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mon-fri
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The History of Sardinia covers several millennia of civilization. |
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Prehistory -
In 1979 human remains were found that were dated to 150,000 BC. In 2004, in
a cave in Logodoru, a human phalanx was found that was dated up to 250.000
BC. The first humans to settle in Gallura and Northern Sardinia probably
came from Italian peninsula, possibly
Tuscany. The central
region may have been populated by people arriving from the Iberian Peninsula
through the Balearic Islands.
Prehistoric arrowheads (3rd millennium BC)
and sculptures of the Mediterranean Mother Goddess (now in the Archeological
Museum of Cagliari) were retrieved which demonstrate a well developed
industry of stone carving.
Already in the Stone Age Monte Arci played
an important role. The old volcano was one of the central places where
obsidian was found and worked for cutting tools and arrowheads. Even now the
volcanic glass can be found on the sides of the mountain.
The Archeological Museum of Sassari
displays ceramics from the Copper or Aneolithic Age (2600 BC). |
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The
era of the nuraghi -
The prehistorical era of Sardinia is characterised by
the typical structures in stone that are called Nuraghe. There are
more than 8000 of these structures, more or less complex. The most famous is
the complex of
Barumini in the
province of Cagliari. The Nuraghe were mainly built in the period from about
1800 to 1200 BC, though many were used until the Roman period. Next to that
holy waterplaces have been built (for example Santa Cristina, Sardara) and
the grave structures called Dolmen. It is known that the Sardinians already
had contact with the Myceneans, who traded with the West Mediterranean.
The alleged connection with the
Shardana, the sea
people that invaded Egypt has not been proven. Tombs (Tombe dei giganti)
have tombstones shaped like a sinking ship, probably witness to a tragedy on
sea expeditions. Euboians, the first Greeks to navigate westwards, called
the island Hyknousa (later latinized in Ichnus(s)a). The Nora
stone has been seen as proof that the island was called Sharden by
the Phoenicians, and from there it derived the name Sardinia. |
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Phoenicians, Carthaginians and
Romans in Sardinia - From the 8th century
BC, Phoenicians founded several cities and strongholds on Sardinia; Tharros,
Bithia, Sulcis, Nora and Karalis (Cagliari). The Phoenicians came originally
from Lebanon and traded in the Mediterranean. They settled everywhere in the
region. Sardinia had a special position because it was central in the
western Mediterranean between Carthage, Spain, the Rhone river and the
Etruscan civilization area. The mining area around Iglesias was important
for the metals (lead and zinc). The cities were founded on strategic points,
often peninsulas or islands near estuaries, easy to defend and natural
harbours. After the Phoenicians, the Carthagianians took over control in
that part of the Mediterranean, around 550 BC. They expanded their influence
to the eastern and southern coast from Bosa to Karalis, including a wide
fraction of the respective mainlands. The cities were administrated by
plenipotentiaries called Sufetes, which stressed the growing of grain
and cereals. In 240, in the
course of the First Punic War, the Carthaginian mercenaries on the island
revolted and gave the Romans, who some years earlier had defeated the
Carthiaginians in the sea off Olbia and had occupied Sulci, the opportunity
to land on Sardinia and occupy it. In 238 BC the Romans took over the whole
island, without meeting any resistance. They took over an existing developed
infrastructure and urbanized culture (at least in the plains). Together with
Sicily it formed one of the main granaries of Rome until the Romans
conquered Egypt.
A revolt, led by two Sardo-Punic
nobles, broke out after the crushing Roman defeat at
Cannae (216 BC). A
Roman army of 23,000 men, under Titus Manlius Torquatus, met the
Carthagianian-Sardinian allied forces in the south of the island, defeating
them and killing 12,000 men. The so-called Sardi Pelliti
("Fur-covered Sardinians") living in the impervious mountains of the
interior resisted the Roman colonization for more than a century, Marcus
Caecilius Metellus subduing them only in 127 BC.
Under the Roman domination, the
Sardinian language gradually came under the strong influence of
Latin, turning
eventually into a Romance tongue. The Phoenician-Punic culture remained very
strong under the Romans until the first centuries AD. Tharros, Nora, Bithia,
Antas and Monte Sirai are now important archaeological monuments where
architecture and city planning can be studied.
