Neolithic through late antiquity Though traces of
Neolithic settlements can be found in the region, the earliest modern settlements on the site were
Celtic
Tharsatica (modern
Trsat, now part of Rijeka) on the hill, and the tribe of mariners, the
Liburni, in the natural harbour below. The city long retained its dual character. Rijeka was first mentioned in the 1st century AD by
Pliny the Elder as Tarsatica in his
Natural History (iii.140). Rijeka (Tarsatica) is again mentioned around AD 150 by the Greek geographer and astronomer
Ptolemy in his
Geography when describing the "Location of Illyria or Liburnia, and of Dalmatia" (Fifth Map of Europe). (Rimski luk), the oldest architectural monument in Rijeka and an entrance to the old town In the time of
Augustus, the
Romans rebuilt Tarsatica as a
municipium Flumen (MacMullen 2000), situated on the right bank of the small river Rječina (whose name means "the big river"). It became a city within the Roman Province of
Dalmatia until the 6th century. In this period the city was part of the
Liburnia limes (system of walls and fortifications against raiding Barbarians). Remains of these walls are still visible in some places today. After the 4th century Rijeka was rededicated to
Saint Vitus, the city's
patron saint, as
Terra Fluminis sancti Sancti Viti or in German
Sankt Veit am Pflaum. From the 5th century onwards, the town was ruled successively by the
Ostrogoths, the
Byzantines, the
Lombards, and the
Avars. The city was burned down in 452 by the troops of
Attila the Hun as part of their
Aquileia campaign.
Middle Ages Croats settled the city starting in the 7th century. At the time, Rijeka was a feudal stronghold surrounded by a wall. At the center of the city, its highest point, was a fortress. lies at the exact spot of an ancient Illyrian and Roman fortress. In 799 Rijeka was attacked by the
Frankish troops of
Charlemagne. Their
Siege of Trsat was at first repulsed, during which the Frankish commander Duke
Eric of Friuli was killed. However, the Frankish forces finally occupied and devastated the castle, while the
Duchy of Croatia passed under the overlordship of the
Carolingian Empire. From about 925, the town was part of the
Kingdom of Croatia, from 1102
in personal union with Hungary. Trsat Castle and the town were rebuilt under the rule of the
House of Frankopan. In 1288 the Rijeka citizens signed the
Law codex of Vinodol, one of the oldest codes of law in Europe. From about 1300 to 1466 Rijeka was ruled by a number of noble families, the most prominent of which was the German
Walsee family. Rijeka even rivalled
Venice when it was sold by Vitus Butinarius to the
Habsburg emperor
Frederick III,
Archduke of Austria in 1466. While
Ottoman forces attacked the town several times, they never occupied it. From the 16th century onwards, Rijeka's present
Renaissance and
Baroque style started to take shape. Emperor
Charles VI declared the
Port of Rijeka a
free port (together with the
Port of Trieste) in 1719 and had the trade route to Vienna expanded in 1725. On November 28, 1750 Rijeka was hit by a large earthquake. The devastation was so widespread that the city had to be almost completely rebuilt. In 1753, the Austrian Empress
Maria Theresa approved the funding for rebuilding Rijeka as a "new city" ("Civitas nova"). The rebuilt Rijeka was significantly different - it was transformed from a small medieval walled town into a larger commercial and maritime city centered around its port. By order of Maria Theresa in 1779, the city was annexed to the
Kingdom of Hungary and governed as
corpus separatum directly from Budapest by an appointed governor, as Hungary's only international port. From 1804, Rijeka was part of the
Austrian Empire (
Kingdom of Croatia-Slavonia after the
Compromise of 1867), in the Croatia-Slavonia province. During the
Napoleonic Wars, Rijeka was briefly captured by the
French Empire and included in the
Illyrian Provinces. During the French rule, between 1809 and 1813, the critically important
Louisiana road was completed (named after
Napoleon's wife
Marie Louise). The road was the shortest route from Rijeka to the interior (
Karlovac) and gave a strong impulse to the development of Rijeka's port. In 1813 the French rule came to an end when Rijeka was first bombarded by the
Royal Navy and later re-captured by the Austrians under the command of the Irish general
Laval Nugent von Westmeath. The British bombardment has an interesting side story. The city was apparently saved from annihilation by a young lady named Karolina Belinić who - amid the chaos and destruction of the bombardment - went to the English fleet commander and convinced him that further bombardment of the city was unnecessary (the small French garrison was quickly defeated and left the city). The legend of Karolina is warmly remembered by the population even today. Karolina Riječka (Caroline of Rijeka) became a folk hero and has been celebrated in plays, movies and even in a rock opera. In the early 19th century, the most prominent economical and cultural leader of the city was
Andrija Ljudevit Adamić. Fiume also had a significant naval base, and in the mid-19th century it became the site of the
Imperial and Royal Naval Academy (
K.u.K. Marine-Akademie), where the
Austro-Hungarian Navy trained its officer cadets.
