Reggio Calabria
Reggio Calabria | ||
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Country | Italy | |
region | Calabria | |
Metropolitan city | Reggio Calabria (RC) | |
Coordinates | 38 ° 7 ' N , 15 ° 40' E | |
height | 31 m slm | |
surface | 236 km² | |
Residents | 178,760 (Dec. 31, 2019) | |
Population density | 757 inhabitants / km² | |
Factions | Catona, Gebbione, Gallico, Archi, Gallina, Mosorrofa, Ortì, Pellaro | |
Post Code | 89100 | |
prefix | 0965 | |
ISTAT number | 080063 | |
Popular name | Reggini | |
Patron saint | San Giorgio | |
Website | Reggio di Calabria | |
Reggio Calabria [ ˌɾɛdːʒo kaˈlabɾia ], also Reggio di Calabria or Reggio for short (in antiquity Rhegion or Rhegium ), is a city on the southern tip of the Italian peninsula and capital of the metropolitan city of Reggio Calabria .
Reggio was the capital of the Calabria region until 1970 when it had to cede this function to Catanzaro . The regional parliament still has its seat in Reggio Calabria. With 178,760 inhabitants (as of December 31, 2019), it is the largest city in Calabria.
geography
The city is on the east side of the Strait of Messina across from Messina ( Sicily ).
The neighboring communities are Bagaladi , Calanna , Campo Calabro , Cardeto , Fiumara , Laganadi , Motta San Giovanni , Montebello Ionico , Roccaforte del Greco , Sant'Alessio in Aspromonte , Santo Stefano in Aspromonte , Villa San Giovanni .
history
The Greek city of Rhegion ( ancient Greek Ῥήγιον , Latin Rhegium, Regium ) on the Strait of Messina ( Fretum Siculum ) is next to Cumae the oldest Greek colony in Italy. It was founded by settlers from Chalkis in the 8th century BC. BC (720) and later settled by Messenians . Due to the trade it soon flourished to such an extent that it provided 70 warships at the time of the elder Dionysius .
433 BC Regium signed a treaty with the Athenians and allied itself with them against Syracuse in 427 , but remained neutral in 415. It was conquered, plundered and destroyed by Dionysius I of Syracuse after several years of fierce fighting and sieges in 387. The residents were led into slavery. The city did not rise to its old prosperity afterwards.
Regium was involved in wars with Lokroi several times , until shortly before the First Punic War in 264 BC. Came under Roman rule as an allied city ( civitas foederata ) . After the alliance war , which gave the inhabitants Roman citizenship , Regium became a municipality and developed into a magnificent Roman city under the name Rhegium Julii . It later became Byzantine , part of the Kingdom of Sicily in the 12th century, and the Kingdom of Naples in the 13th century . In the 16th century it was sacked by Ottoman Turks who, like the Sicilian Arabs in 918 , wanted to spread Islam from Reggio to Italy .
The poet Ibykos, known from Schiller's ballad, came from the region .
The area had already been hit by several earthquakes in ancient times. On December 28, 1908, Reggio was devastated by the 1908 Messina earthquake , which was connected with a tsunami . At least 15,000 of the then 45,000 residents lost their lives.
Reggio Calabria is known as the location of the first dated Hebrew book, a Rashi commentary taken from the Pentateuch in 1475 .
In October 2012 the city council was dissolved by the Italian Ministry of the Interior and the administration was placed under supervision. The reason for the measure was the proximity of some politicians to the mafia organization 'Ndrangheta . The police chief of Crotone will take over the supervision of the administration , who will then have to hand it back to a newly elected city council in spring 2013.
Attractions
- The Museo Nazionale della Magna Grecia (National Museum) shows early Italian, ancient, medieval and modern sculptures as well as the two Greek bronze statues of Riace (Heroes of Riace) from the period from 460 to 430 BC. BC, which were found in 1972 on the bottom of the Ionian Sea not far from the place Riace Marina in Calabria.
- Reggio Calabria Cathedral , rebuilt in neo-Romanesque-Byzantine style after the 1908 earthquake
- Madre della Consolazione (Reggio Calabria) , Sanctuary (1965)
- Castello Aragonese (fort) from the 15th century not far northeast of the cathedral
- Villa Comunale (city garden) southwest of the cathedral
- Remains of a Greek city wall from the 4th century BC. And from Roman thermal baths with floor mosaics on the southern section of the Lungomare Giacomo Matteotti (embankment)
traffic
- Autostrada: Reggio is the southern end point of the Autostrada Del Sole (A3) , which connects the Mezzogiorno with northern Italy.
- Railway: Reggio owns the train stations Reggio di Calabria Catona, Reggio di Calabria Gallico, Reggio di Calabria Archi, Reggio di Calabria Santa Caterina, Reggio di Calabria Lido and the main train station Reggio di Calabria Centrale on the Salerno – Reggio di Calabria railway line . This line is part of the planned 2200 km long, high-speed railway axis Berlin – Palermo .
- Ferry: The ferry between Reggio di Calabria and Messina in Sicily takes 20 minutes.
- Airport: The airport Reggio Calabria is to reach the city by plane.
Sports
Reggio is home to the Urbs Reggina 1914 football club , which will play in Serie B in the 2020/2021 season .
Town twinning
There is a city partnership with Gualeguaychú in Argentina.
Personalities
sons and daughters of the town
- Franz von der Trenck (1711–1749), imperial officer and militant
- Umberto Boccioni (1882–1916), painter and sculptor
- Goffredo Zehender (1901–1958), racing car driver
- Antonio Mauro (1914-2001), Archbishop of the Curia
- Leopoldo Trieste (1917–2003), actor, director and screenwriter
- Mario Alicata (1918–1966), politician, author, publicist and literary and film critic
- Natale Sapone (1920–2002), Italian-Swiss painter, draftsman, graphic artist, sculptor and designer
- Mario Castellacci (1925–2002), screenwriter
- Gianna Maria Canale (1927–2009), film actress
- Giuseppe Agostino (1928–2014), Archbishop of Cosenza-Bisignano
- Domenico Campana (* 1929), film journalist, author and director
- Salvatore Nunnari (* 1939), Archbishop of Cosenza-Bisignano
- Giovanni Tegano (* 1939), member of the 'Ndrangheta
- Gianni Versace (1946–1997), fashion designer
- Giovanni De Gennaro (* 1948), police chief
- Nicola Calipari (1953–2005), employee of the Italian foreign intelligence service SISMI
- Donatella Versace (* 1955), fashion designer
- Santo Marcianò (* 1960), military archbishop
See also
Web links
- Homepage (ital.)
- Province of Reggio Calabria ( Memento of September 27, 2007 in the Internet Archive )
Individual evidence
- ↑ Statistiche demografiche ISTAT. Monthly population statistics of the Istituto Nazionale di Statistica , as of December 31 of 2019.
- ↑ Italy places provincial capital under compulsory supervision. In: Zeit Online. Zeit Online GmbH, October 10, 2012, accessed on October 10, 2012 .