The Crati is a river in Calabria , southern Italy . It is the largest river of Calabria and the third largest river of southern Italy after the Volturno and the Sele . In classical antiquity it was known as the Crathis or Crater ( Greek : Κρᾶθις ).
44-610: Crathis may refer to: Crati , a river of southern Italy Krathis , a river of southern Greece [REDACTED] Topics referred to by the same term This disambiguation page lists articles about distinct geographical locations with the same name. If an internal link led you here, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended article. Retrieved from " https://en.wikipedia.org/w/index.php?title=Crathis&oldid=932777124 " Category : Place name disambiguation pages Hidden categories: Short description
88-554: A discharge of 20 m /s it continues to Tarsia where a dam forms an artificial lake of the same name. From here it changes course to the northeast and meets with the Coscile river approximately five kilometers from the Gulf of Taranto . The Coscile is its main tributary on the left which again doubles the river in size. It continues eastwards, passing immediately south of the archaeological site of Sybaris and Thurii . Its mouth
132-767: A building in 2010 dating to the Republican age in Via Discesa Fosso indicated the possibility of locating of the Roman colony in the acropolis. The building had painted plaster in Pompeian style with tiled and marble floors. An important domus found in Discesa Fosso includes baths and indicates a Roman-era "neighbourhood" which may have been distinguished from the rest of the Roman town by its secluded position of absolute prestige. It seems that it also had
176-520: A great Greek city, home of the renowned mathematician-philosopher Pythagoras amongst other famous citizens, and one of the most important centres of Magna Graecia . It was known as Cotrone from the Middle Ages until 1928, when its name was changed to the current one. In 1992, it became the capital of the newly established Province of Crotone . The promontory of Kroton was inhabited by indigenous populations, perhaps Oenotrians and Japigi, in
220-657: A large plain , the Vallo del Crati. Here it is joined by several tributaries from the right: the Arente, Mucone (its main tributary on the right) and Duglia rivers. Several smaller streams also join it on the right: the Finita, Turbolo, Cucchiato, Campagnano, Mavigliano and Settimo. The river is also joined by several left tributaries including the Annea. It has a drainage basin of 2,448 square kilometres (945 sq mi). With
264-597: A national archaeological museum, a municipal museum, a municipal art gallery, and a provincial museum of contemporary art, as well as the Antiquarium di Torre Nao. F.C. Crotone is a football club in Serie C . The team was promoted to top flight Serie A for the first time in its history for the 2016–17 season , and after one year in Serie B , was again promoted to play in Serie A for the 2020–21 season . Achei Crotone
308-608: A portal with a single architrave , surmounted by a stained glass window, depicting the Virgin, and two niches with statues, all topped by a triangular gable and side pinnacles . Crotone appears in the Philippine national epic Florante at Laura as the Kingdom of Krotona . The poem narrates this as the homeland of the protagonist Florante's mother, Princess Floresca. In Petronius' Satyricon , which survives in fragments,
352-565: A small service port for the domus, perhaps a breakwater built to protect the port from which the Krotonian aristocrats during the second Punic war, having descended from the upper part of the city, embarked for Locri. Perhaps it is the Krotonian port mentioned by Cicero that determined the location of the colony as overlapping with the Greek polis. Crotone enjoys a Mediterranean climate ( Köppen : Csa ). Crotone Airport (Sant'Anna Airport)
396-649: Is an American football club in Italy's 3rd division. It was established in 1989 and is considered one of the most storied teams in Italy. Church of the Immaculate Conception : the original construction of the Cathedral dates back to the 9th century. Initially it was dedicated to St. Dionysius, and later, around 1462–1463, to the Assumption of Saint Mary into heaven. During the centuries, the church
440-535: Is different from Wikidata All article disambiguation pages All disambiguation pages Crati The Crati rises in the central Sila Mountains in the comune Aprigliano . It starts at as the Craticello at an elevation of 1,742 meters. It descends very steeply northward towards Cosenza where it is joined on the left by the Busento river, doubling in size. From here on it flows through
484-465: Is near the marina of the comune Corigliano-Rossano . The Crati is the largest river in the region in terms of discharge, both as an annual average (about 36 m /s), minimum (about 10 m /s) and maximum (more than 3,000 m /s). The river is very seasonal and can sometimes bring disastrous winter floods , which happened most recently in December 2008. Because of its close proximity to
