Perched on the top Monte Titano
stand the three fortification towers of Guaita linked by walls and
communication trenches, which offer spectacular panoramic views of San Marino.
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The
story goes like this. Stone
mason and sometimes preacher Marinus
of Arba and his life-long pal Leo were
forced by some political upheaval to
leave his home of Rab, a Roman colony on the island
of Arba in the Adriatic Sea off the coast of what is now Croatia. The two young men
settled in the northern Italian city
of Rimini to find work
reconstructing the city’s ruined walls. But there they ran afoul of the infamous persecution
of Christians ordered by the Emperor
Diocletian and had to flee the city.
At the same time some of Marinus’s sermons
as an ordained Deacon were found
somehow at odds with the not-yet codified tenets of the Church so
he could find no refuge. The pair fled to the rugged, remote, and unpopulated
Apennine Mountains determined to live as monastic hermits equally free of the Emperor and the Pope.
By tradition on September
3, 301 CE Marinus began laying the
stones of a chapel and the
establishment of a monastic community.
A much later German etching depicting Saint Mrinus the Stone Cutter building his monastery. |
Marinus died many years
later in 366 with the words Relinquo vos liberos ab utroque homine—I
leave you free from both men—meaning the Emperor and the Pope. By then his community had grown and prospered
and the monastery high on the top of Monte
Titano had become a haven for refugees persecuted by both. It would remain so through the centuries.
Eventually Marinus would be canonized
as San Marino and the community
that sprang up around his Hermitage would become known as the Most Serene
Republic of San Marino. The tiny nation, occupying less than 24
square miles, has maintained its independence ever since and
celebrates September 3 not only as Marinus’s Feast Day, but as foundation
date of the Republic.
That makes San Marino easily the oldest surviving continuously sovereign state in the world, and because it never came under the rule of a local nobleman or even feudal governance by the Abby, also the oldest Republic. This was made possible by its isolation, the terrain so rugged that it was said there was hardly a square inch of level ground, located away from traditional trade routes and invasion corridors, sometimes surprising
friends in High Places, and just
plain dumb luck.
In
its earliest years San Marino was informally ruled by the hermit monks of Church of St. Agatha on the top of
Monte Titan. This hardly was governance
of any meaningful kind. In the early
400’s with Rome near collapse eight neighboring towns joined with San Marino
seeking protection from invading Goths. These communes became the along with the
original settlement became San Marino’s nine
municipalities. With the expanded territory and population the heads of
families established themselves as ruling
council known as the Arengo which
governed from the 5th Century to 1243.
By then it had grown to representatives of more than 50 extended
families and had become a cumbersome body and was riven by feuds and
rival cabals.
The Sammarinese,
as
citizens are known, fed up by oligarchic
rule established their own Grand and General Council. Pope
Innocent IV, the titular head of
state in one of the first acts of his Papacy
recognized the Council as the country’s ruling body. Every six months the Grand and General
Council elected two Captains Regent to
co-hold executive power. They were not eligible
for re-election, but could be returned to the position on later occasions. Traditionally the pair of Regents were drawn
from opposing factions on the
Council and since the adoption of a multi-party
system, from each of the main political parties or coalitions. This form of governance was molded after the Senate and Consuls of the old Roman
Republic. The arrangement was codified the Leges Statutae Republicae Sancti Marini—Constitution of San Marino—recorded in a series of six books written in Latin
in the late 1600. In 1631the Papacy waived its light
claims on San Marino and recognized its independence from the Papal
States.
The Constitution of San Marino was codified and published in 1600. |
If
maintaining essential independence for nearly 1400 years from the declining years of the Roman Empire, through
the Dark Ages, and the Renaissance when intrigue and war spread
across the Italian Peninsula as the
Papacy, ambitious city states, and
various leagues and alliances struggled for supremacy was
hard, the challenges of the Napoleonic
era, the clash of Empires, and
the rise of the European nation state
was even more daunting.
In
1797 San Marino’s independence was threatened when Napoleon Bonaparte’s French Army was rampaging through Italy.
Somehow Antonio Onofri, one of the two serving Captains Regent, managed
to befriend the General and impress
him with his tale of San Marino’s long independence as a republic. Napoleon at this stage of his career was
still an ideologically committed
Republican himself. Not only did he
offer to guarantee and protect San Marino’s independence, but
he offered to award the country territory from adjacent states. The grateful Grand and General Council
politely refused that offer rightly fearing that accepting a land grab would alienate
more powerful neighbors and lead to attacks when the French would inevitably
eventually leave Italy.
