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A SMALL BIG WORLD
IBIZA, the island, is the third largest of the Balearic Islands and together
with Formentera forms the "Pitiusas" islands, that is what the Greeks
called them, and it means "islands of pine trees". The population is
80.000 inhabitants and the island enjoys an excellent climate with an average
annual temperature of 21,5° C maximum and 14° C minimum.
Ibiza, on the sun route of the ancient Phoenicians, is situated in The western
Mediterranean. It has an extension of 572 square kms and a coastline of 210 kms.
Its highest elevation is s'Atalaiassa (475 metres) and in The waters which
surround the island there are a total of 48 smaller islands, some of which, such
as sa Conillera (7,29 square kms) are in themselves a small world. In reality
the whole of the island is a small big world extending from the coast to the
interior, its surface generally hilly and mountainous, and offers all sorts of
contrasts which instil in the visitor an adventurous spirit, so that the might
discover an interest in culture, tradition, nature or art.
The history of Ibiza has its beginnings in 1600 BC, however, there are no
chronological records until 654 BC, when Carthage founded lbosim, nowadays
Eivissa, the capital of the island, and it was Diodoro Sículo who was the first
to mention us ".. After the afore -mentioned island (Sardinia) lies the
so-called Pitiusa, which carries this name because of the great number of pine
trees wbich grow on it...".The Carthaginians of ibiza came from Phoenicia
and were very good traders. They were followed by the Romans under whom Ibiza
received the title of Confederated City. In the following five centuries, know
as the "dark centuries" because very little is known about them, ruled
the Barbarians and the Byzantines, and their rule ended in the year 711 when the
Arabs arrived and with them the name "Yebisah" for the island. The key
Catalonian conquest took place, an act with wich the islands Ibiza and
Formentera became part of what we nowadays call "western world". In
this short historical résumé it must also be mentioned that for centuries
Ibiza was attacked by Saracens who, under the protection of Turkish squadrons,
made the Mediterranean unsafe. From this epoch stem the fortified rural churches
and the watch towers that surround the island.
The island of Ibiza consists of five municipalities: Eivissa, the capital; Santa
Eulària, Sant Antoni, Sant Josep and Sant Joan. To the visitor each one of
these offers distinct possibilities which complement each other. In Ibiza a
small big world opens itself to the visitor and keeps him, if he so wishes, busy
for twenty-four hours a day.
THE HISTORICAL PRECINCT
Ibiza town was founded by the Phoenicians 2600 year ago, and ever since then has
been continually populated. The urban structure of the walled town, Dalt Vila
(High Town) is created around an original nucleus, the actual castle, and
developed in spontaneous, sporadic and heterogeneous editions, without any
original planning, adapted to the geographical conditions and with no other
criterion other than the defence needs of each period. Dalt Vila is surrounded
by a wall constructed in the XVIth century according to the Renaissance
conception of defense by the Italian engineers Juan Baptista Calvi and Jacobo
Paleazo Fratin. The walls consist of seven bastions armed with artillery and a
ravelling, connected by defensive walls. Inside, remains of the medieval wall can
be found, arranged in four adjacent areas, each on a different level and easy to
recognize.
If you begin your visit at the top of Dalt Vila you can see the distribution of
medieval power in its architectural form. The Cathedral, dedicated to the Virgin
Mary, was built between the XIVth and XVIth century, and restored in the XVIIIth
century, thus we can distinguish two phases, the first in Catalan-Gothic style
and the later in Baroque style. On the corner, next to the Cathedral, can be
found a building called the "Universidad", the governing body of the
island introduced in the XlIth century and abolished in the XVIIIth with the
arrival of the Spanish (Castilian) troups. In its outbuildings can be found
today the Archaeological Museum of Dalt Vila which as well occupies the bastion
of Santa Tecla, next to the Cathedral.
Bordering on the carer Major is the Reial Curia with ist unmistakably Gothic
entrance; a building which housed today's equivalents of courthouses and
notaries' offices. In the background the castle and ramparts that, with their
heights, dominate the square and also the town. Their are built in different
styles and is restored.
Descending the aforementioned carer Major we come to the carer de Sant Ciriac,
and here is the chapel of the saint celebrated every year on the 8th of August,
this being, according to tradition, the place where King Jaume I el
Conqueridor's troups managed to break the resistance of the Saracens and in the
year 1235 took the town. Descending further along carer Joan Ramon and carer
Pere Tur we come to the Plaçaa d'Espanya, where the Town Hall is situated,
originally a Dominican monastery built between the XVIth and XVIlth century and
whose religious functions are still carried out by the church of Sant Léomar,
the entrance to which is in carer de Balansat.
Continuing downwards along Sa Carrossa you come to a statue of Isidor Macabich,
a famous poet. Then you enter Plaça de Vila, a centre of commerce and
handicrafts, which leads to the guardhouse of the Portal de sees Taules, the
official entrance to the walled town. In the upper part of the guardhouse you
can see the building that houses the Museum of Contemporary Art that is noted
for its collection of graphical art of internationally known artists.
Following the steep way downwards out through the wall you find yourself
opposite the "Mercat Vell", the old market, a symbolic building for
the modern history of the town.
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