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INTRODUCTION
The island of Sicily (Italian: Sicilia) with
its neighboring islands forms a
semiautonomous region of Italy. Palermo is the capital. Separated from
the
southwest tip of the Italian peninsula by the Strait of Messina ,
Sicily is
surrounded by the Mediterranean Sea to the south, the Ionian Sea to the
east,
and the Tyrrhenian Sea to the north. Sicily is divided into nine
provinces:
Agrigento, Caltanissetta, Catania, Enna, Messina, Palermo, Ragusa,
Siracusa,
and Trapani. The island's Peloritani, Nebrodi, and Le Madonie mountain
chains
are structurally a continuation of the Apennine Mountains. The highest
point (10,705
feet) is the
active summit of Mount Etna, former source of summer snow for the
wealthy all
up and down the peninsula. Sicily has two other active volcanos:
Stromboli and
Vulcano, both in the Aeolian Islands.. The island's three main ports
are
Catania, Messina, and Palermo. Tuna and other fishing dominate the
coastal
economy.
HISTORY
Sicily, the largest and most populous island
in the Mediterranean, has been
settled and ruled by many peoples. Its earliest-known inhabitants were
the
Elymi, Sicani, and Siculi. From the 8th century B.C. Phoenicians,
Carthaginians, and Greeks established settlements on the island. In the
5th
century B.C. the leading Greek city, Syracuse, established hegemony
over the
other Greek colonies (including Agrigento, Gela, Catania, Himera, and
Messina).
It faced a vigorous challenge from the Carthaginians, however, who by
the end
of that century controlled half the island. In the mid-3d century the
Romans intervened
against the Carthaginians on Sicily, precipitating the First Punic War
(264-241
B.C.).
After the Roman victory and the death of Hiero
II of Syracuse, Rome gained
control of most of the island, and Sicily became known as the
Breadbasket of
Rome. Sicily was taken by the Vandals and then the Goths in the 5th
century. In
532 it came under Byzantine rule, and in the 9th century it fell to the
Muslim
Arabs.
The Arabs, who promoted both economic and
cultural development, were driven
out by the Normans in the late 11th century. The Norman Roger II was
recognized
(1139) by Pope Innocent II as king of Sicily and of the Norman
territories in
southern Italy . Through the marriage of Constance, heiress of the last
Norman
king, to Holy Roman Emperor Henry VI, Sicily passed in 1194 to the
Hohenstaufen
dynasty. Their son, Holy Roman Emperor Frederick II, spent much of his
time in
Sicily, where, like Roger II, he effected important administrative
reforms.
After his death (1250), however, his weak successors were outmaneuvered
by the
papacy, which placed (1266) the Angevin Charles I on the throne as a
papal
vassal.
Charles's oppressive rule provoked the
Sicilian Vespers (1282), a revolt in
which the Sicilians chose Peter III of Aragon as their king. Although
the
Aragonese secured control of Sicily, the Angevins retained Naples, and
wars
between the two continued until 1373. The Aragonese allowed Sicily
considerable
local autonomy, but this policy was reversed after the unification of
Spain and
the accession to the Spanish throne of the Habsburg dynasty (early 16th
century). Sicily passed briefly to the house of Savoy (1713) and then
to the
Austrian Habsburgs (1720), but in 1734, during the War of the Polish
Succession, both Sicily and Naples were conquered by the Spanish
Bourbon prince
Charles. When Charles succeeded (1759) to the Spanish throne (as
Charles III),
Sicily and Naples passed to his son Ferdinand (see Ferdinand I, King of
the Two
Sicilies). The Bourbons ruled from Naples until the French forced
Ferdinand to
flee to Sicily in 1806. After the Napoleonic Wars, Ferdinand formally
combined
(1816) his realms as the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies. In 1860, Giuseppe
Garibaldi
took Sicily, which then joined the kingdom of Sardinia and ultimately
became
part of united Italy. During World War II, Sicily was the scene of
heavy
fighting when the Allies launched an invasion from North African bases
on July
9-10, 1943.
WHAT TO SEE IN SICILY
The Phoenicians founded Palermo; the ancient
Greeks are present in the
temples at Agrigento; the Romans leave us the exquisite villa at Piazza
Armeria; the Normans built cathedrals; the Swabians built castles; the
Spanish
built palazzi. Everyone left something wonderful to see in Sicily. This
island,
whose name derives from the Greek Sikelìa ("three points"),
has also 645 miles
of wonderful coasts and many active volcanos.
Palermo, the largest city, revolves around the
intersection of Via Maqueda
and Corso Vittorio Emanuele, the so-called Quattro Canti which
delineates four
rival quarters. Artistic rivalries abound as well, as exemplified in
the
massive Palazzo dei Normanni, Roger II’s palace. Look for the Christian
haloes
King Ferdinand II had placed over the heads of the original Moorish
figures.
