CORSICA

kôrˈsĭkə, Fr. Corse, island (1990 pop. 251,000), 3,352 sq mi (8,682 sq km), a region of metropolitan France, SE of France and N of Sardinia, in the Mediterranean Sea. Ajaccio, the capital, and Bastia are the chief towns and ports. The island is largely mountainous, culminating in Monte Cinto (8,891 ft/2,710 m). Corsica is divided into two administrative departments. French is the official language, but most Corsicans also speak a dialect akin to Italian.

Much of the island is wild, covered by dense shrubs called maquis, whose flowers produce a fragrance that carries far out to sea and has earned for Corsica the name "the scented isle." The maquis also long provided hideouts for bandits, and banditry was not suppressed until the 1930s. Blood feuds between clans also persisted into modern times.

Fruit, cork, cigarettes, wine, and cheese are the main exports. Much wheat is produced, and sheep are raised. Tourism is important, with good air and sea transport from continental France.

History

After having belonged to the Romans (3d cent. b.c.–5th cent. a.d.), the Vandals, the Byzantines, and the Lombards, the island was granted (late 8th cent.) by the Franks to the papacy. It was threatened by the Arabs from c.800 to 1100. In 1077, Pope Gregory VII ceded Corsica to Pisa. Pisa and Genoa, later Genoa and Aragón, battled for control. In the mid-15th cent. actual administration of the island was taken up by the Bank of San Giorgio in Genoa. Genoese rule was harsh and unpopular, and unrest was typified by the 1730s episode of "King" Theodore I (see Neuhof, Theodor, Baron von).

In 1755, Pasquale Paoli headed a rebellion against Genoa, but its success resulted only in the cession (1768) of Corsica to France. One consequence of the transfer was the French citizenship of Napoleon I, who was born in 1769 at Ajaccio. With British support Paoli expelled the French in 1793, and in 1794 Corsica voted its union with the British crown. The French (under Napoleon) recovered it, however, in 1796, and French possession was guaranteed at the Congress of Vienna (1815). French rule brought education and relative order, but economic life remained agrarian and primitive.

In World War II, Corsica was occupied by Italian and German troops. Late in 1943 the population revolted, and, joined by a Free French task force, drove Axis forces out. A postwar population exodus caused the French government to announce a program of economic development. In 1958 a right-wing coup, similar to that in Algeria, contributed to the return to power in France of Charles de Gaulle. Since the French took control in 1768, Corsica has seen separatist movements, with repeated incidents of violence, notably the Feb., 1998, assassination of the French prefect. Beginning in the 1990s the roles of true nationalists and of criminal gangs appeared to blur. In 2001, France's parliament voted to give the island's regional parliament power to amend some national legislation and regulations and to permit the Corsican language to be taught in schools, but the amending of national laws by regional parliaments was declared unconstitutional. In 2003, after constitutional amendments permitting greater local autonomy were approved, a referendum on autonomy was held, but Corsican voters narrowly defeated it.

____________________

The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition Copyright© 2004, Columbia University Press. Licensed from Lernout & Hauspie Speech Products N.V. All rights reserved.

-11825-

Search the Library
Books
Journals
Magazines
Newspapers
Encyclopedia
Advanced Search
About Questia
Questia is the world's largest online academic library offering full-text books, journals, and articles on thousands of topics.

Join Now...
Questia Books and Articles on: Corsica
We found: 4276 results
By media type:
 

Books:

 

3014  

 

Journal articles:

 

169  

 

Magazine articles:

 

133  

 

Newspaper articles:

 

917  

 

Encyclopedia articles:

 

43  

 

books on: Corsica  - 3014 results

       More book Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>  
 
...I29 Recent critics have argued that Corsica was a Plutarchan revelation to Boswell...conscious attempt to present Paoli and Corsica in the spirit of Plutarch. Plutarch argues...informs Boswells idealisation. He hoped Corsica would generate just such a moral response...
...1960- Ideologies in action : language politics on Corsica / by Alexandra Jaffe. p. cm. - (Language, power...alk. paper) l. Sociolinguistics - France - Corsica. 2. Corsica (France) - Languages - Political aspects. 3. Language...
...started from. Possibly I shall write an account of my discoveries. As if I dont have to! Here am I imitating Potts, talking as if I expected the public to believe that I own estates in Corsica. Here is where Dycers Yard was. Allons!
...Although he tells us that he had heard of Corsica ever since he was a boy, he probably had no great interest in Corsica until his visit to Rousseau. This occurred...his imagination with descriptions of Corsica as the cradle of liberty. The first...
...and Insular France: The DOM-TOM and Corsica, Regional Politics Policy 4:3 (1994...France, 123-4. 4 Peter Savigear, Corsica, in Michael Watson (ed.), Contemporary...organizations (U Cullettivu Naziunale, Corsica Viva and lAssociu per a Suvranita) and...
More book Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>

