diff options
| author | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-14 18:23:12 -0700 |
|---|---|---|
| committer | Roger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org> | 2025-10-14 18:23:12 -0700 |
| commit | 58cf265402e1a57eca3552801d245ba345793591 (patch) | |
| tree | 4604e05c084e0516ba9b0198c41a02f770a2c02e /old | |
Diffstat (limited to 'old')
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diff --git a/old/54760-0.txt b/old/54760-0.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..5792a85 --- /dev/null +++ b/old/54760-0.txt @@ -0,0 +1,24187 @@ +The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Earth and its inhabitants, Volume 1: +Europe., by Élisée Reclus + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most +other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions +whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of +the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at +www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have +to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. + +Title: The Earth and its inhabitants, Volume 1: Europe. + Greece, Turkey in Europe, Rumania, Servia, Montenegro, + Italy, Spain, and Portugal. + +Author: Élisée Reclus + +Editor: E.G. Ravenstein + +Release Date: May 22, 2017 [EBook #54760] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: UTF-8 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EARTH AND ITS INHABITANTS--EUROPE *** + + + + +Produced by Josep Cols Canals, RichardW, and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This +file was produced from images generously made available +by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.) + + + + + + + + + + THE EARTH AND ITS INHABITANTS. + + EUROPE. + + BY + ÉLISÉE RECLUS. + + EDITED BY + E. G. RAVENSTEIN, F.R.G.S., F.S.S., ETC. + + VOL. I. + + GREECE, TURKEY IN EUROPE, RUMANIA, SERVIA, MONTENEGRO, + ITALY, SPAIN, AND PORTUGAL. + + [Illustration] + + _ILLUSTRATED BY NUMEROUS ENGRAVINGS AND MAPS._ + + NEW YORK: + D. APPLETON AND COMPANY, + 1, 3, AND 5 BOND STREET. + 1883. + +[Illustration] + + + + +CONTENTS. + + + INTRODUCTORY REMARKS . . . 1 + + + EUROPE. + + I. GEOGRAPHICAL IMPORTANCE . . . 5 + + II. EXTENT AND BOUNDARIES . . . 6 + + III. NATURAL DIVISIONS AND MOUNTAINS . . . 9 + + IV. THE MARITIME REGIONS . . . 13 + + V. CLIMATE . . . 16 + + VI. INHABITANTS . . . 18 + + + THE MEDITERRANEAN. + + I. HYDROLOGY . . . 23 + + II. ANIMAL LIFE, FISHERIES, AND SALT-PANS . . . 28 + + III. COMMERCE AND NAVIGATION . . . 31 + + + GREECE. + + I. GENERAL ASPECTS . . . 36 + + II. CONTINENTAL GREECE . . . 45 + + III. THE MOREA, OR PELOPONNESUS . . . 56 + + IV. THE ISLANDS OF THE ÆGEAN SEA . . . 69 + + V. THE IONIAN ISLES . . . 75 + + VI. THE PRESENT AND FUTURE OF GREECE . . . 80 + + VII. GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL DIVISIONS . . . 85 + + + TURKEY IN EUROPE. + + I. GENERAL ASPECTS . . . 87 + + II. CRETE AND THE ISLANDS OF THE ARCHIPELAGO . . . 90 + + III. TURKEY OF THE GREEKS (THRACIA, MACEDONIA, AND THESSALY) . . . 98 + + IV. ALBANIA AND EPIRUS . . . 115 + + V. THE ILLYRIAN ALPS, BOSNIA, AND HERZEGOVINA . . . 126 + + VI. BULGARIA . . . 131 + + VII. PRESENT POSITION AND PROSPECTS OF TURKEY . . . 145 + + VIII. GOVERNMENT AND ADMINISTRATION . . . 150 + + TREATIES OF SAN STEFANO AND BERLIN . . . 153 + + + RUMANIA . . . 155 + + + SERVIA AND MONTENEGRO. + + I. SERVIA . . . 172 + + II. MONTENEGRO . . . 179 + + + ITALY. + + I. GENERAL ASPECTS . . . 183 + + II. THE BASIN OF THE PO: PIEMONT, LOMBARDY, VENETIA, AND EMILIA + . . . 189 + + III. LIGURIA AND THE RIVIERA OF GENOA . . . 230 + + IV. TUSCANY . . . 239 + + V. THE ROMAN APENNINES, THE VALLEY OF THE TIBER, THE MARCHES, AND THE + ABRUZZOS . . . 257 + + VI. SOUTHERN ITALY: NAPLES . . . 286 + + VII. SICILY . . . 309 + + The Æolian or Liparic Islands . . . 331 + + The Ægadian Islands . . . 334 + + Malta and Gozzo . . . 335 + + VIII. SARDINIA . . . 338 + + IX. THE PRESENT AND FUTURE OF ITALY . . . 352 + + X. GOVERNMENT AND ADMINISTRATION . . . 358 + + + CORSICA . . . 363 + + + SPAIN. + + I. GENERAL ASPECTS . . . 370 + + II. THE CASTILES, LEON, AND ESTREMADURA . . . 377 + + III. ANDALUSIA . . . 394 + + IV. THE MEDITERRANEAN SLOPE: MURCIA AND VALENCIA . . . 414 + + V. THE BALEARIC ISLANDS . . . 423 + + VI. THE VALLEY OF THE EBRO: ARAGON AND CATALONIA . . . 427 + + VII. BASQUE PROVINCES, NAVARRA, AND LOGROÑO . . . 439 + + VIII. SANTANDER, THE ASTURIAS, AND GALICIA . . . 448 + + IX. THE PRESENT AND FUTURE OF SPAIN . . . 460 + + X. GOVERNMENT AND ADMINISTRATION . . . 465 + + + PORTUGAL. + + I. GENERAL ASPECTS . . . 469 + + II. NORTHERN PORTUGAL: THE VALLEYS OF THE MINHO, DOURO, AND MONDEGO + . . . 473 + + III. THE VALLEY OF THE TAGUS . . . 482 + + IV. SOUTHERN PORTUGAL: ALENTEJO AND ALGARVE . . . 490 + + V. THE PRESENT AND FUTURE OF PORTUGAL . . . 496 + + VI. GOVERNMENT AND ADMINISTRATION . . . 498 + + + INDEX . . . 501 + +[Illustration] + +[Illustration] + + + + +LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. + + +MAPS PRINTED IN COLOURS. + + 1. Ethnographical Map of Europe . . . 18 + + 2. Turkey-in-Europe and Greece . . . 85 + + 3. The Bosphorus and Constantinople . . . 98 + + 4. Ethnographical Map of Turkey . . . 148 + + 5. Italy . . . 183 + + 6. The Delta of the Po . . . 210 + + 7. The Bay of Naples . . . 288 + + 8. Spain and Portugal . . . 365 + + +PLATES. + + Peasants from the Environs of Athens . . . _To face page_ . . . 53 + + Constantinople and the Golden Horn, from the Heights of Eyub . . . 99 + + Albanians . . . 118 + + Wealthy Arnauts . . . 124 + + Turkish Muleteers in the Herzegovina . . . 127 + + Tirnova . . . 133 + + Bulgarians . . . 138 + + Mussulman of Adrianople, and Mussulman Lady of Prisrend . . . 147 + + Wallachians (Valakhs) . . . 162 + + Belgrade . . . 174 + + The Pennine Alps, as seen from the Becca di Nona (Pic Carrel), 10,380 + feet . . . 195 + + Venice . . . 207 + + The Palace at Ferrara . . . 228 + + Verona . . . 229 + + Peasants of the Abruzzos . . . 258 + + Naples . . . 300 + + Capri, seen from Massa Lubrense . . . 302 + + Amalfi . . . 304 + + La Valetta, Malta . . . 337 + + Peasants of Toledo, Castile . . . 390 + + Roman Bridge at Alcántara . . . 391 + + Gorge de los Gaitanes, Defile of Guadalhorce . . . 399 + + Peasants of Córdova, Andalusia . . . 406 + + Gibraltar, as seen from the “Lines” . . . 414 + + Peasants of La Huerta, and Cigarrera of Valencia . . . 419 + + Women of Ibiza, Balearic Isles . . . 425 + + Monserrat, Catalonia . . . 431 + + Barcelona, seen from the Castle of Monjuich . . . 437 + + Gorges of Pancorbo . . . 440 + + Los Pasages . . . 447 + + Oporto . . . 478 + + Lisbon . . . 484 + + +ILLUSTRATIONS IN TEXT. + + + EUROPE. + + 1. The Natural Boundary of Europe . . . 7 + + 2. The Relief of Europe . . . 8 + + 3. Development of Coast-lines relatively to Area . . . 14 + + 4. The Isothermal Zone of Europe . . . 17 + + + THE MEDITERRANEAN. + + 5. The Depth of the Mediterranean . . . 24 + + 6. The Strait of Gibraltar . . . 26 + + 7. Principal Fisheries of the Mediterranean . . . 30 + + 8. Steamer Routes and Telegraphs . . . 34 + + + GREECE. + + 9. MAINOTE AND SPARTAN . . . 42 + + 10. Foreign Elements in the Population of Greece . . . 44 + + 11. MOUNT PARNASSUS AND DELPHI . . . 46 + + 12. Lower Acarnania . . . 49 + + 13. Thermopylæ . . . 50 + + 14. Lake Copais . . . 52 + + 15. THE ACROPOLIS OF ATHENS . . . 54 + + 16. Athens and its Long Walls . . . 55 + + 17. Ancient Athens . . . 56 + + 18. MOUNT TAYGETUS . . . 58 + + 19. Lakes Phenea and Stymphalus . . . 60 + + 20. The Plateau of Mantinea . . . 62 + + 21. Bifurcation of the Gastuni . . . 63 + + 22. The Valley of the Eurotas . . . 67 + + 23. Euripus and Chalcis . . . 70 + + 24. Nea Kaimeni . . . 72 + + 25. CORFU . . . 76 + + 26. The Channel of Santa Maura . . . 77 + + 27. Argostoli . . . 79 + + + TURKEY IN EUROPE. + + 28. THE GORGE OF HAGIO RUMELI . . . 91 + + 29. Crete, or Candia . . . 93 + + 30. The Ægean Sea . . . 95 + + 31. Geological Map of the Peninsula of Constantinople . . . 99 + + 32. The Hellespont, or Dardanelles . . . 105 + + 33. Mount Athos . . . 108 + + 34. MOUNT OLYMPUS . . . 110 + + 35. Mount Olympus and the Valley of Tempe . . . 111 + + 36. Southern Epirus . . . 117 + + 37. Subterranean Beds of the Affluents of the Narenta . . . 128 + + 38. Mount Vitosh . . . 132 + + 39. Delta of the Danube . . . 137 + + 40. Comparative Discharge of the Mouths of the Danube . . . 138 + + 41. Commercial Highways converging upon Constantinople . . . 150 + + 42. The Turkish Empire . . . 151 + + + RUMANIA. + + 43. The Rumanians . . . 156 + + 44. The Rivers Shil and Olto . . . 158 + + 45. The Danube and Yalomitza . . . 161 + + 46. Ethnological Map of Moldavian Bessarabia . . . 164 + + 47. BUCHAREST . . . 169 + + + SERVIA AND MONTENEGRO. + + 48. Confluence of the Danube and Save . . . 174 + + 49. Montenegro and the Lake of Skodra . . . 180 + + + ITALY. + + 50. Rome and the Roman Empire . . . 186 + + 51. MONTE VISO . . . 189 + + 52. Grand Paradis . . . 191 + + 53. Plain of Débris between the Alps and Apennines . . . 192 + + 54. Slope of the Valley of the Po . . . 193 + + 55. Mud Volcanoes of the Northern Apennines . . . 194 + + 56. Ancient Glaciers of the Alps . . . 195 + + 57. Serra of Ivrea and Ancient Glacier Lakes of the Dora . . . 196 + + 58. Ancient Lakes of Verbano . . . 197 + + 59. Lake Como . . . 198 + + 60–62. Sections of Lake Como . . . 199 + + 63. VILLA SERBELLONI . . . 201 + + 64. Beech and Pine Woods of Ravenna . . . 203 + + 65. Shingle Beds of the Tagliamento, &c. . . . 205 + + 66. Old Bed of the Piave . . . 206 + + 67. Lagoons of Venice . . . 207 + + 68. Colonies of the Roman Veterans . . . 209 + + 69. The Po between Piacenza and Cremona . . . 211 + + 70. German Communes of Northern Italy . . . 216 + + 71. MONTE ROSA . . . 217 + + 72. The Lagoons of Comacchio . . . 220 + + 73. The Fisheries of Comacchio . . . 221 + + 74. Mouth of the Adige Valley . . . 223 + + 75. The Passages over the Alps . . . 224 + + 76. The Lakes and Canals of Mantua . . . 227 + + 77. Palmanova . . . 229 + + 78. Junction of the Alps and Apennines . . . 231 + + 79. Genoa and its Suburbs . . . 234 + + 80. GENOA . . . 235 + + 81. The Gulf of Spezia . . . 237 + + 82. THE GOLFOLINO OF THE ARNO . . . 240 + + 83. Defiles of the Arno . . . 241 + + 84. Monte Argentaro . . . 243 + + 85. Val di Chiana . . . 244 + + 86. The Lake of Bientina . . . 245 + + 87. The Malarial Regions . . . 247 + + 88. FLORENCE . . . 252 + + 89. The Harbour of Leghorn . . . 255 + + 90. The Lake of Bolsena . . . 260 + + 91. La Montagna d’Albano . . . 261 + + 92. Ancient Lake of Fucino . . . 263 + + 93. Lake of Trasimeno . . . 264 + + 94. CAMPAGNA OF ROME . . . 265 + + 95. Pontine Marshes . . . 267 + + 96. Ancient Lakes of the Tiber and Topino . . . 269 + + 97. CASCADES OF TERNI . . . 270 + + 98. The Delta of the Tiber . . . 271 + + 99. PEASANTS OF THE ROMAN CAMPAGNA . . . 272 + + 100. ROME . . . 276 + + 101. The Hills of Rome . . . 278 + + 102. Civita Vecchia . . . 281 + + 103. Valleys of Erosion on the Western Slope of the Apennines . . . 283 + + 104. Rimini and San Marino . . . 285 + + 105. Monte Gargano . . . 287 + + 106. Ashes of the Campania . . . 289 + + 107. ERUPTION OF MOUNT VESUVIUS . . . 292 + + 108. Educational Map of Italy . . . 297 + + 109. Pompeii . . . 301 + + 110. The Marshes of Salpi . . . 305 + + 111. Harbour of Brindisi in 1871 . . . 307 + + 112. Harbour of Taranto . . . 308 + + 113. Strait of Messina . . . 310 + + 114. Profile of Mount Etna . . . 311 + + 115. Lava Stream of Catania . . . 313 + + 116. Subsidiary Cones of Mount Etna . . . 314 + + 117. The Maccalubas and Girgenti . . . 317 + + 118. PALERMO AND MONTE PELLEGRINO . . . 324 + + 119. Trapani and Marsala . . . 326 + + 120. Syracuse . . . 328 + + 121. TEMPLE OF CONCORD AT GIRGENTI . . . 329 + + 122. The Central Portion of the Æolian Islands . . . 332 + + 123. The Mediterranean to the South of Sicily . . . 334 + + 124. The Port of Malta . . . 336 + + 125. The Sea to the South of Sardinia . . . 339 + + 126. Strait of Bonifacio . . . 340 + + 127. La Giara . . . 345 + + 128. District of Iglesias . . . 348 + + 129. CAGLIARI . . . 350 + + 130. Port of Terranova . . . 351 + + 131. Navigation of Italy . . . 355 + + 132. Commercial Routes of Italy . . . 356 + + 133. Submarine Plateau between Corsica and Tuscany . . . 364 + + 134. Profile of the Road from Ajaccio to Bastia . . . 365 + + 135. BASTIA . . . 368 + + + SPAIN. + + 136. Table-lands of Iberian Peninsula . . . 371 + + 137. Dehesas near Madrid . . . 375 + + 138. Density of Population . . . 376 + + 139. Profile of Railway from Bayonne to Cádiz . . . 379 + + 140. Sierras de Grédos and de Gata . . . 380 + + 141. DEFILE OF THE TAJO . . . 382 + + 142. Steppes of New Castile . . . 384 + + 143. Salamanca . . . 388 + + 144. THE ALCAZAR OF SEGOVIA . . . 389 + + 145. TOLEDO . . . 390 + + 146. Madrid and its Environs . . . 392 + + 147. Aranjuez . . . 394 + + 148. Basins of the Guadiana and Guadalquivir . . . 395 + + 149. THE PASS OF DESPEÑAPERROS . . . 396 + + 150. THE SIERRA NEVADA . . . 397 + + 151. The Mouth of the Guadalquivir . . . 399 + + 152. The Steppes of Ecija . . . 402 + + 153. Zones of Vegetation on the Coast of Andalusia . . . 403 + + 154. The Mines of Huelva . . . 406 + + 155. THE ALHAMBRA . . . 408 + + 156. Cádiz and its Roadstead . . . 411 + + 157. Gibraltar . . . 413 + + 158. Steppes of Múrcia . . . 416 + + 159. THE PALM GROVE OF ELCHE . . . 418 + + 160. The Palm Grove of Elche and the Huertas of Orihuela . . . 419 + + 161. RUINS OF THE DYKE ABOVE LORCA . . . 420 + + 162. PEASANTS OF MURCIA . . . 421 + + 163. The Harbour of Cartagena . . . 423 + + 164. The Gráo de Valencia . . . 424 + + 165. The Balearic Islands . . . 426 + + 166. VIEW OF IBIZA . . . 427 + + 167. The Pytiuses . . . 428 + + 168. Port Mahon . . . 430 + + 169. The Delta of the Ebro . . . 435 + + 170. The Steppes of Aragon . . . 436 + + 171. The Environs of Barcelona . . . 440 + + 172. The Sand-banks of Mataró . . . 441 + + 173. Andorra . . . 443 + + 174. Jaizquibel . . . 445 + + 175. Azcoitia and Azpeitia . . . 447 + + 176. The Environs of Bilbao . . . 449 + + 177. St. Sebastian . . . 450 + + 178. ST. SEBASTIAN . . . 451 + + 179. Guetaria . . . 452 + + 180. Guernica . . . 453 + + 181. Pass of Reinosa . . . 454 + + 182. Peñas de Europa . . . 456 + + 183. Rias of La Coruña and Ferrol . . . 458 + + 184. Santoña and Santander . . . 460 + + 185. Oviedo and Gijon . . . 462 + + 186. TOWER OF HERCULES . . . 463 + + 187. Ria de Vigo . . . 464 + + 188. Railroads of the Iberian Peninsula . . . 465 + + 189. Foreign Commerce of the Iberian Peninsula . . . 466 + + 190. Diagram exhibiting the Extent of the Castilian Language . . . 467 + + + PORTUGAL. + + 191. Rainfall of the Iberian Peninsula . . . 470 + + 192. PORTUGUESE TYPES (Peasants) . . . 472 + + 193. The Valley of the Limia, or Lima . . . 475 + + 194. Dunes of Avéiro . . . 476 + + 195. Oporto and the Paiz do Vinho . . . 478 + + 196. São João da Foz and the Mouth of the Dóuro . . . 480 + + 197. COIMBRA . . . 482 + + 198. The Estuary of the Tejo (Tagus) . . . 483 + + 199. Peniche and the Berlingas . . . 485 + + 200. Mouth of the Tejo . . . 486 + + 201. Zones of Vegetation in Portugal . . . 488 + + 202. CASTLE OF PENHA DE CINTRA . . . 489 + + 203. MONASTERY OF THE KNIGHTS OF CHRIST AT THOMAR . . . 491 + + 204. Estuary of the Sado . . . 492 + + 205. Serra de Monchique and Promontory of Sagres . . . 493 + + 206. Geology of Algarve . . . 494 + + 207. Faro and Tavira . . . 496 + + 208. Geographical Extent of the Portuguese Language . . . 497 + + 209. Telegraph from Lisbon to Rio de Janeiro . . . 498 + +[Illustration] + +{1} + +[Illustration] + + + + +THE EARTH AND ITS INHABITANTS. + +INTRODUCTORY REMARKS.[1] + + +Our earth is but as an atom in space, a star amongst stars. Yet, to us +who inhabit it, it is still without bounds, as it was in the time of +our barbarian ancestors. Nor can we foresee the period when the whole +of its surface will be known to us. We have been taught by astronomers +and geodesists that our planet is a sphere flattened at the poles, and +physical geographers and meteorologists have applied their powers of +inductive reasoning to establish theories on the direction of the winds +and ocean currents within the polar regions. But hitherto no explorer +has succeeded in reaching the extremities of our earth, and no one can +tell whether land or sea extends beyond those icy barriers which have +frustrated our most determined efforts. Thanks to the struggles of +indomitable seamen, the pride of our race, the area of the mysterious +regions around the north pole has been reduced to something like the +hundredth part of the earth’s surface, but in the south there still +remains an unknown region of such vast extent, that the moon, were she +to drop upon our planet, might disappear within it without coming into +contact with any part of the earth’s surface already known to us. + +And the polar regions, which present so many natural obstacles to +our explorers, are not the only portions of the earth not yet known +to men of science. It may be humiliating to our pride as men, but we +feel constrained to admit that among the countries not yet known to +us there are some, accessible enough as far as natural obstacles are +concerned, but closed against us by our fellow-men ! There are peoples +in this world, dwelling in towns, obeying laws, and having customs +comparatively polished, but who choose to live in seclusion, and are +as little known to us as if they were the inhabitants of some other +planet. Their frontiers are closed by war and its horrors, by the +practice of slavery, by religious {2} fanaticism, and even commercial +jealousy. We have heard of some of these peoples by vague report, +but there are others concerning whom we absolutely know nothing. And +thus it happens that in this age of steam, of the printing press, of +incessant and feverish activity, we still know nothing, or very little, +of the centre of Africa, of a portion of Australia, of the interior of +that fine and no doubt most fertile island of New Guinea, and of vast +table-lands in the centre of Asia. Nay, even the country which most men +of learning love to look upon as the cradle of our Aryan ancestors is +known to us but very imperfectly. + +As regards most countries which have been visited by travellers, and +figure more or less correctly upon our maps, a great amount of further +research is required before our knowledge of their geography can be +called complete. Years will pass ere the erroneous and contradictory +statements of our explorers concerning them have been set right. A +prodigious amount of labour must be performed before their climate, +their hydrography, their plants and animals, can be thoroughly known +to us. Minute and systematic researches have to be conducted to +elucidate the slow changes in the aspects and physical phenomena +of many countries. The greatest caution will have to be exercised +in distinguishing between changes due to the spontaneous action of +natural causes and those brought about by the hand of man. And all this +knowledge we must acquire before we can boast that we know the earth, +and all about it ! + +Nor is this all. By a natural bent of our mind, all our studies are +carried on with reference to Man as the centre of all things. A +knowledge of our planet is, therefore, imperfect as long as it is not +joined to a knowledge of the various races of man which inhabit it. The +earth which man treads is but imperfectly known, man himself even less +so. The first origin of races is shrouded in absolute darkness, and the +most learned disagree with reference to the descent, the amalgamation, +the original seats, and migratory stages of most peoples and tribes. +What do men owe to their surroundings? What to the original seats of +their ancestors, to inborn instincts of race, to a blending with alien +races, or to influences and traditions brought to bear upon them from +beyond? We hardly know, and as yet only a few rays of light begin to +penetrate this darkness. Unfortunately our erroneous views on many of +these questions are not due solely to ignorance. Contending passions +and instinctive national hatreds too frequently obscure our judgment, +and we see man as he is not. The far-off savages assume the shape +of dim phantoms, and our near neighbours and rivals in the arts of +civilisation appear repulsive and deformed of feature. If we would see +them as they really are, we must get rid of all our prejudices, and of +those feelings of contempt, hatred, and passion which still set nation +against nation. Our forefathers, in their wisdom, said that the most +difficult thing of all was to know one’s self. Surely a comprehensive +study of mankind is more difficult still. + +We are thus not in a position at present to furnish a complete account +of the earth and its inhabitants. The accomplishment of this task +we must leave to the future, when fellow-workers from all quarters +of the globe will meet to write the grand book embodying the sum of +human knowledge. For the present an {3} individual author must rest +content with giving a succinct account of the Earth, in which the space +occupied by each country shall be proportionate to its importance, and +to the knowledge we possess with respect to it. + +It is natural, perhaps, that each nation should imagine that in such a +description it ought to be accorded the foremost place. Every barbarous +tribe, however small, imagines itself to occupy the very centre of the +earth, and to be the most perfect representative of the human race. +Its language never fails to bear witness to this naïve illusion, born +of the very narrowness of its horizon. The river which irrigates its +fields is called the “Father of Waters,” the mountain which shelters +its camp the “Navel,” or “Centre of the Earth;” and the names by which +primitive races designate their neighbours are terms of contempt, +for they look down upon them as their inferiors. To them they are +“mute,” “deaf,” “unclean,” “imbecile,” “monstrous,” or “demoniac.” +The Chinese, one of the most remarkable peoples in some respects, and +certainly the most important of all as far as mere numbers go, are not +content with having bestowed upon their country the epithet of “Flower +of the Centre,” but are so fully convinced of its superiority as to +have fallen into the mistake (very excusable under the circumstances) +of deeming themselves to be the “Sons of Heaven.” As to the nations +thinly scattered around the borders of their “Celestial Empire,” they +know them merely as “dogs,” “swine,” “demons,” and “savages.” Or, more +disdainful still, they designate them by the four cardinal points of +the compass, and speak of the “unclean” tribes of the west, the north, +the east, and the south. + +If in our description of the Earth we accord the first place to +civilised Europe, it is not because of a prejudice similar to that of +the Chinese. No ! this place belongs to Europe as a matter of right. +Europe as yet is the only continent the whole of whose surface has been +scientifically explored. It possesses a map approximately correct, and +its material resources are almost fully known to us. Its population +is not as dense as that of India or of China, but it nevertheless +contains about one-fourth of the total population of the globe; and +its inhabitants, whatever their failings and vices, or their state of +barbarism in some respects, still impel the rest of mankind as regards +material and mental progress. Europe, for twenty-five centuries, +has been the focus whence radiated Arts, Sciences, and Thought. Nor +have those hardy colonists who carried their European languages and +customs beyond the sea succeeded hitherto in giving to the New World +an importance equal to that of “little” Europe, in spite of the virgin +soil and vast area which gave them scope for unlimited expansion. + +Our American rivals may be more active and enterprising than we +are—they certainly are not cumbered to the same extent by the +traditions and inheritances of feudal times—but they are as yet not +sufficiently numerous to compete with us as regards the totality of +work done. They have scarcely been able hitherto to ascertain the +material resources of the country in which they have made their home. +“Old Europe,” where every clod of earth has its history, where every +man is the heir of a hundred successive generations, therefore still +maintains the first place, and a comparative study of nations justifies +us in the belief that its moral {4} ascendancy and industrial +preponderance will remain with it for many years to come. At the same +time, we must not shut our eyes to the fact that equality will obtain +in the end, not only between America and Europe, but also between +these two and the other quarters of the world. The intermingling of +nations, migrations which have assumed prodigious proportions, and +the increasing facilities of intercourse must in the end lead to an +equilibrium of population being established throughout the world. +Then will each country add its proper share to the wealth of mankind, +and what we call civilisation will have “its centre everywhere, its +periphery nowhere.” + +The central geographical position of Europe has undoubtedly exercised +a most favourable influence upon the progress of the nations +inhabiting it. The superiority of the Europeans is certainly not +due to the inherent virtues of the races from which they sprang, as +is vainly imagined by some, for in other parts of the ancient world +these same races have exhibited far less creative genius. To the +happy conditions of soil, climate, configuration, and geographical +position the inhabitants of Europe owe the honour of having been the +first to obtain a knowledge of the earth in its entirety, and to have +remained for so long a period at the head of mankind. Historical +geographers are, therefore, right when they insist upon the influence +which the configuration of a country exercises upon the nations +who inhabit it. The extent of table-lands, the heights of mountain +ranges, the direction and volume of rivers, the vicinity of the ocean, +the indentation of the coast-line, the temperature of the air, the +abundance or rarity of rain, and the correlations between soil, air, +and water—all these are pregnant with effects, and explain much of +the character and mode of life of primitive nations. They account for +most of the contrasts existing between nations subject to different +conditions, and point out the natural highways of the globe which +nations are constrained to follow in their migrations or warlike +expeditions. + +At the same time, we must bear in mind that the influence exercised +upon the history of mankind by the general configuration of land and +sea, or any special features of the former, is subject to change, and +depends essentially upon the stage of culture at which nations have +arrived. Geography, strictly speaking, confines itself to a description +of the earth’s surface, and exhibits the various nations in a passive +attitude as it were, whilst Historical Geography and statistics show +man engaged in the struggle for existence, and striving to obtain the +mastery over his surroundings. A river, which to an uncultured tribe +would constitute an insurmountable barrier, becomes a commercial +high-road to a tribe further advanced in culture, and in process of +time it may be converted into a mere canal of irrigation, the course +of which is regulated by man. A mountain range frequented by shepherds +and huntsmen, and forming a barrier between nations, may attract, in a +more civilised epoch, the miner and the manufacturer, and in course of +time will even cease to be an obstacle, as roads will traverse it in +all directions. Many a creek of the sea, which afforded shelter of yore +to the small vessels of our ancestors, is deserted now, whilst the open +bays, which vessels dreaded formerly, have been protected by enormous +breakwaters, and have become the resort of our largest ships. {5} + +Innumerable changes such as these have been effected by man in all +parts of the world, and they have revolutionised the correlations +existing between man and the land he lives in. The configuration and +height of mountains and table-lands, the indentation of the coasts, +the disposition of islands and archipelagos, and the extent of the +ocean—these all lose their relative influence upon the history of +nations in proportion as the latter emancipate themselves and become +free agents. Though subject to the condition of his dwelling-place, man +may modify it to suit his own purpose; he may overcome nature as it +were, and convert the energies of the earth into domesticated forces. +As an instance we may point to the elevated table-lands of Central +Asia, which now separate the countries and peninsulas surrounding them, +but which, when they shall have become the seats of human industry, +will convert Asia into a real geographical unit, which at present +it is only in appearance. Massy and ponderous Africa, monotonous +Australia, and Southern America with its forests and waterfalls, will +be put on something like an equality with Europe, whenever roads of +commerce shall cross them in all directions, bridging their rivers, +and traversing their deserts and mountain ranges. The advantages, on +the other hand, which Europe derives from its backbone of mountains, +its radiating rivers, the contours of its coasts, and its generally +well-balanced outline are not as great now as they were when man was +dependent exclusively upon the resources furnished by nature. + +This gradual change in the historical importance of the configuration +of the land is a fact of capital importance which must be borne in mind +if we would understand the general geography of Europe. In studying +SPACE we must take account of another element of equal value—TIME. + +[Illustration] + +{5} + +[Illustration] + + + + +EUROPE. + + +I.—GEOGRAPHICAL IMPORTANCE. + +In the geography of the world the first place is claimed for Europe, +not because of a prejudice like that of the Chinese, but as a matter of +right. Europe as yet is the only continent the whole of whose surface +has been scientifically explored. It possesses a map approximately +correct, and its material resources are almost fully known to us. +Its population is not as dense as that of India or of China, but it +nevertheless contains about one-fourth of the total population of the +globe; and its inhabitants, whatever their failings and vices, or their +state of barbarism in some respects, still impel the rest of mankind +as regards material and mental progress. Europe, for twenty-five +centuries, has been the focus whence radiated Arts, Sciences, and +Thought. Nor have those hardy colonists who carried their European +languages and customs beyond the sea succeeded hitherto in giving to +the New World an importance equal to that of “little” Europe, in spite +of the virgin soil and vast area which gave them scope for unlimited +expansion. + +“Old Europe,” where every clod of earth has its history, where every +man is the heir of a hundred successive generations, therefore still +maintains the first place, and a comparative study of nations justifies +us in the belief that its moral ascendancy and industrial preponderance +will remain with it for many years to come. At the same time, we must +not shut our eyes to the fact that equality will obtain in the end, not +only between America and Europe, but also between these two and the +other quarters of the world. The intermingling of nations, migrations +which have assumed prodigious proportions, and the increasing +facilities of intercourse, must in the end lead to an equilibrium of +population throughout the world. Then will each country add its proper +share to the wealth of mankind, and what we call civilisation will have +“its centre everywhere, its periphery nowhere.” + +The central geographical position of Europe has undoubtedly exercised a +most favourable influence upon the progress of the nations inhabiting +it. The superiority of the Europeans is certainly not due to the +inherent virtues of the races from which they sprang, as is vainly +imagined by some, for in other parts of {6} the ancient world +these same races have exhibited far less creative genius. To the +happy conditions of soil, climate, configuration, and geographical +position, the inhabitants of Europe owe the honour of having been +the first to obtain a knowledge of the earth in its entirety, and to +have remained for so long a period at the head of mankind. Historical +geographers are, therefore, right when they insist upon the influence +which the configuration of a country exercises upon the nations +who inhabit it. The extent of table-lands, the heights of mountain +ranges, the direction and volume of rivers, the vicinity of the ocean, +the indentation of the coast-line, the temperature of the air, the +abundance or rarity of rain, and the correlations between soil, air, +and water—all these are pregnant with effects, and explain much of +the character and mode of life of primitive nations. They account for +most of the contrasts existing between nations subject to different +conditions, and point out the natural highways of the globe which +nations are constrained to follow in their migrations or warlike +expeditions. + + +II.—EXTENT AND BOUNDARIES. + +The dwellers on the eastern shores of the Mediterranean Sea must +have learnt, in the course of their first warlike and commercial +expeditions, to distinguish between the great continents; for within +the nucleus of the ancient world Africa is attached to Asia by a narrow +band of arid sand, and Europe separated from Asia Minor by seas and +channels difficult to navigate on account of dangerous currents. The +division of the known world into three distinct parts could not fail +to impress itself upon the minds of those infant nations; and when +the Greeks had attained a state of maturity, and historical records +took the place of myths and oral traditions, the name of Europe had +probably been transmitted through a long series of generations. +Herodotus naïvely admits that no mortal could ever hope to find out +the true meaning of this name, bequeathed to us by our forefathers; +but this has not deterred our modern men of learning from attempting +to explain it. Some amongst them consider that it was applied at first +to Thrace with its “large plains,” and subsequently extended to the +whole of Europe; others derive it from one of the surnames of Zeus +with the “large eyes,” the ancient god of the Sun, specially charged +with the protection of the continent. Some etymologists believe that +Europe was designated thus by the Phœnicians, as being the country of +“white men.” We consider it, however, to be far more probable that its +name originally meant simply “the West,” as contrasted with Asia, “the +East,” or “country of the rising sun.” It is thus that Italy first, and +then Spain, bore the name of Hesperia; that Western Africa received +the name of El Maghreb from the Mohammedans, and the plains beyond the +Mississippi became known in our own times as the “Far West.” + +But, whatever may be the original meaning of its name, Europe, in all +the myths of the ancients, is described as a Daughter of Asia. The +Phœnicians were the first to explore the shores of Europe, and to bring +its inhabitants into contact with those of the East. When the Daughter +had become the superior of her {7} Mother in civilisation, and Greek +voyagers were following up the explorations begun by the mariners +of Tyre, all the known countries to the north of the Mediterranean +were looked upon as dependencies of Europe, and that name, which was +originally confined to the Thraco-Hellenic peninsula, was made to +include, in course of time, Italy, Spain, the countries of the Gauls, +and the hyperborean regions beyond the Alps and the Danube. Strabo, +to whom were known already the most varied and fruitful portions +of Europe, extends it eastward as far as the Palus Mæotis and the +Tanais.[2] + +[Illustration: Fig. 1.—THE NATURAL BOUNDARY OF EUROPE. + +Scale 1 : 21,800,000. + +Erhard. + +The zone of depression extending from the Black Sea to the Gulf of Obi +is shaded. The darker shading to the north of the Caspian shows the +area depressed below the level of the Mediterranean.] + +{8} + +Since that epoch the limits between Europe and Asia have been shifted +by geographers still further to the east. They are, however, more or +less conventional, for Europe, though bounded on three sides by the +ocean, is in reality but a peninsula of Asia. At the same time, the +contrasts between these two parts of the world fully justify scientific +men in dividing them into two continental masses. But where is the +true line of separation between them? Map-makers generally adopt the +political boundaries which it has pleased the Russian Government to +draw between its vast European and Asiatic territories, and others +adopt the summits of the Ural Mountains and of the Caucasus as the +boundary between the two continents; and although, at the first glance, +this delineation appears more reasonable than the former, it is in +reality no less absurd. The two slopes of a mountain chain can never be +assigned to different formations, and they are generally inhabited by +men of the same race. The true line of separation between Europe and +Asia does not consist of mountains at all, but, on the contrary, of a +series of depressions, in former times covered by a channel of the sea +which united the Mediterranean with the Arctic Ocean. The steppes of +the Manych, between the Black Sea and the Caspian, and to the north of +the Caucasus, are still covered in part with salt swamps. The Caspian +itself, as well as Lake Aral and the other lakes which we meet with +in the direction of the Gulf of Obi, are the remains of this ancient +arm of the sea, and the intermediate regions still bear the traces of +having been an ancient sea-bed. + +[Illustration: Fig. 2.—THE RELIEF OF EUROPE. + +According to Houzeau, Berghaus, Kiepert, Olsen, and others. Scale +1 : 60,000,000.] + +There can be no doubt that vast changes have taken place in the +configuration {9} of Europe, not only during more ancient geological +periods, but also within comparatively recent times. We have already +seen that a vast arm of the sea formerly separated Europe from Asia; it +is equally certain that there was a time when it was joined to Anatolia +by an isthmus, which has since been converted into the Bosphorus of +Constantinople; Spain was joined to Africa until the waters of the +Atlantic invaded the Mediterranean; Sicily was probably connected +with Mauritania; and the British Islands once formed a portion of the +mainland. The erosion of the sea, as well as upheavals and subsidences +of land, has effected, and still effect, changes in the contours of +our coasts. Numerous soundings in the seas washing Western Europe have +revealed the existence of a submarine plateau, which, from a geological +point of view, must be looked upon as forming an integral portion of +our continent. Bounded by abyssal depths of thousands of fathoms, and +submerged one hundred fathoms at most below the waters of the ocean, +this pedestal of France and the British Islands must be looked upon +as the foundation of an ancient continent, destroyed by the incessant +action of the waves. If the shallow portions of the ocean, as well as +those of the Mediterranean Sea, were to be added to Europe, its area +would be increased to the extent of one-fourth, but it would lose, at +the same time, that wealth in peninsulas which has secured to Europe +its historical superiority over the other continents. + +If we supposed Europe to subside to the extent of one hundred fathoms, +its area would be reduced to the compass of one-half. The ocean would +again cover her low plains, most of which are ancient sea-beds, and +there would remain above the waters merely a skeleton of plateaux and +mountain ranges, far more extensively indented by bays and fringed by +peninsulas than are the coasts existing at the present time. The whole +of Western and Southern Europe would be converted into a huge island, +separated by a wide arm of the sea from the plains of interior Russia. +From an historical as well as a geological point of view, this huge +island is the true Europe. Russia is not only half Asiatic on account +of its extremes of temperature, and the aspect of its monotonous +plains and interminable steppes, but is likewise intimately linked +with Asia as regards its inhabitants and its historical development. +Russia can hardly be said to have belonged to Europe for more than a +hundred years. It was in maritime and mountainous Europe, with its +islands, peninsulas, and valleys, its varied features and unexpected +contrasts, that modern civilisation arose, the result of innumerable +local civilisations, happily united into a single current. And, as the +rivers descending from the mountains cover the plains at their foot +with fertile soil, so has the progress accomplished in this centre of +enlightenment gradually spread over the other continents to the very +extremities of the earth. + + +III.—NATURAL DIVISIONS AND MOUNTAINS. + +The Europe alluded to includes France, Germany, England, and the three +Mediterranean peninsulas, and constitutes several natural divisions. +The British Islands form one of these. The Iberian peninsula is +separated scarcely less {10} distinctly from the remainder of Europe, +for between it and France rises a most formidable range of mountains, +the most difficult to cross in all Europe; and immediately to the north +of it a depression, nowhere exceeding a height of 650 feet, extends +from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic Ocean. The geographical unity +of Europe is represented to the full extent only in the system of the +Alps, and in the mountains of France, Germany, Italy, and the Balkan +peninsula which are connected with it. It is there we must seek the +framework of continental Europe. + +The Alps, whose ancient Celtic name probably refers to the whiteness +of their snowy summits, stretch in an immense curve, more than 600 +miles in length, from the shores of the Mediterranean to the plains +of the Danube. They consist in reality of more than thirty mountain +masses, representing as many geological groups, and joined to each +other by elevated passes; but their rocks, whether they be granite, +slate, sandstone, or limestone, form one continuous rampart rising +above the plains. In former ages the Alps were higher than they are +now. This is proved by an examination of their detritus and of the +strata disintegrated by natural agencies. But, whatever the extent of +detrition, they still rise in hundreds of summits beyond the line of +perennial snow, and vast rivers of ice descend from them into every +upland valley. Looked at from the plains of Piedmont and Lombardy, +these glaciers and snow-fields present the appearance of sparkling +diadems encircling the mountain summits. + +In the eastern portion of the Alpine system—that is to say, between +the Mediterranean and Mont Blanc, the culminating point of Europe—the +average height of the mountain groups gradually increases from 6,500 +to more than 13,000 feet. To the east of Mont Blanc the Alps change +in direction, and, beyond the vast citadels represented by Monte Rosa +and the Bernese Oberland, they gradually decrease in height. To the +east of Switzerland no summit exceeds a height of 13,000 feet, but +this loss in elevation is fully made up by increase of breadth. And +whilst the general direction of the principal axis of the Alps remains +north-easterly, very considerable mountain chains, far exceeding the +central mass in breadth, are thrown off towards the north, the east, +and the south-east. A line drawn across the true Alps from Vienna has a +length of no less than 250 miles. + +In thus spreading out, the Alps lose their character and aspect. We +no longer meet with grand mountain masses, glaciers, and snow-fields. +Towards the north they gradually sink down into the valley of the +Danube; towards the south they branch out into secondary chains, +resting upon the arched plateau of Turkey. But, in spite of the vast +contrasts offered by the true Alps and the mountains of Montenegro, +the Hæmus, the Rhodope, and the Pindus, all these mountain chains +nevertheless belong to the same orographical system. The whole of the +Balkan peninsula must be looked upon as a natural dependency of the +Alps; and the same applies to Italy, for the chain of the Apennines is +nothing but a continuation of the Maritime Alps, and we hardly know +where to draw the line of separation between them. The Carpathians, +too, must be included among the {11} mountain chains forming part of +the system of the Alps. They have been gradually separated from them +through the continuous action of water, but there can be no doubt +that, in former times, the semicircle of mountains known as the Little +Carpathians, the Beskids, the Tatra, the Great Carpathians, and the +Transylvanian Alps was joined, on the one hand, to the Austrian Alps, +and on the other to spurs descending from the Balkan. The Danube has +forced its way through these mountain ramparts, but the passages, or +“gates,” are narrow; they are strewn with rocks, and commanded by what +remains of the ancient partition ranges. + +The configuration of the Alps, and of the labyrinthine mountain ranges +branching off from them towards the east, could not fail to exercise a +most powerful influence upon the history of Europe and of the entire +world. The only high-roads known to barbarians are those traced out +by nature herself, and they were consequently able to penetrate into +Europe only by sea, or through the vast plains of the north. Having +penetrated to the westward of the Black Sea, their progress was first +stopped by the lakes and difficult swamps of the Danubian valley; and, +when they had surmounted these obstacles, they found themselves face to +face with a barrier of high mountains, whose intricate wooded valleys +and declivities led up to the inaccessible regions of eternal snow. +The Alps, the Balkan, and all the other advanced chains of the Alpine +system constituted an advanced defensive barrier for Western Europe, +and the conquering nomad tribes who threw themselves against it did so +at the risk of destruction. Accustomed to the boundless horizon of the +steppes, they did not venture to climb these steep hills—they turned +to the northward, where the vast plains of Germania enabled successive +swarms of immigrants to spread over the country with greater ease. And +as to the invaders, whom blind rage of conquest impelled to engage in +the defiles of these mountains, they found themselves caught as in a +trap; and this accounts for the variety of nations, and of fragments of +nations, whose presence has converted the countries of the Danube into +a sort of ethnological chaos. And as the débris carried along by the +current is deposited in the eddy of a river, so were these fragments of +nearly every nation of the East accumulated in motley disorder in this +corner of the Continent. + +To the south of this great mountain barrier the migrations between +Europe and Asia could take place only by sea—a high-road open to +those nations alone who were sufficiently advanced in civilisation to +have acquired the art of building ships. Whether pirates, merchants, +or warriors, they had raised themselves long ago above a state of +primitive barbarism, and even their voyages of conquest added something +to the stock of human knowledge. Moreover, owing to the difficulties +of navigation, they migrated only in small bodies. At whatever point +they settled they came into contact with populations of a different +race from their own, and this intercourse gave birth to a number of +local civilisations, each bearing its own stamp, and nowhere did their +influence preponderate. Every island of the Archipelago, and every +valley of ancient Hellas, differed from its neighbours as regards +social condition, dialect, and customs, but they all remained Greek, +in spite of the Phœnician and other influences to which they had been +subjected. It is thus owing to the {12} configuration of the mountain +chains and coast-lines that the civilisation which developed itself +gradually in the Mediterranean countries to the south of the Alps +was, upon the whole, more spontaneous in its nature, and offered more +variety and greater contrasts, than the civilisation of the far less +advanced nations of the north, who were moving from place to place on +vast plains. + +The wide range of the Alps and of their advanced chains thus separated +two distinct worlds, in which historical development went on at a +different rate. At the same time, the separation between the two +slopes of the Alpine system was by no means complete. Nowhere in the +Alps do we meet with cold and uninhabited plateaux, as in the Andes +and in Tibet, whose enormous extent forms almost insurmountable +barriers. The Alpine masses are cut up everywhere into mountains and +valleys, and the climate of the latter is sufficiently mild to enable +man to exist in them. The mountaineers, who easily maintained their +independence, owing to the protection extended to them by nature, +first served as intermediaries between the peoples inhabiting the +opposite lowlands. It was they who effected the rare exchanges of +produce which took place between the North and South, and who opened +the first commercial high-roads between the summits of the mountains. +The direction of the valleys and the deeply cut mountain passes even +then indicated the grand routes by which the Alps would be crossed, at +a future period, for the purposes of commerce or of war. That portion +of the Alps which lies between the mountain masses of Savoy and of +the Mediterranean would naturally cease first to form an obstacle to +military expeditions. The Alps there are of great height, it is true, +but they are narrower than anywhere else; besides which, the climate on +the two opposite slopes is similar, and assimilates the mode of life +and the customs of the people dwelling there. Far more formidable, as a +natural barrier, are the Alps to the north-east of Mont Blanc, for they +constitute a climatic boundary. + +The other mountain ranges play but a secondary or local part in the +history of Europe, when we compare them with the Alps. Still, the +influence which they have exercised upon the destiny of nations is +no less evident. The table-lands and snow-fields of the Scandinavian +Alps form a wall of separation between Norwegians and Swedes. The +quadrangular mountain fort of Bohemia, in the centre of Europe, which +shelters the Chechians, is almost entirely enclosed by Germans, and +resembles an island fretted by the waves of the ocean. The hills of +Wales and of Scotland have afforded a shelter to the Celtic race +against the encroachments of Anglo-Saxons, Danes, and Normans. The +Bretons, in France, are indebted to their rocks and _landes_ for +the fact of their not having yet become wholly French; whilst the +table-land of Limousin, the hills of Auvergne and the Cevennes +constitute the principal cause of the striking contrast which still +exists between the inhabitants of Northern and of Southern France. The +Pyrenees, next to the Alps, constitute the most formidable obstacle +to the march of nations in Europe; they would have remained an +insurmountable rampart down to our own time, were it not easy to pass +round them by their extremities abutting upon the sea. {13} + + +IV.—THE MARITIME REGIONS. + +The valleys which radiate in all directions from the great central +masses of the Alps are admirably adapted for imparting to almost the +whole of Europe a remarkable unity, whilst they offer, at the same +time, an extreme variety of aspects and of physical conditions. The +Po, the Rhone, the Rhine, and the Danube traverse countries having +the most diverse climates, and yet they have their sources in the +same mountain region, and the fertilising alluvium which they deposit +in their valleys results from the disintegration of the same rocks. +Minor valleys cut up the slopes of the Alps and of their dependent +chains, and carry towards the sea the waters of the mountains and +the triturated fragments of their rocks. Running waters are visible, +wherever we cast our eyes. There are neither deserts, nor sterile +plateaux, nor inland lakes and river basins such as we meet with in +Africa and Asia. The rivers of Europe are not flooded as are those of +certain portions of South America, which deluge half the country with +water. On the contrary, in the scheme of her rivers Europe exhibits +a certain degree of moderation which has favoured the work of the +settler, and facilitated the rise of a local civilisation in each river +basin. Moreover, although most rivers are sufficiently large to have +retarded migration, they are not sufficiently so to have arrested it +for any length of time. Even when roads and bridges did not exist, +barbarian immigrants easily made their way from the shores of the Black +Sea to those of the Atlantic. + +But Europe, in addition to the advantages due to its framework of +mountains and the disposition of its river basins, enjoys the still +greater advantage of possessing an indented coast-line. It is mainly +the contours of its coasts which impart to Europe its double character +of unity and diversity, which distinguish it amongst continents. It +is “one” because of its great central mass, and “diversified” because +of its numerous peninsulas and dependent islands. It is an organism, +if we may say so, resembling a huge body furnished with limbs. Strabo +compared Europe to a dragon. The geographers of the period of the +revival of letters compared it to a crowned virgin, Spain being the +head, France the heart, and England and Italy the hands, holding the +sceptre and the orb. Russia, at that time hardly known, is made to do +duty for the ample folds of the robe. + +The area of Europe is only half that of South America, and one-third +of that of Africa, and yet the development of its coast-lines is +superior to that of the two continents taken together. In proportion +to its area the coasts of Europe have twice the extent of those of +South America, Australia, and Africa; and although they are to a small +extent inferior to those of North America, it must be borne in mind +that the arctic coasts of the latter are ice-bound during the greater +portion of the year. A glance at the subjoined diagrams will show that +Europe, as compared with the two other continents washed by the Arctic +Ocean, enjoys the immense advantage of possessing a coast-line almost +wholly available for purposes of navigation, whilst a large portion +of the coasts of Asia and America is altogether useless to man. And +not only does the sea penetrate into the very heart of {14} temperate +Europe, cutting it up into elongated peninsulas, but these peninsulas, +too, are fringed with gulfs and miniature inland seas. The coasts +of Greece, of Thessaly, and of Thrace are thus indented by bays and +gulfs, penetrating far into the land; Italy and Spain likewise possess +numerous bays and gulfs; and the peninsulas of Northern Europe, Jutland +and Scandinavia, are cut up by the waters of the ocean into numerous +secondary peninsulas. + +[Illustration: Fig. 3.—DEVELOPMENT OF COAST-LINES RELATIVELY TO AREA. + + Europe. Asia. Africa. N. America. S. America. Australia. + Total area, square miles 4,005,100 17,308,400 11,542,400 9,376,850 6,803,570 3,450,130 + Mainland area, square miles 3,758,300 15,966,000 11,293,930 7,973,700 6,731,470 2,934,500 + Development of coast-line, 18,600 34,110 16,480 30,890 16,390 10,570 + miles + Accessible coasts 17,610 28,200 16,480 26,510 16,390 14,400 + Ratio of the geometrical to 1 : 2·5 1 : 2·5 1 : 1·4 1 : 3·1 1 : 1·8 1 : 1·7 + the actual contour + + The shaded circles represent the various continents; the outer circle + represents the actual extent of coast-line. The blank space between + the two concentric circles represents graphically the difference + between the smallest possible or geometrical contour of a country + having the area of the respective continents, and the actual contour + as exhibited in the existing coast-lines. Europe, being in reality + only a peninsula of Asia, hardly admits of this comparison.] + +The islands of Europe must be looked upon as dependencies of that +continent, for most of them are separated from it only by shallow seas. +Candia and the islands scattered broadcast over the Ægean Sea, the +Archipelagos of the Ionian Sea, and of Dalmatia, Sicily, Corsica and +Sardinia, Elba, and the Baleares, are in reality but prolongations, +or maritime out-stations, of neighbouring peninsulas. To the islands +of Sealand and Fyen, at the entrance to the Baltic, Denmark owes {15} +most of her commercial and political importance. Great Britain and +Ireland, which actually formed a portion of the European continent in a +past age, cannot be looked upon otherwise than as dependencies of it, +although the isthmus which once joined them has been destroyed by the +waters of the ocean. England has actually become the grand commercial +emporium of Europe, and plays now the same part in the world’s commerce +that Greece once played in that of the more restricted world of the +Mediterranean. + +It is a remarkable fact that each of the European peninsulas should +have enjoyed in turn a period of commercial preponderance. Greece, the +“most noble individuality of the world of the ancients,” came first, +and when at the height of her power governed the Mediterranean, which +at that time meant nearly the whole universe. During the Middle Ages +Amalfi, Genoa, and Venice became the commercial agents between Europe +and the Indies. The discovery of a passage round the Cape and of +America diverted the world’s commerce to Cadiz, Seville, and Lisbon, on +the Iberian peninsula. Subsequently the merchants of the small Dutch +Republic seized a portion of the heritage of Spain and Portugal, and +the wealth of the entire world was floated into the harbours of their +sea-bound islands and peninsulas. In our own days Great Britain, thanks +to its favourable geographical position, in the very centre of great +continental masses, and the energy of its people, has become the great +mart of the world. London, the most populous city of the world, is +also the great centre of attraction for the treasures of mankind; but +there can be no doubt that sooner or later it will be supplanted, in +consequence of the opening of new commercial high-roads, and changes in +the political preponderance of nations. Perhaps some city of the United +States will take the place of London in a future age, and thus the +American belief in the westward march of civilisation will be verified; +or we may possibly return to the East, and convert Constantinople or +Cairo into the world’s emporium and centre of intercourse. + +But, whatever may happen in the future, the great changes which have +taken place in the relative importance of the peninsulas and islands +of Europe in the short span of twenty centuries, sufficiently prove +that geographical features exercise a varying influence at different +epochs. That which at one time was looked upon as a great natural +advantage may become, in course of time, a serious disadvantage. Thus +the numerous inlets and gulfs enclosed by mountain chains, which +favoured the rise of the cities of Greece, and gave to Athens the +dominion of the Mediterranean, now constitute as many obstacles to +their connection with the existing system of European communications. +That which in former times constituted the strength of the country +has become its weakness. In primitive times, before man ventured upon +the seas, these bays and gulfs formed insurmountable obstacles to the +migration of nations; at a later date, when the art of navigation had +been acquired, they became commercial high-roads, and were favourable +to the development of civilisation; and at the present time they are +again obstacles in the way of our road-builders and railway engineers. +{16} + + +V.—CLIMATE. + +The influence exercised by the relief of the land and the configuration +of the coasts varies in different ages, but that of climate is +permanent. In this respect Europe is the most favoured region of the +earth, for during a cycle of unknown length it has enjoyed a climate at +once the most temperate, the most equable, and the most healthy of all +continents. + +Owing to the inland seas which penetrate far into the land, the whole +of Europe is exposed to the modifying influence of the ocean. With +the exception of Central Russia, no part of Europe is more than 400 +miles from the sea, and, as most of the mountains slope from the +centre of the continent towards its circumference, the influence of +the sea breezes is felt throughout. And thus continental Europe, in +spite of its great extent, enjoys the advantages of an insular climate +throughout, the winds passing over the ocean moderating the heat of +summer and tempering the cold of winter. + +The continuous north-easterly movement of the waters of the Atlantic +likewise has a favourable effect upon the climate of Europe. After +having been heated by a tropical sun in the Gulf of Mexico, the +gulf-stream issues through the Strait of Florida, and, spreading over +the Atlantic, takes its course towards the coasts of Europe. This +enormous mass of warm water, equal in volume to twenty million rivers +as large as the Rhone, brings the warmth of southern latitudes to the +western and northern shores of Europe. Its influence is felt not only +in the maritime countries of Western Europe, but to some extent as far +as the Caspian and the Ural Mountains. + +The currents of the air exercise as favourable an influence upon the +climate of Europe as do those of the ocean. The south-westerly winds +predominating on the coasts pass over the warm gulf-stream, and, on +reaching Europe, they part with the heat stored up by them between +the tropics. The north-westerly, northerly, and even north-easterly +winds, which blow during a portion of the year, are less cold than +might be expected, for they, too, have to cross the warm waters of +the gulf-stream. And lastly, there is the Sahara, which elevates the +temperature of a portion of Europe. + +The increase in temperature due to the combined influence of winds +and ocean currents amounts to 40° 50°, and even 60°, if we compare +Europe with other parts of the world lying under the same latitudes. +Nowhere else, not even on the western coast of North America, do the +isothermals, or lines of equal annual temperature, ascend so high +towards the arctic regions. The inhabitants of Europe, though they +may live 900 to 1,200 miles farther away from the equator, enjoy as +mild a climate as do those of America, and the decrease of temperature +on going northward is far less rapid than in any other part of the +globe. This uniformity of temperature constitutes one of the most +characteristic features of Europe. The whole of it lies within the +temperate region bounded by the isothermal lines of 32° F. and 68° F., +whilst in America and Asia that privileged zone has only half this +extent. {17} + +[Illustration: Fig. 4.—THE ISOTHERMAL ZONE OF EUROPE. + +Scale 1 : 60,000,000. + +Erhard.] + +This remarkable uniformity in the climate of Europe is exhibited not +only in its temperature, but likewise in the distribution of its +rains. The seas washing the shores of Europe supply all parts of it +with the necessary amount of moisture. There is no rainless district, +nor, with the exception of a portion of the maritime region of the +Caspian and a small corner of Spain, any district where droughts +occasionally entail the entire loss of the harvest. Rains fall not +only regularly every year, but in most countries they occur in every +season, the only exception being the countries of the Mediterranean, +where autumn and winter are the real rainy seasons. Moreover, in spite +of the great diversity in the physical features of Europe, the amount +of rain is scarcely anywhere excessive, whether it descends as a fine +drizzle, as in Ireland, or in heavy showers, as in Provence and on +the southern slope of the Alps. The annual rainfall scarcely ever +exceeds thirty-nine inches, except on the flanks of certain mountain +ranges which arrest the passage of currents charged with moisture. +This uniformity and moderation in the rainfall exercise a regulating +influence upon the course of the rivers, for even the smallest amongst +them, at all events those to the north of the Pyrenees, the Alps, and +the Balkan, flow throughout the year. They rise and fall generally +within narrow limits, and inundations on a vast scale are as rare as +is want of water for purposes of irrigation. In consequence of this +regularity, Europe is able to derive a greater advantage from its +waters than other continents where the amount of precipitation is more +considerable. The Alps contribute much towards {18} maintaining a +regular flow of the rivers; the excess of humidity which falls to their +share is stored up in the shape of snow and ice, which descend slowly +into the valleys, and melt during the heat of summer. This happens +just at a time when the rivers gain least from rain, and lose most +by evaporation, and some amongst them would dry up if the ice of the +mountains did not come to the aid of the waters descending from the +sky. It is thus that a sort of balance is established in the economy of +European rivers. + +The climate of Europe is thus characterized by uniformity as a whole, +and by a compensatory action in its contrasts. Regularity and freedom +from excess, such as are not known in other continents, mark its ocean +currents, its winds, its temperature and rains, and the course of +its rivers. These great advantages have benefited its inhabitants in +the past, and will not cease to do so in the future. Though small in +extent, Europe possesses by far the largest area of acclimation. Man +may migrate from Russia to Spain, or from Ireland to Greece, without +exposing himself to any great risk of life. The inhabitants of the +Caucasus and the Ural Mountains were thus able to cross the plains and +mountains of Europe, and to establish themselves on the shores of the +Atlantic. Soil and climate are equally propitious to man, and enable +him to preserve his physical and intellectual powers wherever he goes. +A migratory people might found new homesteads in any part of Europe. +Their companions of travel—the dog, the horse, and the ox—would not +desert them on the road, and the seed-corn which they carry with them +would yield a harvest wherever confided to the earth. + + +VI.—INHABITANTS. + +A study of the soil and a patient observation of climatic phenomena +enable us to appreciate the general influence exercised by the nature +of the country upon the development of its inhabitants; but it is +more difficult to assign to each race or nation its due share in +the progress of European civilisation. No doubt, in their struggles +for existence, different groups of naked and ignorant savages must +have been acted upon differently, according to their numbers and +physical strength, their inborn intelligence, their tastes and mental +tendencies. But who were those primitive men who first turned to +account the natural resources of the country in which they dwelt? We +know not; for, if we go back for a few thousand years, every fact +is shrouded in darkness. We know nothing even as regards the origin +of the leading nations of Europe. Are we the “sons of the soil,” +and the “shoots of oak-trees,” as told in the poetical language of +ancient tradition, or are we to look upon the inhabitants of Asia as +the ancestors to whom we are indebted for our languages, and for the +rudiments of our arts and sciences? Or did those immigrants from a +neighbouring continent settle down amongst an indigenous population? +Not many years ago the Asiatic origin of European nations was accepted +as an established fact, and the original seats of our forefathers +were pointed out upon the map of Asia. But now most men of science +are agreed to {19} seek our ancestors upon the very soil which we, +their descendants, still occupy. Caverns, the shores of oceans and +lakes, and the alluvial beds of our rivers have yielded the remains +of human industry, and even human skeletons, which clearly prove that +long before these supposed immigrations from Asia there existed in +Europe tribes who had already made some progress in human industry. +Even in the childhood of history there existed tribes who were looked +upon as aborigines, and some of their descendants—as, for instance, the +Basks—have nothing in common with the invaders from the neighbouring +continent. Nor is it universally admitted that the Aryans—that is, the +ancestors of the Pelasgians, the Greeks, the Latins, Celts, Germans, +and Slavs—are of Asiatic origin. Similarity of language may justify +our belief in the common origin of the Aryans of Europe, the Persians, +and the Hindoos, but it does not prove that their ancestral home +should be looked for somewhere near the sources of the Oxus. Many +men of learning[3] look upon the Aryans as aborigines of Europe, but +certainty on this point does not exist. No doubt, in prehistoric times, +intermigrations between the two continents were frequent; but we hardly +know what directions they took, and can speak with certainty only of +those migrations of peoples which are related by history. We thus know +that Europe sent forth to other continents Galatians, Macedonians, and +Greeks, and more recently innumerable emigrants of all nationalities, +and received in turn Huns, Avares, Turks, Mongols, Circassians, Jews, +Armenians, Moors, Berbers, and members of many other nations. + +[Illustration: ETHNOGRAPHICAL MAP OF EUROPE] + +Leaving out of consideration the smaller families of nations, as well +as the members of races who have not attained a national existence, +Europe may be described as consisting of three great ethnological +divisions, the principal boundary between which is formed by the Alps, +the Carpathians, and the Balkan. + +The first of these great families of European nations, the members of +which speak Greco-Latin languages, occupies the southern slopes of the +Balkan and of the Alps, the Iberian peninsula, France, and a portion of +Belgium, as well as a few detached territories within the limits of the +ancient Roman empire, altogether surrounded by alien nations. Such are +the plains of the Lower Danube and a portion of Transylvania, which are +inhabited by the Rumanians, and a few secluded Alpine valleys inhabited +by “Romans.” On the other hand, fragments of two ancient nations have +maintained their ground in the midst of Latinised populations, viz. +the Celtic inhabitants of Brittany, and the Basks of the Pyrenees. +Generally speaking, however, all the inhabitants of South-western +Europe, whether of Celtic, Iberian, or Ligurian race, speak languages +derived from the Latin, and whatever differences existed originally +between these various populations, this community of language has more +or less obliterated them. + +The Teutonic nations form the second great group. They occupy nearly +the whole of Central Europe to the north of the Alps, and extend +through Holland and Flanders to within a short distance of the +Straits of Dover. Denmark and the great Scandinavian peninsula, as +well as Iceland, belong to the same group, and {20} the bulk of the +inhabitants of the British Islands are likewise generally included in +it. The latter, however, should rather be described as a mixed race, +for the aboriginal Celtic population of these islands, which now exists +pure only in a few remote districts, has amalgamated with Anglo-Saxon +and Danish invaders, and the language of the latter has become mixed +with mediæval French, the resulting idiom being almost as much Latin as +Saxon. The development of national characteristics has been favoured +by the isolation in which the inhabitants of the British Islands found +themselves, and they differ essentially from continental neighbours—the +Scandinavians, Germans, and Celto-Latins—in language and customs. + +The Slavs, or Slavonians, form the third group of European nations. +They are less numerous than the Greco-Latins, but the territories they +occupy are far more extensive, for they spread over nearly the whole +of Russia, over Poland, a large portion of the Balkan peninsula, and +about one-half of the Austro-Hungarian monarchy. All the great plains +to the east of the Carpathians are inhabited by Slavs, either pure or +mixed with Tartars and Mongols. To the west and south of the mountains +the race is split up into numerous small nations, and in the valley +of the Danube these come into contact with Rumanians, as well as with +Turks and Magyars, the two latter being of Asiatic origin, and these +separate the Slavonians of the north from the Slavonians of the south. +In the north, Finns, Livonians, and Lithuanians interpose between the +Slavonians and the Germanic nations.[4] + +Race and language, however, are not always identical. Members of one +race frequently speak the language of another, and race and linguistic +boundaries, therefore, differ frequently. As for the political +boundaries, they scarcely ever follow those natural features which +would have been selected had their settlement been intrusted to the +spontaneous action of the different nations. They hardly ever coincide +with the boundaries of races or of languages, except in the case of a +few high mountain ranges or of arms of the sea. On many occasions the +countries of Europe were arbitrarily split up in consequence of wars or +diplomatic arrangements. A few peoples only, protected by the nature +of their country as well as {21} by their valour, have maintained +their independence since the age of great migrations, but many more +have been swept away by successive invasions. Many others, again, have +alternately seen their frontiers expand and contract more than once +even during a generation. + +The so-called “balance of European powers,” founded as it is upon the +rights of war and ambitious rivalries between nations, is necessarily +unstable. Nations eminently fit to lead a common political existence +are torn asunder on the one side, whilst the most heterogeneous +elements are thrown together on the other. In these political +arrangements the nations themselves are never consulted, but their +wishes and inclinations must nevertheless prevail in the end, and +the artificial edifice raised by warriors and statesmen will come to +the ground. A true “balance of power” will only be established when +every nation of the continent shall have become the arbiter of its +own destinies, when every pretended right of conquest shall have been +surrendered, and neighbouring nations shall be at liberty to combine +for the management of the affairs they have in common. Our arbitrary +political divisions, therefore, possess but a transitory value. They +cannot altogether be ignored; but in the following descriptions we +shall, as far as possible, adhere to the great natural divisions as +defined by mountains and valleys, and by the distribution of nations +having the same origin and speaking the same language. But even these +natural boundaries lose their importance in countries like Switzerland, +inhabited by nations speaking different languages, but held together by +the strongest of all ties—the common enjoyment of freedom. + +From an historical point of view a description of Europe should +commence with the maritime countries of the Mediterranean. It was +Greece which gave birth to our European civilisation, and which at one +time occupied the centre of the known world. Her poets first sang the +praises of venturesome navigators, and her historians and philosophers +collected and classified the information received with respect to +foreign countries. In a subsequent age, Italy, in the very centre of +the Mediterranean, took the place of Greece, and for fifteen centuries +maintained herself therein: Genoa, Venice, and Florence succeeded +Rome as the leaders of the civilised world. During that period the +surrounding nations gravitated towards the Mediterranean and Italy; +and it was only when the Italians themselves enlarged the terrestrial +sphere by the discovery of a new world beyond the ocean that this +preponderance passed away from them, to remain for a short time with +the Iberian peninsula. Greece had been the mediator between Europe +and the ancient civilisations of Asia and Africa; Spain and Portugal +became the representatives of Europe in America and the extreme Orient; +historical development in its progress had followed the axis of the +Mediterranean from east to west. + +It will be found natural, under these circumstances, when we describe +the three Mediterranean peninsulas in the same volume, particularly +as they are peopled almost exclusively by Greco-Latin nations. +France, though likewise Latinised, nevertheless occupies a distinct +position. It is a Mediterranean country only as respects Provence and +Languedoc, the rest of its territory sloping towards the Atlantic. +Its geographical position and history have made France the great {22} +European thoroughfare upon which the nations of the Mediterranean and +of the Atlantic meet to exchange their products and to fight their +battles. Ideas are imported into France from all parts of Europe, +and she is called upon to act the part of an interpreter between the +nations of the North and of the South. Next to France we shall describe +the Germanic countries of Europe, the British Islands, and Scandinavia; +and lastly, the immense empire of Russia. + +[Illustration] + +{23} + +[Illustration] + + + + +THE MEDITERRANEAN. + + +I.—HYDROLOGY. + +Greece and its insular satellites prove sufficiently that the unstable +floods of the Mediterranean have exercised a greater influence upon the +march of history than did the solid land upon which man trod. Western +civilisation would never have seen the light had not the waters of the +Mediterranean washed the shores of Egypt, Phœnicia, Asia Minor, Hellas, +Italy, Spain, and Carthage. The western nations would have remained in +their primitive barbarism if it had not been for the Mediterranean, +which joined Europe, Asia, and Africa; facilitated the intercourse +between Aryans, Semites, and Berbers; and rendered more equable the +climate of the surrounding countries, thus facilitating access to +them. For ages it appeared almost as if mankind could prosper only +in the neighbourhood of this central sea, for beyond its basin only +decayed nations were to be met with, or tribes not yet awakened to +mental activity. “Like frogs around a swamp, so have we settled down +on the shores of this sea,” said Plato; and the sea he refers to is +the Mediterranean. It is therefore deserving of description quite as +much as the inhabited countries which surround it. Unfortunately many +mysteries still remain hidden beneath its waves.[5] + +[Illustration: Fig. 5.—THE DEPTH OF THE MEDITERRANEAN. + +From a Chart by M. Delesse.] + +From an examination of the coasts, as well as from the traditions of +the people inhabiting them, we learn that the Mediterranean has varied +frequently in its contours and extent. The straits which connect +its waters with those of the ocean have frequently changed their +position. At a time when peninsulas like Greece, and even islands +like Malta, formed part of continental masses—and that they did so +in a comparatively recent geological epoch is proved by their fossil +fauna—the waters of the Mediterranean covered large portions of Africa, +of Southern Russia, and even of Asia. The researches of Spratt, Fuchs, +and others have satisfactorily proved that towards the close of the +miocene age a vast {24} fresh-water lake stretched from the banks of +the Aral, across Russia, the plains of the Danube and the Archipelago, +as far as Syracuse in Sicily. Then came the briny waters of the ocean. +There was a time when the Black Sea and the Caspian connected the +Archipelago with the Gulf of the Obi. At another epoch the gulfs of +the Syrtes penetrated far inland, and a large portion of what is now +the Libyan and Saharan desert was then covered with water. The Strait +of Gibraltar, which was torn asunder by Hercules according to the +traditions of the ancients, is in reality but of recent origin, and has +taken the place of a more ancient strait which joined the Mediterranean +to the Red Sea and Indian Ocean: this strait has been restored by human +hands, and is known now as the Suez Canal. The coast-lines of the +Mediterranean are undergoing perpetual change, owing to the upheaval +or subsidence of the countries surrounding it. The Nile, the Po, the +Rhone, and other rivers incessantly enlarge the alluvial plains at +their mouths, and still further encroach upon the sea. Actually the +Mediterranean, with its subordinate seas from the Strait of Gibraltar +to the Sea of Azof, covers an area about thirty times that of the +British Islands. This area is small if we compare it with the immense +development of the coasts and the wealth in peninsulas, which impart an +aspect of life and independence to at least one-third of the ancient +world. The Mediterranean, though it takes precedence of all the oceans, +in consequence of the part it has played in history, nevertheless only +covers an area one-seventieth that of the Pacific.[6] It is broken up, +moreover, into several separate seas, some of them so small in extent +that the navigator hardly ever loses sight of the land. In the {25} +east we have the Black Sea, with its two dependencies, the Seas of +Azof and of Marmara. The Ægean Sea, or Archipelago, with its numerous +islands, extends between the deeply indented coasts of Greece, Asia +Minor, and Crete. The Adriatic stretches towards the north-west, +between the Balkan peninsula and Italy; and the Mediterranean proper +is divided into two separate basins, which might appropriately be +called the Phœnician and Carthaginian Seas, or the Greek and Roman +Mediterraneans. Each of these basins is again subdivided, the one by +Crete, the other by the two islands of Sardinia and Corsica. These +various subdivisions of the Mediterranean differ in area, and still +more in depth. The Sea of Azof almost deserves the name of “Swamp,” +which was bestowed upon it by the ancients, for if a ship sinks in it +the masts remain visible above the water. The Black Sea has a maximum +depth of over 1,000 fathoms, but the narrow strait which joins it to +the Sea of Marmara is shallower than many a European river. The cavity +filled by the Sea of Marmara is far inferior to that of many an inland +lake; and the Dardanelles, like the Bosphorus, are hardly wider than a +river. In the Archipelago and the eastern basin of the Mediterranean +proper the depth corresponds with the protuberance of the land. Abyssal +depths and “pits” of 260 and even of 540 fathoms are to be found in +close proximity to the scarped mountain islands of the Cyclades, whilst +on the low coasts of Egypt the water deepens only gradually, until in +the centre of the Levantine Sea it attains a depth of 1,750 fathoms. +The maximum depth—2,170 fathoms—is attained between Crete and Malta. If +the whole of the waters of the Mediterranean were to be collected into +an aqueous sphere, the latter would have a diameter of 90 miles; if it +fell down upon the earth, it would not even wholly cover a country like +Switzerland. + +The Ionian Sea is separated from the Adriatic by a submarine ridge +rising in the Strait of Otranto, and bounded on the west by a shoal or +submarine isthmus, already referred to by Strabo, which joins Sicily +to Tunis. This isthmus forms the true geological boundary between the +western and eastern basins of the Mediterranean, which are connected +here by a narrow breach only, the depth of which hardly exceeds 100 +fathoms. The western of these basins is the smaller and shallower of +the two, but nevertheless it attains a depth of 1,100 fathoms in the +Tyrrhenian, and of 1,360 fathoms and even 1,640 in the Balearic Sea, +and is separated from the waters of the Atlantic by a submarine ridge +lying outside the Strait of Gibraltar, and joining Europe to Africa.[7] + +This subdivision of the Mediterranean into separate basins, divided +from each other by shoals or submarine ridges, by islands and +promontories, sufficiently explains the contrasts between the phenomena +of the open ocean and those observed here. In the Mediterranean, it is +well known, the tides are almost everywhere irregular and uncertain. +To the east of the Narrows of Gibraltar, in the sea extending between +Andalusia and Morocco, the tides are hardly felt at all, and {26} +they are, moreover, interfered with to such an extent by currents +that it is exceedingly difficult to determine their amplitude, or the +establishment of the various ports. Nevertheless the rise and fall of +the tidal wave are sufficiently marked to have attracted the attention +of Greek and Italian navigators. On the coasts of Catalonia, France, +Liguria, Naples, Asia Minor, Syria, and Egypt the oscillation is hardly +perceptible, but on those of Eastern Sicily and of the Adriatic the +tide sometimes rises three feet, and, if accompanied by storms, may +even attain a height of ten feet in certain localities. The Straits of +Messina and of Euripo (Eubœa) have their regular tides, and in the Gulf +of Gabes the waters rise and fall with the same regularity as in the +open ocean. In the Black Sea, however, no tidal movements whatever have +been discovered hitherto. It is nevertheless probable that more careful +observations will lead to the discovery of a feeble tide, for it is +believed that this phenomenon exists even on Lake Michigan, which has +only one-fifth the area of the Black Sea. + +[Illustration: Fig. 6.—THE STRAIT OF GIBRALTAR. + +According to Robiquet, Randegger, and others. Scale 1 : 750,000. + +Erhard.] + +The Mediterranean differs not only from the open ocean with respect +to the feebleness and irregularity of its tides, but it is likewise +without a great stream-current keeping in constant circulation the +whole body of its waters. The currents which have been observed in +various divisions of the Mediterranean can be ascribed only to local +causes. An Italian geographer of the last century, Montanari, has {27} +advanced an hypothesis of a great circuit current which entered the +Mediterranean through the Strait of Gibraltar, and, after having washed +the shores of Africa as far as Egypt, returned to the west along those +of Asia and Europe; but careful observers have vainly endeavoured +to discover its existence. They have met only with local currents, +produced by an indraught of the waters of the Atlantic, by winds, by +the floods of rivers, or by an excess of evaporation. One of these +currents sets along the coasts of Morocco and Algeria from west to +east; another flows along the Italian coast of the Adriatic from north +to south; and a third from the mouth of the Rhone in the direction of +Cette and Port Vendres. In fact, the configuration of the sea-bottom, +and particularly the shoal between Sicily and Tunis, precludes the +existence of any but surface currents in the Mediterranean. + +Amongst the local currents the existence of which has been most clearly +established are those which convey the waters of the Sea of Azof into +the Black Sea, and those of the latter into the Archipelago. The Don +more than makes up for the loss by evaporation in the Sea of Azof, and +its surplus waters find an exit through the Strait of Kerch into the +Black Sea. Similarly the waters of the Dniester, the Dnieper, the Rion, +and of the rivers of Asia Minor, and, above all, of the Danube, which +by itself conveys a larger volume of water into the Black Sea than +all the others combined, are discharged through the Bosphorus and the +Dardanelles into the Archipelago. On the other hand, the Archipelago +returns to the Black Sea, by means of a submarine counter-current and +of lateral surface currents, a certain quantity of salt water for the +fresh water which it receives in excess. This exchange accounts for the +salineness of the waters of the Black Sea. The volume of fresh water +discharged into it by the Danube and other rivers is so large that +in the course of a thousand years its waters would become perfectly +fresh, if there did not exist these compensatory highly saline +counter-currents. + +Analogous phenomena take place at the other extremity of the +Mediterranean. Evaporation there is excessive, owing to the +neighbourhood of the burning sands of the deserts, the winds from which +blow freely over the sea, absorbing the vapours and dispersing the +clouds. The loss by evaporation amounts to at least seven feet in the +course of a year, and as the annual rainfall is estimated to amount to +twenty inches only, and the volume of water discharged annually by all +the tributary rivers of the Mediterranean, if uniformly spread over +its surface, would hardly exceed ten inches in depth, there exists +thus an excess of evaporation amounting annually to more than four +feet; and this excess has to be made good by an inflow of the waters +of the Atlantic, which takes place through the Strait of Gibraltar, +whose volume far exceeds that of the Amazon in a state of flood. This +inflow of the waters of the Atlantic is felt, as a current, as far as +the coasts of Sicily, and, like all other currents, it is bounded by +lateral currents flowing in a direction contrary to that of the main +current. During ebb the insetting Atlantic current takes up the whole +of the strait, but when the tide rises the Mediterranean resists more +successfully the pressure of the ocean, and this struggle gives birth +to {28} two counter-currents, one of which skirts the coast of Europe, +the other that of Africa between Ceuta and Cape Spartel; the latter is +the larger and more powerful of the two. In addition to these, there +exists a submarine current, which conveys the highly saline and heavier +waters of the Mediterranean out into the Atlantic. + +The quantity of salt held in solution in various parts of the +Mediterranean differs widely, as the submarine ridges and shoals which +divide it into separate basins do not permit its waters to mingle as +freely as in the open ocean. Owing to the excess of evaporation, the +quantity of salt is greater on the whole than in the Atlantic, and this +is the case more particularly on the coast of Africa. But in the Black +Sea it is far less, and near the mouths of some of the large rivers +which enter that sea the water is almost fresh.[8] + +The temperature of the Mediterranean is affected by the same causes +which produce its varying salineness, viz. the existence of shoals +and banks, which separate it into distinct sub-basins. In the open +ocean the currents convey to all latitudes large bodies of water, +some of them heated by a tropical sun, others cooled by contact with +the ice of the polar regions. But these layers of unequal density are +regularly superimposed one upon the other, owing to the differences in +their temperature: the warm water remains on the surface, whilst the +cold water descends to the bottom. In the Mediterranean an analogous +superimposition exists only to a depth of 110 fathoms, which is the +depth of the Atlantic current, flowing into it through the Strait of +Gibraltar. If a thermometer be lowered to a greater depth it will +indicate no further decrease of temperature, and the immense body of +water, remaining almost still at the bottom of the Mediterranean, has +an equable temperature of about 56° F. Observations made at depths +varying between 110 and 1,640 fathoms have always exhibited the same +result. Professor Carpenter believes, however, that the abyssal waters +of some of the volcanic regions have a somewhat higher temperature, +which may be due to the presence of lava in a state of fusion. + + +II.—ANIMAL LIFE. FISHERIES AND SALT PANS. + +Another remarkable feature of the abyssal waters of the Mediterranean +consists in their poverty of animal life. No doubt there is some life; +the dredgings of the _Porcupine_ and the telegraph cables, which, on +being brought to the surface, were found to be covered with shells +and polypes, prove this. But, compared with those of the ocean, the +depths of the Mediterranean are veritable deserts. Edward Forbes, who +explored the waters of the Archipelago, arrived at the conclusion that +their abyssal depths were entirely devoid of life, but he was wrong +when he assumed an exceptional case like this to represent a universal +law. Carpenter thinks that this absence of life in the depths of the +Mediterranean is due to the great quantity of organic remains which +is carried into it by the rivers. These remains absorb the oxygen of +the water, and part with their carbonic acid, which is detrimental to +{29} animal life. In numerous instances the water of the Mediterranean +contains only one-fourth the normal quantity of the former gas, but +fifty per cent. in excess of the latter. To the presence of these +organic remains the Mediterranean is probably indebted for its +beautiful azure colour, so different from the black waters of most +oceans. This blue, then, which is justly celebrated by poets, would +thus be caused by the impurity of the water. M. Delesse has shown that +the bottom of nearly the whole of the Mediterranean is covered with +ooze. + +The regions of the Mediterranean immediately below the surface abound +in animal life, particularly on the coasts of Sicily and Southern +Italy; but nearly all species, whether fish, testacea, or others, are +of Atlantic origin. The Mediterranean, in spite of its vast extent, as +far as its fauna is concerned, is nothing but a gulf of the Lusitanian +Ocean. Its longitudinal extension and the similarity of climate in its +various portions have favoured the migration of animals through the +Strait of Gibraltar as far as the coasts of Syria. At the same time, +animal life is most varied near this point of entry, and the species +met with in the western basin are generally of greater size than those +which exist in the eastern. A very small proportion of non-Atlantic +species recalls the fact that the Mediterranean formerly communicated +with the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean. But amongst a total of more than +eight hundred molluscs there are only about thirty which have reached +the seas of Greece and Sicily through the ancient straits separating +Africa from Asia, instead of through the Strait of Gibraltar.[9] The +diminution in the number of species in an easterly direction becomes +most striking when we reach the narrow channel of the Dardanelles and +the Bosphorus. The Black Sea, in fact, differs essentially from the +Mediterranean proper as regards temperature. It is refrigerated by +north-easterly winds sweeping over its surface, to the extent even of +portions of it becoming now and then covered with a thin coating of +ice, adhering to the coast. The Sea of Azof has frequently disappeared +beneath a thick crust of ice, and even the whole of the Black Sea has +been frozen over in winters of exceptional severity. The cold surface +waters, together with those conveyed into the Black Sea by large +rivers, descend to the bottom, and prove most detrimental to animal +life. Echinodermata and zoophytes are not met with at all in the Black +Sea; certain classes of molluscs, already rare in the Levantine Sea and +the Archipelago, are likewise absent; and the total number of species +of molluscs is only one-tenth of what it is in the Mediterranean. Fish +are numerous as far as individuals go, but their species are few. +In fact, the fauna of the Black Sea appears to resemble that of the +Caspian, from which it is cut off, rather than that of the Greek seas, +with which the Sea of Marmara connects it. + +In addition to the species which have found a second home in the +Mediterranean, there are some that must still be looked upon as +visitors. Such are the sharks, which extend their incursions to the +seas of Sicily, to the Adriatic, and even to the coasts of Egypt and +Syria. Such, also, are the larger cetacea—whales, rorquals, and sperm +whales—whose visits, however, are confined now to the Tyrrhenian +{30} basin, and become less frequent from century to century. The +tunny-fish of the Mediterranean are also visitors from the coasts +of Lusitania. First-rate swimmers, they enter through the Strait of +Gibraltar in spring, ascend the whole of the Mediterranean, make the +tour of the Black Sea, and return in autumn to the Atlantic, after +having accomplished a journey of some 5,600 miles. In the opinion +of the fishermen the tunnies go upon their travels in three immense +divisions or shoals, and it is the central shoal which visits the +coasts of the Tyrrhenian Sea, and consists of the largest and strongest +fish. Each of the three divisions appears to be composed of individuals +about the same age. For mutual protection they swim in troops, for they +are preyed upon by enemies innumerable. Dolphins and other fish of prey +follow their track, but their great destroyer is man. In the summer the +tunny fishery, or _tonnaro_, is carried on in numerous bays of Sicily, +Sardinia, Naples, and of Provence. Enormous structures consisting of +nets enclose these bays, and they are ingeniously arranged so as to +close gradually around the captured fish, which, passing from net to +net, find themselves at last in the “chamber of death,” where they are +massacred. Millions of pounds of flesh are annually obtained from these +floating “slaughter-houses,” yet the tunny appears year after year +in multitudes, and on the same coasts. There may have been a slight +decrease in the number, but their closely packed masses still invade +the “Golden Horn” of Byzance and other bays, as they did when first +they attracted the attention of Greek naturalists. + +[Illustration: Fig. 7.—THE PRINCIPAL FISHERIES OF THE MEDITERRANEAN. + +Scale 1 : 38,300,000. + +Erhard.] + +Next to the tunny fisheries those of the sardines and anchovies are +most important. Sea-urchins and other products of the sea are eaten +by the inhabitants of the coasts, particularly in Italy, but there is +no part of the Mediterranean where animal life is so abundant and so +prodigious in quantity as on the celebrated banks of Newfoundland, or +on the coasts of Portugal or of the Canaries. + +A large number of fishing-boats are engaged, not in the capture of +fish, but in {31} the collection of articles of dress or of the +toilet. The purple-shell fisheries on the coasts of Phœnicia, the +Peloponnesus, and Greece are no longer carried on, but hundreds of +boats are employed annually during the fine season in fishing for coral +or sponges. + +Coral is found most abundantly in the western portion of the +Mediterranean, and the Italian fishermen do not confine themselves to +their own shores—to Sicily, Naples, and Sardinia—but also visit the +Strait of Bonifacio, the sea off St. Tropez, the vicinity of Cape Creus +in Spain, and the waters of Barbary. Ordinary sponges are collected in +the Gulf of Gabes, and at the other extremity of the Mediterranean, on +the coasts of Syria and Asia Minor, and in the straits winding between +the Cyclades and Sporades. Sponges are usually found at a depth of from +12 to 150 feet, and can be gathered by divers; whilst coral occurs at +far greater depths, and has to be wrenched off with an iron instrument, +which brings up its fragments, mixed with ooze, seaweeds, and the +remains of marine animalculæ. This industry is still in a state of +barbarism: those devoted to it are not as yet sufficiently acquainted +with the sea and its inhabitants to enable them to carry on the sponge +and coral fisheries in a rational manner. Yet this they must aim at: +they must learn how to deprive Proteus, the ever-changing deity, of his +dominion over the inhabitants of the deep. + +Next to the fisheries, the preparation of sea salt constitutes one +of the leading industries of the Mediterranean coast-lands. But this +industry, too, is frequently carried on in a primitive way, and only +in the course of the present century have scientific methods been +introduced in connection with it. The Mediterranean is admirably suited +for the production of salt, for its waters have a high temperature, +they hold a very large quantity of salt in solution, the rise and fall +of the tides are inconsiderable, and flat seashores alternate with +steep coasts and promontories. The most productive salt marshes of the +Mediterranean are probably those on the Lagoon, or Étang de Thau, near +Cette, and on the littoral of Hyères; but considerable ones may also be +met with on the coasts of Spain, in Italy, in Sardinia, Sicily, Istria, +and even on the “limans” of Bessarabia, bordering upon the Black Sea. +The annual production of salt is estimated at more than a million tons, +and exceeds, therefore, the entire tonnage of the commercial marine of +France.[10] But this quantity, large as it is, is infinitesimal if we +compare it with the saline contents of the sea, and science will enable +us one day to raise a far more abundant treasure from its sterile +depths.[11] + + +III.—COMMERCE AND NAVIGATION. + +Whatever advantages may be yielded by fisheries and salt-works, +they shrink into insignificance if we compare them with the great +gain—material, intellectual, {32} and moral—which mankind has derived +from the navigation of this inland sea. It has repeatedly been pointed +out by historians that the disposition of the coasts, islands, and +peninsulas of the Mediterranean of the Phœnicians and Greeks admirably +favoured the first essays in maritime commerce. Many causes have +contributed to make this sea the cradle of European commerce: the faint +summits of distant lands visible even before the port has been quitted; +numerous nooks along the coasts where a safe refuge may be found in +case of storms; regular land and sea breezes; an equability of climate +which makes the sailor feel at home wherever business takes him; and, +moreover, a great variety of productions resulting from the diverse +configuration of the Mediterranean coast-lands. And this commerce, +does it not lead to a peaceful intercourse between peoples on neutral +ground, and to mutual enlightenment, brought about by an interchange +of ideas? Every coast-line which facilitates the intercourse between +nations is, therefore, of immense value as a means of developing +civilisation. + +Civilisation for many centuries marched from the south-east towards the +north-west, and Phœnicia, Greece, Italy, and France have successively +become great centres of human intelligence. This historical phenomenon +is due to the configuration of the sea, which has been the vehicle +of migratory nations. In fact, the axis of civilisation, if this +expression be allowed, has become confounded with that axis of the +Mediterranean which extends from the coast of Syria to the Gulf of +Lions, on the coast of France. But the Mediterranean has ceased to be +the only centre of gravitation of Europe, which sends its merchantmen +now to the two Americas and the farthest East; and civilisation no +longer marches in that general line from east to west, but rather +radiates in all directions. Civilising streams depart from England and +Germany towards Northern America, and from the Latinised countries of +Europe towards Southern America. Their direction is still westerly, +but they have been deflected towards the south, to meet the conditions +imposed by climate and the geographical configuration of land and sea. + +It is interesting to trace the changes which have occurred in the +historical importance of the Mediterranean. As long as that sea +remained the great highway between nations, the commercial republics +were content to extend this highway towards the east, by establishing +caravan routes to the Gulf of Persia, to India, and to China. In the +Middle Ages Genoese factories dotted the coasts of the Black Sea, and +extended thence through Trans-Caucasia as far as the Caspian. European +travellers, and particularly Italians, at that time crossed Western +Asia in all directions; and many a route hardly known in our days +was then frequented almost daily. But for several centuries direct +commercial intercourse with Central Asia has dwindled down to small +proportions. + +The Mediterranean had ceased to be a great ocean highway. Our +navigators, no longer dreading a boundless sea, took their ships into +every part of the ocean. The difficult and perilous land routes were +abandoned, the once busy markets of Central Asia became solitudes, +and the Mediterranean itself a veritable blind alley, as far as the +world’s commerce was concerned. This condition of affairs lasted for +many years, but since the middle of this century our relations with +the East have {33} been renewed, and the lost ground is rapidly +being recovered. Within the last year a great commercial revolution +has been effected through the opening of one of the ancient gates of +the Mediterranean, and the Suez Canal has become the great highway of +steamers between Western Europe, the Indies, and Australia. Possibly, +at no distant future, a similar canal will enable our merchantmen to +proceed from the Black Sea to the Caspian, and perhaps even to the Amu +and the Syr, in the very heart of the ancient continent. + +It is thus that the great centres of intercommunication, or vital +points of our planet, as we should like to call them, become shifted in +the course of time. Port Said, an improvised town on a desert shore, +has thus become a centre of attraction for travellers and merchandise, +whilst the neighbouring cities of Tyre and Sidon have dwindled down +into miserable villages, with nothing to indicate the proud position +they held in the past. Carthage, too, has perished, and Venice decayed. +Many a thriving place on the shores of the Mediterranean has been +reduced to insignificance through the silting up of its harbour, the +employment of larger vessels, the loss of independence, or through +political changes of all kinds. But in nearly every instance some +neighbouring town has taken the place of these decayed harbours, and +most of the great routes of commerce have maintained their original +directions, and their terminal points, as well as intermediate +stations, have remained in the same localities. + +There are, moreover, certain places which ships are almost obliged +to frequent, and where towns of importance arise as a matter of +course. Such are the Straits of Gibraltar and of Messina; such, +also, are places like Genoa, Trieste, and Saloniki, which occupy +the bottom of gulfs or bays penetrating far into the land. Ports +offering the greatest facilities for embarking merchandise intended +for foreign countries, such as Marseilles and Alexandria, are likewise +natural centres of attraction to merchants. One town there is in the +Mediterranean which enjoys at one and the same time every one of the +geographical advantages which we have pointed out, for it is situated +on a strait connecting two seas and separating two continents. This +town is Constantinople, and despite the deplorable maladministration +under which it suffers, its position alone has enabled it to maintain +its place amongst the great cities of the world. + +The ports of the Mediterranean no longer enjoy a monopoly of commerce +as they did for thousands of years, but the number of ships to be met +with in that inland sea is, nevertheless, proportionately far greater +than what we meet with on the open oceans. The commercial marine of +the Mediterranean numbers thirty-seven thousand vessels, of a capacity +of two million seven hundred and ninety-six thousand tons, without +counting fishing-boats. This is more than one-fourth of the entire +commercial marine of the world, as respects the number of ships, and +one-sixth of it as regards tonnage. This inferiority of tonnage is due +to the small vessels of ancient types which still maintain their ground +in Greece and Italy, and which possess certain advantages for the +coasting trade. + +To this marine of the Mediterranean should be added the vessels +belonging to foreign ports, which visit it for purposes of trade, and +amongst which those of {34} England take the most prominent rank. +The Government of Great Britain has even taken care to secure itself +a place amongst the Mediterranean powers. It has occupied Gibraltar, +at the eastern entrance to this basin, and taken possession of Malta, +which commands its centre; and although the western entrance, formed by +the Suez Canal, is not in its possession, its garrisons on Perim and +the rock of Aden are able at any moment to close up the only approach +to it which leads from the Indian Ocean through the Red Sea. + +[Illustration: Fig. 8.