Greek rites are still the norm at the Church of the Martorana, with its
exquisite belfry. San Giorgio dei Genovesi is a rare example of
Sicilian
Renaissance. Sicily’s kings and queens are buried in the breathtaking
cathedral; on a smaller but no less extravagant scale are the stuccos
in the Oratorio
di San Domenico, whose altarpiece is by Van Dyck. The Oratorio di San
Lorenzo
is a masterpiece of Sicilian roccoco, contrasted starkly by
Caravaggio’s
"Nativity," his next to last work. Just outside Palermo are the
chinoiserie-decorated La
Favorita; La Zisa, the most important Norman building
in Sicily; La Cuba,
a 12th-century royal
pavilion buried within a modern barracks (half the fun is the military
tour
guide/escort you will be provided), and the Capuchin Convent, with its
macabre
catacombs holding the mummified bones of 8000 Palermitans.
The cathedral of Monreale is at the top of any
list, with its dazzling
mosaics and Benedictine cloisters. The unfinished temples of Segesta,
the
Valley of the Temples at Agrigento, the 6th-century city of Heraclea
Minoa all
rival any ancient site in Greece today. Erice is perched high atop a
hill, its
5th-century BC walls and great medieval castle overlooking the valleys
and, on
a very clear day, the shadows of nearby Africa. A few miles south is
Marsala,
home of great wines both sweet and dry, and of long sandy beaches.
Sciacca, a
small town with a festive evening atmosphere, is the best place to stay
to
visit Selinunte, the other ancient Greek town.
Noto is as heady a baroque extravaganza as any
you’ll ever find. In Gela,
stand atop the monumental ramparts, built less than a hundred years
after
Aeschylus died here in 456 BC.
And then there is Siracusa.
On the mainland,
inside the dense archeological zone, Aeschylus may have seen one of his
own
plays performed at the Linear Theatre (so-called because its seats form
straight rows, unlike the semicircular ones found in most ancient
theatres). On
Ortygia Island are Santa Maria delle Colonne, a church that combines a
5th-century Greek temple, Norman battlements and a baroque façade; and
San
Pietro, one of the oldest churches in all of Italy; just a few miles
north of
town is the Eurylus Castle, built in 100 BC.
Catania, the second
largest city, is tipical for
its barocco, the night life, the outdoor fish market, and the Feast Day
of
Sant'Agata. The barocco is also dominant in Acireale, the city of the
most
famous Carnival of Sicily.
Piazza Armerina is a spectacular town with a
breathtaking hilltop view and a
hunting lodge whose mosaics date from the 4th century BC.
Troìna and Randazzo are lovely little medieval
towns; the 11th-century
church of San Pietro in Itala Marina is one of the few remaining
structures
built by Count Roger.
Taormina is also medieval, though its fame
derives from its ancient Greek
theatre (and from its view, probably the most spectacular of any
theatre built
by the Greeks, who certainly loved their views). A few miles away in
the
country, the church at San Francesco di Paola, a most important Norman
building, is lost at the far end of a rustic valley: the trek there is
indeed
as unique as the goal (ask a local to open the door if it’s closed!).
Make sure you get to the cathedral of Messina
at noon to see the world’s
largest astronomical clock perform; like its neighbor Catania, Messina
was
devastated in the 1908 earthquake, then heavily bombed in World War II;
both
have extensive new quarters and small baroque neighborhoods that have
miraculously survived.
Go to the Aeolians to see the extensive Greek
ruins on Lipari, but mostly to
swim and dive in the crystalline seas and to sunbathe on the myriad
beaches and
rocky shores.
SICILIAN COOKING
Sicilian cooking is unique in Italy, blending
extravagant Arab and northern
techniques with simple peasant ingredients, mainly the catch of the sea
and the
pick of the garden. Pasta con le sarde is the perfect example:
featuring
a sauce made with sardines, raisins, pine nuts, fennel, saffron,
parsley and
capers, its origins go all the way back to the Phoenicians. Pasta
alla Norma
combines tomato, eggplant and tasty ricotta salata. Swordfish and tuna
dishes
abound, especially in May and June.
But the Sicilian tooth is most glorious when
it's sweet. Sicilians think
nothing of having a brioche stuffed with ice cream for breakfast. Try
it, if
you dare. Try also Cannoli, cassata and frutta di
Martorana,
perfectly authentic looking marzipan fruits and vegetables originally
made by
the nuns of the Martorana convent. And when you're in Messina sample la
pignolata, a delicate mound of lemon-scented crispy deep-fried
batter balls
covered half with vanilla and half with chocolate icing.
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Coordinates: 37°38′33″N,
14°11′34″E
Sicily (Italian
and Sicilian: Sicilia) is an autonomous
region
of Italy
in Europe.
Of all the
regions of Italy, Sicily covers
the
largest surface area with 25,708 km², and currently has five
million
inhabitants. It is also the largest island in the Mediterranean
Sea, though several much smaller islands surrounding it
are also
considered part of Sicily.
Throughout
much of its history, Sicily
has been considered a crucial strategic location due in large part to
its
importance for Mediterranean trade routes.[1]
The area was highly regarded as part of Magna
Graecia, with Cicero describing Siracusa
as the greatest and most beautiful city of all Ancient
Greece.[2]
Although
today it is a region of Italy,
it was once a country in its own right, as the Kingdom
of Sicily, ruled from Palermo.
