Timeline of the city of Rome

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The city of Rome, Italy, has had an extensive history since antiquity.

Early history

Tradition states that Romulus and Remus were raised by a wolf before founding Rome in 753 BC.
  • 1000 BC – Latins begin to settle in Italy
  • . 753 BC - City of Rome established by Romulus and Remus according to Livius
A map of Rome in 753 BC. Colours show topography, with green lowlands and brown highlands. The Latin names of hills are included in all caps.
  • After 578 BC Servius Tullius made built a circum wall around Rome.
A map of the City of the Four Regions, roughly corresponding to the city limits during the later kingdom. The division is traditionally, though probably incorrectly, attributed to Servius Tullius

.

Republic

19th-century painting of the Gallic leader Brennus looting Rome after the Battle of the Allia in 390 BC
Map of the city of Rome in 44 BC

Imperial city

St Peter, regarded in Catholic tradition as the first Pope, is believed to have been crucified in Rome during the reign of Nero (c. 64–67 AD).[2]
The Colosseum opened in 80 AD
  • 27 BC - Augustus is made Rome's first emperor.
  • 13 BC - The Senate commissions the Ara Pacis to honor Augustus' return to Rome.
  • c. 60 AD - Paul the Apostle arrives in Rome.
  • 64 AD - The Great Fire of Rome, rumored to be blamed by Nero on the Christians.
  • c. 65 AD - Blamed for causing the Great Fire, Christians in the city are persecuted.
  • 72 AD - Work on the Flavian Amphitheatre (Colosseum) begins.
  • 80 AD - While Titus is inspecting the damage of the eruption of Vesuvius, a fire breaks out in the city for three days, destroying Capitoline temples and the Pantheon.[3]
  • 125 AD - Emperor Hadrian has the Pantheon reconstructed, assuming its current appearance.
  • 212 AD - All the inhabitants of the empire are granted citizenship of Rome.
  • 216 AD - Work on the Baths of Caracalla is completed.
  • 217 AD - Fire, possibly caused by a lightning strike, damages the Flavian Amphitheatre.[4]
  • 225 AD - Mathematicians allowed to teach publicly at Rome.[citation needed]
  • 247 AD - The first millennium of Rome is celebrated.
  • 270 AD - Construction of the Aurelian Wall begins.
Aurelian wall around 280 AD
The most important buildings inside city of late ancient Rome

Late antiquity and early medieval period

19th-century painting of the Visigothic Sack of Rome in 410 AD
A map of the city of Rome in the 10th and 11th centuries

High Middle Ages

The Papal throne in the Archbasilica of St. John Lateran dates from the 13th century
  • 1084 - The city of Rome is attacked by the Normans
  • 1108 - The church of San Clemente is in this year rebuilt.
  • 1140 - The church of Santa Maria in Trastevere is restored.
  • 1200 - The city becomes an independent commune
  • 1232 - The cloisters in the Basilica of St. John Lateran are finished.
  • 1300 - Pope Boniface VIII proclaims the First Holy Year.
  • 1309 - The Papacy is moved to Avignon under Pope Clement V
  • 1347 - The patriot and rebel Cola di Rienzo tries to restore the Roman Republic.
  • 1348 - As in most of Europe, the Black Death strikes Rome.

Roman Renaissance

From 1508 to 1512, Michelangelo painted the Ceiling of the Sistine Chapel

Baroque period

The Church of the Gesù was the first Baroque structure, built in 1568
The current St. Peter's Basilica was finished in 1626
Rome around 1642
  • 1651 - Piazza Navona is fully re-designed by Bernini.
  • 1653 - Pope Innocent X issues the bull "Cum occasione impressionis libri" condemning heresy of Jansenism.
  • 1656 - Bernini's colonnades in St. Peter's Square are begun.
  • 1657 - Borromini finishes his work in Sant' Agnese in Agone.
  • 1676 - Pope Innocent XI (1676-1689) initiates major reforms; stabilises papal finances; condemn nepotism; upgrades clerical morals; finances Austria's wars against Ottoman Empire to protect Vienna and Hungary. However he fails in efforts to reduce royal control of the Church in France.
  • 1694 - The Palazzo di Montecitorio is finished.
  • 1732 - Work on the Trevi Fountain begins.
  • 1734 - The Palazzo Nuovo is made by Pope Clement XII the world's first public museum.
  • 1735 - The Spanish Steps are designed.
  • 1751 - The Views of Rome by Piranesi revives interest in Rome's classical ruins.
  • 1762 - The Trevi Fountain is completed.
  • 1792 - Pope Clement XIII tomb by Canova is completed.
  • 1797 - Napoleon Bonaparte captures Rome.
  • 1798 - New Roman Republic declared by Napoleon, Pope Pius VI exiled.
  • 1799 - Napoleon is driven out of Rome and Italy by the Russians and the Austrians

19th century and Risorgimento

Illustration of the proclamation of the 1849 Roman Republic in the Piazza del Popolo.
  • 1800 - 1801 - Napoleon retakes Italy and Rome.
Rome around 1800

20th century and modern Rome

The Altare della Patria was built in honour of King Victor Emmanuel II in 1911
Fascists, led by Benito Mussolini, at the March on Rome in 1922

21st century

See also

Other cities in the macroregion of Central Italy:(it)

References

Further reading

Related Articles

Wikiwand AI