—STEAMER ROUTES AND TELEGRAPHS IN THE +MEDITERRANEAN. + +Scale 1 : 45,000,000.] + +The share which England takes in the commerce of the Mediterranean is +considerable, but it is surpassed by far by that of France and Italy. +A sovereign who aspired to the dominion of the world once spoke of the +inland sea extending from the Strait of Gibraltar to Egypt as a “French +lake;” but with equal justice might it be called a Greek, a Dalmatian, +or Spanish lake, and with still greater an Italian lake. The pirates +of Barbary were, in reality, the last “masters” of the Mediterranean: +their swift vessels presented themselves unexpectedly before the coast +towns, and carried off their inhabitants. But since their predatory +fleets have been destroyed, the Mediterranean has become the common +property of the world, and the meshes of an international network of +maritime highways become closer from year to year. The merchantmen no +longer pursue their voyages in company as they did in former times, +discharging their cargo from port to port, for a single vessel may +venture now into any portion of the Mediterranean in safety. Still +there remain the dangers of reefs and of storms. The art of navigation +has made vast progress; most of the capes, at least on the coasts +of Europe, are lit up by lighthouses; the approaches to the ports +are rendered easy by lightships, buoys, and beacons; but shipwrecks +are nevertheless of frequent occurrence. Even large vessels founder +sometimes, without leaving a stray plank behind to indicate the place +of their disappearance. + +Steamers travelling along prescribed routes are now gradually taking +the place of sailing vessels, and where they cross at frequent +intervals they may be {35} likened to ferry-boats crossing a river. +The regularity and speed of these steam ferries; the facilities which +they afford for the conveyance of merchandise; the increasing number of +railways which convey the produce of the interior to the seaports; and +lastly, the submarine telegraphs, which have established instantaneous +means of communication between the principal ports, all contribute +towards the growth of Mediterranean commerce. This commerce, including +imports and exports, and the transit through the Suez Canal, actually +amounts to about £353,000,000, a year.[12] This may not be much for a +maritime population of a hundred millions, but a perceptible increase +is taking place from year to year. We should also bear in mind that, +face to face with the busy peninsulas of Europe, there lies torrid +Africa, an inert mass, avoided by the sailors of our own age as much as +it was by those of ancient Greece. Its coasts are hardly ever visited, +with the exception of those portions which extend from Oran to Tunis, +and from Alexandria to Port Said. It is matter of surprise, too, that +certain localities which formerly attracted crowds of vessels, such as +Cyrenaica, Cyprus, and beautiful Crete, at the very entrance to the +Archipelago, should still remain outside the ordinary track of our +steamers. + +[Illustration] + +{36} + + + + +GREECE. + + +I.—GENERAL ASPECTS. + +Greece, within its confined political boundaries, to the south of +the Gulfs of Arta and Volo, is a country of about nineteen thousand +square miles, or at most equal to the ten-millionth part of the earth’s +surface. Within the vast empire of Russia there are many districts +more extensive than the whole of Greece, but there is nothing which +distinguishes these from other districts which surround them, and +their names call forth no idea in our mind. The little country of the +Hellenes, however, so insignificant upon our maps—how many memories +does it not awaken ! In no other part of the world had man attained +a degree of civilisation equally harmonious in all respects, or more +favourable to individual development. Even now, though carried along +within an historical cycle far more vast than that of the Greeks, +we should do well to look back frequently in order to contemplate +those small nations, who are still our masters in the arts, and +first initiated us into science. The city which was the “school of +Greece” still remains the school of the entire world; and after twenty +centuries of decay, like some of those extinct stars whose luminous +rays yet reach the earth, still continues to enlighten us. + +The considerable part played by the people of Greece during many +ages must undoubtedly be ascribed to the geographical position of +their country. Other tribes having the same origin, but inhabiting +countries less happily situated—such, for instance, as the Pelasgians +of Illyria, who are believed to be the ancestors of the Albanians—have +never risen above a state of barbarism, whilst the Hellenes placed +themselves at the head of civilised nations, and opened fresh paths to +their enterprise. If Greece had remained for ever what it was during +the tertiary geological epoch—a vast plain attached to the deserts +of Libya, and run over by lions and the rhinoceros—would it have +become the native country of a Phidias, an Æschylos, or a Demosthenes? +Certainly not. It would have shared the fate of Africa, and, far from +taking the initiative in civilisation, would have waited for an impulse +to be given to it from beyond. {37} + +Greece, a sub-peninsula of the peninsula of the Balkans, was even more +completely protected by transverse mountain barriers in the north than +was Thracia or Macedonia. Greek culture was thus able to develop itself +without fear of being stifled at its birth by successive invasions of +barbarians. Mounts Olympus, Pelion, and Ossa, towards the north and +east of Thessaly, constituted the first line of formidable obstacles +towards Macedonia. A second barrier, the steep range of the Othrys, +runs along what is the present political boundary of Greece. To the +south of the Gulf of Lamia a fresh obstacle awaits us, for the range +of the Œta closes the passage, and there is but the narrow pass of the +Thermopylæ between it and the sea. Having crossed the mountains of +the Locri and descended into the basin of Thebæ, there still remain +to be crossed the Parnes or the spurs of the Cithæron before we reach +the plains of Attica. The “isthmus” beyond these is again defended by +transverse barriers, outlying ramparts, as it were, of the mountain +citadel of the Peloponnesus, that acropolis of all Greece. Hellas has +frequently been compared to a series of chambers, the doors of which +were strongly bolted; it was difficult to get in, but more difficult to +get out again, owing to their stout defenders. Michelet likens Greece +to a trap having three compartments. You entered, and found yourself +taken first in Macedonia, then in Thessaly, then between the Thermopylæ +and the isthmus. But the difficulties increase beyond the isthmus, and +Lacedæmonia remained impregnable for a long time. + +At an epoch when the navigation even of a land-locked sea like the +Ægean was attended with danger, Greece found herself sufficiently +protected against the invasions of oriental nations; but, at the +same time, no other country held out such inducements to the pacific +expeditions of merchants. Gulfs and harbours facilitated access to +her Ægean coasts, and the numerous outlying islands were available as +stations or as places of refuge. Greece, therefore, was favourably +placed for entering into commercial intercourse with the more highly +civilised peoples who dwelt on the opposite coasts of Asia Minor. The +colonists and voyagers of Eastern Ionia not only supplied their Achæan +and Pelasgian kinsmen with foreign commodities and merchandise, but +they also imparted to them the myths, the poetry, the sciences, and the +arts of their native country. Indeed, the geographical configuration +of Greece points towards the east, whence she has received her first +enlightenment. Her peninsulas and outlying islands extend in that +direction; the harbours on her eastern coasts are most commodious, +and afford the best shelter; and the mountain-surrounded plains there +offer the best sites for populous cities. Greece, at the same time, +does not share the disadvantage of Turkey, which is almost cut off from +the western world by a mountain region difficult to cross. The Ionian +Sea, to the west of the Peloponnesus, it is true, is, comparatively +speaking, a desert; but farther north the Gulf of Corinth almost cuts +in two the Greek peninsula, and the sight of the distant mountains of +Italy, which are visible from the Ionian Islands, must have incited +to an exploration of the western seas. The Acarnanians, who knew how +to build vaults long before the Romans, were thus brought early into +contact with the Italians, to whom they imparted their {38} knowledge, +and at a subsequent period the Greeks became the civilisers of the +whole western world of the Mediterranean. + +The most distinctive feature of Hellas, as far as concerns the relief +of the ground, consists in the large number of small basins, separated +one from the other by rocks or mountain ramparts. The features of the +ground thus favoured the division of the Greek people into a multitude +of independent republics. Every town had its river, its amphitheatre of +hills or mountains, its acropolis, its fields, pastures, and forests, +and nearly all of them had, likewise, access to the sea. All the +elements required by a free community were thus to be found within each +of these small districts, and the neighbourhood of other towns, equally +favoured, kept alive perpetual emulation, too frequently degenerating +into strife and battle. The islands of the Ægean Sea, likewise, had +constituted themselves into miniature republics. Local institutions +thus developed themselves freely, and even the smallest island of the +Archipelago has its great representatives in history. + +But whilst there thus exists the greatest diversity, owing to the +configuration of the ground and the multitude of islands, the sea acts +as a binding element, washes every coast, and penetrates far inland. +These gulfs and numerous harbours have made the maritime inhabitants +of Greece a nation of sailors—amphibiæ, as Strabo called them. From +the most remote times the passion for travel has always been strong +amongst them. When the inhabitants of a town grew too numerous to +support themselves upon the produce of their land, they swarmed out +like bees, explored the coasts of the Mediterranean, and, when they had +found a site which recalled their native home, they built themselves a +new city. It was thus Greek cities arose in hundreds of places, from +the Mæotis Palus to beyond the columns of Hercules—from Tanais and +Panticapæum to Gades and Tingis, the modern Tangier. Thanks to those +numerous colonies, some of them more powerful and renowned than the +mother towns which gave birth to them, the veritable Greece, the Greece +of science and art and republican independence, in the end overflowed +its ancient cradle, and sporadically occupied the whole circumference +of the Mediterranean. The Greeks held the same position relatively to +the world of the ancients which is occupied at the present time by +the Anglo-Saxons with reference to the entire earth. There exists, +indeed, a remarkable analogy between Greece, with its archipelago, and +the British Islands, at the other extremity of the continent. Similar +geographical advantages have brought about similar results, as far as +commerce is concerned, and between the Ægean and the British seas time +and space have effected a sort of harmony. + + * * * * * + +The admiration with which travellers behold Greece is due, above all, +to the memories attaching to every one of its ruins, to the smallest +amongst its rivulets, and the most insignificant rock in its seas. +Scenery in Provence or Spain, though it may surpass in grace or +boldness of outline anything to be seen in Greece, is appreciated only +by a few. The mass go past it without emotion, for names like Marathon, +Leuctra, or Platææ are not connected with it, and the rustle of bygone +ages is not heard. But even if glorious memories were not associated +with the {39} coasts of Greece, their beauty would nevertheless +entitle them to our admiration. In the gulfs of Athens or of Argos +the artist is charmed not only with the azure blue of the waters, +the transparency of the sky, the ever-changing perspective along the +shores, and the boldness of the promontories, but also with the pure +and graceful profile of the mountains, which consist of layers of +limestone or of marble. We almost fancy we look upon architectural +piles; and the temples with which many a summit is adorned appear to +epitomize them. + +It is verdure and the sparkling water of rivulets which we miss most +on the shores of Greece. Nearly all the mountains near the coast +have been despoiled of their large trees. There remain only bushes, +mastic, strawberry, and juniper trees, and evergreen oaks; even the +carpet of odoriferous herbs which clothes the declivities, and upon +which the goat browses, has in many instances been reduced to a few +miserable patches. Torrents of rain have carried away the mould, +and the naked rock appears on the surface. From a distance we only +see greyish declivities, dotted here and there with a few wretched +shrubs. Even in the days of Strabo most mountains along the coasts +had been robbed of their forests, and one of our modern authors says +that “Greece is a skeleton only of what it used to be !” By a sort of +irony, geographical names derived from trees abound throughout Hellas +and Turkey: Caryæ is the “town of walnut-trees,” Valanidia that of the +Valonia oaks, Kyparissi that of cypresses, Platanos or Plataniki that +of plane-trees. Everywhere we meet with localities whose appellation is +justified by nothing. Forests at the present day are confined almost +entirely to the interior and to the Ionian coast. The Œta Mountains, +some of the mountains of Ætolia, the hills of Acarnania, and Arcadia, +Elis, Triphylia, and the slopes of the Taygetus, in the Peloponnesus, +still retain their forests. And it is only in these forest districts, +visited solely by herdsmen, that savage animals, such as the wolf, the +fox, and the jackal, are now met with. The chamois, it is said, still +haunts the recesses of the Pindus and Œta Mountains; but the wild boar +of the Erymanthus, which must have been a distinct species if we are to +judge by antique sculptures, exists no more in Greece, and the lion, +still mentioned by Aristotle, has not been seen for two thousand years. +Amongst the smaller animals there is a turtle, common in some parts of +the Peloponnesus, which the natives look upon with the same aversion as +do many western nations upon the toad and the salamander. + +Greece is a small country, but the variety of its climate is +nevertheless great. Striking differences in the climate of different +localities are produced by the contrasts between mountains and plains, +woodlands and sterile valleys, coasts having a northern or southern +aspect. But even leaving out of sight these local differences, it +may safely be asserted that the varieties of climate which we meet +with in traversing Greece from north to south are scarcely exceeded +in any other region. The mountains of Ætolia, in the north, whose +slopes are covered with beech-trees, remind us of the temperate zone +of Europe, whilst the peninsulas and islands towards the east and +south, with their thickets of fig and olive trees, their plantations +of oranges and lemons, their aloe hedges and rare palm-trees, belong +to the sub-tropical zone. But even neighbouring districts occasionally +{40} differ strikingly as regards climate. In the ancient lake basin +of Bœotia the winters are cold, the summers scorching, whilst the +temperature of the eastern shore of Eubœa is equable, owing to the +moderating influence of sea breezes. Within a narrow compass Greece +presents us with the climates of a large portion of the earth, and +there can be no doubt that this diversity of climate, and the contrasts +of every kind springing from it, must have favourably influenced the +intellectual development of the Hellenes. A spirit of inquiry was +called forth amongst them which reacted upon their commercial tastes +and industrial proclivities. + +The diversity of the climate of the land, however, is compensated for, +in Greece, by a uniformity in the climate of the maritime districts. As +in a mountain valley, the winds of the Ægean Sea blow alternately in +contrary directions. During nearly the whole of summer the atmospheric +currents of Eastern Europe are attracted towards the African deserts. +The winds from the north of the Archipelago and Macedonia then speed +the navigator on his voyage to the south, and on many occasions the +conquering tribes of the northern shores of that sea have availed +themselves of them in their improvised attacks upon the inhabitants +of the more southern districts of Asia Minor and of Greece. These +regular northerly currents, known as etesian or annual winds, cease +on the termination of the hot season, when the sun stands above the +southern tropic. They are, moreover, interrupted every night, when +the cool sea air is attracted by the heated surface of the land. +When the sun has set the wind gradually subsides; there is a calm, +lasting a few moments; and then the air begins to move in an inverse +direction—“the land begins to blow,” as the sailors say. Nor is this +regular wind without its counter-current, known as the _embates_, or +propitious south-easterly breeze of which the poets sing. General winds +and breezes, moreover, are deflected from their original directions +in consequence of the configuration of the coast and the direction +of mountain chains. The Gulf of Corinth, for instance, is shut in by +high mountains on the north and the south, and the winds alternately +enter it from the east or west—a phenomenon likened by Strabo to the +breathing of an animal. + +The rains, like the winds, deviate in many places from the average, +and whilst the water pours down into some mountain valleys as into a +funnel, elsewhere the clouds drift past without parting with a drop of +their humid burden. Contrasts in the amount of precipitation are thus +added to those resulting from differences of configuration and variety +of climate. As a rule, rain is more abundant on the western shores of +Greece than on the eastern, and this fact accounts for the smiling +aspect of the hills of Elis, as compared with the barren declivities +of Argolis and Attica. Thunder-storms, driven before the winds of the +Mediterranean, likewise recur with greater regularity in the western +portion of the peninsula. In Elis and Acarnania the roll of thunder may +be heard in spring daily, for whole weeks, in the afternoon. No sites +more apposite could have been found for temples dedicated to Jupiter, +the god of lightning. + + * * * * * + +The ancient inhabitants of the Cyclades, and probably, also, those +of the coasts {41} of Hellas and Asia Minor, had already attained a +considerable amount of culture long before the commencement of our +historical records. This has been proved by excavations made in the +volcanic ashes of Santorin and Therasia. At the time their houses were +buried beneath the ashes, the Santoriniotes had begun to pass from the +age of stone into that of copper. They knew how to build arches of +stone and mortar, they manufactured lime, used weights made of blocks +of lava, wove cloth, made pottery, dyed their stuffs, and ornamented +their houses with frescoes; they cultivated barley, peas, and lentils, +and had begun to trade with distant countries. + +We do not know whether these men were of the same race as the Hellenes; +but thus much is certain—that at the earliest dawn of history the +islands and coasts of the Ægean Sea were peopled by various families of +Greeks, whilst the interior of the country and the western shores of +the peninsula were inhabited by Pelasgians. These Pelasgians, moreover, +were of the same stock as the Greeks, and they spoke a language derived +from the same source as the dialects of the Hellenes. Both were Aryans, +and, unless natives of the soil, they must have immigrated into Greece +from Asia Minor by crossing the Hellespont, or by way of the islands +of the Archipelago. The Pelasgians, according to tradition, sprang +from Mount Lycæus, in the centre of the Peloponnesus; they boasted of +being “autochthons,” “men of the black soil,” “children of oaks,” or +“men born before the moon.” All around them lived tribes of kindred +origin, such as the Æolians and the Leleges, and these were afterwards +joined by Ionians and Achæans. The Ionians, who, in a subsequent age, +exercised so great an influence over the destinies of the world, only +occupied the peninsula of Attica and the neighbouring Eubœa. The +Achæans for a long time enjoyed a preponderance, and in the end the +Greek clans collectively became known by that name. Later on, when +the Dorians had crossed the Gulf of Corinth where it is narrowest, +and established themselves as conquerors in the Peloponnesus, the +Amphictyons, or national councils, sitting alternately at Thermopylæ +and Delphi, conferred the name of Hellenes, which was that of a small +tribe in Thessaly and Phthiotis, upon all the inhabitants of the +peninsula and the islands. The name of Greek, which signifies, perhaps, +“mountaineer,” “ancient,” or “son of the soil,” gradually spread +amongst the nation, and in the end became general. The Ionians of Asia +Minor, and the Carians of the Sporades, emulated the Phœnicians by +trading from port to port amongst these half-savage tribes, and, like +bees which convey the fecundating pollen from flower to flower, they +carried the civilisation of Egypt and the East from tribe to tribe. + +[Illustration: Fig. 9.—MAINOTE AND SPARTAN.] + +Phœnician merchants and Roman conquerors scarcely modified the elements +composing the population of Hellas, but during the age of migrations +barbarians in large numbers penetrated into Greece. For more than two +centuries did the Avares maintain themselves in the Peloponnesus. Then +came the Slavs, aided, on more than one occasion, by the plague in +depopulating the country. Greece became a Slavonia, and a Slavonian +language, probably Servian, was universally spoken, as is proved by +the majority of geographical names. The superstitions and legends {42} +of the modern Greeks, as has been remarked by many authors, are not +simply a heritage derived from the ancient Hellenes, but have become +enriched by phantoms and vampires of Slav invention. The dress of the +Greeks, too, is a legacy of their northern conquerors. But, in spite +of this, the polished language of the Hellenes {43} has regained by +degrees its ancient preponderance, and the race has so thoroughly +amalgamated these foreign immigrants, that it is impossible now to +trace any Servian elements in the population. But hardly had Hellas +escaped the danger of becoming Slav when it was threatened with +becoming Albanian. This occurred during the dominion of Venice. As +recently as the commencement of the present century Albanian was the +dominant language of Elis, Argos, Bœotia, and Attica, and even at the +present day a hundred thousand supposed Hellenes still speak it. The +actual population of Greece is, therefore, a very mixed one, but it is +difficult to say in what proportions these Hellenic, Slav, and Albanian +elements have combined. The Mainotes, or Maniotes, of the peninsula +terminating in Cape Matapan, are generally supposed to be the Greeks of +the purest blood. They themselves claim to be the descendants of the +ancient Spartans, and amongst their strongholds they still point out +one which belonged to “Signor Lycurgus.” Their Councils of Elders have +preserved from immemorial times, and down to the war of independence, +the title of Senate of Lacedæmonia. Every Mainote professes to love +unto death “Liberty, the highest of all goods, inherited from our +Spartan ancestors.” Nevertheless, a good many localities in Maina bear +names derived from the Servian, and these prove, at all events, that +the Slavs resided in the country for a considerable time. The Mainotes +practise the _vendetta_, as if they were Montenegrins. But is not this +a common custom amongst all uncivilised nations? + +However this may be, in spite of invasions and intermixture with other +races, the Greeks of to-day agree in most points with the Greeks of +the past. Above all things, they have preserved their language, and +it is truly matter for surprise that the vulgar Greek, though derived +from a rural dialect, should differ so slightly only from the literary +language. The differences, analogous to what may be observed with +respect to the languages derived from the Latin, are restricted almost +to two points, viz. the contraction of non-accentuated syllables and +the use of auxiliary verbs. It was, therefore, easy for the modern +Greeks to purify their language from barbarisms and foreign terms, +and to restore it gradually to what it was in the time of Thucydides. +Nor has the race changed much in its physical features, for in most +districts of modern Greece the ancient types may yet be recognised. +The Bœotian is still distinguished by that heavy gait which made him +an object of ridicule amongst the other Greeks; the Athenian youth +possesses the suppleness, grace of movement and bearing which we admire +so much in the horsemen sculptured on the friezes of the Parthenon; the +Spartan women have preserved that haughty and vigorous beauty which +constituted the charm of the virgins of Doris. As regards morals, +the descent of the modern Hellenes is equally evident. Like their +ancestors, they are fond of change, and inquisitive; as the descendants +of free citizens, they have preserved a feeling of equality; and, +still infatuated with dialectics, they hold forth at all times as +if they were in the ancient market-place, or Agora. They frequently +stoop to flattery: like the ancient Greeks, too, they are apt to rate +intellectual merit above purity of morals. {44} Like sage Ulysses of +the Homeric poem, they well know how to lie and cheat with grace; and +the truthful Acarnanian and the Mainote, who are “slow to promise, +but sure to keep,” are looked upon as rural oddities. Another trait +in the character of the modern and ancient Greeks, and one which +distinguishes them from all other Europeans, is this—that they do not +allow themselves to be carried away by passion, except in the cause of +patriotism. The Greek is a stranger to melancholy: he loves life, and +is determined to enjoy it. In battle he may throw it away, but suicide +is a species of death unknown amongst the modern Greeks, and the more +unhappy they are, the more they cling to existence. They are very +seldom afflicted with insanity. + +[Illustration: Fig. 10.—FOREIGN ELEMENTS IN THE POPULATION OF GREECE.] + +In spite of the diverse elements which compose it, the Greek +nationality is one of the most homogeneous in Europe. The Albanians, +of Pelasgian descent like the Greeks, do not cede to the latter in +patriotism; and it was they—the Suliotes, Hydriotes, Spezziotes—who +fought most valiantly for national independence. The eight hundred +families of Rumanian or Kutzo-Wallachian Zinzares who pasture +their herds in the hills of Acarnania and Ætolia, and are known as +Kara-Gunis, or “black cloaks,” speak the two languages, and sometimes +marry Greek girls, though they never give their own daughters in +marriage to the Greeks. Haughty and free, they are not sufficiently +numerous to be of any great importance. To foreigners the Greeks are +rather intolerant, and they take no pains to render their stay amongst +them agreeable. The Turks—who were numerous formerly in certain parts +of the Peloponnesus, in Bœotia, and in the {45} island of Eubœa, and +whose presence recalled an unhappy period of servitude—have fled to +a man, and only the fez, the narghile, and the slippers remind us of +their former presence. The Jews, though met with in every town of the +East, whether Slav or Mussulman, dare hardly enter the presence of the +Greeks, who are, moreover, their most redoubtable rivals in matters +of finance: they are to be found only in the Ionian Islands, where +they managed to get a footing during the British Protectorate. In this +same Archipelago we likewise meet with the descendants of the ancient +Venetian colonists, and with emigrants from all parts of Italy. French +and Italian families still form a distinct element of the population +of Naxos, Santorin, and Syra. As to the Maltese porters and gardeners +at Athens and Corfu, they continue for the most part in subordinate +positions, and never associate with the Greeks. + + * * * * * + +The homogeneous character of the population of Greece does not admit +of that country being divided into ethnological provinces, like +Turkey or Austro-Hungary, but it consists geographically of four +distinct portions. These are (1), continental Hellas, known since the +Turkish invasion as Rumelia, in remembrance of the “Roman” empire of +Byzantium; (2), the ancient Peloponnesus, now called the Morea, perhaps +a transposition of the word “Romea,” or from a Slav word signifying +“sea coast,” and applied formerly to Elis; (3), the islands of the +Ægean Sea; (4), the Ionian Islands. In describing the various portions +of Greece we shall make use, in preference, of the ancient names of +mountains, rivers, and towns; for the Hellenes of our own day, proud of +the glories of the past, are endeavouring gradually to get rid of names +of Slav or Italian origin, which still figure upon the maps of their +country.[13] + + +II.—CONTINENTAL GREECE. + +The Pindus, which forms the central chain of Southern Turkey, passes +over into Greece, and imparts to it an analogous orographical +character. On both sides of this conventional boundary we meet with the +same rocks, the same vegetation, the same landscape features, and the +same races of people. By dividing the Epirus and handing over Thessaly +to the Turks, European diplomacy has paid no attention to natural +features. The eastern portion of the boundary is made to follow the +line of water parting over the range of the lofty Othrys, commanding +the plain of the Sperchius. Westward of the Pindus the boundary {46} +crosses transversely the valley of the Achelous, and the hills which +separate it from the Gulf of Arta. + +[Illustration: Fig. 11.—MOUNT PARNASSUS AND DELPHI.] + +The isolated summit of Mount Tymphrestus, or Velukhi, which rises where +the grand chain of the Othrys branches off from the Pindus, is not the +culminating point of continental Greece, but it is a centre from which +the principal mountain spurs and rivers radiate. Within its spurs lies +hidden the charming valley of Karpenisi, and an elevated ridge joins +them, towards the south-east, to the most important mountain mass of +modern Greece, viz. the group surmounted by the snow-clad pyramids of +the Vardusia and Khiona, whose slopes are covered with dark firs, and +to the superb Katavothra, the Œta of the ancients, on which Hercules +built his funeral pile. The mountains of Vardusia and Khiona are face +to face with the fine mountain masses of Northern Morea, likewise +wooded and covered with snow during the greater part of the year. + +The mountains of Ætolia, to the west of the Velukhi and the Vardusia, +are far less elevated, but they are rugged, and form a veritable chaos +of rocks, savage defiles, and thickets, into which only Wallachian +herdsmen venture. In Southern Ætolia, on the shores of the lakes and +along the rivers, the country is more accessible, but mountains rise +there likewise, and by tortuous ridges they are brought into connection +with the system of the Pindus. Those on the coast of Acarnania, +opposite to the Ionian Islands, are steep, covered with trees and +shrubs; they are the mountains of the “Black Continent” mentioned by +Ulysses. {47} To the east of the Achelous there is another coast +chain, well known to mariners: this is the Zygos, the southern slopes +of which, arid and austere, are seen from off Missolonghi. Still +further to the east another range comes down to the seashore, and, +together with the promontories on the opposite coast of the Morea, +forms the narrow entrance to the Gulf of Corinth. Close to this +entrance, on the Ætolian side, there rises bold Mount Varassova, a huge +block of rock. Local tradition tells us that the Titans endeavoured to +throw this rock into the sea, so that it might form a bridge between +the two coasts; but the rock proved too heavy, and it was dropped where +we now see it. + +Towards the Ægean Sea the mountain mass of the Katavothra is continued +by a coast range running in a direction parallel to the mountains of +the island of Eubœa. This range should be described rather as a series +of mountain-groups separated from each other by deep hollows, extensive +depressions, and even by river valleys. These mountains, though low +and intersected by numerous roads, are nevertheless difficult of +access, for their slopes are steep, their promontories abrupt, and +their precipices sudden, and in the times of the ancient Greeks a small +number of men repeatedly defended them against large armies. At one +extremity of this range is the passage of Thermopylæ; at the other, on +the eastern foot of the Pentelicus, the famous plain of Marathon. + +The mountain groups on the northern shore of the Gulf of Corinth, and +to the south of Bœotia, may be looked upon as a range running parallel +with that following the channel of Eubœa, but far more beautiful and +picturesque. Every one of its summits recalls the sweet memories of +poetry, or conjures up the image of some ancient deity. To the west we +find ourselves in the presence of “double-headed” Parnassus, to which +fled Deucalion and Pyrrha, the ancestors of the Greeks, and where the +Athenians celebrated their torchlight dances in honour of Bacchus. +From the summits of the Parnassus, which rival in height those of the +Khiona, raising its pyramidal head towards the north-west, nearly the +whole of Greece, with its gulfs, islands, and mountains, lies spread +out below us, from the Thessalian Olympus to the Taygetus, at the +extremity of the Peloponnesus; and close by, at our feet, lies the +admirable basin of Delphi, the place of Peace and Concord, where Greeks +forgot their animosities. The mountain group towards the east next to +Parnassus is quite equal to it. The valleys of the Helicon, the seat of +Apollo and the Muses, are still the most verdant and the most smiling +in all Greece. The eastern slope of the Helicon is more especially +distinguished for its charming beauty, its woods, its verdant pastures, +gardens, and murmuring springs, which contrast most favourably with the +bare and arid plains of Bœotia. If Mount Parnassus may boast of the +Castalian spring, Mount Helicon possesses that of Hippocrene, which +burst forth from the ground when struck by the hoof of Pegasus. The +elongated summit of the Cithæron, the birthplace of Bacchus, joins +the mountains of Southern Bœotia to those of Attica, whose marble has +become famous through the neighbourhood of the city which they shelter. +Mount Parnes rises to the north of Athens; to the east of it, like the +pediment of a temple, rises the Pentelicus, in which are {48} the +quarries of Pikermi, rendered famous through their fossil bones; on the +south appears Mount Hymettus, celebrated for its flowers and its bees. +Farther away, the Laurium, with its rich argentiferous slags, stretches +towards the south-east, and terminates in Cape Sunium, consecrated in +other days to Minerva and Neptune, and still surmounted by fifteen +columns of an ancient temple. + +Another isolated mountain group to the south of Attica, and occupying +the entire width of the Isthmus of Megara, served the Athenians as a +rampart of defence against their neighbours of the Peloponnesus. This +is the mountain group of Gerania, the modern Pera Khora.[14] Having +passed beyond it, we find ourselves upon the Isthmus of Corinth, +properly so called, confined between the Gulfs of Athens and of +Corinth. It is a narrow neck of land, scarcely five miles across, +whose arid limestone rocks hardly rise two hundred feet above the sea. +This neutral bit of territory, lying between two distinct geographical +regions, naturally became a place for meetings, festivals, and markets. +The remains of a wall built by the Peloponnesians across the isthmus +may still be traced, as may also the canal commenced by order of Nero. + + * * * * * + +The limestone mountains of Greece, as well as those of the Epirus and +of Thessaly, abound in lakes, but all the rivers are swallowed up in +“sinks,” or _katavothras_, leaving the land dry and arid. Southern +Acarnania, a portion of which is known as Xeromeros, or the “arid +country,” on account of the absence of running water, abounds in +lake basins of this kind. To the south of the Gulf of Arta, which +may not inaptly be described as a sort of lake communicating with +the sea through a narrow opening, there are several sheets of water, +the remains of an inland sea, silted up by the alluvial deposits of +the Achelous. The largest of these lakes is known to the natives as +Pelagos, or “big sea,” because of its extent and the agitated state of +its waters, which break against its coasts. This is the Trichonius of +the ancient Ætolians. Reputed unfathomable, it is, in truth, very deep, +and its waters are perfectly pure; but they are discharged sluggishly +into another basin far less extensive, and surrounded by pestilential +marshes, and through a turgid stream they even find their way into +the Achelous. The hills surrounding Lake Trichonis are covered with +villages and fields, whilst the locality around the lower lake has +been depopulated by fever. The country, nevertheless, is exceedingly +beautiful to look upon. Hardly have we passed through a narrow gorge, +or _klisura_, of Mount Zygos before we enter upon a bridge over a +mile in length, which a Turkish governor caused to be thrown across +the swamps separating the two lakes. This viaduct has sunk down more +than half its {49} height into the mud, but it is still sufficiently +elevated to enable the eye freely to sweep over the surface of the +waters, and to trace the coasts which bound them. Oaks, planes, and +wild olive-trees intermingle beneath us, their branches hung with +festoons of wild vine, and these, with the blue waters of the lake and +the mountains rising beyond it, form a picture of great beauty. + +[Illustration: Fig. 12.—LOWER ACARNANIA. + +Scale 1 : 800,000.] + +Another lake basin lies to the south of the Zygos, between the alluvial +lands of the Achelous and the Fidari. It is occupied by a swamp +filled with fresh, brackish, or salt water; and since the days of +ancient Greece, this swamp, owing to the apathy of the inhabitants, +has continued to increase in extent at the expense of the cultivated +land. Missolonghi the heroic is indebted for its name to its position +near these marshes, for the meaning of it is “centre of marshes.” A +barrier, or _ramma_, here and there broken through by the floods, +separates the basin of Missolonghi from the Ionian Sea. During the +war of independence every opening in this barrier was protected by +redoubts or stockades, but at present the only obstruction consists +of the reed barriers of the fishermen, which are opened in spring to +admit the fish from the sea, and closed in summer to prevent their +escape. Missolonghi, though surrounded by brackish water, is a healthy +place, thanks to the breezes from the sea; whilst a heavy atmosphere +charged with miasmata hangs perpetually over the bustling little town +of Ætoliko (Anatolikon), which lies farther to the north-west in the +midst of the swamps, and is joined to the dry land by two bridges. +Between Ætoliko and the river Achelous may be observed a large number +of rocky eminences, rising like pyramids above the plain. These are +no doubt ancient islands, such as still exist between the mainland +and the island of St. Mauro. The mud brought down by the Achelous has +gradually converted the intervals between these {50} rocks into dry +land. In former times the commercial city of Œniadæ occupied one of +these islets. The geological changes already noticed by Herodotus are +thus still going on under our eyes, and the muds of the Achelous, to +which it owes its modern name of Aspro, or “white,” incessantly extend +the land at the expense of the sea. + +[Illustration: Fig. 13.—THERMOPYLÆ. + +From the French Staff Map (1852). Scale 1 : 330,000.] + +The Achelous, which the ancients likened to a savage bull, owing to +its rapid current and great volume, is by far the most important river +of Greece. One of the great feats ascribed to Hercules consisted +in breaking off one of the horns of this bull; that is to say, he +embanked the river, and thus protected the lands which it used to +inundate. The neighbours of the Achelous, the rapid Fidari (Evenus, on +the banks of which Hercules killed the centaur Nessus, for offering +violence to Dejanira) and the Mornos, which rises in the snows of the +Œta, cannot compare with it. Still less is it equalled by the Oropus, +the Cephissus, and the Ilissus, “wet only when it rains,” which flow +eastward into the Ægean Sea. The principal river of Eastern Greece, the +Sperchius, is inferior to the Achelous, but, like it, has extensively +changed the aspect of the plain near its mouth. When Leonidas and his +three hundred heroes guarded the defiles of Thermopylæ against the +Persians, the Gulf of Lamia extended much farther into the land than +it does now. But the alluvial deposits of the river have extended its +delta, and several rivulets which formerly flowed {51} directly into +the sea have now to be numbered amongst its tributaries; the sea has +retired from the foot of the Callidromus for a distance of several +miles; and the narrow pass of Thermopylæ has been converted into a +plain sufficiently wide to enable an entire army to manœuvre upon it. +The hot springs which gush from the rocks, by forming deposits of +calcareous tufa, may likewise have contributed towards this change +of coast-line; nor are more violent convulsions of nature precluded +in a volcanic region like this, subject to frequent earthquakes. +Sailors still point out a small island in this neighbourhood, formed +of scoriæ, from which the incensed Hercules hurled his companion, +Lichas, into the ocean. Hot springs abound on the opposite coast of +Eubœa, and the incrustations formed by them are so considerable as to +assume the appearance of glaciers when seen from a distance. A bathing +establishment exists now near the hot sulphur springs of Thermopylæ, +and strangers are thus enabled to explore this region, so rich in +memories of a great past. The pedestal, however, upon which reposed +the figure of a marble lion, placed there in honour of Leonidas, has +been destroyed by ruthless hands, and utilised in the construction of a +mill ! + +The basin of the Cephissus, enclosed by the chains of the Œta and +Parnassus, is one of the most remarkable from an hydrological point +of view. The river first flows through a bottom-land formerly a +lake, and then, forcing for itself a passage through a narrow defile +commanded by the spurs of Mount Parnassus, it winds round the rock upon +which stood the ancient city of Orchomenus, and enters upon a vast +plain, where swamps and lakes are embedded amidst cultivated fields +and reed-banks. These swamps are fed, likewise, by numerous torrents +descending from the Helicon and other mountains in its vicinity. One +of these is the torrent of Livadia, into which the bounteous springs +of Memory and Oblivion—Mnemosyne and Lethe—discharge themselves. In +summer a large portion of the plain is dry, and it yields a bountiful +harvest of maize, the stalks of which are sweet like sugar-cane. But +after the heavy rains of autumn and winter the waters rise twenty, +and even twenty-five feet, and the plain is converted into a vast +lake, ninety-six square miles in extent. The myth of the deluge of +Ogyges almost leads us to believe that the rising floods occasionally +invaded every valley which debouches into this basin. To the ancients +the shallower part of this lake was known as Cephissus, and its deep +eastern portion as Copais, from Copæ, a town occupying a promontory on +its northern shore, and now called Topolias. + +[Illustration: Fig. 14.—LAKE COPAIS + +From the French Staff Map. Scale 1 : 500,000. + +K. Katavothras.] + +The importance of regulating the floods just referred to, and of +preventing the sudden overflow of the waters to the destruction of the +cultivated fields, may readily be imagined. The ancient Greeks made +an effort to accomplish this task. To the east of the large Lake of +Copais there is another lake basin, about one hundred and thirty feet +lower, and encompassed by precipitous rocks, incapable of cultivation. +This basin, the Hylice of the Bœotians, appears to be made by nature +for receiving the superabundant waters of the Copais. The remains of a +canal may still be traced in the plain, which was evidently intended to +convey into {52} it the floods of the Copais, but it appears never to +have been completed. No doubt care was taken to keep open the various +_katavothras_, or subterranean channels, through which the waters of +the Copaic lake discharge themselves into the sea. One of these, on the +north-western shore of the lake, and close to the rock of Orchomenus, +swallowed up the river Melas, and conveyed its waters to the Gulf of +Atalanta. Farther to the east other subterranean channels flow towards +Lakes Hylice and Paralimni, but the most important of these channels +are towards the north-east, in the Gulf of Kokkino. In that extreme +angle of the lake, the veritable Copais, the waters of the Cephissus +rush against the foot of Mount Skroponeri, and are swallowed up by +the ground so as to form a subterranean delta. To the south there is +a cavernous opening in the rock, but this is merely a sort of tunnel +passing underneath a promontory, and, except during the rainy season, +it may be traversed dry-shod. Beyond this, another opening swallows +up one of the most important branches of the Cephissus, which makes +its reappearance in the shape of bounteous springs pouring their +waters into the sea. Two other branches of the river disappear in +the rocks about a mile farther north. They join soon afterwards, and +flow northwards beneath the bottom of a sinuous valley. The old Greek +engineers dug pits in this valley, which enabled them to descend to +the subterranean waters, and to clear away obstructions interfering +with their flow. Sixteen of these pits have been discovered between +the opening of the katavothra and the place where the waters reappear. +Some of these are still thirty to one hundred feet in depth; but most +of them have become choked up with stones and earth. These ancient +engineering works, which Crates vainly endeavoured to restore in the +time of Alexander, may possibly date {53} from the mythical age of +King Minyas of Orchomenus,[15] and the successful draining of these +marshes may account for the well-filled treasury of that king spoken +of by Homer. Thus the ingenuity of the Homeric age had succeeded in +accomplishing a work of the engineering art which baffles our modern +men of science ! + +[Illustration: PEASANTS FROM THE ENVIRONS OF ATHENS.] + + * * * * * + +The whole of Western Greece, filled as it is by the mountains of +Acarnania, Ætolia, and Phocis, is condemned by nature to play a very +subordinate part to the eastern provinces. In the time of the ancient +Greeks these provinces were looked upon almost as a portion of the +world of the barbarians, and even in our own days the Ætolians are the +least cultivated of all the Greeks. There is no commerce except at a +few privileged places close to the sea, such as Missolonghi, Ætoliko, +Salona, and Galaxidi. The latter, which is situated on a bay, into +which flows the Pleistus, a river at one time consecrated to Neptune, +although quite dry during the greater part of the year, was, up to +the war of independence, the busiest seaport on the Gulf of Corinth. +As for Naupactus, or Epakto, (called Lepanto by the Italians), it +was important merely from a strategical point of view, on account +of its position at the entrance of the Gulf of Corinth, which is +sometimes named after it. Many naval engagements were fought to force +the entrance into the gulf, defended by the castles of Rumelia and +Morea—the ancient Rhium and Antirrhium. A curious phenomenon has been +observed in connection with the channel which forms the entrance to the +Gulf of Corinth. Nowhere more than 36 fathoms in depth, it is subject +to perpetual changes in its width, owing to the formation of alluvial +deposits by maritime currents. What one current deposits is carried +away by the other. At the epoch of the Peloponnesian war this channel +was 7 stadia, or about 1,200 yards, wide; at the time of Strabo its +width was only 5 stadia; whilst in our own days it is no less than +2,200 yards from promontory to promontory. The entrance of the Gulf of +Arta, between the Turkish Epirus and Greek Acarnania, does not present +the same phenomena, and its present width is about equal to that +assigned to it by every ancient author; that is to say, about 1,000 +yards. + +The valleys and lake basins of Eastern Greece, and more especially its +position between the Gulf of Corinth, the Ægean Sea, and the channel of +Eubœa, which almost convert it into a peninsula, sufficiently account +for the prosperity of that country. With its cities of Thebes, Athens, +and Megara, it is essentially a land of historical reminiscences. The +contrast between the two most important districts of this region—Bœotia +and Attica—is very striking. The first of these is an inland basin, the +waters of which are collected into lakes, where mists accumulate, and +a rich vegetation springs forth from a fat alluvial soil. Attica, on +the other hand, is arid. A thin layer of mould covers the terraces of +its rocky slopes; its valleys open out into the sea; the summits of its +mountains rise into an azure sky; and the blue waters of the Ægean wash +their base. Had the Greeks been fearful of the sea; had they confined +themselves, as in the earliest {54} ages, to the cultivation of the +soil, Bœotia, no doubt, would have retained the preponderance which +it enjoyed in the time of the Minyæ of wealthy Orchomenus. But the +progress of navigation and the allurements of commerce, which proved +irresistible to the Greeks, were bound by degrees to transfer the lead +to the men of Attica. The city of Athens, which arose in the midst of +the largest plain of this peninsula, therefore occupied a position +which assured to it a grand future. + +[Illustration: Fig. 15.—THE ACROPOLIS OF ATHENS.] + +The choice of Athens as the modern capital of Greece has been much +criticized. Times have changed, no doubt, and the natural centres +of commerce have become shifted, in consequence of the migrations +of nations. Corinth, on the isthmus joining continental Greece to +the Peloponnesus, and commanding two seas, undoubtedly deserved the +preference. Its facilities for communicating with Constantinople and +the Greek maritime districts still under the rule of the Osmanli, on +the one hand, and with the western world, from which now proceed all +civilising impulses, on the other, are certainly greater than those +of Athens. If Greece, instead of a small centralised kingdom, had +become a federal republic, which would have been more in accordance +with her genius and traditions, there is no doubt that other towns of +Greece, more favourably situated than Athens for establishing rapid +communications with the rest of Europe, would soon have surpassed that +town in population and commercial wealth. Athens, however, has grown +upon its plain, and, by the construction of a railway, it has become +even {55} a maritime city, as in ancient days, when its triple walls +joined it to the ports of the Piræus and Phalerum. + +[Illustration: Fig. 16.—ATHENS AND ITS LONG WALLS. + +According to Kiepert and Schmidt. Scale 1 : 114,000.] + +But how great the difference between the monuments of the ancient +city and of the modern ! The Parthenon, though gutted by the shells +of the Venetian Morosini, and robbed since of its finest sculptures, +still retains its pure and simple beauty, which agrees so well with +the sobriety of the surrounding landscape—still remains the finest +architectural work of the world. By the side of this majestic ruin, on +the same plateau of the Acropolis, where the mariner in the Gulf of +Ægina saw the gilt spear-head of Athene Promachos glitter in the sun, +there rise other monuments, the Erechtheum and the Propylæa, hardly +inferior to it, and dating likewise from the great period of art. +Outside the city, on a promontory, rises the temple of Theseus, the +best-preserved monument of Greek antiquity. Elsewhere, on the banks +of the Ilissus, a group of columns marks the site of the magnificent +temple of Olympian Jupiter, which it took the Athenians seven hundred +years to build, and which their degenerate descendants made use of as +a quarry. Remarkable remains have been discovered in many other parts +of the ancient city, and the least of them are of interest, for they +recall the memory of illustrious men. On such a rock sat the Areopagus +which condemned Socrates; from this stone tribune Demosthenes addressed +the multitude; and here walked Plato with his disciples ! + +A similar historical interest attaches to nearly every part of Attica, +whether we visit the city of Eleusis, where the mysteries of Ceres were +celebrated, or the {56} city of Megara, with its double Acropolis, +or whether we explore the field of Marathon and the shores of the +island of Salamis. Even beyond Attica the memories of the past attract +the traveller to Platæa, to Leuctra, Chæronea, Thebes of Œdipus, and +Orchomenus of Minyas, though, in comparison with what these districts +were in other times, they are now deserts. In addition to Athens and +Thebes, there are now only two cities in eastern continental Greece +which are of any importance. These are Lamia, in the midst of the low +plains of the Sperchius, and Livadia, in Bœotia, at one time celebrated +for the cavern of Trophonius, which archæologists have not yet +succeeded in identifying. The island of Ægina, which belongs to Attica, +offers the same spectacle of decay and depopulation as the mainland. +Anciently it supported more than two hundred thousand inhabitants; at +present it hardly numbers six thousand. But the island still retains +the picturesque ruin of its temple of Minerva, and the prospect which +it affords of the amphitheatre of hills in Argolis and Attica is as +magnificent as ever. + +[Illustration: Fig. 17.—ANCIENT ATHENS. + +According to Kiepert and Schmidt. Scale 1 : 30,000.] + + +III.—THE MOREA, OR PELOPONNESUS. + +Geographically the Peloponnesus well deserves the name of island, +which was bestowed upon it by the ancients. The low Isthmus of Corinth +completely severs it from the mountainous peninsula of Greece. It is +a world in itself, small enough as far as the mere space is concerned +which it occupies upon the map, but great on account of the part it has +played in the history of humanity. {57} + +On entering the Peloponnesus from the Isthmus of Corinth, we see rising +in front of us the mountain rampart of Oneium, which defended the +entrance of the peninsula, and upon one of whose promontories was built +the nearly impregnable citadel of Corinth. These mountains form part +of the general mountain system of the whole island, and, sheltered by +them, its inhabitants could live in security. The principal mountain +mass, whence all other chains radiate towards the entrances of the +peninsula, is situated in the interior of the country, about forty +miles to the west of Corinth. There Mount Cyllene of the ancient +Greeks, or Zyria, rises into the air, its flanks covered with dark +pines; and farther away still, the Khelmos, or Aroanian Mountain, +attains even a more considerable height, its snows descending into a +valley on its northern slope, where they give rise to the river Styx, +the cold waters of which prove fatal to perjurers, and disappear in +a narrow chasm, one of the entrances to Hades. A range of wooded +peaks, to the west of the Khelmos, connects that mountain with the +Olonos (Mount Erymanthus), celebrated as the haunt of the savage boar +destroyed by Hercules. All those mountains, from Corinth as far as +Patras, form a rampart running parallel with the southern shore of +the gulf, in the direction of which they throw off spurs enclosing +steep valleys. In one of these—that of Buraikos—we meet with the grand +caverns of Mega-Spileon, which are used as a monastery, and where the +most curious structures may be seen built up on every vantage-ground +offered by the rocks, suggesting a resemblance to the cells of a vast +nest of hornets. + +The table-land of the Peloponnesus is thus bounded towards the north by +an elevated coast range. Another chain of the same kind bounds it on +the east. It likewise starts from Mount Cyllene, and extends southward, +its various portions being known as Gaurias, Malevo (Mount Artemisium), +and Parthenion. It is then broken through by a vast depression, but +again rises farther south as the range of Hagios Petros, or Parnon, +to the east of Sparta. Getting lower by degrees, it terminates in the +promontory of Malea, opposite to the island of Cerigo. It was this +cape, tradition tells us, which formed the last refuge of the Centaurs; +that is to say, of the barbarian ancestors of the modern Tsakonians. No +promontory was more dreaded by Greek navigators than this Cape Malea, +owing to sudden gusts of wind, and an ancient proverb says, “When thou +hast doubled the cape forget the name of thy native land.” + +The mountains of Western Morea do not present the regularity of the +eastern chain. They are cut through by rivers, and to the south of the +Aroanian Mountains and the Erymanthus they ramify into a multitude +of minor chains, which now and then combine into mountain groups, +and impart the most varied aspect to that portion of the plateau. +Everywhere in the valleys we come unexpectedly upon landscapes to which +an indescribable charm is imparted by a group of trees, a spring, a +flock of sheep, or a shepherd sitting upon a heap of ruins. We are in +beautiful Arcadia, sung by the poets. Though in great part deprived of +its woods, it is still a beautiful country; but more charming still +are the eastern slopes of the plateau, which descend towards the +Ionian Sea. There luxuriant forests and {58} sparkling rivulets add +an element of beauty to blue waves, distant islands, and a transparent +sky, which is wanting in nearly every other part of maritime Greece. + +[Illustration: Fig. 18.—MOUNT TAYGETUS.] + +The table-land of Arcadia is commanded on the west by pine-clad +Mænalus, and bounded on the south by several mountain groups which give +birth to separate mountain chains. One of these mountain masses—the +Kotylion, or Palæocastro—thus gives rise to the mountains of Messenia, +amongst which rises the famous Ithome, and to those of Ægaleus, +which spread over the peninsula to the west of the Gulf of Coron, +and reappear in the sea as the rocky islets of Sapienza, Cabrera, +and Venetikon. Another mountain mass, the Lycæus, or Diaforti—the +Arcadian Olympus, which the Pelasgians claim for their cradle—and +which rises almost in the centre of the Peloponnesus, is continued +westward of Laconia by an extended mountain chain, the most elevated +and most characteristic of all the Morea. The highest crest of these +mountains is the famous Taygetus, known also as Pentedactylum (five +fingers), because of the five peaks which surmount it; or as St. Elias, +in honour, no doubt, of Helios, the Dorian sun-god. A portion of the +lower slopes of this mountain is clothed with forests of chestnuts and +walnuts. {59} interspersed with cypresses and oaks; but its crest is +bare, and snow remains upon it during three-fourths of the year. The +snows of Taygetus direct the distant mariner to the shores of Greece. +On approaching the coast, he sees rising above the blue waters the +spurs and outlying ridges of the Kakavuni, or “bad mountain.” Soon +afterwards he comes in sight of the promontory of Tainaron, with its +two capes of Matapan and Grasso—immense blocks of white marble more +than six hundred feet in height, upon which the quails settle in +millions after their fatiguing journey across the sea. Into the caverns +at its foot the waters rush with a dull noise which the ancients +mistook for the barking of Cerberus. Cape Matapan, like Malea, is +dreaded amongst mariners as a great “destroyer of men.” + +The three southern extremities of the Peloponnesus are thus occupied +by high mountains and rocky declivities. The peninsula of Argolis, in +the east, is likewise traversed by mountain ranges, which start from +Mount Cyllene, similarly to the Gaurias and the mountains of Arcadia. +The whole of the Peloponnesus is thus a country of table-lands and +mountain ranges. If we except the plains of Elis, which have been +formed by the alluvial deposits carried down by the rivers of Arcadia, +and the lake basins of the interior, which have been filled up in the +course of ages, we meet with nothing but mountains.[16] The principal +mountain masses—the Cyllene, the Taygetus, and Parnon—are composed +of crystalline schists and metamorphic marbles, as in continental +Greece. Strata of the Jurassic age and beds of cretaceous limestone +are here and there met with at the foot of these more ancient rocks. +Near the coast, in Argolis, and on the flanks of the Taygetus, +eruptions of serpentines and porphyries have taken place, whilst +on the north-eastern coast of Argolis, and especially on the small +peninsula of Methone, there exist recent volcanoes—amongst others, +the Kaimenipetra, which M. Fouqué identifies with the fire-vomiting +mouths of Strabo, and which had its last eruption twenty-one centuries +ago. These volcanoes are, no doubt, the vents of a submarine area of +disturbance which extends through Milos, Santorin, and Nisyros, to the +south of the Ægean Sea. + +The sulphur springs which abound on the western coast of the +Peloponnesus are, perhaps, likewise evidences of a reaction of the +interior of the earth. + +It is the opinion of several geologists that the coasts of Western +Greece are being insensibly upheaved. In many places, and particularly +at Corinth, we meet with ancient caverns and sea beaches at an +elevation of several feet above the sea-level. It is this upheaval, and +not merely the alluvial deposits brought down by rivers, which explains +the encroachment of the land upon the sea at the mouth of the Achelous +and on the coast of Elis, where four rocky islets have been joined to +the land. Elsewhere a subsidence of the land has been noticed, as in +the Gulf of {60} Marathonisi and on the eastern coast of Greece, where +the ancient peninsula of Elaphonisi has been converted into an island. +But even there the fluvial deposits have encroached upon the sea. The +city of Calamata is twice as distant from the seashore now as in the +days of Strabo, and the traces of the ancient haven of Helos, on the +coast of Laconia, are now far inland. + + * * * * * + +The limestone rocks of the interior of the Peloponnesus abound as much +in chasms, which swallow up the rivers, as do Bœotia and the western +portion of the whole of the Balkan peninsula. Some of these katavothras +are mere sieves, hidden beneath herbage and pebbles, but others are +wide chasms and caverns, through which the course of the underground +waters may be readily traced. In winter wild birds post themselves +at the entrances of these caverns, in expectation of the prey which +the river is certain to carry towards them; in summer, after the +waters have retired, foxes and jackals again take possession of their +accustomed dens. The water swallowed up by these chasms on the plateau +reappears on the other side of the mountains in the shape of springs, +or _kephalaria_ (_kephalovrysis_). The water of these springs has been +purified by its passage through the earth, and its temperature is that +of the soil. It bursts forth sometimes from a crevice in the rocks, +sometimes in an alluvial plain, and sometimes even from the bottom of +the sea. The subterranean geography of Greece is not yet sufficiently +known to enable us to trace each of these kephalaria to the katavothras +which feed them. + +[Illustration: Fig. 19.—LAKES PHENEA AND STYMPHALUS. + +From the French Staff Map. Scale 1 : 500,000.] + +The ancients were most careful in keeping open these natural funnels, +for, by facilitating the passage of the water, they prevented the +formation of swamps. These precautions, however, were neglected during +the centuries of barbarism which overcame Greece, and the waters were +permitted to accumulate in many places at the expense of the salubrity +of the country. The plain of Pheneus, or Phonia, a vast chasm between +the Aroanian Mountains and the Cyllene, has thus repeatedly been +converted into a lake. In the middle of last century the whole of this +basin {61} was filled with water to a depth of more than 300 feet. +In 1828, when this sheet of water had already become considerably +reduced, it was still 6 miles long and 150 feet in depth. At length, +a few years afterwards, the subterranean sluices opened, the waters +disappeared, and there remained only two small marshes near the places +of exit. But in 1850 the lake was again 200 feet in depth. Hercules, we +are told, constructed a canal to drain this valley and to cleanse its +subterranean outlets, but the inhabitants content themselves now with +placing a grating above the “sink-holes,” to prevent the admission of +trunks of trees and of other large objects carried along by the floods. + +To the east of the valley of Pheneus, and on the southern foot of Mount +Cyllene, there is another lake basin, celebrated in antiquity because +of the man-eating birds which infested it, until they were exterminated +by Hercules. This is the Stymphalus, alternately lake and cultivated +land. During winter the waters cover about one-third of the basin; but +it happens occasionally, after heavy rains, that the lake resumes its +ancient dimensions. There is only one katavothra through which the +waters can escape, and this, instead of being near the shore, as usual, +is at the bottom of the lake. It swallows up not only the water of +the lake, but likewise the vegetable remains carried into it, and the +mud formed at its bottom; and this detritus is conveyed through it to +some subterranean cavity, where it putrefies slowly, as may be judged +from the fetid exhalations proceeding from the katavothra. The water, +however, is purified, and when it reappears on the surface, close to +the seashore, it is as clear as crystal. + +There are many other lake basins of the same kind between the mountains +of Arcadia and the chain of the Gaurias. They all have their swamps +or temporary lakes, but the katavothras, in every instance, are +sufficiently numerous to prevent an inundation of the entire valley. +The most important of these lake basins is formed by the famous plain +of Mantinea, upon which many a battle was fought. From an hydrological +point of view this is one of the most curious places in the world; +for the waters which collect there are discharged into two opposite +seas—the Gulf of Nauplia on the east, and in the direction of the +Alpheus and the Ionian Sea towards the west. There may exist even some +subterranean rivulet which discharges itself, towards the south, into +the Eurotas and the Gulf of Laconia. + +The disappearance of the waters underground has condemned to sterility +several parts of the Peloponnesus, which a little water would convert +into the most fertile regions of the globe. The surface waters quickly +suck up and form subterranean rivers, hidden from sight, which only +see the light again, in most instances, near the seashore, when it is +impossible to utilise them. The plain of Argos, though surrounded by a +majestic amphitheatre of well-watered hills, is more sterile and arid +even than are Megara and Attica. Its soil is always dry, and soaks +up water like a sieve, which may have given rise to the fable of the +Danaids. But to the south of that plain, where there is but a narrow +cultivable strip of land between the mountains and the seashore, a +great river bursts forth from the rocks. This is the Erasinus. + +Other springs burst forth at the southern extremity of the plain, +close to the defile {62} of Lerna, which, like that of the Erasinus, +are supposed to be fed from Lake Stymphalus. Close to them is a chasm +filled with water, said to be unfathomable. It abounds in tortoises, +and venomous serpents inhabit the adjoining marsh. These are the +_kephalaria_, or “heads,” of the ancient hydra of Lerna, which Hercules +found it so difficult to seize hold of. Still farther south there is +another spring which rises from the bottom of the sea, more than three +hundred yards from the shore. This spring—the Doinæ of the ancients, +and Anavula of modern Greek mariners—is, in reality, but the mouth of +one of the rivers swallowed up by the katavothras of Mantinea. When the +sea is still it throws up a jet rising to a height of fifty feet. + +[Illustration: Fig. 20.—THE PLATEAU OF MANTINEA. + +From the French Staff Map. Scale 1 : 400,000. + +K. Katavothras.] + +Analogous phenomena may be witnessed in the two southern valleys of +the peninsula, those of Sparta and Messenia. The Iri, or Eurotas, is, +in reality, but a large rivulet, which discharges itself into the +Gulf of Marathonisi, at the end of a gorge, {63} through which the +waters of the Lake of Sparta forced themselves a passage during some +ancient deluge; but it is only on rare occasions that its volume of +water is sufficient to remove the bar which obstructs its mouth. The +Vasili-Potamo (“royal river”), on the other hand, which bursts forth at +the foot of a rock a short distance from the Eurotas, though its whole +course does not exceed five miles, discharges a considerable volume of +water throughout the year, and its mouth is at all times open. As to +the river of Messenia, the ancient Pamisus, now called Pirnatza, it is +the only river of Greece, besides the Alpheus, which forms a harbour +at its mouth, and it can be ascended by small vessels for a distance +of eight miles; but this advantage it owes exclusively to the powerful +springs of Hagios Floros, which are fed by the mountains on the east. +These springs, which form a large swamp where they rise to the surface, +are the real river, if volume of water is to be decisive, and the +country watered and fertilised by them was called the “Happy” by the +ancients, on account of its fertility. + +[Illustration: Fig. 21.—BIFURCATION OF THE GASTUNI. + +From the French Staff Map. Scale 1 : 400,000.] + +The western regions of the Peloponnesus receive more rain, and they are +likewise in the possession of the most considerable river, the Alpheus, +now called Ruphia, from one of its tributaries. The latter, the ancient +Ladon, conveys a larger volume of water towards the sea than the +Alpheus. It was as celebrated amongst the Greeks as was the Peneus +of Thessaly, on account of the transparency of its waters, and the +smiling scenery along its banks. It is partly fed by the snows of Mount +Erymanthus, and, like most rivers of the Morea, derives a portion of +its waters from subterranean tributaries rising on the central plateau. +The Ladon thus receives the waters of Lake Phenea, whilst the Alpheus +proper {64} is fed in its upper course from katavothras on the shores +of the ancient lakes of Orchomenus and Mantinea. Having traversed the +basin of Megalopolis, anciently a lake, it passes through a series of +picturesque gorges, and reaches its lower valley. A charming tradition, +illustrative of the ties of amity which existed between Elis and +Syracuse, makes this river plunge beneath the sea and reappear in +Sicily, close to the fountain of his beloved Arethusa. The ancient +Greeks, who witnessed the disappearance of so many rivers, would hardly +have looked upon this submarine course of the Alpheus as a thing to +wonder at. + +The Alpheus and all other rivers of Elis carry down towards the sea +immense masses of detritus, which they spread over the plains extending +from the foot of the mountains to the seashore. The ruins of Olympia +disappeared in this manner beneath alluvial deposits. They have all +frequently changed their beds, and not one amongst them has done +so more frequently than the Peneus, or river of Gastuni. Anciently +it discharged its waters to the north of the rocky promontory of +Chelonatas, whilst in the present day it turns abruptly to the south, +and enters the sea at a distance of fifteen miles from its ancient +mouth. Works of irrigation may partly account for this change, but +there can be no doubt that nature unaided has by degrees much modified +the aspect of this portion of Greece. Islands originally far in the +sea have been joined to the land; numerous open bays have gradually +been cut off from the sea by natural embankments, and transformed into +swamps or lagoons. One of the latter extends for several leagues to the +south of the Alpheus, and is divided from the sea by a fine forest of +pines. These majestic forests, in which the Triphylians paid honour to +their dead, the surrounding hills dotted over with clumps of trees, and +Mount Lycæus, from whose flanks are precipitated the cascades dedicated +to Neda, the nurse of Jupiter, render this the most attractive district +of all the Morea to a lover of nature. + + * * * * * + +The Peloponnesus presents us with one of the most striking instances +of the influence exercised by the nature of the country upon the +historical development of its inhabitants. Held to Greece by a mere +thread, and defended at its entrance by a double bulwark of mountains, +this “isle of Pelops” naturally became the seat of independent tribes +at a time when armies still recoiled from natural obstacles. The +isthmus was open as a commercial high-road, but it was closed against +invaders. + +The relief of the peninsula satisfactorily explains the distribution +of the tribes inhabiting it, and the part they played in history. The +whole of the interior basin, which has no visible outlets towards the +sea, naturally became the home of a tribe who, like the Arcadians, +held no intercourse with their neighbours, and hardly any amongst +themselves. Corinth, Sicyon, and Achaia occupied the seashore on +the northern slopes of the mountains, but were separated by high +transversal chains. The inhabitants of these isolated valleys long +remained strangers to each other, and when at length they combined to +resist the invader, it was too late. Elis, in the west, with its wide +valleys and its insalubrious plains extending along a coast having no +havens, naturally played but a secondary part {65} in the history of +the peninsula. Its inhabitants, exposed to invasions, owing to their +country being without natural defences, would soon have been enslaved, +had they not placed themselves under the protection of all the rest of +Greece by converting their plain of Olympia into a place of meeting, +where the Hellenes of Europe and of Asia, from the continent and from +the islands, met for a few days’ festival to forget their rivalries and +animosities. The basin of Argos and the mountain peninsula of Argolis, +on the eastern side of the Peloponnesus, on the other hand, are +districts having natural boundaries, and are easily defended. Hence the +Argolians were able to maintain their autonomy for centuries, and even +in the Homeric age they exercised a sort of hegemony over the remainder +of Greece. The Spartans were their successors. The country in which +they established themselves possessed the double advantage of being +secure against every attack, and of furnishing all they stood in need +of. Having firmly established themselves in the beautiful valley of +the Eurotas, they found no difficulty in extending their power to the +seashore, and to the unfortunate Helos. At a later date they crossed +the heights of the Taygetus, and descended into the plains of Messenia. +That portion of Greece likewise formed a natural basin, protected by +elevated mountain ramparts; and the Messenians, who were kinsmen of +the Spartans and their equals in bravery, were thus able to resist +for a century. At length they fell, and all the Southern Peloponnesus +acknowledged the supremacy of Sparta, which was now in a position to +assert its authority over the whole of Greece. Then it was that the +mountain-girt plateau on the road from Lacedæmonia to Corinth, upon +which stood the cities of Tegea and Mantinea, and which was made by +nature for a field of Mars, became the scene of strife. + +The Peloponnesus, with its sinuous shores, forms a remarkable contrast +to Attica. Its characteristics are essentially those of a continent, +and anciently the Peloponnesians were mountaineers rather than +mariners. Except in Corinth, where the two seas nearly join, and a few +towns of Argolis, which is another Attica, there were no inducements +for the inhabitants to engage in maritime commerce; and in their +mountain valleys and upland plains they were entirely dependent upon +the rearing of cattle and husbandry. Arcadia, in the centre of the +peninsula, was inhabited only by herdsmen and labourers; and its name, +which originally meant “country of bears,” has become the general +designation for an eminently pastoral country. The Laconians also, +separated from the sea by rocky mountains which hem in the valley +of the Eurotas at its point of issue, preserved for a long time the +customs of warriors and of cultivators of the soil, and took to the sea +only with reluctance. “When the Spartans placed Eurotas and Taygetus +at the head of their heroes,” says Edgar Quinet, “they distinctly +connected the features of the valley with the destinies of the people +by whom it was occupied.” + +In the very earliest ages the Phœnicians already occupied important +factories on the coasts of the Peloponnesus. They had established +themselves at Nauplia, in the Gulf of Argos; and at Cranaæ, the modern +Marathonisi or Gythion, in Laconia, they purchased the shells which +they required to dye their purple {66} cloths. The Greeks themselves +were in possession of a few busy ports, amongst which was “sandy +Pylos,” the capital of Nestor, whose position is now held by Navarino, +on the other side of the gulf. At a subsequent date, when Greece had +become the centre of Mediterranean commerce, Corinth, so favourably +situated between the two seas, rose into importance, not because of its +political influence, its cultivation of the arts, or love of liberty, +but through the number and wealth of its inhabitants. It is said that +it had a population of three hundred thousand souls within its walls. +Even after it had been razed by the Romans it again recovered its +ancient pre-eminence. But the exposed position of the town has caused +it to be ravaged so many times that all commerce has fled from it. In +1858, when an earthquake destroyed Corinth, that once famous city had +dwindled down into a poor village. The city has been rebuilt about five +miles from its ancient site, on the shore of the gulf named after it, +but we doubt whether it will ever resume its ancient importance unless +a canal be dug to connect the two seas. The high-roads from Marseilles +and Trieste to Smyrna and Constantinople would then lead across the +Isthmus of Corinth, and this canal might attract an amount of shipping +equal to that which frequents other ocean channels or canals similarly +situated. But for the present the isthmus is almost deserted, and only +the passengers who are conveyed by Greek steamers to the small ports +on its opposite shores cross it. The ancients, who had failed in the +construction of a canal, and who made no further effort after the time +of Nero, because they imagined one of the two seas to be at a higher +level than the other, had provided, at all events, a kind of tramway, +by means of which their small vessels could be conveyed from the Gulf +of Corinth to the Ægean Sea.[17] + +After the Crusades, when the powerful Republic of Venice had gained +a footing upon the coasts of Morea, flourishing commercial colonies +arose along them, in Arcadia, on the island of Prodano (Prote), at +Navarino, Modon, Coron, Calamata, Malvoisie, and Nauplia in Argolis. +At the call of these Venetian merchants the Peloponnesus again became +a seat of trade, and resumed, to some extent, that part in maritime +enterprise which it had enjoyed in the time of the Phœnicians. But +the advent of the Turk, the impoverishment of the soil, and the civil +wars which resulted therefrom, again forced the inhabitants to break +off all intercourse with the outer world, and to shut themselves up +in their island as in a prison. Tripolis, or Tripolitza, in the very +centre of the peninsula, and called thus, it is said, because it +is the representative of three ancient cities—Mantinea, Tegea, and +Pallantium—then became the most populous place. Since the Greeks have +regained their independence life again fluctuates towards the seashore +as by a sort of natural sequence. Patras, close to the entrance of the +Gulf of Corinth, and near the most fertile and best-cultivated plains +on the eastern shore, is by far the most important city at present, +and, in anticipation of its future extension, the streets of a new town +have been laid out, in the firm belief that it will some day rival +Smyrna and Trieste in extent. {67} + +[Illustration: Fig. 22.—THE VALLEY OF THE EUROTAS. + +From the French Staff Map. Scale 1 : 370,000.] + +The other towns of the peninsula, even those which exhibited the +greatest activity during the dominion of the Venetians, are but of very +secondary importance, if we compare them with this emporium of the +Peloponnesus. Ægium, or Vostitza, on the Gulf of Corinth, is a poor +port, less celebrated on account of its commerce than in consequence +of a magnificent plane-tree, more than fifty feet in girth, the hollow +trunk of which was formerly used as a prison. Pyrgos, close to the +Alpheus, has no port at all. The fine roadstead of Navarino, defended +against winds and waves by the rocky islet of Sphacteria, is but +little frequented, and the merchantmen riding at anchor there never +outnumber the Turkish men-of-war at the bottom, where they have lain +since the battle fought in 1828. Modon and Coron have likewise fallen +off. Calamata, at the mouth of the fertile valleys of Messenia, has an +open roadstead only, and vessels cannot always ride in safety upon it. +The celebrated Malvoisie, now called Monemvasia, is hardly more than a +heap of ruins, and the vineyards in its neighbourhood, which furnished +the exquisite wine named after the town, have long ceased to exist. +Nauplia, which was the capital of the modern kingdom of Greece during +the first few years of its existence, possesses the advantage of a {68} +well-sheltered port; but its walls, its bastions, and its forts give +it the character of a military town rather than of a commercial one. + +The towns in the interior of the country, whatever glories may attach +to them, are hardly more now than large villages. The most celebrated +of all, Sparta, thanks to the fertility of its environs, promises +to become one of the most prosperous cities of the interior of the +Peloponnesus. Sparta—that is, the “scattered city,”—was named thus +because its houses were scattered over the plain, defended only by +the valour of their inhabitants, and not by walls. In the Middle Ages +Sparta was supplanted by the neighbouring Mistra, whose decayed Gothic +buildings and castles occupy a steep hill on the western side of the +Eurotas; but it has now recovered its supremacy amongst the towns of +Laconia. Argos, which is more ancient even than the city of Lacedæmon, +has likewise risen anew from its ruins; for the plain in which it lies, +though occasionally dried up, is of great natural fertility. + +Strangers, however, who explore the countries of the Peloponnesus, +do not go in search of these newly risen cities, where a few stones +only remind them of the glories of the past, but are attracted by the +ancient monuments of art. In that respect Argolis is one of the richest +provinces of Greece. Near to Argos the seats of an amphitheatre are cut +into the steep flanks of the hill of Larissa. Between Argos and Nauplia +a small rock rises in the middle of the plain, which is surmounted +by the ancient Acropolis of Tiryns, the Cyclopean walls of which are +more than fifty feet in thickness. A few miles to the north of Argos +are the ruins of Mycenæ, the city of Agamemnon, where the celebrated +“Gate of Lions,” coarsely sculptured when Greek art first dawned, +and the vast vaults known as the Treasury of the Atrides, mainly +attract the attention of visitors. These vaults are amongst the oldest +and best-preserved antiquities of Greece. They exhibit most solid +workmanship, and one of the stones, which does duty as a lintel over +the entrance-gate, weighs no less than one hundred and sixty-nine tons. +At Epidaurus, in Argolis, on the shores of the Gulf of Ægina, and close +to the most famous temple of Æsculapius, we still meet with a theatre +which has suffered less from time than any other throughout Greece. +Shrubs, interspersed with small trees, surround it; but we can still +trace its fifty-four rows of white marble seats, capable of affording +accommodation to twelve thousand spectators. Amongst other famous ruins +of Argolis are the beautiful remains of a temple of Jupiter at Nemea, +and the seven Doric columns of Corinth, said to be the oldest in all +Greece. But the most beautiful edifice of the peninsula must be sought +for near Arcadian Phigalia, in the charming valley of the Neda. This is +the temple of Bassæ, erected by Ictinus in honour of Apollo Epicurius, +and its beauty is enhanced by the oaks and rocks which surround it. + +Citadels, however, are the buildings we most frequently meet with; +and many a fortified place, with its walls and acropolis, yet +exists as in the days of ancient Greece. The walls of Phigalia and +Messenia still have their ancient towers, gates, and redoubts. Other +fortifications were utilised by the Crusaders, Venetians, or Turks, +and by them furnished with crenellated walls and keeps, which add +another picturesque feature to the landscape. One of these ancient {69} +fortresses, transformed during the Middle Ages, rises at the very +gates of the Peloponnesus—namely, the citadel of Corinth, the strongest +and most commanding of all. + + * * * * * + +Several of the islands of the Ægean Sea must be looked upon as natural +dependencies of the Peloponnesus, to which submarine ledges or shoals +attach them. + +The islands along the coast of Argolis, which are inhabited by Albanian +seamen, who were amongst the foremost to fight the Turk during the +struggle for Hellenic independence, have lost much of their former +commercial importance. Poros, a small Albanian town on a volcanic +island of the same name, which the revolted people chose for their +capital, is, however, still a bustling place, for it has an excellent +harbour, and the Greek Government has made it the principal naval +station of the kingdom. Hydra, on the other hand, and the small +island of Spezzia, next to it, have lost their former importance. +They are both rocky islands, without arable soil, trees, or water, +and yet they formerly supported a population of fifty thousand souls. +About 1730 a colony of Albanians, weary of the exactions of some +Turkish pasha on the mainland, fled to the island of Hydra. They +were left in peace there, for they agreed to pay a trifling tribute. +Their commerce—leavened, to be sure, with a little piracy—assumed +large dimensions, and immediately before the war of independence the +Albanians of Hydra owned nearly 400 vessels of 100 to 200 tons each, +and they were able to send over 200 vessels, armed with 200 guns, +against the Turks. By engaging so enthusiastically in this struggle +for liberty, the Hydriotes, without suspecting it, wrought their own +ruin. No sooner was the cause of Greece triumphant than the commerce of +Hydra was transferred to Syra and the Piræus, which are more favourably +situated. + +Cythera of Laconia, a far larger island than either of those mentioned, +and better known by the Italian name of Cerigo, formed a member of +the Septinsular Republic, although not situated in the Ionian Sea, +and clearly a dependency of the Peloponnesus. Cythera is no longer +the island of Venus, and its voluptuous groves have disappeared. Seen +from the north, it resembles a pile of sterile rocks. It nevertheless +yields abundant harvests, possesses fine plantations of olive-trees, +and populous villages. Cerigo, in former times, enjoyed considerable +importance, owing to its position between the Ionian Sea and the +Archipelago; but Cape Malea has lost its terrors now, and the harbour +of refuge on the island is no longer sought after. Heaps of shells, +left there by Phœnician manufacturers of purple, have been found on the +island; and it was the Phœnicians who introduced the worship of Venus +Astarte. + + +IV.—THE ISLANDS OF THE ÆGEAN SEA. + +Islands and islets are scattered in seeming disorder over the Ægean +Sea, the name of which may probably mean “sea of goats,” because these +islands appeared at a distance like goats. By a singular misapplication +the modern term {70} Archipelago, instead of sea, is now used to +designate these groups of islands. The Sporades, in the north, form +a long range of islands stretching in the direction of Mount Athos. +The island of Scyros, farther south, the birthplace of Achilles and +place of exile of King Theseus, occupies an isolated position; the +large island of Eubœa extends along the coast of the continent; and in +the distance rise the white mountains of the Cyclades, likened by the +ancient Greeks to a circle of Oceanides dancing around a deity. + +[Illustration: Fig. 23.—EURIPUS AND CHALCIS. + +Scale 1 : 220,000.] + +All these islands are so many fragments of the mainland. This is +proved by their geological structure, or by shoals which attach them +to the nearest coast. The Northern Sporades are a branch of Mount +Pelion. Eubœa is traversed by limestone mountains of considerable +height, running parallel to the chains of Attica, Argolis, Mount +Olympus, and Mount Athos. Scyros is a rocky mountain mass, whose axis +runs in the same direction as that of the central chain of Eubœa. +The summits of the Cyclades continue the ranges of Eubœa and Attica +towards the south-east, and the same micaceous and argillaceous +schists, limestones, and crystalline marbles are found in them. They +are, indeed, “mountains of Greece {71} scattered over the sea.” If +Athens may boast of the quarries of Mount Pentelicus, the Cyclades +produce the glittering marbles of Naxos, and the still more beautiful +ones of Paros, from which were chiselled the statues of heroes and of +gods. Curious caverns are met with in the limestone of the islands, +especially that of Antiparos, the existence of which was not known to +the ancients, and the Cave of Sillaka, on the island of Cythnos, or +Thermia, celebrated for its hot springs. Granite is found on some of +the islands, and particularly in the small island of Delos, dedicated +to the worship of Apollo and Diana. In the south, finally, the Cyclades +are traversed by a chain of volcanic islands, extending from the +peninsula of Methana, in Argolis, to Cos and the shores of Asia Minor. + +Eubœa may be looked upon almost as a portion of the continent, for +the strait which separates it from the mainland resembles a submerged +longitudinal valley, and is nowhere of great depth or width. At its +narrowest part it is no more than two hundred and fourteen feet across, +and from the most remote times, Chalcis, the capital of the island, has +been joined to the mainland by a bridge. The irregular tidal currents +flowing through this strait were looked upon as marvellous by the +Greeks, and Aristotle is said to have flung himself into it because +he was unable to explain this phenomenon. The Italian name of the +island, Negroponte, is formed by a series of corruptions from Euripus, +by which name the ancients knew the strait between the island and the +mainland. Eubœa has at all times shared in the vicissitudes of the +neighbouring provinces of Attica and Bœotia. When the cities of Greece +were at the height of their glory, those of Eubœa—Chalcis, Eretria, +and Cerinthus—enjoyed likewise a high degree of prosperity, and +dispatched colonies to all parts of the Mediterranean. Later on, when +invaders ravaged Attica, Eubœa shared the same fate, and at present it +participates in every political and social movement of the neighbouring +continent. + +In Northern Eubœa there are forests of oaks, pines, elms, and +plane-trees; the villages are embedded in orchards; and the surrounding +country resembles what we have seen in Elis and Arcadia. But in the +Cyclades we look in vain for charming landscapes. Foliage and running +water abound only in a very few spots. Arid rocks, more arid even than +those on the coast of Greece, predominate, and only in a few favoured +spots do we meet with a few olive-trees, valonia oaks, pines, and +fig-trees. Everywhere else the hills are naked. And yet these islands +arouse feelings of devotion in us, for their names are great in +history. The highest summits of most of them have been named after the +prophet Elias, the biblical successor of Apollo, the god of the sun; +and justly so, for the sun reigns supreme upon these austere rocks, and +his scorching rays destroy every vestige of vegetation. + +Antimilos, one of the uninhabited islands of this group, still affords +an asylum to the wild goat (_Capra Caucasica_), which has disappeared +from the remainder of Europe, and is met with only in Crete, and +perhaps Rhodes. Wild pigs likewise haunt the rocks of Antimilos. +Rabbits were introduced from the West, and abound in the caverns +of some of the Cyclades, and especially on Myconus and Delos. The +ancient authors never mention these animals. It is a curious fact that +{72} hares and rabbits never inhabit the same island, with the sole +exception of Andros, where the hares occupy the extreme north, whilst +the rabbits have their burrows in the southern portion of the island. +As a curiosity, we may also mention that a large species of lizard, +called crocodile by the inhabitants, is found on the islands, but not +on the neighbouring continent, and we may conclude from this that the +Cyclades were separated from the Balkan peninsula at a very remote +period. + + * * * * * + +A chain of volcanic islands bounds the Cyclades towards the south, +where they are separated from Crete by an ocean trough of great depth. +Milos is the most important of these islands. It has an irregularly +shaped crater, which has been invaded by the sea, and forms there +one of the safest and most capacious harbours of refuge in the +Mediterranean. Milos has had no eruption within historic times, but the +existence of solfataras and of hot springs proves that its volcanic +forces are not yet quite extinct. + +[Illustration: Fig. 24.—NEA KAMMENI. + +According to Danfalik.] + +The actual centre of volcanic activity has to be looked for in a small +group of islands known as Santorin, and lying midway between Europe and +Asia. These islands consist of marbles and schists, similar to those +of the other Cyclades, and they surround a vast crater no less than +twelve hundred and eighty feet in depth. The crescent-shaped island +of Thera, on the east, presents bold cliffs towards the crater, while +its gentle outer slopes are covered with vineyards producing exquisite +wine. Therasia, on the west, rises like an immense wall; and the islet +of {73} Aspronisi, between the two, indicates the existence of a +submarine partition wall which separates the crater from the open sea. +The submarine volcano occupies the centre of this basin. It remains +quiescent for long periods, and then suddenly arousing itself, it +ejects immense masses of scoriæ. Nearly twenty-one centuries ago the +first island rose to the surface in the centre of this basin. This +island is known now as Palæa Kammeni, or the “old volcano.” Three years +of eruptions in the sixteenth century gave birth to the smallest of +the three islands, Mikra Kammeni. A third cone of lava, Nea Kammeni, +rose in the eighteenth century; and quite recently, between 1866 and +1870, this new island has more than doubled its size, overwhelming +the small village of Volkario and its port, and extending to within a +very short distance of Mikra Kammeni. No less than half a million of +partial eruptions occurred during those five years, and the ashes were +sometimes thrown to a height of four thousand feet. Even from Crete +clouds of ashes could be seen suspended in the air, black during the +day, and lit up by night. + +Thousands of spectators hastened to Santorin from all quarters of the +world to witness these eruptions, and amongst them were several men of +science—Fouqué, Gorceix, Reiss, Stübel, and Schmidt—whose observations +have proved of great service. The crater of Santorin appears to have +been produced by a violent explosion which shattered the centre of the +ancient island, and covered its slopes with enormous masses of tufa.[18] + +Southern Eubœa and the vicinity of Port Gavrion, on the island of +Andros, are inhabited by Albanians, but the population in the remainder +of the Archipelago is Greek. The families of Italian or French descent +on Scyros, Syra, Naxos, and Santorin are not sufficiently numerous +to constitute an element of importance. They claim to be of French +descent, and are known in the Archipelago as Franks, and during the war +of independence they claimed the protection of the French Government. +In former times nearly the whole of the land was held by these Franks, +who had taken possession of it during the Middle Ages, and these large +estates are made to account for the sparse population of Naxos, which +supported a hundred thousand inhabitants formerly, but is now hardly +able to support one-seventh that number. + +The Cyclades are farther removed from the coast of Greece than Eubœa, +and they have not always shared in the historical dramas enacted +upon the neighbouring continent. Their position in the centre of the +Archipelago naturally caused them to be visited by all the nations +navigating the Mediterranean, and their inhabitants were thus subjected +to the most diverse influences. In ancient times the mariners of +Asia Minor and of Phœnicia called at the Cyclades on their voyages +to Greece; during the Middle Ages the Byzantines, the Crusaders, the +Venetians, the Genoese, the Knights of Rhodes, and the Osmanli were +masters {74} there in turn; and in our own days the nations of Western +Europe, with the Greeks themselves, hold the preponderance in the +Archipelago. + +These historical vicissitudes have caused the centre of gravity of +the Cyclades to be shifted from island to island. In the time of the +ancient Greeks, Delos, the island of Apollo, was looked upon as the +“holy land,” where merchants congregated from all quarters, carried +on business in the shadow of sanctuaries, and held slave markets at +the side of the temples. The sale of human flesh became in the end the +main feature of the commerce of Delos, and in the time of the Roman +emperors as many as ten thousand slaves were bartered away there in a +single day. But the markets, the temples, and monuments of Delos have +vanished, and its stony soil supports now only a few sheep. During the +Middle Ages Naxos enjoyed the predominance; and at present, Tinos, with +its venerated church of the Panagia and its thousands of pilgrims, is +the “holy land” of the Archipelago; whilst Hermopolis, on Syra, though +without trees or water, holds the position of commercial metropolis of +the Cyclades. The latter was a town of no importance before the war of +independence; but it remained neutral during that struggle, and thus +attracted numerous refugees from other islands, and, thanks to its +central position, it has since become the principal mart, dockyard, and +naval station of the Ægean Sea. Whether travellers proceed to Saloniki, +Smyrna, Constantinople, or the Black Sea, they must stop at Hermopolis. +The town formerly occupied the heights only, for fear of pirates, +but it has descended now to the foot of the hill, and its quays and +warehouses extend along the seashore. + +Commerce has peopled the naked rocks of Syra, but it has not yet +succeeded in developing the resources of the Archipelago as in ancient +times. Eubœa is no longer “rich in cattle,” as its name implies, and +only exports corn, wine, fruit, and the lignite extracted from the +mines near Kumi. The gardens of Naxos yield oranges, lemons, and +citrons; Scopelos, Andros, and Tinos, the latter one of the best +cultivated amongst the islands, export wines, which are excelled, +however, by those of Santorin, the Calliste of the earliest Greeks. +The volcanic and other islands of the Cyclades export millstones, +china clay, lavas, and cimolite, this being used in bleaching. Naxos +exports emery, and that is all. The marbles of Paros even remain +untouched, and the excellent harbour of that island only rarely sees +a vessel. The inhabitants of the Cyclades confine themselves to the +cultivation of the soil, and to the breeding of a few silkworms, the +surplus population of Tinos, Siphnos, and others emigrating annually +to Constantinople, Smyrna, or Greece, to work as labourers, cooks, +potters, masons, or sculptors. But whilst some of the islands can +boast of a surplus population, there are others which are the abode +of a few herdsmen only. Most of the islands between Naxos and Amorgos +are hardly more than barren rocks. Antimilos, like Delos, is merely +a pasture-ground sown over with rocks. Seriphos and Giura are still +dreary solitudes, as in the time of the Roman emperors, when they +were set aside as places of exile. Seriphos, however, possesses iron +of excellent quality, and may, in consequence, again become of some +importance. On Antiparos there are lead mines. {75} + + +V.—THE IONIAN ISLES. + +The island of Corfu, on the coast of Epirus, and the whole of the +Archipelago to the west of continental and peninsular Greece, down to +the island of Cythera, which divides the waters of the Ionian Sea from +those of the Ægean, have passed through the most singular political +vicissitudes in the course of the last century. Corfu, thanks to +the protection extended to it by the Venetian Republic, is the only +dependency of the Balkan peninsula which successfully resisted the +assaults of the Turk. When Venice was handed over to the Austrians +by Bonaparte in 1797, Corfu and the Ionian Islands were occupied by +the French. A few years afterwards the Russians became the virtual +masters in these islands, which they formed into a sort of aristocratic +republic under the suzerainty of the Porte. In 1807 the French once +more took possession of them; but the English captured one after the +other until there remained to them only Corfu, and this, too, had to +be given up in 1814. The Ionian Islands were then converted into a +“Septinsular Republic,” governed by the landed aristocracy, supported +by British bayonets. Twice did England alter the constitution of this +republic in a democratic sense, but the patriotism of the islanders +refused to submit to British suzerainty; and, when Great Britain parted +with her conquest, the Ionian Islands annexed themselves to Greece, +and they now form the best educated, the wealthiest, and the most +industrious portion of that kingdom. England, no doubt, consulted her +own interests when she set free her Ionian subjects; but her action is +nevertheless deserving of approbation. England exhibited her faith in +the axiom that moral influence is superior to brute force, and yielded +with perfect good grace, not only the commercial ports of the islands, +but likewise the citadel of Corfu, which gave her the command of the +Adriatic. This magnanimous policy has not hitherto met with imitators +in other countries, but England herself has still many opportunities of +applying it in other parts of the world. + +Corfu, the ancient Corcyra, has always held the foremost place amongst +the Ionian Islands. It owes this position to the vicinity of Italy, +and to the commercial advantages derived from an excellent port and +a vast roadstead almost resembling an inland lake. The inhabitants +are fond of appealing to Thucydides in order to prove that Corfu +is the island of the Phæaces of Ulysses. They even pretend to have +discovered the rivulet in which beauteous Nausicaa washed the linen +of her father, and the shaded walks near the city are known by them +as the gardens of Alcinous. Corfu is the only one of the islands +which can boast of a small perennial stream, the Messongi, which is +navigable for a short distance in barges. The hills, which are placed +like a screen in front of the plains of the Epirus, are exposed to +the full force of the south-westerly winds, which bring much rain; +the vegetation, consequently, is rich: orange and lemon trees form +fragrant groves around the city, vines and olive-trees hide the barren +ground of the hills, and waving fields of corn cover the plains. +Corfu, unfortunately, is exposed to the hot sirocco, blowing from the +south-east, and this very much curtails its advantages as a winter +station for invalids. {76} + +The city occupies a triangular peninsula opposite the coast of the +Epirus, and is the largest, and commercially the most important, of +the former republic. It is strongly fortified, and its successive +possessors—Venetians, French, Russians, and English—have sought to +render it impregnable. A beautiful prospect may be enjoyed from its +bastions; but far superior is that from Mount Pantokratoros, the +“commandant,” for it extends across the Strait of Otranto to Italy. +The commercial relations with the latter, as well as the traditions +of Venetian dominion, have converted Corfu into a city almost half +Italian, and numerous families residing in it belong to both nations, +the Greek and the Italian, by descent as well as language. Italian +remained the official language of the island until 1830. Maltese +porters and gardeners constitute a prominent element amongst the +cosmopolitan population of the city. + +[Illustration: Fig. 25.—CORFU.] + +Corfu formerly owned the town of Butrinto and a few villages on the +mainland; but an English governor thought fit to surrender them to the +terrible Ali Pasha, {77} and the only dependencies of Corfu at present +are the small islets near it, viz. Othonus (Fano), Salmastraci, and +Ericusa, in the north; Paxos, with its caverns, and Antipaxos, the +rocks of which exude asphalt, on the south. Paxos is said to produce +the best oil in Western Greece. + +Leucadia, Cephalonia, Ithaca, Zante, and a few smaller islands, form +a crescent-shaped archipelago off the entrance to the Gulf of Patras. +They are the summits of a half-submerged chain of calcareous mountains, +alternately flooded by the rains or scorched by the sun. Their valleys, +like those of Corfu, produce oranges, lemons, currants (“Corinthians”), +wine, and oil, which form the objects of a brisk commerce. The +inhabitants very much resemble those of Corfu, the Italian element +being strongly represented, except on Ithaca. + +[Illustration: Fig. 26.