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#1732771848005528-596: Is served by Italiatour.it and other charter airlines. Crotone also has a railway station, although much of the tourism traffic is served by the Salerno-Reggio Calabria highway and the National Road (called 106 Ionica) leading all the Jonic (eastern) coast from Taranto to Reggio Calabria . In recent times, Crotone Port has been used by visitors on yacht charter cruising vacations. Crotone hosts
572-711: The Blessed Virgin Mary by a group of lay people who had decided to give birth to a lay congregation in honour of the Blessed Virgin Mary and the Souls in Purgatory , which was also called La Congregazione dei Plebei ("The Congregation of the Plebeians"). The façade , which recalls in its features the sober and austere neoclassical style setting, is a harmonious and unifying element. It has
616-527: The 16th-century castle of Charles V , overlooking modern Crotone, serves as a reminder. Its successor, the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies was conquered by the Kingdom of Sardinia in 1860 and incorporated into the new Kingdom of Italy in 1861. Crotone's location between the ports of Taranto and Messina , as well as its proximity to a source of hydroelectric power, favoured industrial development during
660-793: The Battery, and northwards beyond the river Esaro, in an area still unoccupied by the modern town. The urban layout has emerged with a sequence of superimpositions throughout the life of the colony, datable between the end of the 7th and start of the 6th century BC. Three large urban blocks have been identified, organised with an orthogonal network of narrow streets (stenopoi) and streets between individual houses (ambitus). Numerous houses, both of residential nature and mixed house-artisan workshops, have been excavated, as have furnaces and shops specialising in pottery products, areas of necropolis of Hellenistic date. The construction techniques were functional and economical, generally using roughly cut stone, typical of
704-639: The Bronze Age and early Iron Age. Kroton's oikistes (founder) was Myscellus , from the city of Rhypes in Achaea in the northern Peloponnese , after consulting the Delphic Oracle who announced: The Achaeans were motivated, like others of the Greek colonisation , by the lack of cultivatable land in their mountainous region and by population pressure. Although the Greek foundation of Kroton
748-460: The Esaro river. On St. Lucia hill material had been reused which confirms that it had been built or rebuilt after of Dionysius' siege. The archaeological data give a city area of at least 617 hectares which may not have been entirely occupied by buildings and may not originally have been entirely surrounded by walls. A stretch near the river brought to light in 1978 was also described by Paolo Orsi at
792-731: The Greeks at the Battle of Salamis , the only one from the Italian coast. Half of a stone anchor block bearing his name was found at Capo Cimiti and currently preserved in the Museum of Capo Colonna. It founded the colony of Terina on the Tyrrhenian coast in 480–470 BC. Shortly afterwards, however, a bloody revolt led by the oligarch Cylon , during which many Pythagoreans were massacred and Pythagoras himself had to flee to Metapontum, led to
836-621: The Gulf of Taranto. It probably followed a course at a short distance to the north of Sybaris. Crotone Crotone ( / k r oʊ ˈ t oʊ n eɪ , k r ə ˈ -/ ; Italian: [kroˈtoːne] ; Crotonese : Cutrone or Cutruni ) is a city and comune in Calabria , Italy. Founded c. 710 BC as the Achaean colony of Kroton ( Ancient Greek : Κρότων or Ϙρότων ; Latin : Crotona ), it became
880-509: The Pertusola factory towards the sea. Urban excavations between from 1975 have considerably expanded knowledge of the history of the settlement. As on all sites where modern cities are built over ancient towns, archaeological research is limited. The data seems to confirm the contemporary occupation of the whole walled area by reasonably close nuclei, between the hill of the Castle and that of
924-583: The Pythagoreans being driven out and a democracy established. At the same time, other similar governments also fell and there were massacres and persecutions of Pythagoreans in all the Italian poleis . Croton then experienced a period of decline. Around this time the Italiote league was founded to defend itself from the expansionist aims of Syracuse and from attacks by the Lucanians, with Croton as
