Read A Sweet and Glorious Land Online
Authors: John Keahey
George Gissing, photographed two years before leaving for Italy on the 1897 journey that led to the writing of
By the Ionian Sea.
   Â
Photo by Mendelssohn
Â
The author and publisher have provided this e-book to you for your personal use only. You may not make this e-book publicly available in any way.
Copyright infringement is against the law. If you believe the copy of this e-book you are reading infringes on the author's copyright, please notify the publisher at:
us.macmillanusa.com/piracy
.
Contents
Map of southern Italy
/Magna Graecia
Map of southern Basilicata/southern Puglia
6. The Missing Madonna, and Concrete Bunkers with a View
16. Bunkers, a Church with No Floor, a Lonely Column
19. In the Lair of Cassiodorus
Â
For Connie-Lou Disney
Â
All the faults of the Italian people are whelmed in forgiveness as soon as their music sounds under the Italian sky. One remembers all they have suffered, all they have achieved in spite of wrong. Brute races have flung themselves, one after another, upon this sweet and glorious land; conquest and slavery, from age to age, have been the people's lot. Tread where one will, the soil has been drenched with blood.
George Gissing
By the Ionian Sea: Notes of a Ramble in Southern Italy,
1901
Gissing, far left, in Rome early in 1898, a few months after returning from southern Italy and his Ionian Sea adventure. With, left to right, Ernest W. Hornung, brother-in-law of Arthur Conan Doyle; Doyle; and H. G. Wells.   Â
Photographer unknown
Chronology
B.C.E. | Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â Â | Â |
circa 5000 | Â | First agricultural settlements in Egypt |
c. 2700 | Â | Beginning of Egyptian Old Kingdom |
c. 2300 | Â | Full European Bronze Age begins |
c. 1775â1200 | Â | Mycenaean civilization on mainland Greece, eventually evolves into Greek civilization |
c. 1560 | Â | Rise of Egyptian New Kingdom |
c. 1100 | Â | Spread of Phoenicians (thought to be the precursors of Carthaginians) throughout the Mediterranean |
c. 1000 | Â | Hilltop settlements established in Rome, including on the Palatine Hill |
c. 1050â950 | Â | Migration of Ionian Greeks to the eastern Aegean, principally along coast of modern-day southwestern Turkey |
c. 900 | Â | End of Greek Dark Age; rise of the Archaic Age |
c. 875â730 | Â | Greek colonization of the West begins |
c. 776 | Â | First Olympic Games held in Greece |
c. 753 | Â | Traditional, perhaps mythical, founding of Rome by Romulus |
c. 750 | Â | Homer's First Greek colony in Magna Graecia (Great Greece), or southern Italy, believed established on modern Ischia, in Gulf of Naples. |
740 | Â | Cumae (modern Cuma), earliest Greek colony on Italian mainland, established |
720 | Â | Sybaris (later named Thurii by Greeks and still later renamed Copia by Romans) in the far south of Italy founded by Achaean Greeks near the mouth of the river Crati Rhegion (Roman Rhegium, modern Reggio di Calabria) founded by Chalcidian Greeks |
710 | Â | Kroton (modern Crotone, known as Cotrone from the Middle Ages until |
706 | Â | Taras (Roman Tarentum, modern Taranto), founded by Spartan Greeks |
c. 700 | Â | Palatine settlement in Rome expands. The Forum, between the Palatine and the Capitoline Hills, is laid out as a public meeting place Metapontion (Roman Metapontum, modern Metaponto) established along the Bradano River as buffer colony between Taras (Taranto) and Sybaris |
c. 650 | Â | Rise of the “tyrants” in Greece First Greek coins and rise of lyric Greek poetry |
c. 600 | Â | Foundation of Greek colony at Massilia (modern Marseilles in southern France) Greek colony at Neapolis (modern Naples) founded by colonists from Cumae, ten miles to the northwest Sybaris establishes colony at Poseidonia, later renamed Paestum by Romans in 273 Development of Latin script |
c. 530 | Â | Greek mathematician and philosopher Pythagoras active in southern Italy |
510 | Â | Sybaris destroyed by fellow colonists from nearby Kroton |
509 | Â | Last of kings expelled from Rome; the Roman Republic founded |
c. 485 | Â | First western historian Herodotus, born at Halicarnassus in what is now southwestern Turkey; dies about 425, either in Thurii, in southern Italy, or in Pella, in Macedonia, north of mainland Greece |
480â460 | Â | Carthage expands African territory |
460â430 | Â | Herodotus writes |
c. 479â338 | Â | Period of Greek classical culture |
444 | Â | Colony of Thurii built by Greek colonists on site of destroyed Sybaris Cumae overrun by Italic tribes |
410 | Â | Carthage invades Sicily |
c. 380 | Â | Roman expansion in Italy begins Romans conquer Cumae |
341â295 | Â | Rome wages war with native peoples through much of the Italian peninsula; conflicts range from Latin War through Battle of Sentinum, establishing Rome's supremacy in Italy |
336 | Â | Assassination of Philip at Pella in Macedonia; Alexander the Great (356â323), his son, succeeds to the Macedonian throne as Alexander III of Macedonia |
c. 336â31 | Â | Greek Hellenic period |
323 | Â | Death of Alexander the Great at Babylon |
322â281 | Â | Alexander's empire, now Greek, divided among his “Successors” |