—THE CHANNEL OF SANTA MAURA. + +From the French Staff Map. + +Scale 1 : 200,000.] + +Leucadia, or the “white island,” thus called because of its glittering +chalk cliffs, is evidently a dependency of the continent. The ancients +looked upon it as a peninsula converted into an island by Corinthian +colonists, who cut a canal through the isthmus which joined it to the +mainland; but this legend is not borne out by an examination of the +locality. These Corinthians probably merely dug a navigable channel +through the shallow lagoon which separates the island from the coast, +and does not exceed eighteen inches in depth. In fact, if there were +any tides in the Ionian Sea, the island of Leucadia would be converted +twice daily into a peninsula. A bridge, of which there still exist +considerable remains, formerly joined the island to the mainland near +the southern extremity of the lagoon, whilst an island occupied by the +citadel of Santa Maura—a name sometimes applied to the whole of the +island—defended its entrance to the north. {78} Until recently this +was the only spot in Western Greece where a grove of date-trees might +be seen. A magnificent aqueduct of two hundred and sixty arches, which +was also used as a viaduct, joined the citadel to Amaxiki, the chief +town and harbour of Leucadia. This monument of Turkish enterprise—it +was constructed in the reign of Bajazet—has sustained much injury from +earthquakes. Amaxiki might be supposed to be haunted by fever, owing +to the salt swamps and lagoons which surround it; but such is not the +case: on the contrary, it is a comparatively healthy town, and its +women are noted for freshness of complexion and beauty. To the south +of it rise the wooded mountains which terminate in the promontory +of Leucate (Dukato), opposite to Cephalonia. On the summit of this +promontory stood a temple of Apollo, whence, at the annual festival of +the god, a condemned criminal was hurled as an expiatory victim. It was +celebrated, also, as the lover’s leap, whence lovers leaped into the +sea to drown their passion. + +Cephalonia, or rather Cephallenia, is the largest of the Ionian +Islands, and its highest summit—Mount Ænus, or Elato—is the culminating +point of the entire Archipelago. Mariners from the centre of the Ionian +Sea can see at one and the same time Mount Ætna in Sicily and this +mountain of Cephalonia. The forests of conifers, to which the latter +is indebted for its Italian name of Montenero, have for the greater +part been destroyed by fire, but there still remain a few clumps of +magnificent firs. On its summit may be seen the remains of a temple of +Jupiter. The island is fertile and populous, but suffers much from want +of water. All its rivers dry up in summer, the calcareous soil sucking +up the rain, and most of the springs rise from the bottom of the sea, +far away from the fields thirsting after water. On the other hand, two +considerable streams of sea-water find their way into the bowels of the +island. + +This curious phenomenon occurs a short distance to the north of +Argostoli, a bustling town, having a safe but shallow harbour. The +two oceanic rivers are sufficiently powerful to set in motion the +huge wheels of two mills, one of which has been regularly at work +since 1835, and the other since 1859. Their combined discharge amounts +to 35,000,000 gallons daily, and naturalists have not yet decided +whether they form a vast subterranean lake, in which beds of salt are +constantly being deposited, or whether they find their way through +numerous threads, and, by hydrostatic aspiration, into the subterranean +rivers of the island, rendering their water brackish. The latter is +the opinion of Wiebel, the geologist, and thus much we may assume for +certain—that these subterranean waters and caverns are one of the +principal causes of the severe earthquakes which visit Cephalonia so +frequently. The island of Asteris, between Cephalonia and Ithaca, upon +which stood the city of Alalkomenæ, exists no longer, and was probably +destroyed by one of those earthquakes. + +Ithaca of “divine Ulysses,” the modern Theaki, is separated from +Cephalonia by the narrow channel of Viscardo, thus named after Robert +Guiscard. The island is small, and all the sites referred to in the +Odyssey are still pointed out there, from the spring of Arethusa to the +acropolis of Ulysses; but the black forests which clothed the slopes of +Mount Neritus have disappeared. The inhabitants are {79} excessively +proud of their little island, rendered so famous by the poetry of +Homer, and in every family we meet with a Penelope, a Ulysses, and a +Telemachus. But the present inhabitants have no claim whatever to be +the descendants of the crafty son of Laertes, for during the Middle +Ages their ancestors were exterminated by invaders, and in 1504 the +deserted fields were given, by the Senate of Venice, to colonists drawn +from the mainland. Most of those immigrants came from the Epirus, and +the dialect spoken by the islanders is much mixed with Albanian words. +At the present time the island is well cultivated, and Vathy, its chief +port, carries on a brisk commerce in raisins, currants, oil, and wine. +Ithaca, as in the days of Homer, is the “nurse of valiant men.” The +inhabitants are tall and strong, and Dr. Schliemann is enthusiastic +about the high standard of virtue and morality prevailing amongst them. +There are neither rich nor poor, but they are great travellers, and +natives of Ithaca are met with in every populous city of the East. + +[Illustration: Fig. 27.—ARGOSTOLI. + +According to Wiebel. + +Scale 1 : 78,000.] + +“Zante, fior del Levante,” say the Italians. And, indeed, this +ancient island, Zacynthus, is richer in orchards, fields, and villas +than any other of this Archipelago. An extensive plain, bounded by +ranges of hills, occupies the centre of this “golden isle”—a vast +garden, abounding in vines, yielding currants of superior quality. +The inhabitants are industrious, and not content with cultivating +their own fields, they assist also in the cultivation of those of +Acarnania, receiving wages or a share of the produce in return. The +city of Zante, on the eastern coast of the island, facing Elis, is the +wealthiest and cleanest town in the Archipelago. {80} Unfortunately +it suffers frequently from earthquakes, to which a volcanic origin is +ascribed. Nor is this improbable, for bituminous springs rise near the +south-eastern cape of the island, and though worked since the days of +Herodotus, they still yield about a hundred barrels of pitch annually. +Oil springs discharge themselves close to the shore, and even at the +bottom of the sea; and near Cape Skinari, in the north, a kind of rank +grease floats on the surface of the waters. + +The only islets dependent upon Zante are the Strivali, or the +Strophades, to which flew the hideous harpies of ancient mythology.[19] + + +VI.—THE PRESENT AND THE FUTURE OF GREECE. + +The Greeks, although they have not altogether fulfilled the +expectations of Philhellenes, have nevertheless made great strides in +advance since they have thrown off the yoke of the Turks. The deeds +of valour performed during the war of independence recalled the days +of Marathon and Platæa; but it was wrong to expect that a short time +would suffice to raise modern Greece to the intellectual and artistic +level of the generation which gave birth to an Aristotle and a +Phidias. Nor can we expect that a nation should throw off, in a single +generation, the evil habits engendered during an age of servitude, +and digest at once the scientific conquests made in the course of +twenty centuries. We should likewise bear in mind that the population +of Greece is small, and that it is thinly scattered over a barren +mountain region. The numerous ports, no doubt, offer great facilities +for commerce, nor have their inhabitants failed to avail themselves +of them; but there is hardly a country in Europe which offers equal +obstacles to a development of its agricultural and industrial +resources. The construction of roads, owing to the mountains, meets +with difficulties everywhere, whilst the blue sea invites its beholders +to distant climes and commercial expeditions. No immigration from the +neighbouring Turkish provinces has consequently taken place, whilst +many Hellenes, and more especially natives of the Ionian Islands and +the Cyclades, annually seek their fortune in Constantinople, Cairo, +and even distant India. Men of enterprise leave the country, and there +remains behind only a horde of intriguers, who look upon politics as +a lucrative business, and an army of government officials, who depend +upon the favour of a minister for future promotion. This state of +affairs explains the singular fact that the most prosperous Greek +communities exist beyond the borders of the kingdom of Greece. These +foreign communities are better and more liberally governed than those +at home. In spite of the Pasha, who enjoys the right of supervision, +the administration of the smallest Greek {81} community in Thracia or +Macedonia might serve as a pattern to the independent and sovereign +kingdom of Greece. Every one there takes an interest in the prosperity +of the commonwealth; but in Greece a rapacious bureaucracy takes care +only of its own advancement, the electors are bribed, and the expenses +thus illegally incurred are recovered by illegal exactions and robbery, +such as have prevailed for many years. + +The actual population of Greece may amount to 1,500,000 souls; that +is to say, it includes about two-fifths of all the Greeks residing +in Europe and Asia. The population is less dense than in any other +country of Europe, including Turkey. Greece, at the epoch of its +greatest prosperity, is said to have supported 6,000,000 or 7,000,000 +inhabitants. Attica was ten times more populous at that time, and many +islands which now support only a few herdsmen could then boast of +populous towns. Sites of ancient cities abound on the barren plateaux, +on the banks of the smallest rivulet, and crown every promontory +throughout the ancient countries of the Hellenes, from Cyprus to Corfu, +and from Thasos to Crete. + +The country, however, is being gradually repeopled. Before the war +of independence, the population, including the Ionian Islands, +amounted, perhaps, to 1,000,000; but battles and massacres diminished +it considerably, and in 1832 the number of inhabitants was 950,000 +at most. Since that epoch there has been an annual increase varying +between 9,000 and 14,000 souls. This increase, however, is spread +very unequally over the country. The towns increase rapidly, but +several islands, and more especially Andros, Santorin, Hydra, Zante, +and Leucadia, lose more inhabitants by emigration than they gain +by an excess of births over deaths. The swamp fevers prevailing in +continental Greece much retard the increase of population. Naturally +the climate is exceedingly salubrious, but the water, in many +localities, has been permitted to collect into pestilential swamps, +and the draining of these and their cultivation would not only add +to the wealth of the country, but would likewise free it from a dire +plague.[20] + +Unfortunately agriculture progresses but slowly in Greece, and its +produce is not even sufficient to support the population, still less +to supply articles for export. And yet the cultivable soil of Greece +is admirably suited to the growth of vines, fruits, cotton, tobacco, +and madder. Figs and oranges are delicious; the wines of Santorin and +the Cyclades are amongst the finest produced in the Mediterranean; the +oil of Attica is as superior now as when Athene planted the sacred +olive-tree; {82} but, excepting a little cotton grown in Phthiotis, +and the raisins known as currants or Corinthians, which are exported +from the Ionian Islands and Patras to the annual value of about +£1,500,000, agriculture contributes but little towards the exports. One +of the principal articles is the valonia, a species of acorn picked up +in the forests, and used by tanners. + +In a country so far behindhand in agriculture manufactures cannot be +expected to flourish. All manufactured articles have consequently to +be imported from abroad, and especially from England. Greece does not +even possess tools to work its famous marble quarries, though they +are richer than those of Carrara. There is only one metallurgical +establishment in the whole of the kingdom—that of Laurion. The ancients +had been working argentiferous lead mines in that part of the country +for centuries, and vast masses of unexhausted slag had accumulated +near them. This waste is now being scientifically treated in the +smelting-works of Ergastiria, and nearly ten thousand tons of lead, and +a considerable quantity of silver, are produced there annually. Quite a +brisk little town has arisen near the works, and its harbour is one of +the busiest in all Greece. But the founders of this flourishing concern +had to struggle against jealousies, and the “Laurion question” nearly +embroiled the Governments of France and Italy with Greece.[21] + +The Greeks do not support themselves by agriculture, nor can they boast +of manufactories, and they would be doomed to starvation if they did +not maintain six thousand vessels acting in the lucrative business of +ocean carriers throughout the Mediterranean. This Greek mercantile +marine is superior to that of Russia, almost equal to that of Austria, +and six times larger than that of Belgium, and we should bear in mind +that many vessels sailing under Turkish colours are actually owned by +Greeks. The ancient instinct of the race comes out strongly in this +coast navigation. The large fleets of swift ocean steamers belong to +the powerful companies of the West, and the Greeks are content to sail +in small vessels suited to the requirements of the coasting trade, +which hardly ever extend their voyages beyond the limits of the ancient +Greek world. None can compete with them as regards low freight, for +every sailor has an interest in the cargo, and all of them are anxious +to increase the profits. One may have furnished the wood, another the +rigging, a third a portion of the cargo, whilst their fellow-citizens +have advanced money for the purchase of merchandise, without requiring +any bond except their word of honour. On many of these vessels all are +partners, all work alike, and share in the proceeds of the venture. + +But, whatever the sobriety and intelligence of these Greek mariners, +they cannot escape the fate which has overtaken the small trader and +the handicraftsman throughout the world. The cheap vessels of the +Greeks may be able to contend for a long time against the steamers of +powerful companies, but in the end they must succumb. The country will +lose its place amongst the commercial nations of the world unless its +agricultural and industrial resources are quickly developed, {83} and +railways are constructed to convey the products of the interior to the +sea-coast. Greece, even now, has only a few carriage roads, not so +much because the mountains offer insurmountable obstacles, but because +its heedless inhabitants are content with the facilities for transport +offered by the sea. It would be impossible in our day to travel from +the Pylos to Lacedæmon in a chariot, as was done by Telemachus; for the +road connecting these places leads along precipices and over dangerous +goat paths. Greece and Servia are the European states which remained +longest without a railway, and even now the former is content with a +short line connecting Athens with its harbour. It has certainly been +proposed to construct several lines of the utmost importance, but, +owing to the bankrupt condition of the Greek exchequer, these works +have not yet been begun. The public income is not sufficient to meet +the expenditure, the debt exceeds £15,000,000, and the interest on the +loans remains unpaid.[22] + +The poverty of the majority of the inhabitants of Greece is equal to +that of the State. The peasants are impoverished by the payment of +tithes, and of a Government impost double or even treble their amount. +Though naturally very temperate, they are hardly able to sustain life; +they dwell in unwholesome dens, and are frequently unable to put by +sufficient means for the purchase of clothing and other necessaries. +The young men of the poorest districts of Greece thus find themselves +forced to emigrate in large numbers, either for a season or for an +indefinite period. Arcadia may be likened in this respect to Auvergne, +to Savoy, and to other mountain countries of Central Europe. The +Ætolians, however, exchange their fine savage valleys for foreign +cities only very reluctantly, though they, too, suffer intensely from +the weight of taxation. In ancient times, before their spirit was +broken by servitude, they would have resisted the tax-gatherer with +arms in their hands. They now content themselves with sallying forth +from their villages, in order to pile up a heap of stones by the side +of the high-road, as a testimony of the injustice with which they have +been treated. This heap of stones is _anathema_. Every peasant passing +it religiously adds a stone to this mute monument of execration, and +the earth, the common mother of all, is thus charged with the task of +vengeance. + +Ignorance, the usual attendant of poverty, is great in the rural +districts of Greece, and especially in those difficult of access. +In Greece, as in Albania and Montenegro, they believe in perfidious +nymphs, who secure the affections of young men, and then drag them +down below the water; they believe in vampyres, in the evil eye +and witchcraft. But the Greeks are an inquiring race, anxious to +learn, in spite of their poverty. The peasant of Ithaca will stop +a traveller of education on the road, in order that he may read to +him the poetry of Homer. Elementary schools have been established in +nearly every village, in spite of the poverty of the Government. If +no school buildings can be secured, the classes meet in the open air. +The scholars, far from playing truant, hardly raise their eyes from +the books to notice a passing stranger or the flight of a bird. The +scholars in the superior schools and at the University of Athens are +equally {84} conscientious and assiduous. It may be that some of them +merely aspire to become orators, but they certainly do not resort to a +city on the pretence of study, whilst in reality they yield themselves +up to debauchery. Amongst the students of the University of Athens +there are many who work half the night at some handicraft, others who +hire themselves out as servants or coachmen, to enable them to pursue +their studies as lawyers or physicians. + +This love of study cannot fail to secure to the Greek nation an +intellectual influence far greater than could be looked for from the +smallness of its numbers. The Greeks of the East, moreover, look upon +Athens as their intellectual centre, whither they send their sons in +pursuit of knowledge. They found scholarships in connection with the +schools of Athens, and largely contribute towards their support. And +it is not only the rich Greek merchants of Trieste, Saloniki, Smyrna, +Marseilles, and London who are thus mindful of the true interests of +their native country, but peasants of Thracia and Macedonia, too, +devote their savings to the promotion of public education. The people +themselves support their schools and museums, and pay their professors. +The Academy of Athens, the Polytechnic School, the University, and +the Arsakeion, an excellent ladies’ college—these all owe their +existence to the zeal of Greek citizens, and not to the Government. It +may readily be understood from this how carefully these institutions +are being watched by the entire nation, and how salutary must be the +influence of young men and women returning to their native provinces +after they have been educated at them. + +It is thus a common language, common traditions, and a common hope +for the future that have made a nation of the Greeks in spite of +treaties. Greek patriotism is not confined to the narrow limits laid +down by diplomacy. Whether they reside in Greece proper, in European or +Asiatic Turkey, the Greeks feel as one people, and they lead a common +national life independently of the Governments of Constantinople and +Athens. Nay, amongst the Greeks dwelling in foreign lands this feeling +of nationality is, perhaps, most intense, for they are not exposed to +the corrupting influence of a bureaucracy. They have more carefully +guarded the traditions and practices of municipal government, and +are practically in the enjoyment of greater individual liberty. The +Greek nation, in its entirety, numbers close upon 4,000,000 souls. Its +power, already considerable, is growing from day to day, and is sure to +exercise a potent influence upon the destinies of Mediterranean Europe. + +We are told sometimes that community of religion might induce the +Greeks to favour Russian ambition, and to open to that power the road +to Constantinople. Nothing can be further from the truth. The Hellenes +will never sacrifice their own interests to those of the foreigner. Nor +do there exist between Greece and Russia those natural ties which alone +give birth to true alliances. Climate, geographical position, history, +commerce, and, above all, a common civilisation, attach Greece to that +group of European nations known as Greco-Latin. In tripartite Europe +the Greeks will never range themselves by the side of the Slav, but +will be found amongst the Latin nations of Italy, France, and Spain. + +[Illustration: TURKEY IN EUROPE and GREECE + +By E. G. Ravenstein, F.R.G.S. + +Scale 1 : 5,000,000.] + +{85} + + +VII.—GOVERNMENT AND POLITICAL DIVISIONS. + +The protecting powers have bestowed upon Greece a parliamentary and +constitutional Government, modelled upon West European patterns. +Theoretically the King of the Greeks reigns, but does not govern, and +his ministers are responsible to the Chambers, whose majority changes +with the fluctuations of public opinion. In reality, however, the +power of the King is limited only by diplomacy. Nor do those Western +institutions respond to the traditions and the genius of the Greeks, +and although the charter has been modified three times since the +declaration of independence, it has never been strictly adhered to. + +In accordance with the constitution of 1864, every Greek citizen +possessing any property whatever, or exercising a profession, has a +right to vote on attaining his twenty-fifth year, and becomes eligible +as a deputy at thirty. The deputies, one hundred and eighty-seven in +number, are elected for four years, and are paid for their services. +The civil list of the King, inclusive of a subvention granted by the +protecting powers, amounts to £46,000 a year. + +The orthodox Greek Church of Hellas is independent of the Patriarch +of Constantinople. It is governed by a Holy Synod, sitting in the +capital, and presided over by an archbishop as metropolitan. A royal +commissioner is present at the meetings of the Synod, and countersigns +every proposition that is carried. Decisions not bearing this official +signature are void. The King, on the other hand, is permitted to +dethrone or remove a bishop only by consent of the Synod, and in +accordance with the canon law. The constitution guarantees religious +liberty, but this official Church nevertheless exercises considerable +powers, and frequently calls upon the civil authorities to give force +to its decrees. The Synod carefully watches over the observance of +religious dogmas; it points out to the authorities heretical or +heterodox preachers and writers, and demands their suppression; +exercises a censorship over books and religious pictures; and calls +upon the civil tribunals to punish offenders. + +There are no longer any Mohammedans in Greece, except sailors or +travellers, and the last Turk has quitted Eubœa. The only Church +besides the established one which can boast a considerable number of +adherents is the Roman Catholic. It prevails amongst the middle classes +on Naxos, and on several others of the Cyclades, and is governed by two +archbishops and four bishops. + +Greece is divided into thirteen nomes, or nomarchies, and these, again, +into fifty-nine eparchies. Each eparchy is subdivided into districts, +or dimes (dimarchies), and the latter into parishes, governed by +paredres, or assistant dimarchs. These officials are appointed by the +King, and are in receipt of small emoluments. The number of officials +is proportionately greater in Greece than in any other part of Europe. +They form the sixtieth part, or, including their families, the twelfth +part of the population, and although their pay is small, they swallow +up between them more than half the public income. {86} + +The thirteen nomes and fifty-nine eparchies of Greece, with their +population in 1870:― + + Eparchies. Population. + + Mantinea 46,174 + Kynuria 26,733 + Gartynia 41,408 + Megalopolis 17,425 + ─────── + Arkadia 131,740 + ═══════ + + Lakedæmon 46,423 + Gythion 13,957 + Itylos (Œtylos) 26,540 + Epidauros Limera 18,931 + ─────── + Lakonia 105,851 + ═══════ + + Kalamæ 25,029 + Messini 29,529 + Pylia 20,946 + Triphylia 29,041 + Olympia 25,872 + ─────── + Messenia 130,417 + ═══════ + + Nauplia 15,022 + Argos 22,138 + Korinthia 42,803 + Spetsæ and Hermionis 19,919 + Hydra and Trizinia 17,301 + Kythyra 10,637 + ─────── + Argolis and Korinthia 127,820 + ═══════ + + Syros 30,643 + Koa 8,687 + Andros 19,674 + Tinos 11,022 + Naxos 20,582 + Thira (Thera, Santorin) 21,901 + Milos 10,784 + ─────── + Kyklades 123,293 + ═══════ + + Attiki 76,919 + Ægina 6,103 + Megaris 14,949 + Thiva (Thebæ) 20,711 + Livadia 18,122 + ─────── + Attiki and Viotia (Bœotia) 136,804 + ═══════ + + Khalkis 29,013 + Xerochorion 11,215 + Karystia 33,936 + Skopelos 8,377 + ─────── + Euvia (Eubœa) 82,541 + ═══════ + + Phthiotis 26,747 + Parnasis 20,368 + Lokris 20,187 + Doris 49,119 + ─────── + Phthiotis and Phokis 106,421 + ═══════ + + Mesolongion (Missolonghi) 18,997 + Valtos 14,027 + Trichonia 14,453 + Evrytania 33,018 + Navpaktia 22,219 + Vonitza and Xeromeros 18,979 + ─────── + Akarnania and Ætolia 121,693 + ═══════ + + Patras 46,527 + Ægialia 12,764 + Kalavryta 39,204 + Ilia (Elis) 51,066 + ─────── + Achaia and Ilis (Elis) 149,561 + ═══════ + + Kerkyra (Corfu) 25,729 + Mesi 21,754 + Oros 24,983 + Paxi (Paxos) 3,582 + Leucas (Santa Maura) 20,892 + ─────── + Kerkyra (Corfu) 96,940 + ═══════ + + Kranæa 33,358 + Pali 17,377 + Sami 16,774 + Itaki 9,873 + ─────── + Kephallinia 77,382 + ═══════ + + Zakynthos (Zante) 44,557 + +The modern nomenclature has been adopted in the above table. + +[Illustration] + +{87} + +[Illustration] + + + + +TURKEY IN EUROPE.[23] + + +I.—GENERAL ASPECTS. + +The Balkan peninsula is, perhaps, that amongst the three great +peninsulas of Southern Europe which enjoys the greatest natural +advantages, and occupies the most favourable geographical position. +In its outline it is far less unwieldy than Spain, and even surpasses +Italy in variety of contour. Its coasts are washed by four seas; they +abound in gulfs, harbours, and peninsulas, and are fringed by numerous +islands. Several of its valleys and plains vie in fertility with the +banks of the Guadalquivir and the plains of Lombardy. The floras +of two climes intermingle on its soil, and add their charms to the +landscape. The mountains of Turkey do not yield to those of the two +other peninsulas in graceful outline or grandeur, and most of them are +still covered with virgin forests. If they are less accessible than the +Apennines of Italy or the _sierras_ of Spain, that is owing simply to +the want of roads; for they are, as a rule, of moderate elevation, and +the plateaux from which they rise are narrower and more extensively +intersected by valleys than is the table-land of Castile. Both Spain +and Italy are closed in the north by mountain barriers difficult to +cross, whilst the Balkan peninsula joins the continental trunk by +almost imperceptible transitions, and nowhere is it separated from it +by well-defined natural boundaries. The Austrian Alps extend without +a break into Bosnia, and the Carpathians cross the Danube in order to +effect a junction with the system of the Balkan. To the east of the +“Iron Gate” there are no mountains at all, and Turkey is bounded there +by the broad valley of the Danube. {88} + +The proximity and parallelism of the coasts of two continents confer +upon the Balkan peninsula an advantage unrivalled, perhaps, throughout +the world. It is separated from Asia only by the narrow channel which +joins the Black Sea to the Ægean Sea: this channel is an ocean highway, +and yet forms no serious obstacle to the migration of nations from +continent to continent. If the Black Sea were larger than it is at +present; if it still formed _one_ sea with the Caspian, and extended +far into Asia, as it did in a past age, then Constantinople would +necessarily become the great centre of the ancient world. That proud +position was actually held by it a thousand years ago, and even if it +should never recover it, its geographical position alone insures to +it an importance for all time to come. If the city were to be razed +to day, it would arise again to-morrow at some other spot in the +neighbourhood. In the dawn of history powerful Ilion kept watch at the +entrance of the Dardanelles: it survives in the city on the Bosphorus; +and had there been no Byzantium, its mantle would have descended upon +some other town in the same locality. + +We know the part played by ancient Greece in the history of human +culture. Macedonia and Thracia, the two other countries bordering upon +the Ægean, have played their part too. It was those provinces which, +after the invasion of the Persians, gave birth to the movement of +reaction which led the armies of Alexander to the Euphrates and Indus. +The power of the Romans survived there for a thousand years after Rome +itself had fallen, and the precious germs of civilisation, which at +a later period regenerated Western Europe, were nurtured there. It +is true, alas ! that the Turk has put a stop to every enterprise of +a civilising nature. These conquerors of Turanian race were carried +into the Balkan peninsula in the course of a general migration of +nations towards the west, which went on for three thousand years, and +was attended by perpetual broils. It is now five hundred years since +the Turks obtained a footing in the peninsula, and for more than four +hundred years they have been its masters, and during that long period +the old Roman empire of the East has been severed, as it were, from +the rest of Europe. The normal progress of these highly favoured +countries has been interrupted by incessant wars between Christians +and Mohammedans, by the decay of the nations conquered or enslaved by +the Turks, and by the heedless fatalism of the masters of the country. +But the time is approaching when that important portion of Europe will +resume the position due to it amongst the countries of the earth. + +Vast tracts of the Balkan peninsula are hardly better known to us than +the wilds of Africa. Kanitz found rivers, hills, and mountains figuring +upon our maps which have no existence. Another traveller, Lejean, +found that a pretended low pass through the Balkans existed only in +the imagination. Russian geodesists engaged upon the measurement of an +arc of a meridian found that Sofia, one of the largest and best-known +cities of Turkey, had been inserted upon the best maps at a distance +of nearly a day’s journey from its true position. The entire chain of +the Balkans had to be shifted considerably to the south, in consequence +of explorations carried on within the last few years. Men of science +have hardly ventured yet to explore the plateaux of Albania or Mount +Pindus, and much remains yet to {89} be done before our knowledge of +the topography of the Balkan peninsula can be called even moderately +complete. The voyages and explorations of a host of travellers[24] +have, however, made known to us its general features and its geological +formations. Their task was by no means an easy one, for the mountain +masses and mountain chains of the peninsula do not constitute a +regular, well-defined system. There is no central range, with spurs +running out on both sides, and gradually decreasing in height as they +approach the plains. Nor is the centre of the peninsula its most +elevated portion, for the culminating summits are dispersed over the +country apparently without order. The mountain ranges run in all the +directions of the compass, and we can only say, in a general way, that +those of Western Turkey run parallel with the Adriatic and Ionian +coasts, whilst those in the east meet the coasts of the Black Sea and +the Ægean at right angles. The relief of the soil and the water-sheds +make it appear almost as if Turkey turned her back upon continental +Europe. Its highest mountains, its most extensive table-lands, and its +most inaccessible forests lie towards the west and north-west, as if +they were intended to cut it off from the shores of the Adriatic and +the plains of Hungary, whilst all its rivers, whether they run to the +north, east, or south, finally find their way into the Black Sea or the +Ægean, whose shores face those of Asia. + +This irregularity in the distribution of the mountains has its +analogue in the distribution of the various races which inhabit the +peninsula. The invaders or peaceful colonists, whether they came +across the straits from Asia Minor, or along the valley of the Danube +from Scythia, soon found themselves scattered in numerous valleys, or +stopped by amphitheatres having no outlet. They failed to find their +way in this labyrinth of mountains, and members of the most diverse +races settled down in proximity to each other, and frequently came into +conflict. The most numerous, the most warlike, or the most industrious +races gradually extended their power at the expense of their +neighbours; and the latter, defeated in the struggle for existence, +have been scattered into innumerable fragments, between which there is +no longer any cohesion. Hungary has a homogeneous population, if we +compare it with that of Turkey; for in the latter country there are +districts where eight or ten different nationalities live side by side +within a radius of a few miles. + +Time, however, has brought some order into this chaos, and commercial +intercourse has done much to assimilate these various races. Speaking +broadly, Turkey in Europe may now be said to be divided into four +great ethnological zones. The Greeks occupy Crete, the islands of +the Archipelago, the shores of the Ægean Sea, and the eastern slopes +of Mounts Pindus and Olympus; the Albanians hold the country between +the Adriatic and Mount Pindus; the Slavs, including Servians, Croats, +Bosnians, Herzegovinians, and Tsernagorans (Montenegrins), occupy +the Illyrian Alps, towards the north-west; whilst the slopes of the +Balkan, the Despoto Dagh, and the plains of Eastern Turkey belong to +the Bulgarians, who, as far as language goes, are Slavs likewise. As +to the Turks, the lords of the land, {90} they are to be met with in +most places, and particularly in the large towns and fortresses; but +the only portion of the country which they occupy to the exclusion of +other races is the north-eastern corner of the peninsula, bounded by +the Balkans, the Danube, and the Black Sea. + + +II.—CRETE AND THE ISLANDS OF THE ARCHIPELAGO. + +Crete, next to Cyprus, is the largest island inhabited by Greeks. It is +a natural dependency of Greece, but treaties made without consulting +the wishes of the people have handed it over to the Turks. It is Greek +in spite of this, not only because the majority of its inhabitants +consider it to be so, but also because of its soil, its climate, and +its geographical position. On all sides it is surrounded by deep seas, +except towards the north-west, where a submarine plateau joins it to +Cythera and the Peloponnesus. + +There are few countries in the world more favoured by nature. Its +climate is mild, though sometimes too dry in summer; its soil fertile +in spite of the waters being swallowed up by the limestone rocks; +its harbours spacious and well sheltered; and its scenery exhibits +both grandeur and quiet beauty. The position of Crete, at the mouth +of the Archipelago, between Europe, Asia, and Africa, seems to have +destined that island to become the great commercial emporium of that +part of the world. Aristotle already observed this, and, if tradition +can be trusted, Crete actually held that position for more than three +thousand years. During that time it “ruled the waves;” the Cyclades +acknowledged the sway of Minos, its king; Cretan colonists established +themselves in Sicily; and Cretan vessels found their way to every part +of the Mediterranean. But the island unfortunately became divided into +innumerable small republics jealous of each other, and was therefore +unable to maintain this commercial supremacy in the face of Dorian and +other Greeks. At a subsequent period the Romans subjected the island, +and it never recovered its independence. Byzantines, Arabs, Venetians, +and Turks have held it in turn, and by each of them it has been laid +waste and impoverished. + +The elongated shape of the island, and the range of mountains which +runs through it from one extremity to the other, enable us to +understand how it was that at a time when most Greeks looked upon +the walls of their cities as synonymous with the limits of their +fatherland, Crete became divided into a multitude of small republics, +and how every attempt at federation (“syncretism”) miserably failed. +The inhabitants, in fact, were more effectually separated from each +other than if they had inhabited a number of small islands forming an +archipelago. Most of the coast valleys are enclosed by high mountains, +the only easy access to them being from the sea, and communications +between the towns occupying their centres are possible only by crossing +difficult mountain paths easily defended. In all Crete there exists +but one plain deserving the name, viz. that of Messara, to the south +of the central mass of mountains. It is the granary of the island, and +the Ieropotamo, or “holy river,” which traverses it, has a little water +even in the middle of summer. {91} + +The contour of Crete corresponds in a remarkable manner with the height +of its mountains. Where these are high, the island is broad; where +they sink down, it is narrow. In the centre of the island rises Mount +Ida (Psiloriti), where Jupiter was educated by the Corybantes, and +where his tomb was shown. Its lofty summit, covered with snow almost +throughout the year, its gigantic buttresses, and the verdant valleys +at its base render it one of the most imposing mountains in the world; +but it was still more magnificent in the time of the ancient Greeks, +when forests covered its slopes, and justified its being called Mount +Ida, or “the wooded.” On the summit of this mountain the whole island +lies spread out beneath our feet; the horizon towards the north, from +Mount Taygetus to the shores of Asia, is dotted with islands and +peninsulas; and in the south a wide expanse of water extends beyond the +barren and inhospitable island of Gaudo. + +[Illustration: Fig. 28.—THE GORGE OF HAGIO RUMELI.] + +The Leuca-Ori, or “White Mountains,” in the western extremity of the +island, are thus called on account of the snow which covers their +summits, or because {92} of their white limestone cliffs. They are +exceedingly steep, and perfectly bare, hardly any verdure being met +with even in the valleys at their foot. They are known, also, as the +Mountains of the Sphakiotes, the descendants of the ancient Dorians, +who have retired into their fastnesses, where they are protected by +nature against every attack. Some of their villages are accessible +only by following the stony bed of mountain torrents leaping down from +the heights in small cascades. During the rains the water rushes down +these ravines in mighty torrents. The “gates are closed” then, as it +is said. One of these gates, or _pharynghi_, is that of Hagio Rumeli, +on the southern slope of the Leuca-Ori. When rain threatens it is +dangerous to enter these gorges, for the waters rush down and carry +everything before them. During the war of independence the Turks vainly +endeavoured to force this “gate” of the strong mountain citadel. The +level pieces of ground on these heights are sufficiently extensive to +support a considerable population, if it were not for the cold. The +villages of Askyfo occupy one of these plains, which is surrounded on +all sides by an amphitheatre of mountains. In former times this cavity +was occupied by a lake. This is proved by ancient beaches and by other +evidence. But the waters of the lake found an outlet through some +katavothras (_khonos_, “sinks”) and discharged themselves into the sea. + +The remaining mountains of the island are less elevated and far less +sterile than the White Mountains. The most remarkable amongst them +are the Lasithi, and, still farther west, those of Dicte, or Sitia, a +sort of pendant to the Mountains of the Sphakiotes. Raised sea-beaches +have been traced along their northern slopes, covered with shells of +living species, and they prove that that portion of the island has been +upheaved more than sixty feet during a recent geological epoch. The +northern coast, between the White Mountains and Mount Dicte, offers a +greater variety of contour than does the south coast. Its capes, or +_acroteria_, project far into the sea, and thence are gulfs, bays, and +secure anchorages. For these reasons most commercial cities have been +built upon that side of the island, which faces the Archipelago and +presents a picture of life, whilst the south coast, facing Africa, is +comparatively deserted. All the modern cities on the northern coasts +have been built upon the sites of ancient ones. Megalokastron, better +known by its Italian name of Candia, is the Heracleum of the ancients, +the famous haven of Cnossus. Retimo, on the western front of Mount +Ida, is easily identified with the ancient Rithymna; whilst Khanea +(Canea), whose white houses are almost confounded with the arid slopes +of the White Mountains, represents the Cydonia of the Greeks, famous +for its forests of quince-trees. Canea is the actual capital, and +although not the most populous, it is nevertheless the most important +and the busiest city of the island. It has a second haven to the +east, Azizirge, on Suda Bay, one of the best sheltered on the island, +and promises to become one of the principal maritime stations on the +Mediterranean.[25] {93} + +Crete has certainly lost much in population and wealth, and the +epithet of the “isle of a hundred cities,” which it received from +the ancient Greeks, no longer applies to it. Miserable villages +occupy the sites of the ancient cities, their houses built from the +materials of a single ruined wall, whilst immense quarries had to be +opened in order to supply the building materials required in former +times. The famous “labyrinth” is one of the most considerable of these +ancient quarries. Crete, in spite of its great fertility, exports +merely a few agricultural products, and nothing now reminds us of the +fruitful island upon which Ceres gave birth to Plutus. The peasants +are the reputed owners of the land, but they take little heed of its +cultivation. Their olives yield only an inferior oil, and though +the wine they make is good in spite of them, it is no longer the +Malvoisie so highly prized by the Venetians. The cultivation of cotton, +tobacco, and of fruit of all sorts is neglected. The only progress in +agriculture which can be recorded during the present century consists +in the introduction of orange-trees, whose delicious fruit is highly +appreciated throughout the East. M. Georges Perrot has drawn attention +to the singular fact that, with the exception of the olive-trees +and the vine, the cultivated trees of the island are confined to +particular localities. Thus chestnuts are met with only at the western +extremity of the island; vigorous oaks and cypresses are confined to +the elevated valleys of the Sphakiotes; the valonia oaks are met with +only in the province of Retimo; Mount Dicte alone supports stone-pines +and carob-trees; and a promontory in South-eastern Crete, jutting out +towards Africa, is surmounted by a grove of date-trees—the finest +throughout the Archipelago. + +[Illustration: Fig. 29.—CRETE, OR CANDIA. + +Scale 1 : 2 470,000. + +The district inhabited by Mohammedans is shaded vertically.] + +The inhabitants of Crete and the neighbouring islets are still Greek, +in spite of successive invasions, and they still speak a Greek dialect, +recognised as a corrupted Dorian. The Slavs, who invaded the island +during the Middle Ages, have left no trace except the names of a few +villages. The Arabs and Venetians, too, have been assimilated by the +aboriginal Cretans; but there still exist a considerable {94} number +of Albanians, the descendants of soldiers, who have retained their +language and their customs. As to the Mohammedans or pretended Turks, +who constitute about one-fifth of the total population, they are, for +the most part, the descendants of Cretans who embraced Islamism in +order to escape persecution. They are the only Hellenes throughout the +East who have embraced, in a body, the religion of their conquerors; +but since religious persecution has subsided several of those +Mohammedan Greeks have returned to the religion of their ancestors. The +Greeks of Crete are thus not only vastly in the majority, but they hold +the first place also in industry, commerce, and wealth; it is they who +buy up the land, and the Mohammedan gradually retires before them. All +Cretans, with the exception of the Albanians, speak Greek, and only in +the capital and in a portion of Messara, where the Mohammedans live in +compact masses, has the Turkish language made any progress. + +We need not be surprised, therefore, if the Greeks lay claim to a +country in which their preponderance is so marked. But, in spite of +their valour, they were no match against the Turkish and Egyptian +armies which were brought against them. + +The Cretans are said to resemble their ancestors in the eagerness +with which they do business, and in their disregard of truth. They +may possibly be “Greeks amongst Greeks—liars amongst liars;” but +they certainly cannot be reproached with being bad patriots. On the +contrary, they have suffered much for the sake of their fatherland, and +during the war of independence their blood was shed in torrents on many +a battle-field. The vast cavern of Melidhoni, on the western slope of +Mount Ida, was the scene of one of the terrible events of this war. In +1822 more than three hundred Hellenes, most of them women, children, +and old men, had sought refuge in this cavern. The Turks lit a fire +at its mouth, and the smoke, penetrating to its farthest extremity, +suffocated the unfortunate beings who had hoped to find shelter there. + + * * * * * + +The profound “Sea of Minos,” to the north of Crete, separates that +island from the Archipelago. All the islands of the latter have been +assigned to the kingdom of Greece—Astypalæa, vulgarly called Astropalæa +or Stampalia, alone excepted, which still belongs to the Turks. The +ancients called this island the “Table of the Gods,” although it is +only a barren rock. It clearly belongs to the eastern chain of the +Cyclades, as far as geological formation and the configuration of +the sea-bottom go; but the diplomats allowed its fifteen hundred +inhabitants to remain under the dominion of Turkey. + +Amongst the other islands inhabited by Greeks, but belonging to +Turkey, Thasos is that which lies nearest to the coast of Europe. +The strait which separates it from Macedonia is hardly four miles +across, and in its centre there is an island (Thasopulo), as well as +several sand-banks, which interfere much with navigation. Though a +natural dependency of Macedonia, this island is governed by a mudir +of the Viceroy of Egypt, to whom the Porte made a present of it. When +Mohammed II. put an end to the Byzantine empire, Thasos and the {95} +neighbouring islands formed a principality, the property of the +Italian family of the Gateluzzi. + +[Illustration: Fig. 30.—THE ÆGEAN SEA. + +According to Robiquet. Scale, 1 : 5,170,000. + +The map is shaded to express the depth of the sea. The palest tint +indicates a depth of less than 55 fathoms; the next tint a depth of 55 +to 275 fathoms; the next a depth of 275 to 550 fathoms; and the darkest +tint a depth of over 550 fathoms.] + +Thasos is one of those countries of the ancient world the present +condition of which contrasts most unfavourably with former times. +Thasos, an ancient Phœnician colony, was once the rival, and +subsequently the wealthy and powerful ally, of Athens: its hundred +thousand inhabitants worked the gold and iron mines of {96} the island; +they quarried its beautiful white marble; cultivated vineyards yielding +a famous wine; and extended their commercial expeditions to every part +of the Ægean Sea. But now there are neither mines nor quarries, the +vines yield only an inferior product, the agricultural produce hardly +suffices for the six thousand inhabitants of the island, and the +ancient haven of Thasos is frequented only by the tiniest of vessels. +The island has recovered very slowly from the blow inflicted upon it +by Mohammed II., who carried nearly the whole of its inhabitants to +Constantinople. Thasos after this became a haunt of pirates, and its +inhabitants sought shelter within the mountains of the interior. They +are Hellenes, but their dialect is very much mixed with Turkish words. +Unlike other Hellenes, they are not anxious to improve their minds. +They are degenerate Greeks, and they know it. “We are sheep and beasts +of burden,” they’ repeatedly told the French traveller, Perrot. + +Thasos, however, is the only island of the Archipelago where wooded +mountains and verdant landscapes survive. Rains are abundant, and +its vegetation luxuriant. Running streams of water murmur in every +valley; large trees throw their shade over the hill-sides; the villages +near the foot of the mountain are hidden by cypresses, walnut, and +olive-trees; the valleys which radiate in all directions from the +centre of the island abound in planes, laurels, yoke-elms, and vigorous +oaks; and dark pine forests cover the higher slopes of the hills, +the glittering barren summits of Mount St. Elias and of other high +mountains alone rising above them. + +Samothrace, though smaller than Thasos, is much more elevated. Its +mountains are composed of granite, schists, limestones, and trachyte, +and form a sort of pendant to Mount Athos, on the other side of the +Ægean Sea. If we approach Samothrace from the north or the south, it +presents the appearance of a huge coffin floating upon the waters; +from the east or west its profile resembles a pyramid rising from the +waves. From its summit Neptune watched the fight of the Greeks before +Troy. In the dark oak forests of the Black Mountains were carried on +the mysteries of Cybele and her Corybantes, as well as the Cabiric +worship, which was intimately connected with them, and Samothrace was +to the ancient Greeks what Mount Athos is to the moderns—a sacred land. +Numerous ruins and inscriptions remain to bear witness to the zeal of +devout travellers from all parts of the world. But with the downfall of +the heathen temples the pilgrims disappeared. There is only one village +on the island now. Its inhabitants lead a secluded life, and the only +strange faces they see are those of the sponge-fishers who frequent the +island during summer. The entire absence of harbours, and the dangerous +current which separates Samothrace from Imbro, keep off the mariner, +and though the valleys are extremely fertile, they have not hitherto +attracted a single immigrant from the neighbouring continent. + +Imbro and Lemnos are separated from Samothrace by a deep sea, and +appear to continue the range of the Thracian Chersonesus. Imbro, which +is nearest to the continent, is the more elevated of the two islands, +but its St. Elias does not attain half the height of the mountains +of Samothrace. There are no forests {97} upon the slopes of this +mountain, the valleys are covered with stones, and hardly an eighth +of the surface of the island is capable of cultivation. Still, the +position of Imbro, close to the mouth of the Dardanelles and upon an +international ocean highway, will always secure to it a certain degree +of importance. The majority of the inhabitants live in a small valley +in the north-eastern portion of the island, and though the rivulet +which flows through this valley regularly dries up in summer, it is +nevertheless called emphatically the Megalos Potamos, or “big river.” + +Lemnos, or Limni, is the largest island of Thracia, and at the same +time the least elevated and the most barren. You may walk for hours +there without seeing a tree. Even olive-trees are not met with in the +fields, and the village gardens can boast but of few fruit trees. +Timber has to be procured from Thasos or the continent. Lemnos, in +spite of all this, is exceedingly fertile; it produces barley and +other cereals in plenty, and the pastures amongst its hills sustain +40,000 sheep. The island consists of several distinct mountain groups +of volcanic origin, 1,200 to 1,500 feet in height, and separated by +low plains covered with scoriæ, or by gulfs penetrating far inland. +In the time of the ancient Greeks the volcanoes of Lemnos had not yet +quenched their fires, for it was in one of them that Vulcan, when +hurled from heaven, established his smithy, and, with the assistance of +the Cyclops, forged his thunderbolts for Jupiter. About the beginning +of our era Mount Mosychlos and the promontory of Chryse were swallowed +up by the sea, and the vast shoals which extend from the eastern part +of the island in the direction of Imbro probably mark their site. +Since the disappearance of Mount Mosychlos, Lemnos has not again +suffered from volcanic eruptions or earthquakes. The majority of the +inhabitants are Greeks, and the Turks who have settled amongst them +are being evicted by the conquered race, which is superior to them +in intelligence and industry. Commerce is entirely in the hands of +the Greeks. Its principal seat is at Kastro—the ancient Myrhina—which +occupies a headland between two roadsteads. Sealed earth is one of the +articles exported, and is found in the mountains. In ancient times it +was much prized as an astringent, and is so still throughout the East. +It is not considered to possess its healing qualities unless it has +been collected before sunrise on Corpus Christi day. + +The small island of Stratio (Hagios Eustrathios) depends politically +and commercially upon Lemnos. It, too, is inhabited by Greeks. As to +the islands along the coast of Asia Minor, they form a portion of +Turkey in Europe as far as their political administration is concerned, +but geographically they belong to Asia.[26] {98} + + +III.—TURKEY OF THE GREEKS (THRACIA, MACEDONIA, AND THESSALY). + +The whole of the Ægean seaboard of European Turkey is occupied +by Greeks, and this proves the great influence which the sea has +exercised upon the migrations of the Mediterranean nations. Thessaly, +Macedonia, Chalcis, and Thrace are more or less Greek countries, and +even Constantinople lies within Greece, as defined by ethnological +boundaries. The geographical distribution of race there does not, in +fact, coincide with the physical features of the country—its mountains, +rivers, and climate. The Turkey of the Greeks is, in reality, no +geographical unit, and the only tie which unites it are the waters of +the Archipelago, which wash all its shores. + +Nowhere else does the Balkan peninsula exhibit such varied features +as on the shores of the Ægean Sea, and of the adjoining basin of the +Sea of Marmara. Bluffs, hills, and mountain masses rise abruptly from +the plain; arms of the sea extend far inland; and ramified peninsulas +project into the deep waters of the ocean. It appears almost as if +nature were making an effort to create an archipelago similar to that +in the south. + +The tongue of land upon which Constantinople has been built offers a +remarkable example of the features which characterize the coast lands +of this portion of Europe. Geologically the whole of this peninsula +belongs to Asia. Its hollow hills are separated from the granitic +mountains of Europe by a wide plain covered with recent formations, +and the wall of Athanasius, now in ruins, which was built as a defence +to the city, approximately marks the true boundary between Europe and +Asia. The rocks on both sides of the Bosphorus belong to the Devonian +formation. They contain the same fossils, exhibit the same outward +aspects, and date from the same epoch. A patch of volcanic rocks at +the northern entrance to the Bosphorus likewise exhibits the same +characteristics on both sides of the strait, and there cannot be the +least doubt that this European peninsula at a former epoch constituted +a portion of Asia Minor, but was severed from it by an irruption of the +waters. + +[Illustration: THE CITY OF CONSTANTINOPLE, AND THE THRACIAN BOSPHORUS.] + +[Illustration: CONSTANTINOPLE AND THE GOLDEN HORN, FROM THE HEIGHTS OF +EYUB.] + +Apollo himself, it is said, pointed out the site where to build the +city which is now known as Constantinople, and no better could have +been found. In fact, the city occupies the most favoured spot on the +Bosphorus. It stands on a peninsula of gently undulating hills, bounded +by the Sea of Marmara and by the curved inlet called, from its shape, +its beauty, and the valuable cargoes floating upon its waters, the +“Golden Horn.” The swift current of the Bosphorus penetrates into +this inlet, and sweeps it clean of all the refuse of the city. It +then passes into the open sea at the extreme angle of the peninsula, +and sailing vessels are thus able to reach their anchorage without +having to struggle against a contrary current. This haven not only +affords a secure anchorage to a multitude of vessels, but it likewise +abounds in fish; for, in spite of the constant agitation of its waters +by the oars of caiques and the paddles or screws of steamers, it is +visited annually by shoals of tunnies and other fish. The haven of +Constantinople, though easy of access to peaceable merchantmen, can +readily be {99} closed in case of war. The surrounding heights +command every approach to it, and a chain has more than once been drawn +across the narrow entrance to its roadstead when the city was besieged. +The latter, too, can be defended easily, for it is built upon hills, +bounded on the land side by an extensive plain. An assailant, to insure +success, must dispose not only of an army, but also of a powerful navy. +In addition to all these natural advantages of its site, Constantinople +is in the enjoyment of a climate far superior to that of the cities of +the Black Sea, for it is screened by hills from cold northerly winds. + +[Illustration: Fig. 31.—GEOLOGICAL MAP OF THE PENINSULA OF +CONSTANTINOPLE. + +According to F. von Hochstetter. Scale 1 : 1,370,000.] + +In the dawn of history, when migration and commerce marched only at a +slow pace, a site as favoured as that of Byzantium was capable only +of attracting the dwellers in its immediate neighbourhood. But after +commerce had become developed, the blind alone—so said the oracle of +Apollo—could fail to appreciate the great advantages held out by the +Golden Horn. Indeed, Constantinople lies not only on the ocean highway +which connects the world of the Mediterranean with the Black Sea, but +also on the high-road which leads from Asia into Europe. Geographically +it may be described as occupying a position at {100} the mouths of the +Danube, Dniester, Dnieper, Don, Rion, and Kizil Irmak, whose common +outlet is the Bosphorus. When Constantine the Great constituted it +the metropolis of the Roman empire, it grew rapidly in population and +wealth; it soon became the city of cities; and its Turkish appellation, +Stamboul, is nothing but a corruption of the expression _es tam polin_, +used by the inhabitants to denote their going _into the city_. Amongst +the distant tribes of Asia it represents Rome. They know it by no other +name than that of “Rum,” and the country of which it is the capital +they call “Rumelia.” + +Constantinople is one of the most beautiful cities in the world: it +is the “paradisiacal city” of Eastern nations. It may compare with +Naples or Rio de Janeiro, and many travellers accord it the palm. As +we approach the entrance of the Golden Horn, seated in a caique more +graceful than the gondolas of Venice, the vast and varied panorama +around us changes with every stroke of the oars. Beyond the white walls +of the Seraglio and its masses of verdure rise here, amphitheatrically +on the seven hills of the peninsula, the houses of Stamboul—its towers, +the vast domes of its mosques, with their circlets of smaller domes, +and its elegant minarets, with their balconies. On the other side of +the haven, which is crossed by bridges of boats, there are more mosques +and towers, seen through a forest of masts and rigging, and covering +the slope of a hill whose summit is crowned by regularly built houses +and the palatial residences of Pera. On the north vast villa-cities +extend along both shores of the Bosphorus. Towards the east, on a +promontory of Asia, there is still another city, cradled amidst gardens +and trees. This is Scutari, the Asiatic suburb of Constantinople, with +its pink houses and vast cemetery shaded by beautiful cypress groves. +Farther in the distance we perceive Kadi-koei, the ancient Chalcedon, +and the small town of Prinkipo, on one of the Princes’ Islands, whose +yellow rocks and verdant groves are reflected in the blue waters of the +Sea of Marmara. The sheet of water connecting these various portions of +the huge city is alive with vessels and boats, whose movements impart +animation to the magnificent picture. The prospect from the heights +above the town is still more magnificent. The coasts of Europe and +Asia are beneath our feet, the eye can trace the sinuosities of the +Bosphorus, and far away in the distance looms the snow-capped pyramidal +summit of Mount Olympus, in Bithynia. + +But this enchantment vanishes as soon as we penetrate into the streets +of Constantinople. There are many parts of the town with narrow and +filthy streets, which a stranger hesitates to enter. It is, perhaps, +a blessing, from a sanitary point of view, that conflagrations so +frequently lay waste and scour large portions of the city. Scarcely a +night passes without the watchman on the tower of the Seraskieriate +giving the alarm of fire, and thousands of houses are devoured by that +element every year. The city thus renews itself by degrees. It rises +from its ashes purified by the flames. But formerly, before the Turks +had built their city of stone on the heights of Pera, the quarters +destroyed by fire were rebuilt as wretchedly as they were before. It +is different now. The use of stone has become more general; wooden +structures are being replaced by houses built {101} of a fossiliferous +white limestone, which is quarried at the very gates of the city; and +free use is made of the blue and grey marbles of Marmara, and of the +flesh-coloured ones of the Gulf of Cyzica, in Asia Minor, in decorating +the palaces of the great. + +Nearly every vestige of the monuments of ancient Byzantium has been +swept away by fires or sieges. There only exists now the precious +tripod of bronze, with its three serpents, which the Platæans had +placed in the temple of Delphi in commemoration of their victory over +the Persians. The relics of the epoch of the Byzantine emperors are +limited to columns, obelisks, arches of aqueducts, the breached walls +of the city, the remains of the palace of Justinian, only discovered +recently, and the two churches of Santa Sophia, which have been +converted into mosques. The grand church of Santa Sophia, close to the +Seraglio, is no longer the most magnificent edifice in the universe, +as it was in the time of Justinian, for even the neighbouring mosque +of Sultan Ahmed far exceeds it in beauty and elegance. It is a clumsy +building, supported by buttresses added at various times to keep it +from falling. The character of the interior has been changed by the +Turks, who have introduced additional pillars, and the once bright +mosaics have been covered over; but the dome never fails to strike the +beholder: it is a marvel of strength and lightness. + +The Seraglio, or Serai, near Garden Point, may boast of fine pavilions +and shady walks, but the dark memories of crime will always cling to +it. The spot from which sacks containing the bodies of living sultanas +or odalisks were hurled into the dark waters of the Bosphorus is still +pointed out to the traveller. Far more attractive than this ancient +residence of the sultans are the marvellous structures in the Arab or +Persian style which line the shores of the Bosphorus, and which impart +to the suburbs of Constantinople an aspect of oriental splendour. + +The bazaars are amongst the most curious places in the city, not so +much because of the rich merchandise which is displayed in them, but +because they are frequented by a variety of nations such as cannot be +met with in any other city of the world. The capital of the Ottoman +empire is a centre of attraction not only to the inhabitants of the +Balkan peninsula, but also to those of Anatolia, Syria, Arabia, Egypt, +Tunis, and even of the oases. There are “Franks” from every country +of Europe, drawn thither by a desire to share in the profits of the +ever-increasing commerce of the Bosphorus. This mixture of races is +rendered still greater by the surreptitious importation of slaves; +for, whatever diplomatists may assert, there can be no doubt that the +“honourable guild of slave-dealers” still does an excellent business in +negresses, Circassians, and white and black eunuchs. Nor is anything +else to be expected amongst a people who look upon a well-stocked +harem as a sign of respectability. Dr. Millingen estimates the number +of slaves at Constantinople at 30,000 souls, most of whom have been +imported from Africa. From an anthropological point of view it is +certainly very remarkable that the negro should not have taken root in +Constantinople. In the course of the last four centuries a million of +negroes at least have been imported, and yet, owing to difficulties +of acclimation, ill-usage, and want, they would die out but for fresh +importations. {102} + +Our statistics do not enable us to classify the 600,000 inhabitants +of Constantinople and its suburbs according to race.[27] One of the +principal sources of error in estimates of this kind consists in our +confounding Mussulmans with Turks. In the provinces it is generally +possible to avoid this error, for Bosnians, Bulgarians, and Albanians +recognise each other as members of the same race, whatever religious +differences may exist between them. But in the turmoil of a great +city this distinction is no longer made, and, in the end, all those +who frequent the mosques are lumped together as if they were members +of the same race. Of the supposed Osmanli of Constantinople a third, +perhaps, consists of Turks, whilst the remaining two-thirds are made +up of Arnauts, Bulgarians, Asiatics, and Africans of various races. +Amongst the boatmen there are many Lesghians from the Caucasus. The +Mohammedans, if not in the minority already, will be so very soon, +for they lose ground almost visibly. In old Stamboul, in which a +Frank hardly dared to enter some twenty years ago, they still enjoy a +numerical preponderance, but in the “agglomeration of cities” known +as Constantinople, and extending from Prinkipo to Therapia, they are +outnumbered by Greeks, Armenians, and Franks, and certain quarters of +the town have been given up to the Christians altogether. + +The Greeks are the most influential, and perhaps most numerous, element +amongst the rayas. Their head-quarters, like those of the Turks, are +at Stamboul, where they occupy a quarter of the town called Phanar, +from an old lighthouse. The Greek patriarch and the wealthiest Greek +families reside there. These Phanariotes, in former times, almost +monopolized the government of the Christian provinces of Turkey, +but they fell into disfavour after the Greek war of liberation. The +religious influence, too, which they exercised until quite recently, +has been destroyed in consequence of the separation of the Servian, +Rumanian, and Bulgarian Churches from the orthodox Greek Church—a +separation brought about almost entirely through the rapacity of the +Greek patriarch and his satellites. If the Greeks would continue to +preserve their pre-eminence amongst the races of Constantinople, they +must trust, in the future, to their superior intelligence, their +commercial habits, education, patriotism, and unanimity. To the Turks +the members of the orthodox Church are known as the “Roman nation,” and +they enjoy a certain amount of self-government, exercised through their +bishops, which extends to marriages, schools, hospitals, and a few +other matters. + +The “nation” of the Armenians is likewise very strong at +Constantinople, and, like that of the “Romans,” it governs itself +through an elective Executive Council. Much of the commerce of +Constantinople passes through the hands of Armenians, who, though they +came to that city almost simultaneously with the Turks, have down to +the present day preserved their peculiar manners. They are cold and +reserved, and full of self-respect, differing widely from their rivals +in trade, the Jews, who slink furtively to their poor suburb of Balata, +at the upper {103} extremity of the Golden Horn. The Armenians are +clannish in the extreme, they readily assist each other, and, like +the Parsees of Bombay, delight in acts of munificence. But, unlike +the Greeks, they are not sustained in their undertakings by an ardent +belief in the destinies of their race. Most of them are not even able +to speak their native language freely, and prefer to converse in +Turkish or Greek. + +The Franks are much inferior in number to either of the races named, +but their influence is nevertheless far more decisive. It is through +them that Constantinople is attached to the civilisation of Western +Europe, and their institutions are by degrees getting the better of the +fatalism of the East. It is they who built the manufacturing suburbs +to the west of Constantinople and near Scutari, and who introduced +railways. Every civilised nation of the world is represented amongst +them—Italians and French most numerously; and to the Americans is due +the credit of having established the first geological museum in Turkey, +in connection with Robert Colleg. + +Constantinople, owing to the influx of strangers, is steadily +increasing in population, and one by one the villages in its vicinity +are being swallowed up by the city. The whole of the Golden Horn is +surrounded by houses now, and they extend far up the valleys of the +Cydaris and Barbyzes, which fall into it. Industrial establishments +extend along the shores of the Sea of Marmara, from the ancient fort of +the Seven Towers far to the west, and from Chalcedon to the south-east, +in the direction of the Gulf of Nicomedia. Both banks of the Bosphorus +are lined with villas, palaces, kiosks, cafés, and hotels. This +remarkable channel extends for nineteen miles between the shores of +Europe and of Asia.[28] Like a huge mountain valley it winds between +steep promontories, now contracting and then expanding, until it +finally opens out into the vast expanse of the Black Sea. When northern +winds hurl the agitated waters of the latter against the sombre cliffs +which guard the entrance to the Bosphorus, the contrast between this +savage sea and the placid waters of the strait and its charming scenery +is striking indeed. At every turn we are arrested by unexpected charms. +Rocks, palaces, woods, vessels of every description, and the curious +scaffoldings of Bulgarian fishermen succeed each other in infinite +variety. + +Amongst the innumerable country residences which nestle on the shores +of the Bosphorus, those of Balta-Liman, Therapia, and Buyukdere are the +best known, for they have been the scenes of historical events; but +there is no spot throughout this marine valley which does not excite +admiration. These marvels of nature will, before long, have added to +them a marvel of human ingenuity. The width of the channel between the +castles of Rumili and Anadoli is only 600 yards. It was here Mandroclus +of Samos constructed the bridge of boats across which Darius marched +his army of 700,000 men when he made war upon the Scythians, and on +this identical spot it is proposed now to construct a railway bridge +which will join the railways of Europe to those of Asia. A current +runs through the Bosphorus, from the Black Sea to the Sea of Marmara, +at a rate of from two to six miles an hour; and although several +geographers conclude from this that the level {104} of the former is +higher than that of the latter, this must by no means be looked upon as +an established fact. We have already noticed the exchange between the +waters of the Mediterranean and of the open Atlantic, which takes place +through the Strait of Gibraltar. A similar exchange is going on here, +and the outflowing surface current is compensated for by an inflowing +under-current. + +The outlying houses and villas of Constantinople extend northwards +along the Bosphorus as far as the two Genoese castles of Rumili-kavak +and Anadoli-kavak. This extension coincides with the geological +features of the ground, for no sooner have we turned our backs upon the +houses than we find ourselves shut in between cliffs of dolerite and +porphyry, which extend as far as the Black Sea, where they terminate in +the precipices of the Cyaneæ, or Symplegades, the famous rocks which +opened and shut, crushing the vessels that ventured to pass through the +strait, until Minerva fixed them for ever. These volcanic rocks are +barren, but the Devonian strata to the south of them are beautifully +wooded. The Turks, unlike the Spaniards and other Southern nations, +love and respect nature; plane-trees, cypresses, and pines still shade +the shores of the Bosphorus; and the vast forest of Belgrade covers +the hills to the east of Constantinople, from which the city draws +its supply of water. Birds, too, are better protected than in many a +Christian land. The plaintive cooing of doves is heard wherever we +turn, flights of swallows and aquatic birds skim over the surface of +the Bosphorus, and now and then we encounter a grave stork perched upon +the top of a tree or of a minaret. + +The whole aspect of the place is southerly, yet the climate of +Constantinople has its rigour. The cold winds of the steppes of Russia +freely penetrate through the strait, and the thermometer has been known +to fall four degrees below zero in the winter. The neighbouring sea +renders the climate more equable than it would otherwise be; but as +the winds, from whatever direction they blow, meet with no obstacle, +sudden changes of temperature are frequent. The average temperature +varies very considerably in different years. Sometimes it sinks to the +level of that of Pekin or Baltimore, at others it is as high as that +of Toulon or of Nice. In exceptional cases the Bosphorus has become +covered with ice, but thaws always set in rapidly, and then may be +witnessed the magnificent spectacle of masses of ice striking against +the walls of the Seraglio, and floating away across the Sea of Marmara. +In A.D. 762 these masses of ice were so stupendous that they became +wedged in the Dardanelles, and the tepid waters of the Ægean Sea then +assumed the aspect of a bay of the Arctic Ocean. + + * * * * * + +The geological features of the coast region of the Sea of Marmara +differ essentially from those of the rest of Turkey. Low ranges of +hills rise close to the coast, increasing in height towards the west, +until they attain an elevation of 2,930 feet in the Tekir Dagh, or +“holy mountains,” the grey slopes of which, covered here and there with +patches of shrubs or pasturage, are visible from afar. + +A narrow neck of land joins the peninsula of Gallipoli—the Thracian +{105} Chersonesus of the ancients—to this coast range. This peninsula +is composed of quaternary rocks, which differ in no respect from +those met with on the shore of Asia opposite. Anciently a huge +fresh-water lake covered a portion of Thracia and more than half +the area now occupied by the Ægean Sea. When the land first emerged +above the waters, the Chersonesus formed an integral portion of Asia. +Subsequently the waters of the Black Sea, which had forced themselves +a passage through the Bosphorus, likewise found their way through the +Hellespont into the Ægean Sea. The geological formation of the country +and the configuration of the sea-bottom prove this to have been the +case, and this irruption of the waters was attended, probably, by +volcanic eruptions, traces of which still exist on the islands of the +Sea of Marmara and near the mouth of the Maritza, the former to the +east, the latter to the west of the peninsula. + +[Illustration: Fig. 32.—THE HELLESPONT, OR DARDANELLES, AND THE GULF OF +SAROS. + +Scale 1 : 1,220,000. + +The dark shading expresses a depth exceeding 55 fathoms.] + +If the statements of Pliny and Strabo may be relied upon, the +Hellespont must have been much narrower in former times than it is +now. At Abydos—the modern Naghara—the width is said to have amounted +to seven stadia, or less than a mile, anciently, whilst at the present +time it is 6,500 feet. It was here Xerxes constructed his double bridge +of boats. The strait is deep at that spot, and its current strong, but +no wooden ship could hope to force a passage if covered by the guns +in the batteries on both coasts. The Hellespont, like the Bosphorus, +has two {106} currents flowing through it. In winter, when the rivers +which flow into the Black Sea are frozen up, and the Sea of Marmara +is no longer fed by the waters of the Bosphorus, a highly saline +under-current penetrates from the Ægean Sea into the Dardanelles, +whilst a feebler current of comparatively fresh water flows in a +contrary direction on the surface.[29] + +Gallipoli, the Constantinople of the Hellespont, stands near the +western extremity of the Sea of Marmara. It is the first city which the +Turks captured upon the soil of Europe; but though they settled down +there nearly a hundred years earlier than they did at Constantinople, +they are no more in the majority here than they are in the capital. +Gallipoli, like Rodosto and other towns on the Sea of Marmara, is +inhabited by Mohammedans of various races, by Greeks, Armenians, and +Jews, forming separate communities dwelling within the walls of the +same town. The country population consists almost exclusively of +Greeks, who are the proprietors and cultivators of the land; and in +sight of the coasts of Asia, and within that portion of the Balkan +peninsula which has been longest under the rule of the Turk, the Greek +is stronger numerically than anywhere else to the north of Mount +Pindus. He does not there confine himself to the coast, and, if we +except a few Bulgarian villages and the larger towns, the whole of +Eastern Thracia belongs to him. + +The lowlands of this region form a vast triangular plain, bounded by +the Tekir Dagh and the coast range on the south, by offshoots from the +Rhodope on the west, and by the granitic mountains of Stranja on the +east. This is one of the dreariest districts of all Turkey. Swampy +depressions and untilled land recall the steppes of Russia; and in +summer, when the wind raises clouds of dust, we can imagine ourselves +in the midst of a desert. The dreary monotony of this plain is relieved +only by the pale contours of distant mountains, and by innumerable +artificial mounds of unknown origin. So numerous are these tumuli that +they form an essential feature of the landscape, and no artist could +convey a just idea of it without introducing into his picture one or +more of them. + +Near the northern extremity of this unattractive plain, at the +confluence of Maritza and Tunja, lies the city of Adrianople, enveloped +in trees, whose sight delights the eye of the weary traveller. +Adrianople, in reality, consists of a number of villages, separated +from each other by orchards, poplars, and cypresses, above which peep +out the minarets of some hundred and fifty mosques. The sparkling +waters of the Maritza and Tunja, of rivulets and of aqueducts, lend +animation to the picture, and render Adrianople one of the most +delightful places. But it is more than this. It is the great centre of +population in the interior of Turkey, and its favourable geographical +position has always secured to the city a certain amount of importance. +The ancient city of Orestis, the capital of the Kings of Thracia, +stood on this site, and was succeeded by the Hadrianopolis of the +Romans, which the Turks changed into Edirneh, and made their capital +until Constantinople fell into their power. The old palace of the +Sultan, built in the {107} Persian style towards the close of the +fourteenth century, still remains, though in a dilapidated condition. +But here, likewise, the Osmanli are in the minority. The Greeks are +their equals in numbers, and far surpass them in intelligence, whilst +the Bulgarians, too, muster strongly, and, as in other towns of the +East, we meet with a strange mixture of races, from Persian merchants +down to gipsy musicians. The Jews are proportionately more numerous in +Adrianople than in any other town of Turkey, and, strange to relate, +they differ from their co-religionists in every other part of the world +by a lack of smartness in business transactions. A local proverb says +that “it requires _ten_ Jews to hold their own against _one_ Greek;” +and not Greeks alone, for Wallachians, and even Bulgarians, are able to +impose upon the poor Israelite at Adrianople. + +The communications between Adrianople and Midea, the ancient Greek +colony, famous for its subterranean temples, and with other cities +on the Black Sea, are difficult. Its natural outlets are towards the +south—on the one hand to Rodosto, on the Sea of Marmara; on the other, +down the Maritza valley to the Gulf of Saros. The railway follows the +latter, and the Rumelian Railway Company has constructed an artificial +harbour at Dede Aghach, enabling merchantmen to lie alongside a pier. +The allurements of commerce, however, have not hitherto induced the +inhabitants of Enos to exchange their walled and turreted acropolis for +the marshy tract on the Lower Maritza, with its deadly atmosphere. + +The zone occupied by the Greeks grows narrower as we go west of the +Maritza, where the Rhodope Mountains form a kind of international +barrier. Only the coast is occupied there by Greek mariners and +fishermen, whilst the hills in sight of it are held almost exclusively +by Turkish and Bulgarian peasants and herdsmen. The marshy littoral +districts, the small valleys on the southern slopes of the mountains, +and a few isolated hills of volcanic or crystalline formation +constitute a narrow band which connects the Greeks of Thracia +with their compatriots of Chalcidice and Thessaly. The Yuruks, or +“Wanderers,” a Turkish tribe which has retained its nomadic habits +down to the present day, sometimes even extend their excursions to the +sea-coast. Their principal seat is in the Pilav Tepe, a mountain mass +to the north-west of Thasos, famous in the time of the Macedonian kings +for its mines of gold and silver. A wide plain extends immediately to +the west of these mountains, watered by the Strymon, or Karasu, and +is of marvellous fertility. Seres, a considerable city, occupies its +centre, and hundreds of villages, surrounded by orchards, rice, and +cotton fields are scattered over it. Looked at from the heights of +the Rhodope, this plain assumes the appearance of a huge garden-city. +Unfortunately many parts of it are very insalubrious. + +The triple peninsula of Chalcidice has no connection whatever with +the Rhodope, and is attached to the mainland by an isthmus covered +with lakes, swamps, and alluvial plains. It extends far into the sea +like a huge hand spread out upon the waters. Chalcidice is a Greece +in miniature, with coasts of fantastic contours, deep bays, bold +promontories, and mountains rising in the midst of plains, like islands +in an archipelago. One of these mountain masses rises in the trunk of +the peninsula, and culminates in Mount Kortach, whilst each of its +three {108} ramifications possesses its own system of scarped hills. +Greek in aspect, this curious appendage to the continent is Greek, too, +in its population; and, a rare thing in Turkey, all its inhabitants are +of the same race, if we except the Turks in the town of Nisvoro and the +Slav monks of Mount Athos. + +[Illustration: Fig. 33.—THE PENINSULA OF MOUNT ATHOS. + +Scale 1 : 1,020,000.] + +The easternmost of the three tongues of land of Chalcidice, which jut +out far into the waters of the Ægean, is almost entirely detached. Only +a low and narrow neck of land connects it with the mainland, and it +was across this isthmus that Xerxes dug a canal, 3,950 feet in length, +either to enable his fleet to avoid the dangerous promontory of Mount +Athos, or to give the awe-struck inhabitants a proof of his power. This +is the peninsula of Hagion Oros, the Monte Santo of the Italians. At +its extremity rises a limestone mountain, one of the most beautiful +in the Eastern Mediterranean. This is the famous Mount Athos, which +an ancient sculptor proposed to convert into a statue of Alexander, +holding a city in one hand and a spring in the other, and which Eastern +legends point out as the “exceeding high mountain” to which the devil +took Jesus, to show him “all the kingdoms of the world.” But whatever +old legends may say, the panorama is not as vast as this, though the +shores of Chalcidice, Macedonia, and Thracia lie spread out beneath our +feet, and the eye can range across the blue waters of the Ægean Sea +from Mount Olympus, in Thessaly, to Mount Ida, in Asia Minor. The bold +outlines of the fortified monasteries which appear here and there, in +the midst of chestnuts, oaks, or pines, on the slope of the mountain, +contrast most happily with the faint outline of the coasts on the +distant horizon.[30] + +This peninsula, which a traveller has compared to a sphinx crouching +upon the bosom of the sea, is the property of a republic of monks, +who govern {109} themselves according to their own fancy. In return +for a tribute, which they pay to the Porte, they alone have the right +to live there, and strangers require their permission before they are +allowed to enter. A company of Christian soldiers is stationed at the +neck of the peninsula to prevent the sacred soil being desecrated +by the footsteps of a woman. Even the Turkish governor cannot gain +admittance without leaving his harem behind him. For fourteen hundred +years, we are told in the chronicles of Mount Athos, no female has +set foot upon this sacred soil, and this prohibition extends to +animals as well as to human beings. Even the presence of poultry would +profane the monasteries, and the eggs eaten by the monks are imported +from Lemnos. With the exception of a few purveyors, who reside at +the village of Karyes, the 6,000 inhabitants of the peninsula are +monks, or their servants, and they live in the monasteries, or in the +hermitages attached to the 935 churches and chapels. Nearly all the +monks are Greeks, but amongst the twenty large monasteries there are +two which were built by the ancient sovereigns of Servia, and one which +was founded by Russia. Most of these edifices occupy promontories, +and, with their high walls and strong towers, they are exceedingly +picturesque. One amongst them, that of Simopetra, appears to be almost +inaccessible. It is in these retreats the good fathers of the order of +St. Basil spend their lives in contemplative inaction. They are bound +to pray eight hours in the day and two in the night, and during the +whole of that time they are not allowed to sit. They have, therefore, +neither time nor strength for study or manual labour. The books in +their libraries are incomprehensible mysteries to them, and, in spite +of their sobriety, they might die of starvation if there were not +lay-brothers to work for them, and numerous farms on the mainland which +are their property. A few shiploads of hazel nuts is all this fertile +peninsula produces. + +The ancient cities of Olynthus and Potidæa, on the neck of the western +peninsula of Chalcidice, have dwindled down into insignificant +villages; but the city of Therma, called afterwards Thessalonica, and +now known as Saloniki, still exists, for its geographical position is +most favourable, and after every siege and every conflagration it again +rose from its ashes. Vestiges of every epoch of history may still be +seen there: Cyclopean and Hellenic walls, triumphal arches, and remains +of Roman temples, Byzantine structures, and Venetian castles. Its +harbour is excellent, its roadstead well sheltered; and the high-roads +into Upper Macedonia and Epirus lead from it along the valleys of +the Vardar and Inje Karasu. These favourable circumstances have not +been without their influence, and Saloniki, next to Constantinople +and Adrianople, is the most important city of European Turkey. Its +population is mixed, like that of other cities in the East, and Jews +are exceptionally numerous. Most of them are the descendants of Spanish +Jews, expelled by the Inquisition, and they still talk Spanish. Many +have outwardly embraced Mohammedanism to escape persecution, but the +true Mussulman spurns these converts with disdain. They are generally +known as “Mamins.” + +The commerce of Saloniki is important even now, but greater things +are {110} expected of the future. Like Marseilles, Trieste, and +Brindisi, Saloniki aspires to become a connecting link in the trade +between England and the East. It actually lies on the most direct +road between the Channel and the Suez Canal, and once connected by +railways with the rest of Europe, it is sure to take a large share +in the world’s commerce. This emporium of Macedonia is interesting, +too, from an ethnological point of view, for, with the exception of +Burgaz, on the Black Sea, it is the only place where the Bulgarians, +the most numerous race of European Turkey, have reached the sea-coast. +Everywhere else they are cut off from it by alien races, but Saloniki +brings them into direct contact with the remainder of Europe. Saloniki, +however, not only suffers from bad government, but also from the +marshes which surround it, and in summer many of its inhabitants flock +to the healthier town of Kalameria, to the west. Miasmatic swamps +unfortunately occupy a large portion of the northern coast of the +Ægean, and they separate the interior of Macedonia more effectively +from the coast than do its mountains. There is hardly any commerce +except at Saloniki. + +[Illustration: Fig. 34.—MOUNT OLYMPUS.] + + * * * * * + +On the western shores of the Gulf of Saloniki, beyond the ever-changing +mouths of the Vardar and the briny waters of the Inje Karasu, or +Haliacmon, the land gradually rises. Hills are succeeded by mountains, +until bold precipices {111} approach close to the coast, and summit +rises beyond summit, up to the triple peak of Mount Olympus. Amongst +the many mountains which have borne this name, this is the highest and +the most beautiful, and the Greeks placed upon it the court of Jupiter +and the residence of the gods. It was in the plains of Thessaly, in the +shadow of this famous mountain, that the Greeks lived in the springtide +of their history, and their most cherished traditions attach themselves +to this beautiful country. The mountains which had sheltered the cradle +of their race remained to them for ever afterwards the seat of their +protecting deities. But Jupiter, Bacchus, and the other great gods of +antiquity have disappeared now, and monasteries have been built in the +woods which witnessed the revels of the Bacchantes. + +[Illustration: Fig. 35.—MOUNT OLYMPUS AND THE VALLEY OF TEMPE.] + +Until recently the upper valleys of Mount Olympus were inhabited only +by monks, and by klephtes, or bandits, who sought shelter there from +the Arnaut soldiers sent in their pursuit. The mountain, in fact, +constitutes a world apart, surrounded on all sides by formidable +declivities. Forty-two peaks form the battlements of this mountain +citadel, fifty-two springs rise within it, and the bold klepht is +secure within its fastnesses from the abhorred Turk. Magnificent +forests of laurel-trees, planes, and oaks cover its lower maritime +slopes, and in times of trouble they have served as a refuge to entire +populations. But Italian {112} speculators have purchased these +forests, and the time is not, perhaps, very distant when Mount Olympus, +deprived of its verdure, will be reduced to a barren mass of rock, +like most of the mountains of the Archipelago. Wild cats abound on the +lower slopes of Olympus, chamois still climb its rugged pinnacles, but +bears are no longer met with: St. Denys, who dwelt upon the mountain, +required beasts to ride upon, and changed them into horses ! + +Xenagoras, an ancient geometrician, was the first to measure the height +of Mount Olympus, but his result, 6,200 feet, is far from the truth, +for the highest summit attains an elevation of 9,750 feet.[31] It +may possibly be the culminating point of the Balkan peninsula. Snow +remains in some of its crevices throughout the year, and no human +being hitherto appears to have succeeded in ascending its highest +pinnacle. According to the Greek legend, even Pelion heaped upon Ossa +did not enable the Titans to reach the abode of the gods, and, in +reality, the combined height of these two mountains hardly exceeds +that of Olympus. But, in spite of this inferior height, “pointed” +Ossa and “long-stretched” Pelion, known to us moderns as Kisovo and +Zagora, impress the beholder, because of their savage valleys, their +precipitous walls of rock, and cliffy promontories. + +These mountains continue southward through the hook-shaped peninsula +of Magnesia, and terminate opposite the island of Eubœa. They formed +a strong bulwark of defence in the time of ancient Greece. The hordes +of the barbarians stopped in front of this insurmountable barrier. +They were compelled to seek a practicable road to the west of it, +through the valley of the Peneus, which is rightly looked upon as the +natural frontier of Hellas. Hence the great strategical importance +of Pharsalus, in Southern Thessaly, which protects the gorges of the +Othrys and the only access to the plains of the Sperchius. The pass of +Petra, at the northern extremity of Olympus, was carefully guarded for +similar reasons. + +A large portion of the area bounded by the crystalline rocks of +Olympus and Ossa, and by the cretaceous range of the Pindus, running +parallel with the former, consists of plains originally covered by +vast lakes. The Gulf of Volo approaches close to the shrunken remains +of one of these lakes—that of Karla, or Bœbeis—into which the waters +of the swampy plain of Larissa discharge themselves. The dwellers on +the shores of this lake say that a dull rumbling noise may now and +then be heard at its bottom, which they ascribe to the bellowing of +some invisible animal, but which is more probably the gurgling sound +of the water penetrating into a sink-hole. Other lake basins are met +with at the foot of Olympus towards the west and north-west, and some +of the valleys of the upper tributaries of the Peneus are covered with +alluvium left behind by the receding waters. Hercules, according to +some—Neptune, according to others—drained all these lakes of Thessaly +into the Ægean, by opening the narrow gorge between Olympus and Ossa, +known to the ancients as the Valley of Tempe. This narrow valley is +due, no doubt, to the slow erosive action of water. To the Hellenes it +realised their ideals of refreshing coolness and beauty, and once every +nine years an embassy arrived from Delphi to pluck the laurel-leaves +destined for the victors in the Pythian games. The {113} Valley of +Tempe is indeed most beautiful; the transparent and rapid waters of the +Peneus, the foliage of the planes, the shrubberies of laurel-roses, and +the red-hued cliffs—these combine frequently, and form pictures which +delight the senses and impress the mind. But, taken as a whole, this +narrow and sombre valley fairly deserves its modern name of Lykostomo, +or “wolf’s gorge.” Even in Thessaly, and, above all, in the Pindus, +there are localities more smiling and more beautiful than this famous +Valley of Tempe. + +The upper valleys of the Peneus, or Salembria, abound in natural +curiosities, such as defiles, sinks, and caverns. To the north-west of +Mount Olympus, the turbid Titaresius flows through the narrow gorge of +Saranta Poros, or of the Four Fords, which was looked upon in former +times as one of the gates of hell. + +To the west, on the Upper Peneus, are the limestone hills of Khassia, +rising to a height of 5,000 feet, and the elevated spurs of Mount +Pindus, which have become celebrated through the “works of the gods,” +or _theoktista_, which surmount them. These “works” consist of isolated +towers, crags, and pillars, the most famous amongst them being those +on the banks of the Peneus, not far from Trikala. Zealous followers of +Simeon the Stylite conceived the idea of building their monasteries on +the tops of some of the larger of these natural columns or pedestals. +Perched on these heights, and condemned never to leave them, they +receive their provisions and visitors in a basket attached to the end +of a long rope, and hoisted aloft by means of a windlass. An aërial +voyage of no less than 220 feet has to be performed in order to reach +in this manner the monastery of Barlaam, and visitors are at liberty +to effect this ascent by means of ladders fastened against the rocky +precipices. The religious zeal, however, which led monks to select +these eyries for their habitations is gradually dying out. Out of +twenty monasteries which existed formerly, there remain now but seven, +and only one of these, that of Meteora, is inhabited by as many as +twenty monks. + +Of all the Greek countries which still remain under the dominion of +the Turks, there is none which has so frequently sought to regain its +independence, none which is claimed by the Hellenes with equal ardour +as a portion of their common fatherland and the cradle of their race. +Thessaly is, in truth, a portion of Greece, as far as the traditions +of the past, a common language, and the general aspects of the country +can make it so. But it is a more fertile country, its vegetation is +more luxuriant, its landscapes are more smiling and delightful. We +may not frequently meet with the deep blue sky which calls forth our +admiration in Southern Greece, for the vapours rising from the Ægean +Sea are attracted by Olympus and other mountains; but this moisture +imparts a charm to distant views, and, by protecting the earth against +the scorching rays of the sun in summer, it contributes largely towards +the fertility of the soil. + +The Greek population of Thessaly is strongly mixed with foreign +elements, which it has gradually assimilated. Neither Serbs nor +Bulgarians remain now in the country, although the Upper Titaresius +is known as Vurgari, or “river of the Bulgarians.” The Zinzares, or +Macedo-Walakhs, who were so numerous in the Middle Ages, now only +occupy a few villages. Though proud of their Roman {114} descent, they +gradually become Hellenized. Most of the words by which they designate +objects of civilised life are Greek, their priests and schoolmasters +preach or teach in Greek, and they themselves speak Greek in addition +to their native language. They lose ground, moreover, through an +excessive emigration. Even the cultivators of the soil amongst them +have not quite given up their nomadic habits, and the roving life of +a herdsman or of a pedlar exercises an irresistible attraction upon +them. The Turks inhabit in compact masses the lowlands around Larissa, +and that town itself is Mussulman to a large extent. The hilly tracts +to the north, between the Inje Karasu and the Lakes of Kastoria and +Ostrovo, are likewise inhabited by Turks, who differ from the Osmanli +of the rest of the empire, and are known as Koniarides. Turks also +occupy a portion of Mount Ossa. It is easy to tell from a distance +whether a village is inhabited by Turks or by Greeks. M. Mézières +has observed that “the Turks plant trees for the sake of shade, the +Greeks for the sake of profit.” Near the villages of the former we +find cypresses and plane-trees, near those of the latter orchards +and vineyards. The Koniarides are believed by some authors to have +come to Thessaly and Macedonia as colonists in the eleventh century, +by invitation of the Eastern emperor. They govern themselves through +democratic representative bodies, and are respected by all, because of +their probity, their hospitality, and their rustic virtues. + +The Greeks are morally inferior to the Turkish peasantry, but they +surpass them in intelligence and industry. In the seventeenth century +there took place amongst them even a sort of revival similar to the +Renaissance of Western Europe, and the love of art was developed +sufficiently far to give rise to a school of painters in the villages +of Olympus. Faithful to their national traditions and the instincts +of their race, the Greeks of Thessaly have sought to organize +themselves into self-governing commonwealths. In their free towns, +or _kephalokhori_, they are permitted to elect their town councils, +establish schools, and appoint what teachers they like. They know how +to get the Turkish pasha not to meddle in their local affairs. They pay +the taxes demanded by the Turks, as their ancestors paid them to Athens +or some other Greek city, but in every other respect they are free +citizens governing themselves. The contrast between these independent +commonwealths and the _chifliks_ of Mussulman proprietors cultivated by +Greek farmers is most striking. The land of the free proprietors is, as +a rule, far less fertile than that included within these chifliks; yet +it produces more, and its cultivators live in comparative ease. + +The Greeks of Thessaly bestow much care upon the education of growing +generations. Even the most miserable Greek village in the Pindus can +boast of a school, which is visited by the young people up to the age +of fifteen. As an instance of the commercial spirit of the Thessalians +we may mention the Weavers’ Co-operative Association, formed in the +last century in the town of Ambelakia, delightfully situated amongst +orchards and vineyards on the southern slopes of the Valley of Tempe. +This powerful association wisely limited its dividends to six per +cent., and expended the surplus profits upon an extension of its +business. For {115} many years it enjoyed the greatest prosperity, but +the wars of the empire, which closed the markets of Germany against +it, brought about its ruin. Co-operation likewise partly accounts for +the flourishing cloth manufacture of the twenty-four wealthy Greek +villages on the peninsula of Magnesia, to the north of the Gulf of +Volo. This district, together with that of Verria, to the north of the +Inje Karasu, is probably the most prosperous in all the Greek provinces +of Turkey, and it is at least partly indebted for this prosperity to +its happy geographical position, being far away from great strategical +high-roads.[32] + + +IV.—ALBANIA AND EPIRUS. + +The name of SHKIPERI, which the Albanians give to the country they +inhabit, is supposed to mean “land of rocks,” and no designation +could be more appropriate. Stony mountains occupy the whole of the +country, from the frontiers of Montenegro to those of Greece. The only +plain of any extent is that of Scutari (Shkodra), to the south of +the Montenegrin plateau, which forms the natural frontier of Albania +towards the north. The bottom of this depression is occupied by the +Lake of Scutari; and the Drin, the only river of the Balkan peninsula +which is navigable for a considerable distance from the sea, debouches +upon it. The Drin is formed by the junction of the White and the Black +Drin, and in former times it only discharged a portion of its waters +temporarily into the Boyana River, which drains the Lake of Scutari. +But in 1858 it opened itself a new channel opposite to the village +of Miet, about twenty miles above its mouth, and since that time +the greater volume of its waters flows in the direction of Scutari, +frequently inundating the lower quarters of that town. The marshy +tracts on the Lower Drin are dangerous to cross during the heat of +summer, and the fevers of the Boyana are the most dreaded along the +whole of that coast. + +Most of the southern ramifications of the Bosnian Alps are inhabited +by Albanians, but they are separated from their kinsmen in Albania +proper by the deep valley of the Drin, a kind of _cañon_ similar to +those of the Rocky Mountains, enclosed between precipitous walls +several thousand feet in height, and hardly ever trodden by the foot +of a wanderer. The mountain systems of Bosnia and Albania are only +indirectly connected by a series of ranges and plateaux stretching +from the mountain of Glieb in a south-easterly direction as far as +the Skhar, or Scardus of the ancients. The crest of this latter runs +at right angles to most of the ranges of Western Turkey, and although +its culminating point is inferior in height to those of Slav Turkey, +it is the point of junction between the Balkan and the {116} mountain +systems of Bosnia and Albania. The Skhar is of great importance, too, +in the hydrography of Turkey; for two great rivers, the Bulgarian +Morava and the Vardar, descend from its flanks, one flowing to the +Danube, the other to the Gulf of Saloniki. Chamois and wild goats are +still met with in the Skhar, as in the Pindus and Rhodope, and M. Wiet +mentions an animal known to the Mirdits as a _lucerbal_, which appears +to be a species of leopard. + +A mountain region, hardly 3,000 feet in elevation, but exceedingly +difficult of access, rises to the west of the Skhar, on the other +side of the Black Drin: this is the citadel of Upper Albania, the +country of the Mirdits and Dukajins. Enormous masses of serpentine have +erupted there through the chalk, the valleys are hemmed in by bold +precipices, and the torrents rapidly run down the hollowed-out beds on +the exterior slopes. As a rule, the direction of the tortuous ranges +of this mountain country is the same as that of the southern spurs of +the Skhar. They gradually decrease in height, enclosing fine upland +valleys, where the waters are able to accumulate. The Lake of Okhrida, +the largest sheet of water in Upper Albania, has not inaptly been +likened to the Lake of Geneva. Its waters are bluer even than those of +its Swiss rival, and more transparent, and fish may be seen chasing +each other at a depth of sixty feet beneath its surface: hence its +ancient Greek name of Lychnidos. The delightful little town of Okhrida +and Mount Pieria, with its old Roman castle, guard its shores, and the +white houses of numerous villages peep out amongst the chestnut forests +which cover the slopes of the surrounding hills. This lake is drained +towards the north through the narrow valley of the Black Drin. If the +statements of the inhabitants may be credited, the waters of the double +basin of Lake Presba reach Lake Okhrida through subterranean channels. + +The isolated peak of Tomor commands this lake region on the west. To +the south of it commences the chain of the Pindus, locally known as +Grammos. At first of moderate height, and crossed by numerous mountain +roads affording easy communication between Albania and Macedonia, these +mountains gradually increase in height as we proceed south, and exactly +to the east of Yanina they form the mountain mass of Metzovo, with +which the Pindus, properly so called, takes its rise. This mountain +mass is inferior in altitude to the peaks of Bosnia or Northern +Albania, but it is far more picturesque than either, its slopes being +covered with forests of conifers and beech-trees, and the plains +extending along its foot having a more southern aspect. Mount Zygos, +or Lachmon, which rises in the centre of this mountain mass, does not +afford a very extended panorama, but if we climb the craggy peaks of +the Peristera-Vuna, or Smolika, near it, we are able to look at the +same time upon the waters of the Ægean and Ionian Seas, and even the +shore of Greece may be descried beyond the Gulf of Arta. + +A famous lake occupies the bottom of the limestone basin at the western +foot of the mountain mass of Metzovo. This is the Lake of Yanina, +and nowhere else throughout Epirus do we meet with an equal number +of natural curiosities as on the shores of this lake. Its depth is +inconsiderable, nowhere exceeding forty feet, and it is fed only by +numerous springs rising at the foot of the rocks. There is no {117} +visible outlet; but Colonel Leake assures us that each of the two +basins into which it is divided is drained by a subterranean channel. +The northern lake pours its waters into a sink, or _voinikova_, and +reappears towards the south-west as a considerable river, which flows +into the Ionian Sea. This is the Thyamis of the ancients, our modern +Kalamas. Farther to the south the ancient Acheron bursts from the +rocks, and having received the nauseous waters of the equally famous +Cocytus, throws itself into the “bay of sweet waters,” thus called on +account of the large volume of water discharged into it by rivers. + +[Illustration: Fig. 36.