San Marino vista, for article on San Marino's founding

Saint Marinus founds the world’s oldest surviving republic on Monte Titano

A stonemason from a Roman island sails to the Italian coast, preaches Christianity, flees persecution into the mountains, and builds a small church on a rocky peak — and from that act, according to tradition, the world’s longest-surviving republic is born. The story of San Marino’s founding is part legend, part miracle, and possibly part fact. But the tiny state that grew from it is entirely real, and it is still standing.

What the tradition holds

  • San Marino’s founding: According to accounts first recorded centuries after the events they describe, a stonemason named Marinus left the Roman island of Rab — in present-day Croatia — with his friend Leo and traveled to Rimini to work. After drawing attention for his Christian preaching during the Diocletianic Persecution, he retreated to Monte Titano in the Apennines, where he built a small church and established a monastic community around 301 C.E.
  • Monte Titano settlement: The earliest verifiable historical evidence for a monastic community on Monte Titano comes not from 301 C.E. but from the 5th or 6th century C.E., when a monk named Eugippus recorded that another monk had lived in a monastery in the area — making the founding date traditional rather than archaeologically confirmed.
  • Oldest constitutional republic: San Marino today claims to be both the oldest extant sovereign state and the oldest constitutional republic in the world — a claim widely recognized internationally, even as historians note the legendary nature of its origin story.

A republic that refused to disappear

Whatever its precise origins, San Marino has demonstrated a remarkable capacity to survive. Surrounded by the Italian peninsula — and later, entirely enclosed by the modern state of Italy — it navigated papal authority, Napoleonic expansion, and two world wars while retaining its independence.

When Napoleon’s forces advanced in 1797, a Sammarinese regent named Antonio Onofri cultivated a personal relationship with Napoleon himself, who promised in writing to protect the republic’s independence and even offered to expand its territory. The offer of new land was declined. The regents feared that accepting it would invite retaliation from neighboring powers. It was a characteristically careful move from a state that had survived by reading the room for centuries.

During the Italian unification movement of the 19th century, San Marino sheltered figures persecuted for their political beliefs, including Giuseppe Garibaldi and his wife Anita. Garibaldi, in return, allowed San Marino to remain independent when he had the power to absorb it. In 1861, U.S. President Abraham Lincoln — himself leading a republic through existential crisis — accepted honorary Sammarinese citizenship and wrote that San Marino proved a republic “founded on republican principles is capable of being so administered as to be secure and enduring.”

How the government actually works

San Marino’s constitutional structure is genuinely unusual. The Grand and General Council — a democratically elected legislature — selects not one but two heads of state, called the Captains Regent, every six months. The two must come from opposing political parties. They serve simultaneously with equal powers, presiding over the council and the institutions of state together.

The only other country with a comparable multi-person executive structure is Switzerland, whose Federal Council has seven members. San Marino’s six-month term limit is even more stringent — and the requirement that the two leaders come from opposing parties is a built-in check on concentrated power that many larger democracies have never managed to institutionalize.

The country was also the first currently existing state to abolish the death penalty, doing so in 1865 C.E. — before most of its much larger neighbors.

What a microstate can teach a world of large states

San Marino covers just over 61 square kilometers. Its population is around 34,000. It has no army of consequence and no natural resources that would make it strategically valuable to a conquering power. Its survival across more than 17 centuries — even accepting the uncertainty about the earliest dates — is less a story of military strength than of diplomatic agility, constitutional creativity, and a community that kept choosing to stay together.

The republic sits atop Monte Titano, a UNESCO World Heritage Site, and its historic center and the mountain itself were inscribed in 2008 C.E. as an outstanding example of a medieval state’s continuity into the modern era. Tourism, finance, and industry now drive an economy that ranks among the wealthiest in the world by GDP per capita — a striking outcome for a landlocked mountain community that started, if the tradition holds, with one man and a small stone church.

The Grand and General Council, San Marino’s parliament, remains one of the oldest continuously functioning legislative bodies on Earth. The council’s origins predate many of the institutions that the modern world takes as its democratic benchmarks.

Lasting impact

San Marino’s survival shaped — in small but meaningful ways — how the world thinks about what a republic can be. Abraham Lincoln’s letter was not diplomatic flattery. It was a statement of political philosophy: that the size of a state has nothing to do with the durability of its principles.

The Sammarinese model of shared executive power with term-limited co-heads of state has attracted interest from political theorists studying how to prevent the concentration of authority. Switzerland’s Federal Council — a similar, if larger, structure — is one of the most stable governments on Earth. The coincidence is worth examining.

San Marino also demonstrated early that a small state could punch above its weight through legal and diplomatic means rather than military ones. Its repeated success in asserting tax exemptions, securing papal recognition, and declining Napoleon’s territorial gifts all point to a political culture that understood leverage without force. That lesson — that sovereignty can be maintained through institutional legitimacy rather than physical power — is one that international relations scholars continue to study.

The republic also became an early adopter of philatelic sovereignty — issuing its own postage stamps from 1877 C.E. onward as a deliberate expression of national identity and a significant source of revenue. It was a creative act of state-building that smaller nations around the world would eventually follow.

Blindspots and limits

The 301 C.E. founding date is a claim, not a confirmed historical fact. The accounts of Saint Marinus were first written down centuries after his supposed lifetime, and the historian William Miller described them as “a mixture of fables and miracles.” The earliest verifiable evidence of a monastic community on Monte Titano dates to the 5th or 6th century C.E. San Marino’s status as the world’s oldest republic rests on a tradition, not an archaeological record.

The republic also passed through a period of Fascist rule between 1923 C.E. and 1943 C.E., when the Sammarinese Fascist Party — modeled on Mussolini’s Italian movement — governed the country and sought Italian support. That chapter complicates any uncritical narrative of unbroken democratic continuity.

Read more

For more on this story, see: Wikipedia — San Marino

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