In the previous post we sailed through the Messina Strait between Italy and Sicily towards Vulcano Island where we climbed Gran Cratère. We continued to Stromboli volcano and witnessed a nighttime eruption. Today we take the dinghy ashore to visit Stromboli town.
It was time to leave Stromboli and head to Lipari, the largest island in this volcanic archipelago situated in between Vesuvius (volcano on mainland Italy that buried Pompei) and Etna (volcano on Sicily). See previous post for our route in the Aeolian sea.
Greek colonists arrived in Lipari ~580 BC and build the acropolis on the rock now known as Castello. Lipari became a Carthaginian naval base during the first Punic War, but fell to Roman forces in 252–251 BC. (for an explanation on the Punic Wars see; https://www.twobatsea.com/history-of-iberian-peninsula/).
In the 9th century Arab tribes conquered Sicily and Arab pirates started raiding the area resulting in the depopulation of Lipari. Charles V had his Spanish subjects repopulate the island and build the massive city walls atop the walls of the ancient Greek acropolis in 1556 that we still see today.
It was not safe to live on the rest of the island until Mediterranean piracy was eradicated in the 19th century.
The first cathedral was built in the heart of the acropolis, where a Greek temple had existed in the classical period. It was destroyed by the Arabs in 838. As with many landmark buildings, they are rebuild and destroyed again many times. What we see today was finished in 1861.
Some of our readers might remember that the Greeks loved drama, and theater played an important role in society. (https://www.twobatsea.com/athens-greece-part-1/). The actors were wearing masks to identify the character they would play. A favourite theme at the time was the Trojan War, described in the Iliad by Homer. The masks shown below are those for the scene of Hector’s farewell to his wife Andromache before he went on to face the combat with Achilles in which he was destined to die.
Thank you for reading our stories and we hope to see you next time in Sicily.