During the Roman period, the geographer
Ptolemy noted that Sardinia was inhabited by the following peoples, from
north to south: the Tibulati and the Corsi, the Coracenses, the Carenses and
the Cunusitani, the Salcitani and the Lucuidonenses, the Æsaronenses, the
Æchilenenses (also called Cornenses), the Rucensi, the Celsitani and the
Corpicenses, the Scapitani and the Siculensi, the Neapolitani and the
Valentini, the Solcitani and the Noritani. Ptol. III, 3. |
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The Middle Ages -
After the fall of the Roman Empire, Sardinia was
subject to several conquests. In 456, the Vandals, coming from North Africa,
occupied the coastal cities of the island. A brief Eastern Roman reconquest
did not last longly, and the Vandals imposed garrisons guarded by Afric an
auxiliaries, like the Mauri of what was later called Barbagia, whose
troublesome presence lasted probably for centuries. In 534 the small Vandal
forces surrendered immediately to the Byzantines when news of the Vandal
collapse; thenceforth the island was part of the Byzantine Empire, included
in the African prefecture. The local governor sat in Caralis. During the
Gothic Wars much of the island fell easily to the Ostrogoths, but an army
sent from Carthage and the final fall of German resistance in the mainland
reassured the Byzantine control.
Starting from 705-706, the Saracens from
North Africa (recently conquered by the Arab armies) harassed the population
of the coastal cities. News about the political situation of Sardinian in
the following centuries are scarce. Due to Saracen attacks, in the 9th
century Tharros was abandoned in favor of Oristano, after more than 1800
years of occupation; Caralis and numerous other coastal centres suffered the
same fate. There are news of another massive Saracen sea attack in 1015 from
Spain, led by one Mujahid (Latinized in Museto), who established a
colony in the north in 1018-1028. Pope Benedict VIII asked the aid of the
maritime republics of Pisa and Genoa in the struggle against the Arabs.
From the mid-11th century the Giudicati
("held by judges") appeared. The title of giudice ("judge") was an
heir of that of the Byzantine governor after the creation of the Exarchate
of Africa in 582 (Prases or Judex Provinciae). In the 8th-9th
centuries the four partes depending from Caralis grow increasingly
independent, the Byzantines being totally cut off from the Tyrrhenian Sea by
the Muslim conquest of Sicily in 827. A letter of Pope Nicholas I of 864
mentions for the first time the "Sardinian judges", their autonomy now clear
in a later letter by Pope John VIII, which defined them "princes".
At the dawn of the judicial era the
Sardinia had some 330,000 inhabitants, of which 120,000 free. These were
subjected to the authority of local curators (administrators), in
turn subjected to the judge (who also administrated justice and was the
commander of the army). The church was also powerful, and at this time it
had completely abandoned the Eastern Rite. The arrival of Benedictines and
other monks boosted the agriculture in a land which was to be extremely
underdeveloped.
There were four giudicati: Logudoro,
Cagliari, Arborea and Gallura. Often warring one against the other, they
made a great number of commercial concessions to the Pisanes (who
established a fortress in the Giudicato of Cagliari in 1216) and the
Genoese, who soon became the true masters of the Sardinian economy. The
first victim was the Giudicato of Cagliari, destroyed by an alliance of the
Pisane and the other three Giudicati in 1258.
In 1259, Logudoro was divided
between the family of Bas Serra of Arborea and the
Doria family of
Genoa. In 1288 Pisa acquired the Giudicato of Gallura.
Sassari declared
itself a philo-Genoese free commune in the same period. In the early 14th
century much of the eastern Sardinia, Cagliari included, as under Pisan
authority.
