; modern-day rivers and lakes are shown in darker blue
Prehistory According to the legend, Reate was founded by Rea, a divinity (that would be the origin of the town name). It was founded at the beginning of the Iron Age (9th–8th century BC). Probably in earlier times the lands around Rieti were inhabited by
Umbri, then by
Aborigines and later on by
Sabines, who reached the lands sited in the nearby of Tevere river.
Ancient era Reate was originally a major site of the
Sabine nation well before the foundation of
Rome. According to the legend, when
Romulus founded Rome, Romans kidnapped Sabine women in order to populate the town (
The Rape of the Sabine Women) and this led to a war between Romans and Sabines. The
battle of the Lacus Curtius came to an end only when the women threw themselves between the armies, begging the men who were by then their relatives to stop fighting. Romulus and
Titus Tatius relented and a collaboration between the two people started. According to an account more based on history, Sabines settled on the Quirinale because of their continuous need for grazing-lands. After the final
Roman conquest, carried out by
Manius Curius Dentatus in the early third century BC (290 BC), the village became a strategic point in the early Italian road network, dominating the "salt" track (
Via Salaria) that linked Rome to the Adriatic Sea through the Apennines. Many lands of Reate and
Amiternum were confiscated and allocated to Romans. From the outset, Sabines were offered Roman citizenship but without voting rights, until 268 BC in which they gained full citizenship, and were incorporated into two new tribes (
Velina and
Quirina). Curius Dentatus drained a large portion of the lake by diverting the Velino river into the
Nera (thus giving birth to
Marmore Falls). The wide area once occupied by the lake turned into a fertile plain (the
Rieti Valley). Following Roman customs, the land was split into characteristic square allotments. The town itself underwent significant development, being re-organised according to typical Roman urban standards (e.g., two crossed roads make up the settlement's backbone), and was fortified with strong walls. A stone bridge was laid across the Velino river, and a large viaduct was built to bring goods from the Via Salaria directly to Rieti's southern gate. Roman Reate receives a number of mentions in Latin literature, thanks to its flourishing soil, its valued assets, and some peculiarities of the surroundings (such as wandering islands and hollow-subsurfaced fields).
Cicero, for instance, describes the tensions between Reate and Interamna (
Terni) following the lake drainage, and refers to the country house (villa) that his friend
Q. Axius owned in the plain. One of the most important Sabine families that gained success in Rome was the
Gens Flavia, from which Emperor
Titus Flavius Vespasianus (who started the building of the
Colosseum, also known as the Amphitheatrum Flavium) descended. The Reatin poet and writer
Marcus Terentius Varro was born in 116 BC and he is usually referred to as the father of Roman erudition.
Middle Ages After the fall of the
Western Roman Empire, Rieti suffered destruction by Barbarians, but never ceased to be an important
gastaldate during the Lombard domination, as part of the
Duchy of Spoleto. Under the Franks, it was the county capital. It was sacked by the
Saracens in the ninth and tenth centuries and by the Norman king
Roger II of Sicily in 1149. The city was rebuilt with the help of the
Roman comune, and from 1198 was also a free commune, of
Guelph orientation, with a
podestà of its own. As a favourite Papal seat, Rieti was the place of important historical events: proxy
Emperor Henry VI married
Constance of Hauteville here (1185).
Charles I of Anjou was crowned King of Apulia, Sicily and Jerusalem by
Pope Nicholas IV in 1289.
Pope Gregory IX canonized
St. Dominic in Rieti (1234).
Moses ben Isaac of Rieti (1388–1467) was a Jewish scholar and physician who authored a two-part
Dantean poem known for its wealth of literary-biographical information, and especially as a primary source for the
Shalshelet haQabbalah of Gedalya ibn Yihya. This poem was published as
Sefer Miqdash Meat by Jacob Goldenthal (Vienna 1851).
Late Middle Ages and modern era After the Papal seat had been moved to
Avignon, Rieti was conquered by the King of Naples, while inner struggles between
Guelphs and Ghibellines broke out. In 1354 it was won back by
Cardinal Albornoz, and it later became a feudal seigneury of the Alfani family within the
Papal States. More of the surrounding plain was drained in the following century, but this led to confrontation with the neighboring
Terni. Rieti was province capital of the Papal States from 1816 to 1860. In 1821 the
Battle of Rieti between
Austrian forces and southern Italian rebels was fought just outside the city at
Antrodoco. After the
unification of Italy, it was initially part of
Umbria, being annexed to Lazio in 1923. It became the provincial capital on January 2, 1927. ==Climate==