 

journal articles on: Corsica  - 169 results

       More journal Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>  
 
Corsica, with a Collie by Peter Bridges I stood...Francophile friends, hearing we were bound for Corsica, suggested gently that we should remember...was simple: the collie had never been to Corsica. Nor had we. We had often flown over...
...Magnetic Fabric of Granitoids from Southern Corsica and Northern Sardinia and Implications...the European Hercynian belt in Southern Corsica (France) and Northern Sardinia (Italy...extensive AMS study on granitoids in Southern Corsica to obtain a high-density net of structural...
...personnalites-cle comme Paul Quastana et Jean-Guy Talamoni de Corsica nazione (dont les elus ont dailleurs temporairement quitte...du FLNC Canal historique et du FLNC Canal habituel, et de Corsica nazione au moment des elections de 1992. (19.) La violence...
...Martin Stokes. The Mediterranean island of Corsica yields a particularly rich case study for...contested site of "the traditional" not just in Corsica, but all over the globe. The island of Corsica is a region of France comprising two departements...
...recent fieldwork on the French island of Corsica, this article asks what ethnography would...brief account of my own field-site in Corsica, and of the implications of considering...my work on inclusion and exclusion in Corsica (Candea 2005), I will suggest that...
More journal Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>

 

magazine articles on: Corsica  - 133 results

       More magazine Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>  
 
Riviera, Relaxed: Corsica Offers Much of the Miditerraneans Best...Little of Its Worst. by Corby Kummer Corsica offers much of the Mediterraneans best...And where do Sardinians vacation? On Corsica, I learned recently, when friends...
Could Corsica break up France by David Lawday The spirit...The incendiary Mediterranean island of Corsica pointing France down a federal road...prime minister, Lionel Jospin. It was Corsica that pushed him into it. As the rethink...
...surreal tale of a burning beach bistro in Corsica should teach France a lesson: devolution...the opposite course. Having done so in Corsica, France is suffering for it. I dont...lesson in how not to handle it. No, Corsica is not an easy place to manage. Corsica...
...emigrants have become the stuff of legend in Corsica. Stories of their triumph over adversity...instincts," states Viso, whose research in Corsica uncovered letters written to family members...believe Columbus was one of their own, as Corsica was under Genoan control when he explored...
...foot French tanker in tow. Destination Corsica, seas calm and weather hot. Sighted...afternoon. 08/01/44-Came in sight of Corsica about 1000. At 1130 our SC escort left...took it into the harbor of de Propriana, Corsica, where they dropped anchor. At 1430...
More magazine Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>

 

newspaper articles on: Corsica  - 917 results

       More newspaper Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>  
 
Blood, sweat and Corsica by Helle Bering PARIS - The operetta...ministers indignation - the island of Corsica and the fate of the French Republic itself...introduction of limited autonomy for Corsica, such as the government of Mr. Jospin...
Breeze off to Corsica, Its Heaven Scent. by David Kerr Corisca...he could smell the island out at sea. Corsica is French but has a strong character...Porto - a tiny but busy resort. South of Corsica, life on the Italian island of Sardinia...
Mountain Retreat in Sunny Corsica; Weekly Charter Flights from Birmingham to Corsica Start Today. Gillian Thomas Had a Preview of...flower too. This is a glorious time to be in Corsica, though the new direct flight from Birmingham...
GO CRAZY FOR CORSICA; There Are Cows on the Beach, the Drivers...flight), beautiful and fairly hot. Corsica fits the bill perfectly. Napoleons birthplace...beaches, but the Costas this is not. Corsica really is an extraordinary place and if...
...a Perfect Holiday Food Fans Have It in Corsica Writes Laura Jones Food and Drink Makes...Nice on the French mainland the island of Corsica is surprisingly diverse - drawing climbers...influence in the architecture and customs of Corsica. Dazzled by all this choice it can be...
More newspaper Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-50 >>

 

encyclopedia articles on: Corsica  - 43 results

       More encyclopedia Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-43 >>  
 
CORSICA kor sik , Fr. Corse, island (1990 pop...Monte Cinto (8,891 ft/2,710 m). Corsica is divided into two administrative departments...carries far out to sea and has earned for Corsica the name "the scented isle." The maquis...
...of the island. In 1755 he returned to Corsica, led a successful revolt against the...reducing the island to submission, sold Corsica to France. Paoli fought brilliantly against...corresponded with him and visited him in Corsica, introduced him into the circle of Samuel...
...the Mediterranean coast W of the Rhone. Corsica lies off the Mediterranean coast. The...Centre, Champagne-Ardenne, Corse ( Corsica ), Franche-Comte , Haute-Normandie...Pyrenees, and Corsican on the island of Corsica. Roman Catholicism is by far the largest...
...and diplomat in Russian service, b. Corsica. In the French Revolution, he allied with Pasquale Paoli against the Jacobins on Corsica and supported the British occupation of...Paoli. After the French reconquest of Corsica (1796), Pozzo di Borgo left the island...
...Helped by Pisa, Genoa drove (11th cent.) the Arabs from Corsica and Sardinia. Rivalry over control of Sardinia resulted in...a popular uprising in 1746, but in 1768 Genoa had to cede Corsica, its last outlying possession, to France. In 1797, French...
More encyclopedia Results: 1-10 11-20 21-30 31-40 41-43 >>

 About Questia   ::   Privacy   ::   Contact