The Giudicato of Arborea survived until
1420. The most remarkable Sardinian figure of the Middle Ages, Eleonora
d'Arborea, was co-ruler of that reign in the late 14th century: she laid the
foundations for the laws that remained valid until 1827, the Carta de
Logu. |
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Aragonese
and Spanish rules -
In 1323 the Aragonese under Peter, son of
King James II,
disembarked near
Iglesias, in southern
Sardinia. The Pisane intervened but were defeated both by sea and by land,
and were forced to leave the Cagliari area as well as Gallura, maintaining
only their castle in Carali. In 1353 Mariano III of Arborea, allied with the
Doria family, waged
war against the Aragonese, defeating them at Decimum and besieging Sassari,
but unable to capture Cagliari. The Peace of Sanluri (1355) ushered in a
period of tranquillity, but hostilities were resumed in 1395, with Arborea
initially able to capture much of the Island. However, in 1409 the Aragonese
crushed a Genoese fleet coming in support the Sardinians, and destroyed the
Giudicato army at the Battle of Sanluri.
Oristano, the
Arborean capital, fell on March 29, 1410. The last giudice of Arborea
sold his remaing territories in 1420, in exchange for 100,000 florins.
The watchtowers all along the coast are
called Aragonese towers and served to protect the island against the Arab
incursions. Some of these towers were built with the stones of the
Phoenician cities because these lay on strategic sites. A nice example of
reuse for secular and ecclesiastical architecture can also be found in the
church of Santa Giusta where the old city of Othoca had been.
The loss of the independence, the firm
Aragonese (later Spanish) rule, with the introduction of a sterile
feudalism, as well as the discovery of the Americas, provoked an unstoppable
decline of Sardinia. A short period of resurgence occurred under the local
noble Leonardo Alagon, marquess of Oristano, who managed to defeat the
viceroyal army in the 1470s but was later crushed at the Battle of Macomer
(1478), ending any further hope of independence for the island. The
unceasing attacks from North African pirates and a series of plagues (from
1582, 1652 and 1655) further worsened the situation. In 1637 a French fleet
sacked Oristano. |
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From
the kingdom of Sardinia until the present day -
The treaty of Utrecht (1713) assigned
Sardinia to the Austrian Habsburgs and Sicily to the
Piedmontese
Savoyards. Philip V of Spain however recovered the island in 1717, but for
territorial convenience the European powers assigned Sardinia to the Savoys
and Sicily to Emperor Charles VII.
Until the Unification of Italy in 1861,
Sardinia and Piedmont were joined in the Kingdom of Sardinia. In 1802 King
Victor Emmanuel I was ousted from Piedmont by the French army, and four
years later moved his court to Cagliari: the brief Republic declared that
year, soon thwarted by the Savoy army, was the sole concrete attempt of
independence from the Sardinians. The King returned to Turin in 1814. In the
early 19th century the situation of the island was the following: 99% of
illiterates, absence of any developed economy or trade, cities and forests
abandoned. The development of the infrastructure was slow, as the
Piedmontese initially did little to improve the conditions of the
population. Under King Carlo Felice, a main road, still bearing his name,
was built from south (Cagliari) to north (Sassari), while the universities
of the two centres were enhanced; however, the few riches remained in the
hands of a restricted number of barons and clergymen, banditism attracted a
large number of inhabitants, and the force of immigration of Corsi,
Ligurians and Maltese could do little to solve the demographics void. The
concession to Sardinia of the same rights of Piedmont in 1847, under King
Charles Albert, was of little help.
In 1883 the first trains travelled between
Cagliari and Sassari and under Mussolini the swamps around Oristano were
laid dry and the foundation of the most successful agrarian community was
laid, Arborea. Mussolini also founded Carbonia, the centre of the mining
activity. In 1927 the province of Nuoro was created, and works to dry the
numerous waste lands favoured the arrival of immigrants. World War II saw
Sardinia as the theater of minor activities, but the main event was the
successful fight against malaria, obtained also with the help of the
Rockefeller Foundation. Sardinia was declared an autonomous region, with
some special tax raising and cultural privileges, in 1947. First regional
elections were held on May 8, 1949.
After the war coal decreased in importance
and that of tourism increased. Many efforts to create jobs have failed
because of the high costs of transport that could not compensate the cheap
labor.
Today Sardinia is still an underdeveloped
region, whose history is still visible in language and culture. Noticeable
is also the difference between coastal regions and the inland. Coastal
regions have always been more open to outside influences. Nowadays Sardinia
is most known for the northern coasts and island (La Maddalena, Costa
Smeralda) and the coast near Cagliari because these are easily reached by
ship and by plane. |
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