Antiquity Padua claims to be among the oldest cities in northern Italy. According to a tradition dated at least to the time of
Virgil's
Aeneid and to
Livy's
Ab Urbe Condita, Padua was founded around 1183 BC by the
Trojan prince
Antenor. After the
Fall of Troy, Antenor led a group of Trojans and their
Paphlagonian allies, the Eneti or
Veneti, who lost their king
Pylaemenes to settle the Euganean plain in Italy. Thus, when a large ancient stone sarcophagus was exhumed in the year 1274, officials of the
medieval commune declared the remains within to be those of Antenor. An inscription by the native
humanist scholar
Lovato Lovati placed near the tomb reads: More recent tests suggest the sepulcher dates back to between the 4th and 3rd centuries BC. Nevertheless, archeological remains confirm an early date for the foundation of the center of the town to between the 11th and 10th centuries BC. By the 5th century BC, Padua, rose on the banks of the river Brenta, which in the Roman era was called
Medoacus Maior and probably until AD 589 followed the path of the present-day Bacchiglione (
Retrone). Padua was one of the principal centers of the
Veneti. wall The
Roman historian
Livy records an attempted invasion by the Spartan king Cleonimos around 302 BC. The Spartans came up the river but were defeated by the Veneti in a naval battle and gave up the idea of conquest. Still, later, the Veneti of Padua successfully repulsed invasions by the
Etruscans and
Gauls. According to Livy and
Silius Italicus, the Veneti, including those of Padua, formed an alliance with the Romans by 226 BC against their common enemies, first the Gauls and then the Carthaginians. Men from Padua fought and died beside the Romans at
Cannae. With Rome's northwards expansion, Padua was gradually assimilated into the
Roman Republic. In 175 BC, Padua requested the aid of Rome in putting down a local civil war. In 91 BC, Padua, along with other cities of the Veneti, fought with Rome against the rebels in the
Social War. Around 49 (or 45 or 43) BC, Padua was made a Roman
municipium under the
Lex Julia Municipalis and its citizens ascribed to the Roman tribe,
Fabia. At that time the population of the city was perhaps 40,000. The city was reputed for its excellent breed of horses and the wool of its sheep. In fact, the poet
Martial remarks on the thickness of the tunics made there. By the end of the first century BC, Padua seems to have been the wealthiest city in Italy outside of Rome. The city became so powerful that it was reportedly able to raise two hundred thousand fighting men. However, despite its wealth, the city was also renowned for its simple manners and strict morality. This concern with morality is reflected in Livy's
Roman History (XLIII.13.2) wherein he portrays Rome's rise to dominance as being founded upon her moral rectitude and discipline. Still later, Pliny, referring to one of his Paduan protégés' Paduan grandmother, Sarrana Procula, lauds her as more upright and disciplined than any of her strict fellow citizens (Epist. i.xiv.6). Padua was also the birthplace of
Thrasea Paetus,
Asconius Pedianus, and perhaps
Valerius Flaccus. Christianity was introduced in Padua and in most of the Veneto region by
Saint Prosdocimus. He is venerated as the first bishop of the city. His deacon, the Jewish convert
Daniel, is also a saintly patron of the city.
Late Antiquity The history of Padua during
Late Antiquity follows the course of events common to most cities of north-eastern Italy. Padua suffered from the invasion of the
Huns and was savagely sacked by
Attila in 450. A number of years afterward, it fell under the control of the
Gothic kings
Odoacer and
Theodoric the Great. It was reconquered for a short time by the
Byzantine Empire in 540 during the
Gothic War. However, depopulation from plague and war ensued. The city was again seized by the Goths under
Totila, but was restored to the Eastern Empire by
Narses only to fall under the control of the
Lombards in 568. During these years, many Paduans sought safety in the countryside and especially in the nearby lagoons of what would become
Venice. In 601, the city rose in revolt against
Agilulf, the Lombard king who put the city under siege. After enduring a 12-year-long bloody siege, the Lombards stormed and burned the city. Many ancient artifacts and buildings were seriously damaged. The remains of an amphitheater (the
Arena) and some bridge foundations are all that remain of Roman Padua today. The townspeople fled to the hills and later returned to eke out a living among the ruins; the ruling class abandoned the city for the
Venetian Lagoon, according to a chronicle. The city did not easily recover from this blow, and Padua was still weak when the
Franks succeeded the Lombards as masters of northern Italy.
