoric - 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
Sant'Apollinare Nuovo
![]() Ravenna, Sant'Apollinare Nuovo, Exterior |
![]() Ravenna, Sant'Apollinare Nuovo, Interior |
![]() Ravenna, Sant'Apollinare Nuovo, Mosaic of the Three Magi |
![]() Ravenna, Sant'Apollinare Nuovo, Mosaic of Christ |