Hungarian Crown During the
Hungarian revolution of 1848, when Hungary tried to gain independence from Austria, Rijeka was captured by the Croatian troops (loyal to Austria) commanded by
Ban Josip Jelačić. The city was then annexed directly to Croatia, although it did keep a degree of autonomy.
Giovanni de Ciotta (mayor from 1872 to 1896) proved to be an authoritative local political leader. Under his leadership, an impressive phase of expansion of the city started, marked by major port development, fuelled by the general expansion of international trade and the city's connection (1873) to the Austro-Hungarian railway network. Modern industrial and commercial enterprises such as the Royal Hungarian Sea Navigation Company "
Adria", a rival shipping company the Ungaro-Croata (established in 1891) and the Smith and Meynier paper mill (which operated the first steam engine in south-east Europe), situated in the Rječina canyon, producing cigarette paper sold around the world. The second half of the 19th century and the beginning of the 20th century (up to World War I) was a period of great prosperity, rapid economic growth and technological dynamism for Rijeka. Many authors and witnesses describe Rijeka of this time as a rich, tolerant, well-to-do town which offered a good standard of living, with endless possibilities for making one's fortune. The Pontifical Delegate Celso Costantini noted in his diary "the religious indifference and apathy of the town". The further industrial development of the city included the first industrial scale oil refinery in Europe in 1882 and the first
torpedo factory in the world in 1866, after
Robert Whitehead, manager of the "
Stabilimento Tecnico Fiumano" (an Austrian engineering company engaged in providing engines for the Austro-Hungarian Navy), designed and successfully tested the world's first torpedo. In addition to the
Whitehead Torpedo Works, which opened in 1874, the oil refinery (1882) and the paper mill, many other industrial and commercial enterprises were established or expanded in these years. These include a rice husking and starch factory (one of the largest in the world), a wood and furniture company, a wheat elevator and mill, the Ganz-Danubius shipbuilding industries, a cocoa and chocolate factory, a brick factory, a tobacco factory (the largest in the Monarchy), a cognac distillery, a pasta factory, the Ossoinack barrel and chest factory, a large tannery, five foundries and many others. At the beginning of the 20th century more than half of the industrial capacity in Croatia (which was at that time mostly agrarian) was located in Rijeka. Rijeka's Austro-Hungarian Marine Academy became a pioneering centre for
high-speed photography. The Austrian physicist Peter Salcher working in the Academy took the first photograph of a bullet flying at supersonic speed in 1886, devising a technique that was later used by
Ernst Mach in his studies of supersonic motion. Rijeka's port underwent tremendous development fuelled by generous Hungarian investments, becoming the main maritime outlet for Hungary and the eastern part of the
Austro-Hungarian Empire. By 1913–14, the port of Fiume became the tenth-busiest port in Europe. The 1851 census reported a Croatian majority, though considered not very reliable by Italian historians. At the last Austro-Hungarian census in 1910, the
corpus separatum had a population of 49,806 people and was composed of the following linguistic communities: By religion, the census of 1910 indicates that - from the total of 49,806 inhabitants - there were 45,130
Catholics, 1,696
Jewish, 1,123
Calvinist, 995
Orthodox and 311
Lutheran. The Jewish population expanded rapidly, particularly in the 1870s-1880s, and built a
large synagogue in 1907 (which would be destroyed in 1944, during the German occupation, concurrent with the murder of most of the city's Jewish residents). On the eve of WWI, there were 165 inns, 10 hotels with restaurants, 17 cafés, 17 jewellers, 37 barbers and 265 tailor shops in Rijeka. Rijeka was also the main center for the production of torpedoes. However, a lot changed with the war becoming a protracted conflict and especially with the
Italian declaration of war on Austria-Hungary in May 1915. This opened a