Frankish and Episcopal Supremacy At the Diet of Aix-la-Chapelle (828), the duchy and
march of Friuli, in which Padua lay, was divided into four counties, one of which took its title from the city of Padua. The end of the early
Middle Ages in Padua was marked by the sack of the city by the
Magyars in 899. It was many years after Padua recovered from this ravage. During the period of
episcopal supremacy over the cities of northern Italy, Padua does not appear to have been either very important or very active. The general tendency of its policy throughout the
war of investitures was Imperial (
Ghibelline) and not Roman (
Guelph); and its bishops were, for the most part, of Germanic extraction.
Emergence of the Commune Under the surface, several important movements were taking place that were to prove formative for the later development of Padua. At the beginning of the 11th century, the citizens established a constitution, composed of a general council or
legislative assembly and a
credenza or executive body. During the next century, they were engaged in wars with Venice and Vicenza for the right of water-way on the Bacchiglione and the Brenta. The city grew in power and self-confidence and in 1138, the government was entrusted to two consuls. The great families of
Camposampiero,
Este and
Da Romano began to emerge and to divide the Paduan district among themselves. The citizens, in order to protect their liberties, were obliged to elect a
podestà in 1178. Their choice first fell on one of the Este family. A fire devastated Padua in 1174. This required the virtual rebuilding of the city. The temporary success of the
Lombard League helped to strengthen the towns. However, their civic jealousy soon reduced them to weakness again. In 1214–1216, Padua was involved in
a conflict with Venice, which it lost. In 1236
Frederick II found little difficulty in establishing his vicar
Ezzelino III da Romano in Padua and the neighbouring cities, where he practised frightful cruelties on the inhabitants. Ezzelino was unseated in June 1256 without civilian bloodshed, thanks to
Pope Alexander IV. Padua then enjoyed a period of calm and prosperity: the basilica of the saint was begun; and the Paduans became masters of Vicenza. The
University of Padua (the second university in Italy, after Bologna) was founded in 1222, and as it flourished in the 13th century, Padua outpaced Bologna, where no effort had been made to expand the revival of classical precedents beyond the field of jurisprudence, to become a center of early
humanist researches, with first-hand knowledge of Roman poets that was unrivalled in Italy or beyond the Alps. The advances of Padua in the 13th century finally brought the commune into conflict with
Can Grande della Scala, lord of Verona. In 1311 Padua had to yield to the Scaligeri of Verona.
Emergence of the Signoria Jacopo da Carrara was elected lord (
signore) of Padua in 1318, at that point the city was home to 40,000 people. From then till 1405, nine members of the
Carraresi family, including Ubertino, Jacopo II, and Francesco il Vecchio, succeeded one another as lords of the city, with the exception of a brief period of
Scaligeri overlordship between 1328 and 1337 and two years (1388–1390) when
Giangaleazzo Visconti held the town. The period of the
signoria is covered down to 1358 in the chronicle of
Guglielmo Cortusi. The Carraresi period was a long period of restlessness, for the Carraresi were constantly at war. Under Carraresi rule the early humanist circles in the university were effectively disbanded:
Albertino Mussato, the first modern
poet laureate, died in exile at
Chioggia in 1329, and the eventual heir of the Paduan tradition was the Tuscan
Petrarch. In 1387,
John Hawkwood won the
Battle of Castagnaro for Padua, against
Giovanni Ordelaffi, for
Verona. The Carraresi period finally came to an end as the power of the Visconti and of Venice grew in importance.
Venetian rule , symbol of the
'Most Serene Republic' Padua came under the rule of the
Republic of Venice in 1405, and mostly remained that way until the
fall of the republic in 1797. There was just a brief period when the city changed hands (in 1509) during the wars of the
League of Cambrai. On 10 December 1508, representatives of the Papacy, France, the
Holy Roman Empire, and
Ferdinand V of Castile concluded the League of Cambrai against the Republic. The agreement provided for the complete dismemberment of Venice's territory in Italy and for its partition among the signatories:
Holy Roman Emperor Maximilian I of the House of Habsburg was to receive Padua in addition to Verona and other territories. In 1509 Padua was held for just a few weeks by Imperial supporters. Venetian troops quickly recovered it and successfully defended Padua during
its siege by Imperial troops. The city was governed by two Venetian nobles, a podestà for civil affairs and a captain for military affairs. Both of them were elected for sixteen months. Under these governors, the great and small councils continued to discharge municipal business and to administer the Paduan law, contained in the statutes of 1276 and 1362. The treasury was managed by two chamberlains; and every five years the Paduans sent one of their nobles to reside as
nuncio in Venice, and to watch the interests of his native town. Venice fortified Padua with new walls, built between 1507 and 1544, with a series of monumental gates.
