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SICILY
ART IS CULTURE |
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Sicily has had a varied and colorful
history. The first known inhabitants of the island were the
Elymi, Sicani, and Siculi. Phoenicians later settled on the
west coast, notably at Panormus (now Palermo); Carthaginians
founded Lilybaeum and Drepanum (now Trapani ); and on the east
and southeast coasts Greeks founded (8th-6th cent. BC) such
cities as Syracuse , Catania , Zancle (now Messina ), Gela ,
and Selinus and settled in older towns like Segesta . The
Greek cities flourished and in turn founded such cities as
Acragas (now Agrigento ) and Himera . Their originally
democratic governments were gradually replaced by tyrannies,
particularly those of Phalaris at Acragas and of Gelon , Hiero
I , and others at
Syracuse.

In the 5th cent. BC, Syracuse gained hegemony over the other
cities. Phoenician influence was reinvigorated by Carthaginian
expansion; although Hamilcar was repulsed at Himera in 480 BC,
later Carthaginian invaders gained control (by c.400 BC) of
more than half of the island. Interlopers from mainland Greece
seized the remainder, and Sicily became a battleground for
rival empires. A century of antagonism between Greeks and
Carthaginians was followed by strife between Romans and
Carthaginians, which flared (264 BC) in the first of the Punic
Wars . Rome was victorious by 241 BC, and after the death (c.215)
of Hiero II of Syracuse, virtually all of Sicily came under
Rome.
The Romans completed the enriching Hellenization of Sicilian
culture. However, the resources of the island—known as the
Breadbasket of Rome—were depleted by the Romans, who also
founded the large estates ( latifundia ) that subsequently
greatly hampered the economic development of Sicily. Roman
rule was often corrupt, and corruption reached a peak under
governor Caius Verres (73-71 BC). Slave revolts (135-132 BC
and 104-100 BC) were cruelly suppressed. Many remains of the
Greek and Roman periods have been found on Sicily, especially
at Agrigento, Syracuse, Segesta, and Selinunte.
After the fall of Rome, Sicily passed from the Vandals
(mid-5th cent. AD) to the Goths (493) and then to the
Byzantines (535). The Arabs conquered the island in the 9th
cent. after raiding it for two centuries. They promoted
agriculture, commerce, and the arts and sciences. The Arabs
were displaced by the Norman conquest of Sicily (1060-91), led
by Roger I . Roger II became (1130) the first king of Sicily;
he forced (1139) Pope Innocent II, who claimed suzerainty over
Sicily, to invest him with the kingdom, which included the
Norman holdings in S Italy. The brilliant court of Roger II
did much to introduce Arabic learning to Western Europe.
Roger's last direct descendant, Constance , married Holy Roman
Emperor Henry VI; their son and heir, Holy Roman Emperor
Frederick II , was more interested in the kingdom of Sicily (where
he reigned as king from 1197 to 1250) than in the Holy Roman
Empire.
After Frederick's death and the failures of the last
Hohenstaufen claimants ( Conrad IV , Manfred , and Conradin ),
Pope Clement IV crowned (1266) Charles I (Charles of Anjou)
king of Naples and Sicily as his vassal. The unpopular French
government brought on the Sicilian Vespers revolt (1282) and
the Sicilians chose Peter III of Aragón as king. The resulting
war between the Angevin line and the Aragonese ended
temporarily in 1302, with Frederick II (see also Aragón, house
of ) becoming king of Sicily and Charles II of Anjou keeping S
Italy (see Naples, kingdom of ). In 1373, Joanna I of Naples
formally renounced Sicily. After the Sicilian branch of Aragón
became extinct, Sicily reverted (1409) to the main branch.
Under Aragonese rule local liberties were maintained, and the
Sicilian national assembly enjoyed wide powers. With the
accession of the Hapsburgs to the Spanish throne (early 16th
cent.), there was more centralization, and Spanish governors
arrived to tighten the imperial bonds. Corruption increased,
and the island came under the control of a few powerful nobles
and church officials.
In 1713 the Peace of Utrecht assigned Sicily to Savoy, which
in 1720 exchanged it with Emperor Charles VI for Sardinia.
However, as a result of the War of the Polish Succession ,
Sicily and Naples came under (1735) the rule of Don Carlos of
Bourbon (later Charles III of Spain). The Bourbon kings
resided at Naples, except in 1799 and from 1806 to 1815, when
Naples was held by the French. The centralizing policies of
the Bourbons were resisted by the Sicilian nobles, who
welcomed British intervention (1811-14). Feudal privileges
were renounced in 1812 but in practice continued much longer.
Naples and Sicily were merged, despite Sicilian protests, in
1816, when Ferdinand I styled himself officially king of the
Two Sicilies . Revolts occurred in 1820 and 1848-49 and were
mercilessly suppressed; the bombardments of Messina (1848) and
Palermo (1849) earned Ferdinand II the nickname “King Bomba.”
In 1860, Garibaldi conquered the island, which then voted to
join the kingdom of Sardinia.
Even after Italian unification, Sicily was neglected by the
central government, and the island's economic and social
problems long remained unattended. In World War II a
large-scale amphibious landing was carried out by the Allies
on July 9-10, 1943. After heavy fighting, the Allied conquest
was completed on Aug. 8, 1943. Sicily was given limited
autonomy under the Italian constitution of 1947. The
assassination of two prominent anti-Mafia prosecutors in 1992
prompted the central government to send in the military. The
operation ended in 1998 after many organized crime figures
were jailed.
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OFFICIAL WEB SITE REGION SICILY
www.regione.sicilia.it
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