About Corfu
History & Culture
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THE VARIOUS NAMES OF CORFU (Korfu)
40.000 BC - 735 BC FROM THE CAVE-DWELLERS TO THE FIRST SETTLETS Corfu was not always an island: during the Paleolithic Period it was joined with the mainland opposite. Archaeological finds from this period (70,000-40,000 BC) have been made at Ag. Mathaios. Separation from the mainland occurred during the Neolithic period (10,000-8,000BC) when, with the melting of the ice, the level of the sea rose. Traces of the Neolithic Period are to be found at Sidari. In the north-west of the island, at Kefali, Afionas and Ermones, Bronze Age settlements (2,000 BC) have been found. Apollonias the Rodian, in the ''Argonautika'' refers to the fact that Jason hid here with the Argonauts and Medea, in order to escape the Colchians.
735-435 BC THE CORINTHIANS IN CORCYRA Under the leadership of Chersicrates a powerful Corcyra was created, with colonies, economic wealth, and naval power, but political differences divided the Phaiacians into Democrats and Oligarchs, and after 300 years of peaceful co-existence the inhabitants of Corcyra found themselves in conflict with the Corinthians over their jointly-held colony Epidamnos (today known as Durres). The Athenians support for Corcyra gave rise to the start of the Peloponnesian Wars 435-229 BC CORCYRA'S ATHENIAN ALLIES The alliance lasted for almost a century. In spite of the internal conflict between the aristocratic and the democratic parties the Corcyrans were able to give strong support to the Athenians in many battles, thanks to their powerful navy. But in 338 BC, at Chaeroneia, the Macedonians, under Philip II, won the battle, dissolving the Athenian Alliance and conquering Corcyra. It was then that Alexander the Great visited the island, was enchanted by its beauty and placed it under his protection for almost 35 years. From 300 BC onwards, Corcyra became at various times the temporary possession of the Spartans, the Syracusians, and the Illyrians, who eventually handed the island over to the Romans, in 229 BC. In occupying Corcyra, the Romans conquered their first Greek territory. From the oligarchic party, they fashioned their own ruling class and thrust the entire island into a state of deep decline. In their time, the first century AD, Jason and Sosipatros, disciples of the Apostle, Saint Paul, brought Christianity to the island. A little later, Nero visited Kassiopi, a plague epidemic struck the island, and the persecution of the Christians began.
337-1267 A.D. THE BYZANTINE PERIOD In 337 A.D. the Roman Empire was divided into East and West for the first time, with Corfu being included in the Western section. The partition however was finalised in 395 A.D. and Corfu was ceded to the Eastern Roman Empire.Centuries of darkness followed, during which Corfu suffered barbarian raids repeatedly, such as the one in 455 A.D. when the Vandals of Genzerichou laid waste to the island. The sack of Corfu by the Goths under Totila folowed in 550 A.D., an event which led to the adandonment of the ancient city and its relocation for defensive purposes behind the fortifications of the Old Fortress. In the second half of the 7th century A.D. Saracens seized Corfu, ravaged it and then used it as a base of operations. In 733 A.D. the Byzantines expelled the Saracens, signalling the start of a new era for Corfu, under Byzantine Orthodox rule. In 1081 A.D. the Normans under the leadership of Robert Guiscaud besieged and captured the island. Their rule did not last long, however, since the Byzantines, with the help of Venice, beat them in a naval battle and again took possession. Various Frankish knights conquered the island in subsequent years and in 1204 A.D., when knights of the Fourth Crusade seized Constantinople, Corfu fell into Venetian hands. The next decade was Corfu's first period under Venetian rule, but in 1214 A.D. Byzantium again took possession of the island, which became part of the Despotate of Epirus, at that time one of three independent Greek states. Half a century of peace followed, until a new threat, this time from Sicily, arose. The use of the Greek language in the Eastern Roman Empire constituted the basis for the development of a separate consciousness from that of Rome. The Church of Western Greece left the control of the Pope and came under the auspices of the Patriarch in Constantinople. Corfu became a Metropolitan Bishopric and the Greek world came into opposition with the Latin one. When in 1267 A.D. the Angevins conquered Corfu, they attempted to impose the Catholic religion in place of the Orthodox. The attempt failed completely, since the end of Byzantine rule did not by any means signify the end of the Greek Orthodox consciousness and culture amongst the people of Corfu 1267-1386 THE ANGEVIN OCCUPATION In 1267, Charles of Anjou, the French King of Sicily, seized the island and began efforts to replace the Orthodox Church with the Catholic one. During this period the island was divided into the four districts which still exist today - the regions of Giros, Oros, Mesis and Lefkimmi. Also at this time, Corfu was settled by two new peoples. The first group consisted of Jews banished from Spain, who were treated little better when they came to Corfu. Despite protective measures imposed by the Angevins, they were persecuted until 1386, when, having become a large community, they were at last allowed to play a part in public life. The second people were the Vagenets, who came from the coastal region of Epirus and involved themselves in tough manual labour, thus becoming a separate lower class. Meanwhile the external threat from the Turks was always present and, fearing an attack, the Council of Corfu sought the protection of the ruler of the seas, the Serene Republic of Venice. So it was that on May 20th 1386, the banner of St. Mark was raised upon the Old Fortress.