An
even greater challenge was the long struggle of Italian unification that began after the final fall of Napoleon and
the Congress of Vienna in 1815 and
continued up to the final surrender of the Papal States and the location of the
capital at Rome for the Kingdom of Italy. San Marino began the period completely
surrounded by the Papal States. But in
1859 the rapidly expanding Kingdom of
Sardinia extended its borders over Central
Italy and San Marino lay astride the border between that Kingdom and the
Papal States. In accordance to its
traditions, San Marino became of place of refuge for many fleeing the fighting,
but especially for refugees from pro-unification
areas. In December 1860 the Papal province of Marche adjacent to San Marino was
incorporated in the Kingdom of Sardinia.
One of San Marino's critical freinds in high places that helped preserve its independence. |
That
made San Marino an island in an area aflame for unification. In gratitude
and in recognition of the tiny nation’s long resistance to Papal rule, unification
leader Giuseppe Garibaldi prevailed
upon the soon-to-be King of Italy, Victor
Emanuel II who had let the Sarndinian-Piedmontese
forces which had captured Marche, to respect the traditional independence
of San Marino.
San
Marino was not immune from its own domestic
crisis. By the turn of the 20th Century the citizenry had become
restive under the Grand and General Council which had become increasingly
oligarchic. In a bold and unusual move
in 1906 the Sammarinese Socialist Party
agitated for and achieved a call to meeting of the ancient Arengo, where the
heads of families, under some public
duress, voted to authorize universal
manhood suffrage for the first time in elections to the General
Council. The Socialists took advantage
of the change to assume leadership of a majority coalition in the Council. The oligarchs formed a counter-party and
bided their time for a chance to resume power.
The
eruption of World War I interrupted
the internal political struggles and put independence once again at risk. Italy initially entered the war on the side
of Austria-Hungary, honoring old
treaty obligations. Then in May of 1915,
Italy changed sides, declaring war
on its former ally in hopes gaining territory along the frontier between the
countries. San Marino, however, declared its neutrality, which was taken as hostile
by Italy which feared that the small state could become a nest of Austrian spies and agents and that the country’s powerful new radio transmitter atop Monte Titano could be used by the enemy.
Italy
tried to force the occupation of San Marino by units of the Carabinieri paramilitary police which
the Republic refused and resisted. In
retaliation Italy cut San Marino’s telephone
lines and established a partial blockade. The Italians did not, however, invade the
country.
Still
within San Marino there was some popular support for the Italians. Small numbers of Sammarinese formed a volunteer unit to fight with the
Italians. Another volunteer group set up
a Red Cross field hospital. This was regarded as hostile by the
Austrians who broke diplomatic relations
and threatened the country should the front
move its way.
The
Italians fared poorly in a brutal campaign that turned into retreat and then
stalemate. The Sammarinese once again
offered shelter to refugees.
In
the aftermath of World War I the old oligarchic faction reorganized under Giuliano Gozi, one of the few
volunteers with the Italian army and then serving as both Foreign Minister—effectively the leader of the Cabinet—and Interior
Minister which put him in control of the Army and police forces. Gozi founded the Sammarinese Fascist Party, modeled on the Italian Party, in 1922
and used street thugs to intimidate
the Socialists and syndicalists—unionists. In 1923 Gozi was elected the first
Fascist Captain Regent. After 1926 all
other parties were banned and until the end of World War II both Captains Regents were Fascist in contradiction to
the ancient Constitution. Although San Marino had become a single party state, Fascist power was not absolute and independents continued to hold a
majority in the Grand and General Council until 1932. After that a split in Fascist ranks weakened
the Party.
Despite cordial relations with Mussolini and the Italian
Fascists, San Marino once again declared its traditional neutrality with
the outbreak of a general European War in 1939.
It had already not followed the Italian Party’s lead in adopting Anti-Jewish legislation in 1938. It had a small, but long standing Jewish
population, and after persecution began in Italy some Jews found refuge in San
Marino. During the war anti-fascist Italian Partisans also
occasionally found secret refuge there, although the local Fascists expelled
those who were discovered.
