SICILY

sĭsˈĭlē, Ital. Sicilia, region (1991 pop. 4,966,386), 9,925 sq mi (25,706 sq km), S Italy, mainly situated on the island of Sicily, which is bounded by the Mediterranean Sea on the west and south, by the Ionian Sea on the east, and by the Tyrrhenian Sea on the north, and which is separated from the Italian mainland by the narrow Strait of Messina. The region also includes the Egadi Islands, the Lipari Islands, the Pelagie Islands (see Lampedusa), Pantelleria island, and Ustica island. Palermo is the capital of Sicily, which is divided into the provinces of Agrigento, Caltanisetta, Catania, Enna, Messina, Pallermo, Ragusa, Syracuse, and Trapani (named for their capitals).

Geography

The largest Mediterranean island, Sicily is triangular and formerly was sometimes called Trinacria [Gr.,=triangle]; capes Boeo (or Lilibeo), Passero, and Punta del Faro (or Peloro) are the vertices of the triangle. The island is almost entirely covered by hills and mountains (continuations of the Apennines); Mt. Etna (10,700 ft/3,261 m), in the east, is the highest point. The only wide valley is the fertile plain of Catania in the east, mostly located along the lower Simeto River. There are also narrow coastal strips in the south and west, and a small fertile plain (the Conca d'Oro) near Palermo in the northwest.

Economy

Sicily has long been noted for its fertile soil, pleasant climate, and natural beauty. It has a long, hot growing season, but summer droughts are frequent. Agriculture is the chief economic activity but has long been hampered by absentee ownership, primitive methods of cultivation, and inadequate irrigation. The establishment (1950) of the now-defunct Cassa per il Mezzogiorno (Southern Italy Development Fund) by the national government led to land ownership reforms, an increase in the amount of land available for cultivation, and the general development of the island's economy. The Mafia, which is still influential, has hindered governmental efforts to institute reforms in the region, and Sicily continues to have an extremely low per capita income and high unemployment, although many workers have "black," or unreported, jobs.

The chief agricultural products are wheat, barley, corn, olives, citrus fruit, almonds, wine grapes, and cotton; cattle, mules, donkeys, and sheep are raised. There are important tuna and sardine fisheries. Sicily's manufactures include processed food, chemicals, refined petroleum, fertilizers, textiles, ships, leather goods, wine, and forest products. There are petroleum fields in the southeast, and natural gas and sulfur are also produced. Improvements in Sicily's road system have helped to promote industrial development. The chief ports of the island are Palermo, Catania, and Messina.

History

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. b.c.) 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. b.c., Syracuse gained hegemony over the other cities. Phoenician influence was reinvigorated by Carthaginian expansion; although Hamilcar was repulsed at Himera in 480 b.c., later Carthaginian invaders gained control (by c.400 b.c.) 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 b.c.) in the first of the Punic Wars. Rome was victorious by 241 b.c., 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 b.c.). Slave revolts (135–132 b.c. and 104–100 b.c.) 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. a.d.) 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.

Bibliography

See A History of Sicily: Vol. I by M. I. Finley (1968), Vol. II–III by D. M. Smith (1968).

____________________

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

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books on: Sicily  - 9765 results

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SICILY AND THE UNIFICATION OF ITALY Sicily and the Unification of Italy Liberal Policy and Local Power...Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Riall, Lucy, 1962- Sicily and the Unification of Italy/ Lucy Riall. p. cm. Includes bibliographical...
SICILY An Informal History SICILY An Informal History PETER SAMMARTINO WILLIAM ROBERTS CORNWALL...of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data Sammartino, Peter Sicily : an informal history / Peter Sammartino, William Roberts. p...
...Tel Aviv) VOLUME 48, 3 THE JEWS IN SICILY BY SHLOMO SIMONSOHN VOLUME ONE...in Italy, and the first of the Jews in Sicily, covering the years 383-1300. It also...up to the expulsion of the Jews from Sicily. The method employed is once again that...
The Archaeology of Ancient Sicily Sicily is renowned for the richness of its archaeological record, especially...Palaeolithic to the later Roman period, The Archaeology of Ancient Sicily explores all the main topics of archaeological interest. These...
...BENTINCK AND THE BRITISH OCCUPATION OF SICILY 1811-1814 M. de Metternich a raison...BENTINCK THE BRITISH OCCUPATION OF SICILY 1811-1814 CAMBRIDGE AT THE UNIVERSITY...A William Drummonds Mission to Sicily, 1806-1808 158...
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journal articles on: Sicily  - 542 results