The Kingdom
of Sicily ruled over southern
Italy, Sicily,
and Malta.
It
later became a part of the Two
Sicilies under the Bourbons,
which was actually centered in Naples
rather than Sicily.
Since that time the risorgimento has occurred and Sicily has been a fully fledged part of Italy.
Sicily is considered to be highly rich in its
own unique culture, especially in regards to the arts,
cuisine,
architecture
and even language. The Sicilian economy is
largely based
in agriculture
(famously orange and lemon
orchards), this
same rural countryside has attracted significant tourism
in the
modern age as its natural beauty is highly regarded.[3]
Sicily
also
holds importance for archeological
and ancient sites such as the Necropolis of Pantalica.
[edit] History
Main article: History
of Sicily
[edit] Ancient tribes
The
original inhabitants of Sicily were
three
defined groups of the Ancient peoples of Italy. The
most
prominent and by far the earliest of which was the Sicani,
who
according to Thucydides arrived from the Iberian
Peninsula (perhaps Catalonia).[4][5]
Important historical evidence has been discovered in the form of cave
drawings
by the Sicani, dated from the end of the Pleistocene
Epoch, around 8000 BC.[6]
The Elymians,
thought to be from the Aegean,
were the next tribe to migrate to join the
Sicanians on Sicily.[7]
Although there is no evidence of any wars between the
tribes, when the Elymians settled in the north-west corner of the
island, the
Sicanians moved across eastwards. From mainland Italy,
thought to
originally have been Ligures from Liguria
came the Sicels
in 1200 BC; forcing the Sicanians to move back across
Sicily settling in the middle of the island.[6]
[edit] Greek and Roman
period
Main articles: Magna
Graecia, Ancient Rome, and Sicilia (Roman province)
Greek temple at Selinunte.
In
around 750 BC, the Greeks began to colonize
Sicily,
establishing
many important settlements. The most important colony was Syracuse;
other significant ones were Akragas,
Gela, Himera, Selinunte,
and Zancle.
The native Sicani and Sicel peoples were absorbed by the Hellenic
culture with relative ease, and the area was part of Magna
Graecia along with the rest of Southern
Italy, which the Greeks had also colonized.
Sicily
was very fertile, and the introduction of olives
and grape vines
flourished, creating a great deal of profitable trading;[8] a significant part of Greek culture on the
island was
that of Greek religion and many temples
were
built across Sicily, such as the Valley of the Temples at Agrigento.[9]
Politics on the island was intertwined with that of
Greece; Syracuse became desired by the Athenians,
who
during Peloponnesian War set out on the Sicilian Expedition. Syracuse
gained Sparta
and Corinth
as
allies, as a result the Athenian army and ships were destroyed, with
most of
the survivors being sold into slavery.[10]
The Roman amphitheatre
While
Greek Syracuse controlled much of Sicily,
there were a few Carthaginian colonies in the far west of the
island. When
the two cultures began to clash, the Sicilian
Wars erupted.[11]
Greece began to make
peace
with the Roman Republic in 262 BC and the Romans
sought to annex Sicily
as its empire's
first province. Rome intervened in the First
Punic War, crushing Carthage so
that by 242
BC Sicily
had
become the first Roman province outside of the Italian
Peninsula.[11]
The Second Punic War, in which Archimedes
was killed, saw Carthage trying to take
Sicily from the Roman
Empire.
They failed and this time Rome was even
more
unrelenting in the annihilation of the invaders; during 210 BC the Roman
consul M. Valerian, told the Roman
Senate that "no Carthaginian remains in Sicily".[12]
Sicily served a level of high importance for the Romans
as it acted as the empire's granary,
it was divided into two quaestorships
in the form of Syracuse
to the east and Lilybaeum to the west.[13]
Although under Augustus
some attempt was made to introduce the Latin
language to the island, Sicily was allowed to remain largely Greek
in a
cultural sense, rather than a complete cultural Romanisation.[13]
When Verres
became governor of Sicily, the once
prosperous
and contented people were put into sharp decline, in 70 BC noted figure
Cicero
condemned
the misgovernment of Verres in his oration In
Verrem.[14]
The
religion of Christianity first appeared in Sicily during
the years
following 200 AD, between this time and 313 AD when Constantine
the Great finally lifted the prohibition, a significant number of
Sicilians
became martyrs
such as Agatha, Christina,
Lucy,
Euplius
and many
more.[15] Christianity grew rapidly in Sicily
during the next two centuries, the period of history where Sicily was a
Roman province lasted for
around 700 years in total.[15]
[edit] Early Middle Ages
Main articles: Byzantine
Empire and Emirate of Sicily
As the
Roman Empire was falling apart, a Germanic
tribe known as the Vandals took Sicily
in 440 AD under the rule of their king Geiseric.
The
Vandals had already invaded parts of Roman France
and Spain,
inserting
themselves as an important power in western Europe.[16]
However, they soon lost these newly acquired possessions to another East Germanic tribe in the form of
the Goths.[16]
The Ostrogothic
conquest of Sicily (and Italy
as a
whole) under Theodoric the Great began in 488;
although the
Goths were Germanic, Theodoric sought to revive Roman culture and
government
and allowed freedom of religion.[17]
Depiction of the Gothic War.