frontline only 90 km from the city and caused a pervasive sense of anxiety among the large Italian population. Several hundred Italians, considered disloyal (enemy non-combatants) by the authorities, were deported to camps in Hungary (
Tápiósüly and
Kiskunhalas), where many died of malnutrition and diseases. The torpedo factory was attacked by the Italian
airship "Città di Novara" in 1915 (later shot down by Austrian hydroplanes) and suffered damages. As a consequence - most of the torpedo production was moved to
Sankt Pölten in Austria, further away from the frontlines. The city was again attacked by Italian airplanes in 1916 and suffered minor damage. The Naval Academy ceased its activities and was converted to a war hospital (the ex-naval academy buildings are still housing the city hospital to this day). On 10 February 1918 the Italian navy
raided the nearby bay of Bakar causing little material damage but achieving a significant propaganda effect. As the war dragged on, the city's economy and the living standard of the population deteriorated rapidly. Due to a
maritime blockade, the port traffic suffered a collapse - from 2,892.538 tons in 1913 (before the war) to only 330.313 tons in 1918. Many factories - lacking manpower and/or raw materials - reduced the production or simply closed. Shortages of food and other basic necessities became widespread. Even public safety became a problem with an increase in the number of thefts, violent incidents and war profiteering. The crisis escalated on October 23, 1918, when the Croatian troops stationed in Rijeka (79th regiment) mutinied and temporarily took control of the city. Amid growing chaos, the
Austro-Hungarian empire dissolved a few weeks later, on November 12, 1918, starting a long period of instability and uncertainty for the city.
The "Fiume Question" and the Italian-Yugoslav dispute Habsburg-ruled Austria-Hungary's disintegration in October 1918 during the closing weeks of World War I led to the establishment of rival Croatian-Serbian and Italian administrations in the city; both Italy and the founders of the new
Kingdom of the Serbs, Croats and Slovenes (later the Kingdom of Yugoslavia) claimed sovereignty based on their "
irredentist" ("unredeemed") ethnic populations, and both in conflict with the autonomist stream which was dominant in the city and sympathized by the great powers gathered at the peace conference in Paris. After a very brief military occupation by the Kingdom of Serbs, Croats and Slovenes, followed by the unilateral annexation act of the former Corpus Separatum by Belgrade, an international force of British, Italian, French and American troops entered the city in November 1918 to ensure the peace. Its future became a major
barrier to agreement during the
Paris Peace Conference of 1919. The US president Wilson leaned toward making Rijeka a free city-state, even proposing it for the headquarters of the newly formed
League of Nations. The main problem arose from the fact that Rijeka was not assigned either to Italy or to Croatia (which became part of Yugoslavia in the meanwhile) in the
Treaty of London which defined the post-war borders in the area. It remained assigned to Austria-Hungary because - until the very end of WWI - it was assumed that the Austro-Hungarian empire would survive WWI in some form and Rijeka was to become its only seaport (Trieste was to be annexed by Italy). However, once the empire disintegrated, the status of the city became disputed. Italy based its claim on the fact that Italians comprised the largest single nationality within the city (46.9% of the total population), while Croats made up most of the remainder and were a majority in the surrounding area.
Andrea Ossoinack, who had been the last delegate from Fiume to the Hungarian Parliament, was admitted to the conference as a representative of Fiume, and essentially supported the Italian claims, while Ruggero Gotthardi represented the auonomist idea and proposed a Free State of Rijeka with borders. Nevertheless, at this point the city had had for years a strong and very active Autonomist Party seeking for Rijeka a special independent status among nations as a multicultural Adriatic city. This movement even had its delegate at the Paris peace conference - Ruggero Gotthardi.