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#1732771848005968-471: The archaic age. To prevent the deterioration of the lower part of the walls due to rain water, stone footings were additionally protected by tiles or pieces of pithoi (large pottery vessels). Prior to the construction of a new school in Acquabona di Crotone an excavation over a larger area has recently been possible. Two stenopoi about 5 m wide run across it on an alignment of + 30° E. The discovery of
1012-414: The basis for the prestige of Croton's physicians. Croton formed a league with Sybaris against Siris and in the war that ensued after 550 BC Siris was destroyed. Pythagoras founded his school at Croton c. 530 BC. Among his pupils were the early medical theorist Alcmaeon of Croton and the philosopher, mathematician, and astronomer Philolaus . The Pythagoreans acquired considerable influence with
1056-548: The beginning of the century. Also of notable importance are the sections on the "Vigna Nuova" hill and in the water collector of the industrial area of the Papaniciaro stream, where a large fragment was found with a double facing in opus quadratum and emplecton, dating to the mid-4th century BC. From excavations carried out from 1975 the line of the Hellenistic walls was completed going up Battery hill and descending by
1100-638: The cathedral but were not able to occupy the city. Over a hundred years later, Otto II, Holy Roman Emperor , mounted a campaign in southern Italy to reduce the power of the Byzantines. Later, Crotone was conquered by the Normans . In 1806, it was occupied and sacked by the British, and later by the French. Thereafter it shared the fate of the Kingdom of Naples , including the period of Spanish rule of which
1144-517: The city has undergone urban renewal and risen in quality-of-life rankings. The overall layout of the ancient wall circuit of Kroton was reconstructed by archaeology in recent decades. It descends from the St. Lucia hill to the nearby Carrara hill from where it headed north-west towards the Cimone Rapignese on which, at 40 m above sea level, traces of wall have been found, and from here it crossed
1188-562: The city was not recaptured until 205 or 204 BC after the Battles of Croton . In 194 BC, it became the site of a Roman colony. Little more is heard of it during the Republican and Imperial periods, though the action of one of the more significant surviving fragments of the Satyricon of Petronius is set in Croton, where he mentions the corrupt morals of its inhabitants. Around 550 AD,
1232-700: The city was unsuccessfully besieged by Totila , king of the Ostrogoths . At a later date it became a part of the Byzantine Empire . Around 841, the Republic of Venice sent a fleet of 60 galleys (each carrying 200 men) to assist the Byzantines in driving the Arabs from Crotone, but it failed. About 870, it was sacked by the Saracens , who put to death the bishop and many people who had taken refuge in
1276-512: The city when the river submerged it. An analysis of core samples taken from the site of Sybaris by Stanley and Bernasconi did not find such river deposits directly above the former city. Future retrieval of additional cores and facies analysis will eventually confirm or discredit Strabo's account. In the time of Sybaris the Coscile was not a tributary of the Crati but pursued a direct course to
1320-455: The famous ancient city of Sybaris the Crati was noticed by many ancient writers. Lycophron and Theocritus mention the river in their poetry . Euripides praises the river and alleges that it would change the color of the hair to auburn . Others mention different colors and Pliny the Elder writes that it would make sheep white. According to Strabo the river received its name because it
1364-526: The first generation of settlers. It soon became one of the most flourishing cities of Magna Graecia reaching a population between 50,000 and 80,000 around 500 BC. During its early history Croton expanded its influence over the Bruttian peninsula founding possibly Caulonia in the second half of the 7th century BC. The victory of Locri and Rhegium over Croton in the battle of the Sagra in middle of
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1408-465: The foremost among the Greeks, and among them Democedes , son of Calliphon , was the most prominent in the 6th century BC. Accordingly, he travelled around Greece and ended up working in the court of Polycrates , tyrant of Samos. After the tyrant was murdered, Democedes was captured by the Persians and brought to King Darius, curing him of a dislocated ankle. Democedes' fame was, according to Herodotus,
1452-565: The head of a similar expedition, he founded Kroton. Archaeology has shown that colonisation in the second half of the 8th century BC had an impact on the settlement organisation and on the economic and social structure of the indigenous communities: in the Kroton area most of the existing settlements disappeared, while grave goods from the Carrara necropolis highlight a widespread practice of mixed marriages between Greeks and indigenous women, since