The Gothic War took place between the
Ostrogoths
and the Eastern Roman Empire, also known as the Byzantine
Empire. Sicily was the first part
of Italy
to be
taken under general Belisarius who was commissioned by Eastern
Emperor Justinian I.[18]
Sicily was used as a base for the Byzantines to conquer the rest of
Italy, with
Naples,
Rome, Milan and
the
Ostrogoth capital Ravenna
falling within five years.[19]
However, a new Ostrogoth king Totila,
drove down the Italian peninsula, plundering
and
conquering Sicily
in 550. Totila, in turn, was defeated and killed in the Battle
of Taginae by the Byzantine general Narses
in 552.[19]
Byzantine
Emperor Constans
II decided to move from the capital Constantinople
to Syracuse in Sicily during 660, the
following year
he launched an assault from Sicily against the Lombard
Duchy of Benevento, which then occupied
most of
Southern Italy.[20] The rumours that the capital of the empire was
to be
moved to Syracuse,
along with small raids probably cost Constans his life as he was
assassinated
in 668.[20] His son Constantine
IV succeeded him, a brief usurpation in Sicily by Mezezius
being quickly
suppressed by the new emperor. Contemporary accounts report that the Greek
language was widely spoken on the island during this period.[21]
San Giovanni degli Eremiti, red
domes
showing elements of Arab architecture.
In
826, Euphemius the commander of the
Byzantine
fleet of Sicily
forced a nun to marry him. Emperor Michael
II
caught wind of the matter and ordered that general Constantine end the marriage and cut
off
Euphemius' nose. Euphemius rose up, killed Constantine
and then occupied Syracuse; he in turn
was
defeated and drove out to North
Africa.[22]
He offered rule of Sicily over to Ziyadat Allah the Aghlabid
Emir
of Tunisia
in
return for a place as a general and safety; an Islamic army of Arabs, Berbers,
Spaniards,
Cretans
and Persians
was
sent.[22]
The conquest was a see-saw affair: with considerable resistance and
many
internal struggles, it took over a century for Byzantine Sicily to be
conquered. Syracuse held for a long
time, Taormina
fell
in 902, and all of the island was eventually conquered by 965.[22]
Throughout
this reign, continued revolts by Byzantine Sicilians happened
especially in the
east and part of the lands were even re-occupied before being quashed.
Agricultural items such as oranges,
lemons, pistachio
and
sugar
cane
were brought to Sicily,[16]
the native Christians were allowed freedom of religion but had to pay an
extra tax
to their rulers. However, the Emirate
of Sicily began to fragment as inner-dynasty related quarrels took
place
between the Muslim regime.[22]
By the 11th century mainland southern Italian powers were hiring
ferocious Norman
merecenaries, who were Christian descendants of the Vikings;
it was
the Normans under Roger I who freed Sicily from the
Muslims.[22]
After taking Apulia
and Calabria,
he occupied Messina
with an army of 700 knights. In 1068, Roger
Guiscard and his men defeated the Muslims at Misilmeri
but
the most crucial battle was the siege of Palermo,
which led to Sicily
being completely in Norman control by 1091.[23]
[edit] Kingdom of Sicily
Main articles: Kingdom
of Sicily and List of monarchs of Sicily
The Cathedral of Monreale.
Palermo continued on as the capital under the Normans.
Roger's
son, Roger II of Sicily, was ultimately able
to raise
the status of the island, along with his holds of Malta and Southern
Italy to a kingdom in 1130.[24][23] During this period the Kingdom
of Sicily was prosperous and politically powerful, becoming one of
the
wealthiest states in all of Europe; even wealthier than England.[25]
Significantly, immigrants from Northern
Italy and Campania
arrived during this period and linguistically the island became Latinised,
in
terms of church it would become completely Roman
Catholic, previously under the Byzantines it had been more Eastern
Christian.[26]
Depiction of the Sicilian Vespers.
After
a century the Norman Hauteville dynasty died out, the last
direct
descendent and heir of Roger; Constance married Emperor Henry VI.[27]
This eventually led to the crown of Sicily
been passed on to the Hohenstaufen Dynasty who were
Germanic peoples
from Swabia.
Conflict between the Hohenstaufen house and the Papacy,
led in 1266
to Pope Innocent IV crowning Angevin Dynasty duke Charles I as the king of both Sicily
and Naples.[27]
Strong
opposition of the French
officialdom due to mistreatment and taxation
saw
the local peoples of Sicily rise up, leading in 1282 to an insurrection
known as the War of the Sicilian Vespers,
which
eventually saw almost the entire French population on the island killed.[27]
During the war the Sicilians turned to Peter III of the Kingdom
of Aragon for support after being rejected by the Pope. Peter
gained
control of Sicily from the French
though the
French retained control of the Kingdom
of Naples. The wars continued until the peace of Caltabellotta in 1302,
which saw Frederick III recognised as king
of the
Isle of Sicily, while Charles II was recognised as the king
of
Naples by Pope Boniface VIII.[27]
Sicily was ruled as an independent
kingdom by
relatives of the kings of Aragon
until 1409 and then as part of the Crown
of Aragon.[8]
Sicilian Baroque in Catania.
