History stops again and again at Roses. Founded as a Greek colony, its location makes it a strategic point in the Mediterranean. For this reason, the site has experienced various occupations and has been a target of numerous attacks.
Today, the Ciutadella is a modern cultural centre and an extraordinary site.
Brought together over an area of 139,000 m2 are the archaeological remains of the Greek colony and later Roman colony of Rhode, the Romanesque monastery of Santa Maria and the structure of the old village of Roses, which even retains some medieval fortifications.
History
The origins of Roses (Greek: Rhode) are disputed. A popular theory holds it was founded in the 8th century BC by Greek colonists from Rhodes.
It seems more probable that it was founded in the 5th century BC by Greeks from Massalia (Marseilles), perhaps with an admixture of colonists from neighbouring Emporion (today's Empúries).
Remains of the Greek settlement can still be seen. Remains from the Roman period go back to the 2nd century BC and continue well into Christian times with a paleochristian church and necropolis. After the collapse of Roman power the town seems to have been abandoned, but a fortified settlement from the Visigothic period has been excavated on the nearby Puig Rom.
Rhoda coins, 5th-1st century BCE.
The mediaeval town grew around the monastery of Santa Maria de Roses (mentioned since 944). Its jurisdiction was shared by the abbots of Santa Maria de Roses and the counts of Empúries. In 1402 the county of Empúries was incorporated into the Crown of Aragon and Roses acquired the right to organize its own municipal government and economy.
In the first decades of the 16th century Roses suffered repeated attacks by privateers from North Africa. To counter the threat, Charles V ordered the construction of extensive fortifications in 1543. In spite of the precautions, a naval squadron led by the Turkish admiral Barbarossa attacked and plundered the town some months later. After substantial revisions, the fortifications were completed in 1553, under Charles's son Philip II. The entire medieval town was enclosed by a bastioned pentagonal wall (illustration, below). The defensive system was supplemented by the Castell de la Trinitat, some 2.5 km to the east. The town received a permanent military garrison, which profoundly changed its character. To minimise friction between the citizenry and the soldiers, barracks were constructed, but did not prevent the gradual movement of part of the population to outside the walls, where the modern town of Roses now is.
In the following centuries the fortifications were severely tested. In 1645, during the Catalan Revolt, French troops besieged Roses and captured it. The Treaty of the Pyrenees (1659) restored the town to Spain.
In 1693, during the War of the Grand Alliance the French captured the town again. This time the French occupation lasted until the Peace of Ryswick in 1697. In 1712, during the War of the Spanish Succession, Austrian troops tried to take the city, but were driven off. In 1719, during the War of the Quadruple Alliance, the French again attacked, but failed to take Roses.
After a long period of relative calm the Wars of the French Revolution ushered in a new round of hostilities. In 1793 the French revolutionary government declared war on Spain. At first, the Spanish armies won a foothold in France, but in 1794 the revolutionary armies invaded Catalonia. The Siege of Roses lasted from 28 November 1794 until 3 February 1795, when the garrison was safely evacuated by a Spanish naval squadron, except for 300 soldiers. The town was surrendered to France, but the war between France and Spain ended at the Peace of Basle signed in July 1795. The city quickly returned to Spanish control.
In 1808, Emperor Napoleon I of France forced King Charles IV of Spain and his son Ferdinand to abdicate and installed his brother, Joseph Bonaparte on the throne. When the Spanish people revolted against this high-handed behavior, French armies again invaded the country in the Peninsular War. The fourth and last Siege of Roses occurred in 1808. During the operation, the Scottish Royal Navy captain, Thomas Cochrane assisted the Spanish by putting his men into Castell de la Trinitat to help defend the town. The Scot stayed until the citadel and the town surrendered, before evacuating himself and his men. In 1814, when the defeated French withdrew from Spain, they blew up the town's fortifications along with the Castell de la Trinitat. At this time, the ancient town, called the Ciutadella, was completely ruined. Meanwhile, to the east the modern town slowly continued to grow.