1496-487: The hegemon of the league. The meeting place for the league was the Sanctuary of Hera Lacinia at Capo Collone 10 km away, which was also used as the federal treasury of the league. The decline was followed by general anarchy, not only in Croton but also in other cities. The intervention of Achaeans brought a truce to the anarchy and the colonies adopted the laws of their original homeland. This calm lasted until Dionysius ,
1540-495: The narrator and his friends arrive at Croton, famous for its legacy hunters. The narrator's companion, the manic poet Eumolpus, poses as a childless, rich old man. Upon arrival to the city, Philomela, a citizen of Croton, seduces Eumolpus by means of her children. The extant portion of the Satyricon ends with Eumolpus explaining that the people of Croton must agree to eat his dead body if they wish to claim his inheritance. Crotone
1584-400: The period between the two World Wars. In the 1930s its population doubled. However, after the two main employers, Pertusola Sud and Montedison , collapsed by the late 1980s, Crotone was in economic crisis, with many residents losing their jobs and leaving to find work elsewhere. In 1996, the river Esaro flooded the city, which dealt a further blow to the city's morale. Since that low point,
1628-495: The sixth century BC interrupted the expansion of the city. The walls of the city were 12 miles long and enclosed a vast area. Its inhabitants were famous for their physical strength and for the simple sobriety of their lives. From 588 BC onwards, Croton produced many generations of winners in the Olympics and the other Panhellenic Games , the most famous of whom was Milo of Croton . The physicians of Croton were considered
1672-544: The supreme council of one thousand by which the city was ruled. Sybaris started to become the rival of Croton under the influence of the Pythagoreans who disliked excess, until 510 BC when Sybaris was shaken by various political events leading to the rule of the tyrant Telys. Many aristocrats were forced to flee to Croton and when Telys asked them to hand over the Sybarite exiles, the Crotonians refused and Sybaris began
1716-550: The tyrant of Syracuse , aiming at hegemony in Magna Graecia, captured Croton in 379 BC and held it for twelve years. Croton was then occupied by the Bruttii , with the exception of the citadel, in which the chief inhabitants had taken refuge; these soon after surrendered and were allowed to withdraw to Locri. In 295 BC, Croton fell to another Syracusan tyrant, Agathocles . When Pyrrhus invaded Italy (280–278, 275 BC), it
1760-400: The war. Croton sent an army of 100,000 men commanded by the wrestler Milo against Sybaris and destroyed it. As a consequence, Croton became the capital of a confederation including the 25 city-states in the region of Sybaris, as shown by numerous coins minted between 480 and 460 BC. In 480 BC, Croton sent a ship led by the famous athlete Phayllos and armed at his own expense in support of
1804-664: Was a mixture, just like the Krathis river in Achaea . Pausanias and Herodotus also mention it, but state that the river was named after the Krathis river. Strabo also claims that the Croton diverted the course of the Crathis to submerge Sybaris. Research has not confirmed this. The Crati transports coarse sand and pebbles in its channel . If Strabo's claim is true, that material would have been deposited as sediment above
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1848-609: Was still a considerable city, with twelve miles (19 km) of walls, but after the Pyrrhic War , half the town was deserted. What was left of its population submitted to Rome in 277 BC. After the Battle of Cannae in the Second Punic War (216 BC), Croton was betrayed to the Brutii by a democratic leader named Aristomachus , who defected to the Roman side. Hannibal made it his winter quarters for three years, and
1892-402: Was subject to various restoration, although in the 16th century the bishop A. Lucifero undertook its complete reconstruction, using materials removed from the ancient temple of Hera Lacinia. The interior of the church has three naves divided by pillars. The Cathedral : in 1686, as attested by an existing marble plaque in the current church, on the old oratory a church was built and dedicated to
1936-489: Was thought to be 710 BC, it is likely that Myscellus made three founding expeditions to Kroton, the first in ca. 733 in the company of Archias of Corinth at the head of an Achaean-Spartan venture (when they founded Syracuse ), but which did not result in a stable urban settlement. The second was in 720-709 at the head of an Achaean colonial expedition, hoping to settle in the Sybaris area. The third time in ca. 708 when, at
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