The Spanish Inquisition in 1492 saw Ferdinand I decreeing the explusion
of every
single Jew
from Sicily.[27]
The island was hit by two very serious earthquakes in the east in both
1542 and
1693, just a few years before the latter earthquake the island was
struck by a
ferocious plague.[27]
There were revolts during the 17th century, but these were quelled with
significant force especially the revolts of Palermo
and Messina.[8] The Treaty
of Utrecht in 1713 saw Sicily assigned to the House
of Savoy, however this period of rule lasted only seven years as it
was
exchanged for the island of Sardinia
with Emperor Charles VI of the Austrian
Habsburg
Dynasty.[28]
While
the Austrians were concerned with the War of the Polish Succession,
a Bourbon
prince, Charles from Spain was
able to
conquer Sicily and Naples.[29]
At first Sicily was able to remain as
an
independent kingdom under personal union, while the Bourbons ruled
over both
from Naples.
However the advent of Napoleon's First French Empire saw Naples taken at
the Battle of Campo Tenese and
Bonapartist Kings
of Naples were instated. Ferdinand III the Bourbon
was
forced to retreat to Sicily
which he was still in complete control of with the help of British
naval protection.[30]
Following this Sicily joined the Napoleonic
Wars, after the wars were won Sicily
and Naples
formally merged as
the Two
Sicilies under the Bourbons. Major revolutionary
movements occurred in 1820 and 1848 against the Bourbon government with
Sicily
seeking independence; the second of which, the 1848 revolution
was
successful and resulted in a sixteen month period of independence for
Sicily,
until the armed forces of the Bourbons regained control by May 1849.[31]
[edit] Italian unification
After
the Expedition of the Thousand led
by Giuseppe Garibaldi, Sicily became part
of the Kingdom of Italy in 1860 as
part of
the risorgimento.[32]
The conquest started at Marsala and was finally completed with the Siege of Geata where the final
Bourbons were
expelled and Garibaldi announced his dictatorship in the name of Victor Emmanuel II of Sardinia. An anti-Savoy revolt pushing
for
Sicilian independence erupted in 1866 at Palermo:
this was
quelled brutally by the Italians within just a week.[33][32]
The Sicilian (and the wider mezzogiorno)
economy collapsed, leading to an unprecedented wave
of emigration.[32]
Organisations of workers and peasants known as the Fasci
Siciliani, who were leftist and separatist
groups rose and caused the Italian government to impose martial law
again in
1894.[34][35]
The Mafia, a loose
confederation of organised crime networks, grew in influence in the
late 19th
century; the Fascist regime began suppressing them in
the 1920s
with some success.[32]
There was an allied invasion of Sicily during
World
War
II starting on July 10, 1943, the invasion of Sicily was one of
the causes
of the July 25 crisis; in general the Allied
victors were
warmly embraced by the Sicilian population. [32]
Italy became a Republic in 1946
and as part
of the Constitution of Italy, Sicily was
one of the
five regions given special status as an autonomous
region.[36]
Both the partial Italian land
reform and special funding from the Italian
government's Cassa per il Mezzogiorno
(Fund for the
South) from 1950 to 1984, helped the Sicilian economy improve.[37][38]
[edit] Geography
Provinces of Sicily.
Sicily is directly adjacent to the Italian region of Calabria,
via
the Strait of Messina to the east. The early
Roman
name for Sicily
was Trinacria,
alluding to its triangular shape. Sicily
has been noted for two millennia as a grain-producing territory. Citrons,
oranges,
lemons,
olives, olive
oil, almonds,
and wine
are among its
other agricultural
products. The mines
of the Enna
and Caltanissetta
district became a leading sulfur-producing area in the 19th century but have
declined
since the 1950s.
Administratively
Sicily is divided into nine provinces; Agrigento, Caltanissetta, Catania, Enna,
Messina, Palermo, Ragusa, Syracuse and Trapani. Also part of various Sicilian
provinces are small surrounding islands, including the Aeolian
Islands, the Aegadian Islands, Pantelleria,
Ustica
and the Pelagian
Islands.
The island
of Sicily is drained
by
several rivers, most of which flow through the central area and enter
the sea
at the south of the island. The Salso
River
flows through parts of Enna and Caltanissetta
before entering the Mediterranean Sea at the port of Licata.
To the east the Alcantara in the province of Messina,
it exits at Giardini-Naxos. The other two main rivers
on the island are to the south-west with Belice
and Platani.
Topography
of Sicily.
Sicily and its small surrounding islands are
highly significant in the area of volcanology.
Mount
Etna
is the only volcano
on mainland Sicily located in the
east; with a
height of 3,320 m
(10,900 ft)
it is the tallest active volcano in Europe
and
one of the most active in the world. As well as Etna, there are several
non-volcanic mountain
ranges in Sicily,
Sicani to the west, Eeri in the central era and Iblei in the
south-east. Across
the north of Sicily
there are three other mountains Madonie, Nebrodi
and Peloritani.
