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| History |
| Ithaki was first inhabited in 4000-3000 BC. Information
about its first inhabitants who were indigenous Greeks, comes from
shards incised with the Linear A script found in Pilikata.
Finds from the Pilikata settlement and Loizos Cave date back as
far as 3000-2000 BC. By 1500 BC, the whole island was
inhabited. The island's civilization reached a high point in
1000 BC, when the kingdom of Ithaca included the other Ionian
islands and part of the coast of Arcanania. The decline that
followed was mainly due to exhaustion of the soil. The northern
part of the island, however remained inhabited and under
cultivation. After 180 BC Ithaki was part of the Roman
province of Illyria.
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Later its port town, Polis or Jerusalem, was built; Anna Comnene
refers to it in her "Alexias". The port was
gradually abandoned and sank into the sea after the earthquake in
967 AD. In 1086 the first pirates appeared on the
scene. In 1185, Ithaki was conquered by the Normans, who
ceded it in 1200 to the Orsini family. The Orsinis remained
rulers of the island until 1357, when the king of Naples handed it
over to the Tocco family. The Turks sacked Ithaki, along
with the rest of the Ionian islands, in 1479. Material
damage was tremendous, many hostages were sold as slaves. Of the
remaining population, many abandoned the island. When war broke out between
the Turks and the Venetians in 1499, Ithaki, sharing the fate of
neighbouring Kefalonia, was signed over in a treaty to the
Venetians. The Venetian senate, concerned about the
reduction in population due to fear of pirates and the Turks,
granted lands to anyone who would come back, and exempted them
from taxation. Many people were attracted by this offer,
most of them from mainland Greece, which was suffering under the
Turkish yoke.
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In 1569 Ithaki was fortified for the first time. But the
Venetian governors, taking advantage of the people's poverty and
ignorance, often acted unjustly and sometimes committed acts of
violence. Despite this the island's population increased to 10,000
and the the dawn of the
17th century found Ithaki's land under cultivation; the island had
also put together a commercial fleet that was carrying on trade
with Europe. This fleet took part in all the battles for
freedom from the Turks up to 1821.
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In 1798, the democratic French took over the Ionian islands but
held them for only a year. Despite the heavy taxes they
levied, their new revolutionary ideas were conveyed to the
islanders. The Russians and Turks succeeded the French and a
14-member senate governed democratically until 1807. French
rule returned for another two years, and in 1809 the English
occupied the Ionian Islands and formed the "United States of
the Ionian Islands".
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During the Revolution of 1821, the Ithaki islanders joined the
Friendly Society, taking part in its activities and offering a
place of refuge to fugitive Greeks. It was in Galatsi in Romania
that Ithacans first began the Revolution in 1821. Two waves
of emigration, one in 1829 and the other in 1845, made the
Ithacans famous as sailors and merchants abroad. Union with
Greece in 1864, of which T. Paizis and the Radical Party were
strong supporters, came at a time when Ithaki was a significant
power, both in commerce and shipping.
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Like the whole Ionian area, Ithaki has been stricken by repeated
earthquakes. According to Partsch, the most violent occurred
in 1648. There were other earthquakes in 1766, 1876, and
between 1912 and 1918. Extensive devastation was caused by
the 1953 earthquake.
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On May 1, 1941 the Italian annexation began, and September 24,
1943 saw the beginning of the German occupation, which lasted only
a year.
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| from Kefalonia & Ithaki, the Kingdom of
Odysseus, by Betty Kagia. Grecocard Publications, Athens 1994.
(pp106-110) |
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