—SOUTHERN EPIRUS. + +According to Kiepert. Scale 1 : 1,400,000. + +K. Katavothra.] + +When the waters of the southern and larger basin of Lake Yanina are +low, there is but a single effluent, which plunges down into an abyss, +and in doing so turns the wheels of a mill. The Cyclopean ruins of +the Pelasgic city of Hellas command this huge chasm with its roaring +waters. The subterranean river reappears far to the south, and flows +into the Gulf of Arta. But when the level of the lake is high, four +other sinks swallow up its superabundant waters, and convey them into +the main channel, the direction of which is indicated by a few small +lakes. The important part played in the mythology of ancient Greece by +these subterranean effluents, and particularly by the infernal Acheron +and the Cocytus, amply proves the influence exercised by the Pelasgians +upon the civilisation of the Hellenes. The myths of the Hellopians +became the common property of all Greece, and {118} there was no +temple in all Hellas more venerated than their sanctuary at Dodona, +where the future might be foretold by listening to the rustling of the +leaves of sacred oaks. This sacred grove existed, probably, near one of +the Cyclopean towns so numerous in the country, if not on the shore of +the lake itself. Some, erroneously no doubt, have looked for it near +the castle inhabited in the beginning of this century by Ali Tepeleni, +the terrible Pasha of Epirus, who boasted of being a “lighted torch, +devouring man.” + +The mountains of Suli, to the west of the basin of Yanina, attain an +altitude of 3,500 feet, but the neighbouring hills are of moderate +height, though abrupt and difficult of access, and near the coast they +sink down into small rocky promontories, scantily clothed with shrubs +and overrun by jackals. Swamps abound near the shore, and during summer +their miasmatic air spreads over the neighbouring villages. To the +north of the swamps of Butrinto and of the channel of Corfu, and to the +west of the isolated peak of Kundusi, however, the coast rises again, +and the austere chain of the Chimæra Mala, or Acroceraunii, extends +along it. It was dreaded by the ancients on account of its tempests, +and the torrents which poured down its sides. Squalls and changes of +wind are frequent near the “Tongue (Linguetta) of Rocks,” the most +advanced promontory of this coast, at the entrance to the Adriatic Sea. +These are the “infamous rocks” referred to by the Roman poet, upon +which many a vessel suffered shipwreck. The channel which separates +Turkey at that place from Italy has a width of only 45 miles; it is +less than 100 fathoms in depth, and at some former period an isthmus +may have united the two countries.[33] + +The Shkipetars, or Albanians, are subdivided into two leading tribes or +nations, the Tosks and the Gheges, both of whom are no doubt descended +from the ancient Pelasgians, but have in many places become mixed with +Slavs, Bulgarians, and Rumanians, and perhaps even with other nations; +for whilst in some tribes we meet with the purest Hellenic types, +there are others the members of which are repulsively ugly. The Gheges +are the purest of their race, and they occupy, under various tribal +names, the whole of Northern Albania as far as the river Shkumbi. +The territory of the Tosks extends from that river southward. The +dialects of these two nations differ much, and it is not easy for an +Acroceraunian to understand a Mirdit or other Albanian from the north. +Gheges and Tosks detest each other. In the Turkish army they are kept +separated for fear of their coming to blows, and, when an insurrection +has to be suppressed amongst them, the Turkish Government always avails +itself of these tribal jealousies, and is certain of being served with +the zeal and fury which hatred inspires. + +[Illustration: ALBANIANS.] + +Up to the period of the migration of the barbarians, the whole of +Western Turkey, as far as the Danube, was held by Albanians. But they +were then pushed back, and Albania was entirely occupied by Servians +and Bulgarians. {119} The names of numerous localities throughout +the country recall that period of obscuration, during which the name +of an indigenous race was not even mentioned by the historian. But +when the Osmanli had broken the power of the Serb, the Albanians again +raised their heads, and ever since they have kept encroaching upon +their Slav neighbours. In the north they have gradually descended into +the valley of the Bulgarian Morava, and one of their colonies has +even penetrated into independent Servia. Like the waters of a rising +ocean, they overwhelm the detached tracts of territory still occupied +by Servians. This progress of the Albanians is explained, to a great +extent, by the voluntary expatriation of the Servians. Thousands of +them, headed by their patriarchs, fled to Hungary, in order to escape +the dominion of the Turks, and the Albanians occupied the wastes they +left behind. The Servians still hold their ground near Acroceraunia, +on the shores of Lake Okhrida, and in the hills looking down upon the +fatal plain of Kosovo, where their ancestors were massacred; but they +gradually become Albanians in language, religion, and customs. They +speak of themselves as Turks, as do the Arnauts, and apply the name of +Servian only to the Christians dwelling beyond the frontier. On the +other hand, many of the customs of the Gheges agree in a remarkable +manner with those of their Slav neighbours, and this proves that there +has taken place a thorough blending of the two races. + +But whilst the Albanians are gaining ground in the north, they are +losing it in the south. A large portion of the inhabitants of Southern +Albania, though undoubtedly of Pelasgic origin, are Greek by language. +Arta, Yanina, and Prevesa are Hellenized towns, and only a few +Mohammedan families there still speak Albanian. Nearly the whole of the +tract between the Pindus and the Adriatic coast ranges has become Greek +as far as language goes, and throughout the mountain region extending +westward to the sea the inhabitants are “bilingual;” that is to say, +they speak two languages. The famous Suliotes, for instance, who talk +Tosk within the bosom of their family, make use of Greek in their +intercourse with strangers. Wherever the two races come into contact, +it is always the Albanian who takes the trouble to learn Greek. + +This influence of the Hellenes is all the more powerful as it meets +with support amongst the Zinzares, known also as Macedo-Walakhs, +“Limping” Walakhs, or Southern Rumanians, who are met with throughout +the country. These Zinzares are the kinsmen of the Rumanians of +Wallachia and Moldavia, and live in a compact body only on the two +slopes of the Pindus, to the south and east of the Lake of Yanina. Like +the Rumanians of the Danube, they are most probably Latinised Dacians. +They resemble the Walakhs in features, character, and disposition, +and speak a neo-Latin tongue much mixed with Greek. The Zinzares +in the valleys of the Pindus are, for the most part, herdsmen, and +wander away from their villages sometimes for months. Others carry on +trades, exhibiting much manual skill and intelligence. Nearly all the +bricklayers of Turkey, those of the large towns excepted, are Zinzares; +and the same individual sometimes erects an entire house, doing in turn +the work of architect, carpenter, joiner, {120} and locksmith. The +Rumanians of the Pindus are likewise esteemed as clever goldsmiths. + +Their capacity for business is great, and the commerce of the interior +of Turkey is almost entirely in their hands, as is that of the maritime +districts in those of the Greeks. The Walakhs of Metzovo are said to +have stood formerly under the direct protection of the Porte, and +every traveller, whether Mussulman or Christian, was bound to unshoe +his horses before he left their territory, for fear “of his carrying +away a clod of earth which did not belong to him.” Commercial houses +conducted by Walakhs of the Pindus are met with in every town of the +Orient, and even at Vienna one of the most influential banks has been +founded by one of them. Abroad they are generally taken for Greeks, +and the wealthier amongst them send their children to Athens to be +educated. Surrounded by Mussulmans, the Zinzares of the Pindus feel the +necessity of attaching themselves to some country through which they +might obtain their freedom, and they hope for a union with Greece. It +is only quite recently that they have learnt to look upon the Rumanians +of the North and the Italians as their kinsmen. They do not, however, +set much store upon their nationality, and have no aspirations as a +distinct race. There can be no doubt that in the course of ages many +of these Macedo-Walakhs have become Hellenized. Nearly all Thessaly +was inhabited by Zinzares in the Middle Ages, and Byzantine authors +speak of that country as “Great Wallachia.” Whether these Zinzares have +emigrated to Rumania, as some think, or have become assimilated with +the Greeks, the fact remains that at the present day they are not very +numerous on the eastern slopes of the Pindus. Thousands of Rumanian +families have settled in the coast towns, at Avlona, Berat, and Tirana, +embracing Mohammedanism, but still retaining their native idiom. + +If we exclude these Zinzares, the Greeks of Epirus, the Servians, and +the few Osmanli dwelling in the large towns, there remain only the +semi-barbarous Gheges and Tosks, whose social condition has hardly +undergone any change in the course of three thousand years. In their +manners and modes of thought these modern Albanians are the true +successors of the ancient Pelasgians, and many a scene that a traveller +may witness amongst them carries him back to the days of the Odyssey. +G. von Hahn, who has most thoroughly studied the Shkipetars, looks upon +them as veritable Dorians, whose ancestors, led by the Heraclidæ, burst +forth from the forests of Epirus to conquer the Peloponnesus. They +are as courageous, as warlike, as fond of dominion, and as clannish +as were their ancestors. Their dress, likewise, is nearly the same, +and the white tunic (_fustanelle_) neatly fastened round the waist +fairly represents the ancient _chlamys_. The Gheges, like the Dorians +of old, are addicted to that mysterious passion which the historians +of antiquity have confounded, unfortunately, with a nameless vice, and +which links men to children by a pure and ideal love, in which the +senses have no part. + +There is no modern people respecting whom more astounding acts of +bravery are recorded than of the Albanians. In the fifteenth century +they had their Scanderbeg, who, though the theatre of his glory +was more circumscribed than that of his namesake of Macedonia, was +hardly inferior to him in genius, and {121} certainly surpassed him +in justness and goodness of heart. Or what nation has ever exceeded +in courage the Suliote mountaineers, amongst whom not an aged man, +a woman, or a child was found to beg for mercy from Ali Pasha’s +executioners? The heroism of these Suliote women, who set fire to the +ammunition waggons, and then hand in hand precipitated themselves from +the rocks, or sought death in the mountain torrents, chanting their own +funeral song, will at all times stand forth in history as an astounding +fact. + +This valour, unfortunately, is associated amongst many tribes with a +fearful amount of savageness. Human life is held cheap amongst these +warlike populations; blood calls for blood, and victim for victim. +They believe in vampires and phantoms, and occasionally an old man has +been burnt alive, on suspicion of his being able to kill by the breath +of his mouth. Slavery does not exist, but woman is held in a state of +servitude; she is looked upon as an inferior being, having no rights +or mind of her own. Custom raises a more formidable barrier between +the sexes than do walls and locked doors elsewhere. A young girl is +not permitted to speak to a young man; such an act is looked upon as a +crime, which her father or brother may feel called upon to punish by a +deed of blood. The parents sometimes consult the wishes of their son +when about to marry him, but never those of their daughter. The latter +is frequently affianced in her cradle, and, when twelve years of age, +she is handed over to a young man on his presenting a wedding outfit +and a sum of money fixed by custom, and averaging twenty shillings. +From that moment he becomes the absolute master of his bride, though +not without first going through the farce of an abduction, as is +customary amongst nearly all ancient nations. The poor woman, thus sold +like a slave, is bound to work for her husband. She is his housekeeper +as well as his labourer, and the national poets compare her to the +“ever-active shuttle,” whilst the father of the family is likened +to the “majestic ram marching at the head of the flock.” Yet woman, +scorned though she be, and brutalised by heavy work, may traverse +the whole country without fear of being insulted, and the life of an +unfortunate who places himself under her protection is held sacred. + +Family ties are very powerful amongst the Albanians. The father retains +the rights of sovereign lord up to an advanced age, and as long as +he lives the earnings of his children and grandchildren are his own. +Frequently this communism continues after his death, the eldest son +taking his place. The loss of a member of the family, and particularly +of a young man, gives rise to fearful lamentations amongst the women, +who frequently swoon away, and even lose their senses. But the death +of persons who have reached the natural limits of human life is hardly +mourned at all. The descendants of the same ancestor never lose sight +of their parentage. They form clans, called _phis_ or _pharas_, which +are bound firmly together for purposes of defence or attack, or in +the pursuit of their common interests. Brotherhood by election is +known amongst the Albanians, as well as amongst the Servians and other +ancient nations, and its ties are as strong as those of blood. Young +men desirous of becoming brothers bind themselves by solemn vows in +the presence of their families, and, having opened a vein, they {122} +drink each other’s blood. The need of these family bonds is felt so +strongly in Albania, that young people brought up together frequently +remain united during the remainder of their lives, forming a regular +community, having its days of meetings, its festivals, and a common +purse. + +But in spite of these family associations and clans, in spite of the +enthusiastic love which the Albanian bears his native land, there +exists no political cohesion amongst the various tribes. The physical +conditions of the country, no less than an unhappy passion for war, +have scattered their forces, and rendered them unable, consequently, +to maintain their independence. The religious animosities between +Mussulman and Christian, Greek and Roman Catholic, have contributed to +the like result. + +It is generally supposed that the majority of the Albanians are +Mohammedans. When the Turks became masters of the country the most +valiant amongst them fled to Italy, and the greater part of the tribes +that remained behind were compelled to embrace Islamism. Many of the +chiefs, moreover, turned Mussulmans, in order that they might continue +their life of brigandage, on pretence of carrying on a holy war. This +accounts for the fact of the aristocracy of the country being for the +most part Mohammedan, and in possession of the land. The Christian +peasant who tills it is nominally a free man, but in reality he is +at the mercy of his lord, who keeps him at the point of starvation. +These Albanian Mussulmans, however, are fanatic warriors rather than +religious zealots, and many of their ceremonies, particularly those +connected with their native land, differ in nothing from those of their +Christian compatriots. They have been converted, but not convinced, and +cynically they say of themselves that their “sword is wherever their +faith is.” + +In many districts the conversion has been nominal only, and zealous +Christians have continued to conduct their worship in secret. Many +Mohammedans of this class returned to the faith of their fathers as +soon as the tolerance of Government permitted them to do so. As to the +warlike mountain clans, the Mirdits, Suliotes, and Acroceraunians, +they had no need to bend to the will of the Turks, and remained Greek +or Roman Christians. The boundary between Gheges and Tosks coincides +approximately with the boundary between these two denominations, the +Roman Catholics living to the north of the Shkumbi, the orthodox Greeks +to the south of the river. The Hellenes and Zinzares in Southern +Albania are orthodox Greeks. The hatred between these two denominations +of Christians is intense, and this is the principal reason why the +Albanians have not succeeded in regaining their independence, as have +the Servians. + +Southern Albania and Epirus had feudal institutions up to the close +of last century. The chiefs of the clans and the semi-independent +Turkish pashas lived in strong castles perched upon the rocks, from +which they descended from time to time, followed by bands of servitors. +War existed in permanence, and property changed hands continuously, +according to the fortunes of the sword. Ali the Terrible, of Yanina, +put a stop to this state of affairs. He reduced high and low to the +same level of servitude, and the central Government now wields the +power formerly exercised by lords and heads of families. {123} + +If we would become acquainted with a social condition recalling the +Middle Ages, we must go amongst the independent tribes of Northern +Albania. On crossing the Matis we at once perceive a change. Every one +goes armed; shepherds and labourers carry a carbine on the shoulder; +and even women and children place a pistol in their belts. Families, +clans, and tribes have a military organization, and at a moment’s +notice are ready to take the field. A sheep missing in a flock, an +insult offered in the heat of passion, may lead to war. Not long since +the Montenegrin was the most frequent disturber of the peace, for, shut +up in his sterile mountains, he was often obliged to turn brigand in +order to sustain life, and laid under contribution the fields of his +neighbours. The Turks have at all times nourished this hatred between +Albanians and Montenegrins. They recompense the warlike services of +the tribes of the border clans by exempting them from taxation, and +allowing them to govern themselves according to their own laws. Let +these immunities be touched, and they will make common cause with their +hereditary foes of the Black Mountains. + +The Mirdits are typical of the independent tribes of Northern Albania. +They inhabit the high valleys to the south of the gorge of the +Drin, and, though hardly numbering 12,000 souls, they exercise, in +consequence of their warlike valour, a most important influence in +all Western Turkey. Their country is accessible only through three +difficult defiles, and they hold command of the roads which the Turkish +troops must follow when operating against the Montenegrins. The Sublime +Porte, well aware how difficult it would be to subdue these redoubtable +mountaineers, has endeavoured to attach them, showering honours upon +them, and granting them the most complete self-government. The Mirdits, +on their side, though Christians, have at all times fought most +valiantly in the ranks of the Turkish army, in Greece and the Morea, as +well as against their fellow-Christians of Montenegro. They are formed +into three “banners” of the mountains and two of the plains, and in +time of war are joined by the five banners of Lesh, or Alessio. The +banner of the renowned clan of Orosh takes precedence of all others. + +The country of the Mirdits is governed by an oligarchy, of which the +Prince or Pasha of Orosh is the hereditary head. His power, however, +is merely nominal, for in reality the country is governed by a council +consisting of the elders (_vecchiardi_) of the villages, the delegates +of the banners, and the heads of clans. The proceedings of this +council are regulated by ancient traditions. Wives are taken by force +from the enemy, for the members of the five banners look upon each +other as relatives, and the Mohammedan girls in the lowland villages +look forward with little fear to their being carried off by Mirdit +warriors. The _vendetta_ is exercised in an inexorable manner, and +blood cries for blood. A violation of hospitality is punished with +death. The adulteress is buried beneath a heap of stones, and her +nearest relative is bound to deliver the head of her accomplice to the +injured husband. It need hardly be said that education is at a very low +ebb amongst these savages. There are no schools, and in 1860 hardly +fifty Christians of the Mirdit country and of the district of Lesh were +able to {124} read. Agriculture, nevertheless, is in a relatively +advanced state. The valleys of the sterile mountains are cultivated +with a certain amount of care, and they produce finer crops than do the +fertile plains, inhabited by an indolent population. + +By a strange contrast, these direct descendants of the ancient +Pelasgians, to whom we are indebted for the beginning of civilisation +in Europe, still number amongst the most savage populations of our +continent. But they, too, must yield in time to the influence of their +surroundings. Until recently the Epirotes and southern Shkipetars left +their country only in order to lead the easy but degrading life of +mercenaries. In the last century the young men of Acroceraunia sold +themselves to the King of Naples, to be embodied in his regiment of +“Royal Macedonians;” and even in our own days not only Mohammedans, +but also Christian Tosks, enter the service of pashas and beys. These +men, known as Arnauts, may be met with in the most remote parts of +the empire—in Armenia, at Bagdad, and in Arabia. On the expiration of +their term of service, the majority of these veterans retire to estates +granted them by Government, and this accounts for the large number of +Arnaut villages met with in all parts of the empire. + +But wars are less frequent now, the life of a mercenary offers fewer +advantages, and increasing numbers of Albanians leave their country +annually in order to gain a living abroad by honest labour. Like the +Swiss of the canton of Grisons, many Shkipetars descend from their +mountains at the commencement of winter in order to work for wages in +the plains. Most of these return to their mountain homes in spring, +enriched by their earnings; but there are others who remain abroad for +years, or who never return. The advantages of a division of labour +appear to be well understood by these mountaineers of Epirus and +Southern Albania, and each mountain valley is noted for the exercise of +some special craft. One valley sends forth butchers, another bakers, a +third gardeners. A village near Argyrokastro supplies Constantinople +with most of its well-sinkers. The district of Zagori, perhaps the home +of the ancient Asclepiads, sends its doctors, or rather “bone-setters,” +into every town of Turkey. Many of these emigrants, when they become +wealthy, return to their native land, where they build themselves fine +houses in the midst of sterile mountains, and these take the places of +the old seigneurial towers, which were erected only for purposes of +defence. + +[Illustration: WEALTHY ARNAUTS.] + +The Albanians are thus being carried along by a general movement of +progress, and if once they enter into the common life of Europe, we may +expect them to play a prominent part, for they possess a penetrating +mind and much strength of character. The Albanians enjoy the advantage +of having ready access to the sea, but hitherto they have derived only +small benefit from it, not only owing to the disturbed state of the +country and the absence of roads, but also because of the alluvial +deposits formed by the rivers and the malaria of the marshes. Still, +making every allowance for these disadvantages, they hardly account +for the almost entire absence of maritime enterprise. One would +scarcely fancy these Epirotes and Gheges to be of the same race as +those Hydriote corsairs who launched whole fleets upon the waters of +the Archipelago at the time of the war for Hellenic independence, and +who still maintain the foremost place amongst the mariners of {125} +Greece. The ports of Albania—Antivari, Porto Medua (one of the +safest on the Adriatic), Durazzo, Avlona, Parga (lost in a forest of +citron-trees), and even strong Prevesa, surrounded by more than a +hundred thousand olive-trees—can boast but of a trifling commerce, and +two-thirds of that are carried on in Austrian vessels from Trieste. +With the exception of the Acroceraunians and the inhabitants of +Dulcigno, which is the port of Scutari, no Mohammedan Albanian ventures +upon the sea, not even as a fisherman. In spite of the fertility of the +soil, there are hardly any articles to export. The mines of the country +are unexplored, agriculture is in a most backward state, and in Epirus +hardly any industry is known except the rearing of sheep and goats. + +At the time of the Romans these countries were equally forsaken. There +was one magnificent city, Nicopolis, built by Augustus on a promontory +to the north of the modern Prevesa to commemorate his victory at +Actium. The only other town of importance was Dyrrhachium, called +Durazzo by the Italians. It formed the terminus of the Via Egnatia, +which traversed the whole of the Balkan peninsula from west to east, +and constituted the great highway between Italy and the Orient. Avlona +may aspire one day to take the place of ancient Dyrrhachium. Its +geographical position is superior to that of Durazzo, for it is nearer +to Italy, and its deep and secure harbour enjoys the shelter of the +island of Suseno and of the Linguetta of Acroceraunia. + +In the meantime all the commerce of the country is concentrated in +Scutari and Yanina, and in some other towns of the interior. The most +considerable amongst the latter are Prisrend, at the foot of the Skhar, +whose nobles boast of their magnificent dresses and fine weapons; Ipek +(Pech), Prishtina, Jakovitza (Yakova), in the north-eastern portion +of the country, and on roads which lead from Macedonia into Bosnia. +Nearer the coast are Tirana, Berat, and Elbasan, the ancient Albanon, +whose name recalls that of the entire country. Gyorcha (Koritza), to +the south of the Lake of Okhrida, is likewise a place of much trade, +thanks to its position on a road joining the Adriatic to the Ægean Sea. +Scutari and Yanina occupy sites at the foot of the mountains, whose +natural advantages could not fail to attract a numerous population. +Yanina, the capital of Epirus, is the more picturesque of these two +cities. It is situated on the shore of a fine lake, opposite the +somewhat heavy masses of the Pindus, but in sight of the mountains +of Greece, which are of a “luminous grey, glittering like a tissue +of silk.” At the time of Ali Pasha, Yanina became the capital of an +empire, and its population then exceeded that of Scutari. But the +latter has now regained its pre-eminence. It is admirably situated, and +the roads from the Danube and the Ægean, from the Lower Drin and the +Adriatic, converge upon it. Scutari, or Shkodra, is the first oriental +city which a traveller coming from Italy meets with, and the first +impression made by its numerous gardens enclosed by high walls, its +deserted streets and irregular buildings, is sufficiently curious. Long +after he has entered the town, the traveller will remain uncertain as +to its whereabouts. But let him climb to the summit of the limestone +rock surmounted by the old Venetian castle of Rosapha, and the most +magnificent panorama will {126} unfold itself before his eyes. The +domes of Scutari, its twenty minarets, the emerald verdure of the +plain, the surrounding amphitheatre of fantastically shaped mountains, +the winding waters of the Boyana and Drin, and the placid surface of +the lake glittering in the sun—these all combine to produce a spectacle +of rare magnificence. The sea alone is wanting to render this picture +perfect, but, though near, it is not within sight.[34] + + +V.—THE ILLYRIAN ALPS, BOSNIA, AND HERZEGOVINA. + +Bosnia, in the north-western corner of Turkey, is the Switzerland of +the European Orient, but it is a Switzerland whose mountains do not +reach the zone of perennial snow and ice. In many respects the mountain +ranges of Bosnia, and of its southern province, the Herzegovina, +resemble those of the Jura. They, too, are composed principally of +limestone, and rise in parallel ridges, surmounted here and there +by sharp crests. Like the successive ridges of the Jura, they are +of unequal height, and, taken as a whole, assume the appearance of +a plateau traversed by parallel furrows, and gently sloping in one +direction. The most elevated chain of Northern Bosnia is that which +separates it from the coast of Dalmatia, and the less elevated ridges +running parallel with it gradually decrease in height towards the +north-east, in the direction of the plains of the Save. + +Rocks not belonging to the Jurassic system, such as crystalline slates, +dolomites, tertiary deposits, and serpentine, are met with in various +localities, and impart some variety to the orographical features of +Bosnia. Several crater-shaped depressions in the east and south-east +separate the mountains of Bosnia from the mountain masses of Servia. +The most remarkable amongst these plains is that of Novibazar, into +which numerous torrents discharge themselves, and which commands roads +diverging in various directions. This is the strategical key of the +country, and is destined on this account to become an important railway +junction. + +[Illustration: TURKISH MULETEERS IN THE HERZEGOVINA.] + +Nearly all the mountain ranges which pass from Carniola and Austrian +Croatia into Bosnia increase in height as we advance towards the +centre of the peninsula. The bleached pyramid of the Durmitor, close +to the northern frontier of Montenegro, attains an elevation of nearly +8,000 feet, and the plateau surrounding it is cut up by deep cavities, +some of which, like the troughs of the Herzegovina, open out in one +direction, whilst others are completely shut in by declivities. The +Prokletya, or “cursed” mountain, still farther to the south-east, rises +to a height even more considerable, and constitutes one of the most +formidable mountain masses of all Turkey. A huge depression occupies +its centre, the bottom of which is covered by the Lake of Plava. Even +in summer patches of snow may be seen on some of the mountains which +surround this abyss. But Mount Kom, the {127} highest of all, never +retains its cap of snow during the whole of the year, for it melts away +before the hot African winds to which it is exposed. Mount Kom may +possibly turn out to be the culminating point of the Balkan peninsula. +It is certainly one of the highest summits, and its double peak, rising +above the plateau of Montenegro, is descried from afar by the mariner +navigating the Adriatic. It has been ascended by several travellers, +for its slopes are gentle.[35] + +The rivers of Bosnia, like those of the Jura, flow between parallel +mountain ranges towards the north-east, along the furrows traced out +for them by nature. But these calcareous mountain ramparts of Bosnia, +like those of the Jura, are broken up by narrow gorges, or _cluses_, +through which the pent up waters find a way from furrow to furrow. +Instead of taking a serpentine course, as do most rivers flowing +through a plain, these rivers of Bosnia change from valley to valley +by abrupt bends. Gentle and furious in turns, they gradually reach +the lower regions, and are finally swallowed up by the Save. Only one +river, the Narenta, finds its way into the Adriatic; all others, in +accordance with the general slope of the country, flow in the direction +of the Danube. These river valleys, with their sudden turnings, would +be available as natural roads for reaching the plateau, if most of the +gorges were not exceedingly difficult of access; and until regular +roads have been constructed, as in the cluses of the Jura, travellers +are obliged to scale steep heights in order to pass from valley to +valley. It is this want of practicable roads which renders military +operations in Bosnia so difficult and perilous. + +Great armies have at all times remained to the east of the mountain +masses referred to, passing from the valley of the Vardar into that +of the Morava, whose springs almost intermingle their waters. In that +locality we meet with the bed of an ancient lake, through which flows +the Sitnitza, one of the upper tributaries of the Servian Morava: this +is the plain of Kosovo, the “field of black birds,” which reminds +all southern Slavs of painful events. It was there the power of the +Servians succumbed in 1389, and, if we may credit ancient heroic songs, +more than 100,000 men perished in a single day. Five hundred years have +passed away since this great disaster, but the Slavs have never ceased +to hope for a day of vengeance, and they look forward to the time when +on this very field they may reconquer the independence they have lost. + +The similarity between the mountains of Bosnia and of the Jura is +rendered complete by the existence of grottoes, sink-holes, and +subterranean rivers. Sink-holes from 60 to 100 feet in diameter, and +shaped like funnels, are met with in many localities. Several rivers +appear suddenly at the foot of a hill, and, after flowing on for a few +miles, disappear again beneath some portal in the rocks. The table-land +of the Herzegovina especially abounds in phenomena of this kind. The +ground there is pierced by “sinks,” or _ponors_, which swallow up the +water derived from precipitation. “Blind valleys” and “troughs” present +everywhere the traces of currents of water and of temporary lakes, +and after heavy rains the subterranean basins sometimes rise to the +surface, and a river then flows for a time along the valley. As a rule, +however, the inhabitants are compelled to {128} collect the water they +require in cisterns, or to fetch it from long distances. Elsewhere the +hydrography of the country is subject to annual changes. Lakes which +still figure upon our maps are drained through subterranean passages +only recently opened; other lakes are formed in consequence of some +passage, which formerly carried off the surface water, having become +choked with alluvium. No more curious river probably exists in the +world than the Trebinishtitza, in the Western Herzegovina. It appears +and disappears many times. One of its branches, flowing at one time +on the surface, at others underground, crosses the plains of Kotesi, +in turns a parched champaign country or a lake abounding in fish, and +enters the Narenta. Other branches pass beneath the mountains, and +gush out near the shores of the Adriatic. One of the most famous of +these springs is that of Ombra, which pours its waters into the Bay of +Gravosa, to the north of Ragusa. + +[Illustration: Fig. 37.—SUBTERRANEAN BEDS OF THE AFFLUENTS OF THE +NARENTA. + +Scale 1 : 1,925,000.] + +“Where the rocks finish and the trees appear, there begins Bosnia.” +So said the Dalmatians formerly. But many parts of Bosnia have now +lost their clothing of verdure. The table-lands of the Herzegovina +and Montenegro, no less than Dalmatia, have been despoiled of their +forests, but Bosnia proper still remains a country of woods. Nearly +one-half its area is covered with forests. In the valleys trees have +almost disappeared, for the peasant is allowed to wield his axe {129} +without hindrance, but in the virgin forests of the mountains trees +still abound. The principal trees of Europe are met with in these +magnificent woods: walnut-trees, chestnut-trees, limes, maples, oaks, +beeches, ash-trees, birches, pines, firs, and larches. Austrian +speculators, unfortunately, avail themselves of the roads which begin +to open up the interior of the country to devastate these forests, +which ought to be preserved with the greatest care. The song of birds +is but rarely heard in these sombre woods, but wild animals abound +in them. They shelter bears, wild boars, and deer, and the number of +wolves is so large that their skins form one of the most important +articles of Bosnian commerce. Taken as a whole, Bosnia ranks among +the most fertile countries of Europe, and few regions surpass it in +the beauty of its rural scenery. In some parts of the country, and +particularly near the Save, large herds of hogs, almost wild, roam +through the oak forests. Hence the epithet of “country of hogs” which +the Turks have derisively given to Bosnia. + +With the exception of the Jews, the gipsies, and the few Osmanli +officials, soldiers, and merchants in the principal towns, the entire +population of the country is of Slav race. The inhabitants of Kraina, +near the Austrian frontier, call themselves Croats, but they scarcely +differ from the Bosnian Servians and Raitzes of ancient Rascia, now +known as the sandjak of Novibazar. On the classical soil of Rascia +originated most of those cherished _piesmas_, or popular songs, in +which the Southern Slavs have deposited their national traditions. The +Herzegovinians, in some respects, differ from their Bosnian kinsmen. +They are the descendants of immigrants who came from the banks of the +Vistula in the seventh century. Like their neighbours the Montenegrins, +they are more voluble in their speech than the Servians proper, and +make use of numerous peculiar turns of expression and a few words of +Italian which have glided into their language. + +Although most of the Bosnians are of the same race, they are divided by +religious animosities, and these account for their state of political +servitude. At the first glance it may cause surprise that the Slavs +of Bosnia should not have succeeded in throwing off the Turkish yoke, +like their kinsmen of Servia. Their country is more remote from the +capital, and far less accessible than Servia. A conquering army coming +from the south has not only to force numerous defiles, but has to +contend, too, with the climate, which is far more severe than that of +the remainder of the Balkan peninsula. But, in spite of these great +natural advantages from a defensive point of view, every revolt has +hitherto failed lamentably. We need not seek far for the cause of this: +Christian and Mohammedan Bosnians are at enmity, and the Christians +themselves are split up into Greeks, who are led by their _popes_, and +Romans, who follow blindly their Franciscan priests. In their divided +state they fall an easy prey to their oppressors, and servitude has +degraded their character. + +The Mussulmans of Bosnia call themselves Turks, but they are Slavs +nevertheless, like their Christian compatriots, and, like them, +speak Servian with a large admixture of Turkish words. They are the +descendants of the nobles who, in {130} the fifteenth and sixteenth +centuries, embraced Islamism in order to save their feudal privileges. +They also number amongst their ranks the descendants of brigands, who +changed their religion in order to be able to continue their trade +without fear of punishment. This apostacy gave to the lords even +greater power over their wretched dependants than they had formerly +possessed. The hatred of caste was augmented by religious animosity, +and they soon surpassed in fanaticism the Mohammedan Turks, and reduced +the Christian peasantry to a condition of veritable slavery. A wild +pear-tree is still pointed out near one of the gates of Sarayevo, upon +which the notables occasionally suspended some unfortunate raya for +their amusement. Whether beys or spahis, these Mohammedan Bosnians are +the most retrograde element of old Turkey, and on several occasions, +as in 1851, they even rose up in rebellion in order to maintain intact +their ancient feudal privileges. Sarayevo, as a Mussulman city, stood +under the special protection of the Sultan’s mother, and possessed most +extravagant privileges, which converted it into a state in the state +more hostile to Christianity than the Sublime Porte itself. + +Even in our own days the Bosnian Mussulmans possess far more than their +proper share of the land. The country is divided into _spahiliks_, +or Mussulman fiefs, which are transmitted, in accordance with the +custom of the Slavs, indivisibly to all the members of the family. +The latter choose the most aged or most valorous of their members as +their head. The Christian peasants are compelled to work for these +Mussulman communities; and, although no longer serfs, they are called +upon to bear the chief burden of taxation and of other expenses. It +is natural, under these circumstances, that the Christians of Bosnia +should shun agriculture in order to devote themselves to trade, and +nearly the whole of the commerce is in the hands of the Christians of +the Herzegovina and of their co-religionists from Slavonian Austria. +The Spanish Jews form communities in the principal towns, where they +carry on their usual commercial pursuits and money-lending on tangible +securities. They still talk Spanish amongst themselves, and never +mention without emotion the name of the country which sent them into +exile. + +The number of Mussulmans hardly exceeds one-third of the total +population of Bosnia, and they are said to remain stationary, or even +to diminish, whilst the more fecund Christians increase in numbers.[36] + +For the rest, the Bosnians, in spite of the differences in their +religious belief, possess the same natural gifts as their Servian +kinsmen, and, whatever destinies may be in store for them, they will +in the end rise to the same level of intelligence. They are frank and +hospitable, brave in battle, industrious, thrifty, of a poetical turn, +fast as friends, and true as lovers. The marital ties are respected, +{131} and even the Mussulmans reject the polygamy permitted by the +Koran. In the Herzegovina the women enjoy much liberty, and in many +villages there are even back doors to the houses, in order that they +may be able to gossip with their neighbours without going into the +street. In Northern Bosnia, however, the Mussulman women are wrapped +up closely in white linen sheets, and are hardly able to see a few +steps before them. But, in spite of these good qualities, there exists +an amount of barbarity, ignorance, superstition, and fanaticism, +amongst Christians and Mohammedans alike, which is truly astounding. +Incessant wars, tyranny on the one side, and servitude on the other, +have brutalised their manners. The want of roads, the extensive +forests, and the precipitous mountains have placed them beyond the +reach of civilising influences. There are hardly any schools, and the +few monasteries which supply their places are of little use, for the +monks themselves are steeped in ignorance, and their pupils at most +learn to chant a few hymns. Besides this, the immense consumption +of _slibovitza_ undermines the health of the people and demoralises +them, and it has been estimated that every Bosnian—man, woman, or +child—drinks annually no less than thirty-four pints of this detestable +plum-brandy. + +It may be matter for surprise that bustling towns should exist in +so rude a country, but the natural resources of Bosnia are so great +that a certain amount of local trade was sure to spring up. Isolated +as they are, the Bosnians are thrown upon their own resources. They +grind their own flour, manufacture their arms, stuffs, and iron +implements, and the exchange of these commodities has given rise to +commerce in the cities most favourably situated as entrepôts, the +principal amongst which are Sarayevo, or Bosna Serai, and Travnik, the +ancient capital of the country, picturesquely situated at the foot +of an ancient castle. Banyaluka, which is connected with Austria by +a railway, has some trade with Croatia; Tuzla extracts salt from its +abundant brine springs; Zvornik, which guards the frontier of Servia, +also carries on some trade with that country; Novibazar has commercial +relations with Albania; Mostar and Trebinye import a few articles from +Dalmatia. The populations of these towns have not, however, been solely +attracted by trade and industry, for the insecurity of the country +has also contributed to that result. There is no part of Europe, the +neighbouring Albania and the polar regions of Scandinavia and Russia +excepted, which is so rarely visited by strangers, and this isolation +will only cease when the proposed international railway shall have +joined it to Saloniki and Constantinople.[37] + + +VI.—BULGARIA. + +The centre plateau of Turkey is still amongst the least-known countries +of the Balkan peninsula, although it is intersected by the great +highways which connect Thracia with Bosnia, and Macedonia with the +Danube. This plateau, {132} known to the ancients as Upper Mœsia, +consists of a vast granitic table-land, rising to an average height +of 2,000 feet. Its surface is diversified by several _planinas_, or +mountain chains, of small relative height, and by domes of trachyte, +the remains of ancient volcanoes. Its numerous depressions were +formerly filled with water, and the contours of the ancient lakes can +still be traced. They have been gradually filled up by alluvium, or +drained by rivers. The most remarkable amongst these ancient lacustrine +basins are now represented by the fertile plains of Nish, Sofia, and +Ikhtiman. + +[Illustration: Fig. 38.—MOUNT VITOSH AND ITS ENVIRONS. + +According to F. von Hochstetter. Scale 1 : 1,058,000] + +The superb syenitic and porphyritic mountain group of Vitosh forms the +eastern bastion of the Mœsian plateau. Immediately to the east of it +the deep valley of the Isker pierces the whole of the Balkan Mountains, +and, crossing the plain of Sofia, takes its course in the direction of +the Danube. The upper valley of this river and the plain mentioned form +the true geographical centre of European Turkey. From Sofia diverge +some of the most important roads of the peninsula, one leading through +the valley of the Isker to the Lower Danube, another along the Morava +valley into Servia, a third by way of the Maritza into Thracia, and +a fourth down the Struma into Macedonia. It is said that Constantine +the Great, struck by these important natural advantages of Sofia, then +called Sardica, thought of making it the capital of his empire. {133} + +[Illustration: TIRNOVA.] + +The Turks apply the name of Balkans to all the mountain ranges of +the peninsula, but geographers restrict that term to the Hæmus of +the ancients. This mountain rampart begins to the east of the basin +of Sofia. It does not form a regular chain, but rather an elevated +terrace sloping down gently in the direction of the Danube, whilst +towards the south it presents an abrupt slope, it appearing almost +as if the plateau on that side had suddenly sunk to a lower level. +The Balkan consequently presents the appearance of a chain only when +looked at from the south. But its contours even there are only slightly +undulating; there are neither abrupt projections nor rocky pyramids, +and the prevailing character is that of long-stretched mountain ridges. +The porphyritic mountain group of Chatal, which rises to the south of +the principal chain, constitutes the only exception to this gentleness +of contour. Though inferior in height to the summits of the Balkan, its +steep precipices, slashed crests, and chaotic rock masses strike the +beholder, and the contrast between this mass of erupted rock and the +gentle slopes of the calcareous hills which surround it is very great. + +The uniformity of the northern slopes of the Balkan is such that, in +many places, a traveller is able to reach the crest without having come +in sight of mountains. When the woods have disappeared from the Balkan, +these undulating slopes will be deprived of their greatest charm; but, +as long as the forests ornament them as now, the country will remain +one of the most delightful in Turkey. Running streams flow through each +valley, bordered by pastures as brilliantly green as are those of the +Alps; the villages are built in the shade of beech-trees and oaks; and +nature everywhere wears a smiling aspect. But the plains which extend +to the Danube are barren, and sometimes not a single tree is visible. +The inhabitants, deprived of wood, are dependent upon cow-dung dried +in the sun for their fuel, and they dig for themselves holes in the +ground, where they seek protection from the cold of winter. + +The core of the Balkan, between the basin of Sofia and that of Slivno, +consists of granite, but the terraces which descend towards the Danube +present every geological formation, from the metamorphic to the most +recent rocks. The cretaceous formation occupies the largest area in +Bulgaria, and the rivers rising in the mountains, in traversing it, +form picturesque valleys and defiles. Ancient fortresses defend each +of these valleys, and the towns have been built where they debouch +upon the plain. Tirnova, the ancient capital of the tsars of Bulgaria, +is the most remarkable of these old bulwarks of defence. The Yantra, +on debouching there from the mountains, winds about curiously; +steep cliffs form an amphitheatre, in the centre of which rise two +precipitous isolated rocks, crowned formerly by walls and towers. The +houses of the town are built on the slopes, and its suburbs extend +along the foot of the cliffs. + +A singular parallelism has been noticed on the northern slopes of +Balkan. The elevated mountain saddles, crests of secondary chains, +geological formations, the faults which give rise to the meandering +of the rivers, and even the Danube itself, all follow the same +direction, from west to east. As a consequence, each of the parallel +valleys descending from the Balkans offers similar features; the {134} +population is distributed in the same manner; and the towns occupy +analogous positions. The valley of the Lom offers the only exception +to the rule, for its direction is towards the north-west. It debouches +upon the Danube at Rustchuk, and its green orchards and gardens are +hemmed in by dazzling white cliffs of chalk rising to a height of about +100 feet. + +The symmetry would be almost complete in Northern Turkey if it were +not for the detached arid hills of the Dobruja, which force the Danube +to make a wide détour to the north. Rising in the low and swampy delta +of the Danube, these hills appear to be much higher than they are. In +reality they do not exceed 1,650 feet in height. It is possible that +during some very remote geological epoch the Danube took its course +to the south of these hills, through the depression which has been +utilised for the construction of the first Turkish railway. Trajan, +who feared that the Goths might obtain a footing in this remote corner +of the Roman empire, constructed one of those lines of fortifications +here which are known throughout the countries of the Lower Danube as +Trajan’s Walls. Remains of walls, ditches, and forts may still be +traced along the banks of the marshes, and on the heights commanding +them. This country of the Dobruja is the “savage hyperborean region” +where Ovid, exiled from Rome, wept for the splendours of the capital. +The port of Tomi, the place of his banishment, is the modern Kustenje. + +To the north of the Gulf of Burgas, which is the westernmost extremity +of the Black Sea, rise the fine porphyry mountains which terminate in +the superb Cape of Emineh. They are sometimes described as an eastern +prolongation of the Balkan, but erroneously, for the ancient lacustrine +basin of Karnabat, now traversed by a railway, separates them from the +system of the Hæmus. The granitic plateaux and mountains of Tunja and +Stranja, which command the wide plain of Thracia on the north, are +likewise separate mountain ranges. The Southern Balkan is, in reality, +without ramifications or spurs, except in the west, where the mountains +of Ikhtiman and of Samakov, so rich in iron ore and thermal springs, +and other transverse chains, connect it with the mountain mass of +the Rhodope. The upper basin of the Maritza River, enclosed between +the Balkan and the Rhodope, has the shape of an elongated triangle, +whose apex, directed towards the plain of Sofia, indicates the point +of junction between the two systems. The whole of this triangular +depression, with its lateral ramifications, was formerly occupied by +lakes, now converted into bottom-lands of marvellous fertility. The +passes near the apex of this triangle are naturally points of the +highest strategical and commercial importance. Through one of them, +still marked by ancient fortifications, and known as Trajan’s Gate, +passed the old Roman highway, and there, too, the railway now in course +of construction will cross the summit between the two slopes of the +peninsula. This is the true “gateway of Constantinople,” and from the +most remote times nations have fought for its possession. The numerous +tumuli scattered over the neighbouring plains bear witness to many a +bloody struggle. + +The spurs of the Rhodope intermingle with those of the Balkan, and +the lowest {135} pass which separates the two still exceeds 3,000 +feet in elevation. The Rilo Dagh, the most elevated mountain mass +of the Rhodope, boldly rises at its northern extremity, and, to use +the expression of Barth, forms the shoulder-blade of junction. Its +height is 9,580 feet. It rises far beyond the region of forests, and +its jagged summits, pyramids, and platforms contrast strikingly with +the rounded outlines of the Balkan. But the lower heights, surrounded +by this imposing amphitheatre of grand summits, are covered with +vegetation. Forests of pines, larches, and beech-trees, the haunts +of bears and chamois, alternate with clumps of trees and cultivated +fields, and the villages in the valleys are surrounded by meadows, +vineyards, and oaks. Picturesque cupolas of numerous monasteries +peep out amongst the verdure: to their existence the mountain owes +its Turkish name of Despoto Dagh, _i.e._ “mountain of the parsons.” +The Rilo Dagh, likewise famous on account of its monasteries, has +altogether the aspect of the Swiss Alps. The moist winds of the +Mediterranean convey to it much snow in winter and spring, but in +summer the clouds discharge only torrents of rain, and the snow rapidly +disappears from the flanks of the mountains. These sudden rain-storms +are amongst the most remarkable spectacles to be witnessed. In the +forenoon the mist which hides the tops of the mountains grows dense by +degrees, and heavy copper-coloured clouds collect on the slopes. About +three in the afternoon the rain begins to pour down, the clouds grow +visibly smaller, first one, then another summit is seen through a rent +in the watery vapours, until at last the air has become purified, and +the mountains are lit up in the sunset. + +To the south of the Rilo Dagh rises the mountain mass of Perim, hardly +inferior to it in height. This is the Orbelos of the ancient Greeks, +and the rings to which Noah made fast his ark when the waters subsided +after the deluge are still shown there, and even Mussulman pilgrims pay +their devotions at this venerated spot. It is the last high summit of +the Rhodope. The mountains to the south rapidly decrease in elevation, +though the granitic formation to which they belong is spread over a +vast extent of country from the plains of Thracia to Albania. The +extent of the hilly region connected with the Rhodope is still further +increased by numerous groups of extinct volcanoes, which have poured +forth vast sheets of trachytic lava. The rivers which flow from the +central plateau of Turkey into the Ægean Sea have cut for themselves +deep passages through these granites and lavas, the most famous amongst +which is the “Iron Gate” of the Vardar, or Demir Kapu, which formerly +figured on our maps of Turkey as a large town. + +The aspect of the crystalline mountain masses to the west of the Vardar +is altogether of an Alpine character, for the peaks not only attain a +high elevation, but snow remains upon them during the greater portion +of the year. The Gornichova, or Nije, to the north of Thessaly, rises +to a height of 6,560 feet; and the Peristeri, whose triple summit +and snow-clad shoulders have been likened to the spread-out wings of +a bird, and which rises close to the city of Bitolia, or Monastir, +is more elevated still. The mountains of ancient Dardania enclose +extensive circular or elliptical plains, and the most remarkable +amongst these, {136} namely, that of Monastir, has been compared by +Grisebach, the geologist, to one of those huge crater lakes which the +telescope has revealed to us on the surface of the moon. In most of +these plains we meet with swamps or small lakes, the only remains of +the sheets of water which at one time covered them. The most extensive +of these lakes is that of Ostrovo. The Lake of Kastoria resembles the +filled-up crater of a volcano. In its centre rises a limestone hill +joined to the shore by an isthmus, upon which is built a picturesque +Greek town. + +According to Viquesnel and Hochstetter, traces of glaciers do not +exist in any of these ancient lacustrine basins, or on the flanks +of the mountains. It is certainly remarkable that whilst other +European mountains—as, for instance, the Vosges and the mountains of +Auvergne—have passed through a glacial epoch, the far more elevated +Peristeri, Rilo Dagh, and Balkan, under about the same latitude as the +Pyrenees, should never have had their valleys filled by moving rivers +of ice.[38] + +All the large rivers of European Turkey belong to the Bulgarian regions +of the Balkan or Hæmus. In Bosnia there are merely small parallel +rivers flowing to the Save; Albania has only turbulent torrents forcing +their way through wild gorges, like the Drin; but the Maritza, the +Strymon or Karasu, the Vardar, and the Inje Karasu, which descend from +the southern flanks of the Balkans, or originate in the crystalline +mountain masses of the Rhodope, are large rivers, which bear comparison +with the tranquil streams of Western Europe. As yet we know but little +about their mode of action. The volume of water discharged by them has +never been measured, and they are hardly made use of for purposes of +navigation or irrigation. They all traverse ancient lake basins, which +they have filled up gradually with alluvium, and converted into fertile +plains. This work of filling up still goes on in the lower portions +of these fluvial valleys, where extensive marshes, and even gradually +shrinking lakes, abound. One of these lakes, the Takhino, through which +the Strymon flows before it enters the Ægean Sea, is said to be the +Prasias of Herodotus, and its aquatic villages were no doubt similar to +the pile dwellings discovered in nearly all the lakes of Central Europe. + +The Danube, to the north of the Dobruja, performs an amount of +geological work, in comparison with which that of the Maritza, the +Strymon, and Vardar sinks into insignificance. That mighty river +annually conveys to the Black Sea a volume of water far in excess of +that which is carried down the rivers of all France, and the solids +which it holds in suspension are sufficient to cover an area of ten +square miles to a depth of nine feet. This enormous mass of sand and +clay is annually deposited in the swamps and on the banks of the delta, +and the slow but steady growth of the latter is thus sufficiently +explained. Even the ancients {137} anticipated a time when the Black +Sea would be converted into a shallow pond abounding in sand-banks, and +it must, therefore, afford some consolation to our mariners to be told +that six million years must pass before the alluvium carried down the +river will fill the whole of the Black Sea. + +[Illustration: Fig. 39.—THE DELTA OF THE DANUBE. + +Scale 1 : 1,500,000.] + +The large triangular plain which the Danube has conquered from the +sea has not yet fully emerged from the waters. Lakes, and the remains +of ancient bays, half-obliterated branches of the Danube, and the +ever-changing beds of rivulets, have converted this delta into a +domain, half land, half sea. More elevated tracts, consolidated by the +attack of the waves, rise here and there above the melancholy mire +and reeds, and bear a dense vegetation of oaks, olives, and beeches. +Willows fringe most of the branches of the river which take their +winding course through the delta. Twenty years ago the Danube had six +mouths; it has now only three. + +After the Crimean war the Western powers determined that the Kilia +branch, which conveys to the Black Sea more than half the volume of +the Danube, should thenceforth form the boundary between Rumania and +Turkey. The Sultan thus possesses not only the whole of the delta, +which has an area of about 4,000 square miles, but also the only mouth +of the river which makes the possession of that territory of any value +to him. The mouth of the Kilia is closed by a bar of sand, which does +not even permit small vessels to enter it. {138} + +The southern mouth, that of Khidrillis, or St. George, is likewise +inaccessible. The centre branch, that of the Sulina, which has served +the purposes of commerce from time immemorial, can alone be entered by +vessels. But even this channel would not be practicable, in the case +of large vessels, if our engineers had not improved its facilities of +access. Formerly the depth of water on the bar hardly exceeded a fathom +during April, June, and July; and even at times of flood was at most +two or three fathoms. But by building convergent jetties, which guide +the waters of the river into the deep sea, the depth of water has been +increased to the extent of ten feet, and vessels drawing twenty feet +can enter. Sulina is now one of the most important commercial ports +of Europe, and a highly prized harbour of refuge on the Black Sea, +which is so much dreaded by mariners on account of its squalls. We are +indebted for this great public work to an international commission, +which enjoys almost sovereign rights over the Danube as high up as +Isakcha.[39] + +[Illustration: Fig. 40.—COMPARATIVE DISCHARGE OF THE MOUTHS OF THE +DANUBE. + + Kilia Mouth. Sulina Mouth. St. George’s Mouth.] + +The Bulgarians inhabit the country to the south of the Danube as far as +the slopes of Mount Pindus, excepting only certain detached territories +in the occupation of Turks, Wallachians, Zinzares, or Greeks. In the +Middle Ages their kingdom was even more extensive, for it included the +whole of Albania, and had Okhrida for its capital. + +The origin of the Bulgarians has been a theme of frequent discussion. +The Bulgarians of the Byzantines, who laid waste the plains of Thracia +about the close of the fifth century, and whose name became a term +of opprobrium, probably were a Ugrian race, like the Huns, and spoke +a language akin to that of the Samoyeds. The name of these savage +conquerors is sometimes derived from the Volga, on the banks of which +they formerly dwelt; but their manners and appearance have undergone +a singular change, and nothing now indicates their origin. Originally +Turanians, they have been converted into Slavs, like their neighbours +the Servians and Russians. + +[Illustration: BULGARIANS. + + Christian from Christian Ladies Mohammedans A native of + Viddin. from Skodra. from Viddin. Koyutepe.] + +This rapid conversion of the Bulgarians into Slavs is one of the most +remarkable ethnological phenomena of the Middle Ages. Even in the +ninth century the Bulgarians had adopted the Servian language, and +soon afterwards they ceased to speak their own. Their idiom is less +polished than that of the Servians, and, possessing no literature, +has not become fixed. The purest Bulgarian, it is said, may be heard +in the district of Kalofer, to the south of the Balkan. The gradual +transformation of the Bulgarians into Slavs is ascribed by some authors +to the {139} prodigious facility for imitation possessed by that +people; but it is simpler to assume that, in course of time, the +conquering Bulgarians and the conquered Servians became amalgamated, +and that, whilst the former gave a name to the new nation, the latter +contributed their language, their manners, and physical features. Thus +much is certain, that the inhabitants of Bulgaria must now be looked +upon as members of the Slavonian family of nations. Together with the +Servians, Croats, and Herzegovinians, they are the most numerous people +of European Turkey; and, if the succession to the dominion of the Turks +is to be decided by numbers alone, it belongs to the Servo-Bulgarians, +and not to the Greeks. + +The Bulgarians, as a rule, are not so tall as their neighbours the +Servians; they are squat, strongly built, with a large head on broad +shoulders. Lejean, himself a Breton, and others, consider that they +bear a striking resemblance to the peasants of Brittany. In several +districts, and notably in the environs of Philippopoli, they shave +the head, a tuft of hair alone excepted, which they cultivate and +dress into a tail as carefully as the Chinese. Greeks and Wallachians +ridicule them, and many proverbial expressions refer to their want of +intelligence and polish. This ridicule, however, they hardly deserve. +Less vivacious than the Wallachian, or less supple than the Greek, the +Bulgarian is certainly not deficient in intelligence. But bondage has +borne heavily upon him; and in the south, where he is oppressed by the +Turk and fleeced by the Greek, he looks unhappy and sad; but in the +plains of the north and the secluded mountain villages, where he has +been exposed to less suffering, he is jovial, fond of pleasure, fluent +of speech, and quick at repartee. The inhabitants of the northern +slopes of the Balkan, perhaps owing to a greater infusion of Servian +blood, are better-looking, too, than other Bulgarians, and dress in +better taste. A still finer race of men are the Pomakis, in the high +valleys of the Rhodope, to the south of Philippopoli. Their speech is +Bulgarian, but in no other respect do they resemble their compatriots. +They are a fine race of men, with auburn hair, full of energy, and of a +poetical temperament. We almost feel tempted to look upon them as the +lineal descendants of the ancient Thracians, especially if it should +turn out to be true that in their songs they celebrate Orpheus, the +divine musician. + +The Bulgarians, and especially those of the plains, are a peaceable +people, recalling in no respect the fierce hordes who devastated the +Byzantine empire. They are not warlike, like their neighbours the +Servians, and do not keep alive in their national poetry the memory of +former struggles. Their songs relate to the events of every-day life, +or to the sufferings of the oppressed; and the “gentle _zaptieh_,” +as the representative of authority, is one of the characters most +frequently represented in them. The average Bulgarian is a quiet, +hard-working peasant, a good husband and father; he is fond of +home comforts, and practises every domestic virtue. Nearly all the +agricultural produce exported from Turkey results from the labour of +Bulgarian husbandmen. It is they who have converted certain portions of +the plain to the south of the Danube into huge fields of {140} maize +and corn, rivalling those of Rumania. It is they, likewise, who, at +Eski-Za’ara, at the south of the Balkan, produce the best silk and +the best wheat in all Turkey, from which latter alone the bread and +cakes placed upon the Sultan’s table are prepared. Other Bulgarians +have converted the noble plain of Kezanlik, at the foot of the Balkan, +into the finest agricultural district of Turkey, the town itself being +surrounded by magnificent walnut-trees and by rosaries, which furnish +the famous attar of roses, constituting so important an article of +commerce throughout the East. Amongst the Bulgarians between Pirot and +Turnov (Tirnova), on the northern slope of the Balkan, there exist +flourishing manufactures. Each village there is noted for a particular +branch of industry. Knives are made at one, metal ornaments at another, +earthenware at a third, stuffs or carpets elsewhere; and even common +workmen exhibit much manual dexterity and purity of taste. An equally +remarkable spirit of enterprise is manifested amongst the Bulgarians +and Zinzares of the district of Bitolia, or Monastir. The town +itself, as well as Kurshova, Florina, and others in its vicinity, are +manufacturing centres. + +The Bulgarians, peaceable, patient, and industrious as they are, are +beginning to grow tired of the subjection in which they are held. +They certainly do not as yet dream of a national rising, for the +isolated revolts which have taken place amongst them were confined to +a few mountaineers, or brought about by young men whom a residence +in Servia or Rumania had imbued with an enthusiasm for liberty. But +though docile subjects still, the Bulgarians begin to raise their +heads. They have learnt to look upon each other as members of the +same nation, and are organizing themselves for the defence of their +nationality. The first step in this direction was taken on a question +of religion. When the Turks conquered the country a certain number +amongst them turned Mohammedan to escape oppression; but though they +visit the mosques, they nevertheless still cling to the faith of their +forefathers, venerate the same springs, and put their trust in the same +talismans. A few joined the Roman Church, but a great majority remained +Greek Catholics. Greek monks and priests, not long since, enjoyed +the greatest influence, for during centuries of oppression they had +upheld the ancient faith. Their presence vaguely recalled the times of +independence, and their churches were the only sanctuaries open to the +persecuted peasant. But the Bulgarians, in the end, grew discontented +with a priesthood who did not even take the trouble to acquire the +language of its congregations, and openly sought to subject them to an +alien nation like the Greeks. Nothing was further from their thoughts +than a religious schism. They merely desired to withdraw from the +authority of the Patriarch of Constantinople, and to found a National +Church of their own, as had been done by the Servians, and even by +the Greeks of the new Hellenic kingdom. The Vatican of Constantinople +protested, the Turkish Government proved anything but favourable to +this movement of emancipation, but in the end the Greek priests were +forced to retire—precipitately in some instances—and the new National +Church was established. {141} + +This pacific revolution, though directed against the Greeks, cannot +fail to influence the relations between Bulgarians and Turks. The +former have combined, for the first time since many centuries, for the +accomplishment of a common national object, and this reawakening of a +feeling of nationality cannot but prove detrimental to the rule of the +Osmanli. The latter are not very numerous in the country districts of +Western Bulgaria, where they are met with chiefly in the towns, and +particularly in those which are of strategical importance. Eastern +Bulgaria, however, is for the most part peopled by Turks, or at all +events by Bulgarians who have adopted the language, dress, manners, and +modes of thought of their conquerors. No Christian monastery exists in +this stronghold of Turkish power, though there are several Mohammedan +places of pilgrimage held in high repute for their sanctity. + +The Greeks, next to the Turks, are the most important element of the +population of Bulgaria. They are not very numerous to the north of +the Balkan, where their influence hardly exceeds that of the Germans +and Armenians established in the towns. To the south of the Balkan, +though not numerous relatively, they are much more widely distributed. +One or two Greeks are met with in every village, carrying on trade +or exercising some handicraft. They make themselves indispensable +to the locality, their advice is sought for by all, and they impart +their own spirit to the whole of the population. Where two or three +of these Greeks meet they at once constitute themselves into a sort +of community, and throughout the country they form a kind of masonic +brotherhood. Their influence is thus far greater than could be expected +from their numbers. There are a few important Greek colonies amongst +the Bulgarians, as at Philippopoli and Bazarjik, and in a valley of the +Rhodope they occupy the populous town of Stanimako, to the exclusion of +Turks and Bulgarians. The ruins of ancient buildings, as well as the +dialect of the inhabitants, which contains over two hundred Greek words +not known to modern Greek, prove that Stanimako has existed as a Greek +town for upwards of twenty centuries, and M. Dumont thinks that it is +one of the old colonies of Eubœa. + +The initiatory part played by the Greeks in Southern Bulgaria is +played in the north by the Rumanians. The right bank of the Danube, +from Chernavoda to the Black Sea, is for the most part inhabited by +Wallachians, who are gradually gaining upon the Turks. Other colonists +are attracted by the fertility of the plains at the northern foot +of the Balkan. The Bulgarians are careful cultivators of the soil +themselves, but the Rumanians nevertheless gain a footing amongst them, +as they do with the Servians, the Magyars, and the Germans. They are +more active and intelligent than the Bulgarians, their families are +more numerous, and in the course of a generation they generally succeed +in “Rumanising” a village in which they have settled. + +Bulgarians and Turks, Greeks and Wallachians, isolated colonies of +Servians and Albanians, communities of Armenians and of Spanish Jews, +colonies of Zinzares and wandering tribes of Mohammedan Tsigani, +have converted the {142} countries of the Balkan into a veritable +ethnological chaos; but the confusion is greater still in the small +district of Dobruja, between the Lower Danube and the Black Sea. In +addition to the races enumerated, we there meet with Nogai Tartars, +who are of purer blood than their kinsmen the Osmanli, and exhibit the +Asiatic type in greater purity. Although they cultivate the soil, they +have not altogether abandoned their nomad habits, for they wander with +their herds over hill and dale. They are governed by an hereditary +khan, as at the time when they dwelt in tents. + +After the Crimean war several thousand Nogai Tartars, compromised by +the aid which they had rendered the Allies, joined their compatriots +in the Dobruja. On the other hand, about 10,000 Bulgarians, terrified +at the approach of these much-maligned immigrants, fled the Dobruja, +and sought an asylum in Russia, where they were assigned the lands +abandoned by the Crimean Tartars. This exchange proved disastrous to +both nations, for sickness and grief carried off many victims. More +deplorable still was the lot of the Circassians and other Caucasian +tribes, who, to the number of 400,000, sought a refuge in Turkey in +1864. It was by no means easy to provide accommodation for so large a +host. The pasha intrusted with the installation of these immigrants +sent many of them to Western Bulgaria, in the vain hope that they +would cut off all contact between Servians and Bulgarians. The rayas +were compelled to surrender to them their best lands, to build +houses for them, and to supply them with cattle and seed-corn. This +hospitable reception, compulsory though it was, would have enabled +these immigrants to start in their adopted country with a fair chance +of success, had they but deigned to work. This, however, they declined. +Hunger, sickness, and a climate very different from that of their +mountains, caused them to perish in thousands, and in less than a +year about one-third of these refugees had perished. Young girls and +children were sold to procure bread, and this infamous traffic became +a source of wealth to certain pashas. The harems became filled with +young Circassians, who were a drug in the market at that time, and the +human merchandise not saleable at Constantinople was exported to Syria +and Egypt. These Circassians, after thus suffering from sickness and +their own improvident laziness, have now accommodated themselves to +the conditions of their new homes. Though of the same religion as the +Osmanli, they readily assimilate with the Bulgarians amongst whom they +dwell, and adopt their language. + +Other refugees, more kindly treated by fate, have found an asylum in +the Dobruja. They are Russian Cossacks, Ruthenians, and Muscovites +of the “Old Faith,” who left their steppes towards the close of last +century in order to escape persecution. The Padisha, more tolerant than +the Christian Empress of Russia, generously received them, and granted +them land in various parts of his dominions. The Russian colonies in +the Dobruja and in the delta of the Danube have prospered, and one of +their settlements on the St. George’s branch of the river is known +as the “Cossacks’ Paradise.” Most of these Russians are engaged in +the sturgeon fishery and the preparation of caviare. They have {143} +proved grateful for the hospitality extended to them, and have always +fought valiantly in defence of their adopted country. They retain their +national dress, their language, and their religion, and do not mix with +the surrounding populations. + +In addition to the above, we meet in the Dobruja with colonies of +Germans, Arabs, and Poles, and, in the new port of the Sulina, with +representatives of many nations of Europe and Asia. + + * * * * * + +There are few countries where the great international high-roads are +as plainly traced by nature as in Bulgaria. The first of these roads +is formed by the Danube. The Turkish towns along its banks—Viddin, +Shishtova, Rustchuk, and Silistria—are taking an increasing share +in European commerce. This highway is continued along the shores of +the Black Sea, where there are several commercial harbours, the most +important being Burgas, a great grain port. This natural highway, +however, has become too circuitous for purposes of commerce. A railway +has therefore been built across the isthmus of the Dobruja, from +Chernavoda to Kustenje, and a second line connects Rustchuk, on the +Danube, with Varna, on the Black Sea, the latter line crossing the +whole of Eastern Bulgaria, and touching the towns of Razgrad and +Shumna. A third line, now in course of construction, will cross the +Balkans by a depression to the south of Shumna, and traversing the +plain in which the towns of Yamboly and Adrianople are built, will +connect the Lower Danube with the Ægean Sea. A third route, still +farther to the west, passes Turnov, or Tirnova—the ancient capital of +the tsars of Bulgaria—Kezanlik, and Eski-Za’ara. + +These railways, already opened for traffic or approaching +completion, certainly shorten the journey between Western Europe +and Constantinople; but it is proposed now to avoid the circuitous +navigation of the Lower Danube altogether, by joining the railway +system of Europe to that of Turkey. One of these proposed railways will +pass through Bosnia, and down the valley of the Vardar to Saloniki; +another will follow the ancient Roman road, which connected Pannonia +with Byzantium, and which was paved in the sixteenth century as far as +Belgrad. The principal cities along this great highway are Nish, on a +tributary of the Morava, close to the frontier of Servia; Sofia, the +ancient Sardica, on the Isker, a tributary of the Danube; Bazarjik, +or “the market;” and the fine town of Philippopoli, with its triple +mountain commanding the passage of the Maritza. These towns, on the +completion of the railway, cannot fail to become of great commercial +importance. A hideous monument near Nish will, perhaps, be pointed out +to tourists attracted thither on the opening of the railway. It was +erected to remind future generations of a deed of “glory.” This trophy +of Kele-kalesi consists of a tower built of the skulls of Servians, +who, rather than fall alive into the hands of their enemies, blew +themselves up together with the redoubt which they defended. A governor +of Nish, more humane than his predecessors, desired to remove this +abominable piece of masonry, which no raya passes without a shudder, +but Mussulman fanaticism forbade it. {144} + +The influence of commerce cannot fail to modify largely the manners +and customs of a nation as supple and pliable as are the Bulgarians. +War has brutalised the Albanians, and slavery degraded the Bulgarians. +In the towns, more particularly, they have sunk very low. The insults +heaped upon them by Mussulmans, and the contemptuous manner in which +they were treated, rendered them abject and despicable in their own +eyes. Demoralised by servitude and misery, given up to the mercy of +their rich compatriots, the _chorbajis_, or “givers of soup,” they +became shameless and low-minded helots. The Bulgarian women, in the +towns more particularly, presented a spectacle of the most shameful +corruption, and their want of modesty, their coarseness, and ignorance +fully justified the contempt in which they were held by their +Mohammedan sisters. Even as regards education the Turks were in advance +of them: not long ago their schools relatively were more numerous, +and the instruction given in them was of a superior order. Christian +villages, moreover, were never so clean or pleasant as those of the +Turks. + +But, whatever may have been the case in the past, things have already +begun to mend. The Turks, as a body, may still be the superiors of +the Bulgarians, as regards probity and a respect for truth, but they +work less, and become impoverished by degrees. In the country the land +gradually passes into the hands of the rayas, in the towns the latter +monopolize nearly all the trade. The Bulgarians, moreover, have learnt +to appreciate the importance of education; they have founded schools +and colleges, have set up printing presses, and send their young men to +be educated at the universities of Europe. The young Bulgarians in the +mixed colleges of Constantinople invariably make the most satisfactory +progress in their studies. This revival of learning is a most hopeful +sign of vitality. If persevered in, the Bulgarian race, which has been +dead, as it were, for so many centuries, may again play its part in the +world’s history. The atrocities of which Bulgaria has recently been +the scene may retard this regeneration, but they certainly cannot stop +it.[40] {145} + + +VII.—PRESENT POSITION AND PROSPECTS OF TURKEY. + +The prophecies respecting the “sick man” have not yet been fulfilled, +and his heritage divided amongst the surrounding powers. To a great +extent he is indebted for this continued existence to the jealousies +of the European powers, and to the fact of Russia having her hands +full in Central Asia. Still, Turkey has recently exhibited a wonderful +amount of vitality. Fresh provinces have been incorporated with the +empire in Arabia, at a distance of 1,800 miles from the capital; and a +rebellion in the north-western portion of European Turkey, originating +in the misgovernment of the country, but aided and abetted by Russia, +has been suppressed with a strong hand. The Turkish empire remains not +only intact, but will actually be found to have considerably increased +in extent, if we include within it the territories of the Khedive of +Egypt, whose arms have been carried to the Upper Nile and into Dar Fur. + +We must guard ourselves, at the same time, against the assumption that +Turkey has entered upon a path of normal progress. On the contrary, +Turkey is a mediæval country still, and will have to pass through many +intestine revolutions before it can rank with the civilised states of +Europe or America. The country is in the occupation of hostile races, +who would fall upon each other were they not restrained by force. +The Servian would take up arms against the Albanian, the Bulgarian +against the Greek, and all the subject races would combine against +the Turk. National jealousies are augmented by religious animosities. +The Catholic Bosnians hate other Slavs, and the Tosks detest the +Gheges, although they speak the same language. The Osmanli oppress +these various populations without compunction, their art of government +consisting in playing them off against each other. + +Nor can better things be expected in an empire in which caprice +reigns supreme. The Padishah is lord of the souls and bodies of his +subjects; he is commander-in-chief of the army, supreme judge, and +sovereign pontiff. In former times his power was practically limited +by semi-independent feudatories, but since the fall of Ali Pasha and +the massacre of the janissaries he is restrained only by customs, +traditions, and the demands of the Governments of Europe. He is the +most despotic sovereign of Europe, and his civil list the heaviest in +proportion to the revenues of the country. The household of the late +Sultan and of the members of his family was exceedingly numerous. There +lived in the Seraglio an army of 6,000 servants and slaves of both +sexes, of whom 600 were cooks. These servants, in turn, were surrounded +by an army of hangers-on, who were fed from the imperial kitchens, to +which no less than 1,200 sheep were supplied daily by the contractors. + +Current expenses were sufficiently heavy, but more considerable +still was the extraordinary expenditure incurred in the construction +of palaces and kiosks, the purchase of articles _de luxe_ and of +curiosities, and for all kinds of prodigalities. The present Sultan, +driven thereto by the precarious position of his empire, has limited +his expenditure. But will this last? {146} + +Ministers, valis, and other high officials of the empire faithfully +follow in the footsteps of their sovereign, and their expenditure +always exceeds their salary, though the latter is fixed on a most +liberal scale. As to the lower officials, their salaries are small and +irregularly paid; but it is understood that they may recoup themselves +at the expense of the ratepayers. Everything can be purchased in +Turkey, and, above all, justice. The state of the finances is most +lamentable; loans are raised at usurious interest; and so badly is the +country governed that it has been seriously proposed to intrust the +management of its finances to a syndicate of the European powers ! [41] + +Agriculture and industry progress but slowly under such misgovernment. +Vast tracts of the most fertile land are allowed to lie fallow; they +appear to be no one’s property, and any one may settle upon and +cultivate them. But woe to him if he conducts his operations with +profit to himself; for no sooner is he observed to become wealthy +than his land is laid claim to on behalf of the clergy or of some +pasha, and he may consider himself lucky if he escapes a bastinado. +The peasants, in many districts, are careful not to produce more than +they absolutely require to live upon, for an abundant harvest would +impoverish them—would merely lead to a permanent increase of taxation. +The tradesmen in the smaller towns are equally careful to conceal their +wealth, if they possess any. + +Many Mussulman families have ceded to the mosques their proprietary +rights. They thus enjoy merely the usufruct of their lands, but are +freed, on the other hand, from the payment of taxes, and the land +remains in the possession of their families until they become extinct. +These lands are known as _vakufs_, and they form about one-third of +the area of the whole empire. They contribute actually nothing towards +the revenues of the State. In the end they aggrandise the vast estates +of the Mohammedan clergy. Taxation weighs almost exclusively upon the +lands cultivated by the unfortunate Christians; and in proportion as +the vakufs increase, so does the produce of taxation diminish. This +must in the end necessarily lead to a secularisation of the estates of +the clergy; and even now, to the great horror of the old Turks, the +Ottoman Government is timidly extending its hands towards the estates +belonging to the mosques of Constantinople. + +[Illustration: MUSSULMAN OF ADRIANOPLE, AND MUSSULMAN LADY OF PRISREND.] + +The Servian, Albanian, and Bulgarian peasants actually cultivate +their land in spite of their masters. A single fact will show this. +Certain collectors of tithes, in order to prevent fraud, insist upon +the peasants leaving the whole of the harvest upon the fields until +they have withdrawn their tenth part. Maize, rice, and corn are +exposed there to the inclemencies of the weather and other destructive +agencies; and it frequently happens that the harvest has deteriorated +to the extent of one-half in value before the Government impost is +levied. Sometimes the peasants allow their grapes or fruit to rot +rather than pay the tithes. But it is not the tax-gatherer alone of +whose conduct the peasant may complain; for he is exposed likewise to +exactions by the middlemen with whom he comes into contact when selling +his produce. “The Bulgarian works, but the Greek holds the plough.” So +says an ancient proverb; and this is still true at least of the {147} +countries to the south of the Balkan, where the Bulgarian peasant is +not always the proprietor of the land he tills. But where he does not +directly work for a Greek or Mussulman proprietor, his harvest, even +before it is cut, is frequently the property of a usurer; but he works +on from day to day, a wretched slave, in the vain hope of becoming one +day a free man. + +The fertility of the soil on both slopes of the Balkans, in Macedonia, +and in Thessaly is, however, such that in spite of mosques and +tax-collectors, in spite of usurers and thieves, agriculture supplies +commerce with a large quantity of produce. Maize, or “Turkish corn,” +and all cereals are grown in abundance. The valleys of the Karasu and +Vardar produce cotton, tobacco, and dye stuffs; the coast districts +and islands yield wine and oil, whose quality would leave nought to be +desired, were a little more care bestowed upon their cultivation; and +forests of mulberry-trees are met with in certain parts of Thracia and +Rumelia, and the export of cocoons to Italy and France is increasing +from year to year. Turkey, with its fertile soil, is sure to take +a prominent part amongst the European states for the variety and +superiority of its products. As to its manufactures, they will no doubt +be gradually displaced on the opening of new roads of commerce. The +manufacturers of arms, stuffs, carpets, and jewellery in the cities +of the interior will suffer considerably from foreign competition, +and many amongst them will succumb to it, unless they pass into the +hands of foreigners. The great fairs, too, which are now held annually +at Slivno and other places, and at which merchants from the whole of +the empire meet to transact business—as many as a hundred thousand +strangers being attracted occasionally to a single spot—will gradually +give place to a regular commercial intercourse. + +It is certain that the commerce of Turkey has increased of late years, +thanks to the efforts of Greeks, Armenians, and Franks of all nations. +The annual value of the exports and imports of the whole of the Ottoman +empire in Europe and Asia is estimated at £40,000,000—a very small +sum, if we bear in mind the resources of these countries, their many +excellent harbours, and their favourable geographical position. + +The Turks themselves perform but a very small share of the work that is +done in their empire. Various causes combine to render them less active +than the other races. They are the governing class, and their ambition +naturally aspires to the honours and the luxury of _kief_; that is +to say, of sweet idleness. Despising everything not Mohammedan, and +being, besides, heedless and of a sluggish mind, they but rarely learn +foreign languages, and are thus in a certain measure at the mercy of +the other races, most of whom speak two or more idioms. Moreover, the +fatalism taught in the Koran has deprived the Turk of all enterprise, +and once thrown out of his ordinary routine, he is helpless. Polygamy +and slavery are likewise two causes of demoralisation. It is true that +the rich alone can permit themselves the luxury of a harem, but the +poor learn from their superiors to despise women, they become debased, +and take a share in that traffic in human flesh which is a necessary +sequence of polygamy. Yet, in spite of the innumerable slaves imported +in the course of four centuries from all the regions bordering upon +{148} the Turkish empire; in spite of the millions of Circassian, +Greek, and other girls transplanted into the harems, the Osmanli +are numerically inferior to the other races of the peninsula. This +dominant race—if the term race be applicable to the product of so many +crossings—hardly numbers ten per cent. of the population of European +Turkey. And this numerical inferiority is on the increase, for, owing +to polygamy, the number of children surviving in Mohammedan families is +less than in Christian families. We are not in possession of precise +figures, but there can be no doubt that the Turks are on the decrease. +The conscription, to which they alone are subject, has contributed +towards this result, and becomes more difficult from year to year. + +It has often been repeated since Chateaubriand that the Turks have +but camped in Europe, and expect to return to the steppes whence they +came. It would thus be a feeling of presentiment which induces the +Turks of Stambul to seek burial in the cemetery of Scutari, hoping +thus to save their bones from the profanation of the Giaour’s tread on +his return, as master, to Constantinople. In many places the living +follow the examples of the dead, and a feeble current of emigration +sets from the Archipelago and the coast districts of Thracia in the +direction of Asia, carrying along many an old Turk discontented with +the stir of European life. This migration, however, is but of very +small importance, and does not affect the Osmanli of the interior. +Nothing is further from the minds of the Turks of Bulgaria, the Yuruks +of Macedonia, or the Koniarides, who have inhabited the mountains of +Rumelia since the eleventh century, than to quit the land which has +become their second home. The Turkish element in the Balkan peninsula +can be got rid of only by exterminating it; that is, by treating the +Turks more ferociously than they treated the native populations at +the time of the conquest. We ought not to forget, at the same time, +that the Turks, though far inferior in numbers to the other races, are +nevertheless able to reckon upon the support of millions of Mohammedan +Albanians, Bosnians, Bulgarians, Circassians, and Nogai Tartars. The +Mussulmans constitute more than a third of the population of European +Turkey, and, in spite of differences of race, they hold firmly +together. Nor must it be forgotten that they are backed up by a hundred +and fifty millions of co-religionists in other parts of the world.[42] + +[Illustration: ETHNOGRAPHICAL MAP OF TURKEY in EUROPE + +By E.G. Ravenstein F.R.G.S.] + +{149} + +Let us hope that the future may not give birth to a struggle of +extermination between the races of the peninsula, but rather to +institutions enabling these diverse and partially hostile elements to +develop themselves in peace and liberty. The Turks themselves begin +to see the necessity of such institutions, and, in theory at least, +have abandoned their policy of violence and oppression. All the +nationalities of the empire, without reference to race or religion, are +supposed to be equal before the law, and Christians are admitted to +Government offices on the same terms as Mussulmans. No doubt these fine +laws have for the most part hitherto remained a dead letter, but it +would nevertheless be unjust if we denied that much progress towards an +equalisation of the various races has been made. + +Fortunately the despotism of the Turks is not the despotism of +learning, based upon a knowledge of human nature, and directed to its +debasement. The Osmanli ignore the art of “oppressing wisely,” which +the Dutch governors of the Sunda Islands were required to practise +in former times, and which is not quite unknown in other countries. +The pashas allow things to take their course as long as they are +able to enrich themselves and their favourites, to sell justice and +their favours at a fair price, and to bastinade now and then some +unlucky wight. They do not inquire into the private concerns of their +subjects, and do not call for confidential reports on families and +individuals. Their Government, no doubt, is frequently violent and +oppressive; but all this only touches externals. Such a government may +not be favourable to the development of public spirit, but it does not +interfere with individuals, and powerful national institutions, such +as the Greek commune, the Mirdit tribe, and the Slav community, have +been able to survive under it. Self-government is, in fact, more widely +practised in Turkey than in the most advanced countries of Western +Europe. It would have been difficult to force these various national +elements under a uniform discipline, and the lazy Turkish functionaries +generally leave things alone. The Frankish officials in the pay of +the Turkish Government, in fact, more frequently interfere with the +prejudices and privileges of the governed than do the Mussulman pashas +of the old school. + +It cannot be doubted for a moment that, in a time not very far distant, +the non-Mohammedan races of Turkey will take the lead in politics, as +they do already in commerce, industry, and education. The Osmanli of +the olden school, who still wear the green turban of their ancestors, +look forward towards this inevitable result with despair. They struggle +against every measure calculated to accelerate the emancipation of the +despised raya, and European inventions, in their eyes, are working a +great social transformation to their injury; and, indeed, it is the +raya who profits most from roads, railways, harbours, agricultural and +other machines. Bosnians, Bulgarians, and Servians have learnt to look +upon each other as brothers; Albanians and Rumanians are drawn towards +the Greeks; all alike feel themselves as Europeans; and thus the way is +being paved for the Danubian Confederation of the future. + +The approaching completion of the railway from Vienna to Constantinople +cannot fail to work a commercial revolution as far as the trade of +a considerable portion of Eastern Europe is concerned. It will form +a link in the direct line {150} between England and India, and to +travellers and merchandise will afford the shortest route from the +centre of Europe to the Bosporus. On its opening, Constantinople will +be enabled to avail itself to the fullest extent of the highways of +commerce which converge upon it. Still greater must be the political +consequences of opening this line, for it will bring the populations of +the Balkan peninsula into more direct and active contact with those of +Austro-Hungary and the rest of Europe. + +[Illustration: Fig. 41.—COMMERCIAL HIGHWAYS CONVERGING UPON +CONSTANTINOPLE. + +Scale 1 : 17,100,000.] + + +VIII.—GOVERNMENT AND ADMINISTRATION. + +The Turkish empire occupies a vast area, the greater portion of which +is governed by vassals, almost independent of the Sultan at Stambul. +The vast territories of Egypt and Tunis are in that position. The +interior of Arabia is in possession of the Wahabites; the coast of +Hadramaut is inhabited partly by tribes acknowledging the suzerainty +of England; and even between Syria and the Euphrates there {151} are +numerous districts only nominally under the government of Turkish +pashas, but in reality in the possession of predatory Bedwins. The +Ottoman empire, properly so called, includes the European provinces, +Asia Minor, Syria, Palestine, the basins of Tigris and Euphrates, +Hejaz and Yemen in Arabia, and Tripoli, with Fezzan, in Africa. These +territories, with their dependent islands, cover an area of no less +than 210,156 square miles; but their population, being far less dense +than that of Western Europe, hardly numbers 47,000,000 souls. + +[Illustration: Fig. 42.—THE TURKISH EMPIRE. + +Scale 1 : 55,000,000.] + +The area of Turkey in Europe, exclusive of Rumania, Servia, +and Montenegro, is about equal to that of the British Islands. +Constantinople, with the surrounding country, forms a district under +the immediate supervision of the Ministry of Police. The remainder +of the country is divided into eight _vilayets_, or provinces; the +vilayets are subdivided into _mutesarifliks_, or _sanjaks_; these +latter into _kazas_, or cantons; and the kazas into _rahiés_, or +parishes. Lemnos, Imbros, Samothrace, and Astypalæa, with Rhodes +and the islands along the coast of Anatolia, form a {152} separate +vilayet. These political divisions, however, are subject to frequent +changes.[43] + +The Sultan, or _Padishah_, concentrates all powers within his person. +He is _Emir el mumenin_, or head of the faithful, and his conduct is +guided solely by the prescriptions of the Koran and the traditions of +his ancestors. The two most influential persons in the empire, next +to him, are the _Sheik-el-Islam_, or Great Mufti, who superintends +public worship and the administration of justice, and the _Sadrazam_, +or Grand Vizier, who is at the head of the general administration, +and is assisted by a council of ten ministers, or _mushirs_. The +_Kislar Agasi_, or chief of the black eunuchs, to whom is confided +the management of the imperial harem, is likewise one of the great +dignitaries of the empire, and frequently enjoys the very highest +influence. The legal advisers of the various ministries are known as +_mufti_. _Efendi_, _bey_, and _aga_ are honorary titles bestowed upon +certain Government officials and persons of consideration. The title of +_pasha_, which signifies “grand chief,” is given to certain high civil +or military functionaries. This title is symbolized by one, two, or +three horse-tails attached to the top of a lance, a usage recalling the +time when the nomad Turks roamed over the steppes of Central Asia. + +The work of the various ministries is done by councils, and there thus +exist a council of state, or _shuraï devlet_, councils of accounts, of +war, of the navy, of public education, of police, &c. These various +councils, in their totality, constitute the _divan_, or government +chancery. There is also a supreme court of justice, with sections +for civil and criminal cases. The members of these various official +bodies are appointed by Government. Each of the subject “nations” is +represented on the Council of State by two members, carefully selected +by the _Sadrazam_. + +The vilayet is governed by a _vali_, the sanjak by a _mutesarif_, the +kaza by a {153} _kaimakan_, the parish by a _mudir_. Each of these +is supposed to act by advice of a council composed of the leading +religious and civilian functionaries, Mohammedan and non-Mohammedan. In +reality, however, the vali appoints all these councils, and they are +popularly known as the “Councils of the Ayes.” + +The rules laid down by the supreme Government for its own guidance are +embodied in the _hatti-sherif_ of Gulhane, promulgated in 1839, and +in the _hatti-humayum_ of 1856. These hatts promise equal rights to +all the inhabitants of the empire, but have been carried out hitherto +only very partially. A “constitution” was promulgated in December, +1876, on the assembling of the European Conference at Constantinople. +It provides representative institutions, local self-government, and +various improvements, but is likely to remain a dead letter. + +The religious and judicial organization of the country is jealously +watched over by the Sheik-el-Islam and the priests, and cannot possibly +be changed. The _imans_ are specially charged with the conduct of +public worship. They include _sheiks_, or preachers; _khatibs_, who +recite the official prayers; and the _imans_ properly so called, who +celebrate marriages and conduct interments. Judges and imans form a +body known as _ulemas_, at whose head is placed a _kazi-asker_, or +chief judge, and who are divided hierarchically into _mollahs_, _kazis_ +(kadis), and _naibs_. + +The Greek Patriarch of Constantinople, as head of the Church in Turkey +and civil director of the Greek communities, wields a considerable +influence. He is elected by a synod of eighteen members, which +administers the religious budget, and whose decisions in matters +of faith are final. The heads of the Latin rite are a patriarch at +Constantinople and the two Archbishops of Antivari and Durazzo. The two +Armenian Churches have each a patriarch at Constantinople. + + +TREATIES OF SAN STEFANO AND BERLIN. + +It will be noticed that the preceding description of Turkey in Europe, +and the succeeding accounts of Rumania, Servia, and Montenegro, present +the conditions existing immediately prior to the late war with Russia, +in which the Turks were completely overpowered in a few months. The +Congress of European powers sitting at Berlin in the summer of 1878, to +consider the preliminary treaty of San Stefano (March 2) between Russia +and Turkey, materially modified its provisions in the joint treaty +signed July 13, disposing of European Turkey in the following manner: +1. The tributary principality of Bulgaria is created (with less than +half the dimensions assigned to it by the treaty of San Stefano), to be +governed by a prince (who shall not be a member of any ruling dynasty) +chosen by the people within nine months, and confirmed by the Porte +and the other powers, and in the mean time by Russian commissioners +assisted by delegated European consuls. 2. South of the Balkans is +formed the autonomous province of Eastern Roumelia, under a Christian +governor-general, appointed for five years by the Porte with the +assent of the powers, which are to determine within three months the +administrative requirements of the province. 3. Bosnia and Herzegovina +to be occupied and {154} administered by Austria-Hungary, excepting +Novi-Bazar and a small surrounding district. This provision, unlimited +as to time, practically annexes those provinces to the Austro-Hungarian +Empire, and has already (October, 1878) been executed, after serious +armed resistance by their Moslem inhabitants. 4. Rumania, Servia, and +Montenegro are made independent, with the enlarged boundaries shown by +the annexed map. Rumania receives the Dobruja from Russia, to which it +was ceded by the treaty of San Stefano, with the understanding that it +was to be exchanged for the strip of Bessarabia transferred from Russia +to Rumania by the treaty of Paris of 1856, which has accordingly been +restored. The additions to Montenegro include the port of Antivari, +which is closed to war-ships of all nations; and Montenegro is to have +no national flag nor ships of war, its merchant flag to be protected +by Austrian consuls. 5. Austrian Dalmatia receives from Albania the +small port of Spitza. 6. The services of the powers are offered for the +rectification of the northern frontier of Greece. 7. Entire religious +liberty and political equality are provided for in all the territories +affected by the treaty. + +[Illustration: MAP SHOWING CHANGES IN EUROPEAN TURKEY AND ARMENIA, AS +PROPOSED BY THE TREATY OF SAN STEFANO, AND AS DETERMINED BY THE TREATY +OF BERLIN.] + +{155} + +[Illustration] + + + + +RUMANIA.[44] + + +The Rumanians are certainly one of the most curious amongst European +nations. The descendants of the conquerors of the ancient world, they +live detached from, and far to the north-east of, the other nations +of the Greco-Latin family, and not many years ago they were hardly +known by name. The grave events of which the Lower Danube has been the +scene since the middle of this century have brought these Rumanians +prominently to the fore, and we know now that they differ essentially +from their neighbours, be they Slav, Turk, or Magyar. They constitute, +in fact, one of the most important elements amongst the populations of +Eastern Europe, and numerically they are the strongest nation on the +Lower Danube, the Bulgarians alone excepted. + +The ethnological boundaries of Rumania are far wider than are the +political ones, for they embrace not only Wallachia and Moldavia +beyond the Carpathians, but also Russian Bessarabia, a portion of the +Bukovina, the greater portion of Transylvania, as well as extensive +tracts in the Banat and Eastern Hungary. The Rumanians have likewise +crossed the Danube, and established themselves in portions of Servia +and Bulgaria; and the settlements of their kinsmen, the Zinzares, +sporadically extend far south to the hills of Thessaly and Greece. +Rumania proper has an area of only 46,709 square miles, but the +countries of the Rumanians occupy at least twice that extent, and their +numbers exceed 8,000,000, most of whom dwell in a compact mass on the +Lower Danube and the adjoining portions of Hungary and Russia.