Regency of Carnaro birthday celebration on 11 November 1918 in Fiume/Rijeka. On 10 September 1919, the
Treaty of Saint-Germain was signed, declaring the Austro-Hungarian monarchy dissolved. Negotiations over the future of the city were interrupted two days later when a force of Italian nationalist irregulars led by the poet
Gabriele D'Annunzio captured the city. Because the Italian government, wishing to respect its international obligations, did not want to annex Fiume, D'Annunzio and the intellectuals at his side eventually established an independent state, the
Italian Regency of Carnaro, a unique social experiment for the age and a revolutionary cultural experience in which various international intellectuals of diverse walks of life took part (like
Osbert Sitwell,
Arturo Toscanini,
Henry Furst,
Filippo Tommaso Marinetti,
Harukichi Shimoi,
Guglielmo Marconi,
Alceste De Ambris,
Whitney Warren and Léon Kochnitzky). provisional banknote (1920) Among the many political experiments that took place during this experience, D'Annunzio and his men undertook a first attempt to establish a movement of non-aligned nations in the so-called
League of Fiume, an organisation antithetic to the Wilsonian League of Nations, which it saw as a means of perpetuating a corrupt and imperialist
status quo. The organisation was aiming primarily at helping all oppressed nationalities in their struggle for political dignity and recognition, establishing links with many movements on various continents, but it never found the necessary external support and its main legacy remains today the Regency of Carnaro's recognition of
Soviet Russia, the first state in the world to have done so. The
Liberal Giovanni Giolitti became Premier of Italy again in June 1920; this signalled a hardening of official attitudes to D'Annunzio's
coup. On 12 November, Italy and Yugoslavia concluded the
Treaty of Rapallo, which envisaged Fiume becoming an independent state, the
Free State of Fiume, under a government acceptable to both powers. D'Annunzio's response was characteristically flamboyant and of doubtful judgment: his declaration of war against Italy invited the bombardment by Italian royal forces which led to his surrender of the city at the end of the year, after five days' resistance (known as
Bloody Christmas). Italian troops freed the city from D'Annunzio's militias in the last days of December 1920. After a world war and additional two years of economic paralysis the city economy was nearing collapse and the population was exhausted.
Free State of Fiume (1920–1924) In a subsequent democratic election the Fiuman electorate on 24 April 1921 approved the idea of a free state of Fiume-Rijeka with a Fiuman-Italo-Yugoslav consortium ownership structure for the port, giving an overwhelming victory to the independentist candidates of the Autonomist Party. Fiume became consequently a full-fledged member of the League of Nations and the ensuing election of Rijeka's first president,
Riccardo Zanella, was met with official recognition and greetings from all major powers and countries worldwide. Despite many positive developments leading to the establishment of the new state's structures, the subsequent formation of a
constituent assembly for the state did not put an end to strife within the city. A brief Italian nationalist seizure of power ended with the intervention of an Italian royal commissioner, and another short-lived peace was interrupted by a local Fascist putsch in March 1922 which ended with a third Italian intervention to restore the previous order. Seven months later the
Kingdom of Italy itself fell under Fascist rule and Fiume's fate was therefore sealed, the
Italian Fascist Party being among the strongest proponents of the annexation of Fiume to Italy. The Free State of Fiume thus was to officially become the first country victim of fascist expansionism.
The territory of Fiume part of the Kingdom of Italy in
Rome, Italy. Fiume was at the time a so-called "
irredent land" The period of diplomatic acrimony was closed by the bilateral
Treaty of Rome (27 January 1924), signed by Italy and Yugoslavia. With it the two neighbouring countries agreed to partition the territory of the small state. Most of the old Corpus Separatum territory became part of Italy, while a few Croatian/Slovenian-speaking villages to the north of the city were annexed by Yugoslavia. The annexation happened de facto on 16 March 1924, and it inaugurated about twenty years of Italian government for the city proper, to the detriment of the Croatian minority, which fell victim of discrimination and targeted assimilation policies. The city became the seat of the newly formed
Province of Fiume. In this period Fiume lost its commercial hinterland and thus part of its economic potential as it became a border town with little strategic importance for the Kingdom of Italy. However, since it retained the Free Port status and its iconic image in the nation-building myth, it gained many economic concessions and subsidies from the government in Rome. These included a separate tax treatment from the rest of Italy and a continuous inflow of investments from the Italian state (although not as generous as previous Hungarian ones). The city regained a good level of economic prosperity and was much richer than the surrounding Yugoslav lands, but the economic and demographic growth slowed down if compared to the previous Austro-Hungarian period. File:Fiume-Stemma (1924-1945).svg|alt=Coat of Arms in use during the italian domain of the city, approved in 1935[42]|link=https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Fiume-Stemma%20(1924-1945).svg |Coat of Arms in use during the italian domain of the city, approved in 1935 File:Flag of Fiume (1924-1945, Variant).svg|alt=Varinate della Bandiera con lo stemma[2]|link=https://it.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:Flag%20of%20Fiume%20(1924-1945,%20Variant).svg |Varinat of the flag with the Coat of Arms
World War II and the German Operational Zone At the beginning of World War II Rijeka immediately found itself in an awkward position. The city's largest demographic was Italian followed by Croatian constituting most of the remainder, but its immediate surroundings and the city of Sušak, just across the Rječina river (today a part of Rijeka proper) were inhabited almost exclusively by Croatians and part of a potentially hostile power—
Yugoslavia. Once the
Axis powers invaded Yugoslavia in April 1941, the Croatian areas surrounding the city were occupied by the Italian military, setting the stage for an intense and bloody insurgency which would last until the end of the war.