312 | Â | First Roman roads under construction, beginning with the Via Appia from Rome to Capua; in following centuries, this road is extended to Tarentum (Taranto) and then to Brundisium (Brindisi) along the Adriatic coast of eastern Italy |
272 | Â | Romans capture Greek Taras, the final act in the Roman conquest of Italy; the city renamed Tarentum |
264â241 | Â | First Punic War between Rome and Carthage; Carthage loses Sicily to Romans |
218â201 | Â | Second Punic War; begins when Hannibal invades Italy by crossing the Alps |
216 | Â | Hannibal, after earlier victories in Italy's north, delivers crushing blow to Romans with military defeat at Cannae |
204 | Â | Consentia/Cosenza, built by native Bruttians, taken by Rome |
203 | Â | Hannibal retreats to Carthage from near Kroton (Crotone) in southern Italy |
202 | Â | Scipio defeats Hannibal at Zama, in North Africa |
193 | Â | Romans establish Copia on site that had been occupied by Greeks at Thurii/Sybaris |
149â146 | Â | Third Punic War; Carthage destroyed |
44 | Â | Assassination of Julius Caesar; Augustus, following civil war, begins rise as first emperor of Roman Empire, dies |
 | ||
C.E. | Â | Â |
14â37 | Â | Tiberius emperor of Rome |
393 | Â | Olympic Games in Greece abolished |
395 | Â | Division of Roman Empire between East, in Constantinople (now Istanbul), and West, in Rome |
410 | Â | Alaric the Visigoth (western Goth) sacks Rome for the third time, hastening the eventual fall of the (western) Roman Empire; dies in Consentia/Cosenza and is believed buried in the bed of the Busento River |
476 | Â | Last Roman emperor in the West deposed; replaced by a barbarian king |
489â493 | Â | The Ostrogoths (eastern Goths) under Theodoric invade and conquer Italy |
490 | Â | Cassiodorus born in area around modern-day Squillace in southern Italy, dies about 585; works with his father, who serves Theodoric |
568 | Â | Germanic Lombards take over northern half of the Italian peninsula |
c. 820 | Â | Muslims from North Africa conquer Sicily |
962 | Â | Germanic king invades Italy and is crowned emperor in Rome |
982 | Â | Germanic peoples defeated by the Arabs when they attempt to conquer southern Italy |
1072 | Â | Normans (descendants of the Vikings) capture Palermo in Sicily |
1130 | Â | Norman ruler is crowned king of Sicily, Calabria, and Apulia (modern Puglia) |
1442 | Â | Naples falls to the ruler of Sicily, Alfonso V of Aragon, who in 1443 assumes the title King of the Two Sicilies, that is, of Sicily and Naples |
1504 | Â | Spain assumes control of the Kingdom of Naples, which, for several years around the end of the fifteenth century, has been caught up in the struggles of foreign powers fighting to dominate Italy; Naples and Sicily are ruled by Spanish viceroys for two centuries |
1527 | Â | The out-of-control armies of Emperor Charles V enter Rome and sack the city. Within a week, troops pillage and destroy thousands of churches, palaces, and houses; this event marks Rome's demise as a center of the Renaissance |
1706â1708 | Â | The Kingdom of Naples comes under the influence of the Austrian Habsburgs, along with Milan and Sardinia |
1734 |  | Don Carlos de Borbón (later King Charles III of Spain) is granted cultural patronage at Naples and establishes the Bourbon fortunes in Italy |
1735 |  | Austria cedes Naples and Sicilyâthe “Kingdom of the Two Sicilies”âto the Bourbons; during the eighteenth century, in the spirit of “enlightened despotism,” the rulers sponsor reforms to rectify social and political injustices and to modernize the state |
1796â1799 | Â | The French, under Napoleon, invade Italy, beginning the era of the Italian Republic |
1802 | Â | Napoleon Bonaparte becomes president of the Italian Republic; Milan is his capital |
1805 | Â | Napoleon declares himself king of Italy his sister Paolina eventually becomes ruler of the duchies of Parma, Guastalla, and Piacenza |
1806 | Â | After first annexing the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies to France, Napoleon then declares it independent and installs his brother Joseph as king |
1808 | Â | Joseph is transferred to Spain, and Napoleon gives Naples to his brother-in-law Joachim Murat; under the French, Naples is modernized by the abolition of feudalism and the introduction of a uniform legal code, and Murat is deservedly popular as king; Napoleon also installs his young son as king of Rome |
c. 1815 | Â | Napoleon's influence begins to wane throughout the Italian peninsula; Bourbon rule is restored in Naples, and the Kingdom of the Two Sicilies aligns with the conservative states of Europe |
1820 | Â | Sicilian people win constitutional concessions from their Bourbon rulers, as well as further concessions in 1848, when Sicily tries to win independence from Bourbon rule in Naples; the kingdom's poor political and economic condition leads to its easy collapse in the mid-nineteenth century just prior to Italian unification |
1849 | Â | Vittorio Emanuele II becomes king of Sardinia |
1857 | Â | George R. Gissing, Victorian novelist and short story writer, born in Wakefield, Yorkshire, England, November 22 |
1860 | Â | Garibaldi conquers Sicily, then conquers southern Italy |