Aeolian Islands

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Aeolian Islands
Location [[:]], Italy
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UNESCO World Heritage Sites
Name Isole Eolie (Aeolian Islands)
UNESCO State Party Italy
Region Europe and North America
Type Natural
Criteria viii
UNESCO Site ID 908
Year of Listing 2000



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Aeolian Islands

The Aeolian Islands (Italian Isole Eolie) are a volcanic archipelago in the Tyrrhenian Sea north of Sicily. They are a popular tourist destination in the summer, and attract up to 200,000 visitors annually.

The largest island is Lipari, and tourism marketing often names the entire archipelago the Lipari Islands because of the ease of pronouncing Lipari compared to Aeolian. The other islands include Vulcano, Salina, Stromboli, Filicudi, Alicudi, Panarea and Basiluzzo. The town of Lipari has about 11,000 inhabitants. Vulcano is famous for its fango (mud) baths.

History

The Cnidian settlers under Pentathlos arrived at Lipara in 580 BC and settled on the site of the modern village known as Castello or la Cittade. They named the islands after the Greek keeper of the winds, Aeolus, whose benevolence was essential. Outside Lipara, on the road to the necropolis, a sanctuary to Demeter and Persephone has been discovered. In 394 BC the Roman embassy consisting of Lucius Valerius, Lucius Sergius, and Aulus Manlius took a golden bowl that was made as a gift to Apollo, to Delphi. The diplomats were captured by Liparian pirates, but instead of being harmed the diplomats and their offering were protected by the magistrate Timasitheus and escorted safely to Delphi, this made for peaceful relations between the two states http://www.romansonline.com/Src_Frame.asp?DocID=Hor_LV05_28 Accessed 04/05/07 . The islands were the site of the Battle of the Lipari Islands in 260 BC between Rome and Carthage. Biblical historian Josephus mentioned a group that is probably related to the Aeolian islands: "Elisa gave name to the Eliseans, who were his subjects; they are now the Aeolians." Elisa refers to the biblical figure Elishah, grandson of Japheth, son of Javan.

In 1544, when Spain declared war on France, the French king Francis I, asked the Ottoman Sultan Suleiman for help. The latter sent a fleet headed by Khair ad Din (also known as Barbarossa) who was victorious over the Spaniards, and managed to retake Naples from them. In the course of the battle the Aeolian Islands were depopulated. Later immigrants from mainland Italy, Sicily and Spain re-established communities on the archipelago.

UNESCO World Heritage Sites

The Aeolian Islands are listed by UNESCO as World Heritage Sites, although inaccuracy, the missing closure of a pumice quarry, and the oncoming building of some four harbours by the shore of the sole town of Lipari YouTube - Mega porto: lo scempio di Lipari pose a threat to the islands' place on the list, according to the Italian UNESCO Commission. Eddyburg.it - Le Eolie fuori dai siti Unesco

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bg:Еолийски острови cs:Liparské ostrovy da:Æoliske øer de:Liparische Inseln et:Lipari saared es:Islas Eolias eo:Liparaj insuloj fr:Îles Éoliennes fy:Liparyske of Eolyske Eilannen hr:Eolsko otočje io:Eolia-insuli it:Isole Eolie he:האיים הליפאריים la:Aeoliae insulae lt:Eolijos salos hu:Lipari-szigetek nl:Eolische Eilanden ja:エオリア諸島 no:De eoliske øyer nn:Dei eoliske øyane pl:Wyspy Liparyjskie pt:Ilhas Eólias ro:Isole Eolie ru:Липарские острова scn:Ìsuli Eoli sk:Liparské ostrovy sl:Liparski otoki sr:Липарска острва fi:Liparin saaret sv:Eoliska öarna

Above content from Wikipedia available under GFDL retrieved Mon, 12 May 2008 08:23:43 -0700

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