[45] + +The Roman territories on the Lower Danube almost encircle the mountain +{156} masses of the Eastern Carpathians, as will be seen by a glance +at our map, but only about one-half of this territory has been formed +into an autonomous state, the remainder belonging to Hungary and +Russia. If the national ambition of the Rumanians were to be realised, +the natural centre of their country would not lie within the actual +limits of the territory, but at Hermannstadt (called Sibiu by the +Wallachians), or elsewhere on the northern slope of the Carpathians. +Thrust beyond the Carpathians, and extending from the Iron Gate to +the upper affluents of the Pruth, the independent Rumanians occupy +a country of most irregular shape, and separated into two distinct +portions by the river Sereth and one of its tributaries, which join +the most advanced spur of the Eastern Carpathians to the great bend of +the Lower Danube. To the north of this boundary lies Moldavia, thus +named after a tributary of the Sereth; to the south-west and west is +Wallachia, or the “Plain of the Welsh,” _i.e._ of the Latins. This +plain, the _tzara Rumaneasca_, or Roman-land proper, is intersected by +numerous parallel water-courses, forming as many secondary boundaries, +and the river Olto separates it into Great Wallachia to the east, and +Little Wallachia to the west. The Danube forms the political boundary +down to its mouth. It is a wide and sinuous river; below the Iron +Gate, lakes, forests, and swamps render access to its banks almost +impossible in many places; and migratory nations and conquerors, +instead of crossing it, as they could easily have done in Austria and +Bavaria, rather sought to avoid it by seeking for a passage through the +mountains to the north. The abrupt bend of the Lower Danube and its +extensive swampy delta still further shielded the plains of Wallachia, +and invaders not provided with vessels were thus turned to the north, +in the direction of the Carpathians. The lowlands of Moldavia were +protected, though in a less degree, by the rivers Dnieper, Bug, +Dniester, and Pruth running parallel with each other. {157} + +[Illustration: Fig. 43.—THE RUMANIANS.] + +But, in spite of these natural bulwarks, it remains matter for +surprise, and proves the singular tenacity of the Rumanians, that +they preserved their traditions, their language, and nationality, in +spite of the numerous onslaughts from invaders of every race to which +they were exposed. Ever since the retreat of the Roman legions, the +peaceable cultivators of these plains were preyed upon so frequently +by Goths, Huns, and Pecheneges, by Slavs, Bulgars, and Turks, that +their extinction as a race appeared to be inevitable. But they have +emerged from every deluge which threatened to destroy them, thanks, +no doubt, to the superior culture for which they were indebted to +their ancestors, and again claim a place amongst independent nations. +They have fully justified their old proverb, which says, _Romun no +pere !_—“the Roman perishes not.” + +The Transylvanian Alps lie within the territory of the Rumanians, +who occupy both slopes. Their upper valleys, however, are but +thinly inhabited, and we may travel for days without meeting with +any habitations excepting the rude huts of shepherds. The political +boundary traced along the crest of the mountains is merely an imaginary +line, passing through the forest solitudes of vast extent. Excepting +near the only high-road, and the paths which join Transylvania to the +plains of Wallachia, these mountains remain in a state of nature. The +chamois is still hunted there, and not long since even bisons were met +with. The Tsigani penetrates these mountains in search of the brown or +black bears which he exhibits in the villages. He places a jar filled +with brandy and honey near the beast’s haunt, and, as soon as the bear +and his family have become helplessly intoxicated, they are seized and +placed in chains. + +The physical configuration of Rumania is extremely simple. In Moldavia +low ridges running parallel with the high mountain chain extend from +the north-west to the south-east, being separated from each other by +the valleys of the Bistritza, Moldava, and Sereth, and sinking down +gradually into the plains of the Danube. In Wallachia the southern +spurs of the Transylvanian Alps ramify with remarkable regularity, and +the torrents which descend from them all run in the same direction. +The rivers, whether they rise at the foot of the hills or traverse the +entire width of the mountains, such as the Sil, Shil, or Jiul, the Olto +or Aluta, and the Buseo, turn towards the east before their waters +mingle with those of the Danube. + +The slope of the hills is pretty uniform from the crest of the +mountains to the plain of the Danube, and the zones of temperature +and vegetation succeed each other with singular regularity. Summits +covered with forests of conifers and birch, and clad with snow during +winter, rise near the frontiers of Transylvania. These are succeeded by +mountains of inferior height, where beeches and chestnuts predominate, +and all the picturesque beauties of European forest scenery are met +with. Lower still we come upon gentle hills, with groves of oaks and +maples, and their sunny sides covered with vines. Finally, we enter +the wide plains of the Danube, with their fruit trees, poplars, and +willows. The zone lying between the high mountains and the plain +abounds in localities rendered delightful by picturesque rocks, +luxuriant and varied verdure, and limpid streams. In this “happy +{158} Arcadia” we meet with most of the large monasteries, magnificent +castles with domes and towers, standing in the midst of parks and +gardens. As to the plains, they are no doubt barren and monotonous +in many places, but the villagers, though their habitations are half +buried in the ground, enjoy the magnificent prospect of the blue +mountains which bound the horizon. The most characteristic objects in +these lowlands are the huge hay-ricks already figured upon Trajan’s +column at Rome. + +[Illustration: Fig. 44.—THE RIVERS SHIL AND OLTO. + +Scale 1 : 1,400,000.] + +{159} + +The Rumanian campagna is a second Lombardy, not because of the high +state of its agriculture, but because of the fertility of its soil, +the beauty of the sky, and of the distant views. Unfortunately there +are no mountain barriers to protect it against the cold north-easterly +winds which predominate throughout the year. Extremes of cold and heat +have to be encountered.[46] The vines have to be covered with earth +to protect them against the colds of winter; and in South-eastern +Wallachia, which is most exposed to the violence of the winds, it +happens sometimes that herds of cattle and horses, flying before a +snow-storm, precipitate themselves into the floods of the Danube. +Several districts suffer from want of rain, and are veritable steppes. +Amongst these are the plains of the Baragan, between the Danube and +Yalomitza, where bustards abound, and a tree is not met with for miles. + +Geologically we meet with a regular succession of formations, from the +granite on the mountain summits to the alluvial deposits along the +banks of the Danube. The rocks encountered on these southern slopes of +the Carpathians are of the same kind as those found in Galicia on their +northern slopes, and they yield the same mineral products, such as +rock-salt, gypsum, lithographic stones, and petroleum. Tertiary strata +predominate in the plains, but to the east of Ploiesti and Bucharest +only quaternary deposits of clay and pebbles are met with, in which are +found the bones of mammoths, elephants, and mastodons. The muddy rivers +which traverse these plains have excavated themselves sinuous beds, and +resemble large ditches. + +The plain of Rumania, like that of Lombardy, is an ancient gulf of +the sea filled up by the débris washed down from the mountain sides. +But though the sea has retired, the Danube remains, pouring out vast +volumes of water, and offering great advantages to navigation. At the +famous defile of the Iron Gate, where this river enters the plain, +its bed has a depth of 155 feet, its surface lies 66 feet above the +level of the Black Sea, and its volume exceeds that of the combined +rivers of Western Europe, from the Rhone to the Rhine. The Romans, in +spite of this, had thrown a bridge across the river, immediately below +the Iron Gate, which was justly looked upon as one of the wonders of +the world. This work of architecture, which Apollodorus of Damas had +erected in honour of Trajan, was pulled down by order of the Emperor +Hadrian, who was anxious to save the expenses of the garrison required +for its protection. There only remain now the two abutments, and when +the waters are low the foundations of sixteen out of the twenty piers +which supported the bridge may still be seen. A Roman tower, which has +given name to the little town of Turnu Severin, marks the spot where +the Romans first placed their foot upon the soil of Dacia. The passage +from Servia to Rumania is as important as it was of yore, but modern +industry has not yet replaced Trajan’s bridge. + +The Danube, like most rivers of our northern hemisphere, presses upon +its right bank, and this accounts for the difference between its +Wallachian and Bulgarian banks. The latter, gnawed by the floods, rises +steeply into little hills and {160} terraces, whilst the former rises +gently, and merges almost imperceptibly in the plains of Wallachia. +Swamps, lakes, creeks, and the remains of ancient river beds form a +riverine network, enclosing numerous islands and sand-banks. These +channels are subject to continual change, and to the south of the +Yalomitza may still be seen a line of swamps and lagoons, which marks +the course of an ancient river no longer existing. The lowlands on the +Wallachian side of the Danube are constantly increasing in extent, +whilst Bulgaria continuously suffers losses of territory. The latter, +however, is amply compensated for this by the salubrity of its soil and +the fine sites for commercial emporiums which it offers. It is said +that the beaver, which has been exterminated almost in every other part +of Europe, is still common in these half-drowned lands of Wallachia. + +At a distance of thirty-eight miles from the sea, in a straight line, +the Danube strikes against the granitic heights of the Dobruja, and +abruptly turns to the north, subsequently to spread out into a delta. +In the course of this détour it receives its last tributaries of +importance, viz. the Moldavian Sereth and the Pruth. Thirty miles below +the mouth of the latter the Danube bifurcates. Its main branch, known +as that of Kilia, conveys about two-thirds of the entire volume of +its waters to the Black Sea, and forms the frontier between Rumania +and Turkish Bulgaria. The southern branch, or that of Tulcha, flows +entirely through Turkish territory. It separates into two branches, of +which that of Sulina is the main artery of navigation. + +The main branch of the river is of the utmost importance when +considering the changes wrought upon the surface of the earth through +aqueous agencies. Below Ismail it ramifies into a multitude of +channels, which change continuously, new channels being excavated, +whilst others become choked with alluvial deposits carried down by +the floods. Twice the waters of the river are reunited into a single +channel before they finally spread out into a secondary delta jutting +into the Black Sea. The exterior development of this new land amounts +to about twelve miles, and supposing the sea to be of a uniform depth +of thirty-three feet, it would advance annually at the rate of 660 +feet. Yet, in spite of this rapid increase, the coast, at the Kilia +mouth, juts out far less to the east than it does in the southern +portion of the delta, and we may conclude from this that the ancient +gulf of the sea, now filled up by the alluvial deposits brought down +by the Kilia branch, was far larger and deeper than those to the +south.[47] On examining a map of the Danubian delta, it will be found +that, by prolonging the coast-line of Bessarabia towards the south, +it crosses the delta. This is the ancient coast. It rises above the +half-drowned plains like an embankment, through which the branches of +the river forced themselves a passage to the sea. The alluvium brought +down by the Sulina and St. George’s mouths has been spread over a vast +plain lying outside this embankment, whilst that carried down through +what is at present the main branch forms only a small archipelago of +ill-defined islands {161} beyond it. We may conclude from this that +the latter is of more recent origin than the other arms. + +In the course of its gradual encroachment upon the sea, the river has +cut off several lakes of considerable extent. On the coast between the +mouth of the Dniester and the delta of the Danube there are several +lagoons, or _limans_, of inconsiderable depth, the water of which +evaporates during the heat of summer, depositing a thin crust of salt. +In their general configuration, the nature of the surrounding land, and +parallelism of the rivers which flow into them, these sheets of water +are very much like the lakes met with more to the west, as far as the +mouth of the Pruth. These latter, however, are filled with fresh water, +and the sandy barriers at their lower ends separate them not from the +Black Sea, but from the Danube. There can be no doubt that these lakes +were anciently gulfs of the sea, similar in all respects to the lagoons +still existing along the coast. The Danube, by converting its ancient +gulf into a delta, separated them from the sea, and their saline water +was replaced by fresh water carried down by the rivers. The existing +saline lagoons will undergo the same metamorphosis, in proportion as +the delta of the Danube gains upon the sea. + +[Illustration: Fig. 45.—THE DANUBE AND YALOMITZA. + +Scale 1 : 1,443,000.] + +The plains of Wallachia were defended formerly by an ancient line +of fortifications passing to the north of these Danubian lakes and +lagoons, and known as “Trajan’s Wall,” like the ditches, walls, and +entrenched camps in the Southern Dobruja. The inhabitants ascribe +their construction to Cæsar, although they are of {162} much later +date, having been erected by Trajan as a protection against the +Visigoths. This ancient barrier of defence coincided pretty nearly +with the political boundary between Russian and Rumanian Bessarabia, +and extended probably to the west of the Pruth, across the whole of +Moldavia and Wallachia. Vestiges of it still met with there are known +as the “Road of the Avares.” A second wall, still traceable between +Leova and Bender, defended the approaches to the valley of the Danube. + + * * * * * + +In spite of the diverse races which have overrun, conquered, or +devastated their territory, the inhabitants of Rumania, more fortunate +than their neighbours, have preserved their unity of race and language. +Wallachians and Moldavians form one people, and not only have they kept +intact their national territory, but they have actually encroached +upon the territories of their neighbours. Throughout Rumania, with the +exception of that portion of Bessarabia ceded by the Western powers +after the Crimean war, the inhabitants belonging to alien races are in +the minority. + +The origin of this Latin-speaking nation is still shrouded in mystery. +Are they the descendants of Getæ and Latinised Dacians, or does the +blood of Italian colonists brought thither by Trajan, of legionaries +and Roman soldiers, predominate amongst them? To what extent have they +become amalgamated with their neighbours, the Slavs and Illyrians? What +share had the Celts in the formation of their nationality? Are the +“Little” Wallachians, the “men with the eighty teeth,”—so called on +account of their bravery,—the descendants of Celts? We cannot say with +certainty, for men of learning like Shafarik and Miklosich differ on +all these points. The vast plains at present inhabited by the Rumanians +became a wilderness in the third century, when the Emperor Aurelian +compelled their inhabitants to migrate to the right bank of the Danube. +If it is true that the descendants of these emigrants ever returned +to the seats of their ancestors, in the meantime occupied by Slavs, +Magyars, and Pecheneges, when did they do so? Miklosich presumes that +they did so towards the close of the fifth century; Roesler thinks in +the fourteenth, although ancient chroniclers of the eleventh century +mention Rumanians as dwelling in the Carpathians. Other authorities +deny that there was any re-immigration; they maintain that the +residue of the Latinised population sufficed for reconstituting the +nationality. Thus much is certain, that this small people has increased +wonderfully, and has become now the preponderating race on the Lower +Danube and in Transylvania. + +[Illustration: WALLACHIANS (VALAKHS).] + +Even in the seventeenth century the language spoken by the Rumanians +was treated as a rural dialect, and Slavonian was used in churches +and courts of justice. At the present day, on the contrary, Rumanian +patriots are anxious to purge their language of all Servian words, +and of Greek and Turkish expressions introduced during the dominion +of the Osmanli. The “Romans” of the Danube are endeavouring to polish +their tongue, so that it may rank with Italian and French. They have +abandoned the Russian characters, and their vocabulary is being +continually enriched by new words derived from the Latin. The idiom +spoken in the towns, which was the most impure {163} formerly, in +consequence of the influx of strangers, has now become more Latin than +that spoken in the country. There are, however, about two hundred +words not traceable to any known tongue, and these are supposed to +be a remnant of the ancient Dacian spoken at the period of the Roman +invasion. The Wallachian differs, moreover, from the Latin tongues of +Western Europe by always placing the article and the demonstrative +pronoun after the noun. The same rule obtains in Albanian and +Bulgarian, and Miklosich is probably right when he looks upon this as a +feature of the ancient language of the aborigines. + +These niceties, however, are altogether unnoticed by the mass of the +people. The Rumanian peasant is proud of the ancient conquerors of his +country, and looks upon himself as the descendant of the patricians of +Rome. Several of his customs, at the birth of children, betrothals, +or burials, recall those observed by the Romans, and the dance of the +_Calushares_, it is said, may be traced back to the earliest Italian +settlers. The Wallachian is fond of talking about Father Trajan, +to whom he attributes all those feats which in other countries are +associated with Hercules, Fingal, or Ossian. Many a mountain valley +has been rent asunder by Trajan’s powerful hand; and the avalanches +descending from the hills are spoken of as Trajan’s thunder. The +Rumanian completely ignores Getæ, Dacians, or Goths, though in the +hills we still meet with tall men having blue eyes and long flaxen +hair, who are probably descended from the aboriginal inhabitants of the +country. + +The Rumanians have generally fine sunburnt features, fair hair, +expressive eyes, a mouth finely shaped, and beautiful teeth. They +allow their hair to grow long, and sometimes even prefer to expatriate +themselves to sacrificing it to the exigencies of military service. +They exhibit grace in all their movements, are indefatigable on the +march, and support the heaviest labour without complaining. Even the +Wallachian herdsman, with his sheepskin cap, or _cashula_, his wide +leather belt used as a pocket, a sheepskin thrown over his shoulders, +and drawers which recall those of the Dacians sculptured on Trajan’s +Column, is noble in his bearing. In the large towns, where much +intermixture has taken place with Greeks, Southern Russians, and +Magyars, the brown complexion predominates. The Rumanian women are +grace itself. They always charm us by taste and neatness, whether +they have adopted a modern dress or still patronise the national +costume, consisting of an embroidered chemisette, a floating vest, a +party-coloured apron, a golden net, and golden sequins placed in the +hair. These external advantages are combined in the Rumanian with +quickness of apprehension, a gay spirit, and the gift of repartee, +which entitle them to be called the Parisians of the Orient. + +In the midst of this homogeneous Rumanian population we meet +with Bulgarian colonists, whose number has increased recently in +consequence of the persecutions of Turks and Greeks. The character +of the Bulgarians born in the country has undergone considerable +modifications. They are at present the most industrious tillers of +the soil, and in the vicinity of large towns they occupy themselves +principally with horticulture. Many of these Bulgarians live in that +{164} portion of Bessarabia which was ceded by Russia in 1855. They +settled there in 1829, more particularly in the _Budzak_, or southern +“corner” of Bessarabia, and their fields are better tilled, their roads +in better condition, than those of their Moldavian neighbours. Their +villages still bear Tartar names, from the time when their country +was occupied by Nogai Tartars, and they contrast favourably with the +villages of the surrounding peoples. Bolgrad, the capital of this +colony, is a small bustling town, the schools of which enjoy a high +reputation. These Bulgarians, so distinguished for industry, sobriety, +and thrift, have more or less amalgamated with Russians, Greeks, and +gipsies, and they talk almost every language of the East. + +[Illustration: Fig. 46.—ETHNOLOGICAL MAP OF MOLDAVIAN BESSARABIA.] + +The Russians of Moldavian Bessarabia have their settlements on the +banks of the Danube, to the east of these Bulgarian colonies. They, +too, are good agriculturists. The Russians met with in the towns +are generally engaged in commerce, and enjoy a high reputation for +honesty. Most of them belong to the old sect of the _Lipovani_, and +fled from Russia about a century ago to escape religious persecution. +They nearly all speak Rumanian. Vilkof, a village near the mouth of +the Danube, is almost exclusively occupied by these Lipovani, who are +expert fishermen, and share the produce of their labour in common. +Others amongst the Russians belong to the sect of the _Skoptzi_, or +“mutilated,” which is said to recruit itself by stealing children. +These Skoptzi are recognised by their portliness and smooth faces, and +at Bucharest they are reputed to be excellent coachmen. + +Magyar Szeklers from Transylvania, known in the country as _Changhei_, +are the only other foreign element of the population occupying distinct +settlements. These Changhei, who first came into the country when +the Kings of Hungary were masters of the valley of the Sereth, are +gradually becoming Rumanians {165} in dress and language, and would +have become so long ago were they not Roman Catholics, whilst the +people among whom they live are Greeks. They are joined annually by +a few compatriots from Transylvania, attracted by the mild climate +and the fertility of the soil. In spring and autumn large bands of +Hungarian reapers and labourers descend into the plains of Moldavia. + +The Hellenic element was strongly represented last century, when +the government of the country was farmed out by the Sultan to Greek +merchants of Constantinople. At the present time the Greeks are not +numerous—not exceeding, perhaps, 10,000 souls, even if we include +amongst them Hellenized Zinzares—but they occupy influential positions +as managers of estates or merchants, and the export of corn is almost +exclusively in their hands. Traces of the ancient government of +these Phanariotes still exist in the language of the country, and in +the relationships resulting from intermarriages between seignorial +families. Far more numerous than these Greeks, and of greater +importance, are the members of those homeless nations—the Jews and +Tsigani (or gipsies). A few Spanish Jews are met with in the large +towns, but the majority are “German” Jews, who have come hither from +Poland, Little Russia, Galicia, and Hungary. As publicans and middlemen +they come into close contact with the poor people, and they are +universally detested, not on account of their religion, but because of +the wonderful skill with which they manage to secure the savings of the +people. Imaginary crimes of all kinds are attributed to them, and they +have repeatedly been exposed to maltreatment on the frivolous charge +of having eaten little children at their Passover. The Rumanians, +however, can hardly manage without these detested Jews, and their laws, +by preventing the Jews from acquiring land, fortify their commercial +monopoly. The Jews, if certain estimates may be credited, constitute +one-fifth of the total population of Moldavia. The Armenians, the +other great commercial people of the Orient, are represented by a few +flourishing colonies, more especially in Moldavia. These Haikanes are +the descendants of immigrants who settled in the country at various +epochs between the eleventh and seventeenth centuries. They live +amongst themselves, and, though not exactly liked by the people, they +have known how to avoid becoming objects of hatred. A few Armenians +from Constantinople, and speaking Turkish, are met with on the Lower +Danube. + +The Tsigani, or gipsies, so despised formerly, become merged by degrees +in the rest of the population. Not long ago they were slaves, the +property of the State, of boyards, or monasteries. They led a wandering +life—working, trafficking, or stealing for the benefit of their +masters. They were divided into castes, the principal of which were the +_lingurari_, or spoon-makers; _ursari_, or bear-leaders; _ferrari_, +or smiths; _aurari_, or collectors of gold dust; and _lautari_, or +musicians. These latter were the most polished of all, and were +employed to celebrate the glory and the virtues of the boyards. They +are now the minstrels of the country and the musicians of the town. +Very few in number are the _Netotzi_, a degraded caste who live in +woods or tents, subsist upon the foulest food, and do not bury their +dead. The Tsigani were assimilated in 1837 with the peasantry, and +since {166} their emancipation nearly all of them lead a settled life, +cultivating the soil with great care, or exercising some handicraft. +The fusion between Tsigani and Rumanians is making rapid progress, +for both races have the same religion and speak the same language. +Intermarriages between the two are frequent, and in a time not far off +the Tsigani of Rumania will be a thing of the past. They are supposed +still to number between 100,000 and 300,000 souls.[48] + +The Rumanian nation is still in a state of transition from a feudal to +a modern epoch. The revolution of 1848 shook the ancient system to its +foundation, but did not destroy it. As recently as 1856 the peasants +were attached to the soil. They had no rights, but were at the mercy of +the boyards and monasteries whose soil they were doomed to till, and +lived in miserable hovels. The whole of the country and its inhabitants +belonged to five or six thousand boyards, who were either the +descendants of the ancient “braves,” or had purchased their patents of +nobility. Most of these boyards were only small proprietors, and nearly +the whole of the land belonged to seventy feudatories in Wallachia, and +three hundred in Moldavia. + +This state of affairs led to the most frightful demoralisation amongst +masters and serfs, and even the good qualities of the Rumanian—his +energy, his generosity, and friendliness—were turned into evil. The +nobles lived far away from their estates, spending the income forwarded +by their Greek bailiffs in debauchery and gambling. The peasants +worked but little, for they had no share in the produce of the soil; +they were mistrustful and full of deceit, as are all slaves; they were +ignorant and superstitious, for they depended for their education upon +illiterate and fanatical priests. Their _popes_ were magicians, and +cured maladies by incantations and holy philtres. As to the monks, some +of them were rich proprietors, as rapacious as the temporal lords; +others lived on alms, having exchanged a life of slavery for mendicity. + +Not long ago the Rumanians, deprived of all education except that +supplied by their _doinas_, or ancient songs, were lost almost in +mediæval darkness. Even now some of the ancient customs of their +ancestors survive in the rural districts. Funerals are attended by +hired weeping women, whose shrieks accompany the farewell of relatives. +Into the coffin they place a stick upon which to rest when crossing the +Jordan, a piece of cloth to serve as a garment, and a coin as a bribe +to St. Peter for opening the gate of heaven. Nor are wine and bread +forgotten for the journey. Red-haired people are suspected of returning +to earth in the guise of a dog, a frog, or a flea, and to penetrate +into houses in order to suck the blood of good-looking young girls. In +their case it is as well to close the coffin-lid tightly, or, still +better, to pierce the throat of the defunct with a stick. + +The peasantry will doubtless no longer be haunted by these +hallucinations, for the {167} moral and intellectual progress of the +nation has kept pace with its material prosperity since the peasant +has cultivated his own land. Officially made a freeman in 1856, but +held for several years afterwards in a kind of limited bondage, the +peasant now owns at least a portion of the land. By a law passed in +1862, each head of a family is entitled to a plot of land from seven to +sixty-seven acres in extent, and ever since that time the peasants have +gained immensely in self-respect. His land, though still cultivated +with the ancient Roman plough, and deprived of manure, produces immense +quantities of cereals, the sale of which brings wealth into the country +and encourages progress. Rumania is now one of the great corn-exporting +countries of Europe, and in favourable years, when the crops are +neither eaten up by locusts nor destroyed by frosts, its exports exceed +those of Hungary. In less than ten years the export of wheat, maize, +barley, and oats has doubled, and the sum annually realised varies +between £4,000,000 and £8,000,000 sterling. + +Unfortunately the peasants eat but little of the corn they grow. They +are content with the maize, from which they prepare their _mamaligo_ +and the detestable spirits which cheer their hearts on a hundred and +ninety-four annual fête days. The cultivation of the vine, which was +altogether neglected formerly, is likewise making progress, and the +produce of the foot-hills of the Carpathians is justly esteemed. +The time is past now when “Wallachian” and “herdsman” were synonyms +throughout the East. Still, nearly one-fourth of the area of the +country remains uncultivated, and the soil is allowed to lie fallow +every third year. Moldavia is better cultivated, upon the whole, than +Wallachia, and this is principally owing to the fact of the Moldavian +boyards residing upon their estates, and taking a pride in their +management. Progress, however, is apparent throughout the country, and +there is hardly a large estate without its steam threshing-machine. +Even the small proprietors are gradually introducing improved methods +of cultivation, and in many villages they have formed co-operative +associations for the cultivation of extensive tracts of country.[49] + +Rumania is essentially an agricultural country. The ores of the +Carpathians are not utilised, for there are no roads which give access +to them. The petroleum wells only supplied 3,810,000 gallons in 1873. +Four of the principal salt-works are carried on by Government, partly +with the aid of convict labour, and yield annually 80,000 tons of salt. +The fisheries are of some importance. The inhabitants on the Lower +Danube salt the fish which abound in the river and the neighbouring +lakes, and prepare caviare from sturgeons. There are no manufactories +excepting near the large towns, and the country is noted only for its +carpets, embroidered cloth and leather, and pottery. The housewives are +famed for their confectionery. + +Commerce is annually on the increase.[50] Its only outlet in former +times was {168} the Danube. Nearly the whole produce of the country +was carried to Galatz, at the bend of the river, upon which the +principal routes of the country converge. For many years to come the +Danube will remain the great commercial highway of the country; the +Pruth, too, is navigable for small steamers as far as Sculeni, to +the north of Yassy; whilst the numerous rivers descending from the +Carpathians will always prove useful for the conveyance of timber. New +outlets have been created by the construction of railways. Rumania +is now joined to the railway systems of Austria and Hungary, and the +proposed bridge across the Danube will place it in direct communication +with Varna, on the Black Sea. The level nature of the country +facilitates the construction of railways, but its inhabitants look upon +their extension with a feeling of apprehension, for they fancy that a +commercial invasion may bring in its train a military one.[51] + +The Rumanians complain much about the left bank of the Sulina branch +of the Danube not having been ceded to them by the treaty of Paris. In +former times the whole of the delta of the Danube belonged to Moldavia, +as is proved by the ruins of a town built by the Rumanians on the +southern bank of the river, opposite to Kilia. Up to the close of last +century the jurisdiction of the Moldavian governor of Ismail extended +to the port of Sulina, and he was charged with keeping the mouth of the +river free from obstructions. The Western powers, in spite of this, +allowed Turkey to occupy the whole of the delta, whilst they confined +the Rumanians to the left bank of the Kilia branch. The country, +consequently, has no direct access to the Black Sea, except by means +of small vessels, for the mouth of the Kilia branch is obstructed by a +bar. M. Desjardins and other engineers who have devoted some attention +to the subject propose to construct a ship canal, about eight miles +in length, which will connect the Danube with the Bay of Sibriani. In +the meantime Rumania is at liberty to make use of the Sulina mouth, +which is kept open at the expense of the Western powers, and a canal, +therefore, hardly appears to be called for. + +Bucharest (or Bucuresci, pron. Bukureshti), the capital of Wallachia +and of the whole of Rumania, already numbers amongst the great cities +of Europe. Next to Constantinople and Buda-Pest, it is the most +populous town of South-eastern Europe, and its inhabitants fondly +speak of it as the “Paris of the Orient.” The town not very long +since was hardly more than a collection of villages, very picturesque +from a distance on account of numerous towers and glittering domes +rising above the surrounding verdure, but very unpleasant within. But +Bucharest has been transformed rapidly with the increasing wealth of +its inhabitants. It may boast now of wide and clean streets, bounded +by fine houses, of public squares full of animation, and of well-kept +parks, and fully deserves now its sobriquet of the “joyful city.” + +Yassy (Jasi, or Yashi), which became the capital of Moldavia when +Suchova was annexed by Austria, occupies a position far less central +than does Bucharest, but the fertility of the surrounding country, the +proximity of the navigable {169} Pruth and of Russia, with which it +maintains a brisk commerce, and its position on the high-road joining +the Baltic to the Black Sea, have caused it to increase rapidly +in population. It is a flourishing town now, though no longer the +seat of an independent government. Built upon the foot-hills of the +Carpathians, the city presents itself magnificently from afar, and +its exterior is not belied by its finer quarters. Jews, Armenians, +Russians, Tsigani, Tartars, and Magyars are numerously represented +amongst its population, which is semi-Oriental in type. We may almost +fancy ourselves standing upon the threshold of Asia. The church of the +Three Saints is distinguished for its originality, and is a masterpiece +of ornamentation in the Moorish style. + +[Illustration: Fig. 47.—VIEW OF BUCHAREST.] + +All the other towns of Rumania are indebted for their importance +to their position on commercial high-roads. Botosani, in Northern +Moldavia, lies on the road to Galicia and Poland, and the same may be +said of Falticeni, whose international fairs are always well attended. +Commerce causes the towns on the Danube to flourish. Vilkof is a +great mart for fish and caviare; Kilia, the ancient Achillea, or city +of Achilles; Ismail, where the Russian Lipovani are numerous; Reni; +Galatz, said to be an ancient colony of the Galatians, now the {170} +most important commercial emporium on the Lower Danube, and seat of +the European commissioners for its regulation; Braila, a poor village +as long as the Turks held it, but now important on account of its grain +trade, and the literary centre of the Bulgarians. All these towns, +though situated on the banks of the Danube, may be looked upon almost +as ports of the Black Sea, through which the produce of the country, +and especially its grain, finds an outlet to foreign markets. Giurgiu +(Jurjevo) is the port of Bucharest on the Danube; Turnu-Severinu is the +gateway of Wallachia, below the great narrows of the river; Craiova, +Pitesci, Ploiesti, Buzeu, and Focsani form the terminal points of the +roads descending from the high valleys of Transylvania. Alecsandria, +a town recently built in the centre of the plain which extends from +Bucharest to the Olto, has become a depôt for agricultural produce. + +Formerly, when incessant wars rendered a strong strategical position +of greater importance than commercial advantages, the capital of the +country was established in the very heart of the Carpathians. In +the thirteenth century it was at Campu-Lungu, in the midst of the +mountains, and subsequently it was transferred to Curtea d’Argesia, +founded by Prince Negoze Bessaraba in the beginning of the sixteenth +century. Of this ancient capital there remain now only a monastery and +a wonderful church: the walls, cornices, and towers are covered with +sculptures, like the work of a jeweller. Targu-Vestea, or Tirgovist, +on the Yalomitza, was the third capital, but of the fine palace built +there by the _domni_ there remain now only blackened walls.[52] + +Rumania includes the two ancient principalities of Wallachia and +Moldavia, and forms a semi-independent state under the protection +of the great powers, and paying an annual tribute of about £40,000 +to the Porte. The country has placed a member of the Hohenzollern +family at the head of the State. The constitution of 1866 confers upon +this prince the right of appointing all public functionaries and the +officers of the army, of coining money, and of pardoning. All laws +require his signature before they can be enforced. He enjoys a civil +list of £48,000. + +The legislative powers are vested in two chambers, the members of which +are elected by a process designed to favour the interests of the rich. +All Rumanians above twenty-one years of age, except servants in receipt +of wages, are inscribed in the electoral lists. They are divided into +four “colleges,” or classes, having widely different privileges. +The first college includes all those electors of a district whose +income from landed property amounts to £132 a year; electors having +an income of between £44 and £132 form a second college; merchants +and {171} tradesmen of the towns paying a tax of 23_s._ annually, +Government pensioners, half-pay officers, professors and graduates +of universities, form the third college; and the remainder of the +electors belong to the fourth college. The first two colleges elect a +deputy each for their district; the third college elects from one to +six deputies for each town, according to its size; the fourth college +elects delegates by whom the representatives are chosen. + +The Senate represents more especially the large landed proprietors. +Senators must have an income of £352, and are elected by the landed +proprietors whose income amounts to at least £132 a year. The +universities of Bucharest and Yassy are represented by a senator each, +elected by the professors, and the crown prince, the metropolitan, and +the diocesan bishops are _ex-officio_ members of the Senate. Senators +are elected for eight, and deputies for four years. + +The Rumanian constitution grants all those rights and privileges +usually set forth in documents of that kind. The right of meeting is +guaranteed; there is liberty of the press; the municipal officers and +mayors are elected, but the Prince may intervene in the case of towns +inhabited by more than a thousand families; the punishment of death is +abolished, except in time of war; and education is free and compulsory +“wherever there are schools.” There is liberty of religion, though +there is a State Church, and Christians alone can be naturalised. No +marriage is legal unless it has been consecrated by a priest. The +Rumanian Church, as far as dogmas are concerned, is that of the Greeks, +but it is altogether independent of the Greek patriarch residing +at Constantinople, and is governed by its own Synod. Most of the +monasteries have been secularised. + +The country is divided into four judicial districts, each having a +court of appeal, whilst a supreme court sits at Bucharest. The French +codes, slightly modified, were introduced in 1865. + +The army is partly modelled upon that of Prussia. All citizens are +called upon to serve sixteen years, eight of which are passed in the +standing army or its reserve, and eight in the militia. The National +Guard includes all men up to fifty not belonging to either of the other +categories. By calling out all its men, Rumania can easily send an army +of 100,000 men into the field. There are likewise a few gunboats on the +Danube. + +The finances of Rumania are in a more satisfactory condition than those +of most other states of Europe. The Government has certainly been +living upon loans, for which eight per cent. has to be paid, and nearly +the whole of the annual income is spent upon the payment of interest, +the army, and the revenue services. The credit of Rumania is, however, +good, for the loans are secured upon vast domains, the property of the +secularised monasteries, several thousand acres of which are sold every +year. The sale of salt and the manufacture of tobacco are Government +monopolies.[53] + +Rumania is divided for administrative purposes into 33 departments and +164 districts, or _plasi_. There are 62 towns and 3,020 rural communes. + +{172} + +[Illustration] + + + + +SERVIA AND MONTENEGRO.[54] + + +SERVIA. + +Servia, like Rumania, was until recently a semi-independent state, +paying a tribute of £25,000 a year to the Porte, and submitting to +the presence of a Turkish garrison at Mali-Zvornik, on the Bosnian +frontier. But even these vestiges of ancient oppression irritated the +national pride to an inconceivable degree, and the moment when a blow +might be struck on behalf of Servia and the neighbouring countries +inhabited by Slavs still groaning under the Turkish yoke was looked +forward to with impatience. The blow has been struck, and were it not +for the support extended to it by the great powers, Servia would ere +this have ceased to exist as a semi-independent state. + +Servia, within its actual limits, includes only a small portion of the +northern slope of the mountains rising in the centre of the Balkan +peninsula. It is separated from Austro-Hungary by the Save and the +Danube, but no natural boundary divides it from Turkey; and the valleys +of the Morava, the Drina, and the Timok, the former in the centre, the +others on the eastern and western frontiers of the country, afford +easy access to a foreign invader. The difficulties to be surmounted by +the latter would begin only after he had entered the vast forests, the +narrow valleys, and unfathomable _klisuras_ amongst the mountains. + +The only plains of any extent are on the banks of the Save. Everywhere +else the country is hilly, rocky, or mountainous. The most prominent +mountain range is that which extends from the “Iron Gate” and the +defile of Kasan, on the Danube, through Eastern Servia, and forms a +marked continuation of the Transylvanian Alps, with which it agrees +in geological structure. In the northern portion of these Servian +Carpathians, in the angle formed by the confluence of the Danube and +Morava, where masses of porphyry have burst through limestones and +schists, we find ourselves in the great mineral region of Servia. +Copper, {173} iron, and lead ores are being worked here, especially +at Maidanpek and Kuchaina, but the old zinc and silver mines have +been abandoned. The valley of the Timok, in the southern portion of +this mountain range, is likewise rich in minerals, and gold dust is +collected from the sand of the river. There are few valleys which +can rival that of the Timok in beauty and fertility, and the basin +of Knyashevatz, where the head-streams of the river unite, is more +especially distinguished by its rural beauty, sparkling rivulets +flowing through the meadows, vines covering the hills, and forests the +surrounding mountains. A narrow defile immediately below this basin +leads into the valley of Zaichar, near which, at Gamzigrad, there still +exist ruins of a Roman fortress, its walls and towers of porphyry in a +capital state of preservation. Looking northward from this position we +perceive the Stol (3,638 feet), whilst in the south-west there rises a +huge pyramid of chalk, which might almost be mistaken for the work of +human hands. This is the Rtan (4,943 feet), at whose foot burst forth +the hot springs of Banya, the most frequented and efficacious of all +Servia. + +The valleys of the Morava and of its main tributary, the Bulgarian +Morava, divide Servia into two parts of unequal extent. The valley of +the Morava forms a natural highway between the Danube and the interior +of Turkey, passing through the frontier town of Alexinatz. A Roman road +formerly led along it. Krushevatz, the ancient capital of the Servian +empire, occupies the centre of a plain in the valley of the Servian +Morava, not far above the defile of Stalaj, where the two Moravas +unite at the foot of a promontory crowned with ruins. The remains of +the palace of the Servian tsar are still shown there, and it is stated +that Krushevatz, at the height of Servian power, had a circumference of +three leagues. It is only a poor village now. + +The wildest mountain masses of Servia rise between the two Moravas, +their culminating point being the Kopaonik (6,710 feet), which attains +a greater height than any other summit between the Save and the +Balkans. A wide prospect of incomparable beauty opens from its base and +rocky summit, extending southwards over plains and mountains to the +pinnacles of the Skhar and the pyramidal Dormitor. In itself, however, +the Kopaonik is quite devoid of beauty, and where its slopes have been +deprived of the forests which once covered them, the bare rocks of +serpentine present a picture of utter desolation. Its valleys are far +from fertile, their inhabitants are sulky and poor, and many amongst +them suffer from goître. + +The mountains which extend to the north of the Kopaonik, along both +banks of the Ibar, are for the most part still clothed with oaks, +beeches, and conifers. The broad valley of the Servian Morava, +rivalling in fertility the plains of Lombardy, penetrates into these +mountain masses. But they rise again to the north of that river, +attaining a height of 3,622 feet in the mountain mass of Rudnik. +Cretaceous rocks predominate, frequently surmounted by granitic peaks. +The valleys are narrow and tortuous. This is the famous Sumadia, or +“forest region” of Servia, which during the rule of the Turks offered +a safe asylum to the persecuted rayas, and in the war of independence +became the {174} citadel of Servian liberty. The little town of +Kraguyevatz, in one of its narrow valleys, was chosen to be the seat of +government, and it still retains a gun foundry, supplied with coal from +the basin of Chupriya. A secluded capital like this may have suited +a people constantly engaged in war, but when Servia entered upon a +career of progress the seat of government was removed to Belgrad. This +city—the Beográd, or “white town,” of the Servians, the _Singidunum_ +of the Romans, and the _Alba Græca_ of the Middle Ages—is delightfully +situated upon a hill near the confluence of the Danube and Save, and +overlooks the swampy plains of Syrmia. Belgrad, from its favourable +geographical situation, has become a place of much trade, and is +likewise an important strategical position. + +[Illustration: Fig. 48.—CONFLUENCE OF THE DANUBE AND SAVE. + +Scale 1 : 1,420,000.] + +To the west of Belgrad we merely meet with hills, and with the fertile +plains watered by the Kolubara. It is only towards the south-west, +on nearing the Drina, that we again find ourselves in the midst of +calcareous mountains, attaining a height of 3,630 feet, and connected +with spurs of the Kopaonik in the south. This is one of the most +picturesque portions of the country. Ruins of houses and fortresses +abound, amongst which those of Ushitza are the most extensive. These +fortresses have, however, failed to protect the country, and no portion +of Servia has more frequently been laid waste by ruthless invaders. + +[Illustration: BELGRADE.] + +In former times Servia could boast of some of the most extensive +oak forest in Europe. “To kill a tree is to kill a Servian,” says +an ancient proverb, dating probably from the time when the forests +afforded shelter to the oppressed rayas. This proverb, unfortunately, +is no longer acted upon. In many parts of the country the forests have +disappeared, and the naked rock obtrudes itself as in {175} Dalmatia +and Carniola. A peasant in need of a branch cuts down an entire tree, +and the herdsmen are not content to feed their bivouac fires with +dry sticks, but must needs have an oak. The greatest enemies of the +forests, next to herdsmen, are goats and hogs, the former browsing upon +small trees and leaves, the latter laying bare the roots. An old tree, +thrown down by a tempest or sacrificed to the woodman’s axe, is not +replaced. Laws for the protection of the forests have certainly been +passed, but they are not enforced, and the wood required for fuel has +to be imported, in many instances, from Bosnia. The destruction of the +forests has naturally been attended by a deterioration of the climate. +Mr. Edward Brown, who travelled in Servia in the seventeenth century, +tells us that the Morava was then navigable for the greater part of its +course; but at the present time, owing to its irregularities, it is no +longer available as a navigable channel. + +Servia, by despoiling the mountains of great forests, has got rid of +the wild animals which formerly infested them. Wolves, bears, wild +boars, previously so numerous, have almost disappeared, and those still +met with occasionally are supposed to come from the forests of Syrmia, +crossing the frozen Save in winter. The fauna and flora of Servia are +gradually losing their original features. The introduction of the +domesticated animals and cultivated plants from Austria has given to +Servia a South German aspect. Nor does the climate much differ from +some parts of Southern Germany. Servia, though under the same latitude +as Tuscany, rejoices by no means in an Italian climate. The Dalmatian +or Bosnian mountain ramparts shut out the vivifying south-westerly +winds, whilst the dry and cold winds from the steppes of Russia have +free access over the plains of Wallachia. Strangers do not readily +acclimatise themselves, owing to abrupt changes of temperature.[55] + +Servia includes within its limits but a small proportion of all the +Servians of Eastern Europe, but its inhabitants are probably not far +wrong when they look upon themselves as the purest representatives of +their race. They are, as a rule, tall, vigorous, with broad shoulders +and an erect head. Their features are marked, the nose straight and +often aquiline, and the cheek-bones a trifle prominent; the hair +is abundant and rarely black, the eyes are piercing and cold, and +a well-cultivated moustache imparts a military air to the men. The +women, without being good-looking, have a noble presence, and their +semi-oriental costume is distinguished by an admirable harmony of +colours. Even in the towns, where French fashions carry the day, +Servian ladies occasionally wear the national dress, consisting of a +red vest, a belt and chemisette embroidered with pearls, strings of +sequins, and a little fez stuck jauntily upon the head. + +Unfortunately the custom of the country requires that a Servian woman +should have an abundance of black hair and a dazzling white complexion. +Paint, dyes, and false tresses are universal in town and country. +Even in the most remote villages the peasant women dye their hair +and paint their cheeks, lips, {176} and eyebrows, frequently making +use of poisonous substances injurious to health. Rich country-people +are, moreover, in the habit of making an exhibition of their wealth +by means of their clothes, which they overload with gold and silver +ornaments and gewgaws of every kind. In some districts brides and +young women wear a most extraordinary head-dress, consisting of an +enormous crescent of cardboard, to which are attached nosegays, leaves, +peacock feathers, and artificial roses with silver petals. This heavy +head-dress may symbolize the “burdens of matrimony;” it certainly +exposes the wearer to great inconvenience. + +The Servians are honourably distinguished amongst the people of the +East by the nobility of their character, their dignified bearing, and, +in spite of recent events, incontestable bravery. For centuries they +resisted oppression, and, notwithstanding their isolation and poverty, +they conquered their independence in the beginning of this century. +They are said to be idle and suspicious—qualities which their former +servitude accounts for—but at the same time honest and truthful. It is +difficult to cheat them, but they themselves never cheat. Equals when +under the dominion of the Turks, they are equals still. “There are no +nobles amongst us,” they say, “for we are all nobles.” In their clear +and sonorous language, so well suited to oratory, they fraternally +address each other in the second person singular. Even prisoners are +looked upon as brothers, and it is customary to permit a condemned +criminal to visit his family on his giving his word of honour to return +to prison. + +The ties of family and friendship are a great power in Servia. It +frequently happens that young men who have learnt to like each other +take an oath of fraternal friendship, in the manner of the brothers +in arms of Scythia, and this fraternity of heart is more sacred to +them than that of blood. It is a remarkable fact, and one which speaks +favourably for the high moral tone of the Servians, that their deep +family affections and friendships do not lead to incessant acts of +retaliation and vengeance, as amongst their neighbours the Albanians. +The Servian is brave; he is always armed, but he is also peaceable, +and does not demand blood for blood. Still, like other men, he is not +perfect. As an agriculturist he follows the more obsolete routine. He +is ignorant and superstitious. The peasants firmly believe in vampires, +sorcerers, and magicians, and, in order to guard against their evil +influences, they rub themselves with garlic on Christmas-eve. + +Land is held by families in common, as amongst the other Slavs of the +South. The ancient _zadruga_, such as it existed in the Middle Ages, is +still preserved, and has never been interfered with by Roman or German +laws, as in Dalmatia or Slavonia. On the contrary, the law of Servia +protects this ancient form of tenure, and, in cases of a disputed +will, relatives by adoption take precedence of those by blood. Servian +patriots are desirous to see these ancient customs respected, and +the members of the _Skupshtina_, or parliament, have never attacked +this common proprietorship in the soil, for they look upon it as one +of the surest safeguards against pauperism. Servia offers the best +opportunity for studying agricultural {177} communities of this kind. +Nowhere else are the features of family life equally delightful. The +heavy day’s work is followed by an evening devoted to pleasure. The +children gather round their parents to listen to the warlike legends of +old, or the young men sing, accompanying themselves upon the _guzla_. +All those belonging to the association are looked upon as members of +the family. The _staryeshina_, or head of the community, has charge +of the education of the children, whom he is required to bring up as +“good and honest citizens, useful to their fatherland.” Yet, in spite +of all these advantages, the _zadrugas_ decrease from year to year. +The demands of commerce and industry interfere with their accustomed +routine, and they will hardly survive much longer in their present form. + +A great portion of Eastern Servia has been occupied by Wallachians, who +were invited to the country after the war of independence, when vast +districts had been depopulated. These new settlers, being more prolific +than their neighbours, gradually gain upon the Servians, and already +some of their colonies are met with on the western bank of the Morava. +Many Servian villages have become Wallachian as far as language can +make them so. It is a strange fact that these Rumanian colonists should +prosper in Servia, whilst Servian colonists from Hungary and Slavonia +do not. + +Zinzares, or Southern Wallachians, are met with in most towns, where +they work as masons, carpenters, and bricklayers. + +Bulgarians have settled in the valleys of the Timok and Morava, in the +south-east. They are highly esteemed for their industry, and quickly +assimilate with the Servians. Near Alexinatz there is a small colony +of Albanians, whilst Tsigani, or gipsies, are met with in all parts of +the country. They profess to be Christians, and one of their principal +occupations is the manufacture of bricks. The Spanish Jews, so numerous +formerly at Belgrad, have most of them retired to Semlin, their places +being filled by German and Hungarian Jews.[56] + +Taken as a whole, Servia was a prosperous country before the recent +war. The population has increased rapidly since the declaration of +independence, but is not nearly as dense yet as in the neighbouring +plains of Hungary or Wallachia. Scarcely one-eighth of the area is +under cultivation, and agricultural operations are for the most +part carried on in the rudest manner. Excepting in the most fertile +valleys, such as that of the Lower Timok, the fields are allowed to lie +fallow every second year. The exports of Servia clearly exhibit the +rudimentary condition of its agriculture, for they consist principally +of lean pigs, which find their way in thousands to the markets of +Germany, and of cattle. The peasant of Servia derives most of his +revenue from the sale of these animals. Within the last few years he +has also exported some wheat to the markets of Western Europe. If it +were not for the Bulgarian labourers who annually flock to the country +in search of field-work, Servia would not produce sufficient corn for +its own consumption.[57] {178} + +Industry throughout the country is still in its infancy. The Servian +despises all manual labour excepting agriculture, and it is for this +reason he looks down upon the German mechanics in the towns. Young +men of the least education aspire to government employment, and the +bureaucratic plague, which has wrought such injury in the neighbouring +Austro-Hungarian empire, is thus being developed. There are, however, +others who have studied at foreign universities, and who devote their +energies to the spread of education at home. The progress made in +this respect within the last few years has been enormous. In 1839 the +sovereign of the country could neither read nor write, whilst, at +the present time, Servia, with its numerous schools and colleges, is +becoming the intellectual centre of the Balkan peninsula.[58] + +The Servians have used their best efforts to remove from their country +everything reminding them of the ancient dominion of the Mussulman, +and they have nearly accomplished this. The Belgrad of the Turks has +been converted by them into a Western city, like Vienna or Buda-Pest; +palaces in European style have arisen in the place of mosques and +minarets; magnificent boulevards intersect the old quarters of the +town; and the esplanade, where the Turks exposed the heads of their +victims stuck on poles, has been converted into a park. Shabatz, on +the Save, has become a “little Paris;” Semendria (Smederevo), on the +Danube, which gave the signal of rebellion in 1806, has arisen like a +phœnix from its ashes; whilst Posharevatz, known as Passarovitz in the +history of treaties, has likewise been transformed. Progress is slower +in the interior, but good roads now extend to the most remote corners +of the country. + +Servia is an hereditary constitutional monarchy. The Prince, or +_Kniaz_, governs with the aid of responsible ministers and of a senate; +he promulgates the laws, appoints all public functionaries, commands +the army, and signs the treaties. He rejoices in a civil list of +£20,000. His successor, in the case of there being no male heir, is +to be elected by universal suffrage. The _Skupshtina_, or national +parliament, traces back its origin to the earliest times of a Servian +monarchy. It numbers 134 members, of whom one-fourth are nominated +by the Prince, and the remainder elected by all male taxpayers. This +parliament exercises legislative functions conjointly with the Prince. +In addition to it there exist rural parliaments in each of the 1,063 +_obshtinas_, or parishes, and these enjoy extended rights of local +self-government. The constitution provides for the election of a +_Skupshtina_ of 536 members by universal suffrage, should extraordinary +events make such a meeting desirable. The affairs of the country have +hitherto been managed satisfactorily. A revenue of £554,000 sufficed +for the requirements of the State, and up to the outbreak of the war +there existed no public debt. + +Religious liberty exists, but the Greek Church is declared to be +that of the State. It has been independent of the Patriarch of +Constantinople since 1376, and {179} is governed by a synod consisting +of the Archbishop of Belgrad and the Bishops of Ushitza, Negotin, and +Shabatz. The former is appointed by the Prince. The high dignitaries +of the Church are in receipt of salaries, but ordinary priests are +dependent upon fees and gifts. The monasteries have been suppressed by +a recent decision of the _Skupshtina_, and their revenues are to be +devoted to educational purposes. + +The military forces of the country consist of a standing army of about +4,000 men, and of a militia including all men capable of bearing arms +up to fifty years of age. The first ban of this militia is called out +annually for training, the second ban only in case of war. Servia +is thus able to place an army of 150,000 men in the field, but the +efficiency of these badly trained troops leaves much to be desired, as +has been shown by recent events. + +The country is divided into seventeen _okrushias_, or districts, viz. +Alexinatz, Belgrad, Chachak, Chupriya, Knyashevatz, Kraguyevatz, Kraina +(capital, Negotin), Krushevatz, Podrinye (Loznitza), Posharevatz, +Rudnik (Milanovitz), Shabatz, Smederevo, Tserna-Reka (Zaichar), +Ushitza, Valyevo, and Yagodina. The only towns of importance are +Belgrad (27,000 inhabitants), Posharevatz (7,000 inhabitants), Shabatz +(6,700 inhabitants), and Kraguyevatz (6,000 inhabitants). + + +MONTENEGRO. + +The name Montenegro is a translation of the Servian Tsrnagora, or +“black mountains.” It is a curious designation for a country of +white or greyish calcareous mountains, whose colour even strikes the +voyager on the Adriatic. The name, according to some, is to be taken +figuratively, and is to be understood as designating a country of “bad” +or “black” men; others are of opinion that it refers to ancient pine +forests which have now disappeared. + +The Turks have never succeeded in subjugating the Montenegrins, +who found safety in their mountain fastnesses. Occasionally the +Montenegrins placed themselves under the protection of a foreign +power, such as that of Venice, but they never acknowledged the Sultan +as their sovereign. The mountains, however, to which they owe their +independence, are at the same time their weakness, for they isolate +them from the rest of the world. A high range of mountains, as well +as a strip of Turkish territory, separates them from their Servian +kinsmen; another range, held by the Austrians, cuts them off from +the Gulf of Cattaro and the Adriatic Sea. The small Lake of Scutari +(Skodra) is their sea; the Zeta and Moracha, which feed it, are their +national rivers. If the Montenegrins were permitted to descend into the +plains without sacrificing their independence, the arid plateaux now +inhabited by them would soon be deserted by all but shepherds. + +The eastern portion of Montenegro, which is known as the Berda, and +drained by the Moracha and its tributaries, is comparatively of easy +access. The mighty dolomitic pyramids of the Dormitor (8,550 feet) +command its valleys in the {180} north, whilst the rounded heights +of Kom (9,000 feet) bound it on the east. The Berda differs in no +respect from most other mountain countries. It is only in the western +portion of the country, in Montenegro proper, that we meet with +features altogether distinct. We there find ourselves in a labyrinth +of cavities, valleys, and depressions, separated by craggy calcareous +ridges, abounding in narrow fissures, the hiding-places of adders. +Only the mountaineers are able to find their way in this inextricable +labyrinth. “When God created the world,” they tell you laughing, “he +held in his hand a sack full of mountains. Right above Montenegro the +sack burst, and hence the fearful chaos of rocks which you see before +you.” + +[Illustration: Fig. 49.—MONTENEGRO AND THE LAKE OF SKODRA. + +Scale 1 : 1,590,000.] + +Seen from an immense height, Montenegro resembles a vast honeycomb with +thousands of cells, and this appearance is due to aqueous agencies. +The water at one spot has scooped out wide valleys, whilst elsewhere +its long-continued action has merely succeeded in producing narrow +_rudinas_, or sink-holes. After heavy rains the waters accumulate +into lakes, covering fields and pastures, but ordinarily they run off +rapidly through sink-holes concealed by brambles, only to reappear +again near the seashore as abundant springs of bluish water. The +Zeta, the principal river of Montenegro, is fed by rivulets which are +swallowed up in the valley of {181} Niksich to the north, and find +their way to it through subterranean channels. Similar phenomena have +already been noticed in connection with Bosnia (p. 127). The capital +of Montenegro, Tsetinye (Cetinje), lies in the very midst of the +mountains, in the centre of an ancient lake basin. Formerly it was +accessible only by a most difficult mountain path, for the Montenegrins +took care not to construct roads, which would open their country to +the guns of their enemies. The requirements of commerce, however, have +recently induced them to connect it with Cattaro by means of a carriage +road. + +The Montenegrins are the kinsmen of the Servians of the Danube, but +their life of almost incessant warfare, the elevation and sterility of +their country, as well as the vicinity of the Albanians, have developed +special features amongst them. The quiet life of the plains is unknown +to the Montenegrin; he is violent, and ready at all times to take up +arms; in his belt he carries a whole arsenal of pistols and knives, and +even when working in the fields he has a carbine by his side. Until +recently the price of blood was still enacted, and a scratch even had +to be paid for. This blood vengeance was transmitted from generation to +generation, until the number of victims was equal on both sides, or a +monetary compensation, usually fixed at ten sequins, had been accepted. +Cases of hereditary vengeance are rare now, but the ancient “custom” +could be suppressed only by a law of terrible severity, which punishes +murderers, traitors, rebels, thieves twice convicted, incendiaries, and +scoffers at religion alike with death. Compared with the Servian of the +Danube, the Montenegrin is a barbarian. Nor is his personal appearance +equally prepossessing. The women, however, have regular features, +and, though less dignified in their carriage than their kinswomen of +Servia, they possess, as a rule, more grace and elasticity of movement. +They are very prolific, and if a family increases too rapidly it is +customary for a friend to adopt one or more of the children. + +Up to the invasion of the Osmanli the upper valleys of Montenegro +were the home merely of herdsmen and brigands. But the inhabitants +of the lower valleys were forced to retire to these austere heights +in order to escape slavery. They cultivated the soil, bred cattle +and sheep, and sometimes robbed their neighbours. But the sterile +soil yielded only a scanty harvest, and famines were by no means +unfrequent. Bosnian Uskoches, who fled to the mountains in order to +escape Mussulman oppression, only added to the misery by reducing to +a minimum the share of cultivable soil which fell to the lot of each +family. The pastures are still held in common, in accordance with +the ancient customs of the Servians. According to a recent census, +Montenegro is said to have a population of nearly 200,000 souls. This +may be an exaggeration, but the country is not even able to support +120,000 inhabitants without drawing supplies from beyond, and the armed +incursions into neighbouring districts might thus be excused as an +“economical necessity.” Death from hunger or on the field of battle was +often the only alternative. The Montenegrin always prefers the latter, +for he does not fear death, and “May you never die in bed !” is a wish +universally expressed at the cradle of a new-born infant. If a man +is unfortunate enough to die of disease, {182} or from old age, his +friends excuse him euphemistically by charging the “Old Murderer” with +his death. + +The warlike incursions of former days have ceased now, for the +boundaries of Montenegro have been defined by an international +commission, and the mountaineers have established friendly relations +with their neighbours, from whom they are able now to purchase what +they require. In summer they permit the inhabitants of the coast to +take their cattle into the hills, whilst in winter they themselves +descend to the seaboard, where they are sure now of a friendly +reception. + +The Montenegrins have always been anxious to possess a port on the +Adriatic, which would enable them to import freely, and without the +intervention of the merchants of Cattaro, the powder, salt, and other +articles they require, and to export their own produce. Their commerce, +even now, is of some importance. They export smoked mutton, sheep and +goats, skins, tallow, salt fish, cheese, honey, sumach, insect powder, +&c., of an estimated value of £40,000 annually. + +The Montenegrins, like their neighbours the Albanians, frequently leave +their country for a time in order to seek work in the great cities of +the East. Thousands of them are to be met in Constantinople, where they +manage to live on friendly terms with the Turks, their “hereditary +enemies.” They are even to be found in Egypt. + +The Tsigani are the only strangers met with in the country. They +resemble the Servians in language, dress, religion, and customs, and +only differ from them by working at a useful trade, that of smiths. +Their industry, however, causes them to be objects of disdain, and they +are not permitted to intermarry with Servians. + +The government of Montenegro is a curious mixture of democratic, +feudal, and despotic institutions. The citizens fancy that they are +equals, but they are not, for certain families exercise a powerful +influence. The sovereign, who appropriates about half the revenue +of the country, and receives 8,000 ducats annually from Russia in +addition, appoints the members of the Senate, or _Sovyet_. The +_Skupshtina_ includes the _glavars_, or chiefs, of the thirty-nine +tribes (_plemena_), but has hitherto limited itself to applauding the +“speech from the throne.” There is a body-guard of a hundred men, and +the whole of the male population is bound to take the field under the +leadership of Serdars. The country is divided into eight _nahiés_, +or districts, of which four (Bielopavlichka, Uskochka, Morachka, and +Vasoyevichka, with the country of the Kuchi), constitute the Berda, +and four (Katunska, Liesanska, Riechka, and Tsermnichka) belong to +Montenegro proper. Each of these districts is placed under a _kniaz_. +The families and associations of families (_brastvos_) are governed +by _hospodars_ and _starshinas_, dependent upon the tribal chiefs, or +_glavars_. + +[Illustration: ITALY] + +{183} + +[Illustration] + + + + +ITALY.[59] + + +I.—GENERAL ASPECTS. + +The limits of the Italian peninsula have been most distinctly traced by +nature. The Alps, which bound it in the north, from the promontories of +Liguria to the mountainous peninsula of Istria, present themselves like +a huge wall, the only breaches in which are formed by passes situated +high up in the zones of pines, pastures, or eternal snows. Italy, like +its two sister peninsulas of Southern Europe, thus constitutes a world +of its own, destined by nature to become the theatre of a special +evolution of humanity. Its delightful climate, beauteous skies, and +fertile fields distinguish it in a marked manner from the countries +lying beyond the Alps; and an inhabitant of the latter who descends the +sunny southern slope of this dividing range cannot fail to perceive +that everything around him has changed, and that he has entered a “new +world.” + +The protecting barrier of the Alps and the sea which bounds it have +imparted to Italy a distinct individuality. All its countries, from +the plains of Lombardy to the shores of Sicily, resemble each other in +certain respects. There is a sort of family likeness about them; but +still what delightful contrasts, what {184} picturesque variety, do we +not meet with ! Most of these contrasts are due to the Apennines, which +branch off from the southern extremity of the French Alps. At first +they run close to the seashore, like a huge wall supported at intervals +by powerful buttresses; subsequently they traverse the whole of the +peninsula. At times they are reduced to a narrow ridge, at others they +spread out into vast masses, rising in plateaux or ramifying into +chains and promontories. River valleys and plains intersect them in +all directions; lakes and filled-up lake basins are spread out at the +foot of their cliffs; and numerous volcanoes, rising above the general +level, contrast, by their regular form, with the rugged declivities of +the Apennines. The sea, following these sinuosities in the relief of +the ground, forms a series of bays, arranged with a certain degree of +symmetry. In the north these bays do not much encroach upon the land, +but in the south they penetrate deeply, and almost form veritable +gulfs. There once existed an Italy of granitic rocks, but it exists no +longer, for the rocks of the Apennines and of the plains teach us that +the Italy of the present is of recent origin, and that the many islands +of which it consisted formerly were united into a single peninsula as +recently as the Eocene epoch. + +Italy, compared with Greece, exhibits much sobriety in its +configuration. Its mountains are arranged in more regular ridges, its +coasts are less indented, its small archipelagos bear no comparison +with the Cyclades, and its three great dependent islands, Sicily, +Sardinia, and Corsica, are regular in their contours. Indeed, its +contours mark its intermediate position between joyous Greece and +severe Iberia. Thus there exists a correspondence between geographical +position and contours. + +Italy, as a whole, contrasts in a remarkable manner with the Balkan +peninsula. The former faces the Ægean, and looks towards the east, +whilst in the truly peninsular portion of Italy, to the south of +the plains of Lombardy, the westerly slopes offer most life. Secure +harbours are most numerous on the shores of the Tyrrhenian, and the +largest and most fertile plains slope down towards that sea. It results +from this that the western slopes of the Apennines have given birth to +the most enterprising and intelligent populations, who have taken the +lead in the political history of their country. The west represents the +light, whilst the east, bounded as it is by the Adriatic, an inland +sea almost, a simple gulf, represents the night. True, the plains of +Apulia, though on the east, are wealthier and more populous than the +mountain regions of Calabria, but the vicinity of Sicily, nevertheless, +even there insures the preponderance of the western littoral. Whilst +Greece was in the height of her glory, whilst every initiative went +forth from Athens, the cities of Asia Minor, and the islands of the +Ægean, those republics which looked towards the east, such as Tarentum, +Locri, Sybaris, Syracuse, and Catania, enjoyed a pre-eminence over the +cities on the western littoral. The physical configuration of Italy +thus facilitated the march of civilisation from the south-east to the +north-west, from Ionia to Gaul. The Gulf of Taranto and the eastern +coasts of Greater Greece and Sicily were freely exposed to Hellenic +influences, whilst further north the peninsula faces about to {185} +the west as it were. There can be no doubt that these features greatly +facilitated the expansion of ideas in the direction of Western Europe, +and that if it had been otherwise civilisation would have taken another +direction. + +For nearly two thousand years, from the fall of Carthage to the +discovery of America, Italy remained the centre of the civilised world. +It maintained its hegemony either by conquest and organization, as in +the case of the “Eternal City,” or by the power of its genius, the +relative liberty of its institutions, its sciences, arts, and commerce, +as in the times of Florence, Genoa, and Venice. Two of the greatest +events in history, the political unification of the Mediterranean world +under the laws of Rome, and at a later epoch the regeneration of the +human mind, so appropriately termed “Renaissance,” originated in Italy. +It behoves us, therefore, to inquire into the geographical conditions +which may account for this preponderance during these two ages in the +life of mankind. + +Mommsen and others have pointed out the favourable position of Rome as +an emporium. From the very first that city became the commercial centre +of the neighbouring populations. Built in the centre of a circus of +hills, and on the banks of a navigable river, not far from the sea, it +likewise possessed the advantage of lying on the frontiers of three +nations—Latins, Sabines, and Etruscans. When Rome had conquered the +neighbouring territories it undoubtedly rose into importance as a place +of commerce. This local traffic, however, would never have converted +Rome into a great city. Its position is not to be compared with that +of places like Alexandria, Constantinople, or Bombay, upon which the +world’s commerce converges as a matter of course. On the contrary, +its situation hardly favours commerce. The Apennines, which environ +the territory of Rome in a huge semicircle, constituted a formidable +obstacle until quite recently, and were avoided by merchants; the sea +near Rome is treacherous, and even the small galleys of the ancients +could not enter the inefficient harbour at Ostia without risk. + +The power of Rome, therefore, depended but in a small measure upon +commercial advantages resulting from geographical position. It is +its central position to which that city is mainly indebted for its +greatness, and which enabled it to weld the whole of the ancient world +into a political whole. Three concentric circles drawn around the city +correspond with as many phases in its development. During their first +struggles for existence the Romans enjoyed the advantage of occupying +a basin of limited extent, shielded on all sides by mountains. When +Rome had exterminated the inhabitants of these mountains the remainder +of Italy naturally gravitated towards her. The plains of Cis-and +Transpadana in the north presented no obstacles, whilst the resistance +of the uncivilised tribes of the mountain regions of the south was soon +broken, for they found no support amongst the Greek colonies scattered +along an extensive coast. Nor were the populations of Sicily, Sardinia, +and Corsica sufficiently united to offer an effective resistance to +the organized forces of the Romans, who were thus able to extend their +power over all the countries comprehended within the second concentric +circle referred to. {186} + +It happened that the plains of Northern Italy and Sicily were both rich +granaries, which enabled the Romans to push forward their conquests. +The whole world of the Mediterranean gravitated towards Rome and Italy: +Illyria, Greece, and Egypt in the east, Libya and Mauritania in the +south, Iberia in the west, Gaul in the north-west, and the transalpine +countries in the north. + +[Illustration: Fig. 50.—ROME AND THE ROMAN EMPIRE.] + +Rome maintained her power and influence as long as the Mediterranean +constituted the world; but, in proportion as the borders of the +known world were enlarged, so did Rome lose the advantages which +a central position had conferred upon her. Even during the latter +days of the Roman empire Milan and Ravenna usurped the position once +held by Rome, and the latter became the capital of the Ostrogothic +kingdom, and subsequently the seat of the Byzantine exarchs. Rome, +the city of the Cæsars, had fallen for evermore ! True, the emperors +were succeeded by the popes, but the real masters of the “Holy Roman +Empire” resided beyond the Alps, and only came to Italy to have their +power consecrated. Even in Italy itself Rome ceased to be the leading +town, its place being taken by Pavia, Florence, Genoa, Milan, Venice, +Bologna, and even Turin. + +The unity of Italy has been realised in the course of this century, +and, excepting a few Alpine valleys, its political boundaries coincide +with its natural ones. It may surprise us that this unity should not +have been established long ago, but the geographical configuration of +Italy readily lends itself to the {187} establishment of small states. +Its islands, its mountain-bound plains, and coast districts, shut off +from the interior of the country by abrupt mountains, formed as many +centres where populations of diverse origin were able to lead a life +independently of their neighbours. Now and then the whole of Italy +acknowledged a single master, but it only did so on compulsion. That +spirit of nationality which has given birth to a united Italy only +animated very few citizens of the mediæval republics. They might unite +to resist a common danger, but no sooner was it past than they went +their separate ways, or, still worse, fought amongst themselves about +some trifle. + +Cola di Rienzi, the tribune of Rome, appealed to the cities of Italy +in the middle of the fourteenth century; he adjured them to “throw +off the yoke of the tyrant, and to form a holy national brotherhood, +whose object should be the liberation of Rome and the whole of Italy.” +His messengers, carrying a silver wand, went to every city with +greetings of amity, and asked that deputies should be sent to the +future parliament of the Eternal City. Rienzi, full of the memories +of the past, declared that Rome had not ceased to be the “mistress of +the world,” and had a natural right to govern all nations. It was his +aim to resuscitate the past, not to evoke a new life, and his work +disappeared like a dream. Florence and Venice, the most active cities +of that period, looked upon him as a visionary. “Siamo Veneziani, poi +Cristiani,” said the proud citizens of Venice in the fifteenth century. +They, whose sons fought so valiantly for Italian independence, never +thought of calling themselves Italians. At the same time we must bear +in mind that the impulse which has made Italy one did not originate +with the masses, for there are still millions of Sicilians, Sardinians, +Calabrians, and even Lombards who do not appreciate the vast changes +which have taken place. + +If Italy no longer remains a “geographical expression,” it is owing in +a large measure to frequent foreign invasions. Spaniards, French, and +Germans in turn have seized the fertile plains of Italy, and their hard +oppression has taught the Italians to look upon each other as brothers. +The Alps might be supposed to offer an effective protection against +such invasions, but they do not. They are steepest on the Italian side, +whilst their exterior slopes, towards France, Switzerland, and German +Austria, are comparatively gentle. Invaders, tempted by the delightful +climate and the wealth of Italy, were able to reach easily the Alpine +passes, whence they rushed down upon the plains; and thus the “barrier +of the Alps” is a barrier only to the Italians, and has always been +respected by them, excepting during the Roman empire. Nor is there any +reason why they should cross it, for there is no country beyond equal +to their own. French, Swiss, and Germans, on the other hand, have +always looked upon Italy as a sort of paradise. It was the country of +their dreams; they yielded frequently to their desire to possess it, +and dyed its coveted plains with blood. + +Italy, exposed as it is to attacks from beyond, and no longer situated +in the centre of the known world, has definitively lost its _primato_, +or foremost place amongst nations, which some of its sons, carried away +by an exclusive patriotism, {188} would restore to it. But though no +longer the most powerful nation, and eclipsed in industry, commerce, +and even literature and science, it still remains unrivalled in its +treasures of art. There is no other country in the world which can +boast of an equal number of cities remarkable on account of their +buildings, statues, paintings, and decorations of every kind. There are +provinces where every village, every group of houses even, delights the +eye either by a fresco painting or a work of the sculptor’s chisel, a +bold staircase or picturesque balcony. The instinct for art has passed +into the blood of the people, and we need not wonder if an Italian +peasant builds his house and plants his trees so as to bring them into +harmony with the surrounding landscape. This constitutes the greatest +charm of Italy; everywhere art goes hand in hand with nature. How many +artists are there not in Lombardy, Venetia, or Tuscany who would have +become famous in any other country, but whose names will never be +remembered, in consequence of their overwhelming numbers, or because +their lot was cast in some remote village ! + +Italy owes the rank it has held for more than two thousand years not +merely to its monuments and works of art, which attract students from +the extremities of the earth, but also to its historical associations. +In a country which has been inhabited for centuries by a civilised +people there cannot be a town the origin of which is not lost in the +darkness of tradition. The modern cities have replaced the Roman towns, +and these latter rose upon the ruins of some Greek, Etruscan, or Gallic +settlement. Every fortress, every country house, marks the site of +some ancient citadel, or of the villa of a Roman patrician; churches +have replaced the ancient temples, and though the religious rites +have changed, the altars of gods and saints arise anew in the spots +consecrated of old. An examination of these relics of all ages is full +of interest, and only the most obtuse can resist the influence of the +historical reminiscences which surround him. + +Italy, after a long period of decay and foreign domination, has again +taken its place amongst the foremost modern nations. The aspect of +the peninsula has undergone many changes since it received the name +of Vitalia, or Italia, from the herds of cattle which roamed over +it. Its well-cultivated plains, carefully tended gardens, and busy +cities entitle it now to some other appellation. The passes of the +Alps and its central position give Italy the command of all the routes +which converge from France, Germany, and Austria upon the Gulfs of +Genoa and Venice. Its quarries, sulphur and iron mines, its wines and +agricultural produce of every description, and its industry afford +ever-growing resources. Its men of learning and inventors may fairly +claim to be on a level with those of other countries. The population +increases rapidly. It is not only more dense than in France, but also +sends a considerable contingent of emigrants to the solitudes of +Southern America.[60] {189} + + +II.—THE BASIN OF THE PO. + +PIEMONT,[61] LOMBARDY, VENETIA, AND EMILIA. + +[Illustration: Fig. 51.—MONTE VISO AS IT APPEARS FROM CHIAFFREDO.] + +The valley of the Po is frequently spoken of as Upper Italy, because +it occupies the northern portion of the peninsula, but might more +appropriately be termed the Italian Netherlands, for its elevation is +less than that of any other group of provinces. It is a river valley +now, but during the Pliocene epoch it still formed a gulf of the sea. +This gulf was gradually filled up by the alluvium brought down by the +rivers, and upheaved by subterranean forces above the surface of the +waters, the erosive action of the mountain torrents continuing all the +while; and thus, in the course of ages, the basin of the Po assumed +its gentle and regular slope towards the sea. As long as the waters of +the Adriatic penetrated the valleys between Monte Rosa and Monte Viso, +Italy was attached to the Alps {190} of continental Europe only by a +narrow neck of land formed by the Ligurian Apennines. + +No other region of Europe can rival the valley of the Po as regards +the magnificence of its distant prospects. The Apennines in the south +raise their heads above the region of forests, their rocks, woods, +and pasturages contrasting with the uniform plain spread out along +their foot; whilst the snow-clad Alps rise in all their sublimity from +the Col di Tenda in the west to the passes of Istria in the east. +The isolated pyramid of Monte Viso (thus called from the beautiful +prospect which may be obtained from its summit) looks down upon the +fields of Saluzzo, and the small lakes in its pasturing region feed a +roaring rivulet which subsequently assumes the name of Po. Enormous +buttresses to the north-west of Turin support the ice-clad Grand +Paradis, near which peeps out the Grivola, perhaps the most charming, +the most gracefully chiselled of all Alpine peaks. Right in the bend +of the Alpine chain rises the dome of Mont Blanc, like an island above +a sea of mountains. Monte Rosa, crowned with a seven-pointed diadem, +pushes its spurs far into Italy. Then come the Splügen, the Ortler, the +Adamello, the Marmolade, and many another summit distinguished for some +special beauty. When from the top of the dome of Milan we behold spread +out around us this magnificent amphitheatre of mountains rising above +the verdant plain, we may well rejoice that we should have lived to +contemplate so grand a scene. + +Geographically the Alps belong to the countries which surround Italy. +From the south we seize at a glance the entire slope of the mountains, +from the vineyards and plantations of mulberry-trees to the forests of +beech and larch, the pastures, the naked rocks, and the dazzling fields +of ice. But the cultivator only ventured into this difficult region +when forced by poverty. The features of the northern slope are quite +different. There the land rises gradually, and the valleys are less +fertile, but the inhabitants can easily reach the heads of the passes, +whence they look down upon the inviting plains of Italy. It is this +structure of the Alps which explains the preponderance of the Germanic +and Gallic elements throughout their extent, and whilst Italian is +spoken only in a few isolated localities beyond this mountain barrier, +the French and German elements are largely represented on their inner +slopes. + +Italy can only claim a few Alpine mountain masses within the basin +of the Po, the Adige, and the rivers of Venetia. The most important +of these, alike on account of its height, its glaciers, and springs, +is the Grand Paradis, which rears its head to the south of the Dora +Baltea, between the masses of Mont Blanc and the plains of Piemont. +An Englishman, Mr. Mathews, may claim to be the first discoverer of +this mountain giant, which even on the Sardinian staff map, published +only recently, is confounded with Mont Iseran, a far less noble summit +twenty-five miles to the west of it. + +None of the other Alpine summits on Italian territory can compare in +height with the Grand Paradis, for though the Italian language extends +in numerous instances to the central chain of the Alps, the political +boundaries of Italy do not. {191} Switzerland holds possession of +the valley of the Upper Ticino, whilst Austria still possesses the +Upper Adige. The only rivers rising on the southern slope of the Alps, +and belonging in their entirety, or nearly so, to Italy, are the +Tagliamento and the Piave. In consequence of this violation of the +natural frontiers there are many snow-clad Alpine summits which, though +geographically belonging to Italy, are situated on the frontiers of the +present kingdom, or even within Swiss or Austrian territory. Amongst +these are the giant summits of the Ortler, the Marmolade, and the +precipitous Cimon della Pala. The Monte della Disgrazia, however, to +the south of the Bernina, is an Italian mountain; such is also, for the +greater part, the mountain mass of the Camonica, bounded on the north +by the Pass of Tonale, which plays so prominent a part in legendary +history, and is commanded by the Adamo, or Adamello, whose glacier +streams creep down to the Upper Adige. Farther to the east, in the +valley of the Piave, the obelisk surmounting the huge pyramid of the +Antelao pierces the line of perennial snow, and there are other peaks +scarcely inferior to it in height. + +[Illustration: Fig. 52.—GRAND PARADIS. + +From the Map of the French Alpine Club. Scale 1 : 228,000.] + +Most of the Alpine groups lying within Italy and between the main +chain and {192} the plains do not exceed the Apennines in height, +and only a few amongst them are covered with perennial snow. But the +prospects which may be enjoyed from them are all the more charming for +this reason, for we find ourselves between two zones, with cultivated +valleys, towns, and villages at our feet, and a panorama of bare +and snowy summits bounding the view to the north. Several of these +mountains deservedly attract large numbers of tourists. Favourites +amongst them are the hills rising above the blue lakes of Lombardy, +such as the Motterone on Lago Maggiore, the pyramidal Generoso rising +in the midst of verdant fields on the Lake of Lugano, the superb hills +between the two arms of the Lake of Como and the fertile plains of the +Brianza, and Monte Baldo, advancing its buttresses like lions’ claws +into the waters of the Lake of Garda. The mountains of the Val Tellina, +or the Orobia range, to the south of the valley of the Upper Adda, +being remote from towns and customary highways, are less frequently +visited than they deserve. Standing at their foot, we may almost fancy +being in the Pyrenees. As to the dolomites, on the frontiers of Venetia +and the Tyrol, they are unique. Their fantastically shaped rocks, +delicately tinted with pink and other colours, contrast marvellously +with the green of beeches and firs, or the blue waters of the lakes. +Richthofen and others look upon these isolated mountain masses as +ancient coral islands, or _atolls_, upheaved to a height varying +between 6,500 and 10,400 feet; and, whatever their geological origin +may be, they certainly contribute much towards the beauty of the Alpine +regions. + +[Illustration: Fig. 53.—THE PLAIN OF DÉBRIS BETWEEN THE ALPS AND THE +APENNINES. + +According to Zollikofer.] + +If we descend the Italian slope of the Alps, we pass gradually from the +more ancient to the most recent geological formation, until we finally +reach the alluvial plain. Metamorphic rocks, _verrucano_, dolomites, +and other rocks overlie the granites, the gneiss, and the schists of +the more elevated mountain masses. These are succeeded by beds of +Triassic and Jurassic age. Lower still we meet with {193} terraces +and hills composed of tertiary marls, clays, and conglomerates. Monte +Bolca, so famous amongst geologists on account of its fossils, belongs +to this formation.[62] The whole of the plain of Lombardy and Piemont, +with the exception of the isolated hillocks rising in it, and a few +marine deposits near its margin, consists of débris brought down by the +rivers. The depth of this accumulation is not yet known, for hitherto +no borings have pierced it; but if we suppose the slopes of the Alps +and the Apennines to continue uniformly, it would amount to no less +than 4,130 feet. The two diagrams (Fig. 53) are intended to illustrate +this feature. In the upper of these the heights are exaggerated +tenfold; in the lower both the horizontal and the vertical scales are +the same. A glance at this diagram reveals the astounding fact that +the volume of this débris almost equals that of the existing mountain +systems. + +[Illustration: Fig. 54.—SLOPE OF THE VALLEY OF THE PO. + +The vertical scale is ten times larger than the horizontal.] + +The vast plain stretching from the Adriatic to the foot of the Monte +Rosa and the Viso may boast of its peninsulas, its islands, and even +its archipelagos, as if it were a sea. The tertiary hills of Northern +Monferrato, to the east of Turin, attain a height of 1,600 to 2,000 +feet, and the valley of the Tanaro completely separates them from the +Ligurian Alps and the Apennines. Even at the very foot of the Alps, as +at Cavour and elsewhere, isolated granitic or porphyritic pyramids and +domes rise in the midst of the plain sloping down towards the Po.[63] +The hump-backed Bosco Montello, to the south of the Piave, is another +isolated hill; and on the banks of the Po may be seen a hillock of +pebbles and marine sands, abounding in fossils, which bears the village +of San Colombano and its vineyards. Several volcanic peaks, surrounded +by cretaceous formations, rise in the midst of the plains to the east +of the Lake of Garda. The craters of the Berici, near Vicenza, and of +the Euganean Hills, near Padua, have not vomited {194} flames within +the historical epoch, but the hot and the gas springs which issue +from clefts in the trachytic and basaltic rocks prove sufficiently +that volcanic forces are not yet quite extinct in that part of Italy. +Earthquakes occur frequently in the neighbouring Alps, and particularly +near Belluno and Bassano. + +[Illustration: Fig. 55.—MUD VOLCANOES AND HOT SPRINGS OF THE NORTHERN +APENNINES. + +Scale 1 : 1,160,000.] + +A similar volcanic zone extends along the northern slope of the +Apennines, which bound the valley of the Po on the south. Hydrogen gas +escapes from fissures in the rocks to the south of Modena and Bologna, +and is utilised in several instances in the manufacture of lime, +and for other purposes. These gas springs of Pietra Mala, Porretta, +and Barigazzo were known by the ancients and during the Middle Ages +as “fiery springs,” and they illuminated the path of the traveller +overtaken by the night. Lower down the slope, almost on the verge of +the plains, we meet with a line of mud volcanoes, or _bombi_, the most +famous of which are those of Sassuolo, near Modena. The largest of +these, that of Mirano, has no less than forty craters. The ancient gulf +of the sea, now converted into a plain, is thus skirted by volcanic +cones, mud volcanoes, hot springs, and deposits of sulphur. As high up +as Piemont, and notably at Acqui, we meet with hot springs, attesting +that volcanic activity is not yet altogether extinct. + +[Illustration: La Dent blanche, 14,319 ft.; Château des Dames, 11,998 +ft.; Mt. Cervin, 14,705 ft.; Mischabel Hōrner, 14,942 ft.; Breithorn, +13,680 ft.; Monte Rosa (Dufour Spitze, 15,217 ft.). + +THE PENNINE ALPS, AS SEEN FROM THE BECCA DI NONA (PIC CARREL), 10,380 +FEET.] + +The valleys of the Alps and the plains extending along their foot were +filled, in a former geological epoch, with huge glaciers, descending +from what was anciently the immense glacial region of Central Europe. +There is not a valley between that of the Tanaro in the west, and that +of the Isonzo descending from the mountains of Carinthia, but contains +accumulations of débris carried down by the {195} glaciers, and now +covered with vegetation. Most of these ancient glaciers exceeded those +of the Monte Rosa and the Finsteraarhorn in extent, and several of them +rivalled the existing glaciers of the Himalaya. If we would gain a +notion of what the Alps were like during this glacial epoch, we must go +to Greenland or to the Antarctic regions. + +[Illustration: Fig. 56.—THE ANCIENT GLACIERS OF THE ALPS. + +Scale 1 : 4,800,000.] + +One of the smallest of these ice streams, that which descended from the +mountains of Tenda in the direction of Cuneo, had a length of thirty +miles. That which brought down the ice of Mont Genèvre, Mont Tabor, and +Mont Cenis had twice that length, and its moraines formed a veritable +amphitheatre of hills, locally known as _regione alla pietre_, or stony +region. Farther north the streams of ice descending from the Pennine +Alps between the Grand Paradis and Mont Blanc united in a single stream +eighty miles in length, and spread over the plain far beyond Ivrea. +The alluvial accumulation of this ancient glacier rises 1,100 and even +2,130 feet above the valley through which the Dora Baltea now flows. +One of its lateral moraines, known as the _Serra d’Ivrea_, forms a +regular rampart to the east of the river, eighteen miles in extent. +Its slopes are now covered with chestnuts. The western ravine (Colle +di Brossa) is less prominent, because it is inferior in height; but +the frontal ravine, forming a complete demicircle, can still be traced +readily. In the débris accumulated at the foot of this ancient glacier, +rocks derived from Mont Blanc are mixed with others brought down +from Mont Cervin. And yet it was but a dwarf when compared with the +ancient twin glacier of the Ticino and the Adda, which extended from +the Simplon to the Stelvio, filled up the cavities now occupied by the +Lago Maggiore {196} and the Lake of Como, sent a lateral branch to the +tortuous bed of the Lake of Lugano, and finally, after a course of from +100 to 120 miles, debouched upon the plain of Lombardy. The glacier of +the Oglio was small in comparison with it, but it was exceeded by that +of the Adige, the most considerable of all on the southern slope of +the Alps. This river of ice, from the mountains of the Oetzthal, where +it originated, to its terminal moraine to the north of Mantua, had a +length of 175 miles. One of its branches descended towards the east, +down the valley of the Drave, as far as where the town of Klagenfurt +now stands. Its main stream filled up the cavity of the Lake of Garda, +pushing along a formidable rampart of elevated moraines. + +[Illustration: Fig. 57.—THE SERRA OF IVREA AND THE ANCIENT GLACIER +LAKES OF THE DORA. + +From the Sardinian Staff Map. Scale 1 : 250,000] + +The hand of man is scarcely able to make an impression upon the vast +accumulations heaped up by the action of the glaciers. The hills +of Solferino, of Cavriana, and Somma Campagna, so often named in +connection with battles, are nothing but débris brought down from the +flanks of the Alps, and they were much higher formerly than they are +now. {197} + +Some of the erratic blocks were as large as houses, but, being used as +quarries, they are fast disappearing. One of them at Pianezza, at the +mouth of the Susa valley, is 80 feet long, 40 feet broad, and 46 feet +high, and a chapel has been built upon it. The huge erratic blocks +in the hills between the two arms of the Lake of Como have supplied +materials for the monolithic columns of the churches and palaces in the +environs. The slopes of the hills of Turin facing the Alps are likewise +covered with erratic blocks. + + * * * * * + +When the glaciers retired into the upper valleys of the Alps, the soil +which they covered was left bare, and the depressions now occupied by +the beautiful lakes of Lombardy were revealed. These depressions, whose +bottom even now sinks down below the level of the ocean, were formerly +arms of the sea, in character very much like the fiords of Norway. +That such was the case is proved by the presence, in every one of the +Lombard lakes, of a sardine (the _agone_), which naturalists consider +to be a sea fish. In Garda Lake, moreover, there still dwell two marine +fishes which have adapted themselves to their new condition of life, as +well as a small marine shell-fish. + +[Illustration: Fig. 58.—ANCIENT LAKES OF VERBANO.] + +The number of these Alpine lakes was much larger formerly, and those +which still exist shrink from year to year. In Upper Piemont alluvial +deposits have long ago filled up the lakes, and there now only remain +a few pools of {198} water to indicate their site. The first sheets +of water to which the term “lake” may fairly be applied are met with +on both banks of the Dora Baltea (see Fig. 57). The little basin of +Candia and the shallow Lake of Azeglio, to the west and east of the +river, are the only remains of _Lacus Clisius_, which covered an area +of several hundred square miles until its waters broke through the +semicircular terminal moraine which bounded it on the south. The Dora +Baltea formerly escaped from this lake in the south-east, its present +course only dating from the fourteenth century. + +[Illustration: Fig. 59.—THE UPPER EXTREMITY OF THE LAKE OF COMO. + +Scale 1 : 148,000.] + +Since this reservoir has been drained, the first lake of importance in +the west is that of Verbano, very inappropriately called Lago Maggiore, +or the “principal lake,” as that of Garda exceeds it in extent. Ancient +beaches, at an elevation of 1,300 feet above the sea, prove that the +waters of the lake have considerably subsided, and that its area was +much larger formerly; and it curiously ramified with neighbouring lake +basins, now merely connected with it by rivers. The ancient moraine +at the foot of this lake, and through which the Ticino has excavated +itself a passage, still rises to a height of 980 feet. {199} + +Centuries elapsed before the changes which we now perceive were +accomplished. Still they proceeded at a sufficiently rapid rate. Even +now the alluvium carried down by the Ticino and the Maggia continually +encroaches upon the Lago Maggiore. Seven hundred years ago the village +of Gordola stood on the shore of the lake: it is now nearly a mile away +from it. The landing-places of Magadino, at the mouth of the Ticino, +have to be continually shifted, for the lake retires steadily. Only +sixty years ago barges were able to receive their cargoes at a wharf +nearly half a mile higher up than the present one. The Gulf of Locarno +is gradually being separated from the main sheet of water by alluvial +deposits brought down by the Maggia. + +[Illustration: Fig. 60.—SECTION OF THE NORTHERN PORTION OF LAKE COMO. + +Scale 1 : 25,000.] + +[Illustration: Fig. 61.—SECTION OF THE LAKE OF LECCO, NEAR THE +BIFURCATION. + +Scale 1 : 25,000.] + +[Illustration: Fig. 62.