In 1879 Roses suffered a devastating economic crisis through phylloxera, a pest of the grapevines, that destroyed the town's wine growing industry. Some of the population moved to Barcelona or emigrated to the United States.
In the 20th century, notably in the period after World War II, Roses has profited from the growth of tourism.
Over the last decades important excavations have been carried out inside the walls of the Ciutadella concerning not only the Greek and Roman remains, but part of the medieval city and its walls. In the 1990s extensive restoration work was carried out on the walls of the Ciutadella, and in 2004 a museum was opened inside it. A controversial restoration of the Castell de Trinitat was formally completed in 2010
Source/Photography/Bibliography
Strabon
Lluís Buscató i Somoza, La colònia grega de Rhode: una aproximació al seu origen, evolució i desaparició, Figueres, Brau, 1999.
Lluís Buscató i Somoza, "La Real Academia de la Historia y los yacimientos de Rhode y Emporion en el s. XIX", Boletín de la Real Academia de la Historia, 198 (2001), 155-174.
Lluís Buscató i Somoza, "L'actuació arqueològica de la Comissió de Monuments de Girona al segle XIX: Emporion i Rhode", Annals de l'Institut d'Estudis Gironins, 42 (2001), p. 483-491.
Lluís Buscató i Somoza, "Noucentisme i arqueologia: Emili Gandia i les excavacions arqueològiques dels anys 1916 i 1917 a Roses", Annals de l'Institut d'Estudis Empordanesos, 35 (2002), 11-37.
Carlos Díaz, Hug Palou i Anna M. Puig, La ciutadella de Roses, Girona, Diputació de Girona-Caixa de Girona (Quaderns de la Revista de Girona, 77), 1998.
Antonio Manuel de Guadán, Las monedas de plata de Emporion y Rhode, 2 vols., monogràfic dels Anales y Boletín de los Museos de Arte de Barcelona, 12 (1955-1956) i 13 (1957-1958) [=1968-1970].
Josep M. Gurt, Rosas en el Bajo Imperio, tesina de llicenciatura de la Universitat de Barcelona, 1974 (dir. Pere de Palol).
M. Aurora Martín, F. Javier Nieto i Josep Mª Nolla, Excavaciones en la ciudadela de Roses: campaña 1976 y 1977, Girona, Diputació Provincial de Girona, Servei Tècnic d'Investigacions Arqueològiques, 1979.
Francisco Javier Nieto Prieto, El edificio "A" de la Ciudadela de Roses: la terra sigillata africana, Girona, Centre d'Investigacions Arqueològiques de Girona, 1993.
Mª. José Pedrón Pedrón, Las importaciones de cerámica ática de Rhode: barrio helenístico (1963-1970), tesina de llicenciatura de la Universitat de Lleida, 1995? (dir. Emili Junyent i Sánchez).
Anna M. Puig i Griessenberger et al., La colònia grega de Rhode (Roses, Alt Empordà), coord. Teresa Carreras Rosell i Aurora Martin, Girona, Museu d'Arqueologia de Catalunya-Diputació de Girona-Ajuntament de Roses, 2006. Tesi doctoral original consultable a TDX Tesis en Xarxa.
Enric Sanmartí, La cerámica campeniense de Emporion y Rhode, 2 vols., Barcelona, Diputació Provincial de Barcelona-Institut de Prehistòria i Arqueologia de Barcelona, 1978.
L. Villaronga, Les monedes de plata d'Empòrion, Rhode i les seves imitacions: de principi del segle III aC fins a l'arribada dels romans el 218 aC, Barcelona, Societat Catalana d'Estudis Numismàtics, Institut d'Estudis Catalans, 2000.
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Narciso Díaz i Romañach. Roses: Una vila amb història. Roses, [1991]. ISBN 84-606-0033-5.
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Pablo de la Fuente. Les fortificacions reials del golf de Roses en l'època moderna. Figueres, 1998.
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Marcel Pujol i Hamelink. La vila de Roses (segles XIV-XVI). Figueres, 1997. ISBN 84-88589-42-5.
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