The town was known as Roscianum under the Roman Empire. In the second century AD, the emperor Hadrian built or rebuilt a port here, which could accommodate up to 300 ships. It was mentioned in the Antonine itineraries as one of the important fortresses of Calabria. The Goths under Alaric I and, in the following century, Totila, were unable to take it.
It was known as Rhusianum under the Byzantine Empire. The Rossanesi showed great attachment to the Byzantines, who placed a strategos over the town. The Rossano Gospels, a sixth-century illuminated manuscript of great historical and artistic value, is a tangible relic of that period.
The Saracens failed to conquer Rossano, while in 982 Otto II captured it temporarily from the Byzantines. Its Greek character was preserved long after its conquest by the Normans, as noted by its long retention of the Greek Rite over the Latin Rite.[citation needed] The city in fact maintained notable privileges under the subsequent Hohenstaufen and Angevine dominations, but subsequently decayed after the feudalization in 1417. [citation needed]
The Rossano Cathedral (Italian: Duomo di Rossano, Cattedrale di Maria Santissima Achiropita),[9] built in 11th century, with massive interventions in the 18th–19th centuries, is the main historical building of Rossano. It has a nave with two aisles, and three apses. The bell tower and the baptismal font are from the 14th century, while the remaining decorations are from the 17th and 18th centuries. The church is famous for the ancient image of the Madonna acheropita ("Madonna not made by hands"), now located in the Diocesan Museum, probably dating between 580 and the first half of the eighth century. In 1879, the famous Codex Rossanensis was discovered in the sacristy.[10] It is a Greek parchment manuscript of Matthew and Mark, written in silver on purple-stained parchment, and is one of the oldest pictorial Gospels known.[11] Scholars date the codex from the end of the fifth to the eighth or ninth century; it is probably of Alexandrian origin.[12][13]
The Oratory of Saint Mark (10th century, originally dedicated to St. Anastasia) is the most ancient monument of the city and one of the best preserved Byzantine churches in Italy.[16]
The church of Santa Chiara (1546–1554) was built by Bona Sforza.[17]
The church of San Francesco d'Assisi has a notable Renaissance portal and a cloister.[18]
The late-Gothic church of San Bernardino (1428–62)[citation needed] was the first Roman Catholic church in Rossano. It houses the sepulchre of Oliverio di Somma (1536) and a seventeenth-century wooden crucifix.
Rossano is also the home of the internationally renowned annual Marco Fiume Blues Passion, a free three-day open air blues/jazz festival named after a native son who was becoming a giant in the American blues/jazz guitar world before his early demise. The festival occurs in July and is linked to the Cognac Blues Festival in France.
Outside the city are:
The Torre Stellata ("Star Tower") is a 16th-century fortification built over an ancient fortress.[19]
The Abbazia del Patire (11th–12th century),[20] an abbey located in a wood outside the city, with some Arab-style mosaics, a Norman apse and ancient portals.[21]
Rossano also has a unique peculiarity: mountains[22] and sea[23] just a short distance away:[24] from the beach of San. Angelo[25] you can go trekking in the municipal mountains, with free access, of the Albanian cugnale,[26][27] of the Pathirion[28] up to S. Onofrio.[29][30][31][32]
Rossano is thriving with municipal chestnut groves: anyone can go to pick chestnuts.[33][34] Furthermore, there are hectares of pine nut forests with free access and harvesting.[35][36]
In Rossano there are detached sections of national universities: UniCusano, UniPegaso and UniCampus etc.; with the possibility of choosing different degree courses: law, psychology, etc.
Rossano can be reached from the airports of Crotone, Lamezia Terme or Reggio Calabria through SS. 106 Ionica Route. Rossano has a railway station on the secondary branch starting from Sibari, on the line to Crotone.
Rossano is easily reachable via many buses (in about 6 hours of travel) from RomeTiburtina every day and several times a day.[37]
Rossano is also the seaport of the adjacent Corigliano.[38]
^Duckett, Eleanor Shipley (1988). Death and Life in the Tenth Century. University of Michigan Press. p. 124. ISBN9780472061723. This John, known as John Philagathos, Greek by birth, was a native of Rossano in Calabria, southern Italy