In 1940 the New York Times erroneously reported
that San Marino had declared war on Britain. The Sammarinese government scrambled to wire London denying entering the war.
With the fall of Mussolini in Italy in July of 1943 and the subsequent
official separate peace with the Allies,
the Sammarinese Fascist Party lost power, although they were briefly
restored in 1944. The Fascists
reiterated neutrality in April of 1944 but the British bombed the country on
June 26 believing it was a repository for military supplies for the
Germans. The government denied allowing munitions of any nation to be stored on
its territory.
With a fresh German grave in the foreground, Indian troops march through San Marino with Monte Titano in the background. |
In early September the Germans forcibly occupied the
country, the first and only time the country was overrun by a hostile
power. The Germans were already in
general retreat in Italy. On September
17 the 4th Indian Infantry Division
attacked the Nazis and ousted them in the brief Battle of San Marino. After
driving the Germans out the Indians quickly withdrew and left the country in
the control of its own armed forces.
The German occupation effectively finished the
Fascists as a political force in San Marino.
Multi-party parliamentary government was restored and in 1945 a
coalition led by the Communists
achieved a majority and ruled until 1957.
It was the first time anywhere in the world that Communists formed an
elected government.
The Grand and General Council was for years split
between multiple parties, some of them quite small, a mirror of the situation
in Italy. In 2008 a new election law put
restrictions on small parties forcing most of them out of existence or to join
coalitions. Today there are two main
opposing coalitions, the center-right
Pact for San Marino, led by the Christian Democratic Party, and the left wing Reforms and Freedom, led by
the Party of Socialists and Democrats,
a merger of the Socialist Party and the former communist Party of Democrats. Today the Pact for San Marino hold a
majority on the Council, but in conformity with the Constitution the Captains
Regent are drawn one from each block for their six month terms.
The frequent turn-over of Captains Regents has
resulted in San Marino having more recognized female heads of state than any other nation in the world—15, including three who served twice.
Today San Marino is the smallest member of the Council of Europe but it is not a
member of the European Economic Union, the
European Parliament, or NATO.
None-the-less, it is by agreement allowed to use the Euro as its currency and as is customary has its own national images printed on the obverse
side of notes, most of which are
snapped up by collectors.
With an economy
relying heavily on finance, technical
services, and tourism, the
approximately 35,000 residents enjoy the highest per capita income in Europe and are the only country on the
continent with more automobiles than
people. Its citizens are also among the most highly educated in Europe. Unlike many small nations with substantial
finance industries, San Marino does not rely on being a tax shelter. There is a corporate profits tax rate of 19
percent. Capital gains are subject
to a five percent tax, and interest
is subject to a 13 percent withholding
tax. Foreigners use San Marino banks
for their renowned stability and the high level of technical and personal
services.
The Guard of the Rock on parade. one of the major units of the San Marino regular Army. |
By agreement
Italy is responsible for the general
defense of San Marino, but the country maintains a fairly sizable military
establishment for its size. This include
colorful units with largely ceremonial
duties including the Crossbow Corps,
Guard of the Rock (also a combat unit and border patrol), and Guard of the Council Great and General
(which protects the government). In
addition every family with more than two
adult males is required to provide a member of the Company of Uniformed Militia. Participation
is so popular that it is over
subscribed.
Despite having its origins in the establishment of monastery,
San Marino does not now have and never had a state religion. Always
overwhelmingly Catholic, the small
state resisted Church control which is why it never got its own Bishop.
The Inquisition was never
established there. In the Reformation period fugitive Protestant dissidents found temporary
refuge and a rest stop on their way to places like the German states, Poland, Hungary, and Transylvania
where they influenced the development pietism
and the Radical Reformation. While there was never an official state
policy of toleration, persecution of religious minorities, even Jews, was rare.
Today 97.2% of the population is at least nominally Catholic. Like most of Europe, however, the
majority are non-practicing and secularized. Self-proclaimed Protestants, including Jehovah’s
Witnesses, represent about 1.1% of the population, other Christians—mostly Orthodox--.07%,
Jews .01%, and non-religious, 07.
On the whole its citizens are happy and San Marino
is doing just fine, thank you, on its 1,714th
birthday. There’s a Hallmark moment if there ever was one.
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