1386-1797 THE VENETIAN PERIOD
1797-1814 THE FRENCH PRESENCE IN
CORFU
When the French occupied Corfu the
local people, fired by the ideals of the French Revolution, had visions of
their own independence and of an end to the days of the nobility. The 'Libro
d'Oro' was burned and emblems of Venetian rule were destroyed, but the
authoritarian policy which the French in turn imposed soon antagonised the
people of the island.
In 1799 Russia and Turkey, concerned
about French territorial expansion, formed an alliance and took Corfu. A year
later, on March 21st 1800, Corfu and the other Ionian islands joined to create
the independent Septinsular Republic, but this was dissolved when, in 1807,
Corfu was again ceded to France under Napoleon, a situation which lasted until
1814. By then the Ionian Academy and the Library had been established and the
local economy had improved.
1814
- 1864 THE BRITISH ERA
In 1814 the Ionian islands were
declared an independent state under the protection of Great Britain. Under
British rule, the economy recovered fully, a road network was constructed, the
Ionian Academy (1824) was established as the first Greek university, and, most
important of all, Greek became the official language. The British remained in
Corfu until 1864, when the islands were united with the rest of Greece.
1864 - TODAY
On May 21st 1864, Corfu and the
other Ionian islands finally regained their Greek identity, and the long years
of foreign occupation came to an end. But this also signalled the end of
Corfu's brilliance as the capital of the Ionian State. The small, newly
established Greek state could not afford the existence of two separate poles of
culture and wealth, and the University and other cultural institutions had to
be sacrificed. By 1900, Corfu was just another provincial town with memories of
a glorious past. In 1923 it was bombarded and temporarily occupied by the
Italians, after the Italian General Cellini was murdered on Greek territory. During
the Second World War, in 1940, it was bombed and once again occupied by the
Italians and in 1943 suffered a huge catastrophe when bombed by the Germans,
and the Ionian Academy, the Library, and the Municipal Theatre were burnt down.
In the hard years that followed the
end of the war, Corfu shared the fortune of the rest of Greece. Poverty,
political crisis and emigration continued until the late 1960's, when tourist
development gave a new impetus to the economic and social life of Greece. The
island's attraction for tourists was already evident by the turn of the
century. As well as being the spot chosen by the tragic Empress Sissi for her
Achillion Palace, built in 1890 as a refuge from the intrigues of the Hapsburg
court, it also became the setting of the Bella Venezia Hotel, a beautiful
hostelry which was often compared with the Grande Bretagne in Athens and
attracted the aristocracy of Europe as guests. From the early years of the
century up until the Second World War, Corfu rivalled Capri and Majorca as the
favourite Mediterranean destination of the European elite. During the last 40
years , the growth of mass tourism, combined with the island's natural beauty
and historic past, has made Corfu one of the most popular holiday destinations
for countless people from all over the world, who never cease to recall the
wonderful summer days they spent in Corfu.
Visiting the fortresses, the old
mansions, the monasteries, passing the time at cafes and village tavernas, the
visitor can take pleasure in experiencing a living culture, one which is
evident in the character of the charming Corfiots.
Corfu
(Korfu) history
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