Canossa Castle
Canossa Castle is a medieval fortress in ruins, perched on a white sandstone cliff in the Apennine Mountains within the municipality of Canossa, province of Reggio Emilia, Emilia-Romagna, Italy.[1][2]
Founded in the mid-10th century by the Attonid count Adalberto Atto, it became the core stronghold of the House of Canossa, a powerful family that controlled extensive territories in northern Italy and influenced papal-imperial relations.[3][4]
The castle achieved lasting historical significance in January 1077 during the Investiture Controversy, when Holy Roman Emperor Henry IV, after trekking through winter hardships, performed public penance at its gates before Pope Gregory VII—hosted by Matilda of Canossa—to secure absolution from excommunication, an event chronicled in Gregory's contemporary letter to German princes.[5][6]
Under Matilda of Tuscany, the last prominent Canossan ruler who inherited it in 1076, the fortress symbolized her strategic alliance with the papacy against imperial ambitions, bolstering her defense of vast lands amid feudal conflicts.[7][1]
Repeated sieges, including destruction by Guelph forces in the 13th century, and natural erosion have left only fragmented walls and cisterns, now preserved as an archaeological site housing the National Museum "Naborre Campanini," which displays artifacts from 19th-century excavations revealing Longobard-era influences and medieval fortifications.[8][1]