Austrian rule In 1797 the Venetian Republic
came to an end with the
Treaty of Campo Formio, and Padua, like much of the Veneto region, was ceded to the
Habsburgs. In 1806 the city passed to the French puppet
Kingdom of Italy until the fall of
Napoleon, in 1814, when the city became part of the newly formed
Kingdom of Lombardy–Venetia, part of the
Austrian Empire. Austrian rule was unpopular with progressive circles in northern Italy, but the feelings of the population (from the lower to the upper classes) towards the empire were mixed. In Padua,
the year of revolutions of 1848 saw a student revolt which on 8 February turned the University and the
Caffè Pedrocchi into battlegrounds in which students and ordinary Paduans fought side by side. The revolt was short-lived, and there were no other episodes of unrest under the Austrian Empire (nor previously had there been any), as in
Venice or in other parts of Italy; while opponents of Austria were forced into exile. Under Austrian rule, Padua began its industrial development; one of the first Italian
rail tracks, Padua-Venice, was built in 1845. In 1866 the
Battle of Königgrätz gave Italy the opportunity, as an ally of
Prussia, to take
Veneto, and Padua was also annexed to the recently formed
Kingdom of Italy.
Italian rule Annexed to Italy during 1866, Padua was at the centre of the poorest area of
Northern Italy, as
Veneto was until the 1960s. Despite this, the city flourished in the following decades both economically and socially, developing its industry, being an important agricultural market and having a very important cultural and technological centre like the University. The city hosted also a major military command and many regiments.
20th century When Italy entered
World War I on 24 May 1915, Padua was chosen as the main command of the
Italian Army. The king and the
commander in chief, respectively
Vittorio Emanuele III and
Luigi Cadorna, went to live in Padua for the period of the war. After the defeat of Italy in the battle of
Caporetto in autumn 1917, the front line was situated on the river Piave. This was just from Padua, and the city was now in range of the Austrian artillery. However, the
Italian military command did not withdraw. The city was bombed several times (about 100 civilian deaths). A memorable feat was
Gabriele D'Annunzio's flight to
Vienna from the nearby San Pelagio Castle air field. A year later, the threat to Padua was removed. In late October 1918, the Italian Army won the decisive
Battle of Vittorio Veneto, and the Austrian forces collapsed. The
armistice was signed at Villa Giusti, Padua, on 3 November 1918. During the war, the industry grew rapidly, and this provided Padua with a base for further post-war development. In the years immediately following World War I, Padua developed outside the historical town, enlarging and growing in population, even if labor and social strife were rampant at the time. As in many other areas in Italy, Padua experienced great social turmoil in the years immediately following World War I. The city was shaken by strikes and clashes, factories and fields were subject to occupation, and war veterans struggled to re-enter civilian life. Many supported
fascism as a new political way. As in other parts of Italy, the
National Fascist Party in Padua soon came to be seen as the defender of property and order against revolution. The city was also the site of one of the largest fascist mass rallies, with some 300,000 people reportedly attending one speech by the
Italian fascist leader
Benito Mussolini. New buildings, in typical
fascist architecture, sprang up in the city. Examples can be found today in the buildings surrounding Piazza Spalato (today Piazza Insurrezione), the railway station, the new part of City Hall, and part of the Bo Palace hosting the University. Following Italy's defeat in the
Second World War on 8 September 1943, Padua became part of the
Italian Social Republic, a
puppet state of the Nazi occupiers. The city hosted the Ministry of Public Instruction of the new state, as well as military and militia commands and a
military airport. The Resistenza, the
Italian partisans, was very active against both the new fascist rule and the Nazis. One of the main leaders of the Resistenza in the area was the University vice-chancellor, Concetto Marchesi. From December 1943 to the end of the war,
Padua was bombed 24 times by Allied aircraft; the heaviest raids were the ones on 16 and 30 December 1943 (each of which caused 300 victims), 7 February 1944 (300 victims), 11 March 1944 (over 300 tons of bombs dropped by 111 bombers), 22 and 23 March 1944, 20 April 1944 (180 victims), 22 February and 12 March 1945. The worst-hit areas were the railway station (the target of most raids) and the northern district of Arcella, where 96% of all buildings were destroyed; overall, 950 homes were destroyed and 1,400 damaged. During one of these bombings, the
Church of the Eremitani, with frescoes by
Andrea Mantegna, was destroyed, considered by some
art historians to be Italy's biggest wartime cultural loss. The
Cathedral and the
University also suffered damage. A small
Commonwealth War Cemetery is located in the west part of the city, commemorating the sacrifice of these troops. After the war, the city developed rapidly, reflecting Veneto's rise from being the poorest region in northern Italy to one of the richest and most economically active regions of modern Italy. ==Geography==