Partisan activity included guerrilla-style attacks on isolated positions or supply columns, sabotage and killings of civilians believed to be connected to the Italian and (later) German authorities. This, in turn, was met by stiff reprisals from the Italian and German military. On 14 July 1942, in reprisal for the killing of four civilians of Italian origin by Partisans, the Italian military killed 100 men from the suburban village of Podhum, resettling the remaining 800 people to concentration camps, in the
Podhum massacre. After the
surrender of Italy to the Allies in September 1943, Rijeka and the surrounding territories were occupied and annexed by Germany, becoming part of the
Adriatic Littoral Zone. Partisan activity continued and intensified. On 30 April 1944, in the nearby village of Lipa, German troops killed 263 civilians in reprisal for the killing of several soldiers during a Partisan attack, in the
Lipa massacre. The German and Italian occupiers and their local collaborators deported some 80 percent of the city's roughly 500 Jews to
Auschwitz. A larger proportion of Rijeka's Jewish population was murdered in the Holocaust than that of any other city in Italian territory. , 1944 Because of its industries (oil refinery, torpedo factory, shipyards) and its port facilities, the city was also a target of more than 30 Anglo-American air attacks, which caused widespread destruction and hundreds of civilian deaths. Some of the heaviest bombardments happened on 12 January 1944 (attack on the refinery, part of the
oil campaign), on 3–6 November 1944, when a series of attacks resulted in at least 125 deaths and between 15 and 25 February 1945 (200 dead, 300 wounded). The area of Rijeka was
heavily fortified even before World War II (the remains of these fortifications can be seen today on the outskirts of the city). This was the fortified border between Italy and Yugoslavia which, at that time, cut across the city area and its surroundings. As Yugoslav troops approached the city in April 1945, one of the fiercest and largest battles in this area of Europe ensued. The 27,000 German and additional Italian
RSI troops fought tenaciously from behind these fortifications (renamed "Ingridstellung"—Ingrid Line—by the Germans). Under the command of the German general
Ludwig Kübler they inflicted thousands of casualties on the attacking Partisans, which were forced by their superiors to charge uphill against well-fortified positions to the north and east of the city. The Yugoslav commanders did not spare casualties to speed up the capture of the city, fearing a possible English landing in area which would prevent their advance towards Trieste before the war was over. After an extremely bloody battle and heavy losses on the attackers side, the Germans were forced to retreat. Before leaving the city the German troops destroyed much of the harbour area and other important infrastructure with explosive charges. However, the German attempt to break out of the encirclement north-west of the city was unsuccessful. Of the approximately 27,000 German and other troops retreating from the city, 11,000 were killed or executed after surrendering, while the remaining 16,000 were taken as prisoners. Yugoslav troops entered Rijeka on 3 May 1945. The city had suffered extensive damage in the war. The economic infrastructure was almost completely destroyed, and of the 5,400 buildings in the city at the time, 2,890 (53%) were either completely destroyed or damaged.
