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HISTORY
The name of the Pelagie
archipelago derives from the greek "Pelaghie" meaning high sea
islands. Located in the center of the Mediterranean Sea and
therefore a refuge and supply point for Phoenician, Saracen, Roman
and Greek ships, the island was probably the subject of disputes,
raids and battles of which there is no definite proof.
Even the
origin of the island's name is uncertain. The most reliable version
is that it derives from the lightning that frequently lit up the
night sky in the past, frightening sailors. Coins found during
recent excavations show that the Romans may have settled on the
island, as did the Arabs centuries later. The sea surrounding the
island is scattered with wreckage from Roman and Greek ships and
thousands of nearly fully intact amphoras have been found. For many
years this sea was plagiarized and the findings dispersed; even
today fishing boats still find fragments of amphoras or anchors in
their nets. Information regarding the island becomes clearer from
1430 onwards, when Alfonso V of Aragon, the King of Naples, granted
the rights of the island to his personal servant, Giovanni De Caro
dei Borboni di Montechiaro.
In 1551, a fleet under the
command of Admiral Andrea Doria and following orders from Carlo V
destroyed the fortress of Mekdia in Tunisia, cove of the Turkish
pirate Dragret. During the return journey, the fleet stopped at
Lampedusa, probably at Cala Pisana, following a heavy storm in which
it lost the majority of its crew. The remaining crew settled on the
island but two years later Draget had his revenge during a raid
after which more than one thousands of the island's inhabitants were
deported as slaves.
In 1630, Carlo II of Spain granted
ownership of the island and the title of Prince of Lampedusa to the
Tomasi family (ancestors of the famous author of 'Il
Gattopardo'). A terrible plague hit the island around 1780,
confirmed by a marble gravestone recovered in a cave where a victim
of the plague was buried in 1784.
In 1800 the princes of
Lampedusa granted a part of the island on perpetual lease to a group
of farmers of the Maltese Gatt family, who in turn, several years
later, granted a part of it to the Englishman Alessandro
Fernandez. The good relations did not last very long and the
Tomasi princes asked Ferdinando II (King of the two Sicilies) for
authorisation to sell the island to the English. Authorisation
was not granted and instead in 1839 it was purchased for the price
of 12,000 ducats by the King, whose intention was to change it into
an agricultural colony.
In 1843, the knight and governor
Bernardo Maria Sanvisente, leading a group of 120 farmers hired by
royal edict, landed on the island with the duty to cultivate all
available land. A period of important work began, producing the
still existing seven palaces, homes for new inhabitants, oil mills,
warehouses for crops, small fish-salting factories and a
cemetery.
The Bourbons, short of money and indifferent to
their Governor Sanvisente's protests, began to grant authorization
to anyone who asked, to produce vegetable coal using the trees on
the island. Thus, in a short period of time, the island was deprived
of its vegetation and its crops became more difficult to cultivate,
less profitable and more and more exposed to strong
winds. Governor Sanvisente resigned and while profits from
agriculture were practically disappearing, the inhabitants turned
their attention to fishing.
In 1860, after the fall of the
Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, the Pelagie islands were united to the
Kingdom of Italy.
In 1872, the Italian government, determined
to turn the island into a penal colony, nominated a Commissioner who
annulled all land concessions, provoking a further regression of
cultivation and obvious resentment from the people.
The
Second World War arrived, following positive and negative
fluctuations of the local economy and slow improvements in
communications with Sicily. Due to its important strategic position
between Sicily, Malta, Libya and Tunisia, Lampedusa was fortified
and even today blockhouses, communication trenches and barracks can
still be seen.
After the war and as the Italian economy was
slowly recovering, Lampedusa was given a power station, telephone
communication, a desalinator and finally an airport in 1968. The
inhabitants' income was still ensured by the abundance of fish in
the sea and by the sponge banks of the neighbouring waters. The
first tourists begin to arrive, all keen on underwater
fishing.
Fame finally arrived in 1986. Radios worldwide
announced that Gheddafi had launched two missiles against Lampedusa
which had unexplainably missed their target and exploded in the sea.
From this incident, everyone learned of Italy's three small islands,
in the middle of a wonderful sea, situated closer to Africa than to
Sicily. The television spoke of nothing else for days and Lampedusa
became internationally renowned. Hundreds and thousands of tourists
began to arrive and the island started a new life. Fishermen
converted to tourist operators and hotels, restaurants and shops
cropped up everywhere. The island's economy transformed quickly.
Most of the inhabitant's income started to come from tourism and no
longer from fishing.
A few years later, it was announced that
Gheddafi had never really launched any missiles at Lampedusa.
Seemingly, the Americans who were extremely concerned over
increasingly closer ties between Italian politicians and Libya (a
Libyan bank had just purchased a considerable quantity of shares in
Fiat), had ordered two fighters to break the sound barrier.
Following the bang, Americans in the Loran base on Lampedusa, spread
the news that the bang had been caused by two missiles exploding.
The news spread worldwide, causing tension in relations between
Italy and Libya and damaging the island's tourist promotion.
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