The Aeolian
Islands to the north-east are volcanically significant with Stromboli
currently active, also in the Tyrrhenian
Sea are the three dormant volcanos of Vulcano,
Vulcanello
and Lipari.
Off
the Southern coast of Sicily,
the underwater water volcano of Ferdinandea,
which is part of the larger Empedocles last erupted in 1831. It
is located
between the coast of Agrigento and the island
of Pantelleria
(which itself is a dormant volcano), on the Phlegraean Fields of the Strait
of Sicily.
[edit] Transport
The A29, passing through the countryside near Segesta.
The
most prominent Sicilian roads are the motorways
(known as autostrade) running through the northern section of the
island,
this includes the A19 Palermo-Catania,
the A20 Palermo-Messina, the A29
Palermo-Trapani-Mazara
del Vallo and the toll road A18 Messina-Catania. Much of the
motorway
network is elevated by columns due to the mountainous terrain of the
island.[39][40][41][42]
The Sicilian public is served by a network of railway
services,
linking to most major cities and towns; this service is operated by Trenitalia.
There are services to Naples and Rome; this
is achieved by the trains been loaded
onto ferries
which cross to the mainland.[43]
There
were plans to link the railway to the mainland via the world's longest suspension
bridge, the Strait of Messina Bridge,
construction of
which was expected to start in 2006. However, the plan was scrapped by
the Italian Parliament in late 2006 due to
lack of
popular support, particularly amongst Sicilians.[44]
In two of the main cities there are underground
railway services; these feature in the cities of Palermo
and Catania.
Mainland
Sicily has three airports
which
fly to numerous European destinations; to the east is the Catania-Fontanarossa Airport
which is
the busiest on the island (and one of the busiest in all of Italy).
Palermo
hosts the Palermo International Airport,
which
is also substantially large, the third airport actually on the island
is the Trapani-Birgi Airport which is
smaller. There
are also two small airports on smaller islands which are considered
part of Sicily; Lampedusa
Airport and Pantelleria Airport. By sea, Sicily is
served by
several ferry
routes most of which are to Sicily's small surrounding islands and
mainland
Italy (as well as Sardinia), there is also a daily service between Malta and Pozzallo.[45][46]
[edit] Culture
Main article: Flag
of Sicily
The
regional flag of Sicily,
recognized since January 2000,[47]
is also the historical one of the island since 1282. It is divided
diagonally
yellow over red, with the trinacria
symbol in the center. "Trinacria"
literally means "3 points" and it most probably is a solar symbol
even though lately, it has been considered representative of the three
points
of the island. The head shown on the Sicilian trinacria is the face of Medusa.
The trinacria
symbol is used also by other regions like the Isle
of Man.
Landscape with temple ruins on Sicily,
Jacob Philipp Hackert, 1778
Sicily is well known as a region of art: many poets and writers
were born
here, starting from the Sicilian School in the early 13th century,
which
inspired much subsequent Italian poetry and created the first Italian
standard.
The most famous, however, are Luigi
Pirandello, Giovanni Verga, Salvatore Quasimodo, Gesualdo
Bufalino. Other Sicilian artists include the composers
Sigismondo d'India, Girolamo
Arrigo,
Salvatore Sciarrino, Giovanni
Sollima (from Palermo), Alessandro Scarlatti (from Trapani
or Palermo),
Vincenzo
Bellini, Giovanni Pacini, Francesco
Paolo
Frontini, Alfredo
Sangiorgi,
Aldo
Clementi, Roberto Carnevale (from Catania).
Noto, Ragusa,
and particularly Acireale contain some of Italy's
best examples of Baroque architecture,
carved in the local red sandstone.
Caltagirone
is renowned for its decorative ceramics.
Palermo
is
also a major center of Italian opera. Its
Teatro Massimo is the largest opera house
in Italy
and the
third largest in the world, seating 1,400.
Sicily is also home to two prominent folk art
traditions, both of which draw heavily on the island's Norman
influence. A Sicilian wood cart, or Carretto Siciliano, is painted with
intricate
decorations of scenes from the Norman romantic poems, such as The Song of Roland. The same tales are
told in
traditional puppet
theatres
which feature hand-made wooden marionettes,
especially in Acireale, the
capital of Sicilian puppets.
Sicily
is the setting for many classic Italian films such as Visconti's
La
Terra Trema (1948) and Il
Gattopardo (1963), Rosi's Salvatore Giuliano (1962) and Antonioni's
L'avventura
(1960).
The
1988 film Nuovo Cinema Paradiso, was about life in a Sicilian town
following the Second World War. It is also the setting for
Michael
Radford's Il Postino (1994) starring Massimo Troisi.
Academy
Award winning film director Frank
Capra
was born in Bisacquino.