—LONGITUDINAL SECTION OF LAKE COMO. + +Horizontal scale 1 : 50,000. Vertical scale 1 : 500,000.] + +The Lario, or Lake of Como, which rivals the Maggiore by its beauty, +is likewise being gradually silted up. In the time of the Romans the +navigation extended as far as Summolacus (lake-head), the modern +Samolaco. But the torrent of Mera gradually converted most of the upper +extremity of the lake into an alluvial plain, whilst the alluvial +deposits carried down by the Adda cut off the remainder from the main +body of water. There now remains only the _Lacus_ {200} _Dimidiatus_, +or Lake of Mezzola, which is shrinking from year to year, and will +finally disappear altogether. The miasmata rising from the swamps +at the mouth of the Adda have frequently depopulated the environs, +and the ruined fort of Fuentes, at the mouth of the river, built to +defend the Val Tellina, was hardly ever more than a hospital for its +fever-stricken garrison. + +The south-eastern arm of the lake, that of Lecco, through which the +Adda makes its escape to the south, has likewise been divided into a +series of separate basins. Nature, which would convert these lakes into +bottom-lands at no distant date, is being aided here by the works of +man. The barrier which obstructed the free egress of the Adda has been +cleared away, the structures of fishermen have been removed, and, in +consequence of these and other engineering measures, the once-dreaded +rises of the lake have been reduced to a minimum, and the southernmost +of the lake basins, that of Brivio, has been converted into dry +land. The large Lake of Brianza, which extended formerly far to the +south-west, has likewise been partially drained, and there now remain +only a few lakelets of small extent. + +We know sufficient of the bottom of the Lake of Como to enable us to +judge of the manner in which it is becoming gradually filled up with +alluvium. The mud deposited in its northern portion has filled up all +the original inequalities of the soil, and even in the centre of the +lake, and in its south-eastern arm, the bottom is almost a perfect +level. In the Como arm, however, which receives no tributary river +of any importance, the bottom is still full of inequalities. These +differences amply prove to us the geological agency of the rivers, +which must terminate in the lake being converted into a bottom-land, +with a river flowing through its centre. The third of our diagrams +(Fig. 62) shows that the greatest depth now hardly exceeds 1,300 feet, +whilst, if we may judge from the slopes of the hills which bound it, +the depth in former times cannot have been less than 2,300 feet. + +The Sebino, or Lake of Iseo, and the lakelet of Idro, which are fed +by the glacier streams of the Adamello, exhibit the same features as +the lakes farther to the west. The Benaco, or Lake of Garda, however, +the most extensive of these Alpine lakes, is very stable as regards +its outline and the configuration of its bottom, a fact sufficiently +explained by the small size of its tributary streams as compared +with its vast area. The old Alpine lakes of the Venetian Alps have +disappeared long ago, and there remain only a few ponds, filling +cavities in the dolomitic rocks and peat bogs, to indicate their +ancient sites.[64] {201} + +[Illustration: Fig. 63.—VILLA SERBELLONI, ON THE PENINSULA OF +BELLAGIO, LAKE OF COMO.] + +These lacustrine basins, like all other reservoirs of the same kind, +regulate the outflow of the torrents which empty into them. During the +freshets they store up the superabundant waters, and only part with +them in the dry season, and upon their difference of level in different +seasons depend the oscillations of the emissary rivers which issue from +them. In the case of the Lake of Garda, which drains but a small area +in proportion to its size, this difference is small, and throughout +the year the pellucid waters of the Mincio flow tranquilly beneath +the blackened ramparts of Peschiera. Such is not the case as regards +either the Lago Maggiore or the Lake of Como, for the volume of water +discharged into them is so considerable that their level in summer +and winter varies to the extent of several yards, and corresponding +differences may be observed in the rivers issuing from them. Lake Como +rises no less than 12 feet, and increases 70 square miles in area, +whilst the Lago Maggiore sometimes rises 22 feet, and {202} increases +to the extent of one-fifth. The volume of the Ticino, when at its +highest, almost equals the average volume of the Nile, and if it were +not for the regulating influence of the lake from which it issues, it +would alternately convert the plains of Lombardy into a sheet of water +and leave them an arid tract of land.[65] + +The Alpine lakes of Italy thus play an important part in the economy of +the country. They render the climate more equable, serve as high-roads +of commerce, and, being the centres of animal life, attract a dense +population. But it is not this which has rendered these lakes famous, +which has attracted thousands of wanderers ever since the time of the +Romans, and caused villas and palaces to rise on their shores: it is +their incomparable beauty. And, indeed, there are few spots in Europe +which bear comparison with the delightful Gulf of Pallanza, over which +are scattered the Borromean Islands, or with the peninsula of Bellagio, +which may be likened to a hanging garden suspended within sight of +the snow-clad Alps, and affording a prospect of the rock-bound shores +of the Como Lake, cultivated fields, and numerous villas. Perhaps +even more delightful is the peninsula of Sermione, jutting out into +the azure waters of the Garda Lake, like the tender stalk of a flower +developing into a many-coloured petal. + +Most of the lakes in the plain have been drained into the neighbouring +rivers. The Lake of Gerondo, mentioned in mediæval records, has +dwindled down into a small swamp, or _mosi_, now, and its populous +island of Fulcheria has become merged in the plain of Lombardy. The +lakes on the southern bank of the Po, above Guastalla, have likewise +been drained; and if the two shallow lakes of Mantua still exist, this +is entirely due to the embankments raised in the twelfth century. It +would have been much better, and would have saved the city the horrors +of many a siege, if these lakes had been allowed to disappear likewise. + + * * * * * + +The lagoons along the Adriatic have decreased in extent in the course +of centuries, and whilst new lagoons are being formed, the old ones +are gradually being converted into dry land. The old maps of the +Venetian littoral differ essentially from our modern ones, and yet +all the vast changes they indicate have been wrought in the course +of a few centuries. The swamps of Caorle, between the Piave and the +Gulf of Trieste, have changed to an extent which prevents us from +restoring the ancient topography of the country; and if the lagoons +of Venice and Chioggia exhibit a certain permanence of contour, this +is only on account of the incessant interference of man. The ancient +lagoon of Brondolo has been dry land since the middle of the sixteenth +century. The large lagoon of Comacchio, to the south of the Po, has +been cut up into separate portions by alluvial embankments formed by +the agency of rivers and torrents. For the most part it consists now of +_valli_, or alluvial deposits, but there still remain a few profound +cavities, or _chiari_, which the rivers have not yet succeeded in +filling up. Formerly these {203} lagoons extended far to the south in +the direction of Ravenna, and, according to Strabo and other ancient +writers, that ancient city once occupied a site very much like that of +Venice or Chioggia in our own days. + +[Illustration: Fig. 64.—BEECH AND PINE WOODS OF RAVENNA. + +Scale 1 : 2,470,000.] + +There can be no doubt that these lagoons were anciently separated from +the Adriatic by a narrow strip of land over 120 miles in length, and +similar to what we still meet with on the coasts of Carolina and of +the Brazils. This ancient barrier still exists in the _lidi_ of Venice +and Comacchio, which are pierced at intervals, admitting the vivifying +floods of the open sea. Elsewhere the traces of this ancient beach must +be looked for on the mainland. The low delta of the Po is traversed +from north to south by a range of dunes constituting the continuation +of the lidi of Venice, and extending into the swamps of Comacchio, +where they form a natural embankment running parallel with the coast. +These dunes, between the Adige and Cervia, are covered with sombre pine +woods, replaced here and there by oaks. The underwood mainly consists +of hawthorns and juniper-trees, and wild boars still haunt it. + +No sooner have the lagoons protected by these barriers been converted +into dry land than the sea seizes upon the sand, and forms it into new +curvilinear barriers similar to the former ones. The principal range of +dunes to the east of Ravenna, which is about 20 miles in length, and +varies in width between 50 and 3,300 yards, has thus two other ranges +of dunes running parallel with it, one of them being still in course of +formation. Signor {204} Pareto has estimated the annual advance of the +land at 7½ feet, and at much more near the mouths of rivers. + +The sea thus marks by a series of barriers its successive recoils. +Sometimes, however, the sea gains upon the land in consequence of a +gradual subsidence of the Venetian shore, the cause of which has not +yet been elucidated. Thus the gravel bank of Cortellazzo, opposite +the swamps of Caorle, appears to have anciently been a _lido_ which +has sunk nearly 70 feet below the level of the sea. The islands which +fringed the littoral of Aquileja during the Middle Ages have almost +wholly disappeared. In the time of the Romans these islands were +populous; there were forests and fields upon them, and the inhabitants +built ships. The chronicles of the Middle Ages tell us that the Doge +of Venice and the Patriarch of Aquileja hunted stags and wild boars +upon them, much to the scandal of the inhabitants. At the present day +the dunes which of yore protected these islands have almost wholly +disappeared, the forests have been supplanted by reeds, and Grado is +the only place on the littoral which may still boast of a certain +number of inhabitants. Piers, walls, mosaic pavements, and even stones +bearing inscriptions, which are found occasionally at the bottom of the +sea or of swamps, prove that the mainland was formerly more extensive +there. Farther to the west the littoral of Venice bears evidence of +a similar subsidence. Artesian wells sunk in the city of the lagoons +have led to the discovery of four beds of turf, the deepest no less +than 420 feet below the level of the sea. The subterranean church of +St. Mark has within historical times been converted into a submarine +church, and streets and buildings are gradually sinking beneath the +waters of the lagoons. If it were not for the alluvium brought down by +the rivers, the sea would continually encroach upon the land. Ravenna, +too, participates in this subsidence, which Signor Pareto estimates to +amount to 0·60 inch in the course of a century. + + * * * * * + +Amongst the geological agents constantly at work to modify the surface +of the earth, the rivers and torrents irrigating the plain lying at the +foot of the Alps are the most active, and no other country of Europe, +Holland alone excepted, can compare in this respect with Northern Italy. + +The torrent of Isonzo offers one of the most striking instances of +these geological revolutions. It is said to have formerly communicated +through subterranean channels with the Istrian Timavo, and that its +existence as a separate river does not date very far back. Ancient +writers do not enumerate the Isonzo amongst the rivers flowing into +the Adriatic. It is first mentioned in a document of the sixth century +as a river irrigating some inland valley. On Peutinger’s Table we +meet with a station, Ponte Sonti, far to the east of Aquileja, and +near the sources of the Timavo. The chronicles are silent with +respect to the peripatetics of this river, but a careful examination +of the surrounding hills justifies the assumption that the valley of +Tolmein, on the Upper Isonzo, was formerly a lake which overflowed +towards the north-west through the narrows of Caporetto, and that its +pent-up waters found their way through the Natisone into the Adriatic. +Subsequently they opened themselves a passage to the south, and another +lake was {205} formed at the confluence of Isonzo and Wippach. This +lake communicated by subterranean channels with the Timavo, but it has +now disappeared, and the Isonzo flows directly into the sea, its bed +wandering continuously towards the east. The alluvium carried down by +this river has formed the peninsula of Sdobba, and joined several old +islands to the mainland. + +[Illustration: Fig. 65.—SHINGLE BEDS OF THE TAGLIAMENTO, THE MEDUNA, +AND ZELLINE. + +From the Austrian Staff Map. Scale 1 : 290,000] + +The Tagliamento is even a more active geological agent than its +neighbour just beyond the frontier. The débris deposited at the mouth +of the narrow gorge in which it rises covers many square miles of +a once fertile plain. In summer its waters trickle through these +accumulations of shingle, but after heavy rain the river is converted +into a powerful torrent several miles in width, and all the more +formidable as its bed lies higher than many parts of the surrounding +country. The Meduna and Zelline, to the west of the Tagliamento, are +equally destructive, and an extensive tract at their confluence is +covered with shingles. Lower down, in the lagoons, these torrents have +thrown up huge embankments of sand on either side of their ancient +beds. The alluvium brought down by these torrents to the sea is in +every instance deposited to the west, a circumstance accounted for by +the direction of the coast current. + +The Piave, the most considerable river to the east of the Adige, is +likewise a most active geological agent, converting fertile fields +into sterile shingle tracts, filling up swamps, and carrying large +quantities of matter into the sea. At its {206} mouth the land +gains rapidly upon the sea, and Heraclea of the Veneti, now known as +Cittanova, which was a seaport once, at the present time lies far +inland. + +The Piave was formerly supposed to have changed its bed in the same +manner as the Isonzo. Below the Capo di Ponte, a wild defile in the +Dolomite Alps, the Piave flows towards the south-west, past Belluno, +and lower down is joined by the Cordevole. It was, however, supposed +that the river originally flowed through the valley of Rai, immediately +to the south of the Capo di Ponte, and that the Meschio and Livenzo +constituted its lower course. Earthquakes or landslips were supposed to +have created a barrier across that valley, and the small lakes still +seen there were looked upon as remains of the ancient river bed. But +M. de Mortillet has shown that this hypothesis is untenable, for the +barrier referred to is merely the moraine of an ancient glacier, and +there exist no traces whatever of landslips. + +[Illustration: Fig. 66.—THE SUPPOSED OLD BED OF THE PIAVE. + +From the Austrian Staff Map. Scale 1 : 550,000.] + +At the same time it cannot be doubted that extensive changes have +taken place in the basin of the Piave. Thus in 1771 the course of the +Cordevole, its most important tributary, was obstructed for a time by +a landslip which carried the verdant terraces of Pezza down into the +valley. Two villages were destroyed, and two others overwhelmed by the +rising floods of the river. + +[Illustration: VENICE.] + +[Illustration: Fig. 67.—THE LAGOONS OF VENICE. + +Scale 1 : 394,000.] + +The Brenta, which rises in the beautiful Sugana valley of the Tyrol, +has at all times been a source of anxiety to the Venetians on account +of its irregularities. Formerly it entered the lagoons at Fusina, and +its alluvium filled up the canals {207} and infected the air. The +Paduans and other inhabitants of the lowlands were anxious to divert it +by the most direct course into the lagoons, so as to avoid inundations, +whilst the Venetians were solicitous to get rid of a river which +threatened to fill up their lagoons and render them insalubrious. These +conflicting interests gave rise to numerous wars. The possession of the +coast became a question of existence to the Venetians, and no sooner +had they obtained it than they set about “regulating” the Lower Brenta. +Hy means of two canals, the Brenta Nuova, or Brentone, and the Brenta +Nuovissima, the river was conducted right round the lagoons to the port +of Brondolo, a few miles to the north of the Adige. But the river, +whose course had thus been considerably lengthened, gradually filled +up the bed in its upper course, and it was found impossible to {208} +confine it within its lateral embankments. They were broken through +by the floods no less than twenty times between 1811 and 1859, and, as +the channel of the river became more and more choked, a more frequent +recurrence of such disasters was naturally expected. It was then +resolved to shorten the course of the river to the extent of ten miles, +by diverting it into a portion of the lagoon of Chioggia. The danger +of irruptions has thus been averted for a time, but the fisheries +of Chioggia have been completely destroyed, and fever is a frequent +visitor in the towns of the littoral. + +There can be no doubt that but for the efforts of the Venetian +engineers the lagoons of the Lido, Malamocco, and Chioggia would long +ago have been converted into dry land. Venice has at all times been +alive to the necessity of preserving its precious inland sea. The +Venetian engineers were not content with turning aside the torrents +which formerly poured their waters into the lagoons; they have also, by +means of canals, moved the mouths of the Sile and Piave to the east, +thus securing the ports of the Lido from the dreaded alluvium of the +rivers. They even conceived the gigantic project of a huge encircling +canal for the interception of all the Alpine torrents between the +Brenta and Isonzo. This project, however, has never been carried +out. The débris carried southward by the coast current has silted up +the port of the Lido, which was abandoned towards the close of the +fifteenth century, when a new military port was constructed eight miles +farther south, at the canal of Malamocco, and it is now protected by a +pier extending 7,200 feet into the sea. + +The torrents which descend from the slopes of the Apennines to the +south of the delta of the Adige and Po are as erratic in their course +as those of Venetia. The Trebbia, the Taro, and other rivers irrigating +the districts of Piacenza and Parma only cross a narrow plain between +the mountains and the Po, and do not much modify the topography of the +country. But this cannot be said of the rivers flowing through the vast +plains of Modena, Bologna, Ferrara, and Imola. They are constantly +changing their beds, and the remains of embankments met with all over +the country prove that all efforts to confine them permanently have +proved abortive. Modena itself was once destroyed by the floods of the +Secchia. The Tanaro, the Reno, and other rivers flowing towards the +north-west, either into the canal encircling the lagoons of Comacchio +or direct into the sea, all have a history attached to them; they are +blessed for their fertilising alluvium, cursed on account of their +destructive floods. One of them, probably the Fiumicino, is the famous +Rubicon which bounded the Italy of the Romans, and which was crossed by +Cæsar when he pronounced the fatal words, “Alea jacta est.” + +The Reno is the most erratic, the most dangerous of all these Apennine +rivers. The bed of débris deposited by it in the plain measures 20 +miles across from east to west. Its volume varies between 35 and 49,500 +cubic feet a second, according to the season, and its bed is in places +no less than 30 feet above the adjoining country. The destruction of +the forests has augmented the danger of its inundations. The engineers, +puzzled by its irregular floods, have proposed the most {209} opposite +plans for subduing this terrible scourge. The river has been turned +into the Po; then eastward, direct into the sea. Recently it has been +proposed to divert it to the lagoons of Comacchio. But all these +diversions are attended with disadvantages, and whilst the inhabitants +of one district congratulate themselves upon having got rid of so +troublesome a neighbour, those of another complain of its inundations, +see their fisheries destroyed, and their navigation interfered with. + +[Illustration: Fig. 68.—COLONIES OF THE ROMAN VETERANS. + +Scale 1 : 356,000.] + +Lombardini, the famous hydraulic engineer, has shown how we may +discover the places to which the soil of the lowlands of Emilia has +been conveyed by the torrents, and trace the ancient shores of the +lagoon of Padua, now converted into dry land. A traveller following +the Emilian causeway from Cesena to Bologna can hardly help noticing +the quadrangular fields on his right, all of them of the same size. +Looked at from the spurs of the Apennines, the plain resembles a huge +draught-board, the squares of which are covered alternately with +verdure and ripening crops. We learn from the topographical maps that +these fields are exactly of the same size, and there can be no doubt +that we have here before us the fields which, according to Livy, were +taken from the Gauls and distributed amongst Roman military settlers. A +sinuous line marks, in the direction of the Po, the shore of an ancient +lake. The rectangular fields, laid out by the cadastral surveyors of +ancient Rome, cease there, and we find ourselves again amidst the usual +labyrinth of ditches and tortuous roads. This lake has been filled up +long ago by the débris brought down by the torrents. {210} + +The Po, proportionately to the area it drains and its length, has +undergone fewer changes than either the Piave or the Reno, but looking +to the populous cities which line its banks, and to the fertility of +its fields, the least of these is of some importance. + +The torrent fed by the snows of Monte Viso is usually looked upon +as the head stream of Father Po, as the ancient Romans called the +river; but the Mastra, Varaita, and Clusone are quite equal to it in +volume, and feed as many canals of irrigation. Indeed, these canals +would quickly drain the Po if it were not for a bountiful supply of +snow-water brought down by the Dora Riparia, the Stura, the Orca, and +the Dora Baltea from the glaciers of the Alps. Lower down, the Po +receives the Sesia from the north, and the Tanaro, which is fed by +streams rising in the Apennines and the Alps. Then comes the Ticino, +by far the most important tributary of the Po, “without which,” as the +river fishermen say, “il Po non sarebbe Po.” + +The Po, after its junction with the Ticino, exhibits no longer the +features of a mountain torrent; the pebbles have been triturated into +the finest dust, and no piled-up masses of débris are met with along +its banks. If it were not for its dykes, or _argini_, it might spread +itself freely over the plain. These artificial embankments rival those +of the Netherlands, and date back to the most remote ages. Lucian +refers to them as if they had existed from time immemorial. During the +great migration of peoples they were allowed to decay, and only in the +course of the ninth century were measures taken to restore them. In +1480 the great work had been achieved. Its importance may be judged +from the fact that these embankments protect 3,000,000 acres of the +most fertile land, yielding annually more than £8,000,000 sterling’s +worth of agricultural produce. Most of the towns have been built upon +artificial platforms or terraces, and up to the beginning of this +century they have never been known to suffer from floods; but whether +owing to the devastation of the forests or to the closing up of all +breaches in the dykes, the floods rise higher now than they did of +yore, and it has been found necessary to throw up embankments around +Revere, Sermide, Ostiglia, Governolo, Borgoforte, and other places. + +[Illustration: DELTA OF THE PO] + +Continuous embankments begin at Cremona, and they extend not only +along both banks of the Po, but also along the lower course of its +tributaries. The main dykes have a length of nearly 650 miles. In +addition to these there are smaller dykes traversing the space between +these _froldi_, or main dykes, in all directions, and enclosing willow +plantations, fields, and even vineyards. In fact, the river extends to +the foot of the main dykes only in a few localities. It is ordinarily +only 650 to 1,600 feet wide, whilst the dykes are several miles apart, +to allow the river to spread during the inundations. The land thus +lying within the dykes has been divided by the villagers into _golene_, +and is protected by smaller dykes against ordinary floods. The rules +laid down for the construction of embankments have been drawn up in the +general interest, and are sufficiently precise, but they are not always +observed. The old system, embodied in the dreadful proverb, “Vita mia, +morte tua,” is not yet quite extinct. Formerly the peasants were in the +habit of {211} crossing over to the other bank, and deliberately +cutting through the embankments there, thus saving their own crops by +ruining their neighbours’. + +[Illustration: Fig. 69.—THE PO BETWEEN PIACENZA AND CREMONA. + +From the Austrian Staff Map. Scale 1 : 325,000.] + +The width of the bed of inundation enclosed between these embankments +grows less in proportion as we descend the river, and in the case +of the arms of the delta does not exceed 900 to 1,600 feet. This is +not sufficient to enable the waters to escape during extraordinary +floods, when they sometimes rise 25 and even 30 feet. Besides, it +frequently happens that the villagers fail to keep the embankments in +thorough repair, and sometimes entire districts are ruined because the +mole-tracks were not stopped up. A breach in the embankment, unless +quickly filled up, produces untold misery. The crops are destroyed, the +villages levelled with the ground, the soil is torn up and carried off, +and the inhabitants are swept away by famine and its fearful attendant, +typhus fever. These great floods of the Po and the earthquakes of +Calabria are the two plagues of Italy. In 1872 1,200 square miles +between the Secchia and the sea were converted into a lake. Two years +afterwards there still remained pools of water. + +In these great disasters the inhabitants are afforded an opportunity +of exhibiting their valour, and it is always the most energetic who +succeed in protecting their property from being washed away by the +floods. During the flood just referred {212} to, the inhabitants of +the little town of Ostiglia fought successfully with the rising waters, +whilst many of their neighbours succumbed. The town stands close to the +_froldo_, and there is no second line of dykes to protect it. The dyke +threatened to give way. The inhabitants at once set about throwing up a +second barrier. All the able-bodied men of the place, 4,000 in number, +turned out to work, headed by their mayor. They worked day and night, +and, as the floods carried away the old dyke, the new one rose in its +rear. The victory was won; the floods retired, and their houses were +safe. + +Some of those breaches in the dykes have led to permanent changes +in the course of the river, and these divagations have been most +considerable in the delta. During the time of the Romans, and up to +the thirteenth century, the Po di Volano was the principal branch of +the river, whilst now it has dwindled down to an insignificant ditch +which can hardly be traced through the swamps of Comacchio. Two other +branches, farther to the south, are used now as carriage roads. In the +eighth century the Po di Primaro, which enters the sea to the north +of Ravenna, took the place of these old channels. Another bifurcation +ensued in 1152, when the embankment at Ficcarolo was destroyed, it is +said, by the people living above that town, and the main channel of +the river, the Maestra, deserted the walls of Ferrara in the midst of +its swamps, and united itself with the channels of the Adige. Breaches +in the embankments usually take place in October or November, and +generally at the same places. The danger is always greatest at Corbola, +where the Po di Maestra bifurcates. + +The Adige is quite as great a wanderer as the Po. Scarcely has that +river left its defile, or _chiusa_, of calcareous mountains and the +fortifications of Verona than it begins its erratic course over the +plain. In the time of the Romans the Adige flowed much farther to the +north, along the foot of the Euganean Hills, and entered the sea at +Brondolo. In 587 the river broke through its embankments, and its main +branch took the direction which it maintains up to the present day, +entering the sea at Fossone. But new channels opened repeatedly towards +the south, until the Adige and Po conjointly formed but one delta. The +Polesina of Rovigo, between the two rivers, and that of Ferrara, are +low tracts of alluvial land. The courtyard of the Castle of Ferrara, +which occupies one of the most elevated sites in these plains, is nine +feet lower than the highest level of the Po when flooded. + +The frequent inundations caused by the Po and the numerous changes of +its bed, by spreading the alluvium all over the country, have raised +the whole of the plains to about the same level. But now, when all the +arms of the Po are confined within embankments, most of the alluvium +brought down by the floods is deposited on the coast of the Adriatic. +The land, therefore, gains much more rapidly upon the sea than it +did formerly. The series of dunes marking the ancient shore now lies +fifteen miles inland, and the new land formed annually is estimated at +280 acres. In exceptional years the quantity of solid matter carried +by the river into the sea amounts to 3,531,000,000 cubic feet; on an +average it is 1,623,000,000 cubic feet, sufficient to form an island +ten square miles in area in ten feet of water. The Po, next to the +Danube, is the most active geological agent amongst all the rivers +{213} entering the Mediterranean.[66] The Rhone is inferior to it, and +so is the Nile. At the present rate of progress, the Po, in the course +of a thousand years, will throw a tongue of land six miles wide across +the Adriatic, converting the Gulf of Trieste into an inland sea. + +Northern Italy, in addition to these numerous rivers, possesses one of +the most extensive systems of canals in the world, which has served as +a pattern to all the rest of Europe. Lombardy, portions of Piemont, +the Campagna of Turin, the Lomellina on the Ticino, and the Polesinas +of Ferrara and Rovigo possess a wonderful ramification of irrigation, +which carries fertile alluvium to the exhausted fields. In the Middle +Ages, when the remainder of Europe was still shrouded in darkness, +the Lombard republics already practised the art of irrigation on the +vastest scale, and drained their low-lying plains. Milan, after she +had thrown off the yoke of her German oppressors, towards the close +of the twelfth century, constructed the _Naviglio Grande_, a ship +canal derived from the Ticino, thirty miles distant—probably the first +great engineering work of the kind in Europe. In the beginning of the +thirteenth century the superabundant waters of the Adda were utilised +in filling the Muzza Canal. The same river, at a subsequent period, +was made to feed another canal, the Martesana, which was constructed +by the great Leonardo da Vinci. The art of surmounting elevations of +the ground by means of locks had been discovered by Milanese engineers +about a century before that time, and was applied to the construction +of secondary canals. Amongst works of more recent date are the +_naviglio_ from Milan to Pavia; the Cavour Canal, fed by the Po, below +Turin; and the Canal of Verona, derived from the Adige.[67] + +Not only the rivers of Northern Italy, but also the springs, or +_fontanelle_, however small, which burst forth at the foot of the +Alps, are utilised for purposes of irrigation. Virgil alludes to these +springs in his Bucolics, where he says, “Children, stop the water; the +meadows have drunk enough.” Lombardy is indebted to these springs for +her fine prairies, or _marcite_, which sometimes yield eight crops +a year. The great Adriatic plain has indeed undergone vast changes +through the work of man. Originally it was a swamp surrounded by +forests and heaths, but is now one of the best-cultivated countries +of Europe. One of its great features consists in plantations of +mulberries, the uniformity of which is relieved in many districts—and +especially in the Brianza of Como, that {214} garden of Italy—by +groups of tall trees, little lakes, and sinuous valleys. There still +remain extensive heaths covering the moraines of ancient glaciers, +which become more and more sterile from year to year; but the engineers +are considering schemes for irrigating them by means of the fertilising +waters of the Alpine lakes. + +The irrigated area in the valley of the Po nearly amounts to 5,000 +square miles, and the water it absorbs every second is estimated at +35,000,000 cubic feet, equal to about one-third of the volume of the +Po. If the proposed works of irrigation are carried out, the Po, which +now plays so important a part in the economy of the country by its +floods and alluvial deposits, will be reduced to the dimensions of a +small river. + +The evaporation from the numerous rivers and canals of the country +fills the air with moisture. Rains are less frequent than on the +Atlantic coasts of England and France, but the clouds, driven by +southerly winds against the cool slopes of the Alps, discharge +themselves in torrents. The quantity of rain that falls in the upper +Alpine valleys equals that of the most humid districts of Portugal, +the Hebrides, and Norway, and the rainfall in the plains of Lombardy +is equal to that of Ireland. The annual rainfall in the basin of the +Piave is estimated at five feet, exclusive of what may evaporate or be +absorbed by plants. These rains are not confined to certain seasons, +though it has been observed that they are most abundant in May and +October, and least so in February and July.[68] + +As regards the direction of the winds, the great plain bounded by the +Apennines and the Alps resembles an Alpine valley, the winds either +blowing up it from east to west, or in an inverse direction. The winds +descending from the Alps rarely bring rain, for they have deposited +their moisture on the western slopes, but those coming from the +Adriatic are generally charged with moisture. Nevertheless, owing to +the great extent of the plains and the numerous breaks in the mountain +chains, this rule is frequently interfered with. In the Alpine valleys +the ascending and descending currents are far more regular, and the +navigators on the lakes fully avail themselves of this circumstance. + +The forty-fifth degree of north latitude intersects the valley of the +Po, but the climate, nevertheless, is not as mild as might be expected +from this circumstance, and the range of temperature is great. In the +Val Tellina the temperature sometimes rises above 90°, and frequently +fails below freezing point. In the plain the climate is less austere, +but it is notwithstanding continental in its character; and Turin, +Milan, and Bologna are for this reason the least pleasant cities of +Italy to live in. A few favoured spots on the Alpine lakes, such as +the Borromean Islands, are an exception to this rule, and enjoy an +equable climate, thanks to the moderating influences of a vast expanse +of water. In the Gulf of Pallanza the thermometer never falls below 40° +F., and we must go as far as Naples if we would meet with a climate +equally favourable to vegetation. Venice, too, is a privileged spot, +thanks to the vicinity of the Adriatic, and is healthy, too, in spite +of the lagoons {215} which surround it. It is remarkable that these +brackish lakes and swamps of Northern Italy do not give rise to the +dreaded malarial fevers. Venice undoubtedly owes its healthiness to +the tides, which are higher there than in the Tyrrhenian Sea, and +perhaps, also, to the cold winds descending from the Alps. Comacchio, +too, is a healthy place, and young natives of the Polesina suffering +from consumption are sent there to recover their health. Wherever the +engineers have cut up the connection between the lagoons and the open +sea, marsh fever has made its appearance. The swamps of Ravenna and +Cervia breed malignant fevers, especially where avaricious landowners +have cut down the protecting rows of pines and oaks. A heavy miasmal +air hangs likewise over the environs of Ferrara and Malalbergo, at the +head of the Paduan delta. + +The Alpine valleys are the most unhealthy spots of Northern Italy, for +they are deprived of sunlight. Goître and idiotcy are frequent there, +and in the valley of Aosta nearly all the women are afflicted with the +former, owing, perhaps, to the water which flows over magnesian rocks. +The inhabitants of districts traversed by numerous canals suffer from +diseases traceable to miasmal effluvia. The food of the peasantry is +not sufficiently nourishing or varied to counteract these deleterious +influences, and many die of _pellagre_, an incurable skin disease, only +known in countries where the flour of maize, in the diluted form of +_polenta_, constitutes the principal article of food. In the province +of Cremona one in every twenty-four inhabitants is afflicted with this +malady. The sanitary condition of the people is even worse in the +rice-fields of Milan and the Polesina. The women there frequently stand +for hours in tepid putrefying water, and are obliged from time to time +to pick off the leeches which creep up their legs.[69] + +But in spite of maladies, misery, and famines, always following in the +train of the inundations, the fertile plain of the Po is one of the +most densely peopled portions of Europe. Every plot of ground there +has been utilised. The forests, very much reduced in size, harbour no +game, except, perhaps, on the Alpine slopes, and even small birds are +rare. Not only snipes, quails, and thrushes are shot or trapped, but +also nightingales and swallows. Tschudi estimates the number of singing +birds annually killed on the shores of the Lago Maggiore at 60,000; and +at Bergamo, Verona, Chiavenna, and Brescia they are slain by millions, +the nets being spread in the hedges of every hill. + + * * * * * + +The population of the valley of the Po is composed of the most diverse +elements. Amongst its ancestors were Ligurians, probably the kinsmen +of our Basks; Etruscans, famous for their works of irrigation; Gallic +tribes, whose peculiar intonation is still traceable in the rural Latin +spoken in Northern Italy; and Celtic Ombrians, the most remote of all, +and looked upon by historians as the aboriginal inhabitants of the +country. + +The German invasions during the first centuries of our era have left +a {216} permanent mark upon the population of Northern Italy. The +many tall men met with in the valley of the Po are proofs of this +Transalpine influence. The Goths and Vandals, Herulians and Longobards, +or Lombards, soon became merged in the Latinised masses, but their +position as conquerors and feudal lords gave them an influence which +their mere numbers would not have insured them. The ancient history +of Lombardy is a continual struggle between the towns and these +feudal lords, and as soon as the latter had been defeated—that is to +say, about the beginning of the tenth century—German was superseded +everywhere by Italian. + +[Illustration: Fig. 70.—THE GERMAN COMMUNES OF NORTHERN ITALY. + +Scale 1 : 650,000.] + +Family and topographical names of Lombard origin are very common on the +left bank of the Po, and as far as the foot of the Apeninnes. Marengo, +for instance, is a corruption of the German Mehring. + +This German influence upon manners and language has been most enduring +in the Friuil, or Furlanei, a district bounded by the Adriatic, the +Carniolan Alps, and the plateau of the Karst, or Carso. The Friulians +were even looked upon as a distinct race, though their ancestors, like +those of most Italians of the north, were Latinised Celts. Frequent +intermarriages with their Slovenian neighbours {217} contributed in +some measure to produce a type distinct from that of Venice or Treviso. +The number of these Friulians still speaking their own dialect does not +now exceed 50,000 souls. + +[Illustration: Fig. 71.—MONTE ROSA, AS SEEN FROM GALCORO.] + +Amongst the numerous German colonies of which traces have been found +in the plains of Northern Italy and on the southern slopes of the +Alps, the “Thirteen Communes” to the north of Verona, and the “Seven +Communes” in the deep valleys to the north-west of Bassano, are the +most considerable. The _homines Teutonici_ of these two districts are +supposed to be the descendants of the Cimbrians defeated by Marius, and +blue eyes and fair hair still prevail amongst them, but in all other +respects they resemble the Italians of the plains, and only a few old +women amongst them still talk the language of their ancestors, which +is said to resemble the dialect spoken on the Tegern Lake, in Bavaria. +Nor were they the champions of German authority on Italian soil. On the +contrary, they were charged by the Republic of Venice with the defence +of the northern frontier, and {218} have always valiantly acquitted +themselves of this duty. In return, they were granted self-government +and exemption from military service. But neither the Republic of +Venice nor Austria was able to protect these German colonies against +an invasion of the “Welsh” or Italian element, and there do not now +exist any non-Italian communities to the east of the great lakes. To +the north of Piemont, however, in the valleys descending from Monte +Rosa and in the valley of Pommat, where the Toce forms one of the most +beautiful waterfalls, German colonies still maintain their ground. +They, too, would long ago have lost their language were it not for the +support they receive from the Germans occupying the Swiss valleys on +the northern slopes of the Alps. Alagna, or Olen, one of these German +villages, preserved its ancient customs until quite recently. For +centuries there had been no lawsuit there; contracts, testaments, and +other legal documents were unknown; and everything was regulated by +“custom;” that is, by the absolute authority of the heads of families. + +The French element is far more numerous on the Italian slope of the +Alps than the German. The inhabitants of the valley of Aosta, between +the Grand Paradis and the Monte Rosa, of the upper valleys of the +Dora Riparia, Cluson, Pelice, and Varaita, speak French, and are of +the same origin as the Savoyards and Dauphinois on the western slope +of the Alps. The configuration of the ground has facilitated this +pacific invasion of the western Celts, numbering about 120,000 souls. +They descended from the passes, and occupied the whole of the forest +and pastoral region down to the foot of the hills, the last mountain +defile, in many instances, forming their boundary. But the French +language is steadily losing ground, for the official language is +Italian, and every village has already two names, of which the modern +Italian one is used by preference. The Vaudois, or Waldenses, in the +valleys of Pelice (Pellis) and Cluson, above Pinerolo (Pignerol), +alone resist this Italianisation with a certain amount of success, for +they have a literature and history, and are held together by strong +religious ties. Their sect was persecuted as early as the thirteenth +century, long before the Reformation, and ever since, until their final +emancipation in 1848, they have struggled against adversity. Many times +it was thought they had been exterminated, but they always rose again, +and in history they occupy a rank far out of proportion to their small +numbers. + +The bulk of the population are engaged in agriculture, which need +not be wondered at if we bear in mind the fertility of the soil, the +abundant supply of water, and the improvements effected in bygone ages. +The labour invested in every kind of agricultural improvement, such +as canals, embankments, terraces, or _ronchi_, built up like steps on +the slope of every hill, has been immense, and defies computation. The +mode of cultivation, moreover, entails a vast amount of labour, for +the peasant knows not the iron plough, but tills his field with the +spade: he is a gardener rather than an agriculturist. The agricultural +produce is immense; its annual value is estimated at £80,000,000 +sterling, and it furnishes large quantities for exportation. Cereals, +forage, mulberry leaves and cocoons, vegetables and fruit, and cheese, +including the famous Parmesan, are the principal products. {219} +Lombardy and Piemont occupy the first rank in the world for certain +kinds of agricultural produce, and they are almost the only countries +in Europe in which rice, introduced in the beginning of the sixteenth +century, is extensively grown. The vineyards, on the other hand, are +not as carefully tended as they might be, and the wines, with the +exception of those of Asti, Monferrato, San Colombano, and Udine (the +_picolito_), are of small repute. + +The valley of the Po divides itself into several well-marked +agricultural provinces. In the Alpine valleys, between Col di Tenda and +Monte Tricorno, the greater portion of the forests and pastures is held +in common, but nearly every mountaineer is likewise the free proprietor +of a bit of meadow or land, which his labour has converted into a +garden. The social condition of these mountaineers thus resembles that +of the French peasantry; for they, likewise, enjoy the advantages of +a minute division of the land amongst freehold proprietors. The hilly +tracts along the foot of the mountains are divided into farms of +moderate size. The peasant no longer owns the land, but, in accordance +with old feudal customs, he shares in its produce. In the plain, where +it is necessary to keep up a complicated system of canals, nearly all +the land belongs to rich capitalists, who cut it up into numerous small +farms, and for the most part reside in the towns. These small farmers +have no resources of their own, and are hardly above the rank of +agricultural labourers. Though they cultivate the most fertile region +of Northern Italy, they are miserably fed, frequently decimated by +disease, and least alive to the advantages of education. The contrast +between these miserable peasants and the mountaineers of Vaudois and +the Val Tellina is great indeed. + +Periodically many of the mountaineers migrate to the towns and +neighbouring countries in search of work, and a proverb tells us that +there is no country in the world “without sparrows or Bergamosks.” +But though the natives of the hills of Bergamo furnish a numerous +contingent of these migrants, they are outnumbered by Friulians, +inhabitants of the shores of the Lago Maggiore, and Piemontese. The +latter cross the passes of the Western Alps in large numbers in search +of work at Marseilles and other towns of Southern France, and, small +wages sufficing for their frugal wants, they are not particularly liked +by their French fellow-workmen. + +The metallic wealth of Northern Italy is but small. The only mines of +note are those which formerly supplied the famous armourers of Brescia +with iron, and the gold diggings of Anzasca, at the foot of Monte Rosa, +where 5,000 slaves were kept at work by the Romans, and which are +not yet quite exhausted. Marble, gneiss, granite, potters’ clay, and +kaolin are, however, found abundantly. In former times silks, velvets, +carpets, glass, porcelain, metal-work, and other art productions of the +workmen of Venice and Lombardy enjoyed a very high reputation. These +ancient industries decayed with the downfall of the old republics, but +there are signs now of their revival. The want of coal or other fuel +for setting in motion the machinery of modern factories is compensated +for, to some extent, by an abundant water power, and this explains why +nearly all the important manufactories are met with at the debouchures +of the Alpine valleys. {220} + +[Illustration: Fig. 72.—THE LAGOONS OF COMACCHIO. + +Scale 1 : 290,000.] + +Amongst the ancient industries of the country not yet extinct, the +fisheries of the lagoons of Comacchio occupy a foremost place. The +Canal of Magnavacca, now hardly navigable, admits the waters of the sea +into the Canal Palotta, which may be described as the great artery of +these lagoons. It was constructed in 1631–34, and, by an ingeniously +designed system of ramifying canals, carries the vivifying floods to +the most remote parts of the lagoons. The various basins, or _valli_, +of the lagoons are thus filled with sea-water, and constitute as many +breeding beds, where the fish come from the sea multiply abundantly. A +labyrinth of canals provided with flood-gates cuts off their retreat to +the sea, and they are caught in immense numbers when the fishing season +arrives. Spallanzani has seen 60,000 pounds of fish taken in a single +bed, or _valle_, within an hour; but sometimes the draught is even more +considerable, and the fish are actually used as manure. The fishing +population of Comacchio numbers about 5,000 individuals, most of them +distinguished by tall stature, great strength, and suppleness. Coste, +the fish-breeder, mentions it as a curious fact that this secluded +colony of fishermen {221} should have retained these characteristic +features for centuries, though sustained exclusively by fishing, and +living upon mullets, eels, and _acquadelle_. Unfortunately these +fishermen are not the proprietors of the ponds, for they belong to +the State or to rich private individuals. The workmen live in large +barracks away from the town, to which they return only at stated +intervals, and even their wives and relatives are not permitted to +visit them in their places of exile. + +[Illustration: Fig. 73.—THE FISHERIES OF COMACCHIO. + +Scale 1 : 78,000.] + +The enormous population of the valley of the Po, which almost equals +that of the remainder of continental Italy, is very unequally +distributed; but, except in the high and cold Alpine valleys, the +inhabitants live in towns, dozens of which may be seen peeping out +amidst the verdure if we ascend a high tower. There are scarcely any +villages or hamlets. The farmers alone live in the country, completely +isolated from each other, whilst the numerous landed proprietors throng +the towns, and impart to them an aspect of wealth which similar places +in other {222} parts of Europe cannot boast of. No other country in +the world is as densely populated, and in Lombardy the number of towns +is relatively larger than anywhere else.[70] + +Large towns, too, are numerous, and many of them enjoy a deserved +reputation amongst the cities of the world on account of their +monuments, art treasures, and historical associations. Their number +is partly accounted for by the density of the population, and by the +facility with which the inhabitants were able to shift their abodes, +according to the hazards of war or the vicissitudes of events. And this +accounts, too, for the large number of towns which became famous as the +capitals of republics, or as royal and ducal residences. + +Several of the towns at the base of the Alps occupy sites marked out +for them by nature. Such are the towns at the mouth of the valleys or +defiles, which were places of defence as well as staples of commerce. +Ariminum, the modern Rimini, at the southern extremity of the great +plain of the Po, was one of these, for during the reign of the Roman +it defended the narrow littoral passage between the Adriatic and the +Apennines. The Flaminian Road there reached the sea, the Emilian Road +thence departed for the north-west, as did also the littoral road of +Ravenna. When Rome had ceased to be the capital of the world, and +Italy was divided into small hostile states, the towns in the southern +part of the plain, or near the passes over the Po, such as Ferrara and +Bologna, retained their strategical importance. Piacenza, which defends +the passage of the Po between Piemont and Emilia, remains a first-rate +fortress to the present day; Alessandria, near the confluence of Tanaro +and Bormida, and in a plain famous for many a bloody battle, was +likewise destined to become a formidable fortress, though derisively +called a “city of straw.” Every valley debouching from France or +Austria was locked at its mouth by a strong fort; but most of these +places, such as Vinadio, Pinerolo, Fenestrella, and Susa, have become +untenable, owing to the range of modern artillery. + +The defences of the road over the Brenner, ever since the downfall of +the Roman empire, had to be looked to most carefully, for the plain +between the Mincio and the Adige, to the south of the Lake of Garda, +is the least-protected part of Italy from a military point of view. +History has proved this. Well might the peaceable inhabitants of the +plain consecrate this Alpine road to the gods, and intrust its defence +to the neighbouring tribes. But the northern barbarians were not to +be stopped by altars; and many a time they swept down it like an +avalanche, pillaging the towns and massacring the inhabitants. No spot +on the earth’s surface has been so frequently saturated with human +blood. Most of the battles for the possession of Italy, down to our +own days, were fought near the mouth of the upper valley of the Adige. +Hardly a town or a village of this small district but {223} has gained +a mournful notoriety in the dark pages of human history. It is there +we must seek for the battle-fields of Castiglione, Lonato, Rivoli, +Solferino, and Custozza. When the Austrians held Lombardy and Venice, +they took care to protect this district by the four fortresses known as +the Quadrilateral (Verona, Peschiera, Mantua, and Legnago) and other +works. These constituted the “key of the house,” of which Italy has now +repossessed herself. + +[Illustration: Fig. 74.—MOUTH OF THE ADIGE VALLEY. + +From the Austrian Staff Map. Scale 1 : 397,000.] + +The configuration of the country which rendered these defiles of the +Alps of importance strategically, likewise insured their commercial +importance. The fortresses were placed there to defend the passes, the +commercial entrepôts to intercept the trade. The rank of these places +of commerce depends essentially upon the number and the importance of +the roads which converge upon them. Turin, upon which converge all the +Alpine roads from Mont Blanc to the Apennines, naturally became one of +the vital points of European commerce. Milan, to which lead the seven +great Alpine routes of the Simplon, the Gotthard, the Bernardino, the +Splügen, the Julier, the Maloya, and the Stelvio, was marked out by +nature as a commercial emporium. Bologna, too, which was separated by +the swamps of the Po from the Alpine passes, has risen into importance +since railways have joined it to Vienna, Paris, Marseilles, and Naples. +{224} + +The valley of the Po would never have attained its importance in the +history of Europe unless roads had been constructed for traversing the +obstructive mountains which surround it on all sides except towards +the east, where it opens out upon the Adriatic. No other district of +Europe is so completely hemmed in by natural obstacles as is this, but +the construction of carriage roads and railways has converted Northern +Italy into one of the great centres of European commerce. Venice +gives it the command of the Adriatic, the Apennine railways connect +it with Genoa, Savona, the Gulf of Spezia, and the Tyrrhenian, and +it thus commands the two seas which wash the shores of Italy. Other +railways cross the Alps, and put it into communication with France and +Germany. This central position, joined to the natural fertility of the +country, has converted Northern Italy into one of the most flourishing +portions of Europe. Human hands have conquered original geographical +disadvantages, and the true centre of Italy is in the ancient Cisalpine +Gaul, and not at Rome. Had the Italians been guided in the choice of +their capital by actual importance, and not by historical tradition, +they would have chosen one of the great cities of their northern plain. + +[Illustration: Fig. 75.—THE PASSAGES OVER THE ALPS. + +Scale 1 : 6,000,000.] + +Turin, though an old town, seeing that it was burnt by Hannibal, is +nevertheless a modern city, if we compare it with other towns of Italy. +Its straight and broad streets almost give it the appearance of a town +of the New World. Until made a ducal residence, Turin was but a small +provincial town. During the time of the Romans, and even during the +Middle Ages, the great high-road between Italy and Gaul led along the +coast of the Gulf of Genoa. The passage of the Alps was looked upon +with dread by travellers. Still some traffic went on even in these +{225} early days, and small towns sprang into existence at the foot of +each Alpine pass. Amongst these were Mondovi, the triple town built on +three hills; Cuneo, favourably placed upon a terrace between Stura and +Gesso, in which rise the hot sulphur springs of Valdiera; Saluzzo, on +the gentle slope of the foot-hills of Monte Viso; Pinerolo, with its +ancient castle, so often converted into a prison of state; Susa, the +Italian key of Mont Cenis; Aosta, still abounding in Roman antiquities; +Ivrea, built on a site formerly occupied by a glacier descending from +Monte Rosa; and Riella, with its flourishing woollen industry. The +towns lower down in the plain, upon which several of these Alpine roads +converged, likewise attained some local importance. In Upper Piemont +there are Fossano, on a heap of shingle at the junction of the roads +of Mondovi and Cuneo; Savigliano, lower down, where the roads of the +Po and Maira valleys join; and Carmagnola, which commands one of the +principal roads over the Apennines. Novara, the commercial outlet of +the Lago Maggiore, and in the midst of one of the most productive +agricultural districts, is the most populous town of Eastern Piemont. +Vercelli, on the Sesia, and below the confluence of the rivulets +descending from Monte Rosa, enjoys natural advantages similar to those +of Novara. Casale, the ancient capital of Monferrato, defends one of +the principal passages of the Po. + +But Turin, owing to its favourable position, has become the great +emporium of the valley of the Upper Po. Its commerce has grown +immensely, since the town no longer enjoys the perilous honour of being +the capital of a kingdom, and the places vacated by the court and +Government officials have been filled up quickly by immigrants carried +thither by the railways. Its libraries, a fine museum, and various +learned societies entitle it to rank as one of the intellectual centres +of the peninsula, whilst its manufactures of silks and woollens, of +paper and other articles, are of great importance. The environs of +Turin are delightful. From the hill of the Superga, a few miles to the +east of the city, and crowned by a sumptuous church, may be enjoyed one +of the finest panoramas of the Italian Alps. The numerous small towns +in its vicinity, such as Moncalieri, Chieri, and Carignano, abound in +villas and participate in the prosperity of the capital. As to the +towns in the valley of the Tanaro, in the south, they form a group +apart, and are the natural intermediaries between the valley of the +Po and the port of Genoa. Alessandria, a strong fortress of hideous +regularity, which has superseded the old fortresses of Tortona and +Novi, is the terminus of eight railways, and one of the busiest places +of Italy. The neighbouring cities of Asti, famous for its sparkling +wines, and Acqui, celebrated from the time of the Romans for its hot +springs, are likewise important for their commerce.[71] + +Milan, the capital of Lombardy, is in every respect one of the leading +cities of Italy. In population it is inferior to Naples, in commerce +it is outstripped only {226} by Genoa, but in industry it is the equal +of both. Its scientific and literary life entitles it, probably, to +the first rank amongst the cities between the Alps and Sicily. In the +most remote times Milan was an important town of the Celts, and since +then the advantages of its position have given it the preponderance +amongst all other cities of Northern Italy. Its power during the Middle +Ages gained it the epithet of the “Second Rome.” At the close of the +thirteenth century it had 200,000 inhabitants, whilst London had not +then a sixth of that number. Milan stood in want of water, for it +was dependent upon the feeble stream of the Olona, and its citizens +created the Naviglio Grande and the Martesana, veritable rivers, which +furnish a quantity of water double that of the Seine at Paris during +summer. They likewise erected magnificent monuments, but most of these +have perished during innumerable wars, and the aspect of Milan is now +that of a modern town of Western Europe. Its most famous building, the +“Duomo,” with its prodigious crowd of statues, its finely chiselled +marbles and granites, must be looked upon as a marvel of architecture, +though from an artistic point of view it is hardly more than an +elaborately carved trinket out of all proportion. The stones for this +edifice were quarried on the Lago Maggiore, near the mouth of the Toce. + +The capital of Lombardy, proud of the past and confident of the future, +boasts of never yielding servilely to impulses given from beyond. It +has its own opinions, manners, and fashions, and anything accepted +from abroad is moulded in accordance with local traditions. The other +towns of Lombardy likewise maintain their local character, are proud +of their traditions, and glory in the annals of the past. Como, on the +beautiful lake named after it, the ancient rival of Milan, gains wealth +by spinning silk and exporting the agricultural produce of the Brianza. +Monza, surrounded by parks and villas, is the coronation city. Pavia, +with its 525 towers, now in ruins, remembers the time when it was the +residence of the Lombard kings, and proudly points to the university, +one of the oldest in Europe, and to the Certosa (Chartreuse), one of +the most sumptuous monasteries of Italy. Vigevano, on the other side of +the Ticino, rejoices in a fine castle. Lodi, in the eleventh century, +was the most powerful city of Italy next to Milan, and carried on a war +of extermination with the latter; it is still a busy place. Cremona, an +old republic, boasts of its _torrazzo_, or tower, 393 feet in height, +the loftiest in Europe until Gothic cathedrals were built. Bergamo, +on a hill commanding the rich plains of Brembo and Serio, produced a +larger number of great men than any other town except Florence; and +Brescia, the armourers’ town, more haughty still, proclaims herself to +be the mother of heroes. + +Mantua, on the Mincio, is one of the fortresses of the Quadrilateral, +and can hardly be said to belong to Lombardy, though included within +its political boundaries. It is essentially a military town. It has +lost much of its old commerce, though Jews are more plentiful there +than in any other inland city of Italy. Its swamps, woods, rice-fields, +ditches, and fortified canals are productive of a degree of humidity +exceptional even in Lombardy, and the inhabitants consequently eschew +this ancient birthplace of Virgil. Strikingly different is the +character of the towns situated in the heart of the mountains, such as +Sondrio, the capital of the {227} Val Tellina, or delightful Salo, on +the Lake of Garda, with its group of villas scattered amongst groves of +orange-trees.[72] + +[Illustration: Fig. 76.—THE LAKES AND CANALS OF MANTUA. + +From the Austrian Staff Map. Scale 1 : 198,000.] + +The physiognomy of the large towns of Emilia, beyond the Po, offers +far fewer peculiarities, for, as most of them are situated along the +great Emilian highway, they have been exposed for ages to the levelling +influences of travelling merchants and soldiers. Piacenza, a sorry +place as a fortress, carries on an important commerce. Parma, an old +ducal residence, has a rich library, a museum, and wonderful frescoes +by Correggio in its churches. Reggio, another important {228} station +on the Emilian highway, is famous as the birthplace of Ariosto. Modena +has its museum, and the precious collection of books and manuscripts +known as the _Biblioteca Estense_. Bologna the “Learned,” which has +taken the word “Libertas” for its motto, still remains one of the +most interesting of Italian cities. There are its Etruscan cemetery, +its palaces and mediæval buildings, and its two leaning towers, which +will most certainly come down in the end. Bologna is one of the great +railway centres, carries on much commerce, and increases rapidly in +population. It would have made a far better capital than Rome. Of late +years the environs of the city have been frequently flooded by the +Reno, and these disasters have cost Bologna its ancient epithet of “the +Fat.” + +Near this bustling place there are others, now stagnant, which can +point only to buildings in proof that they, too, were once flourishing. +Ferrara, the ancient capital of the Estes, has fallen from its high +estate since the Po has deserted it, but still remains a place of some +importance. Ravenna has not been deserted by the Po, but by the sea, +with which it communicates now by a canal seven miles in length, and +navigable for ships drawing thirteen feet of water. The town became +the capital of Honorius and Theoderic the Goth, on account of the +protection offered by the surrounding marshes. To the exarchs it is +indebted for its curious Byzantine edifices, so rich in mosaics. As to +the ancient Etruscan city of Adria, on Venetian soil, to the north of +the Po, it could hardly have claimed at any period during the last two +thousand years to give a name to the neighbouring sea. It lies now at a +distance of fourteen miles from it, and even in the time of the Romans +it must have been surrounded by lagoons or swamps, for how else can we +explain its epithet of “Town of the Seven Seas?” Porto, at the foot of +the Euganean Hills, may owe its name to an ancient lake or river. + +Towns famous on account of their history, and still populous, are +most crowded together in the southern angle of the plain, usually +known as the Romagna. The towers and crenellated walls of Imola rise +there on the banks of the Santerno. Lugo, the “town of the beautiful +Romagnese,” occupies the centre of the district of Ravenna, and has +much trade. Faenza, on the Emilian Road, is a large village rather +than a town, though it has given its name to a particular kind of +porcelain (faience). Forli is, next to Bologna, the most populous city +of Romagna. Cesena is known for the excellence of the hemp grown in the +neighbourhood. Rimini, where the Emilian Road reaches the sea, still +has a few Roman ruins, including a triumphal arch. The inhabitants +of the Romagna are distinguished by great energy. Their passions +are violent, and as frequently lead them into crime as to deeds of +heroism.[73] + +[Illustration: THE PALACE AT FERRARA.] + +[Illustration: VERONA.] + +In Venetia there are several provincial towns of importance. Padua +abounds in monuments of art, possesses a university, and was formerly +the rival of Venice. Vicenza is embellished by the palaces erected by +Palladio. Treviso and Belluno are towns of some importance, the one +on the Sile, the other in the upper valley {229} of the Piave. +At Udine is pointed out a mound of earth said to have been thrown up +by Attila, from which he contemplated the conflagration of Aquileja. +Palmanova, on the Austrian frontier, is a regularly built fortress. +Verona, at the other extremity of Venetia, has played an important part +in the history of Italy, but its commerce and industry have fallen into +decay. It hardly fills up the space enclosed by walls and bastions, and +its present population is quite out of proportion to the multitude of +its public buildings dating from the Middle Ages, and the dimensions of +its Roman amphitheatre, capable of seating 50,000 spectators. Amongst +all the cities of Venetia it is Venice itself, the “Queen of the +Adriatic,” which has suffered least in the course of ages. + +[Illustration: Fig. 77.—PALMANOVA. + +Scale 1 : 86,400.] + +Venice is a very ancient city. The remains of Roman buildings +discovered on the island of San Giorgia, far below the present level +of the sea, and therefore referred to in proof of the slow subsidence +of the Venetian coast, prove to us that the mud islands of the gulf +supported a population long before the invasion of the Barbarians. +These half-drowned lands may have attracted the coast population at +an early age, for they afforded security against attack, and offered +great advantages for carrying on commerce. Nevertheless, the Venice +of our time only dates from the commencement of the ninth century, +when the government of this maritime republic was established upon the +islands separated from the sea by the _lidi_, and from the mainland +by estuaries and swamps. This unique position rendered Venice almost +impregnable; and whilst the rest of Europe was being desolated by war, +Venice sent forth its commercial and warlike expeditions to every part +of the Mediterranean, established factories, and built fortresses. Not +without arduous struggles, it became the most powerful and wealthiest +of the commercial republics of Italy. It was largely indebted for +this success to its favourable geographical position, almost in the +centre of the mediæval world. Its commerce brought the Venetians into +contact with nearly every nation, and they had no prejudices against +foreigners. The Armenians were admitted to their city, and an alliance +was made even with the Turks. At the time of the Crusades the Venetian +Republic occupied the foremost position amongst the states of Europe, +and its ambassadors enjoyed a vast amount of influence. This influence +was sustained by enormous material forces. Venice had a navy of 300 +vessels, manned by 36,000 sailors, and the riches of the world, whether +obtained by legitimate commerce or by violence, were accumulated in its +2,000 palaces and 200 churches. Even _one_ of the islets upon which the +city is built would have purchased a kingdom of Asia or Africa. One +of the most sumptuous cities of the West had {230} arisen upon banks +of mud, inhabited formerly only by poor fishermen. The larch forests +of Dalmatia had been cut down, and converted into piles upon which +to build palaces. More than 400 bridges of marble joined island to +island, and superb embankments of granite defended this marvellous city +against the encroachments of the sea. Great achievements in the arts +contributed their share in making _Venezia la Bella_ a city without its +equal. + +But geographical discoveries, in which Venice itself took a leading +share, undermined the power of the Italian Republic. When Africa had +been circumnavigated and the New World discovered, the Mediterranean +ceased to be the great commercial sea of the world. Venice was doomed +to die. It no longer monopolized the road to India, and the increasing +power of the Turks crippled its Eastern trade. Still, so great were +its resources, that it maintained its independence for more than three +hundred years after it had lost its factories, and only fell when +shamefully deserted by General Bonaparte, its supposed ally. + +The decadence of Venice was most remarkable during the dominion of +Austria. In 1840 the city had less than 100,000 inhabitants, hundreds +of its palaces were in ruins, the grass grew in its squares, and +seaweeds encumbered its landing-places. Since that time it has been +gradually recovering. A bridge of 222 arches and 2,000 feet in length +connects it with the mainland, and its commerce, though not equal to +that of Trieste, is nevertheless of considerable importance.[74] The +manufacture of looking-glasses, lace, and other articles has imparted +fresh life to Venice, and there, as well as in other towns of the +lagoons (Malamocco, Burano, Murano, and Chioggia), thousands of workmen +are busy in the production of those gay-looking glass beads which find +their way into every part of the world, and which in certain countries +of the East and in Central Africa take the place of coin. But Venice, +though less populous and active than of yore, still rejoices in its +delightful climate and its bright skies. Its gaiety and fêtes are not +yet things of the past, and its palaces, built in a style half Italian, +half Moorish, still contain the priceless masterpieces of Titian, +Tintoretto, and Paul Veronese.[75] + + +III.—LIGURIA AND THE RIVIERA OF GENOA.[76] + +Liguria is but a narrow slip of land if we compare it with the broad +plain of the Po, but it is one of the most clearly defined districts +of Europe, and its inhabitants have retained many original traits. +The contrast between the Podane plains and the littoral region beyond +the barren Apennines is striking, but if we travel in the direction +of Provence or of Tuscany the landscape changes only by degrees. The +rampart of the Apennines surrounds the whole of the Gulf of {231} +Genoa, and there is not a single break in it. These mountains are +very different in character from the Alps, though joined to them as +the branch of a tree is united to its trunk. It is not possible to +tell where one chain ends and the other begins. If the main direction +of the mountain is to be the criterion, the Ligurian Apennines may +be said to begin at the frontier of France, near the sources of the +Tinea and Vesubio; but if great height, pastures, and perennial snow +are considered sufficient to constitute an Alpine region, then the +Apennines only begin to the east of the Col di Tenda, for the fine +summits of the Clapier, Fenêtre, and Gordalesque, to the west of that +pass, attain a height of 10,000 feet. They are quite Alpine in their +character, and may boast even of small glaciers, the most southerly +in the mountains of Central Europe. Geologists usually draw the line +where cretaceous and tertiary rocks take the place of the crystalline +rocks of the Alps. But this, too, is only a conventional division, +for these crystalline rocks, which constitute the crest of the Alps +in the west, extend far to the east, and occasionally they break +through the sedimentary formations which overlie them, and rise into +summits similar to those of the Alps. Thus the granitic summits of the +mountains of Spezia remind us of the mountain mass near the Col di +Tenda. + +[Illustration: Fig. 78.—THE JUNCTION OF ALPS AND APENNINES. + +Scale 1 : 1,500,000] + +The chain of the Ligurian Apennines is by no means of uniform height, +but, like that of the Alps, it consists of mountain masses separated by +passes. The lowest of these passes is that to the west of Savona, named +indifferently after one of the neighbouring villages, Altare, Carcara, +or Cadibona. This pass is hardly more than 1,600 feet in height, and +is popularly looked upon as constituting the boundary between the Alps +and Apennines. The possession of this pass during war has {232} always +been considered of great importance, for it commands the approaches to +Genoa and the upper valleys of Piemont, and the Tanaro and Bormido, +which rise near it, have often run with blood. + +The Apennines to the east of this pass have an average height of 3,300 +feet, and beyond the Pass of Giovi (1,538 feet), through which the road +leads from Genoa to the northern plains, many summits attain a height +of 4,500 feet. Several spurs, abounding in ravines, extend here to the +north. The main chain, at the same time, retires from the coast, and +the Pass of Pontremoli, which separates the Ligurian from the Tuscan +Apennines, and through which leads the road from Parma to Spezia, is +no less than thirty miles from the sea. In this eastern portion of +the Genoese Apennines a spur detaches itself from the main chain, and +terminates in the fine promontory of Porto Venere, a magnificent rock +of black marble, surmounted formerly by a temple of Venus. This spur, +which protects the Gulf of Spezia against westerly winds, has at all +times constituted an obstacle to the intercourse between neighbouring +peoples, not so much on account of its height, but because of its +steepness. In some places the crest of the Apennines is hardly more +than four miles from the sea. The slope, in such places, is exceedingly +steep, and roads can ascend it only in numerous windings.[77] + +The small width of the maritime slope of the Ligurian Apennines +accounts for the absence of perennial rivers. The most considerable +streams to the east of the Roya, which runs for the greater part +through French territory, such as the Taggia or the Centa, only assume +the appearance of rivers when the snows melt, or after heavy rains. +Ordinarily they are but small streams, closed at the mouth by bars of +pebbles. Between Albenga and Spezia, for a distance of 160 miles, there +are only torrents, and in order to meet again with a real river we must +go beyond the Gulf of Spezia. This river is the Magra, which separates +Liguria from Etruria, and which, up to the epoch of Augustus, formed +the boundary of Italy. Its alluvium has converted an ancient bay of the +sea into a lake, and formed a beach, 1,300 yards in width, in front +of the ancient Tyrrhenian city of Luni, which formerly stood on the +seashore. + +The want of great rivers in Liguria is compensated for to some extent +by subterranean water-courses. Several springs rise from the bottom of +the sea, at some distance from the shore. The springs of La Polla, in +the Gulf of Spezia, are amongst the most bountiful amongst them. They +have been isolated by the Italian Government from the surrounding salt +water, and their water is supplied to ships. + +Owing to the absence of rivers, the sterility of the soil, and the +steep escarpments, this portion of the Mediterranean coast region +contrasts strikingly with other parts of temperate Europe. Having +reached the summit of the mountains beyond the magnificent chestnut +forests at the head-streams of the Ellero, the Tanaro, and the Bormida, +we look down upon a scene almost African in its character. Scarcely +a blade of grass is to be seen between Nice and Spezia, and only +the grass-plots, kept up at great expense in some pleasure-gardens, +remind us that Piemont and {233} Lombardy are near at hand. Pines and +brambles would have remained the only verdure in these Ligurian valleys +and ravines if it were not for the transformation wrought by gardeners +and agriculturists. Strange to say, trees do not ascend to the same +height on the slopes of the Apennines as in the Alps, though the mean +temperature is far higher, and at an altitude at which the beech still +attains noble proportions in Switzerland we find it here stunted in +growth. Larches are hardly ever seen. + +The sea is as sterile as the land. There are neither shallows, +islands, nor seaweeds affording shelter to fish. The cliffs descend +precipitously into the sea, and the narrow strips of beach, extending +from promontory to promontory, consist only of sand without the +admixture of a single shell. The Genoese fishermen, therefore, resort +to distant coasts, those of the “Ponente,” or west, going to Sicily, +whilst those of Camogli, on the Riviera di Levanto, visit the coasts of +Tuscany. This sterility of land and sea accounts for the large number +of Genoese met with in other parts of the world. + +But though an unfruitful country, Liguria is exceedingly picturesque. A +traveller availing himself of the railway between Nice and Genoa, which +follows the sinuosities of the coast and pierces the promontories in +numerous tunnels, is brought within reach of the most varied scenery. +At one time the line runs close to the beach, with the foam of the sea +almost touching the track on the one side, while tamarisks bearing +pink blossoms overshadow it from the other. Elsewhere we creep up the +steep slope, and obtain a view of the cultivated terraces raised at +immense labour by the peasantry, whilst the bluish sea is seen afar +to the right, almost hidden by a grove of olive-trees, and stretching +away until lost in the direction of Corsica. Towns, villages, old +towers, villas, ship-yards, and other industrial establishments impart +an almost infinite variety to the scenery. One town occupies the top +of a hill, and, seen from below, its old walls and towers stand out +boldly against the sky; another is built amphitheatrically, close to +the strand upon which the fishermen have drawn their boats; a third is +hidden in a hollow, and surrounded by vines, olive, orange, and lemon +trees. A date-tree here and there imparts an oriental aspect to the +landscape. Bordighera, a small place close to the French frontier, is +quite surrounded by palm-trees, whose fruit, however, but rarely ripens. + +The climate of Albenga, Loana, and some other places on the Genoese +coast is far from salubrious, on account of the miasmata exhaled by +sheets of stagnant water left behind by freshets. Even Genoa cannot +boast of an agreeable climate, not because there are marshes near +it, but because the southerly winds charged with moisture are caught +there by the semicircle of mountains, and are made to discharge their +superabundant humidity. The number of rainy days at Genoa averages 121 +a year. There are, however, several towns along this coast protected +by the mountains against the north, and yet out of the usual track of +the moisture-laden southerly winds, whose climate is exceptionally +delightful.[78] Bordighera {234} and San Remo, near the French +frontier, are the rivals of Mentone as regards climate; and Nervi, to +the east of Genoa, is likewise a favourite place of resort, on account +of its clear sky and pure atmosphere. Villas and castles rise on every +promontory and in every valley of these favoured districts. For a +dozen miles on either side of Genoa the coast is lined by villas. The +population of the city has overflowed the walls which once confined it, +and is establishing itself in populous suburbs. The long street which +winds between factories and gardens, scales promontories, and descends +into valleys, will continue to grow in length until it extends along +the whole coast of Liguria, for the charms of the country attract men +of leisure from every quarter of Europe. + +[Illustration: Fig. 79.—GENOA AND ITS SUBURBS. + +From the Sardinian Staff Map. Scale 1 : 100,000.] + +The historical development of the ancient Ligurians, who were probably +of Iberian race, was largely influenced by the nature of the country +they inhabited. The cultivable land being only of small extent, +the superabundant population was forced to look to the sea for a +livelihood, and engaged in navigation and commerce. Antium, the modern +Genoa, was an “emporium” of the Ligurians ever since the time of the +Romans, and its vessels frequented every corner of the Tyrrhenian Sea. +In the Middle Ages the Genoese flag was carried into every part of the +known world, and it was Genoa that gave birth to Christopher Columbus, +whose name is inscribed upon the first page of modern history as the +discoverer of America. It was a Genoese, too, Giovanni Gabotto, or +Cabot, who afresh discovered the coast of North America five centuries +after its original discovery by the {235} Normans. The hardy mariners +of Genoa have thus navigated the seas from the most remote times. Even +now they almost monopolize the navigation of the great rivers of the +Argentine Republic. The Genoese likewise enjoy a high reputation as +gardeners, and are met with in every large town of the Mediterranean. + +[Illustration: Fig. 80.—VIEW OF GENOA.] + +As long as the Apennines were not crossed by practicable carriage +roads, Genoa possessed no advantages whatever over the other ports of +Liguria, but ever since it has been placed in easy communication with +the fertile plains of Lombardy and Piemont, the great advantages of +its geographical position have told upon its development. Pisa was +the only republic on the western coast of Italy which contested this +superiority of Genoa, but was defeated after a sanguinary struggle. +The Genoese possessed themselves of Corsica, the inhabitants of which +were treated most cruelly; they took Minorca from the Moors, and +even captured several towns in Spain, which they restored only after +important commercial privileges had been granted them. In the Ægean Sea +the nobles of Genoa became the proprietors of Chios, Lesbos, Lemnos, +and other islands. At Constantinople the Genoese merchants were as +powerful almost as the Emperor. Kaffa, in {236} the Crimea, was one +of their wealthy colonies. Their factories and towers were met along +every commercial high-road in Asia Minor, and even in the recesses of +the Caucasus. The possession of the Black Sea gave them the command of +the trade with Central Asia. These distant colonies explain the use of +a few Arab, Turkish, and Greek terms by the Genoese, and though the +dialect spoken by them is decidedly Italian, the intonation is French. + +Nevertheless Genoa, though more powerful than Pisa, failed in wresting +the command of the sea from the Venetians, who enjoyed immense +advantages through their connection with Germany. Her political +influence has never equalled that of Venice, nor has she produced as +many men eminent in literature and art as has her Adriatic rival. +The Genoese had the reputation in former times of being violent and +false, fond of luxury and power, and indifferent to everything which +did not enrich them. “A sea without fish, mountains without forests, +men without faith, women without modesty—thus is Genoa,” was a proverb +ever in the mouth of the enemies of the Ligurian city. The dissensions +amongst the noble families of Genoa were incessant, but the Bank of St. +George never allowed civil strife to interfere with business. Wealth +flowed into the city without any cessation, and enabled its citizens +to construct those palaces, marble arcades, and hanging gardens which +have won for it the epithet of _la Superba_. In the end, however, ruin +overtook the Bank, and that justly, for it had supplied princes with +money to enable them to wage war, and its bankruptcy in the middle of +the eighteenth century rendered Genoa politically impotent. + +The capital of Liguria, in spite of its small extent, its sinuous +streets, its ramparts, stairs, and dirty narrow quays, may justly boast +of palaces equally remarkable for the splendour and originality of +their architecture. Many of these magnificent buildings appeared to +be doomed to ruin during the decay of the town, but, on the return of +more prosperous times, the citizens again devoted themselves to the +embellishment of their city. Genoa is the busiest port of Italy.[79] +Its shipowners possess nearly half the Italian mercantile marine, and +three-fourths of the vessels annually built in Italy are furnished +from its ship-yards. The harbour, though 320 acres in extent, no +longer suffices for the hundreds of sailing vessels and steamers which +crowd into it. Nor is it sufficiently sheltered against the winds, +and it has therefore been proposed to construct a vast breakwater far +beyond its present limits. Genoa fancies that its interests are not +sufficiently attended to by the Central Government. A second railway +across the Apennines is urgently demanded, in order to manage the +traffic that will be created by the opening of the direct railway +through Switzerland, which will place Genoa in direct communication +with Western Germany. + +[Illustration: Fig. 81.—THE GULF OF SPEZIA. + +From the Sardinian Staff Map. Scale 1 : 80,000.] + +In the meantime Genoa is expanding in all directions. Its factories of +macaroni, paper, silks and velvets, soap, oil, jewellery, metal-work, +pottery, ornamental flowers, and other objects are ever increasing; and +_ovrar del Genoes_—Genoese {237} industry—is a marvel now, as it was +in the Middle Ages. San Pier d’Arena (Sampierdarena), to the west, has +become a veritable manufacturing town. Cornigliano, Rivarolo, Sestri +di Ponente with its large ship-yards, Pegli, and Voltri are populous +towns, having spinning-mills and foundries. Savona, whose port was +{238} filled up by the jealous Genoese, occupies the bottom of a vast +bay. It has glass-works and potteries, and is connected by a railway +with Turin. Elsewhere on the Riviera di Ponente the towns are crowded +closely together. Such is the case with the twin cities of Oneglia +and Porto Maurizio, the one built on the beach, the other on a steep +hill close by, and known as the “Fountains of Oil,” because of their +extensive plantations of olives. At San Remo, however, olives are more +plentiful still.[80] + +On the Riviera di Levante town joins town like pearls in a necklace. +Albaro, with its charming mansion, Quarto, whence departed the +expedition which took Sicily from the Bourbons, and Nervi, a health +resort for persons suffering from pulmonary diseases, constitute a +long-stretching suburb of Genoa, extending in the direction of Recco +and Camogli, two towns abounding in shipping. The rocky promontory of +Porto Fino, thus named after the dolphins which formerly frequented +it, imposes an insurmountable obstacle to the further extension of +Genoa in this direction. Having traversed the tunnel leading through +this promontory, we reach another group of towns, viz. Rapallo, the +industrious; Chiavari, a great place of trade; Lavagna, with its famous +quarries of grey slates; and Sestri di Levante, a town of fishermen. + +The coast beyond Sestri is but sparsely inhabited, for there bold +cliffs approach the sea; but having doubled the superb cape of Porto +Venere, we enter the fine Gulf of Spezia,[81] with its numerous forts, +ship-yards, arsenals, and other buildings. The Italian Government has +been busy ever since 1861 in converting this gulf into a first-rate +naval arsenal, but no sooner has a portion of the work been completed +than the progress made in the arts of destruction compels the engineers +to remodel it—a very costly task. Whatever future may be in store for +Spezia as a military port, it has none as a commercial one, for though +it affords excellent shelter to vessels, no railway connects it with +the fertile countries beyond the Apennines, and its exports are limited +to the produce of the valleys in its immediate vicinity. Spezia is +indebted for its high rank amongst the cities of Italy to its beautiful +gulf, the rival of the Bay of Naples and the roadstead of Palermo. From +the summit of the marble hill above the decayed town of Porto Venere we +look down upon a marvellous succession of bays and promontories, and +far in the distance the mountains of Corsica rise indistinctly above +the blue waters. Looking to the east, we behold the picturesque towns +on the opposite side of the gulf embedded in groves of olive-trees and +cypresses, the Apuanic Alps and the Apennines bounding the horizon. +Right opposite is the charming town of Lerici, and to the south of it +the shore upon which Byron reduced to ashes the body of his friend +Shelley: no spot more appropriate for this mournful holocaust. {239} + + +IV.—TUSCANY. + +Tuscany, like Liguria, lies on the southern slope of the Apennines, but +is of far greater width, for that back-bone of Italy retreats there +from the Gulf of Genoa, and stretches right across the broadest part of +the peninsula to the Adriatic. Besides this there are several detached +plateaux and mountain ranges to the south of the valley of the Arno.[82] + +The Apennines of Tuscany are of very unequal height, and they are +traversed by numerous low passes, which could easily be converted +into carriage roads. Speaking generally, they consist of a series of +elongated and parallel mountain masses, separated from each other by +valleys, through which flow the head-streams of the Serchio and the +Arno. The first important mountain mass of the main chain near the +frontiers of Liguria, which is commanded by the Orsajo and Succiso, +is thus separated by the valley of the Magra from the parallel range +of Lumigiana. The chain of Garfognana, to the north of the plains of +Lucca, has for its pendant the Alps of Apuana. Monte Cimone, farther +east, and the other summits of the _Alpe Apennina_ to the north of +Pistoja and Prato, are attended by the parallel ridges of the Monti +Catini and Monte Albano, on whose slope is the famous grotto of +Monsummano, with a thermal spring. A fourth mountain mass, that which +the direct road from Florence to Bologna crosses in the Pass of Futa, +has likewise its lateral chains, viz. the Monte Mugello, to the south +of the Sieve; the Prato Magno, encircled by the Upper Arno; and the +Alps of Catenaja, between the Arno and the Tiber.[83] + +The Apennines of Tuscany in many places attain a height of 5,000 feet, +and are quite Alpine in their aspect, the upper slopes remaining +covered with snow for more than half the year. They owe much of their +grandeur to the precipitous slopes and fantastic profiles of the +calcareous rocks which enter so largely into their composition. The +forests of chestnuts, firs, and beeches which formerly clothed the +whole of the range have not yet been entirely destroyed. The beautiful +woods which cover the slopes of Prato Magno have impressed the mind of +many a poet; and, since Milton sang the delights of Vallombrosa, the +“shaded vale” has become a proverbial name for everything sweet and +touching in the poetry of nature. Farther to the west the monastery of +the Campo di Maldulo (Camaldoli) occupies one of the most beauteous +spots in all Italy, the woods and meadows of which have been celebrated +by Ariosto. From the summit above the convent both the “Tuscan and the +Slavonian Sea” can be seen, as that poet tells us. + +The barren escarpments and forests of the Apennines form a charming +contrast to the valleys and rounded hills of Lower Tuscany, where +nearly every height is {240} surmounted by the ruins of a mediæval +castle; graceful villas are scattered over the verdant slopes, +farmhouses stand in the midst of vineyards and pointed cypresses, and +every cultivable spot is made to yield a rich harvest. Historical +associations, the taste of its inhabitants, the fertility of the soil, +an abundance of running water, and the sweetness of the climate all +combine in making Central Tuscany one of the most privileged regions of +Italy. Protected by the rampart of the Apennines against cold northerly +winds, this region faces the Tyrrhenian Sea, whence blow warm and humid +winds of tropical origin. The rains they bring are not excessive, +thanks to the screen formed by the mountains of Corsica and Sardinia, +and the happy disposition of the detached hills near the coast. The +climate of Tuscany is essentially temperate, and to its equability, no +less than to the natural beauty of their abode, the Tuscans owe, no +doubt, much of their gaiety, their good-nature, fine taste, poetical +feeling, and facile imagination. + +[Illustration: Fig. 82.—THE GOLFOLINO OF THE ARNO, NEAR SIGNA.] + +The valley of the Arno completely separates the hills of Southern +Tuscany, usually known as the “Sub-Apennines,” from the principal +chain of the mountains. This valley, with its defiles and ancient +lake basins, may be likened to a moat {241} bounding the wall of the +Apennines. The vale of Chiana, originally an arm of the sea, and then +a lake, forms the uppermost portion of the zone which separates the +Apennines from the hills of Southern Tuscany. Then follows the Campagna +of Florence, an ancient lake basin, which it would be easy to flood +again by building a dam across the defile of the Golfolina, through +which the river makes its escape, and which was rent asunder by the +“Egyptian Hercules.” Castruccio, the famous commander of the Luccans, +actually proposed to flood the plains of Florence in the fourteenth +century by constructing a dam across this defile; but happily his +engineers pronounced the scheme to be impracticable, for they supposed +the difference of level to amount to 288 feet, whilst in reality it is +only fifty. + +[Illustration: Fig. 83.—DEFILES OF THE ARNO. + +From the Austrian Staff Map. Scale 1 : 285,000.] + +The Sub-Apennine hills to the south of the Arno are of rounded +contours, of a gloomy grey colour, and devoid of all verdure. Whilst +the Apennines consist exclusively of Jurassic and cretaceous rocks, +the Sub-Apennines are of tertiary formation, their sandstones, clays, +marls, and pudding-stones being pierced here and there by serpentine. +Well-defined ranges can hardly be said to exist. Southern Tuscany, +indeed, may be described as a table-land intersected by rivers in +all directions, surmounted by irregular groups of hills, and pierced +by “sinks,” which swallow up some of the rivers. The cavities of +the Ingolla form one of these sinks, in which several rivulets lose +themselves, to reappear lower down as the source of the Elsa Viva, +one of the principal tributaries of the Arno. The most elevated +hills of this Sub-Apennine region form the water-parting between the +Arno, the Cecina, and the Ombrone, and in the Poggio di Montieri, a +mountain abounding in copper, they attain an elevation of 3,323 feet. +The Labbro (3,815 feet), Cetona (3,650 feet), and Monte Amiata (5,450 +feet), to the south of the Ombrone valley, rise to a greater height, +but geologically they belong already to Central Italy. The Cetona is +a Jurassic outlier surrounded by recent formations. Monte Amiata, a +trachytic cone, is the most elevated volcano of continental Italy. It +no longer vomits lava, but numerous hot springs and solfataras prove +that the volcanic forces are not yet quite extinct. The Radicofani +(2,950 feet) is likewise an extinct volcano, whose lava resembles +petrified froth, and can be cut with a hatchet. + +Subterranean agencies must indeed be very active in Tuscany, for +metalliferous {242} veins ramify in all directions, and the number +of mineral springs of every description is larger than in any other +part of Italy. Amongst these springs there are several of world-wide +reputation, as, for instance, those of Monte Catini, of San Giuliano, +and of the Bagni di Lucca. The brine springs of Tuscany are very +productive; but the most curious, and at the same time most useful, +springs of all are the famous _lagoni_, in a side valley of the Cecina, +and at the northern foot of the Poggio di Montieri. From a distance +dense clouds of white vapour are seen rolling over the plain, and the +bubbling noise made by gases escaping through the ponds, or _lagoni_, +is heard. These ponds contain various salts, silica, and boracic acid, +which is of great value in the manufacture of china and glass, and +yields a considerable revenue to Tuscany. Nowhere else in Europe, +except, perhaps, in the crater of the Eolian Vulcano, is boracic acid +met with in sufficient quantities to repay the labour of extracting it. +In Tuscany, however, there are several other localities where it might +be won with advantage, as, for instance, near Massa Maritima, to the +south of the Montieri. + +The subterranean fermentation of which Tuscany is the scene is no +doubt due in a large measure to the changes which have taken place in +the relative proportions of land and sea. Several isolated hills rise +near the coast like islands from the sea, and these have evidently +been joined to the mainland by the alluvial deposits brought down by +the rivers. The Monti Serra (3,000 feet), to the east of Pisa, between +the Arno and the Serchio, are almost insulated even now, for they are +surrounded by swamps, and the level of the Lake of Bientina, at their +eastern foot, is scarcely thirty feet above that of the Mediterranean. +The heights along the coast to the south of Leghorn are not quite so +isolated, but the lowland which connects them with the table-land of +the interior is only of small elevation. The promontory, however, +whose extremities are occupied by the towns of Populonia and Piombino +(653 feet), is joined to the mainland only by a low plain of sand. +The most perfect type of these ancient islands is presented to us in +the superb Monte Argentaro, at the southern extremity of the Tuscan +littoral, which rises boldly from the sea to a height of 2,085 feet, +and is attached to the mainland by two narrow strips of land covered +with pine-trees, enclosing a lake of regular shape: in the midst of it, +on a fragment of the ancient beach, is built the town of Orbetello. +This lake, which looks almost as if it were the work of a generation +of giants, has been converted into an eel-pond, and millions of fish +are caught in it every year. Towards the west of this mountain, in the +direction of Corsica, lie the islands of Giglio and Monte Cristo (2,062 +feet) and the rock of Formica. The island of Elba, farther north, forms +a small world of its own. + +The rivers of Tuscany have wrought great changes in the plains through +which they flow, and along the sea-coast. Their labour has been +facilitated by the nature of the soil which they traverse. The least +rain converts the barren hill-slopes into a semi-fluid paste, which is +carried by the rivers down to the sea. The mouth of the Arno has thus +been pushed forward to the extent of seven miles in the course of a +few centuries. In former times the Serchio and the Arno united before +they flowed into the sea, but the Pisans diverted the former river to +the {243} north, in order to rid themselves of its unwelcome deposits. +Pisa, in the time of Strabo, stood at a distance of only twenty +Olympian stadia from the Tyrrhenian Sea, and when the _cascina_ of San +Rossore was built, towards the close of the eleventh century, its walls +were close to the beach, which is now at a distance of three miles. +Extensive plains intersected by dunes, or _tomboli_, and partly covered +with forests of pines, have been added to the land in the course of +centuries. These sandy wastes have become the home of large herds of +horses and half-wild cattle, and the camel has been acclimatised there, +it is said, since the Crusades. These changes in the coast-line may +not, however, be due exclusively to the agency of the rivers, for there +exists evidence of an upheaval of the land. The building stone known at +Leghorn as _panchina_ is clearly of marine origin, and the shells which +enter into its composition are still met with in the Tyrrhenian Sea. + +[Illustration: Fig. 84.—MONTE ARGENTARO. + +From the French Chart. Scale 1 : 168,000.] + +[Illustration: Fig. 85.—VAL DI CHIANA. + +From the Austrian Staff Map. Scale 1 : 218,000.] + +Amongst the changes effected by human agency in the basin of the Arno +those referring to the Val di Chiana are, perhaps, the most important. +This depression connects the basins of the Arno and Tiber, and may +possibly have served as an outlet to the former river before it had +opened itself a way through the {244} gorge below Florence. Formerly +the water-parting between the two rivers was close to the Arno. A small +portion of its drainage was carried to the Tuscan river, but by far the +greater portion of the vale was occupied by stagnant pools, extending +to the south as far as the latitude of Montepulciano, a distance of +twenty miles. The whole of this region was a breeding-place of fever. +Dante and other Italian writers speak of it as an accursed place. The +inhabitants made vain attempts at drainage. The illustrious Galileo, +when consulted on the subject, {245} declared that nothing could be +done to mend this evil; and though Torricelli conceived that it would +be possible to drain the valley, he took no steps to put his theories +into practice. + +[Illustration: Fig. 86.—THE LAKE OF BIENTINA. + +From the Austrian Staff Map. Scale 1 : 328,000.] + +About the middle of the eighteenth century the work of drainage was at +length seriously taken in hand, directed by Fossombroni, the celebrated +engineer. “Warps,” or _colmate_, were thrown up at the outlet of each +lateral ravine between which the débris carried down from the flanks +of the mountains was deposited. The swamps gradually filled up, and +the soil became firm. By constructing a dam (_argine_) across the vale +at the point chosen for the new water-parting, an outfall was created, +and a line of stagnant swamps was thus converted into a pure rivulet. +The valley, at one time a hotbed of fever, has now become one of the +most salubrious districts of Italy. The newly won lands were at once +taken possession of by agriculturists, and 500 square miles were thus +added to the productive area of Tuscany. Villages, formerly inhabited +by fever-stricken wretches, have become wealthy towns, and the success +of this _bonification_, or reclamation, has been thorough. The torrents +are under control now, and have already deposited 17,650 million +cubic feet of alluvium over an area of 50,000 acres, as if they were +intelligent workmen. The same system of drainage has been successfully +applied in other parts of Italy, and particularly near Grosseto, on the +right bank of the Ombrone. + +Amongst the great drainage works which will evermore contribute to +the glory of Tuscan engineers, the innumerable canals draining the +plains of Fucecchio, {246} Pontedera, Pisa, Lucca, Leghorn, and +Viareggio, each of which was formerly occupied by its lake, deserve +to be noticed. One of the most difficult of these lakes is that of +Bientina, or Sesto, to the east of the Pisan hills, which is supposed +to have been formed by an overflow of the Serchio. In former times this +lake had two effluents, one running north to the Serchio, the other +south to the Arno. The outfall left nothing to be desired in ordinary +times, but after heavy rains the two effluents were converted into +inflowing rivers, and if the sluices had not been closed, the Arno and +the Serchio would have rejoined each other in this inland sea. The +Bientina, during such freshets, covered six times its ordinary area, +and in order to save the fertile fields of Tuscany it became absolutely +necessary to create a third effluent. The engineers conceived the happy +idea of conveying this new effluent through a tunnel, passing beneath +the Arno, three feet in width, into an ancient bed of that river, now +supplanted by the Colombrone. + +In most of these enterprises it was necessary to struggle on in spite +of the miasmatic atmosphere, which hung more particularly over the +littoral zone, where the fresh inland water mingles with the salt +water of the Mediterranean. The blending of the two waters destroyed +the fresh-water plants and animals, and the deleterious gases arising +from their decomposition poisoned the atmosphere. About the middle +of last century an engineer, Zendrini, proposed to construct sluices +separating the fresh from the salt water. This was done, and the fevers +at once disappeared. In 1768, the sluices having been allowed to fall +out of repair, the miasmatic scourge immediately reappeared, and it +was not until they had been repaired that the sanitary condition of +the villages along the coast was improved. Twice since neglect to keep +the sluices in a proper condition has been punished with the same +results; but from 1821 they have been maintained in thorough order, +and the sanitary condition of the country has ever since been most +satisfactory. Viareggio, in the centre of this malarial district, +was up to 1740 hardly more than a hamlet, avoided on account of its +insalubrity, but is now a seaside town, the favourite resort of numbers +of visitors. + +Much has been done, no doubt, in draining the land, but there is still +room for many improvements. The Maremma, a track between Piombino and +Orbetello, remains one of the most insalubrious regions of Europe, in +spite of what has been done by sanitary engineers. The inhabitants +never reach a high age, and though they descend to the plain only when +it is absolutely required for cultivating their fields, they frequently +carry away with them the germs of disease. In the two summers of 1840 +and 1841 no less than 36,000 persons suffered from fever amongst a +total population of 80,000 souls, most of whom reside in villages built +on hills, and only rarely visit the pestilential plain. In order to +escape the pernicious influence of the poisonous air, it is necessary +to reside constantly at an elevation of 325 feet above the sea, and +even that does not always suffice, for the episcopal city of Sovana +is notoriously unhealthy, though built at that height. Fevers occur +frequently at a distance from the swamps, and Salvagnoli Marchetti is +of opinion that they are due to the nature of the soil. The malaria is +said to creep up clayey hills permeated by empyreumatic substances; +it likewise {247} poisons the air of districts abounding in saline +springs, and still more that near deposits of alum. Southerly winds are +likewise most pernicious, and fevers rise highest in the valleys which +are exposed to them. Places, on the other hand, which are fully open to +the sea breeze are quite free from malaria, even if swamps are near, as +at Orbetello and Piombino. + +[Illustration: Fig. 87.