Sicily: The History and Legacy of the Mediterranean’s Most Famous Island

It is hard to find an island on the map more central than Sicily. Located at the crossroads between Europe and Africa, and between the Eastern and Western Mediterranean, Sicily has rarely been governed as an independent, unified state. Nonetheless, the island has always occupied a front-row seat to some of the most important events in history, and nowhere is this more obvious than during antiquity.

After the Punic Wars, Sicily would remain a Roman domain until the end of antiquity, and affairs on the island dramatically affected the Romans at home. The First Servile War (135-132 BCE) and Second Servile War (104-100 BCE) both took place in Sicily, and they were perhaps the largest (and temporarily successful) slave revolts in antiquity, demonstrating a great unease in the early stages of Roman imperialism. In 70 BCE, the Roman orator and statesman Cicero gave a speech against Verres, the corrupt governor of the island, and over 2,000 years later it still provides an invaluable glimpse into the way things were run in Sicily and the Roman Republic as a whole.

Over 1500 years later, the largest island of the Mediterranean remains a complicated place with a fraught relationship to the Italian mainland. Separated by only the narrow Strait of Messina, Sicily feels like a different country in many ways, and the differences between Sicilians and Italians are much vaster than the tiny geographical separating them might intimate. For example, the linguistic differences between the two are substantial, as Sicilian is practically its own language, rather than just a dialect. It differs from Italian most apparently insofar as the normal final “o” of masculine nouns is replaced by a “u,” but beyond that difference, there are lengthy, five syllable words that a standard Italian tongue tends to trip over. In fact, most Italians have difficulty understanding Sicilian if they can comprehend any of it at all.

Kom igång med den här boken idag för 0 kr

  • Få full tillgång till alla böcker i appen under provperioden
  • Ingen bindningstid, avsluta när du vill
Prova gratis nu
Mer än 52 000 personer har gett Nextory 5 stjärnor i App Store och på Google Play.

  1. 4.0

    The Rise and Fall of the Banate of Bosnia: The History of Bosnia’s Struggle for Independence in the Middle Ages

    Charles River Editors

  2. Zoroastrianism: The History and Legacy of One of the World’s Oldest Religions

    Charles River Editors

  3. Dick Bong: The Life and Legacy of America’s Greatest Combat Ace during World War II

    Charles River Editors

  4. Arnold Rothstein and Meyer Lansky: The Lives and Legacies of the Gangsters Who Reformed Organized Crime in America

    Charles River Editors

  5. Crusading against the Ottomans: The History and Legacy of the Christian Battles against the Ottoman Empire in Central Europe

    Charles River Editors

  6. The Anunnaki: The History and Legacy of the Ancient Mesopotamian Deities

    Charles River Editors

  7. 5.0

    The Amorite Kingdoms: The History of the First Babylonian Dynasty and the Other Mesopotamian Kingdoms Established by the Amorites

    Charles River Editors

  8. 5.0

    Roman Arches: The History of the Famous Monuments in Rome and Throughout the Roman Empire

    Charles River Editors

  9. Ernest Shackleton and Robert Falcon Scott: The History of the British Explorers’ Notorious Rivalry during the Heroic Age of Antarctic Exploration

    Charles River Editors

  10. 4.0

    The New Zealand Wars: The History and Legacy of the British Empire’s Conflicts with the Indigenous Māori

    Charles River Editors

  11. 4.0

    The Circassians: The Turbulent History of the Ethnic Group in the North Caucasus

    Charles River Editors

  12. 3.5

    Sigmund Freud and Carl Jung: The Pioneering Lives and Works of History’s Most Influential Psychologists

    Charles River Editors