[edit] Cuisine
Main article: Cuisine
of Sicily
The
island has a long history of producing a variety of noted cuisines and wines, to
the extent
that Sicily
is sometimes nicknamed God’s Kitchen because of this.[48]
The ingredients are typically rich in taste while remaining affordable
to the
general populance.[49]
The savory dishes of Sicily are viewed to be healthy,
implomenting fresh vegetables and fruits, such as tomatos,
artichokes,
olives
(including olive oil),
citrus,
apricots,
aubergines,
onions, beans, raisins
commonly
coupled with sea
food, freshly caught from the surrounding coastlines, including tuna, sea
bream, sea
bass, cuttlefish,
swordfish,
sardines
and
others.[50]
Cannoli, a
popular Sicilian sweet.
Like
the cuisine of the rest of southern Italy, pasta
plays an
important part in Sicilian cuisine, as does rice; for
example with arancini.[51]
As well as using some other cheeses,
Sicily
has spawned some
of its own, using both cows and sheeps milk, such as pecorino and caciocavallo.[52]
Spices used include saffron, nutmeg, clove, pepper,
and cinnamon
which
were introducted by the Arabs. Although commonly associated with sea
food
cuisines, meat dishes including goose, lamb,
goat and turkey
are also
found in Sicily, it was the Normans
and Hohenstaufen
who first introduced a fondness for meat dishes to the island.[53]
Perhaps
the most well known part of Sicilian cuisine is the rich sweet
dishes
[edit] Language
Main article: Sicilian
language
Many
Sicilians are bilingual in Italian
and Sicilian, an entirely separate Romance
language which is not derived from Italian and has a sizeable
vocabulary
with at least 250,000 words. Some of the words are loan
words
with slight changes, taking influence from Greek,
Latin,
Catalan,
Arabic,
Spanish
and others.[54]
The Sicilian language is also spoken to some extent in Calabria
and Apulia,
it had a
significant influence on the Maltese
language. In the modern age as Italian is taught in schools and is
the
language of the media, especially in some of the urban
areas
Sicilian is now a secondary language amongst much of the youth.
One of the places that hosted Frederick's
Magna Curia.
The
Sicilian language was an early influence in the development of the
first
Italian standard, although its use remained confined to an intellectual
élite.
This was a literary language in Sicily created under the auspices of Frederick II and his
court of notaries,
or Magna Curia, which, headed by Giacomo da Lentini also gave birth to
the Sicilian
School, widely inspired by troubadour literature. Its linguistic
and poetic
heritage was later assimilated into the Florentine by Dante
Alighieri, the father of modern Italian who, in his De Vulgari Eloquentia claims that "In effect this
vernacular seems to deserve a higher praise than the others, since all
the
poetry written by Italians can be called Sicilian".[55]
It is in this language that appeared the first sonnet,
whose
invention is attributed to Giacomo da Lentini himself.
There
is also a couple of less common, unofficial languages spoken on the
island. In
around five small Palermitan villages, Arbëreshë
dialect of the Albanian language has been spoken since
a wave of
refugees settled there in the 15th century; these people are
predominantly Byzantine Catholics and chant Greek
at local Byzantine liturgy.[56]
There are also several Ennese towns where dialects of the Lombard
language of the Gallo-Italic family are spoken.[57]
Much of these two groups of people are tri-lingual, being able to also
speak
Italian and Sicilian.
[edit] Sports
Football manager Carmelo Di Bella.
The
best known and most popular sport on the island of Sicily
is football, which was introduced in the
late 1800s
under the influence of the English. Some of the oldest football clubs
in all of
Italy are Sicilian: the three most successful are Palermo, Messina and Catania,
who have all, at some point, played in the prestigious Serie A.
To
date, no Sicilian side has ever won Serie A, however football is deeply
embeded
in local culture, all over Sicily
each town has its own representative team.[58]
Palermo and Catania have a
heated rivalry and compete in the Sicilian
derby together: to date Palermo
is the only Sicilian team to have played on the European stage, in the UEFA Cup.
The
most noted Sicilian footballer is Salvatore Schillaci who won the Golden Boot at the 1990 FIFA World Cup with Italy.[58] Other noted Sicilian players include Giuseppe
Furino, Pietro Anastasi, Francesco
Coco, Christian Riganò and Roberto Galia.[58] There have also been some noted managers from
the
island, such as Carmelo Di Bella and Franco
Scoglio.
Although
football is by far the most popular sport in Sicily, the island also has
participants in
other fields. Amatori Catania compete in the top Italian
national
rugby
union league called Super 10, they have even
participated
at European level in the European Challenge Cup. Competing
in the basketball
variation of Serie A is Orlandina
Basket from Capo d'Orlando in the province of Messina, the sport has a
reasonable
following. Various other sports which are played to some extent
includes volleyball,
handball
and water
polo.
[edit] People
The
position of Sicily as a stepping
stone of
sorts in the center of the Mediterranean Basin has lent it
strategic
importance throughout history, resulting in an endless procession of
settlers
and conquerors. Modern methods of genetic testing enable us to see
which have
had the greatest demographic impact. Several studies show strong ties
between
Sicily, mainland southern Italy and Greece,[59][60][61][62][63]
suggesting that the Siculi, Elymi and Greek
colonizations
were the most important.