Aftermath of World War II on the left and
Ivan Zajc Croatian National Theatre on the right After the war, the city was placed under Yugoslav administration as part of
Zone B of the
Julian March, and, following the
Paris peace treaty, formally ceded to Yugoslavia as a part of the federal state of Croatia. Once the change to Yugoslav sovereignty was formalized, and in particular in the years leading to the
Trieste Crisis of 1954, 58,000 of the city's 66,000 inhabitants gradually opted to emigrate they became known in Italian as
esuli or the exiled ones and
optanti in Croatian and Slovene. The discrimination and persecution that many inhabitants experienced at the hands of Yugoslav officials in the last days of World War II and the first years of peace, still remain painful memories for the locals and the
esuli, and are somewhat of a taboo topic for Rijeka's political milieu, which is still largely denying the events.
Summary executions of alleged Fascists (often well-known anti-fascists or openly apolitical), aimed at hitting the local intellectual class, the Autonomists, the commercial classes, the former Italian public servants, the military officials and often also ordinary civilians (at least 650 executions of Italians took place after the end of the war) eventually forced most Italophones (of various ethnicities) to leave Rijeka/Fiume in order to avoid becoming victims of a harsher retaliation. The removal was a meticulously planned operation, aimed at convincing the hardly assimilable Italian part of the autochthonous population to leave the country, as testified decades later by representatives of the Yugoslav leadership. The most notable victims of the political and ethnic repression of locals in this period was the
Fiume Autonomists purge hitting all the autonomist figures still living in the city, and now associated in the
Liburnian Autonomist Movement. The Autonomists actively helped the Yugoslav partisans in liberating the region from Fascist and Nazi occupation, and, despite receiving various promises of large political autonomy for the city, they were eventually all assassinated by the Yugoslav secret police
OZNA in the days leading up to the Yugoslav army's victorious march into city and its aftermath. In subsequent years, the Yugoslav authorities joined the municipalities of Rijeka and Sušak and, after 1954, less than one third of the original population of the now united municipalities (mostly what was previously the Croat minority in Fiume and the majority in Sušak) remained in the city, because the old municipality of Fiume lost in these years more than 85% of the original population. The Yugoslav plans for a more obedient demographic situation in Rijeka culminated in 1954 during the Trieste crisis, when the Yugoslav Communist Party rallied many local members to ruin or destroy the most notable vestiges of the Italian/Venetian language and all bilingual inscriptions in the city (which had been legally granted a fully bilingual status after the occupation in 1945), eventually also 'de facto' (but not 'de jure') deleting bilinguilism, except in a handful of selected bilingual schools and inside the Italian Community's own building. After the war the local ethnic Italians of Rijeka left Yugoslavia for Italy (
Istrian-Dalmatian exodus). The city was then resettled by immigrants from various parts of Yugoslavia, once more changing heavily the city's demographics and its linguistic composition. These years coincided also with a period of general reconstruction and new program of industrialization after the destruction of the war. During the period of the
Yugoslav Communist administration between the 1950s and the 1980s, the city became the main port of the
Federal Republic and started to grow once again, both demographically and economically, taking advantage of the newly re-established hinterland that had been lacking during the Italian period, as well as the rebuilding after the war of its traditional manufacturing industries, its maritime economy and its port potential. This, paired with its rich commercial history, allowed the city to soon become the second richest (GDP per capita) district within
Yugoslavia. However, many of these industries and companies, being based on a socialist planned economic model were not able to survive the move to a market-oriented economy in the early 1990s. As Yugoslavia broke up in 1991, the former
Federal State of Croatia became independent and, in the
Croatian War of Independence that ensued, Rijeka became part of the newly independent
Croatia. Since then, the city has stagnated economically and its demography has plunged. Some of its largest industries and employers have gone out of business, the most prominent among them being the Jugolinija shipping company, the torpedo factory, the paper mill and many other small or medium manufacturing and commercial companies. Other companies have struggled to remain economically viable (like the city's landmark
3. Maj shipyard). The number of people working in manufacturing dropped from more than 80,000 in 1990 to only 5,000 two decades later. Privatization scandals and the large scale corruption which marked Croatia's transition from socialism to capitalism as well as several years of
war economy played a significant role in the collapse of the city's economy during the 1990s and early 2000s. A difficult and uncertain transition of the city's economy away from manufacturing and towards an economy based on services and tourism is still in progress. On 27 November 2019, a
waterspout of intensity
IF1 made
landfall in the city of Rijeka, causing tree, roof and car damage along a narrow path. In 2020, Rijeka was voted the
European Capital of Culture alongside
Galway, with a planned program including more than 600 events of cultural and social importance. == Culture ==