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Re-inventing Sicily in Italian American writing and film. by Fred Gardaphe The history of Sicily is one of defeats: defeats of reason...Sicily as a Metaphor...
Hubert Houben. Rogier II of Sicily. A Ruler between East and West...Brooke Hubert Houben. Rogier II of Sicily. A Ruler between East and West. Translated...from the original German, Rogier II of Sicily is a scholarly, thoroughly researched...
...Suggestions from the Antimafia Struggle in Sicily by Jane Schneider , Peter Schneider...the French Connection, in the context of Sicilys becoming a crossroads of global narcotics...investigative powers. Prosecutions in Sicily have depended upon several innovations...
The Jews in Sicily. Volume 7: 1478-1489. by Kenneth Stow Shlomo Simonsohn, ed. The Jews in Sicily. Volume 7: 1478-1489. A Documentary History...90-04-14809-4. Shlomo Simonsohn, ed. The Jews in Sicily. Volume 8: 1490-1497. A Documentary History...
The Day of Battle: The War in Sicily and Italy, 1943-1944. by Len Fullenkamp The Day of Battle: The War in Sicily and Italy, 1943-1944. By Rick Atkinson...of the joint and combined invasion of Sicily and concludes with an account of the capture...
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...a Deal with Mafia Mobsters to Conquer Sicily. Tim Newark Exposes the Truth Behind This...the Mafia in the 1920s, it survived in Sicily and twenty years later Sicilian gangsters...deal with the Mafia to help them conquer Sicily. The most famous is that Allied troops...
...60th anniversary of the liberation of Sicily. Nobody wants a party. Why? by...code name given to the Allied landings on Sicily in July 1943 which led to the overturn...at the opportunity to hold a party in Sicily, where all 65 deputies belong to the Casa...
Sicily Land of No One. by Richard Martin At the heart...Mediterranean, but on the outer edge of Europe, lies the island of Sicily. Like a mosaic of ancient cultures and peoples, this place...eccentricities, and fashioned the social attitudes unique to Sicily and the Sicilians. Palermo was settled by the Phoenicians...
The Death of Roger II of Sicily: February 26th, 1154. by Richard Cavendish THE NEPHEW OF Robert Guiscard and son of Count Roger I of Sicily, Roger II succeeded to Sicily at the age of nine in 1105 and took personal control in...
Letter from Sicily; Jay Gatsby Meets the Russians. by Herbert Mitgang LETTER FROM SICILY Jay Gatsby Meets The Russians It happened...Steri Palace, which six centuries ago housed Sicilys viceroys and later became an office of the...
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Interest in Sicily, especially food, sizzles by Ann Geracimos Byline: Ann Geracimos ALCAMO, Sicily - Sicily is hot - and not just because of the temperature, which soars in summer...
Holiday People: Sicily Is Lava-Ly! by Richard Allen...are guaranteed a red-hot time holiday on Sicily - home of Europes biggest and highest...Naxos, site of the first Greek landing in Sicily 2,700 years ago. It is now a popular...
Sizzling Sicily; Bond: Visits to Family Deepened Pauls...FIRST, a confession: I have family in Sicily. But this doesnt make mebiased. I have...my cheeks and saying Che bello bambino. Sicily is also a fascinating proposition for...
Sicily. Byline: GARETH HUW DAVIES 6 THING THERE is nowhere quite like Sicily. The big Mediterranean island is emerging from its troubled...remains outside Greece ... IN... 1...RAW AND FRUITY I LOVE Sicilys mix of raw beauty, fading grandeur, simple yet fabulous...
Sicily; 6 Things You Must Do In. THERE is nowhere quite like Sicily. The big Mediterranean island is emerging from its troubled...Greek remains outside Greece ... 1...RAW AND FRUITY I LOVE Sicilys mix of raw beauty, fading grandeur, simple yet fabulous...
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encyclopedia articles on: Sicily  - 276 results

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SICILY sis ile, Ital. Sicilia, region (1991 pop. 4,966,386...25,706 sq km), S Italy, mainly situated on the island of Sicily, which is bounded by the Mediterranean Sea on the west...island, and Ustica island. Palermo is the capital of Sicily, which is divided into the provinces of Agrigento, Caltanisetta...
FREDERICK II , king of Sicily 1272 1337, king of Sicily (1296 1337), 3d son of Peter III of Aragon. When his brother, who was king of Sicily, became (1291) king of Aragon as James II , Frederick was his regent in Sicily. In 1295 James...
...PETER III , king of Aragon and king of Sicily (Peter the Great), 1239? 1285, king...count of Barcelona (1276 85) and king of Sicily (1282 85); son and successor of James...Constance, daughter and heir of Manfred of Sicily, were derived the claims of the house...
TANCRED , king of Sicily (Tancred of Lecce)tang krid;, le cha, b. 1130 or 1134, d. 1194, king of Sicily (1190 94), illegitimate son of Roger of Apulia and grandson of Roger II of Sicily. On the death of his cousin, William II of Sicily...
JOHN II , king of Aragon and Sicily 1397 1479, king of Aragon and Sicily (1458 79), king of Navarre (1425 79), count of Barcelona...his brother, Alfonso V, in Aragon, Catalonia, and Sicily and became king of Navarre through his marriage...
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