It has
been proposed that a genetic boundary divides Sicily into two regions, reflecting
the
distribution of Siculi and Greek settlements in the east, and
Sicani/Elymi,
Phoenician/Arab and Norman settlements in the west.[64][65][66]
However, other research has failed to detect any such division.[67][61] No data exist on the contribution of Normans,
but a
number of studies hint that North African and Middle Eastern gene flow
was
limited by the physical barrier of the Mediterranean Sea and resulting
cultural
differentiation.[60][68][69][70][71][72]
Sicily's population is approximately 5 million, and
there are an additional 10 million people of Sicilian descent around
the world,
mostly in the United States,
Argentina, Canada, Australia and the EU countries.
The island
today, like all of western Europe, is home to growing communities of
immigrants, including Tunisians, Moroccans, Nigerians, Indians,
Romanians,
Russians, Chinese and Gypsies (Roma)
from the Balkans.
[edit] Demographics
In Sicily
there are fifteen
cities and towns which have a population level above 50,000 people,
these are;
[edit] Noted Sicilians
- Archimedes
(c. 287 – 212 BCE), scientist
- Diodorus Siculus (c. 90 – 30 BCE),
historian
- Pope
Leo II, Pope from 682 to 683
- Jawhar as-Siqilli (911–922) Military
leader, founder of Cairo
- Giacomo da Lentini (1210 – 1260), poet
- Guido Delle Colonne (1215 – 1290),
poet
- Giovanni Aurispa (1376 – 1459),
anthropologist
- Antonello da Messina (1430 – 1479),
painter
- Giovanni Luca Barberi (1452 – 1520),
historian
- Antonello Gagini (1478 – 1536), sculptor
- Francesco Maurolico (1494 – 1575),
mathematician
- Tommaso Fazello (1498 – 1570), historian
- Antonio Veneziano (1543 – 1593),
poet
- Sigismondo d'India (1582 – 1629),
composer
- Pietro Novelli (1603 – 1647), painter
- Giacomo Serpotta (1656 – 1732), sculptor
- Alessandro Scarlatti (1660 – 1725),
composer
- Filippo Juvarra (1678 – 1736), architect
- Giovanni Battista Vaccarini
(1702 – 1768), architect
- Giovanni
Meli (1740 – 1815), poet
- Count Alessandro di Cagliostro
(1743 – 1795), traveller and occultist
- Ruggero Settimo (1776 – 1863), politician
- Niccolò Cacciatore (1780 – 1841),
astronomer
- Vincenzo Bellini (1801 – 1835), opera
composer
- Giuseppe La Farina (1815 – 1863),
politician
- Francesco Crispi (1819 – 1901),
politician
- Giovan Battista Filippo Basile
(1825 – 1891), architect
- Stanislao Cannizzaro (1826 – 1910),
chemist
- Luigi
Capuana (1839 – 1915), writer
- Maria
Messina (1880 – 1944), short story writer and novelist
- Giovanni Verga (1840 – 1922), novelist
- Giuseppe Pitrè (1841 – 1916), historian
- Giuseppe Sergi (1841 – 1936),
anthropologist
|
- Giovanni Gentile (1875 – 1944),
philosopher
- Josephine Terranova (1889 – 1981),
accused murderess
- Giuseppe Tomasi di Lampedusa
(1896 – 1957), writer, poet
- Frank
Capra (1897 – 1991), actor, director
- Julius
Evola (1898 – 1974), political philosopher
- Ignazio Buttitta (1899 – 1997), poet
- Salvatore Quasimodo (1901 – 1968),
poet, Nobel laureate
- Ugo
La Malfa (1903 – 1979), politician
- Giorgio La Pira (1904 – 1977), politician
- Ettore Majorana (1906 – ?), scientist
- Vitaliano Brancati (1907 – 1954),
writer
- Renato Guttuso (1912 – 1987), painter
- Gesualdo Bufalino (1920 – 1996), writer
- Leonardo Sciascia (1921 – 1989), writer
and politician
- Rocco Chinnici (1925 – 1983), judge
- Giuseppe
Fava (1925 – 1984), writer and dramatist
- Andrea Camilleri (born 1925), novelist
- Bernardo Provenzano (born 1933),
mafioso
- Nino Vaccarella (born 1933), racecar
driver
- Lando Buzzanca (born 1938), actor
- Giovanni Falcone (1939 – 1992), judge
- Paolo Borsellino (1940 – 1992), judge
- Salvatore Adamo (born 1943), singer
- Ferdinando
Scianna (born 1943), photographer
- Franco Battiato (born 1945), musician,
filmmaker
- Salvatore Sciarrino (born 1947),
composer
- Giuseppe Tornatore (born 1956),
filmmaker
- Domenico Dolce (born 1958), fashion
designer
- Angelo d'Arrigo (1961 – 2006), aviator
- Salvatore Antibo (born 1962), runner
- Anna
Kanakis (born 1962), model, actress
- Salvatore Schillaci (born 1964),
football player
- Maria Grazia Cucinotta (born 1969),
actress
- Carmen Consoli (born 1974), musician
- Giuseppe Gibilisco (born 1979), pole
vaulter
- Salvatore Giuliano (1922-1950), Savier
of Italy
|
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[edit] See also
[edit] External links