—THE MALARIAL REGIONS. + +From the Austrian Staff Map. Scale 1 : 2,700,00.] + +It is generally admitted that the coasts of Etruria did not suffer +from malaria whilst the ancient Tyrrhenian cities were prosperous. The +excavations made recently in connection with the railways have revealed +a complete system of subterranean canals, which formerly drained the +whole of the Maremmas. Populonia and other large cities, of which only +a few ruins are found now, could certainly not have existed if the +climate had been as unhealthy as at present. The ancient Etruscans were +famous as hydraulic engineers. They embanked torrents, drained swamps, +and rendered the country cultivable, but their engineering works were +allowed to decay soon after they had been subjected, and the country +returned to its primitive savageness. On the other hand, there are many +towns {248} which were considered healthy during the Middle Ages, but +are now desolated by fever. Massa Maritima, to the south-west of the +Moutieri mountain, was rich and populous as long as it maintained its +republican liberties; but no sooner had it been enslaved by Pisans and +Sienese than its drainage works were allowed to fall into decay, and +in the end it found itself reduced to the “shadow of a town.” Sanitary +works carried out recently have brought back some of its ancient +prosperity. + +Amongst the causes which have contributed most materially towards a +deterioration of the climate may be mentioned the destruction of the +mountain forests and the rapid increase of alluvial lands resulting +from it. The monasteries of Tuscany, which until quite recently were +the owners of the fish-ponds in the Maremmas, energetically protested +against the construction of embankments or other drainage works, +which they conceived would interfere with their cherished Lenten +food. Several of the inland towns rejoiced in the possession of some +unhealthy swampy tract, to which obnoxious persons might be banished +with a certainty of their dying. Even the Kings of Spain established a +penal establishment at one of the most deadly spots on this coast, and +banishment to Talamone, at one time a flourishing port of the Republic +of Siena, was tantamount to a sentence of death. + +Many attempts were made to reclaim these lands. Macchiavelli and other +statesmen of Tuscany thought that the former salubrity of the climate +could be restored by merely repeopling the country. Colonists were +sent for from other parts of Italy, and even from Greece and Germany, +but they soon succumbed to the climate. Since that time considerable +progress has been made in rendering these marshy districts more +salubrious. Trees have been planted, and, in combination with proper +drainage, they have rendered many districts habitable which were not +so formerly. Populonia is a case in point. Follonica, where there +are furnaces in which the iron ores of Elba are smelted, is likewise +looking up, though its inhabitants still fly the place on the approach +of the fever season. + + * * * * * + +The Etruscans, or Tyrrhenians, were the ancestors of the Tuscans, and +long before the dominion of the Romans they were the preponderating +race of all Italy. They occupied not only the whole of the southern +slope of the Apennines as far as the Tiber, but had also founded a +confederation of twelve towns in the Campagna, of which Capua was +the head, and as traders and pirates they held possession of the +Tyrrhenian Sea, still named after them. The island of Capri was one +of their most advanced outposts towards the south. The Adriatic was +likewise their own, for Adria, Bologna (called Felsina by them), +Ravenna, and Mantua were Etruscan colonies, and the Rhætians in the +Alpine valleys were their allies, and perhaps kinsmen. But who were the +Etruscans? They have been classed with Aryans, Ugrians, and Semites; +with Greeks, Germans, Scythians, Egyptians, and Turks. The Etruscan +inscriptions on ancient monuments, though very legible, have not +hitherto been deciphered satisfactorily. If Corssen’s interpretation is +accepted, their language resembled the Latin tongues; but this {249} +philologist, after all, may not be entitled to be called the “Œdipus +of the Etruscan sphinx.” + +The most common type of the Etruscans, as transmitted to us on cinerary +vases, is that of squat men, often inclining to obesity, with broad +shoulders, prominent face, curved noses, broad retreating forehead, +dark complexion, dolichocephalous skull, and curly hair. This type is +neither Hellenic nor Italian. Amongst their monuments there are none +of those curious structures known as _nuraghi_, which abound in Malta, +Sardinia, and Pantellaria, but dolmens are numerous. The sepulchral +monuments, of which many thousands have already been brought to +light, prove that the arts had attained a high degree of development +in ancient Etruria. The paintings in the interior of the vaults, +the bas-reliefs on the sarcophagi, the vases, candelabra, pottery, +and bronzes, resemble similar work produced by the genius of Greek +artists. The arrangement of their dwelling-houses, though not devoid +of originality, proves the intimate connection existing between the +civilisations of the Etruscans and early Greeks. It was the Etruscans +who initiated Rome into the arts. The _Cloaca Maxima_, the most ancient +monument of the Eternal City, the wall named after Servius Tullius, +the Mamertine prison, and, in fact, all the remains of the Rome of the +kings, were their work. It was they who erected the temples, supplied +the statues to deities, built the dwelling-houses, and furnished them +with articles of ornament. Even the she-wolf of bronze, now in the +Capitoline Museum, and a symbol of the Roman people, appears to be of +Etruscan workmanship. + +The Tuscans of our day differ, however, in many respects from their +Etruscan ancestors. These latter, to judge from the paintings in their +sepulchral cities, were an austere race. They appear, likewise, to have +been a nation of cooks and gluttons. Neither of these qualities can be +laid to the charge of their descendants. The modern Tuscan is of an +amiable and kindly disposition, he is possessed of wit and artistic +tastes, easy to move, and altogether perhaps a trifle too pliant of +character. The Tuscans of the plain, but not those of the Maremmas, +are the most gentle of Italians; they “live and let live,” and are +exceedingly good-natured. A singular trait distinguishes them from the +rest of the Italians: though brave when carried away by passion, they +turn with horror from a dead body. In this we may trace the persistence +of ancient superstitions, for though the Tyrrhenians concealed their +tombs, the worship of the dead was the most prominent of their +religious observances. + +The modern Tuscans, like their ancestors, have known a time when they +took the lead amongst the people of Italy, and even now they stand at +the head of the nation in certain respects. After the decadence of +Rome, when civilisation gravitated towards the north, the valley of the +Arno became one of the great centres of the world’s activity. At that +time the passage of the Alps was still difficult, but communications +by sea were established between Tuscany, France, and Spain. The +Apennines not only sheltered the fertile valleys opening upon the +Tyrrhenian against cold northerly winds, but also against the hordes +of barbarian invaders. Tuscany was, indeed, a favoured region, and its +intelligent {250} inhabitants made the most of the natural advantages +they possessed. “Work” was the great law of the Florentines, and all, +without exception, were expected to engage in it. Whilst Pisa disputed +the dominion of the sea with Genoa and Venice, Florence became the +head-quarters of commerce, and its bankers extended their operations to +every part of Europe. + +But Tuscany was more than a commercial and industrial country. What +Athens had been to the world two thousand years ago, republican +Florence became during its period of prosperity, and for the second +time in the history of mankind there arose one of those centres of +light the reflected rays from which still illuminate our own times. +Arts, letters, sciences, and political economy—everything, in fact, +that is noble in this world was cultivated with an energy to which +nations had been strangers for a long time. The pliant genius of the +Tuscans revelled in every species of work, and amongst the names great +in history Florence may fairly claim some of the greatest. Where are +the men that have exercised a greater influence in the world of art +and intellect than Giotto, Orgagna, Masaccio, Michael Angelo, Leonardo +da Vinci, Andrea del Sarto, Brunelleschi, Savonarola, Galileo, or +Macchiavelli? It was a Florentine, too, Amerigo Vespucci, who gave his +name to the New World, and justly so, for it was Vespucci through whom +the discoveries made by the Spaniards first became known, and who, in +1501, bestowed the name of _Novus Mundus_ upon the newly discovered +countries, whilst Columbus died in the belief that he had reached the +eastern coast of Asia. + +The dialect of Florence has become the polished language of the whole +of Italy, and it is curious that this honour should not have been +carried off by Rome. But whilst Florence cultivated the arts and +sciences, and through her great writers exercised an immense influence, +the city of the popes yielded herself up to the worship of the past, +and its literature was written in a dead language, more or less +successfully imitated from that of Cicero. The dialect of Rome never +became a language like that of Florence, but Italian is nevertheless +indebted to Rome for its musical pronunciation, that of the Tuscans +being harsh and guttural. Hence the old proverb, “Lingua Toscana in +bocca Romana.” The delicate, pure poetry breathed in the _ritornelli_ +which Tuscan peasants chant in the evening is highly appreciated by +all admirers of Italian, and the influence which the fine dialect of +the Florentines exercised upon the unification of Italy can hardly be +overestimated. The worshippers of Dante are almost justified in saying +that Italian unity dates from the day on which the great poet first +expressed himself in the firm and sonorous language which he had forged +out of the various dialects spoken throughout the peninsula. + + * * * * * + +The geographical position of Tuscany accounts for the influence it has +exercised upon Italy and the rest of the world, whilst its topography +gives us the key to the local history of the country. The Apennines +and the mountains to the south of the Arno divide it into a number of +separate basins, each of which gave birth to a small state or republic. +At the time of the Tyrrhenians Etruria formed {251} a confederation +of cities, whilst during the Middle Ages it was divided into numerous +small republics, frequently at war with each other. Since that time +many changes have taken place in the relative importance of the various +towns, but even now most of the free cities of the Middle Ages, and +even some founded by the ancient Etruscans, occupy a high rank amongst +the provincial towns of Italy. + +Florence (Firenze) is not one of these ancient cities of the +Tyrrhenians; it is merely a Roman colony of comparatively modern +origin. In the time of the Empire it was of small importance, for +Fiesole, on a hill to the north, remained the leading town of the +country until destroyed by the Florentines, who carried its columns +and statues to their own town. The rapid growth of Florence during +the Middle Ages is due to its position on the highway which connects +Germany, Lombardy, and even Bologna with Southern Italy. As long as +Rome was the capital of Italy travellers starting from the valley +of the Tiber crossed the Apennines in the direction of Ancona and +Ariminum. But after the fall of Rome, when barbarian hordes inundated +the country from the north, the high-roads connecting the plains +of Lombardy with the valley of the Arno rose into importance. This +great military highway became simultaneously a high-road of commerce, +and it was only natural that a great emporium should spring up on +the site occupied by Florence. The “city of flowers” prospered, and +became the marvel which we still admire. But the wealth of the growing +commonwealth proved its destruction. The rich bankers grasped at +political power, the Medici assumed the title of princes, and though +the arts continued to flourish for awhile, public virtues decayed, the +citizens became subjects, and intellectual life ceased. + +Florence, as in the days of republican liberty, owes much of its wealth +to the industry of its inhabitants. There are manufactories of silks +and woollen goods, of straw hats, mosaics, china, cut stones (_pierra +dura_), and other objects, all of them requiring workmen possessed +of taste and manual dexterity. But neither these industries nor the +commerce carried on by the town would have raised Florence above the +level of other populous Italian cities. The prominent position it holds +is due entirely to the beauty of its monuments, which attract to it +the lovers of art from every quarter of the world. Not even Venice is +equally rich in architectural masterpieces of the Middle Ages and the +Renaissance. The museums of Florence “la Bella”—such as the Uffizi, the +Pitti Galleries, and the Academy of Arts—are amongst the richest in +Europe, and contain some of the most highly prized treasures of art; +its libraries abound in curious manuscripts and rare old books. Nay, +the very streets and piazzas of the town, with their palaces, towers, +churches, and statues, may be likened to a huge museum. Brunelleschi’s +Duomo; Giotto’s Campanilla, which was to “surpass in beauty all +imagination can conceive;” the Baptistery, with its incomparable doors +of brass; the Piazza della Signoria; the monastery of San Marco, now a +museum; the gloomy palace of the Strozzi; and numerous other buildings +of superior merit make Florence the delightful place it is. Its charms +are enhanced by the beauty of the surrounding {252} country, and the +traveller will always recall with pleasure the walks along the Arno, +the hills of San Miniato and Belle Sguardo, and the picturesque spur +upon which lie the villas and ruins of Etruscan Fiesole. Unfortunately +the climate of Florence leaves much to be desired; the wind changes +abruptly, and the heat in summer is overpowering. _Il caldo di Firenze_ +has become proverbial throughout Italy. Narrow streets, and to some +extent the disregard of the laws of hygiene, cause the mortality to +exceed that of nearly every other town on the Continent. During the +Middle Ages pestilence was a frequent visitor, and Boccaccio tells us +that in an single season nearly 100,000 inhabitants, or two-thirds +of the entire population, were swept away by it. Targioni Tozetti +contrasts the site of Empoli, a small town to the west, with that of +Florence, and regrets that a project for removing Florence thither +should not have been carried out, as proposed in 1260. + +[Illustration: Fig. 88.—FLORENCE: THE DUOMO AND PALAZZO VECCHIO.] + +The only town of any importance in the upper valley of the Arno +is Arezzo, an ancient city of the Etruscans, and at one time the +capital of one of the most prosperous republics of the Middle Ages. +The inhabitants ascribe to the “subtile {253} air they breathe +the subtility of their spirits,” and indeed the list of famous men +connected with the town is very long. The present Arezzo, however, is +a decayed place, and lives upon the memories and the monuments of a +past age. Cortona, farther south, near the Lake of Trasimeno, claims +to be the most ancient city of Italy; but all traces of its former +greatness have disappeared. Siena, which formerly governed the whole +of the hilly tract between the Arno and Ombrone, has fallen from her +high estate, not without the fault of its own citizens, who were +continually quarrelling amongst themselves. Siena no longer rivals +Florence in population, power, or industry, but may still compare with +the city on the Arno as regards its public buildings—many of them in +the Gothic style—its works of art, its quaint streets and piazzas, and +its magnificent position on the slopes of three hills. Chiusa, one of +the most powerful towns of ancient Etruria, is of no importance now, +and only attracts antiquarians in search of its ancient tombs. The +vineyards of Montepulciano, on the same side of the vale of Chiani, +produce the “king of wines.” Volterra is only a small town now, +interesting, however, on account of its cyclopean walls and a museum +abounding in Etruscan antiquities. The environs are dreary in the +extreme. Salt-works, yielding from 7,000 to 8,000 tons a year, quarries +of alabaster, copper mines at Monte Catini, sulphur springs, and the +famous _lagoni di Monti Cerboli_ (see p. 242), are in the neighbourhood. + +The cities at the foot of the Apennines, on the other side of the +Arno, have retained their importance, for they are favourably situated +for commerce. Prato, where the valley of the Arno is widest, is the +centre of a rich agricultural district. The quarries of serpentine +in the neighbourhood have furnished building stones for many of +the most beautiful edifices of Tuscany, including the cathedral of +Prato, celebrated on account of Donatello’s marvellously sculptured +pulpit. Pistoja, where the railway descends from the Apennines, is a +busy manufacturing town. Other towns of some importance are Pescia, +Capannori, in the “garden of Italy,” and Lucca the industrious, with +its celebrated pictures by Fra Bartolommeo. + +The basin of the Serchio is of incomparable productiveness since its +marsh lands have been brought under cultivation. From the ramparts +of Lucca one of the most charming views may be enjoyed. On the one +hand we have the towers and cupolas of the town, on the other fertile +fields and orchards, with white houses peeping through the verdure, and +distant hills surmounted by old towers. The impression made by this +view is one of perfect peace. In a country so fertile and beautiful, +it would seem, the people ought to be happy, and, if enthusiastic +writers can be believed, such is really the case, and the peasants of +Lucca and of Lower Tuscany in general enjoy advantages denied to their +class elsewhere in Italy. They are farmers for the most part, but hold +their land by long leases, and their share of its produce is regulated +by ancient custom. The land, however, does not suffice for their +wants, and they emigrate in thousands in search of work. Many of these +emigrants work as grinders. + +The inhabitants of the Upper Serchio valley, known as the Garfagnana, +are as industrious as those near Lucca, which is the natural outlet for +its produce. The slopes and spurs descending from the Apennines and +Apuanic Alps are cultivated {254} in terraces. Castelnuovo, the chief +town of this valley, occupies one of the most delightful spots of this +picturesque district. The common people near it are said to speak the +best Italian, superior even to that of the Sienese. + +The valley of the Magra is far more frequented than that of Garfagnana, +for the high-road from Parma to the Gulf of Spezia leads through it. +In its upper portion, in the heart of the Apennines, stands the small +town of Pontremoli. Its inferior portion, known as the Lunigiana, +from the ancient city of Luni, is as beautiful as the parallel valley +of the Serchio. At Sazana it opens upon the sea, and to the south of +that charming town, where the Apuanic Alps approach close to the sea, +leaving only a narrow passage of some note in history, are situated +the towns of Carrara and Massa. Carrara, the “Quarry,” has replaced +Luni as the place from whence the white marbles so highly esteemed by +sculptors are exported, and choice blocks of which sometimes fetch £80 +a cubic yard. No less than 720 quarries perforate the neighbouring +hills, and about 300 of these are being worked now. The town may be +likened to an agglomeration of sculptors’ studios, and its Academy has +trained artists of high reputation. Massa enjoys a better climate than +Carrara, but its marbles are less highly esteemed. As to the marbles +of Serravezza, which are quarried in the Altissimo and other mountains +of the Apuanic Alps near the town of Pietra Santa, they are in many +instances as beautiful as those of Carrara. Michael Angelo highly +appreciated them, and had a road constructed to facilitate access to +them. The quarries and mines in the neighbourhood also yield slates, +iron, lead, and silver.[84] + +These towns at the foot of the Apuanic Alps were bound to prosper in +proportion as the country increased in wealth, whilst Pisa, the great +commercial republic of mediæval Tuscany, was doomed to decay, owing to +the silting up of its harbour. This Porto Pisano was situated about ten +miles to the south of what was then the mouth of the Arno. In 1442 its +depth had been reduced to five feet, a century later only rowing boats +could enter it, and soon after it was abandoned definitely. There are +no traces of it now, and its very site is disputed. But though Pisa is +dead—Pisa _morta_—the city still possesses admirable monuments of its +past grandeur. It has a wonderful cathedral; an elegant baptistery; +its Campo Santa, with the famous frescoes of Orgagna and Gozzoli; and +a leaning tower commanding a view of the Pisan hills and the alluvial +plains of the Arno and Serchio. Its commerce has dwindled away, but +it is still the capital of a rich agricultural district, and its +university is one of the best in Italy. It possesses, moreover, that +which no change in the commercial highways can deprive it of, a mild +climate, and during winter attracts numerous visitors from the north. + +Leghorn, or Livorno, has inherited the commerce of Pisa. It is the +natural outlet of the fertile districts of Tuscany, and its commerce +is far more important than might be supposed from the unfavourable +configuration of the coast, and is surpassed only by that of Genoa and +Naples.[85] Thousands of Spanish and {255} Portuguese Jews who found a +refuge here have contributed in no small measure to the development of +the resources of the town. From an architectural point of view, Leghorn +is one of the least interesting cities of Italy, but as the outcome of +human labour it is one of the most curious. Before the city could be +built, the swamps which occupied its site had to be drained, and an +artificial harbour had to be excavated for the protection of vessels. +Numerous canals intersect the north-western portion of the town, which +is known as New Venice. A huge breakwater marks the entrance to the +harbour, and on a sand-bank in the offing rises the tower of Meloria, +which recalls the naval engagement in which the fleet of the Pisans was +destroyed by the Genoese. + +[Illustration: Fig. 89.—THE HARBOUR OF LEGHORN. + +Scale 1 : 112,000] + +Insular Tuscany consists of Elba and several smaller islands, which +mark the site of an isthmus that formerly joined the mainland to +Corsica, and contribute greatly towards the beauty of the Tuscan +littoral. + +Elba, once the miniature kingdom of Napoleon, is larger than all the +other islands together.[86] An ancient dependency of the Etruscan city +of Populonia, Elba rises above the blue waters of the Tyrrhenian a +picturesque group of mountains. A narrow and dangerous strait separates +its steep coasts from the promontory of Piombino, where passing vessels +were formerly obliged to pay toll. + +The granitic heights of Monte Capanne, the eastern extremity of the +island, {256} attain an elevation of 3,303 feet; the dome-shaped hills +of serpentine at the other extremity are 1,600 feet in height, and +the centre of the island is occupied by hills of various formations, +covered with brushwood. The variety of rocks is very great, taking into +account the small extent of the island. Associated with the granites +and serpentine, we meet with beds of kaolin, and with marble similar to +that of Carrara. Remarkable crystals and precious stones abound to such +an extent, that Elba has been likened to a “mineralogical cabinet” on a +vast scale. + +Formerly, when the sea was infested by pirates, the inhabitants +retreated to the recesses of the interior, or to the summits of steep +promontories, where the picturesque ruins of ancient fortifications +may still be seen. Several of the old inland villages continue to +be inhabited; amongst others, that of Capoliberi, the “Mountain of +the Free,” which is looked upon as a sort of acropolis. After the +suppression of piracy the islanders came down to the _marina_, or +coast, and established themselves in the towns of Porto Ferrajo, +Porto Longone, Marciana, and Rio. The resources of the island +are considerable, and afford plenty of occupation to fishermen, +salt-makers, wine-growers, and gardeners. The inhabitants are +hospitable, and, though neighbours of the fierce Corsicans, they +possess all the gentleness of Tuscans. + +Elba is not, however, so much noted on account of its fisheries, +vineyards, salt-works, or commerce, as because of its rich deposits of +iron ore. The russet-coloured cliffs of ironstone are visible from the +mainland. The huge excavations made by the miners, many of whom are +convicts, resemble the craters of extinct volcanoes, and the reddish +brown, violet, or blackish colour of the rocks helps the illusion. Of +the quantity of ore carried away from here in the course of twenty-five +or thirty centuries we can hardly form a conception. The ironstone is +bedded in layers, differing in colour according to the nature of the +earthy ingredients, and rising into hills 600 and more feet in height, +the slopes of which are covered with brushwood (_macchie_). Shovels +and spades are the only mining tools required in clearing away these +heaps of ore, of which at least 100,000,000 tons remain. By regular +mining operations 500,000 tons might be obtained annually during +twenty centuries. The annual produce at present hardly exceeds 100,000 +tons. The ore is more particularly suited to the manufacture of steel. +Loadstones abound near Capo Calamita. The mariners of the Mediterranean +formerly made use of them in the construction of a primitive ship’s +compass, by placing them in a piece of cork, which they allowed to +float in a basin of water. + +The smaller islands of the Tuscan archipelago are—Giglio, with quarries +of granite; Monte Cristo, a pyramidal rock rising 2,130 feet above the +sea-level; Pianosa, with an agricultural penal settlement; Capraja, +with a small town built within an amphitheatre of pink-coloured +granite; and Gorgona (987 feet).[87] {257} + + +V.—THE ROMAN APENNINES, THE VALLEY OF THE TIBER, THE MARCHES, AND THE +ABRUZZOS. + +That portion of the Italian peninsula which has Rome for its centre +may be likened to the trunk of the body, for it is there the Apennines +attain their greatest height, and nowhere else to the south of the Po +are rivers of equal magnitude met with.[88] + +The main rampart of the Apennines runs parallel to the coast of +the Adriatic. To the mariner, who sees these mountains rise above +the verdure of the littoral region, they have an appearance of the +greatest regularity. Summit rises beyond summit, one lateral chain +succeeds to the other, and every one of the numerous valleys descends +perpendicularly to the coast. The slope throughout is steep, and the +geological strata, whether of Jurassic, cretaceous, or tertiary age, +succeed each other regularly from the snow-clad summits down to the +promontories of the coast. The only irregularity consists in a detached +group of hills (1,880 feet) to the south of Ancona, above which the +axis of the Apennines changes its direction. This region of Italy is +the natural counterpart of Liguria. The position of Ancona corresponds +with that of Genoa, and the coast, which extends on the one hand to +Emilia, and on the other towards the peninsula of Monte Gargano, may +fairly be likened to the “Rivieras” of Genoa, with this exception, that +its direction is inverse. The territory between the mountains and the +coast is narrow, the littoral road frequently winds round promontories, +and the towns extend up the hill-sides. Still this portion of Italy +is not as strongly protected by nature as Liguria. Towards the north +it expands upon the plain of the Po, whilst the terraces at the +foot of the main range of the Apennines afford easy access from the +west. During the whole of the Middle Ages and down to our own days +neighbouring states have fought for the possession of this territory, +which has become known, from this circumstance, as the “Marches;” that +is, the disputed frontier districts, where every town is a fortress +perched on the top of a hill. + +The Apennines forming the boundary between the Marches and Latium, or +Rome, like those of Etruria, are grouped in separate mountain masses. +The first of these commands the valley of the Tiber in the east; it +extends in the north to Monte Comero (3,828 feet) and the Fumajolo, +or head-stream of the Tiber, and in the south to Monte Verone (5,006 +feet). Though inferior in height to other parts of the Apennines, these +mountains are known as the _Alpe della Luna_. A gap, {258} through +which passes the road from Perugia to Fano, separates them from Monte +Catria (5,585 feet). At that point the Apennines bifurcate, and two +parallel ranges can be traced thence for a distance of 120 miles, as +far as the transverse range of the Majella (9,158 feet), which reunites +them, and from which radiate the mountains of Southern Italy. These +parallel chains belong to the Jurassic and cretaceous formations, and +neither of them forms a water-parting, for whilst the Nera and other +rivers tributary to the Tiber force themselves a passage through the +western one, that on the east is broken by numerous gorges, through +which rivers and torrents find their way into the Adriatic. The most +considerable of these rivers is the Pescara, which rises on the plateau +of the Abruzzos, where it is known as the Aterno, and traverses the +eastern range where it is highest. The gorge excavated by this river is +sufficiently wide to afford space for a railway joining the Adriatic to +the basin of the Tiber. + +The plateau of the Abruzzos, enclosed by these parallel ranges, +may be looked upon as the natural citadel of Central Italy. On its +western side rise the double pyramids of Monte Velino (8,157 feet); +in the north Monte Vettore (8,131 feet) forms the termination of the +range of the Sibillini; in the east rises the culminating point of +the Apennines, a mountain covered with snow the greater part of the +year, and appropriately called the “Great Rock of Italy”—“Gran Sasso +d’Italia” (9,518 feet). The fact that this magnificent mountain is the +highest in all Italy has been known from times immemorial. The Romans +conceived they had discovered the “umbilic of Italy” in a small lake +near it, upon which floated an island formed of rank vegetation. The +Marsi and their allies, when they took up arms against their Roman +oppressors, chose Corfinium, in its neighbourhood, for the seat of +their empire, and surnamed it Italica; and there, too, the first +movements which led to the resurrection of modern Italy took place. The +Gran Sasso, as seen from the Adriatic, affords a magnificent spectacle. +Its calcareous masses cannot boast of much beauty of profile, but this +is compensated for by the fine Alpine region extending beneath its +summit, which remains the haunt of bears and chamois, and where rare +plants in the meadows remind us of Switzerland. Forests of beeches +and pines are still met with in a few places, and are all the more +appreciated as forests no longer exist in the lowland regions. This +universal destruction of the forests is one of the great misfortunes +of Italy. In many parts of the Roman Apennines even the soil has been +washed away, and only in a few crevasses do we meet with brooms and +briers. + +The valleys on the western slope of the Apennines are enclosed between +calcareous spurs of the main range, some of which attain a considerable +elevation. The Tiber itself thus passes between two lofty mountains, +rising at the lower extremity of two of these Sub-Apennine spurs, and +forming a kind of triumphal gateway. These are the Soracte (2,270 +feet) and Gennaro (4,162 feet). These fine mountains, with the Sabine +Hills and the volcanic groups near them, form the horizon of the Roman +Campagna, and their natural beauties are enhanced by the memories of +art and history which attach to them. + +[Illustration: PEASANTS OF THE ABRUZZOS.] + +Several ranges of hills and detached mountain groups of calcareous +formation, {259} like the Sub-Apennines, border upon the shore of +the Tyrrhenian Sea and the marshes which extend along it. Such are the +hills, rich in alum, which are grouped around the ancient trachytic +cone of the Tolfa. Such, too, are the Monte Lepini (4,845 feet), +the naked crest of which has been likened to an ass’s back—_schiena +d’asino_—and which bound the Pontine Marshes on the east. In some of +the recesses of these hills there still exist forests of chestnut-trees +and beeches, where the descendants of the ancient Volsci may pasture +their hogs; but almost everywhere else the hill-sides are bare of +vegetation, and the scorching rays of the sun have split the rocks +into innumerable angular fragments. To the east of the marshes rises a +summit with ten pinnacles, covered with dense shrub on the land side, +but barren towards the sea, a few stunted palms excepted, which grow +in the fissures of the rock. This isolated hill, a counterpart of the +Argentaro of Tuscany, is the Circello (1,729 feet), famous as the +residence of the enchantress Circe. The grotto where she changed human +beings into animals is still pointed out there to the curious, and the +remains of cyclopean walls recall the mythical age of the Odyssey. The +ancient Greeks, who were but imperfectly acquainted with Italy, looked +upon this dreaded promontory of Circe as one of the most important +islands of the Western Cyclades. + +During the glacial period the sea, in which have been deposited the +chalk and other rocks composing the Sub-Apennines, was the scene of +volcanic action on a grand scale. The matter ejected was heaped up in a +line of volcanic cones, running in a direction nearly parallel with the +Apennines and the coast of the Mediterranean. These cones are joined +to each other by thick layers of tufa, which cover the whole of the +plain as far as the foot of the calcareous mountains, and extend for +a distance of nearly 120 miles, from Monte Amiata, in Tuscany, to the +mountains of Albano, being interrupted only by the alluvial valley of +the Tiber. Ponzi and other geologists are of opinion that this tufa was +ejected from submarine volcanoes, carried away by the currents, and +equally distributed over the depressions of the sea-bottom. No fossils +have been discovered in it hitherto, which is accounted for by the +presence of icebergs, which prevented a development of animal life. + +This volcanic region is remarkable on account of its numerous lakes. +The largest of these, that of Bolsena, was formerly looked upon +as an ancient crater. This crater would have exceeded by far the +largest volcanic vents met with in the Andes or in Java, for it has a +circumference of twenty-five miles, and covers an area of forty-four +square miles. Modern geologists, however, look upon this crateriform +lake as a basin of erosion, and though it occupies the centre of a +plateau formed of ashes, scoriæ, and lava, these do not form a steep +edge towards the lake, as in the case of veritable craters in the +same district. One of the most remarkable of these latter is that of +Latera, to the west of the lake, in the centre of which rises a cone of +eruption, the Monte Spignano, which has a diameter of nearly five miles. + +The district of the Bolsena is likewise remarkable on account of +its vertical precipices of tufa and lava. Its picturesque towns and +villages are perched upon {260} bold promontories looking down on +the valleys. The old town of Bagnorea occupies the extremity of an +immense mole, and is joined to the new town by a giddy path, bounded by +steep precipices, which timid travellers do not care to venture upon. +Orvieto stands on an isolated rock resembling a fortress. Pittigliano +is surrounded by precipices: by cutting away a few yards of the narrow +isthmus which joins it to the rest of the plateau, access to it would +be impossible to all but birds. In the Middle Ages, when nobles and +towns were continually at war, the capture of one of these eyries was +looked upon as a grand achievement. + +[Illustration: Fig. 90.—THE LAKE OF BOLSENA. + +Scale 1 : 457,000.] + +Lake Bolsena discharges its surplus waters through the Marta into +the Mediterranean. The fine Lake of Bracciano, to the south of it, +gives rise to the Arrone. It, too, appears to be a basin formed by a +subsidence of the ground or erosion, and not a crater. The Lake of +Vico, on the other hand, clearly occupies an ancient volcano, though +its rampart has been gutted towards the east. Close to the lake, and +within the encircling rampart, rises Monte Venere, a perfect cone, +the gentle slopes of which are luxuriantly wooded. Formerly the lake +surrounded this cone, but the breach through which its emissary escapes +to the Tiber having gradually been deepened, the waters of the lake +subsided. Tradition says that an ancient city lies at its bottom. + +On crossing the Tiber we reach the beautiful volcanic group of Albano, +within the great crater of which may still be traced the remains +of several secondary craters, some of them occupied by lakes. The +principal one of these, Monte Cavo (2,790 feet), rises in the very +centre of the exterior rampart. Tradition points it out as one of +Hannibal’s camps. The exterior slopes of the mountain consist of +pozzuolana, small stones, and ashes, through which the torrents have +dug out furrows in divergent directions. The diversity of these {261} +volcanic products enables us to trace the phases of activity of this +Roman Vesuvius, which was active at a much more recent epoch than the +volcanoes farther north, and sent its streams of lava to the very gates +of Rome. + +[Illustration: Fig. 91.—VOLCANOES OF LATIUM. + +From the Austrian Staff Map. Scale 1 : 294,000.] + +The Lake of Albano discharges its surplus waters through a tunnel +7,665 feet in length, which has been in existence for more than +twenty-two centuries. The lake is famous on account of a small crab, +large numbers of which are forwarded to Rome during Lent. It is the +only species of this animal hitherto discovered in fresh water, and +zoologists conclude from this that the crater now occupied by the lake +formerly communicated with the sea, but was separated from it by slow +upheavals and the ejection of volcanic products. Flint implements +and vases of baked clay, discovered in the thick layers of volcanic +peperino, prove that at the {262} period of the earliest eruptions +the country was already inhabited by a civilised population. Some of +the vases referred to are doubly precious, for they present us with +delineations of the houses of that prehistoric epoch. Roman coins and +clasps of bronze, discovered in the upper layers of lava, prove that +these are comparatively recent. In fact, the most diverse developments +of civilisation have left their traces in these ancient craters. Alba +Longa and other towns of the Latins have been replaced by Roman cities; +then came the castles of the popes, and of other high dignitaries of +the Church; and at present these hills are one of the chief resorts of +the crowds of strangers who flock to Rome from every quarter of the +world. On the culminating point of Monte Cavo stood the famous temple +of Jupiter Latialis, where the Latins celebrated their federal Feriæ. +The last remains of this temple were swept away in 1783, to be used in +the construction of a church. From its site the eye embraces a view +extending to the hills of Sardinia. + +The Lake of Nemi no longer reflects in its bluish waters the foliage +of luxuriant trees, or the walls of that dreaded temple of Diana whose +priest was only allowed to assume office after he had killed his +predecessor in a duel. It, too, has its subterranean emissary, like +the Lake of Albano. As to the Regillus, famed for the defeat of the +Latins by the Romans, it has dried up, whilst the incrustating Lake of +Tartari and that of the Solfatara, with its floating islands, are more +shallow ponds, which owe their fame almost exclusively to the vicinity +of Tivoli. + +All these volcanic lakes are of considerable depths, whilst the lakes +in the calcareous regions are shallow.[89] One amongst them, that of +Fucino, has been drained recently, and the same fate is in store for +that of Trasimeno. Lake Fucino originally occupied an area of 104 +square miles, and its surplus waters discharged themselves towards +the north-west into the Salto, a tributary of the Tiber. At an epoch +not known to us the dimensions of the lake became less. It no longer +discharged an effluent, but its waters rose and fell according to +whether the seasons were wet or dry. Occasionally they rose as much as +50 feet, and two cities, Marruvium and Pinna, are said to have been +swallowed up during one of these floods. At other times it was reduced +to a swamp. The ancient Romans, desirous of suppressing a hotbed of +fever, and of gaining fertile soil for agriculture, attempted to drain +this lake. Claudius employed 30,000 slaves for eleven years in cutting +a passage through the mountains from it to the Liri. This great work +was carried on under the direction of the greedy Narcissus, but it +turned out a failure, for after a short time the tunnel became choked. +In the thirteenth century an attempt was made to reopen this tunnel, +but the drainage of the lake has only been achieved quite recently, +in accordance with plans designed by M. de Montricher, and carried +out at the expense of Prince Torlonia. Between {263} 1855 and 1869 a +new tunnel was excavated on the site of the ancient one, and nearly +150,000,000 cubic yards of water were conveyed through it into the +Liri, and thence to the sea. The whole of the ancient lake bed has been +converted into smiling fields, traversed in all directions by carriage +roads; houses have been erected on spots formerly covered with water; +fruit and ornamental trees have been planted; and the salubrity of the +country leaves nothing to be desired now. Some idea of the progress +made in the art of engineering since the time of the Romans may be +formed by comparing this new tunnel with the old one. The latter was +18,500 feet in length, had an average section of 12 square yards, and +cost (according to M. Rotrou) £9,840,000. The new tunnel has a length +of 20,680 feet, a section of 24 square yards, and cost £1,200,000. + +[Illustration: Fig. 92.—THE ANCIENT LAKE OF FUCINO. + +Scale 1 : 412,000.] + +The Lake of Perugia, better known as the Lake of Trasimeno, on account +of the terrible memories which attach to it, still retains nearly the +dimensions which it had at the dawn of history. If this lake were to +rise only a few feet, its surplus waters would find their way into +the Tresa, a tributary of the Tiber; but its basin is shallow, and +evaporation suffices for carrying off the water conveyed into it by its +tributary rivulets. Amongst these is the famous Sanguinetto, on the +banks of which the armies of Hannibal and Flaminius were engaged in +battle, when, + + “beneath the fray, + An earthquake reeled unheededly away.” + +The lake, with its islands and charming contours, is beautiful to +look upon, but the low hills surrounding it are sterile, the climate +is insalubrious, its waters harbour but few fish, and the inhabitants +on its shores look impatiently forward {264} to the time when the +engineers will fulfil their promise of winning for agriculture 30,000 +acres of fertile land now covered by the waters of the lake. + +[Illustration: Fig. 93.—LAKE OF TRASIMENO. + +From the Austrian Staff Map. Scale 1 : 250,000.] + +But far more urgent, on sanitary and economical grounds, are the claims +of the Roman Campagna; that is, of the region lying between the Tolfa +of Cività Vecchia, Monte Soracte, the Sabine Hills, and the volcanoes +of Latium. Slavery and maladministration have converted a fertile +region into a desert extending to the very gates of Rome. Painters are +enraptured with this Roman Campagna; they admire its melancholy aspect, +its picturesque ruins hidden beneath brambles, its solitary pines, its +pools reflecting the purple clouds, and visited by thirsty buffaloes. +True, this region, bounded by hills of bold contours, is full of +grandeur and sadness; but the air that hangs over it is deadly, the +soil and climate of this _Agro Romano_ have deteriorated, and fever now +reigns there supreme. + +Two thousand years ago the Roman Campagna, which covers an area of +600,000 acres to the north of the Tiber, and extends from the sea to +the mountains, was a fertile and carefully cultivated country. Then +its inhabitants were reduced to the condition of serfs, the Roman +patricians appropriated the land, and {265} covered it with villas +and parks. When these magnificent residences were given up to pillage +and to flames, the cultivators of the soil dispersed, and the country +immediately became a desert. Since that epoch most of the Agro is held +in mortmain by ecclesiastical corporations or princely families, and +whilst all the rest of Europe has been making progress, the Campagna +has become even more sterile and insalubrious. Swamps continually +invade the lowlands, and an atmosphere charged with miasmata hangs even +above the hills. Malaria has already knocked at the gates of Rome, and +the fevers produced by it decimate the population of its suburbs. + +[Illustration: Fig. 94.—THE ROMAN CAMPAGNA.] + +Not a village, not even a hamlet, is met with throughout this afflicted +region. The only buildings are the wretched storehouses of the +proprietors, whose wide domains are roamed over by herds of half-wild +grey cattle, said to have been introduced into Italy by the Huns, and +distinguished by immense horns, frequently suspended in the huts of +the peasantry, who fancy that they keep off the “evil eye.” The soil +of these neglected pastures consists of alluvium mixed with volcanic +débris and marls, but only a few patches are cultivated. The farmers +and labourers who engage in this labour carry their lives in their +hands, and are frequently struck down by fever before they are able +to regain their villages in {266} the hills. What can be done to +restore to this region its fertility, salubrity, and population? No +doubt it will be necessary to drain the marshes, and to plant trees +capable, like the Eucalyptus, of absorbing the poisonous miasmata; and +this has been done, with a considerable amount of success, since 1870, +near the abbey of Tre Fontane. But, above all, it will be necessary +to interest the cultivator of the soil in its productiveness. Even +in the most salubrious districts of the ancient Papal dominions the +population is being decimated by misery and the maladies following in +its train. In the valley of Sacco, to the south-east of Rome, which +abounds in cereals, vines, and fruit trees, the cultivator of the soil +is restricted to a diet of maize, for proprietors and money-lenders eat +up the rest of his produce. + +An uncultivated and insalubrious region extends, likewise, along +the sea to the south of the Tiber. Poisonous vapours arise from the +stagnant waters separated by dunes from the sea, and in order to escape +them it is necessary to seek a refuge in the hills of the interior, +or even on jetties built out into the sea, as at Porto d’Anzio. The +palaces which formerly lined the shore from Ostia to Nettuno, and from +the ruins of which have been recovered some of our most highly valued +art treasures, such as the Gladiator and Apollo Belvedere, have been +buried long ago beneath the dunes or in the swamps. The most dreaded +of these malarial districts lies at the foot of the Monti Lepini, and +extends from Porto d’Anzio to Terracina. It is known as the Pontine +Marshes, from Pometia, a city said to have perished before historical +times. No less than twenty-three cities formerly flourished in what is +now a deserted and deadly country, but which was the most prosperous +of the districts held by the confederation of the Volsci. The Roman +conquerors created “peace and solitude” at the same time. Four hundred +and forty years after the building of Rome, when Appius constructed +his famous road to Terracina, the country was only a swamp. Various +attempts have been made since to reclaim this region, but it still +remains the haunt of boars, deer, and semi-savage buffaloes, whose +ancestors were imported from Africa in the seventh century. The canals +dug during the reign of Augustus appear to have been of little use; +the works undertaken by Theodoric the Goth were more efficacious; +but stagnant waters and malaria in the end regained the mastery. The +engineers employed by Pius VI. towards the close of the eighteenth +century failed likewise, and this district of 290 square miles remains +a wilderness to the present day. If a brigand seeks refuge in it, +pursuit is stopped, and he is allowed to die in peace. + +[Illustration: Fig. 95.—THE PONTINE MARSHES. + +Scale 1 : 280,000.] + +In order to drain these marshes an accumulation of difficulties will +have to be surmounted. A range of wooded dunes bounds the marshes on +the west. Having crossed these, we enter a second zone of marshes, +which are separated from the sea by a second range of dunes, extending +northward from the Monte Circello, and likewise densely wooded. These +two formidable barriers would have to be surmounted in order to drain +the marshes towards the west. Nor are the prospects more promising in +the direction of Terracina, for there, too, every outlet is stopped +by dunes. The streams and canals crossing the marshes are, moreover, +choked up with a dense {267} growth of aquatic plants, which impedes +the circulation of the water, feeble though it be. Herds of buffaloes +are sometimes driven into these streams to trample down the vegetation, +but neither this barbarous procedure nor the more regular process +of mowing has availed against its rapid and luxuriant growth, and +the water remains stagnant. Rains are not only heavy in this portion +of Italy, but the superabundant waters of neighbouring river basins +actually find their way through subterranean channels into the +depression occupied by the Pontine Marshes. This happens after heavy +rains in the case of the Sacco, a tributary of the Garigliano, and of +the Teverone, a tributary of the Tiber, and to this circumstance {268} +must be ascribed the curious fact first ascertained by M. de Prony, +viz. that the volume of water annually discharged by the Badino, which +drains the marshes, exceeds by one-half the whole of the rain which +annually descends upon them. When this happens the whole of the country +is under water. Another danger arises during dry weather. It happens +then occasionally that the parched vegetation is ignited through the +carelessness of herdsmen; the fire communicates itself to the turfy +soil, and the latter smoulders until the subsoil water is reached. In +this manner tracts of land which were looked upon as secure against +every inundation are converted into marsh. During the greater portion +of the year the Pontine Marshes present the appearance of a plain +covered with herbage and flowers, and it is matter for surprise that a +country so fertile should be without inhabitants. The town of Ninfa, +which was built in the eleventh century, near the northern extremity +of the plain, has since been abandoned, its walls, houses, and palaces +still remaining, covered with ivy and other creeping plants. + +There can be no doubt that our engineers would be able to reclaim this +desolate region. The system adopted in the case of the valley of the +Chiana may not be practicable, but other, if more costly, means may be +devised. Whatever the outlay, it is sure to be productive, for even now +the marshes yield rich harvests of wheat and maize. + + * * * * * + +The Tiber, or Tevere, the great river of the Romans, has defied all +attempts at correction down to our own days, and its sudden floods are +said to be even more formidable now than they were in the days of the +Republic. Ever since the time of Ancus Martius there has been going on +a struggle against the alluvium brought down by the river, and it will +need all the skill of the Italian engineers to master this difficult +problem. + +The Tiber is by far the most important river of the peninsular portion +of Italy, and its basin is the most extensive.[90] It is, too, the only +river that is navigable in its lower course, from Ostia to Fidenæ. +The Tiber rises on the western slope of the Alpe della Luna, in the +latitude of Florence. The valley through which it flows, whilst in +the heart of the Apennines, is of surpassing beauty; at one time it +expands into broad and fertile basins, at others it is hemmed in by +precipitous rocks. Below the charming basin of Perugia the Tiber +receives the Topino, formed by the confluence of several streams in the +old lacustrine basin of Foligno, one of the most delightful districts +of all Italy, situated at the foot of the Great Apennines and of the +Col Fiorito, which leads across them. The Clituno (Clitumnus) debouches +upon this plain, famous on account of its pellucid waters:― + + “The most living crystal that was e’er + The haunt of the river nymph, to gaze and lave + Her limbs.” + +The ruins of a beautiful temple still remain near the source of this +river, but the miraculous power of the latter of changing into a +brilliant white the wool of the sheep grazing upon its sacred banks has +gone for ever. {269} + +[Illustration: Fig. 96.—ANCIENT LACUSTRINE BASINS OF THE TIBER AND +TOPINO. + +Scale 1 : 294,000.] + +[Illustration: Fig. 97.—THE CASCADES OF TERNI.] + +[Illustration: Fig. 98.—THE DELTA OF THE TIBER. + +According to Darondeau (1861) and Desjardins.] + +The Nera is the most important tributary of the Tiber; “it gives it to +drink,” as the Italian proverb says, and rivals it in volume. It is +formed by the junction of several streams descending from the Sibylline +Mountains, Monte Velino, and the Sabine Hills. About two thousand years +ago, it is said, most of these rivulets did not reach the Tiber; they +were intercepted in the plain of Rieti, where they formed the Lacus +Velinus, represented at the present day by a few ponds and marshes +scattered over the fertile fields of the “Garden of Roses.” A breach +effected in the calcareous rocks, and several times enlarged since, +allowed the pent-up waters of the Velino to escape to the Nera, and in +doing so they formed those beautiful cascades of Marmora, above Terni, +whose charms have been celebrated by poets and painters. The river +falls down a perpendicular height of {270} 542 feet in a single sheet, +and then rushes down, over heaped-up blocks of rock, until it joins the +more placid waters of the Nera. Far less grand, but perhaps {271} more +charming, are the numerous cascatellas of the Anio, or Teverone, the +last affluent of any importance which the Tiber receives above Rome. +Standing on the verdant hill upon which is built the picturesque town +of Tivoli, silvery cascades may be seen to escape in every direction. +Some of them glide down the polished rocks; others shoot forth from +gloomy arches, remain suspended an instant in the air, and then +disappear again beneath the foliage; but every one of them, whether a +powerful jet or a mere thread of water, possesses some charm of its +own, and, as a whole, they form one of the most delightful spectacles +to be witnessed in Italy. It is these cascades which have rendered +Tivoli famous throughout the world; and in spite of the popular rhyme— + + “Tivoli di mal conforto, + O piove, o tira vento, o suona a morto !”— {272} + +modern residences have taken the place of the villas of the ancient +Romans, amongst which that of Hadrian was the most sumptuous. Its +ruins, to the west of Tivoli, cover an area of three square miles. +Recently it has been proposed to {273} utilise the great water +power of the Anio far more extensively than has been done hitherto. +The ancients contented themselves with quarrying the concretionary +limestone, or travertin, deposited by the calcareous waters of the +river, sometimes to the depth of a hundred feet. They made use of this +stone for the construction of their public buildings. Travertin, when +first quarried, is white; after a certain time it turns yellow, and +subsequently assumes a beautiful roseate hue, which imparts a character +of majesty to the edifices constructed of it. + +[Illustration: Fig. 99.—PEASANTS OF THE ROMAN CAMPAGNA.] + +Below their confluence with the Anio, the yellow waters of the Tiber, +discoloured by the clay brought down from the plains of Umbria, rush +beneath the bridges of Rome. Soon afterwards the river winds round +the last hills, which formerly bounded an ancient gulf of the sea, +now silted up. The influence of the tides makes itself felt. At the +head of the Sacred Island, formerly dedicated to Venus, and famous for +its roses, but now a dreary swamp, covered with reeds and asphodels, +it bifurcates. The principal branch, the old Tiber, passes to the +south of this island. Ostia, which was the port of the river during +the early days of Rome, is buried now beneath fields of cereals and +thistles, at a distance of five miles from the sea. Excavations made +there since 1855 have laid bare several temples, tombs, and warehouses. +The merchants of Rome were compelled to abandon that city two thousand +years ago, on account of a bar formed at the mouth of the river. + +The Roman emperors, anxious to have an outlet into the sea, ordered +a ship canal to be excavated to the north of Ostia. This is the +Fiumicino, which the erosive action of the Tiber has converted into a +small river. Claudius had huge docks excavated to the north of this +canal, and a new Ostia arose near them. Trajan opened another port to +the south-east of it, which remained for several centuries the port +of Rome. But it, too, has been silted up for about a thousand years, +and the alluvium brought down by the Tiber is continually encroaching +upon the sea, the rate of progress being about three feet annually at +the mouth of the Fiumicino, and ten feet at that of the old Tiber. +Extensive ruins of palaces, baths, and storehouses exist near the +ancient port of Trajan, and several works of art have recently been +excavated there. + +The mouth of the Tiber is thus closed by a bar, like that of all other +rivers which flow into the Mediterranean; and the Romans, instead +of being able to make use of their river for communicating with the +sea, are obliged to have recourse to more distant harbours. In former +times they kept up this communication with Sicily, Greece, and the +Orient through Antium, Anxur (Terracina), and even Puteoli; but since +the countries of the North have risen into political and commercial +importance, Cività Vecchia has become the great maritime entrepôt of +the valley of the Tiber. It is well known that Garibaldi has conceived +the stupendous project of converting Rome into a great maritime city. +The stagnant waters of the Campagna are to be carried off by means of +a huge sanitary canal, the bed of the Tiber is to be deepened, and an +artificial harbour capable of receiving the largest vessels is to be +constructed far out in the Mediterranean. {274} + +The execution of this vast scheme is no doubt attended with immense +difficulties, not the least amongst which are the annual floods of the +Tiber. Ancient writers tell us that these inundations were dreaded +not only because of the damage done directly, but also because of the +great quantities of animal and vegetable deposits which remained in the +fields after the subsidence of the waters. The nature of these floods +has continued the same down to the present time. At Rome, though its +distance from the sea is only twenty-two miles, the river frequently +rises forty or fifty feet, and in December, 1598, it rose sixty-five +feet ! How is this huge volume of water to be disposed of after it has +passed beneath the bridges of Rome? If the destruction of the forests +in the Apennines is one of the principal causes of these floods, will +it be sufficient to replant them? Or would it be preferable to restore +some of those ancient lakes into which numerous rivers discharged +themselves, which now take their course to the sea? The difficulties +are great indeed, for the western slope of the Apennines is exposed +to the rain-bearing westerly and south-westerly winds, and the floods +of every one of the numerous tributaries of the Tiber take place +simultaneously, and combine to form one vast inundation. + +It is by no means difficult to account for the great floods of the +Tiber which take place in winter, but the condition of the river +during summer has for a long time baffled inquiry. The level of the +river during the dry season is far higher than could possibly be +accounted for by the small quantity of rain which falls within its +basin. Its volume in summer is never less than half its average volume, +a phenomenon not hitherto observed in the case of any other river. +The Seine has a basin five times larger than that of the Tiber, and +its average volume is almost double; yet, after a continuance of dry +weather, its volume is only a third or fourth of the Italian river. +This perennity of the Tiber can only be accounted for by assuming +that it is fed, during the dry season, from subterranean reservoirs, +in which the water is stored up during winter. These reservoirs must +be very numerous, if we are to judge by the numerous “sinks,” or +“swallows,” met with on the calcareous plateaux of the Apennines. One +of these sinks, known as the “Fountain of Italy,” near Alatri, close +to the Neapolitan frontier, has the appearance of a huge pit, 160 feet +in depth and 300 feet across. Its bottom is occupied by a forest, and +numerous springs give rise to luxuriant herbage, upon which sheep +lowered by means of ropes feed with avidity. It is from sinks like +this that the rivers of the country, the Tiber and the Sacco, are fed. +It has been computed by Venturoli and Lombardini, the engineers, that +about three-fourths of the liquid mass of the Tiber during winter are +derived from subterranean lakes hidden in the depths of the Apennines. +The volume of water annually supplied from this source to the Tiber +would fill a basin having an area of 100 square miles to a depth of 80 +feet ! [91] + +Primitive Rome is to a large extent indebted for her power to the +Tiber, not {275} because that river is navigable, but because it +traverses the centre of a vast basin, of which Rome is the natural +capital. Rome, moreover, occupied a central position with regard to the +whole of Italy and the world of the ancients; but, as has already been +pointed out, Rome no longer lies upon any of the great high-roads of +nations. That city certainly occupies not only the centre of Italy, but +of all the countries surrounding the Tyrrhenian Sea; and its climate +would leave little to be desired, if it were not for the insalubrity +of the Campagna. Still Rome, though the residence of two sovereigns, +the King of Italy and the Pope, is not even the principal city of the +peninsula, and still less the capital of the Latin race. It is said +that during the Middle Ages, when the popes resided at Avignon, the +population of Rome was reduced to 17,000 souls. Gregorovius, than whom +no one is better acquainted with that epoch in the history of Rome, +doubts this; but there can be no doubt that after the sack ordered by +the Constable of Bourbon its population was reduced to 30,000 souls. +More recently Rome has increased rapidly, but it is still very inferior +to Naples, and even to Milan. + +From the very first the Romans were a mixed race. The myth of Romulus +and Remus, the rape of the Sabine women, and incessant internal +conflicts bear evidence to this fact. The remains of ancient cities, +cyclopean walls, burial-grounds, urns, vases, and ornaments prove +that on the right bank of the Tiber the Etrurians were at least as +strong as the Italians. Elsewhere the Gauls predominated, and from an +intermixture of all these various peoples sprang the primitive Roman. + +When Rome had reached the zenith of her power things wore a different +aspect, and thousands of foreigners became amalgamated with the Latins, +Gauls, Iberians, Mauritanians, Greeks, Syrians, and Orientals of every +race and climate; slaves, freemen, and citizens flocked towards the +capital of the world, and modified the character of its inhabitants. +Towards the close of the Empire there were more strangers within the +walls of Rome than Romans, and when the empire of the West broke to +pieces, and the empress-city was pillaged repeatedly by barbarian +hordes, the Italians had already become mixed with the most diverse +elements. This endless mixture between different races, victors and +vanquished, masters and slaves, accounts, perhaps, more satisfactorily +for the great changes which have taken place in the course of two +thousand years in the character and spirit of the Romans. Still the +Romans on the right bank of the Tiber, the so called Trasteverini, have +preserved the old Roman type, as transmitted to us in statues and on +medals. + +[Illustration: Fig. 100.—ROME.] + +Rome is great because of its past, and its ruins are more attractive +than its modern buildings; it is a tomb rather than a living +city. These monuments, raised by the former masters of the world, +strongly impress the imagination. The sight of the Coliseum arouses +an admiration akin to terror, unless we look upon this formidable +edifice as a mere heap of stones. The thought that this vast arena +was crowded with men who sought to kill each other, that the steps +surrounding it were occupied by 80,000 human beings who delighted +in this butchery and {276} encouraged it by their shouts, calls up +an amount of baseness, ferocity, and frenzy, whose existence could +not fail to sap the foundations of Roman civilisation, and make it +an easy prey to the barbarian. The Forum awakens memories of quite +a different nature. Abominations were practised there, too, but its +history as a whole exhibits it as the true centre of the Roman world. +It was from this spot that the first impetus was given to the nations +of the West; it was here that the ideas imported from every quarter +of the world bore fruit. The walls, columns, temples, and churches +which surround the Forum relate in mute language the principal events +in the history of Rome; and if we search beneath existing edifices +we meet with structures more ancient, which take us back to a period +still more remote, for edifice has succeeded edifice on this spot, +where pulsated the life of the Roman people. And thus it is throughout +Rome. Every ancient monument, arcade, or broken column, every stone, +bears witness to some {277} historical event, and though it may be +difficult sometimes to interpret these witnesses of the past, the truth +is elicited by degrees. + +In spite of pillage and wholesale destruction, there still exist +numerous ancient monuments, of which the Pantheon of Agrippa is one +of the most marvellous. The Vandals, who are usually charged with the +work of destruction, pillaged the city, it is true, but they demolished +nothing. The systematical destruction had begun long before their +time, when the materials for building the first church of St. Peter +were taken from the Circus of Caligula, and from other monuments near +it. The same plan was pursued in the construction of innumerable other +churches and buildings of every kind. Statues were broken to pieces and +used for making lime, and in the beginning of the fifteenth century +there only remained six of them in all Rome, five of marble and one +of bronze. The invasion of the Normans in 1084, and the numerous wars +of the Middle Ages, which were frequently attended by pillage and +conflagrations, wrought further havoc, but so large had been the number +of public buildings and monuments, that on the revival of art in the +sixteenth century many still remained for study and imitation. Since +that time the architectural collection enclosed by the walls of Rome +has been guarded with the utmost care, and still further enriched by +the masterpieces of Michael Angelo, Bramante, and others. + +On the Palatine Hill the most curious remains of ancient Rome, +including the foundations of the palaces of the Cæsars and of the walls +of _Roma Quadrata_, have recently been laid open. It was on this hill, +so rich in precious relics, that the first Romans built their city, +in order to afford it the protection of steep escarpments, and of the +marshes on the Tiber and Velabro. When Rome grew more populous it +became necessary to descend from this hill. The town spread over the +valley of the Velabro, which had been drained by Tarquin the Etruscan, +and then climbed up the surrounding hills. A small island in the Tiber +occupied its centre. This the Romans looked upon as a sacred spot. They +enclosed it by a masonry embankment, shaped like a ship, erected an +obelisk in its centre to represent a mast, and a temple of Æsculapius +upon the poop. This island was likened to a vessel bearing the fortunes +of Rome. + +There is still another Rome, the subterranean one, which is well worth +study, for we learn more from it about early Christianity than from +all the books that have been written. The crypts of the Christian +burying-places occupy a zone around the city a couple of miles in +width, and embrace about fifty distinct catacombs. Signor Rossi +estimates the length of the subterranean passages at 360 miles. They +are excavated in the tufa, and are, on an average, a yard in width, but +they include chambers which served as oratories, and numerous tiers of +niches for the bodies. The inscriptions, bas-reliefs, and paintings of +these cities of the dead were at all times respected by the pagans, +and fortunately the entrances to them were closed up at the time the +Barbarians invaded Rome. This saved their contents from destruction, +and everything was found intact when they were first reopened towards +the close of the sixteenth century. These tombs prove that the popular +belief of the Christians of that time was very different from what it +is {278} represented to have been by contemporaneous writers, who +belonged to a different class of society from that of the majority of +the faithful. A serene gaiety reigns throughout, and lugubrious emblems +find no place there. We neither meet with representations of martyrdoms +nor with skeletons or images of Death; even the cross, which at a later +epoch became the great symbol of Christianity, is not seen there. The +most common symbols met with are those of the Good Shepherd carrying +a lamb upon his shoulders, and the vine decked with leaves. In the +oldest catacombs, which date back to the second and third centuries, +the figures are Greek in character, and abound in heathen subjects. +One represents the Good Shepherd surrounded by the Three Graces. There +are two Jewish catacombs, likewise excavated in the tufa, and they +enable us to compare the religious notions which prevailed at that time +amongst the followers of the two religions. + +[Illustration: Fig. 101.—THE HILLS OF ROME.] + +By an absurd predilection for mystical numbers, Rome is even now spoken +of as the “City of the Seven Hills,” although it lost all claim to such +a designation {279} after it had outgrown the walls built by Servius +Tullius. Independently of Monte Testaccio, which is merely a heap of +potsherds, there are at least nine hills within the walls of actual +Rome, viz. the Aventino, to which the plebeians retired during their +feeble struggles for independence; the Palatino, the ancient seat of +the Cæsars; the Capitolino, surmounted by the temple of Jupiter; Monte +Celio (Cælius); the Esquilino; Viminale; Quirinale; Citorio; and the +Pincio, with its public gardens. Besides these, there are two hills on +the opposite bank of the Tiber, viz. Monte Gianicolo (Janiculum), the +highest of all, and the Vatican, which derives its name from the Latin +word _vates_, a soothsayer, it having once been the seat of Etruscan +divination. + +Faithful to its traditions, the last hill has ever since remained the +place of vaticinations. When the Christian priests left the obscurity +of the catacombs they established themselves upon it, and thence they +governed Rome and the Western world. The Papal palace, abounding +in treasures of art, was built upon it, and close to it stands the +resplendent basilica of St. Peter, the centre of Catholic Christendom. +A long arcade connects the palace with the Castle of Sant’ Angelo, +the ancient mausoleum of Hadrian. The guns of this fortress no longer +defend the Vatican, for the temporal power of the pontiffs is a thing +of the past; but their sumptuous church of St. Peter, with its dome +rising high into the air, and visible even from the sea, its statues, +marbles, and mosaics, bears witness to the fact that the riches of all +Christendom formerly found their way to Rome. St. Peter’s alone cost +nearly £20,000,000 sterling, and is only one out of the 365 churches +of the city of the popes. At the same time, the admiration which their +sumptuous edifice arouses is not without its alloy. A multiplicity of +ornaments dwarfs the proportions of this colossal building, and, more +serious still, instead of its being the embodiment of an entire epoch +of its faith and ideas, it is representative only of a transitory phase +in the local history of Catholicism, of an age of contradictions, +when the paganism of the Renaissance and the Christianity of the +Middle Ages allied themselves in order to give birth to a pompous and +sensuous neo-Catholicism suited to the tastes and caprices of the +century. How different is the impression we derive from this building +from that which the sombre nave of a Gothic cathedral makes upon us ! +It is a remarkable fact that the quarter of Rome in which the church +of St. Peter is built is the only portion of the city which was laid +waste by the Mussulmans in 846, who are thus able to boast of having +sacked Papal Rome and taken possession of Jerusalem, whilst the tomb +of Mohammed has ever remained in the hands of the faithful. As to +the Jews, they did not come to Rome as conquerors. Shut up in their +filthy Ghetto near the swampy banks of the Tiber, and not far from +that arch of Titus which reminded them of the destruction of their +temple, they have been the objects of hatred and persecution during +nineteen centuries. They have survived, thanks to the power of their +gold, and since their liberation from bondage they contribute even more +to the embellishment of the Italian capital than do their Christian +fellow-citizens. + +Our nineteenth century is not favourable to the creation of edifices +fit to rival {280} the Coliseum or St. Peter’s, but there are works of +another nature, not less deserving of attention, which may distinguish +this third era in the history of Rome. Above all, it will be necessary +to protect the city against the floods of the Tiber, and to improve +its sanitary condition. The bed of the river will have to be deepened, +embankments constructed, and a system of drainage established. + +It is well known that the quantity of water supplied to the Rome of the +ancients was prodigious. In the time of Trajan nine grand aqueducts, +having a total length of 262 miles, supplied about 4,400 gallons of +water per second, and this quantity was augmented to the extent of +one-fourth by canals subsequently constructed. Even now, although +most of these ancient aqueducts are in ruins, the water supply of the +capital of Italy is superior to that of most other cities.[92] But if +the time should ever come when Rome will occupy the whole of the space +enclosed within its walls, if ever the Forum should again become the +centre of the city, then the want of water will be felt there as much +as in most of the other great towns of Europe. + +Irrespective of the insalubrity of the environs, there is another +reason why modern Rome cannot compare with the ancient city. Its +streets no longer radiate from a centre towards all the points of the +compass, as they did of yore. The Appian Road, which on first leaving +the city passes through a curious avenue of tombs, is typical of the +old roads, constructed in straight lines, and shortening distances. It +is true that these ancient highways have been superseded by railways, +but they are still few in number, and Rome is not situated on a trunk +line. Elsewhere railways were built from the capital of the country +towards its periphery; in Italy, on the contrary, it was Florence, +Bologna, and Naples which constructed lines converging upon Rome. + + * * * * * + +Rome is one of those large cities which are least able to exist upon +their own resources, and having no port, and its immediate vicinity +being rendered uninhabitable by miasmata, it has attached to it +outlying places, and occupies a position similar to that of a spider +in the centre of its web. Its gardens, rural retreats, and industrial +establishments are all in the hill towns of Tivoli, Frascati (near +which on a ridge are the ruins of Tusculum), Marino (near which the +confederated nations of Latium held their meetings), Albano (joined +by a magnificent viaduct to Ariccia), Velletri (the old city of the +Volsci), and Palestrina (more ancient than either Alba Longa or Rome, +and occupying the site of a famous temple of Fortune, the pride of +ancient Præneste). Its watering-places are Palo, Fiumicino, and Porto +d’Anzio, which adjoins the little town of Nettuno, so famous because +of the {281} haughty beauty of its women. Its only seaport is Cività +Vecchia, a dreary town on the Tyrrhenian Sea, with a magnificent +harbour.[93] The ancient harbours to the south of the Tiber are very +little resorted to in our day. Terracina, hidden amidst verdure at the +foot of white cliffs, is only used by Rome-bound travellers coming by +the coast road from the south.[94] Nearly every other town of Latium +is built on one or other of the two great roads, of which one leads +northward to Florence, whilst the other penetrates the valley of the +Sacco towards the south-east, and finally issues upon the campagna of +Naples. Viterbo, the “city of nice fountains and pretty girls,” is the +principal town in the north. Alatri, on the slope of the Garigliano, +and commanded by a superb necropolis enclosed by cyclopean walls, +occupies a similar position in the south. In the east, in one of the +most charming valleys of Sabina, traversed by the ever-cool waters of +the Anio, lies Subiaco, the ancient Sublaqueum, thus named after the +three reservoirs constructed by Nero, who used to fish trout in them +with a golden net. It was in a holy cave (_sacro specu_) near Subiaco +that St. Benedict established his famous monastery, which preceded the +still more famous monastery of Monte Casino, and conjointly with that +of Lérins, in Provence, became the cradle of monachism in the West.[95] + +[Illustration: Fig. 102.—CIVITÀ VECCHIA. + +Scale 1 : 8,888.] + +{282} + +Perugia, the capital of Umbria, on the road from Rome to Ancona, is +one of the ancient cities of the Etruscans, and excavations carried +on in its vicinity have revealed tombs of the highest interest. After +every war and disaster this city has arisen from its ruins, for its +position in the midst of a fertile plain, and at the point of junction +of several natural high-roads, is most favourable. It is both a Roman +and a Tuscan city, and at the period of the Renaissance it gave birth +to one of the great schools of painting. There still remain numerous +monuments at Perugia which date back to that famous epoch, and although +no longer one of the artistic head-quarters of Italy, it is still the +seat of a university; its trade, especially in raw silk, is active; +and its clean houses and streets, its pure atmosphere, and charming +inhabitants annually attract to it a large number of the foreigners who +spend the winter at Rome. Perugia has by far outstripped its rival, +Foligno, which was formerly the great commercial mart of Central Italy, +and still carries on a few branches of industry; amongst others, the +tanning of leather. As to Assisi, it is justly famous because of its +temple of Minerva, and its gorgeous monasteries decorated with the +frescoes of Cimabue and his successor, Giotto, the last of the Greek +and the first of the Italian painters. Assisi is only a small place +now, but its environs are fertile and densely inhabited. It gave birth +to Francesco d’Assisi, the founder of the order of St. Francis. + +Other towns of Umbria, though not now of much importance, may boast of +having once played a great part in history, or of possessing beautiful +monuments. Spoleto, the gates of which Hannibal sought in vain to +force, has a superb basilica, a Roman viaduct carried across a deep +ravine, and mountains clad with pines and chestnuts. Terni is proud of +its famous cascade (see p. 270). Orvieto, to the north of the Tiber, +near the frontier of Tuscany, is haughty and dirty, but justly famous +on account of its marvellous cathedral, one of the most costly and +tasteful buildings in the world. Città di Castello, on the Upper Tiber, +and Gubbio, in the very heart of the mountains, are the two principal +towns in the Umbrian Apennines. Both are delightfully situated, and +possess efficacious mineral springs. At Gubbio are shown the famous +“Eugubian Tables,” seven plates of bronze covered with Umbrian +characters, and the only relics of that kind known to exist. The little +town of Fratta, now known as Umbertide, half-way between Perugia and +Città di Castello, is only of local importance.[96] + +Ancona is the Adriatic port of the Roman countries. It is an ancient +city of the Dorians, which still retains the name given it by its +founders, on account of its being situated at the “angle” formed by +the coast between the Gulf of Venice and the Southern Adriatic. A +fine triumphal arch near the mole attests the importance which Trajan +attached to the possession of this port. Thanks to its favourable +position and the labour bestowed upon the improvement of its harbour, +Ancona is one of the three great places of commerce on the Adriatic; +it ranks next to Venice, and is almost the equal of Brindisi, though +not one of the stages on the road to India. Its commerce is fed by +Rome, the Marches, and Lombardy; and {283} amongst its exports are +fruits, oil, asphalt from the Abruzzos, sulphur from the Apennines, +and silk, “the very best in the world,” if the native estimate of its +quality can be accepted.[97] The other ports along this coast offer but +little shelter, and their commerce is small. Pesaro, the native town +of Rossini, is only visited by vessels of twenty or thirty tons. Fano +merely admits barges. The small river port of Sinigaglia (Senigallia) +was formerly much frequented during the fair, at which commodities +valued at £1,000,000 sterling used to change hands, but since its +abolition in 1870 it has been deserted. + +[Illustration: Fig. 103.—VALLEYS OF EROSION ON THE WESTERN SLOPE OF THE +APENNINES. + +Scale 1 : 403,000.] + +With the exception of Fabbriano, which occupies a smiling valley of the +Apennines, and of Ascoli-Piceno, on the river Tronto, the inland towns +of the Marches are built upon the summit of hills, but extend through +their suburbs to the cultivable plains. The principal amongst them are +Urbino, whose greatest glory consists in having been the birthplace +of Raphael, and which, like its neighbour Pesaro, formerly produced a +kind of faience much valued by connoisseurs; Jesi; Osimo; Maxerata; +Recanati, the native place of Leopardi; and Fermo. One of the most +famous of these hill towns is Loreto, formerly the most-frequented +place of pilgrimage in the Christian world. Before the Reformation, and +at a time when {284} travelling was far more difficult than now, as +many as 200,000 devotees visited the shrines of Loreto every year. They +were shown there the veritable house in which the Virgin Mary was born, +and which was carried by angels to the spot it now occupies, where it +is sheltered by a magnificently decorated dome. At Castelfidardo, close +by, was fought the battle which cost the Pope the greater part of the +“patrimony of St. Peter.” + +There are only a few towns in the uplands of the Abruzzos. The +principal of these is Aquila, founded in the thirteenth century by the +Emperor Frederick II. The other towns are difficult of access, and, +far from attracting inhabitants from beyond, they send their vigorous +sons to the lowlands, where they are known as _Aquilani_, and highly +appreciated as terrace gardeners. The most populous places are met with +in the lower valley of the Aterno, or command the road leading to the +coast and the fertile fields of the Adriatic slope. Solmona is embedded +in a huge garden, anciently a lake, and overlooked in the south by the +steep scarps of Monte Majella. Popoli, at the mouth of a defile, where +the Aterno assumes the name of Pescara, is one of the busiest places +between the sea and the uplands. Chieti, lower down on the same river, +is said to have been the first town in the old Neapolitan province to +introduce steam into its spinning-mills and other factories. Teramo and +Lanciano are likewise places of some importance, but the only ports +along the coast, Ortona and Vasto, are merely frequented by small +coasting vessels.[98] + +A small district in the Marches, joined to the coast by a single +road, has maintained its independence through ages. Monte Titano, +which rises in one of the most beautiful parts of the Apennines, and +the base of which has been used as a quarry since time immemorial, +bears upon its summit the old and famous city of San Marino. From its +turreted walls the citizens can see the sun rise above the Illyrian +Alps. San Marino, with some neighbouring hamlets, constitutes a “most +illustrious” republic, and is now the only independent municipality +of Italy. Named after a Dalmatian mason who lived as a hermit on +Monte Titano, San Marino has existed as a sovereign state from the +fourth century, its citizens having at all times known how to turn +to advantage the jealousies of their neighbours. The constitution of +this republic, however, is anything but democratic. The citizens, even +though they be landed proprietors, have no votes, and are at most +permitted to remonstrate. The supreme power is vested in a Council +of sixty members, composed of nobles, citizens, and landowners. The +title of councillor is hereditary in the family, and when a family +becomes extinct the remaining fifty-nine choose another. The Council +appoints the various officials, including a captain for the town and +one for the country. San Marino has its little army, its budget, and +its monopolies. A portion of its income is derived from the sale of +titles and of decorations, and on the payment of £1,400 it has even +created dukes, who take rank with the highest nobility of the kingdom. +Taxation is voluntary. When the public chest is empty a drummer is +sent round the town to invite {285} contributions. Though perfectly +independent, this republic accepts a subsidy from Italy, and claims +the special protection of the King. Its criminals are shut up in an +Italian prison, its public documents are printed in Italy, and an +Italian judge occupies the bench of the republican prætorium. There is +no printing-office in the little state, for the Council is afraid that +books objectionable to the surrounding kingdom might be issued from +it.[99] + +[Illustration: Fig. 104.—RIMINI AND SAN MARINO. + +Scale 1 : 250,000.] + +{286} + + +VI.—SOUTHERN ITALY, NAPLES. + +Amongst the various states which have been welded into the modern +kingdom of Italy, Naples, though second to others in population and +industry, occupies the largest area.[100] It embraces the whole +southern half of the peninsula, and its coast has a development of 995 +miles. Formerly the country was better known than any other portion of +Italy as Magna Græcia, but now many parts of it are scarcely known at +all. + +The Apennines of Naples can hardly be described as a mountain chain. +They consist rather of distinct mountain groups joined by transverse +ranges, or by elevated saddles. In the first of these groups the +serrated crest of the Meta (7,364 feet) rises above the zone of trees, +and is separated from the Abruzzos by the deep valley of the Sangro, +which flows to the Adriatic. Farther to the south, beyond the valley +of Isernia, which gives birth to the Volturno, rise the mountains of +the Matese, culminating in the Miletto (6,717 feet), the last bulwark +of the Samnites. Other summits, less elevated, but equally steep and +imposing, rise near Benevento and Avellino. They abound in savage +defiles, in which many a bloody battle has been fought. The valley of +the “Furcæ Caudinæ,” where the Romans humbled themselves before the +Samnites, and made promises which they never meant to keep, may still +be recognised on the road from Naples to Benevento. The memory of this +event lives in the Caudarola Road, and the village of Forchia d’Arpaia. +This mountain region, which might fitly be called after its ancient +inhabitants, is connected in the south with a transversal chain, +running east and west, and terminating in Cape Campanello, to the south +of the Bay of Naples. The beautiful island of Capri, with its white +cliffs and caverns flooded by the azure waters of the Mediterranean, +lies off this cape. + +The eastern slope of the cretaceous mountains of Naples is gentle, +and gradually merges in argillaceous _tavolieri_, or table-lands, +deposited during the Pliocene epoch. The _tavoliere de la Puglia_ is, +perhaps, the most sterile and dreary portion of Italy. It is cut up +into terraces by deep ravines, through which insignificant streams find +their way to the Adriatic, and the centres of population must be looked +for at the mouths of valleys or along the high-roads. The country +itself is a vast solitude, deserted by all except nomad herdsmen. There +are no shrubs, and a kind of fennel, which forms the hedges separating +the pasturing grounds, is the largest plant to be seen. Hovels, +resembling tombs or heaps of stone, rise here and there in the midst of +these plains. Fortunately the old feudal customs which prevented the +cultivation of these plains, and compelled the mountaineers to keep +open wide paths, or _tratturi_, through their fields for the passage of +sheep, have been abolished, and the aspect of the tavoliere improves +from year to year. + +These tavolieri completely separate the mountains of the peninsula +of Gargano—the “spur” of the Italian “boot”—from the system of the +Apennines. The northern slopes of these rugged mountains are still +clad with forests of beeches {287} and pines, which supply the best +pitch of Italy, and by thickets of carob-trees and other plants, whose +flowers are transformed by the bees into delicious honey; but the very +name of the most elevated summit—Monte Calvo (5,150 feet), or “bald +mountain”—proves that the deplorable destruction of forests has been +going on here as in the rest of the peninsula. In former times the +recesses of Monte Gargano were held by Saracen pirates, and they defied +the Christians there for a long time, in spite of the many sanctuaries +which had been substituted for the ancient heathen temples. The most +famous of these was the church on Monte Sant’ Angelo, at the back of +Manfredonia, which was frequently resorted to by the navigator about to +leave the shelter of the bay for the dangerous coasts of Dalmatia or +the open sea. + +[Illustration: Fig. 105.—MONTE GARGANO. + +Scale 1 : 950,000.] + +The Neapolitan Apennines terminate in the south with the ancient +volcano of Monte Vultur (4,356 feet). Farther south the country +gradually sinks down into a table-land intersected by deep ravines, +which discharge their waters in three directions—towards the Bay of +Salerno, the Bay of Taranto, and the Adriatic. The Apennines, far from +bifurcating, as shown on old maps, are cut in two by the low saddle +of Potenza, and on the peninsula forming the “heel” of Italy only low +ridges and terraces are met with. + +The peninsula of Calabria, however, is rugged and mountainous. The +Apennines, near Lagonegro, again rise above the zone of forests. +Monte Polino (7,656 feet) is the highest summit in Naples. The group +of which it forms the {288} centre occupies the entire width of the +peninsula, and along its western coast it forms a wall of cliffs even +less accessible than those of Liguria. Towards the south it opens out +into wooded valleys, where the inhabitants collect manna, an esteemed +medicinal drug. The deep valley of the Crati separates these mountains +from the Sila (5,863 feet), which is composed of granites and schists, +and still retains its ancient forests, haunted by brigands. The +shepherds who pasture their flocks in the clearings of these woods are +said to be the descendants of the Saracens, who formerly occupied this +“Country of Rosin,” by which name it was known to the Greeks. + +To the south of the isolated Sila the peninsula narrows to a neck of +small elevation, where raised beaches attest the successive retreats +of the sea. A third mountain mass, of crystalline formation, rises to +the south of this depression, its furrowed slopes clad in forests. +This is the Aspromonte (6,263 feet), or “rugged mountain.” One of its +spurs forms the palm-clad promontory of Spartivento, or “parting of the +winds.” + +Naples, like Latium, has its volcanic mountains, which form two +irregular ranges, one on the continent, the other in the Tyrrhenian +Sea, and are, perhaps, connected beneath the sea with the volcanic +mountains of the Liparic Islands and Mount Etna. One of these is Mount +Vesuvius, the most famous volcano of the world, not because of its +height or the terror of its eruptions, but because its history is that +of an entire population who have made its lavas their home. + +Scarcely have we left the defile of Gaeta and entered upon the +paradisiacal Terra di Lavoro than we come upon the first volcano, +the Rocca Monfina (3,300 feet), which rises between two calcareous +mountains, one of which is the Massico, whose wines have been sung by +Horace. No eruption of this volcano is on record, and a village now +occupies its shattered crater. To judge from the streams of lava which +surround its trachytic cone, its eruptions must have been formidable. +The entire Campania is covered to an unascertained depth with ashes +ejected from it, and the marine shells found in them prove that the +whole of this region must have been upheaved at a comparatively recent +epoch. + +[Illustration: THE BAY OF NAPLES] + +The hills which rise to the south of the Campania cannot boast of the +grandeur of the Rocca Monfina, but they have been looked upon from +the most remote times as one of the great curiosities of our earth. +Standing upon the commanding height of the Camaldoli (518 feet), the +Phlegræan Fields lie at our feet. Acquainted as we now are with the far +more formidable volcanoes of Java and the Andes, this verdant sea-bound +country may not strike us as a region of horrors. But our Græco-Roman +predecessors looked upon it with very different eyes, and being unable +to account for the phenomena they witnessed, they ascribed them to the +gods. The quaking soil, the flames bursting forth from hidden furnaces, +the gaping funnels communicating with unexplored caverns, lakes +which disappeared at irregular intervals, and others exhaling deadly +gases—all these things left their impress upon ancient mythology and +poetry. At the time of Strabo the shores of the Bay of Baiæ had become +the favourite resort of {289} voluptuaries, and sumptuous villas +rose upon every promontory; but the terrors inspired by hidden flames +and mysterious caverns had not yet departed. A dreaded oracle was +said to have its seat there, guarded by Cimmerians, to whom strangers +desirous of consulting the gods had to apply. These troglodytæ were +doomed never to behold the sun, and only quitted their caverns during +the night. The Phlegræan Fields were likewise supposed to have been the +battle-ground of giants struggling for the possession of the fertile +plains of the Campania. During the Middle Ages Pozzuoli was looked upon +as the spot from which Christ descended into hell. + +[Illustration: Fig. 106.—THE ASHES OF THE CAMPANIA. + +According to Carl Vogt. Scale 1 : 835,400.] + +The number of craters still distinguishable is twenty. If we were +to suppose {290} the country to be deprived of its vegetation, its +aspect would resemble that of the surface of the moon. Even the city of +Naples occupies an ancient crater, the contours of which have become +almost obliterated. To the west of it several old craters can still +be traced, one of them occupying a promontory of tufa, surmounted by +what is called the tomb of Virgil. Passing through the famous grotto of +Posilippo, we find ourselves in the Phlegræan Fields. On our left rises +the small conical island of Nisita, its ancient crater invaded by the +sea. Farther on we reach the crater known as the Solfatara, the Forum +Vulcani of the ancients. Its last eruption took place in 1198, but it +still exhales sulphuretted hydrogen. The Park of Astroni lies to the +north. The interior slope of its enclosing wall is exceedingly steep, +so as to render impossible the escape of the deer and boars which are +kept within. The only access is through an artificial breach. Another +crater, less regular in shape, is now filled with the bubbling waters +of the Lake of Agnano. Near it is the famous Grotto of Dogs, with its +spring of carbonic acid. Other springs of gas and sulphurous water +rise in the neighbourhood, and to them Pozzuoli is indebted for its +name, which is said to mean the “town of stinks.” The town, in turn, +has given its name to the earth known as pozzuolana, which supplies an +excellent material for the manufacture of cement. + +The coast of the bay of Pozzuoli has undergone repeated changes of +level, in proof of which the three columns of the temple of Serapis +are usually referred to. At a time anterior to the Romans this temple, +together with the beach upon which it stands, sank beneath the waters +of the sea, and its columns must have been exposed to their action +for many years, perhaps centuries, for up to a height of twenty feet +they are covered with tubes of serpulæ, and perforated by innumerable +holes bored by pholadidæ. In the course of time it rose again slowly +above the waters. This happened, perhaps, in 1538, when the Monte +Nuovo sprang into existence. In the short period of four days this new +volcano, 490 feet in height, rose above the surrounding plain, and +buried the village of Tripergola beneath its ashes. A beach now known +as La Starza was formed at the foot of the cliffs, and two sheets +of water to the west of Monte Nuovo were cut off from the sea. One +of these, the Lago Lucrino, is famous for its oysters; the other is +the Lago d’Averno, which Virgil, in conformity with antique legends, +described as the entrance to the infernal regions. It occupies an +ancient crater, and its pellucid waters abound in fish. There are no +exhalations of poisonous gases now, and birds fly over the lake with +impunity. Still its vicinity is haunted by the memories of the old +pagan mythology. Lake Fusaro is referred to by the ciceroni as the +Acheron; close to it they point out the den of Cerberus; the sluggish +stream of Acqua Morta has been identified with the Cocytus; Lake +Lucrino, or rather a spring near it, with the Styx; and the remains +of a subterranean passage which connected the Averno with the sea are +pointed out as the whilom grotto of the Sibyl. The inhabitants of +Cumæ, which was founded by a colony from Chalcis, and the ruins of +which still exist on the Mediterranean coast, to the east of Pozzuoli, +brought with them the myths of Hellas, and Grecian poetry, which took +possession of them, has kept their memory alive. + +It is quite proper that this region of Tartarus should have its +contrast in Elysian {291} Fields, and this name has actually been +bestowed upon a portion of the peninsula of Baiæ, which formed the +chief attraction of the voluptuous Romans, and where Marius, Pompey, +Cæsar, Augustus, Tiberius, Claudius, Agrippina, Nero, and others +had their palaces. Many a fearful tragedy has been enacted in these +sumptuous buildings. But hardly a trace of them exists now; nature has +resumed possession of the country, and the hills of tufa and volcanoes +are the only curiosities of the peninsula. Cape Miseno is one of these +old volcanoes, and from its summit may be enjoyed one of the most +delightful prospects in the world. The whole of the Bay of Naples—“a +bit of heaven fallen upon our earth”—lies spread out beneath us, and +Ischia the joyous, formidable Capri, the promontory of Sorrento, Mount +Vesuvius, and the houses and villas of Naples fill up the space bounded +by the sea and the distant Apennines. + +The island of Procida joins the Phlegræan Fields to the chain of island +volcanoes lying off the Bay of Gaeta. Ischia is the most important of +these, and its volcano, the Epomeo (2,520 feet), almost rivals Mount +Vesuvius in height. One of its most formidable eruptions occurred in +1302, at a time when Mount Vesuvius was quiescent, but after the latter +resumed its activity Ischia remained in repose. Similarly, when the +Monte Nuovo was ejected from the earth, the huge volcano went to sleep +for no less a period than one hundred and thirty years. Ischia has +known no eruption for five centuries and a half, and the gases escaping +from its thirty or forty hot springs are now the only signs of volcanic +activity. + +Ischia has certainly been upheaved during a comparatively recent epoch, +for its trachytic lavas rest in many places upon clays and marls +containing marine shells of living Mediterranean species. Some of these +have been found at a height of nearly 2,000 feet. At the present time +the tufa rocks of Ischia, and of the other volcanic islands to the +west of it, are being washed away by the sea. Ventotene, the ancient +Pandataria, to which the Roman princesses were exiled, is hardly more +now than a heap of scoriæ. Ponza, likewise a place of exile of the +Romans, has been separated by the erosive action of the sea into a +number of smaller islands. Its lavas overlie Jurassic rocks, similar in +all respects to those of Monte Circello on the coast nearest to it. + +Mount Vesuvius (4,100 feet), the pride and dread of the Neapolitans, +was likewise an island during prehistoric times. The marine shells +found in the tufa of Monte Somma prove this, and on the east the +volcano is still surrounded by plains but little elevated above the +sea. Formerly the mountain was covered with verdure to its very summit, +but the explosion of A.D. 79 shattered its cone, and the ashes thrown +up into the air shrouded the whole of the country in darkness. Even at +Rome the sun was hidden, and an age of darkness was believed to have +set in. When at length the light reappeared, the face of the country +was found to have undergone a marvellous change. The mountain had lost +its shape, the fertile fields were hidden by masses of débris, and +entire towns had been buried beneath ashes. + +Since that terrible event Mount Vesuvius has vomited lavas and ashes on +many occasions. No periodicity has been traced in these outbursts, and +the intervals {292} of repose were generally of sufficient duration to +enable vegetation to resume its sway. But these eruptions have become +more frequent since the seventeenth century, and hardly a decade passes +by without one or more of them. Each of them modifies the contours of +the mountain, whose great central vent has undergone many changes. The +crescent-shaped mass of débris which surrounds the old crater, known +as the Atrio del Cavallo, was undoubtedly of loftier height previously +to the great outburst of 79 than it is now. The vicinity of Naples has +facilitated a study of the phenomena attending volcanic eruptions, and +an observatory, permanently occupied, has been built close to the cone +of eruption. + +[Illustration: Fig. 107.—ERUPTION OF MOUNT VESUVIUS, APRIL 26TH, 1872.] + +The neighbourhood of Mount Vesuvius, like that of all other volcanoes, +abounds in hot and gas springs, but there are no subsidiary craters. +The nearest volcano is Monte Vultur (4,356 feet), a regular cone on the +eastern slope of the peninsula. Its dimensions are larger than those +of Vesuvius, but no eruptions are on record, though a slight escape of +carbonic acid is still going on from the two lakes which occupy the +bottom of its vast crater. On a line connecting Ischia, Vesuvius, and +Monte Vultur, and about half-way between the two latter, we meet with +the most abundant carbonic acid spring of Italy. The gas escapes with +a hissing noise from the pond of Ansanto, and the ground around the +spring is covered with the remains of insects, killed in myriads on +coming within the influence of the poisonous air. Near it the Romans +erected a temple in honour of Juno the Mephitic. + +The disasters resulting from volcanic eruptions are great, no doubt, +but they {293} are exceeded by those caused by earthquakes. Some of +these are unquestionably caused by a subterranean displacement of lava, +and thus, when Vesuvius begins to stir, Torre del Greco and other +towns at its foot incur the risk of being buried beneath ashes or +destroyed by earthquakes. But the Basilicata and Calabria—that is to +say, the two provinces lying between the volcanic foci of Vesuvius and +Etna—have many times been shaken by earthquakes whose origin cannot be +traced to volcanic agencies. Out of a thousand earthquakes recorded in +Southern Italy during the last three centuries, nearly all occurred in +the provinces named, and they were occasionally attended by the most +disastrous results. The earthquake of 1857 cost the lives of 10,000 +persons at Potenza and its vicinity, but the most disastrous of these +events happened in 1785 in Southern Calabria. The first shock, which +proceeded from a focus beneath the town of Oppido, in the Aspromonte +Mountains, only lasted a hundred seconds, but within that short space +of time 109 towns and villages were overthrown, and 32,000 of their +inhabitants buried beneath their ruins. Crevasses opened in the ground; +rivers were swallowed up, to reappear again lower down as lakes; +liquid clay flowed down the hill-slopes like lava, converting fertile +fields into unproductive wastes. The commotion of the sea added to +these horrors. Many of the inhabitants of Scilla, afraid to remain on +the quaking land, fled to their boats, when an enormous mass of rock +detached itself from a neighbouring mountain, and, tumbling into the +sea, produced a wave which upset the boats and cast their fragments +upon the shore. Want of food brought on famine, and typhus, as usual, +came in its train. + +We are not yet able to predict earthquakes, and can only provide +against them by a suitable construction of our dwellings. There exists, +however, another cause of misery and depopulation which the Neapolitans +might successfully combat, as was done by their ancestors. In the time +of the Greeks the swamps along the coast were certainly less extensive +than they are now. War, and a return towards barbarism, have caused the +rivers to be neglected, and to produce a deterioration in the climate. +Baia, a place once famous on account of its healthiness, has become the +home of malaria. Sybaris, the town of luxury and pleasure, has been +supplanted by a fever-plain “which eats more men than it is able to +nourish.” These paludial miasmata, poverty, and ignorance decimate the +population of La Puglia, Basilicata, and Calabria. Even certain Asiatic +diseases, such as elephantiasis and leprosy, ravage the country, which, +from its rare fertility and fine climate, ought to be in the enjoyment +of the greatest prosperity. + +Continental Sicily is indeed a favoured region, and its eastern slopes +more especially might be converted into one huge garden, for the +rainfall there is abundant. Naples enjoys a semi-tropical climate, and +its winter temperature is hardly inferior to the annual mean of London. +Snow very rarely falls, and only remains on the tops of the hills +for a few weeks.