in the Santuario di San Francesco The
ancient Roman name of Lanciano was
Anxanum, a city of the
Frentani Italic tribe. The city is said to have been founded in 1181 BC by Solimus, a
Trojan refugee arrived in Italy along with
Aeneas. Legends aside, archaeological findings have shown that the area was settled from the 5th millennium BC. Under the Frentani it was probably under the influence of
Greater Greece. After the end of the
Samnite Wars, which saw the Frentani allied with the
Romans, Lancianum obtained the status of
municipium. It was probably a flourishing commercial site, across an ancient and important trade route connecting
Pescara to
Apulia. During the fall of the
Western Roman Empire, Lanciano was sacked by the
Goths, and was destroyed during the
Lombard invasion (c. 571 AD). A new settlement was then created around a castle built by the new rulers. In 610, however, it was conquered by the
Byzantines, who annexed it to the Duchy of
Teate (
Chieti) and allowed the trades to restart. In the late 8th century Lanciano was conquered by the
Franks, who included it in the
Duchy of Spoleto. In 1060 the
Normans made it a centre of the unified
Kingdom of Sicily. Lanciano flourished again and in 1340 it was the largest city in Abruzzo with 6,500 inhabitants, renowned industries (ceramics, wool, silk, goldworks, ironworks), receiving important privileges by both
Frederick II and his son
Manfred, with a substantial administrative autonomy.
Charles I, King of Sicily, assigned the revenues of the city's port to the
Vatican Basilica. Later it was frequently at war with nearby
Ortona. It was here that Pope
Gregory XII, fleeing from Cividale, landed on Neapolitan territory (1409), and went thence to
Gaeta. After the end of the
Italian Wars, the new Spanish rule and the shift of commerce due to the discovery of America impoverished Lanciano, which, in 1640, became a baronial possession. Later, the city took the part of the
Neapolitan Republic of 1799 and rose against the
Bourbon kings in 1848, 1849 and 1853. In 1860 it voted for annexation to the newly formed
Kingdom of Italy. During
World War II it was an active center of the
Resistance against the German occupation. On 6 October 1943 Italian citizens attacked German soldiers (revolt of the martyrs of October 1943). In 1952 it was awarded the Gold Medal to Military Valour by President
Luigi Einaudi. ==Monuments and sites of interest==