[101] The vegetation along the coast is of tropical +luxuriance. Oranges and lemons bear excellent fruit; date-palms uplift +their fan-shaped leaves, and sometimes bear fruit; the American agave +{294} stretches forth its candelabra-like branches; sugar-cane, +cotton, and other industrial plants, which elsewhere in Europe are +scarcely ever met with outside hothouses, grow in the fields. In the +forests of Calabria the olive-tree affords as much shade as does the +beech with us. Even the bare rocks on the coast yield excellent grapes +and garden fruits. Naples, Sicily, Andalusia, and certain districts of +Greece and Asia Minor realise our beau idéal of the sub-tropical zone, +and only the heaths on the Adriatic slope and the upper valleys of the +Apennines remind us that we are still in Central Europe. + +This delightful country is inhabited by a people having the most +diverse origin. It is now 2,300 years since the Samnites occupied the +whole of it from sea to sea. They were more numerous than the Romans, +and might have conquered the whole of Italy had there been more +cohesion amongst them, and some of that talent for organization which +constituted the strength of their adversaries. But they were split into +five tribes, each speaking a different dialect; and whilst the Samnites +of the hills quarrelled with their kinsmen in the plains, the latter +were at enmity with the Hellenized Samnites who lived near the Greek +towns on the coast. + +The whole of the coast of Southern Italy, from Cumæ—founded more than +a thousand years before our era—to Sipuntum, of which some ruins +remain near the modern Manfredonia, was dotted with Greek colonies. +In these districts of Southern Italy the bulk of the population is +of very different origin from that of other parts of the peninsula. +To the north of Monte Gargano, Celtic, Etruscan, and Latin elements +preponderate, whilst Hellenes, Pelasgians, and kindred races dominate +in the south. Not only did civilised Greeks found their colonies there, +but the aboriginal population, the Iapygians, spoke a dialect akin to +the Hellenic, and Mommsen may be right when he conjectures that these +Iapygians were of the same origin as the modern Albanians. + +At a subsequent date these southern Italians had to bow down before +the Romans, who founded military colonies amongst them, but never +succeeded in completely Latinising them. When the Roman Empire fell to +pieces the Cæsars of Byzantium still maintained themselves for a long +time in Southern Italy, and the Greek language again preponderated, +but gradually Romance dialects gained the upper hand. The inhabitants +returned to a state of barbarism, but they retained to a great extent +their language and customs, and even now there are districts in the +south which are Italian in appearance rather than in reality, and in +eight villages of the Terra d’Otranto the Hellenic dialect of the +Peloponnesus is still spoken. Towns like Naples, Nicastro, Taranto, +Gallipoli, Monopoli, and others, whilst preserving their sonorous Greek +names, have also retained many features which recall the times of Magna +Græcia. + +Reggio—that is, the “city of the strait”—appears to have retained the +use of Greek much longer than any other town, and its patricians, +who boasted of being pure Ionians, still spoke the language of their +ancestors towards the close of the thirteenth century. In several +remote towns of the interior Greek was formerly in common use. The old +popular songs of Bova, a small town near the southern {295} extremity +of Italy, are in an Ionian dialect more like the language of Xenophon +than is modern Greek. Down to a very recent date the peasants near +Roccaforte del Greco, Condofuri, and Cardeto spoke Greek, and when +they appeared before a magistrate they required an interpreter. At the +present day all young people speak Italian; the old language has been +forgotten, but the Greek type remains. The men and women of Cardeto +are famous for their beauty, more especially the latter. “They are +Minervas,” we are told by a local historian. Their principal livelihood +consists in acting as wet nurses to the children of the citizens of +Reggio. The women of Bagnara, between Scilla and Palmi, are likewise of +wondrous beauty, but their features are stern, betraying Arab blood, +and they are destitute of the noble placidity of the Greek. + +It is said that the women of the Hellenic villages of Calabria are +still in the habit of executing a sacred dance, which lasts for hours, +and resembles the representations we meet with on ancient vases, +only they dance before the church instead of the temple, and their +ceremonies are blessed by Christian priests. Funerals are accompanied +by weeping women, who collect their tears in lachrymatories. Elsewhere, +as in the environs of Tarento, the children consecrate the hair of +their head to the manes of their ancestors. Old morals, no less than +old customs, have been preserved. Woman is still looked upon as an +inferior being, and even at Reggio the wives of citizens or noblemen +who respect ancient tradition confine themselves to the gynæceum. They +do not visit the theatre, go out but rarely, and when they walk abroad +are attended by barefooted servants, and not by their husbands. + +In addition to Samnites, Iapygians, and Greeks, who form the bulk +of the population of Southern Italy, we meet with Etruscans in the +Campania; Saracens in the peninsula of Gargano, in the Campania, +the marina of Reggio, Bagnara, and other coast towns; Lombards in +Benevento, who retained their language down to the eleventh century; +Normans, from whom the shepherds on the hills are supposed to be +descended; and Spaniards in several coast towns, especially at +Barletta, in Apulia. The Albanians have probably furnished the largest +contingent of all the strangers now domiciled in Southern Italy. They +are numerous on the whole of the eastern slope of the peninsula, from +the promontory of Gargano to the southernmost point of Calabria. +One of their clans came to Italy in 1440, but the bulk of them only +arrived during the second half of the fifteenth century, after the +heroic resistance made by Scanderbeg had been overcome by the Turks. +The conquered Skipetars were then compelled to expatriate themselves +in order to escape the yoke of the Turks, and they were received with +open arms by the Kings of Naples, who granted them several deserted +villages, which are now amongst the most flourishing of Southern Italy. +The descendants of these Skipetars, who are principally domiciled in +the Basilicata and Calabria, rank among the most useful citizens of +the country. They take the lead in the intellectual regeneration of +the old kingdom of Naples, and were the first to join the liberating +army of Garibaldi. Many have become Italianised, but there are still +over 80,000 who have neither forgotten their origin nor their language. +{296} + +The Neapolitans are undoubtedly one of the finest races of Europe. +The Calabrians, the mountaineers of Molise, and the peasants of the +Basilicata are so well proportioned, erect, supple of limb, and agile, +that their low stature, as compared with the races of the North, can +hardly be a subject of reproach; and the nobility and expression of +the faces of Neapolitan women fully compensate for the irregularity we +frequently meet with. The faces of the children, with their large black +eyes and well-formed lips, beam with intelligence, but the wretched +existence to which too many of them are condemned soon degrades their +physiognomy. Supremely ignorant, the Neapolitan is, nevertheless, +most admirably gifted by nature. The country which has produced so +many great men since the days of Pythagoras is in nowise inferior to +any other; its philosophers, historians, and lawyers have exercised a +powerful influence upon the march of human thought; and the number of +great musicians which it has produced is proportionately large. + +Still, in many respects, the inhabitants of Southern Italy hold the +lowest rank amongst the nations of Europe. Ever since the annihilation +of the Greek republican cities the country has been subjected to +foreign masters, who have either devastated it or systematically +oppressed its inhabitants. With the exception of Amalfi, no other town +was granted the privilege of governing itself for any length of time. +The very position of the country exposed it to dangers. Placed in the +centre of the Mediterranean, it was on the high-road of every pirate +or invader, whether Saracen or Norman, Spaniard or Frenchman, and the +absence of any natural cohesion between its various districts prevented +its population from organizing a united resistance against the attacks +of foreign invaders. Southern Italy has not the river basins of +Lombardy, Tuscany, Umbria, or Rome; there exists no centre of gravity, +so to say, and the country is split up into separate sections having +nothing in common. + +The government under which the Neapolitans lived until quite recently +was most humiliating. “I do not require my people to think,” said King +Ferdinand II. of Naples. Ideas which did not commend themselves to +the authorities were punished as crimes, and only mendicity and moral +depravity were allowed to flourish. Science was compelled to live in +retirement; history to seek a refuge in the catacombs of archæology; +and literature was corrupt or frivolous. Of the Neapolitans who did +not expatriate themselves only a very small number became eminent. +Schools were hardly known outside the large towns, and where they +did exist they were placed under the supervision of the police. Men +able to read and write were looked at askance, and, to escape being +accused of belonging to some secret society, they were compelled to +turn hypocrites. Old superstitions exist in full force, and the heathen +hallucinations of Greeks and Iapygians still survive. The idolatrous +Neapolitan casts himself down before the statue of St. Januarius, but +heaps imprecations upon the head of his saint if his miraculous blood +does not quickly liquefy. Similar superstitions exist in nearly every +town of Naples. Every one of them has its patron saint or deity, who, +if he should fail to protect his people, is treated as a common enemy. +As recently as 1858 the villagers of Calabria, irritated by a drought, +put their venerated saints into prison; and Barletta, {297} about the +same period, had the melancholy honour of being the last town in Europe +in which Protestants were burned alive. Such is the fanaticism still +met with in the second half of the nineteenth century ! [102] + +[Illustration: Fig. 108.—EDUCATIONAL MAP OF ITALY.] + +{298} + +One of the great superstitions of the Neapolitans refers to the +“evil eye.” The unfortunate being who happens to have a nose like a +battle-axe and large round eyes is looked upon as _jettatore_, and is +avoided as a fatal being. If by any evil chance his glance happens +to fall upon any unfortunate person, it is considered necessary to +counteract it by the influence of an amulet resembling the _fascinum_ +of the ancients, or by some other means no less potent. Coral amulets +are looked upon as most efficient, and many who pretend not to believe +in their virtues are the first to make use of them. The peasants of +Calabria wear an image of their patron saint upon the chest, and shield +their cattle and houses by means of the images of saints or household +gods. At Reggio a cactus may be seen near the door or on the balcony of +every house, which has been placed there to keep off evil influences, +and is universally known as _l’albero del mal’ occhio_ (the tree of the +evil eye). + +Next to superstition, the great scourge of Southern Italy is +brigandage. The very name of Calabria conjures up in our imagination +picturesque brigands armed with carbines. Unfortunately this Calabrian +brigand is no myth, invented to serve the purposes of the stage. He +really exists, and neither the severity of the laws put in motion +against him nor political changes have brought about his extermination. +On many occasions, after a successful hunt for brigands had been +carried on, the authorities felicitated themselves upon having rid the +country of this scourge, but it regularly revived. + +In Sardinia and Corsica the peasant takes up arms from a desire for +vengeance, but in Calabria from poverty. Feudalism, though abolished in +name, still flourishes in that country. Nearly the whole of the soil +belongs to a few great landowners, and the peasant, or _cafore_, is +condemned to a life of ill-remunerated toil. In years of plenty, when +the rye, chestnuts, and wine suffice for the wants of his family, he +works without grumbling, but in years of dearth brigandage flourishes. +The brigand, or _gualano_, looks upon the feudal lord as the common +enemy, steals his cattle, sets fire to his house, and even takes him +prisoner, releasing him only on payment of a heavy ransom. Some of +these bandits become veritable wild beasts, thirsting after blood; +but, as long as they confine themselves to avenging wrongs, they +may count upon the complicity of all other peasants. The herdsmen +of the mountains supply them with milk and food, furnish them with +information, and mislead the carabiniers sent in pursuit of them. +All the poor are leagued in their favour, and refuse to bear witness +against them. Moreover, most of these Neapolitan bandits, conscientious +in their own way, are extremely pious. They swear by the Virgin or +some patron saint, to whom they promise a portion of their booty, and +religiously place the share promised upon the altar. Not content with +wearing amulets all over the body to turn aside bullets, they are +said sometimes to place a consecrated wafer in an incision they make +in their hand, in the belief that this will render deadly their own +bullets. + +The fearful poverty of the South Italian peasantry has led to another +practice, even worse than brigandage. Foreign speculators, Christians +as well as Jews, travel the country, and particularly the Basilicata, +in order to purchase children, whom {299} their poverty-stricken +parents are ready to part with for a trifle. The more intelligent and +prettier the child, the greater the likelihood of its passing into the +hands of these dealers in human flesh. The latter are threatened with +the penalties of the law, but custom and ignoble accomplices enable +them to evade them, and to carry their living merchandise to France, +England, Germany, and even America, where the children are converted +into acrobats, street musicians, or simple mendicants. The chances of +this shameful commerce have been carefully calculated, and the losses +arising from deaths and the cost of travelling are more than covered by +the earnings of the children. Viggiano, a small town of the Basilicata, +is more especially haunted by these traffickers, for its inhabitants +possess a natural gift for music. + +Voluntary emigration is on the increase, and if it were not for the +obstructions placed in the way of young men liable to the conscription, +certain districts would become rapidly depopulated in favour of South +America. Only the poorest peasants remain behind. This emigration +influences in a large measure the customs of the country, and, +conjointly with railways and factories, will no doubt bring about +an assimilation of Southern Italy to the rest of the peninsula. +Brigandage and the traffic in children will doubtless disappear, but +the proletarianism of manufacturing towns is likely to be substituted +for them. + +For the present Naples is almost exclusively an agricultural country. +The tavolieri of Puglia, and the hills which command them, remain +for the most part a pastoral country, but the greater portion of the +productive area of Naples is under cultivation. As in the time of the +Romans, cereals, with oil and wine, form the principal produce; but, in +addition to these, tobacco, cotton, madder, and several other plants +used in manufactures, are grown. With some care these products might +attain a rare degree of excellence. Even now the oil of the Puglia +competes successfully with that of Nice, and the wines grown on the +scoriæ of Mount Vesuvius enjoy their ancient celebrity, the Falernian +of Horace, grown in the Phlegræan Fields, disputing the pre-eminence +with the Lachrymæ Christi of Vesuvius and the white wine of Capri. + +The agricultural products of Naples are almost exclusively derived from +the coast region, and commerce is principally carried on in coasting +vessels. The interior is sterile to a great extent, and there are no +metalliferous veins to attract population. + +Southern Italy has no natural centre, and, as its life has at all times +been eccentric and maritime, it is but natural that all the large +towns should have sprung up on the coast. Two thousand years ago, when +Greece was a civilised country and Western Europe sunk in barbarism, +the most important towns lay on the Ionian Sea facing the east. But, +when Rome became the mistress of the world, Magna Græcia was forced to +face about, and Naples became the successor of Sybaris and Tarentum. +This position of vantage it has retained even to the present day, +when Western Europe has become the focus of civilisation. The wave of +history has passed over Tarentum and Sybaris, and whilst the fine port +of the former is now deserted, the latter, at one time the largest city +of all Italy, has entirely disappeared. {300} + +Naples, the “new town” of the Cumæans, has for centuries been the most +populous town of Italy, and even now the number of its inhabitants is +double that of Rome. In the days of Strabo Naples was a large town. +Greeks who had made money by teaching or otherwise, and who desired to +end their days in peaceful repose, used to retire to that beautiful +town, where Greek manners predominated, and the climate resembled +that of their native country. Many Romans followed their example, and +Naples, together with the numerous smaller towns dotting the shores +of its magnificent bay, thus became a place of repose and pleasure. +At the present day it attracts men of leisure from every part of the +world, who revel in its beauties and enjoy the noisy gaiety of its +inhabitants—“masters in the art of shouting,” as Alfieri called them. +The prospect from the heights of Capodimonte and the other hills +surrounding the immense city is full of beauty: promontories jut out +into the blue waters, islands of the most varied colours are scattered +over the bay, shining towns stretch along the foot of verdant hills, +and vessels ride upon the waves. Looking inland, we behold the grey +summit of Vesuvius, which, lurid at night, and always threatening, +imparts a modicum of danger to the voluptuous picture. + +The Neapolitans are indeed a happy people, if such a term may be +applied to any fraction of mankind. They know how to enjoy the gifts +of nature, and are content, if need be, with very little. Naturally +intelligent, they are equal to any enterprise; but, as they hate work, +they soon give up what they have begun, and make short of their want +of success. Travellers were formerly fond of describing that curious +type, the _lazzarone_, the idle man of pleasure, who, enveloped in a +rag, slept on the beach or in the porch of a church, and disdained +to work after he had earned the pittance sufficing for his simple +wants. There still remain a few representatives of this type, but the +material exigencies of our time have absorbed the majority of these +idle tatterdemalions, and converted them into labourers. Others have +succumbed to disease, for they knew nothing of sanitary laws, and +dwelt in damp cellars, or _bassi_, beneath the palaces of the wealthy. +Naples contributes her fair share towards the industrial products of +the peninsula. The principal articles manufactured are macaroni and +other farinaceous pastes, cloth, silks known as _gros de Naples_, +glass, china, musical instruments, artificial flowers, ornaments, +and everything entering into the daily consumption of a large city. +Its workers in coral are famous for their skill; and Sorrento, near +Naples, supplies the much-prized workboxes, jewel cases, and other +articles carved in palm-wood. The ship-yards of Castellamare di Stabia +are more busy than any others in Italy, those of Genoa and Spezia +alone excepted. The sailors of the bay are equal to the Ligurians +in seamanship, and surpass them as fishermen. The inhabitants of +Torre del Greco, who engage in coral-fishing, are well acquainted +with the submarine topography of the coasts of Sardinia, Sicily, and +Barbary, and the least movement of the air or water reveals phenomena +to them which remain hidden to all other eyes. They own about 400 +fishing-boats, which depart in a body, and their return after a +successful season presents a spectacle which even Italy but rarely +affords.[103] + +[Illustration: NAPLES.] + +{301} + +Naples, with its magnificent bay, and the fertile tracts of the +Campania and the Terra di Lavoro near it, could hardly fail to become +a great commercial city, and if it holds an inferior rank in that +respect to Genoa, this is owing to its not being placed upon a great +high-road of international commerce. The country depending upon it is +of comparatively small extent; only a single line of rails crosses +the Apennines; and travellers who follow the mountain road to Taranto +are not, even now, quite safe from brigands. The foreign commerce of +the city is carried on principally with England and France, and the +coasting trade is comparatively of great importance.[104] + +[Illustration: Fig. 109.—POMPEII. + +From the Neapolitan Staff Map. Scale 1 : 35,000.] + +The university is one of the glories of Naples. Founded in the first +half of {302} the thirteenth century, it is one of the oldest of +Italy, but has had its periods of disgraceful decay. Up to a recent +period, when archæology and numismatics were the only sciences not +suspected of revolutionary tendencies, it was a place of intellectual +corruption, but its regeneration has been brought about with marvellous +rapidity. The young Neapolitans now study science with a zest sharpened +by abstinence; and, if the rather gushing eloquence of the South could +be trusted, Naples has become the greatest seat of learning in the +world. Thus much is certain, that the 2,000 students of the university +will give a great impulse to the “march of ideas.” + +Naples possesses an admirable museum of antiquities, open to all the +world, and, more precious still, the ruins of Pozzuoli, Baiæ, and Cumæ, +and catacombs no less interesting than are those of Rome; and, above +everything else, the Roman city of Pompeii, which has been excavated +from the ashes of Mount Vesuvius, beneath which it lay buried for +seventeen centuries. It is not merely a City of the Dead, with its +streets and tombs, temples, markets, and amphitheatres, which these +excavations have restored to us, but they have likewise given us an +insight into the life of a provincial Roman city. When we gaze upon +inscriptions on walls and waxed tablets, at work interrupted, at +mummified corpses in the attitude of flight, we almost feel as if we +had been present at the catastrophe which overwhelmed the town. No +other buried city ever presented us with so striking a contrast between +the tumult of life and the stillness of death. In spite of a hundred +years of excavation, only one-half of the city has yet been revealed +to us. Herculaneum is buried beneath a layer of lava sixty feet in +thickness, upon which the houses of Resina, Portici, and other suburbs +of Naples have been built, and but very few of its mysteries have +been revealed to us. Of Stabiæ, which lies hidden beneath the town of +Castellamare, close to the beach, we know hardly anything. + +[Illustration: CAPRI, SEEN FROM MASSA LUBRENSE.] + +Numerous populous towns cluster around Naples, rivalling it in beauty. +To the south, on the shores of the bay, are Portici, Resina, Torre del +Greco, Torre dell’ Annunziata, Castellamare, and sweet Sorrento, with +its delicious climate, its delightful villas and olive groves. Off Cape +Campanella, facing the volcanic islands of Ischia and Procida, at the +other extremity of the bay, rise the bold cliffs of Capri, full of the +memories of hideous Tiberius, the _Timberio_ of the natives. Another +bay opens to the south of that barren mass of limestone, its entrance +guarded by the islets of the Sirens, who sought in vain to cast their +spell over sage Ulysses. This bay is hardly inferior in beauty to that +of Naples; its shores are equally fertile, but neither of the three +cities, Pæstum, Amalfi, and Salerno, which successively gave a name +to it, has retained its importance for any length of time. Amalfi, +the powerful commercial republic of the Middle Ages, whose code was +accepted by all maritime nations, is almost deserted now, and only +shelters a few fishing-smacks within its rocky creek. In a delightful +valley near it stands the old Moorish city of Ravello, almost as rich +as Palermo in architectural monuments. Salerno is much more favourably +situated than Amalfi, for the road of the Campania debouches upon it. +The town is said to have been founded by a son of Noah, and when the +Normans occupied the country in the eleventh century {303} they made +it their capital. But its ancient splendours have gone. Its university, +at one time the representative of Arab science, and the most famous +in Europe for its medical faculty, has made no sign for ages, and +Salerno has now no claim whatever to the title of “Hippocratic town.” +It aspires, however, to rise into importance through commerce and +industry, and a breakwater and piers might convert it into a formidable +rival of Naples. The inhabitants are fond of repeating a local proverb― + + “When Salerno a port doth obtain + That of Naples will be inane.” + +Pæstum, or Posidonia, the ancient mistress of the bay, stood to the +south-east of Salerno. It was founded by the Sybarites on the ruins +of a more ancient town of the Tyrrhenians. The Roman poets sang this +“city of roses” on account of its cool springs, shady walks, and mild +climate. It was destroyed by the Saracens in 915, and its ruins, though +amongst the most interesting of all Italy, dating as they do from a +period anterior to that of Rome, were known only to shepherds and +brigands up to the middle of last century. Its three temples, the most +important of which was dedicated to Neptune, or Poseidon, are amongst +the most imposing of continental Italy, their effect being heightened +by the solitude which surrounds them and the waves which wash their +foundations. The traveller, however, cannot afford to remain for any +length of time within their vicinity, for the site of the ruins is +surrounded by marshes, the exhalations from which sadly interfere with +the excavations going on. + +Numerous towns and villages are dotted over the champaign country +separating Mount Vesuvius from the foot-hills of the Apennines. +Starting from Vietri, a suburb of Salerno on the banks of a narrow +ravine, we ascend to Cara, a favourite summer retreat, abounding in +shade-trees. Near it is a monastery famous amongst antiquaries on +account of its ancient parchments and diplomas. On descending to the +plain of the Sarno we pass Nocera, a country residence of the ancient +Romans; Pagani, still situated within the region of woods; Angri, which +manufactures yarns from cotton grown in its environs; and Scafati, more +industrious still. Near it may be seen the ruins of Pompeii, the town +of Torre dell’ Annunziata, and, on the southern slope of Vesuvius, the +houses of Bosco Tre Case and Bosco Reale. There are savants who believe +they can trace in the veins of the inhabitants of Nocera and the +neighbourhood the Arab and Berber blood of the 20,000 Saracens who were +settled here by the Emperor Frederick II. + +The valley of the Sarno, above Nocera, is densely peopled as far as the +foot of the Apennines, and another chain of villages extends northwards +to the town of Avellino, the fields of which are enclosed by hedges +of filbert-trees (_avellana_ in Italian), and which is important on +account of its intermediary position between the mountains and the +plain. The population, however, is densest in that portion of the +Campania known as the “Happy” (Felice), which extends between Vesuvius +and Monte Vergine. Sarno, named after the river, though far away from +it, abounds in cereals, vines, fruit, and vegetables, and manufactures +cotton stuffs and raw silk. Palma stands in the midst of fertile +fields; Ottajano, the {304} town of Octavius, on the lower slope of +the Somma of Vesuvius, is famous for its wines; Nola, where Augustus +died, and which gave birth to Giordano Bruno, has fertile fields, but +is better known through the fine Greek vases found in its ruins, and +on account of the remains of an amphitheatre built of marble, and of +greater size than that of Capua. + +Famous Capua, the ancient metropolis of the Campania, at one time the +rival of Rome, with half a million inhabitants dwelling within its +walls, has been completely stripped of its former splendours. Its name +is applied now to a sullen fortress on the Volturno, the _Casilinum_ +of the Romans; and Santa Maria, which is the representative of the +veritable Capua, offers no “delights” other than those of a large +village. In its environs, however, may still be seen the ruins of a +fine amphitheatre, a triumphal arch, and other remains of a vast city. +Caserta, the “town of pleasure” of the modern Campania, lies farther to +the south. It boasts of a large palace, shady parks, and vast gardens +ornamented with statues and fountains, and was the Versailles of the +Neapolitan Bourbons. An aqueduct supplies it with water from a distance +of twenty-five miles, and crosses the valley near Maddaloni by means +of a magnificent bridge, built about the middle of last century by +Vanvitelli, and one of the masterpieces of modern architecture. + +The great Roman highway bifurcates to the north of Capua and the +Volturno. One branch turns towards the coast; the other, along which a +railway has been built, skirts the volcano of Rocca Monfina, follows +the valley of the Garigliano and of its tributary the Sacco as far +as the eastern foot of the volcano of Latium, and then descends into +the Campagna of Rome. Historically the coast road is the more famous +of the two. It first passes close to Sessa, the ancient city of the +Aurunci, whose acropolis stood in the crater of the Rocca Monfina. It +then turns towards the coast, and having crossed the Garigliano near +its mouth, where it is bounded by insalubrious marshes, it penetrates +the defile of Mola di Gaeta, officially called Formia, in memory of +ancient Formiæ, where Cicero lived and died. Travellers coming from +Rome first look down from this spot upon the beauties of the Campania, +and see stretched out before them the Bay of Gaeta, with the volcanic +islands of Ponza, Ventotene, and Ischia in the distance. Gaeta, a +fortress which guards this gateway to the Neapolitan paradise, is built +on the summit of Monte Orlando, occupying a small peninsula attached to +the mainland by an isthmus only 300 yards in width. The port of Gaeta +is well sheltered against westerly and northerly winds, and is much +frequented by coasting vessels and fishing-smacks; but Gaeta itself is +better known as a fortress. It was here the kingdom of the Two Sicilies +was put an end to by the surrender of Francis II. in 1861. + +[Illustration: AMALFI.] + +Towns of some importance are likewise met with on following the eastern +road from Naples to Rome. The most considerable amongst them is San +Germano, the name of which has recently been changed into Casino, +in honour of the famous monastery of that name occupying a terrace +to the west of the town, and affording a glorious prospect of hills +and valleys. This monastery was founded in the sixth century by St. +Benedict, or Bennet, and its rules have been accepted throughout {305} +the Eastern Church. No body of men has ever exercised a greater +influence upon the history of Catholicism than these Benedictine +monks of Monte Casino. At the height of its power the order held vast +estates throughout Italy, and many popes and thousands of Church +dignitaries have been furnished from its ranks. The library of Monte +Casino is one of the most valuable in Europe, and the services formerly +rendered to science by the Benedictines have saved this monastery from +disestablishment, a favour likewise extended to the monastery of La +Cava and the Certosa of Pavia. + +[Illustration: Fig. 110.—THE MARSHES OF SALPI. + +Scale 1 : 225,000.] + +There are but few towns of importance in the mountain region of Naples. +Arpino, the ancient Arpinum, the birthplace of Cicero and Marius, with +cyclopean walls built by Saturn, is the most populous place in the +upper valley of the Liri, to the south of the mountains of Mantese. +Benevento occupies a central position on the Calore, the principal +tributary of the Volturno, and several roads diverge from it. The +ancient name of this place was _Maleventum_, but in spite of its change +of name the town has frequently suffered from sieges and earthquakes, +and of all the great edifices of its past there now remains only a fine +triumphal arch erected in honour of Trajan. The city walls, nearly four +miles in circumference, have for the most part been constructed from +the fragments of ancient monuments. + +Ariano, to the east of Benevento, and also in the basin of the +Volturno, is built upon three hills commanding a magnificent prospect, +extending from the {306} often snow-clad Matese Mountains to the cone +of the Vultur. It lies on the railroad connecting Naples with Foggia +and the Adriatic, and carries on a considerable trade. Campobasso, the +capital of Molise, is likewise an important commercial intermediary, +though still without a railway. + +The commercial towns on the Adriatic slope of the Apennines are of +greater importance than those to the east. Foggia, on the Tavoglieri +di Puglia, upon which converge four railways and several high-roads, +is a great mart for provisions, and in importance and wealth, though +not in population, is the second city of Naples. Several smaller +towns surround it like satellites, such as San Severo, Cerignola, +and Lucera, which became wealthy in the thirteenth century, when the +Saracens, exiled from Sicily by Frederick II., settled here. Foggia, +however, and its sister cities, in spite of the proximity of the Bay +of Manfredonia, have no direct outlet to the sea, for the coast for a +distance of thirty miles, from Manfredonia to the mouth of the Otranto, +is fringed by insalubrious lagoons and marshes. The reclamation of +these is absolutely necessary to enable Southern Italy to develop its +great natural resources. The largest of these lagoons or marshes, that +of Salpi, has been reduced to the extent of one-half by the alluvium +conveyed into it by the rivers Carapella and Ofanto, but as long as the +new land remains uncultivated deadly miasmata will not cease. At the +eastern extremity of this marsh stood the ancient city of Salapia. + +At the extremity of the peninsula of Gargano, to the north of these +marshes, are the harbours of Manfredonia and Vieste, very favourably +situated for sailing vessels compelled by stress of weather to put into +port. The first harbour to the south of the marshes is Barletta, near +which is the “Field of Blood,” recalling the battle of Cannæ. Barletta +exports cereals, wines, oil, and fruit, partly grown on the old feudal +estates near the inland towns of Andria, Corata, and Ruyo. The latter, +the ancient _Rubi_, has yielded a rich harvest of antiquities of every +kind. The other coast towns to the south-east of Barletta are—Trani, +which carried on a considerable Levant trade towards the close of +the Middle Ages; Bisceglia; Molfetta; Bari, the most populous town +on the Adriatic slope of Naples; and Monopoli, all of which are much +frequented by coasting vessels. Tasano, near Monopoli, occupies the +site of the ancient port of Gnatia, and, like Rubi, has well repaid the +search for archæological remains. + +Brindisi, at the northern extremity of the peninsula of Otranto, in +the time of the Romans and during the Crusades, was one of the great +stations on the route from Western Europe to the East, and is likely +again to occupy that position. It lies at the very entrance to the +Adriatic. Its roadstead is excellent, and its harbour one of the best +on the Mediterranean. The entrance is narrow, and was formerly choked +up with the remains of wrecks and mud, but is now practicable for +steamers of the largest size. The two arms of the harbour bear some +resemblance to the antlers of a stag, and to this circumstance the +town is indebted for its name, which is of Messapian origin, and means +“antler-shaped.” Brindisi has recently become the European terminus +of the overland route to India, and many new buildings have risen +in honour of this event, which it {307} was expected would convert +the town into an emporium of Eastern trade. These expectations have +not been realised. Several thousand hurried travellers pass that way +every year, but Marseilles, Genoa, and Trieste have lost none of their +importance as commercial ports in consequence. Moreover, when the +Turkish railways are completed, the position now held by Brindisi will +most likely be transferred to Saloniki or Constantinople.[105] + +[Illustration: Fig. 111.—THE HARBOUR OF BRINDISI IN 1871. + +Scale 1 : 86,000.] + +Taranto, on the gulf of the same name, is making an effort, like its +neighbour Brindisi, to revive its ancient commercial activity. Its +harbour, the _Piccolo Mare_, or “little sea,” is deep and perfectly +sheltered, and its roadstead, or _Mare Grande_, is fairly protected by +two outlying islands against the surge. As at Spezia, springs of fresh +water, known as Citro and Citrello, rise from the bottom of the harbour +as well as in the roadstead. The geographical position of Taranto +enables it successfully to compete with Bari and the other ports of the +Adriatic for the commerce of inland towns like Matera, Gravina, and +Altamura, and it appears to be destined to become the great emporium +for the Ionian trade. No other town of Italy offers equal facilities +for the construction of a port, but the two channels, one natural and +the other artificial, which join the two “seas” have become choked, +and only small craft are now able to reach the harbour. Modern Taranto +is a small town, with narrow streets, built to the east of the Greek +city of Tarentum, on the {308} limestone rock bounded by the two +channels. Its commerce has been slowly increasing since the opening of +the railway, its industry being limited to fishing, oyster-dredging, +and the manufacture of bay-salt; and the Tarantese enjoy the reputation +of being the most indolent people in Italy. The heaps of shells on +the beach no longer supply the purple for which the town was formerly +famous; but the inhabitants still make use of the byssus of a bivalve +in the manufacture of very strong gloves. + +The only towns of any importance in the peninsula stretching +southwards from Brindisi and Taranto are Lecco and Gallipoli, the +former surrounded by cotton plantations, the latter—the Kallipolis, +or “beautiful city,” of the Greeks—picturesquely perched on an islet +attached by a bridge to the mainland. The surrounding country, owing to +the want of moisture, is comparatively barren. + +[Illustration: Fig. 112.—THE HARBOUR OF TARANTO. + +Scale 1 : 208,000.] + +The western peninsula of Naples is far better irrigated than that of +Otranto, but this advantage is counterbalanced to a large extent by the +mountainous nature of the country, and by its frequent earthquakes. +Potenza, a town at the very neck of this peninsula, half-way between +the Gulf of Taranto and the Bay of Salerno, most happily situated as a +place of commerce, has repeatedly been destroyed by earthquakes, and +its inhabitants have only ventured to rebuild it in a temporary manner. + +The famous old cities of Calabria, such as Metapontum and Heraclea, +have ceased to exist. Sybaris the powerful, with walls six miles in +circumference, and suburbs extending for eight miles along the Crati, +is now covered with alluvium and shrubs—“its very ruins have perished.” +The city of the Locri, to the south of Gerace, which existed until the +tenth century, when it was destroyed by the Saracens, has at least +retained ruins of its walls, temples, and other buildings. {309} The +only one of these old cities still in existence is Cotrone, the ancient +Crotona, the “gateway to the granary of Calabria.” In travelling along +the coasts of Greater Greece we feel astonished at the few ruins of +a past which exercised so powerful an influence upon the history of +mankind. + +The existing towns of Calabria cannot compare in importance with +those of a past age. Rossano, near the site of Sybaris, is the small +capital of a district, and is visited only by coasters. Cosenza, in the +beautiful valley of the Crati, at the foot of the wooded Sila, keeps +up its communications with Naples and Messina through the harbour of +Paola. Catanzaro exports its oil, silk, and fruit either by way of the +Bay of Squillace, on the shores of which Hannibal once pitched his +camp, or through Pizzo, a small port at the southern extremity of the +Bay of Santa Eufemia. Reggio, nestling in groves of lemon and orange +trees at the foot of the Aspromonte, is the most important town of +Calabria. It stands on the narrow strait separating the mainland from +the island of Sicily, and could not fail to absorb some of the commerce +passing through that central gateway of the Mediterranean. Messina and +Reggio mutually complement each other, and the prosperity of the one +must result in that of the sister city.[106] + + +VII.—SICILY. + +The Trinacria of the ancients, the island with the “three +promontories,” is clearly a dependency of the Italian peninsula, +from which it is separated by a narrow arm of the sea. The Strait of +Messina, where narrowest, is not quite two miles in width. It can be +easily crossed in barges, and, with the resources at our command, a +bridge might easily be thrown across it, similar enterprises having +succeeded elsewhere. It can hardly be doubted that before the close +of this century either a tunnel or a bridge will join Sicily to the +mainland, and human industry will thus restore in some way the isthmus +which formerly joined the Cape of Faro to the Italian Aspromonte. We +know nothing about the period when this rupture took place, but to +judge from the ancient name of the strait—Heptastadion—it must have +been much narrower in former times.[107] {310} + +[Illustration: Fig. 113.—THE STRAIT OF MESSINA. + +Scale 1 : 156,000.] + +From an historical point of view Sicily may still be looked upon as a +portion of the mainland, for the strait can be crossed almost as easily +as a wide river. On the other hand, it enjoys all the advantages of a +maritime position. Situate in the very centre of the Mediterranean, +between the Tyrrhenian and the eastern basin, it commands all the +commercial high-roads which lead from the Atlantic to the East. Its +excellent harbours invite navigators to stay on its coasts; its soil is +{311} exceedingly fertile; the most varied natural resources insure +the existence of its inhabitants; and a genial climate promotes the +development of life. Hardly a district of Europe appears to be in a +more favourable position for supporting a dense population in comfort. +Sicily, indeed, is more densely populated and wealthier than the +neighbouring island of Sardinia or either of the Neapolitan provinces, +the Campania alone excepted, and rivals in importance the provinces of +Northern Italy.[108] + +Sicily, whenever it has been allowed to rejoice in the possession of +peace and freedom, has always recovered with wonderful rapidity; and it +would certainly now be one of the most prosperous countries if wars had +not so frequently devastated it, and the yoke of foreign oppressors had +not weighed so heavily upon it. + +The triangular island of Sicily would possess great regularity of +structure if it were not for the bold mass of Mount Etna, which +rises above the shores of the Ionian Sea at the entrance of the +Strait of Messina. From its base to the summit of its crater, that +huge protuberance forms a region apart, differing from the rest of +Sicily not only geologically, but also with respect to its products, +cultivation, and inhabitants. + +[Illustration: Fig. 114.—PROFILE OF MOUNT ETNA.] + +Ancient mariners mostly looked upon the Sicilian volcano as the highest +mountain in the world; nor did they err much as respects the world +known to them, for only at the two extremities of the Mediterranean, +in Spain and Syria, do we meet with mountains exceeding this one +in height; and Mount Etna is not only remarkable from its isolated +position, but likewise by the beauty of its contours, the lurid sheen +of its incandescent lavas, and the column of smoke rising from its +summit. From whatever side we approach Sicily, its snowy head is seen +rising high above all the surrounding mountains. Its position in the +very centre of the Mediterranean contributed in no small measure to +secure to it a pre-eminence amongst mountains. It was looked upon as +the “pillar of the heavens,” and at a later epoch the Arabs only spoke +of it as _el Jebel_, “_the_ mountain,” which has been corrupted by the +people dwelling near it into “Mongibello.” + +The mean slopes of Mount Etna, prolonged as they are by streams of lava +extending in every direction, are very gentle, and on looking at a +profile of this mountain it will hardly be believed that its aspect is +so majestic. It occupies, in fact, an area of no less than 460 square +miles, and its base has a development of about 80 miles. The whole of +this space is bounded by the sea, and by the valleys of the Alcantara +and Simeto. A saddle, only 2,820 feet in height, connects it in the +north-west with the mountain system of the remainder of Italy. Small +cones of eruption are met with beyond the mass of the volcano to the +north {312} of the Alcantara, and streams of lava having filled up the +ancient valley of the Simeto, that river was forced to excavate itself +another bed through rocks of basalt, and now descends to the sea in +rapids and cascades. + +An enormous hollow, covering an area of ten square miles, and more than +3,000 feet in depth, occupies a portion of the western slope of the +volcano. This is the Val di Bove, a vast amphitheatre of explosion, +the bottom of which is dotted over with subsidiary craters, and which +rises in gigantic steps, over which, when the mountain is in a state of +eruption, pour fiery cascades of lava. Lyell has shown that this Val +di Bove is the ancient crater of Mount Etna, but that, at some period +not known to us, the existing terminal vent opened a couple of miles +farther west. The steep sides of the Val di Bove enable us to gain a +considerable insight into the history of the volcano, for the various +layers of lava may be studied there at leisure. The cliffs upon which +stands the town of Aci Reale afford a similar opportunity for embracing +at one glance a long period of its history. These cliffs, over 300 +feet in height, consist of seven distinct layers of lava, successively +poured forth from the bowels of Mount Etna. Each layer consists nearly +throughout of a compact mass, affording no hold for the roots of +plants, but their surfaces have invariably been converted into tufa, or +even mould, owing to atmospheric agencies which operated for centuries +after each eruption. It has likewise been proved not only that these +cliffs increased in height in consequence of successive eruptions, but +that they were also repeatedly upheaved from below. Lines of erosion +resulting from the action of the waves can be distinctly traced at +various elevations above the present level of the Mediterranean. The +lavas, too, have undergone a change of structure since they were poured +forth, as is proved by beautiful caverns enclosed by prismatic columns +of basalt, and by the islet of the Cyclops, near Aci Trezza. + +During the last two thousand years Mount Etna has had more than a +hundred eruptions, some of them continuing for a number of years. +Hitherto it has not been possible to trace any regularity in these +eruptions. They appear to occur at irregular intervals, and the +quantity of lava poured forth from the principal or any subsidiary +cone varies exceedingly. The most considerable stream of lava of which +we have any record was that which overwhelmed the city of Catania in +1669. It first converted the fields of Nicolosi into a fiery lake, +then enveloped a portion of the hill of Monpilieri, which for a time +arrested its progress, and finally divided into three separate streams, +the principal of which descended upon Catania. It swept away a part of +that town, filled up its port, and formed a promontory in its stead. +The quantity of lava poured forth on that occasion has been estimated +at 3,532 millions of cubic feet; and nearly 40 square miles of fertile +land, supporting a population of 20,000 souls, were converted into a +stony waste. The double cone of Monti Rossi, with its beautiful crater +now grown over with golden-flowered broom, was formed by the ashes +ejected during that great eruption. More than 700 subsidiary cones, +similar to the Monti Rossi, are scattered over the exterior slopes of +Mount Etna, and bear witness to as many eruptions. The most ancient +amongst them have been nearly obliterated in the {313} course of ages, +or buried beneath streams of lava, but the others still retain their +conical shape, and rise to a height of many hundred feet. Several +amongst them are now covered with forests, and the craters of others +have been converted into gardens—delightful cup-shaped hollows, where +villas shine like gems set in verdure. + +[Illustration: Fig. 115.—THE LAVA STREAM OF CATANIA. + +Scale 1 : 200,000.] + +Most of these subsidiary cones lie at an elevation of between 3,300 +and 6,500 feet above the sea, and it is there the internal forces make +themselves most strongly felt. As a rule the subterranean activity +is less violent near the summit, and during most of the eruptions +the great terminal crater merely serves as a vent, through which the +aqueous vapours and gases make their escape. Fumaroles surrounding it +convert the soil into a kind of pap, and the substances which escape +from them streak the scoriæ with brilliant colours—scarlet, yellow, +and emerald green. The internal heat makes itself felt on many parts +of the exterior slopes. It converts loose rocks into a compact mass, +far less difficult to climb than are the loose cinders of Mount +Vesuvius. Travellers ascending the mountain need fear nothing from +volcanic bombs. Showers of stone are occasionally ejected from the +principal vent, but this is quite an exceptional occurrence. If it were +not so, the small structure above the precipices of the Val di Bove, +which dates from the {314} time of the Romans, and is known as the +“Philosopher’s Tower,” would long ago have been buried beneath débris. +A meteorological observatory might therefore be established with safety +on the summit of this mountain, and no better station could be found +for giving warning of approaching storms. + +[Illustration: Fig. 116.—SUBSIDIARY CONES OF MOUNT ETNA.] + +The summit of Mount Etna, 10,866 feet in height, does not penetrate +the zone of perennial snow, and the heat emitted from the subterranean +focus soon melts the incipient glaciers which accumulate in hollows. +Nevertheless the upper half of the mountain is covered with a shroud of +white during a great part of the year. It might be imagined that the +snow and copious rains would give birth to numerous rivulets descending +from the slopes of the volcano; but the small stones and cinders which +cover the solid beds of lava promptly absorb all moisture, and springs +are met with only in a few favoured spots. They are abundant on the +lower slopes, or in the immediate vicinity of the sea. One of these +is the fountain of Acis, which issues from the chaos of rocks which +Polyphemus is said to have hurled at the ships of sage Ulysses. Another +gives birth to the river Amenano, which rises in the town of Catania, +and hastens in silvery cascades towards its port. When we look at these +clear springs in the midst of black sands and burnt rocks we are able +to comprehend the fancy of the ancient Greeks, who regarded them as +divine beings, in whose honour they struck medals and raised statues. + +Though running streams are scarcely met with on the slopes of Mount +Etna, its cinders retain a sufficient quantity of moisture to support +a luxuriant vegetation. The mountain is clad with verdure except where +the surface of the lava is too compact to be penetrated by the roots of +plants. Only the highest regions, which are covered with snow during +the greater part of the year, are barren. It is {315} a remarkable +fact that the flora of the Alps should not be met with on Mount Etna, +although the temperature suits it exactly. + +Formerly the volcano was surrounded by a belt of forests occupying the +zone between the cultivated lands and the region of snow and cinders. +Such is the case no longer. On the southern slope, which is that +usually ascended by tourists, there are no forests at all, and only +the trunk of some ancient oak is occasionally met with. On the other +slopes groves of trees are more frequent, particularly in the north, +where there remain a few lofty trees, which impart quite an alpine +character to the scenery. But the wood-cutters prosecute their work of +extermination without mercy, and it is to be feared that the time is +not very distant when even the last vestiges of the ancient forests +will have disappeared. The magnificent chestnuts on the western slopes, +amongst which could be admired until recently the “tree of the hundred +horses,” bear witness to the astonishing fertility of the lava. If the +cultivators of the soil only desired it, a few years would suffice to +restore to Mount Etna its ancient covering of foliage. + +The cultivated zone occupying the lower slopes of the mountains +presents in many places the appearance of a beautiful garden. There are +groves of olive, orange, lemon, and other fruit trees, in the midst +of which rise clumps of palms, and villas, churches, and monasteries +peep out from this mass of verdure. The fertility of the soil is so +great that it supports a population three or four times more numerous +than that in any other part of Italy. More than 300,000 inhabitants +dwell on the slopes of a mountain which might be supposed to inspire +terror, and which actually bursts at intervals, burying fertile fields +beneath a fiery deluge. Town succeeds town along its base like pearls +in a necklace, and when a stream of lava effects a breach in this +chain of human habitations it is closed up again as soon as the lava +has had time to cool. From the rim of the crater the mountain climber +looks down with astonishment upon these human ant-hills. The concentric +zones of houses and verdure contrast curiously with the snows and ashes +occupying the centre of the picture, and with the barren limestone +rocks beyond the Simeto. And this is only a small portion of the vast +and marvellous prospect, embracing a radius of 124 miles. Well may the +beholder be enchanted by the unrivalled spectacle of three seas, of a +deeper blue than the skies, washing the shores of Sicily, of Calabria, +and of the Æolian Islands. + +Mount Pelorus, which forms a continuation of the chain of the +Aspromonte of Calabria, is of very inferior height to Mount Etna, but +it had existed for ages when the space now occupied by the volcano was +only a bay of the sea. It was formerly believed that a crater existed +on the highest summit of Pelorus dedicated to Neptune, and now to the +“Mother of God,” or _Dinna Mare_ (3,600 feet), but such is not the +case. These mountains consist of primitive and transition rocks, with +beds of limestone and marble on their flanks. They first follow the +coast of the Ionian Sea, where they form numerous steep promontories, +and then, turning abruptly towards the west, run parallel with that of +the Æolian Sea. Their culminating point, near the centre, is known as +Madonia (6,336 feet), and the magnificent forests which still clothe +it impart to that part of the island {316} quite a northern aspect, +and we might almost fancy ourselves in the Apennines or Maritime Alps. +Limestone promontories of the most varied profile advance into the blue +waters of the sea, and render this coast one of the most beautiful of +the Mediterranean. We are seized with admiration when we behold the +enormous quadrangular block of Cefalù, the more undulating hill of +Termini, the vertical masses of Coltafano, and above all, near Palermo, +the natural fortress of Monte Pellegrino (1,970 feet), an almost +inaccessible rock, upon which Hamilcar Barca resisted for three years +the efforts of a Roman army to dislodge him. Monte San Giuliano (2,300 +feet), an almost isolated limestone summit, terminates this chain in +the west. It is the Eryx of the ancients, who dedicated it to Venus. + +The mountains which branch off from this main chain towards the south +gradually decrease in height as they approach the sea. The principal +slopes of the island descend towards the Ionian and Sicilian Seas, +and all its perennial rivers—the Platani, Salso, and Simeto—flow in +these directions. The rivers on the northern slope are mere _fiumare_, +formidable after heavy rains, but lost in beds of shingle during the +dry season. The lakes and swamps of the island are likewise confined to +the southern slope of the mountains. Amongst them are the _pantani_, +and the Lake, or _biviere_, of Lentini, which is the most extensive +sheet of water in Sicily; the Lake of Pergusa, or Enna, formerly +surrounded by flowery meadows in which Proserpine was seized by Pluto; +the _biviere_ of Terranova; and several marshy tracts, the remains of +ancient bays of the sea. This southern coast of the island contrasts +most unfavourably with the northern, for, in the place of picturesque +promontories of the most varied outline, we meet with a monotonous +sandy shore, devoid of all shade. Natural harbours are scarce there, +and during the winter storms vessels frequenting it are exposed to much +danger. + +The southern slope of Sicily, to the south of the Madonia, consists +of tertiary and more recent rocks, abounding in fossil shells mostly +belonging to species still living in the neighbouring sea. In the hills +to the south of Catania these tertiary rocks alternate with strata of +volcanic origin, which are evidently derived from submarine eruptions. +This process is still going on between Girgenti and the island of +Pantellaria, where the submarine volcano of Giulia or Ferdinandea +occasionally rises above the surface of the sea. It was seen in 1801, +and thirty years later it had another eruption, resulting in the +formation of an island four miles in circumference, which was examined +by Jussieu and Constant Prévost. In 1863 it appeared for the third +time. But the waves of the sea have always washed away the ashes and +cinders ejected on these occasions, spreading them in regular layers +over the bottom of the sea, and thus producing an alternation of +strata similar to that observed at Catania. In 1840 the summit of this +submarine volcano was covered with only six feet of water, but recently +no soundings were obtained at a depth of fifty fathoms. + +[Illustration: Fig. 117.—THE MACCALUBAS AND GIRGENTI. + +Scale 1 : 100,000.] + +This submarine volcano is not the only witness to the activity of +subterranean forces in Southern Italy. We meet there with mineral +springs discharging carbonic acid and other gases, which prove fatal +to the smaller animals venturing within their influence, and with +a naphtha lake near Palagonia, from which escape, {317} likewise, +irrespirable gases. A similar phenomenon may be witnessed in connection +with the Lake of Pergusa, which occupies an ancient crater about +four miles in circumference, and usually abounds in tench and eels. +From time to time, however, an escape of poisonous gases appears to +take place from the bottom of the lake, which kills the fish, whose +carcasses rise to the surface. Another of these _salses_ has made its +appearance farther west, near the Palazzo Adriano, {318} and, indeed, +the whole of underground Sicily appears to be in a state of chemical +effervescence. + +Next to Mount Etna the great centre of volcanic activity in Sicily +appears to be near Girgenti, at a place known as the _Maccalubas_. +The aspect of this spot changes with the seasons. In summer bubbles +of gas escape from small craters filled with liquid mud, which +occasionally overflows, and runs down the exterior slopes. The rains +of winter almost obliterate these miniature volcanoes, and the plain +is then converted into one mass of mud, from which the gases escape. +At the beginning of this century the soil was occasionally shaken by +earthquakes, and on these occasions jets of mud and stones were ejected +to a height of ten or twenty yards. The Maccalubas appear now to be in +a state of quiescence, for these mud volcanoes also seem to have their +regular periods of rest and activity. + +The deposits of sulphur, which constitute one of the riches of Sicily, +undoubtedly owe their existence to these subterranean lakes of seething +lava. These sulphur beds are met with in the tertiary strata extending +from Centorbi to Cattolica, in the province of Girgenti. They date from +the epoch of the Upper Miocene, and are deposited upon layers of fossil +infusoria exhaling a bituminous odour. Geologists are not yet agreed on +the origin of these sulphur beds, but it is most likely that they are +derived from sulphate of lime carried to the surface by hot springs. In +the same formation beds of gypsum and of rock-salt are met with, and +the latter may frequently be traced from a saline effervescence known +as _occhi di sale_ (“eyes of salt”). + +Sicily, like Greece, enjoys one of the happiest climates. The heat +of summer is tempered by sea breezes which blow regularly during the +hottest part of each day. The cold of winter would not be felt at all +if it were not for the total absence of every comfort in the houses, +for ice is not known, and snow exceedingly rare. The autumn rains +are abundant, but there are many fine days even during that season. +The prevailing winds from the north and west are salubrious, but the +_sirocco_, which usually blows towards the south-east, is deadly, +especially when it reaches the northern coast. It generally blows for +three or four days, and during that time no one thinks of clarifying +wine, salting meat, or painting houses or furniture. This wind is the +great drawback to the climate. In some parts of Sicily the exhalations +from the swamps are dangerous, but this is entirely the fault of man. +It is owing to his neglect that Agosta and Syracuse suffer from fevers, +and that death forbids the stranger to approach the ruins of ancient +Himera.[109] + +Temperature and moisture impart to the vegetation of the plains and +lower valleys a semi-tropical aspect. Many plants of Asia and Africa +have become acclimatized in Sicily. Groups of date-palms are seen in +the gardens, and the plains around Sciacca, almost African in their +appearance, abound in groves of dwarf palms, or _giummare_, to which +ancient Selinus was indebted for its epithet of _Palmosa_. Cotton +grows on the slopes of the hills up to a height of 600 feet above the +sea; bananas, sugar-cane, and bamboos do not require the shelter of +{319} greenhouses; the _Victoria regia_ covers the ponds with its +huge leaves and flowers; the papyrus of the Nile, which is not known +anywhere else in Europe, chokes up the bed of the Anapo, near Syracuse: +formerly it grew also in the Oreto, near Palermo, but it does so no +longer. The cactus of Barbary (_Cactus opuntia_) has become the most +characteristic plant of the coast districts of Sicily, and is rapidly +covering the most unpromising beds of lava. These and other plants +flourish most luxuriantly on the southern slopes of Mount Etna, where +the orange-tree bears fruit at a height of 1,700 feet, and the larch +ascends even to 7,400 feet. These slopes facing the African sun are the +hottest spots in Europe, for the volcano shelters them from the winds +of the north, whilst its dark-coloured scoriæ and cinders absorb the +rays of the mid-day sun. + +Those portions of Sicily which are clothed with trees or shrubs are +always green, for orange-trees, olive-trees, carob-trees, laurels, +mastic-trees, tamarisks, cypresses, and pines retain their verdure even +in winter, when nature wears a desolate aspect in our own latitudes. +There is no “season,” so to say, for with a little care all kinds +of vegetables can be had throughout the year. The gardens around +Syracuse are famous above all others, because of the striking manner +in which they contrast with the naked rocks surrounding them. The most +delightful amongst them is the _Intagliatella_, or _Latomia de’ Greci_, +which occupies an old quarry where Greek slaves dressed the stones +used in erecting the palaces of Syracuse. The vegetation there is most +luxuriant; the trunks of the trees rise above masses of shrubs, their +branches are covered with creeping plants, flowers and ripening fruit +cover the paths, and birds without number sing in the foliage. This +earthly paradise is surrounded by precipitous walls of rock covered +with ivy, or bare and white as on the day when Athenian slaves were at +work there. + + * * * * * + +Sicily lies on the high-road of all the nations who ever disputed the +command of the Mediterranean, and its population consequently consists +of a mixture of the most heterogeneous elements. Irrespectively of +Sicani, Siculi, and other aboriginal nations, whose position amongst +the European family is uncertain, but who probably spoke a language +akin to that of the Latins, we know that Phœnicians and Carthaginians +successively settled on its shores, and that the Greeks were almost +as numerous there as in their native country. Twenty-five centuries +have passed since the Greeks founded their first colony, Naxos, at +the foot of Mount Etna. Soon afterwards Syracuse, Leontini, Catania, +Megara Hyblæa, Messina, and other colonies sprang into existence, until +the whole of the littoral region was in the hands of the Greeks, the +native populations being pushed back into the interior. In Sicily the +Greek met with the same climate, and with rocks and mountains similar +in aspect to those of his native home. The “Marmorean” port and the +wide bay of Syracuse, the acropolis and Mount Hybla, do they not recall +Attica or the Peloponnesus? The fountain of Arethusa, on the island of +Ortygia, which is supplied through underground channels, reminds us +of the fountain of Erasinos and of many others in Hellas, which find +their way through fissures in the limestone rocks to the seashore. The +Syracusans said that the river Alpheus, enamoured of {320} the nymph +Arethusa, did not mingle its waters with those of the Ionian, but found +its way through subterranean channels to the coast of Sicily, where +it rose again at the side of the fountain dedicated to the object of +his adoration, bringing the flowers and fruits of beloved Greece. This +legend bears testimony to the great love which the Greek bore his +native land, whose very fountains and plants were supposed to follow +him into his new home. + +If we may judge from the number of inhabitants with which the principal +towns were credited at that time, Sicily must have had a population of +several millions of Greeks. The Carthaginian merchants and soldiers, on +the other hand, though they were the masters of portions of the island +for two or three centuries, never settled upon it, and only a few +walls, coins, and inscriptions bear witness now of their ever having +been present. It has been very judiciously remarked by M. Dennis that +the most striking evidence of their reign is presented in the desolate +sites of the cities of Himera and Selinus. At the same time we must +not forget that the Carthaginians, by intermingling with the existing +population, materially affected the ulterior destinies of the island. +The Romans, who held Sicily for nearly seven centuries, did so in a +still higher degree. Vandals and Goths likewise left traces behind +them. The Saracens, themselves a mixed race, imparted their Southern +impetuosity to the Sicilians, whilst their conquerors, the Normans, +endowed them with the daring and indomitable courage which at that +period animated these sons of the North. In 1071, when the Normans +laid siege to Palermo, no less than five languages were spoken on the +island, viz. Arabic, Hebrew, Greek, Latin, and vulgar Sicilian. But +Arabic was the tongue of the civilised inhabitants, and even during the +dominion of the Normans inscriptions upon palaces and churches were +written in it. It was at the court of King Roger that Edrisi wrote his +“Geography,” one of the great monuments of science. In 1223 the last +Arabs were made to emigrate to Naples, but by that time much Arab blood +already flowed through the veins of the inhabitants. + +Later on, the character of the population was still further modified +by French, Germans, Spaniards, and Aragonese, and all this helped +to make them a people differing in appearance, manners, habits, and +feelings from their Italian neighbours. These islanders look upon every +inhabitant of the mainland as a foreigner. The absence of roads on the +island enabled the different groups of its population to maintain their +distinct idioms and character during a very long period. The Lombards +whom the Romans transplanted to Benevento and Palermo spoke their +native dialect long after it had become extinct in Lombardy. Even now +there are about 50,000 Sicilians who speak this ancient Lombard tongue. +At San Fratello, on a steep hill on the northern coast, this idiom is +spoken with the greatest purity. Nor has the Italian wholly supplanted +the vulgar Sicilian in the interior of the island. We meet with many +Greek and Arab words. One of the most curious words is that of _val_, +which is applied to various districts of Sicily, and is supposed to +have been derived from _vali_, the Arab term for “governor.” The +Sicilian idiom is less sonorous than the Italian. Vowels standing +between consonants are frequently suppressed, and the _o_, and even +the _a_ and _i_ (_ee_), are {321} changed into _oo_, which renders +the speech hard and indistinct. The language lends itself, however, +admirably to poetry, and the Sicilian popular songs are quite equal in +natural grace and delicacy to the much-admired _rispetti_ of Tuscany. + +Of all the emigrants who have settled on the island the Albanians +alone have not become merged in the general population. Locally known +as Greci, they still form separate communities, speaking their own +language and observing special religious rites, in several of the towns +of the interior, and more especially at Piana de’ Greci, which occupies +a commanding hill to the south of Palermo. Nor is the fusion amongst +the other races as complete as it appears to be at the first glance. +The population around Mount Etna, who are, perhaps, more purely Greek +in blood than the Greeks themselves, are noted for their grace, gaiety, +and sweetness of disposition. They are the most intelligent portion +of the population of Sicily. Those of Trapani and San Giuliani are +said to be the best-looking, and their women delight the stranger by +the regularity and beauty of their features. The Palermitans, on the +other hand, in whose veins flows much Arab blood, are for the most part +unprepossessing in their appearance. They open their house but rarely +to strangers, and jealously shut up their women in its most retired +part. + +The most ferocious usages of war, piracy, and brigandage have kept +their ground longer at Palermo and its environs than anywhere else. +The laws of the _omerta_, or “men of heart,” make vengeance a duty. +_A chi ti toglie il pane, e tu toglili la vita !_ (“Take the life of +him who has taken your bread !”) is its fundamental principle; but in +practice Palermitan vengeance is far from possessing the simplicity +of the Corsican vendetta, for it is complicated by the most atrocious +cruelties. No less than four or five thousand Palermitans are said +to be affiliated to the secret league of the _maffia_, whose members +subsist upon every kind of roguery. Up to 1865 the brigands were +masters in the environs of that town. They virtually laid siege to +the town, separating it from its more distant suburbs. Strangers were +afraid to leave lest they should be murdered or captured by bandits; +and no farmer could harvest his corn or olives, or shear his sheep, +without paying toll to these highwaymen. More than ten years have +passed since then, but in spite of measures of exceptional severity the +maffia still exists. + +The history of this association, which dates its origin back to the +time of the Norman kings, remains yet to be written. It has always +flourished most in time of political troubles, and consequent misery. +No doubt things have grown worse in the course of the last twenty +years; taxes have been increased, the conscription established, and +many abrupt changes, such as are inseparable from a new political +regimen, have been introduced. The people, accustomed to put up with +ancient abuses, have not yet learnt to bear the burdens imposed in +connection with the annexation of the island to the kingdom of Italy. +Nevertheless the Sicilians grow more Italian from day to day. Community +of language and of interests attaches the island to the peninsula, and +the time is not far distant when both countries will gravitate in the +same orbit. Italy is most highly interested in establishing feelings of +friendship with the inhabitants of the island, and in developing its +resources. The rapid increase of the population, which is said to have +{322} tripled since 1734, bears witness to the great natural riches of +the country; and what might not be achieved if the barbarous processes +now in force there were superseded by the scientific methods of our own +time? + +Sicily was the favourite haunt of Ceres, and in the plain of Catania +this beneficent goddess taught man the art of cultivating the soil. +The Sicilians have not forgotten this teaching, for nearly half the +area is covered with corn-fields; but they have not improved their +system of cultivation since those fabulous times, and improvements can +hardly be effected as long as the restrictions imposed by the feudal +tenure introduced by the Normans are allowed to exist. The agricultural +implements are of a primitive kind, manure is hardly known, and the +fate of the crops depends entirely upon nature. When travelling through +the country districts of Sicily, we are struck by not meeting with +isolated houses. There are no villages, for all the cultivators of the +soil live in towns, and are content to travel daily to their fields, +which are occasionally at a distance of six miles. Sometimes they pass +the night there, in a cavern or a ditch covered with boughs, and at +harvest-time the labourers sleep in improvised sheds. This absence of +human habitations imparts an air of solemn sadness to vast corn-fields +covering valleys and slopes, and we almost fancy we are wandering +through a deserted country, and wonder for whose benefit the crops are +ripening. + +Corn-fields cover a greater area than that devoted to the cultivation +of all other objects put together; nevertheless the latter articles +represent a higher pecuniary value. The orchards, vineyards, and +gardens near the towns are a far greater source of wealth than the +distant corn-fields. In former times wheat was the principal article +of export; now Sicily is no longer a granary, but promises to become +a vast emporium of fruit. Even now the crop of oranges grown there, +which consists of seven kinds, subdivided into four hundred varieties, +represents a value of £2,000,000 a year. The marvellous gardens which +surround Palermo are steadily increasing at the expense of the ancient +plantations of ash, and ascend the hills to a height of 1,150 feet. +Hundreds of millions of oranges are exported annually to Continental +Europe, England, and America, and the inferior sorts are converted into +essential oils, citric acid, or citrate of lime. The last is used in +printing stuffs, and Sicily enjoys a monopoly in its manufacture. + +Sicily likewise occupies a foremost place as a vine-growing country, +and supplies more than a fourth of the wine produced throughout Italy. +The cultivation of the vine, which is carried on to a large extent by +foreigners, is much better understood there than on the neighbouring +peninsula, and the wines exported from Marsala, Syracuse, Alcamo, and +Milazzo are justly held in high estimation. Excellent wine is also +grown on the southern and western slopes of Mount Etna, to which the +heat of the sun imparts much fire. England and non-Italian Europe are +the great consumers of the wines of Sicily, as they are of its oils, +almonds, cotton, saffron, sumach, and manna, extracted, like that of +the Calabrias, from a kind of ash. Raw silk, which Sicily was the first +to produce in Europe, is likewise exported in considerable quantities. + +Sulphur is the great mineral product of the island. The beds vary much +in {323} richness, but even where they contain only five or six per +cent. a light brought to the walls of the mine will cause the sulphur +to boil like pitch. The blocks extracted from the mine are piled up in +the open air, where they remain exposed to the destructive action of +the atmosphere. The fragments are then heaped up over the flame of a +furnace, which causes the stones to split, the melted sulphur flowing +into moulds placed beneath. By this primitive process only two-thirds +of the sulphur contained in the rock are extracted, but it proves +nevertheless most remunerative. About 200,000 tons of sulphur, or more +than two-thirds of the sulphur required for manufacturing purposes +throughout Europe, are annually exported from Sicily, and the known +deposits of the island have been computed to contain from 40,000,000 to +50,000,000 tons. To the north of Girgenti and in other parts of Sicily +sulphureous plaster has been used in the construction of the houses, +and the atmosphere there is at all times impregnated with an odour of +sulphur. + +Rock-salt is met with in the same formations as the sulphur, and in +quantities almost inexhaustible, but salt is not a rare article, and +even the Sicilians prefer to gather it from the salt swamps extending +along the coast, the most productive of which are near Trapani, at the +western extremity of the island. At the same spot the sea yields the +best coral of Sicily. The tunny fishery is carried on mostly in the +great bays between Trapani and Palermo, while most of the swordfish +are captured in the Strait of Messina. The seas of Sicily abound in +fish, and the islanders boast of being the most expert fishermen of the +Western Mediterranean. + +Until recently communications in Sicily were kept up almost exclusively +by sea. In 1866 the only carriage road of the island, which connects +Messina with Palermo, was hardly made use of by travellers, and even +now the most important mines of sulphur and salt communicate with +the seashore only by mule-paths; and the inhabitants are actually +opposed to the construction of roads, from fear of their interfering +with the existing modes of transport. The road which connects the +harbour of Terranova with Caltanissetta has been under construction +for twenty years, although it is the only one which joins the interior +of the country to the sea-coast. Railways to some extent supply this +deficiency of roads, but are being built very slowly, hardly more than +250 miles being at present open for traffic. + +Palermo the “happy,” the capital of Sicily, is one of the great towns +of Italy. At the time of the Arabs it surpassed all towns of the +peninsula in population, but at present, though increasing rapidly, it +yields to Naples, Milan, and Rome. No other town of Europe can boast +of an equally delicious climate, nor is any fairer to look upon from a +distance. Bold barren mountains enclose a marvellous garden, the famous +“shell of gold” (_conca d’oro_), from the midst of which rise towers +and domes, palms with fan-shaped leaves, and pines, commanded in the +south by the huge ecclesiastical edifices of Monreale. Termini is the +only city of Sicily which rivals Palmero in the beauty of its site, and +it truly merits its epithet of _splendissime_. {324} + +[Illustration: Fig. 118.—PALERMO AND MONTE PELLEGRINO.] + +But the beauty of the country contrasts most painfully with the misery +and filth reigning in most of the quarters of the capital. Palermo has +its sumptuous edifices. It boasts of a cathedral lavishly decorated; +its royal palace and palatine chapel, covered with mosaics, and +harmoniously combining the beauties of Byzantine, Moorish, and Roman +art, are unique of their kind; the church of Monreale, in one of its +suburbs, may challenge Ravenna by the number of its mosaics. There are +Moorish palaces, a few modern monuments, and two broad streets, which a +Spanish governor had made in the shape of a cross. But, besides these, +we only meet with dark and narrow streets and wretched tenements, the +windows of which are stuffed with rags. Down to a recent period Palermo +was undeserving its Greek name of “Port of all Nations.” Enclosed +within mountains, and having no communications with the interior, its +commerce was merely local, and its exports were limited to the produce +of its fisheries and of its gardens. Though {325} far more populous +than Genoa, its commerce is only half that of the Ligurian city, but it +is rapidly on the increase. + +Trapani, a colony of the Carthaginians like Palermo, and Marsala, so +famous for its wines, at the western extremity of the island, are +proportionately far busier than the capital. Trapani, built on a +sickle-shaped promontory, carries on a lively trade. The salt marshes +near it are amongst the most productive in all Italy;[110] tunny, +coral, and sponge fishing is carried on; and the artisans of the town +are skilled as weavers, masons, and jewellers. The harbour is one of +the best in Italy; the roadstead is well sheltered by the outlying +Ægadian Islands; and the ambition of the inhabitants, who look forward +to a time when Trapani will be the principal emporium for the trade +with Tunis, is likely to be realized on the completion of a railway +to Messina. The harbour of Mazzara, the outlet for the produce of the +inland towns of Castelvetrano and Salemi, lies closer to Tunis, but its +shelter is indifferent. As to Marsala—the “Mars ed Allah,” or God’s +haven, of the Arabs—its port was filled up by Charles V., and has only +recently been reconstructed. It is, however, not of sufficient depth +for large vessels, and only salt and wine are exported from it to +France and England. Marsala occupies the site of the ancient city of +Lilybæum, which had a population of 900,000 souls when Diodorus Siculus +wrote his Geography. It has recently become famous in consequence of +the landing there of Garibaldi and his thousand followers in 1860, and +its being the spot from which they entered upon the triumphant march +which ended in the battle of the Volturno and the capture of Gaeta. + +Messina the “noble” is the great commercial centre of Sicily, and the +only port of that island where vessels of all nations meet. Messina is +a stage on the ocean high-roads which join or connect Western Europe +and the Levant. Its roadstead is one of the safest, and vessels in +distress are certain to find protection there. Moreover, vessels coming +from the Tyrrhenian, and fearful of encountering the dangerous currents +of the strait during a storm, may easily find shelter at Milazzo, to +the north of it. The port of Messina is formed by a sickle-shaped +tongue of land, making a natural breakwater.[111] There are few +cities in Europe which are more exposed to the destructive action of +earthquakes than Messina, and the traces of the great shock of 1783, +which swamped the vessels in the harbour, undermined the palaces along +the seashore, and caused the death of more than a thousand persons, +have not yet entirely disappeared. + +Catania, the sub-Etnean, as its Greek name implies, is menaced not +only by earthquakes, but also by volcanic eruptions. It, too, enjoys +a high amount of commercial prosperity, and exports the surplus +produce of the towns situated at the foot of the volcano, among +which are Acireale, with its orange groves; Giarre, with its dusty +streets; Paterno, abounding in thermal springs; Aderno, on the {326} +summit of a rock of lava; Bronte, at the junction of two streams of +scoriæ; and Randazza, commanded by an ancient Norman castle. Catania +also monopolizes the export of the produce of the inland districts +of Eastern Sicily; it is the great railway centre of the island, and +several carriage roads converge upon it. Its port has grown too small +for the business carried on there, and it is proposed to enlarge it by +means of piers and breakwaters. + +[Illustration: Fig. 119.—TRAPANI AND MARSALA. + +Scale 1 : 270,000.] + +It is quite natural that on an island, no locality of which is more +than forty miles from the sea, all great towns should be met with on +the coast, where there are greater facilities for commerce. Still a few +centres of population sprang up in the interior, either in the midst of +the most fertile districts or at the crossings of the most-frequented +lines of communication. Nicosia, the Lombard city, is thus a natural +place of passage between Catania and the northern coast of the island. +Corleone occupies a similar position with respect to Palermo and the +African slope {327} of the island. Castro Giovanni, the ancient Enna, +likewise occupies a privileged position, for it stands on an elevated +plateau in the very centre of the island: a large stone near it is said +by the inhabitants to be an ancient altar of Ceres. Piazza Armerina +_l’opulentissime_, and Caltagirone, surnamed _la gratissima_ on account +of the fertility of its fields, are both populous towns, which carry on +a considerable commerce through Terranova, in the building of which the +stones of the old temples of Gela have been utilised. Caltanissetta, +farther to the west, and its neighbour Canicatti, export their produce +through the port of Licata. + +In the south-eastern corner of Sicily there are likewise several inland +towns of some importance, amongst which Ragusa and Modica are the most +considerable. Comiso, an industrious place, lies farther to the west, +and is surrounded by cotton plantations. The valley of the Hipparis, +sung by Pindar, separates it from Vittoria, the saline plains of which +furnish much of the soda exported to Marseilles. Noto, like most towns +in that part of Sicily, is at some distance from the coast, but its +twin city, Avola, stands upon the shore of the Ionian Sea. Noto and +Avola were both overthrown by the earthquake of 1693, and have been +rebuilt with geometrical regularity near their former sites. The fields +of Avola, though not very fertile by nature, are amongst the best +cultivated of the island, and it is there only that the production of +the sugar-cane has attained to any importance. + +On the northern slope of the hills forming the back-bone of the island +there are several other towns inhabited by the agricultural population. +Lentini, the ancient Leontini, which boasts of being the oldest city in +the island, is at present only a poor place, having been wholly rebuilt +since the earthquake of 1693. Militello has been restored since the +same epoch, and Grammicheli was founded in the eighteenth century to +afford a shelter for the inhabitants of Occhiala, which was destroyed +by an earthquake. Vizzini and Licodia di Vizzini are remarkable on +account of the beds of lava near them, which alternate with layers of +marine fossils, and Mineo stands near a small crater of the swamp of +Palici. The popular songs of Mineo are famous throughout Sicily. The +marvellous “stone of poetry” is shown near it, and all those who kiss +it are said to become poets. + +[Illustration: Fig. 120.—SYRACUSE. + +Scale 1 : 100,000.] + +Southern Sicily is poor in natural ports, and formerly, along the whole +of that part of the coast which faces Africa, there were only open +roadsteads and beaches. On the Ionian coast, however, two excellent +harbours are met with, viz. those of Agosta and Syracuse, which are +very much like each other in outline and general features. Agosta, +or Augusta, the successor of the Greek city of Megara Hyblæa, is now +nothing more than a fortress besieged by fever. Syracuse, the ancient +city of the Dorians, and at one time the most populous and wealthy city +of the Mediterranean, has been reduced to a simple provincial capital. +That city, whose inhabitants even during the last century celebrated +their great victory over the Athenians, is now hardly more than a +heap of ruins. Its “marble port,” formerly surrounded by statues, +is now frequented only by small boats, and its great harbour, large +enough for contending squadrons, lies deserted. All that remains of +it is contained in the small island of Ortygia, {328} separated from +the mainland by fortifications, a ditch, and the swamps of Syraca. +The vast peninsula of limestone formerly occupied by the city is at +present inhabited only by a few farmers, whose houses stand near the +canals of irrigation. The grand edifices erected by the inhabitants +of ancient Syracuse are now represented by the ruins of columns on +the banks of the Anapo rising from the “azure” fountain of Cyane; by +the fortifications of the Epipolæ and Euryelum erected by Archimedes, +and now known as Belvedere; by the remains of baths, an enormous +altar large enough for hecatombs of sacrifices, an amphitheatre, and +an admirable theatre for 25,000 spectators, who were able to see at +a glance from their {329} seats the whole of the ancient city, with +its temples and fleets of merchantmen. Nothing, however, is better +calculated to convey an idea of the ancient grandeur of the city than +the vast quarries or _lautumiæ_ and the subterranean catacombs, more +extensive than those of Naples, and not yet wholly explored. In former +times the summit of the island of Ortygia was occupied by an acropolis, +in which stood a temple of Minerva, a rival of the Parthenon of Athens. +Sailors, on leaving the port, were bound to look towards this temple, +holding in their hands a vase of burning charcoal taken from the altar +of Juno, which they flung into the sea when they lost sight of it. +Portions of the temple still exist, but its beautiful columns have been +covered with plaster and incorporated in an ugly church. + +[Illustration: Fig. 121.—TEMPLE OF CONCORD AT GIRGENTI.] + +There are other Hellenic ruins in Sicily, which, in the eyes of +artists, make that island a worthy rival of Greece itself. Girgenti, +the ancient Acragas, or {330} Agrigentum, which numbered its +inhabitants by hundreds of thousands, but is now a poor place like +Syracuse, possesses ruins of at least ten temples or religious +edifices, of which that dedicated to Olympian Jupiter was the largest +in all Italy, and has been made use of in the construction of the +present mole. Another, that dedicated to Concord, is in a better +state of preservation than any other Greek temple outside the limits +of Hellas. The modern city occupies merely the site of the ancient +acropolis, and is built upon a layer of shelly sandstone, which +descends in steps towards the sea. The cathedral has been built from +materials taken from a temple of Jupiter Atabyrios, and its baptismal +font is an ancient sarcophagus upon which are represented the loves of +Phædra and Hippolytus. In former times Agrigentum reached to within a +couple of miles from the sea. The modern port, named in honour of one +of the most famous sons of the city, lies to the west of the ancient +Hellenic _Emporium_, at a distance of four miles from the city. It is +the busiest harbour on the southern coast, and large quantities of +sulphur are exported from it (see Fig. 117, p. 317). + +Sciacca, another seaside town farther to the west, in one of those +localities of the island most exposed to earthquakes, boasts of +being the modern representative of Selinus, though that Greek city +was situated about fourteen miles farther west, to the south of +Castelvetrano. Its seven temples have been overthrown by earthquakes, +but they still present us with remains of the purest Doric style. The +metopes of three of them have been conveyed to Palermo, where they form +the most precious ornaments of the museum. + +Segesta, on the north coast, no longer exists, but there still remain +the ruins of a magnificent temple. Other remains of Greek art abound in +all parts of the island, and there are also monuments erected by the +Romans. If we contrast these ancient edifices with those raised since +by Byzantines, Moors, Normans, Spaniards, and Neapolitans, we are bound +to admit that the latter exhibit no progress, but decadence. Alas ! how +very much inferior are the inhabitants of modern Syracuse in comparison +with the fellow-citizens of an Archimedes ! + +Sicily offers most striking examples of towns changing their positions +in consequence of political disturbances. When the ancient Greek cities +were at the height of their power they boldly descended to the very +coast; but when war and rapine got the upper hand—when Moorish pirates +scoured the sea, and brigandage reigned in the interior—then it was +that most of the cities of Sicily took refuge on the summits of the +hills, abandoning their low-lying suburbs to decay, and allowing them +finally to disappear. Girgenti is a case in point. Some of the towns +occupy sites of much natural strength, and are almost inaccessible. +Such are Centuripe, or Centorbi, which stretches along the edge of a +rock to the west of the Simeto, and San Giuliano, the town of Astarte, +which stands on the summit of a pyramidal rock 1,200 feet in height +above Trapani. But, on the return of peace, the inhabitants abandoned +their eyries and came back to the plain or coast. All along the +northern coast, from Palermo to Messina, the towns on the _marina_, +or beach, kept increasing at the expense of the _borgos_ occupying +the summits of the mountains, and in many instances the latter were +deserted altogether. Cefalù {331} affords a striking illustration of +this change. The modern city nestles at the foot of a bold promontory, +upon the summit of which may still be seen the crenellated walls of the +old town, within which nothing now remains excepting a small cyclopean +temple, the most venerable ruin of all Sicily, which has resisted the +ravages of thirty centuries.[112] + + +THE ÆOLIAN OR LIPARIC ISLANDS. + +The Æolian or Liparic Islands, though separated from Sicily by a strait +more than 300 fathoms in depth, may nevertheless be looked upon as a +dependency of the larger island. Some of these volcanic islands, “born +in the shadow of Mount Etna,” lie on a line connecting that volcano +with Mount Vesuvius, and they originated probably during the same +convulsion of nature. They all consist of lavas, cinders, or pumice, +ejected from volcanoes. Two amongst them, Vulcano and Stromboli, +are still active volcanoes, and the flames and undulating columns +of smoke rising from them enable mariners and fishermen to foretell +changes of temperature or wind. It is probable that this intelligent +interpretation of volcanic phenomena was the reason why these islands +were dedicated to Æolus, the god of the winds, who there revealed +himself to mariners. + +Lipari, the largest and most central of these islands, is at the +same time the most populous. A considerable town, commanded by an +ancient castle, rises like an amphitheatre on its northern shore. A +well-cultivated plain, abounding in olive-trees, orange-trees, and +vines, surrounds the town, and the slopes of the hills are cultivated +almost to their very summits. The population, as in Sicily, has been +recruited from the most diverse elements since the time that Greek +colonists from Rhodes, Cnidus, and Selinus entered into an alliance +with the aboriginal inhabitants. This intermixture of races is +proceeding now as much as ever, for commerce continually introduces +fresh blood, and many Calabrian brigands have been conveyed to the +island, where they have become peaceable citizens. The population is +now permitted to multiply in peace, for the volcanoes of Lipari have +been quiescent for centuries. The Lipariotes have a legend according +to which St. Calogero chased the devils from the islands, and shut +them up in the furnaces of Vulcano, and we may infer from this that +the last volcanic eruption took place soon after the introduction of +Christianity; that is to say, about the sixth century. The existence +of subterranean forces manifests itself now only in thermal springs +and {332} steam jets, which have been visited from the most ancient +times for the cure of diseases. Earthquakes, however, are of frequent +occurrence, and that of 1780 so much frightened the inhabitants that +with one accord they dedicated themselves to the Virgin Mary. Dolomieu, +who visited Lipari in the year following, found them wearing a small +chain on the arm, by means of which they desired to show that they had +become the slaves of the “Liberating Virgin.” + +[Illustration: Fig. 122.—THE CENTRAL PORTION OF THE ÆOLIAN ISLANDS.] + +Lipari is a land of promise to the geologist, on account of the great +variety of its lavas. Monte della Castagna is wholly composed of +obsidian. Another hill, Monte Bianco, consists of pumice, and, when +seen from a distance, has the appearance of being covered with snow. +The streams of pumice which fill every ravine extend down to the +sea, and the water is covered with this buoyant stone, which drifts +sometimes as far as Corsica. Lipari supplies nearly the whole of Europe +with pumice.[113] + +Vulcano, to the south of Lipari, from which it is separated by a +strait less than a mile across, contrasts strangely with its smiling +neighbour. Vulcano, with the exception of a few olives and vines +growing on the southern slopes, consists wholly of naked scoriæ, and +this circumstance probably led to its being dedicated to Vulcan. Most +of its rocks are black or of a reddish hue like iron, but there are +{333} others which are scarlet, yellow, or white. At the northern +extremity of the island rises the Vulcanello, a small cone which +appeared above the surface of the sea nobody knows when, and which an +isthmus of reddish cinders united about the middle of the thirteenth +century to the principal volcano of the island. This central mountain +of the island has a crater about 1,800 yards in circumference, from +which steam continually escapes. The atmosphere is charged with +sulphurous vapours difficult to breathe. From hundreds of small +orifices jets of steam make their escape with a throbbing and hissing +noise. Some of these fumaroles have a temperature of 610° F. Jets of +a lower temperature are met with in other parts of the island, and +even at the bottom of the bay. Violent eruptions are rare, and in the +eighteenth century only three occurred. The last eruption took place +in 1873, after a repose of a hundred years. Until recently the only +inhabitants of Vulcano were a few convicts, who collected sulphur and +boracic acid, and manufactured a little alum. But an enterprising +Scotchman has now taken possession of this grand chemical laboratory. +He has built a large manufactory near the port, and a few trees planted +around his Moorish residence have somewhat improved the repulsive +aspect of the country. + +Stromboli, though smaller than either Lipari or Vulcano, is +nevertheless more celebrated, on account of its frequent eruptions. For +ages back scarcely any mariners have passed this island without seeing +its summit in a state of illumination. At intervals of five minutes, +or less, the seething lava filling its caldron bubbles up, explosions +occur, and steam and stones are ejected. These rhythmical eruptions +form a most agreeable sight, for there is no danger about them, and the +olive groves of the Stromboliotes have never been injured by a stream +of lava. The volcano, however, has its moments of exasperation, and its +ashes have frequently been carried to the coast of Calabria, which is +more than thirty miles off. + +Panaria and the surrounding group of islands between Stromboli and +Lipari have undergone many changes, if Dolomieu and Spallanzani are +correct in saying that they originally formed only a single island, +which was blown into fragments by an eruption having its centre near +the present island of Dattilo. A hot spring and an occasional bubbling +up of the sea-water prove that the volcanic forces are not yet quite +extinct. + +As regards the small eastern islands of the archipelago, Salina, +Felicudi, and Alicudi, the last of which resembles a tent pitched upon +the surface of the water, history furnishes no records of their ever +having been in any other than a quiescent state. The island of Ustica, +about thirty miles to the north of Palermo, is likewise of volcanic +origin, but is not known ever to have had an eruption. It is one of +the most dreaded places of exile in Italy. Near it is the uninhabited +island of Medico, the ancient Osteodes, where the mercenaries deserted +by the Carthaginians were left to die of starvation. {334} + + +THE ÆGADIAN ISLANDS. + +Off the western extremity of Sicily lie shallows, sand-banks, and +calcareous islands of the same composition as the adjoining mainland. +These are the Ægades, or Goat Islands, named after the animals which +climb their steep escarpments. Favignana, near which the Romans won +the naval victory which terminated the first Punic war, is the largest +of these islands. Its steep cliffs abound in caverns, in which heaps +of shells, gnawed bones, and stone implements have been found, dating +back to the contemporaries of the mammoth and the antediluvian bear. +Conflicts between contrary winds are frequent in this labyrinth of +rocks and shoals, and the power of the waves is much dreaded. The tides +are most irregular, and give rise to dangerous eddies. The sudden ebb, +locally known as _marubia_, or “tipsy sea” (_mare ubbriaco?_), has been +the cause of many shipwrecks. + +[Illustration: Fig. 123.—THE MEDITERRANEAN TO THE SOUTH OF SICILY. + +Scale 1 : 4,000,000.] + + +PANTELLARIA. + +Pantellaria rises in the very centre of the strait which unites the +Western Mediterranean with the Eastern. The island is of volcanic +origin, abounds in thermal springs, and, above all, in steam jets. +Placed on a great line of navigation, Pantellaria might have become +of importance if it had possessed a good harbour like Malta. To +judge from certain ruins, the population was more considerable {335} +formerly than it is now. There exist about a thousand odd edifices, +called _sesi_ by the inhabitants, which are supposed to be ancient +dwellings. Like the _nuraghi_ of Sardinia, they have the shape of +hives, and are built of huge blocks of rock without mortar. Some of +them are twenty-five feet high and forty-five feet wide; and Rossi, the +archæologist, thinks that they date back to the stone age, for pieces +of worked obsidian have been found in them. + +From the top of Pantellaria we are able to distinguish the promontories +on the Tunisian coast, but, though it is nearer to Africa than to +Europe, the island nevertheless belongs to the latter continent, as is +proved by the configuration of the sea-bottom. This cannot be said of +Linosa, an island with four volcanic peaks to the west of Malta, and +still less of the Pelagian Islands. The latter, consisting of Lampedusa +and a satellite rock called Lampion, owe their name (Lamp-bearer and +Lamp) to the light which, legend tells us, was kept burning by a hermit +or angel for the benefit of mariners. In our own days this legendary +lamp has been superseded by a small lighthouse marking the entrance to +the port of Lampedusa, where vessels of three or four hundred tons find +a safe shelter. + +About the close of the eighteenth century the Russians proposed to +establish a military station on Lampedusa to rival that of Malta, but +this project was never carried out, and has not been taken up by the +Italian Government. The population consists of soldiers, political +exiles, criminals, and a few settlers, who speak Maltese.[114] + + +MALTA AND GOZZO. + +Malta, though a political dependency of Great Britain, belongs +geographically to Italy, for it rises from the same submarine plateau +as Sicily. About fifty miles to the east of the island the depth of +the sea exceeds 1,500 fathoms, but in the north, in the direction of +Sicily, it hardly amounts to eighty, and there can be no doubt that an +isthmus formerly united Malta to continental Europe. Geologists are +agreed that the land of which Malta and Gozzo are now the only remains +must formerly have been of great extent, for amongst the fossils of +its most recent limestone rocks have been found the bones of elephants +and other animals which only inhabit continents. Even now the island +is slowly wasting away, and its steep cliffs, pierced by numerous +grottoes, locally known as _ghar_, are gradually crumbling into dust. + +Placed in the very centre of the Mediterranean, and possessed of an +excellent port, Malta has at all times been a commercial station +of much importance. It has been occupied by all the nations who +succeeded each other in the possession of the Mediterranean—Phœnicians, +Carthaginians, Romans, and Greeks. But long before that time the island +must have been inhabited, for we meet with grottoes excavated in the +rocks, and with curious edifices resembling the _nuraghi_ of Sardinia, +and it is just possible that the descendants of these aborigines still +{336} constitute the principal element of the existing population, +which, at all events, is very mixed, and during the domination of the +Saracens almost became Arab. The language spoken is a very corrupt +Italian, containing many Arabic words. + +[Illustration: Fig. 124.—THE PORT OF MALTA. + +Scale 1 : 49,000.] + +[Illustration: LA VALETTA, MALTA.] + +The great military part played by Malta began when the Knights of +St. John, after their expulsion from Rhodes in 1522, installed +themselves upon the island, and converted it into the bulwark of +the Christian world. In the beginning of this century Malta passed +into the possession of the English, who may survey thence, as from a +watch-tower, the whole of the Mediterranean, from Gibraltar to Smyrna +{337} and Port Said. The excellent port of La Valetta singularly +facilitates the military and commercial part which Malta is called +upon to play in the world of the Mediterranean. It is sufficiently +spacious to shelter two entire fleets, and its approaches are defended +by fortifications rendered impregnable by the successive work of +three centuries. There are, besides, all the facilities required by +merchantmen, including a careening dock larger than any other in the +world. The commerce of the island is rapidly increasing; it is one of +the great centres of steamboat navigation, and submarine telegraphs +connect it with all parts of the world.[115] + +The city of La Valetta has retained all its ancient picturesqueness, +in spite of its straight streets and the walls which surround it. +Its high white houses, ornamented with balconies and conservatories, +rise amphitheatre-like on the slope of a hill; stairs lead from +landing-place to landing-place to the summit of this hill; and from +every street we behold the blue sea, with its large merchantmen and +crowds of smaller vessels. Gondolas, having two huge eyes painted upon +the prow, glide noiselessly over the waters, and curious vehicles roll +heavily along the quays. Maltese, English soldiers, and sailors of +every nation crowd the streets. Now and then a woman glides rapidly +along the walls. Like all Christian women of the East, she wears the +_faldetta_, a sort of black silk domino, which hides her sumptuous +dress, and coquettishly conceals her features. + +Malta beyond the walls of the town is but a dreary place of abode. +The country rises gently towards the south, in the direction of Città +Vecchia and the hills of Ben Gemma. Grey rocks abound, a fine dust +covers the vegetation, and the white walls of the village glisten +in the sun. There are no trees, except in a few solitary gardens, +where the famous mandarin oranges grow. Nor are there any rivers. The +soil is scorched, and it is matter for astonishment that it should +yield such abundant harvests of cereals, and clover (_sulla_) growing +to the height of a man. Carnation tints delight the eye during the +season of flowers. The Maltese peasants, small, wiry, and muscular, +are wonderfully industrious. They have brought the whole island under +cultivation, the cliffs alone excepted, and, where vegetable soil +is wanting, they produce it artificially by triturating the rocks. +In former times vessels coming from Sicily were bound to bring a +certain quantity of soil as ballast. But in spite of their careful +cultivation, the inhabitants of Malta, Gozzo, and Comino (thus +named from cumin, which, with cotton, is the principal crop of the +island), the produce hardly suffices for six months’ consumption, +and the islanders are largely dependent upon Sicily for their food. +Navigation and the fisheries contribute likewise towards the means of +subsistence, but the Maltese would nevertheless perish on their island +if the surplus population did not emigrate to all the coast lands of +the Mediterranean, and especially to Algeria, where the Maltese, as +everywhere else, are distinguished for thrift and industry. {338} + +In winter this exodus is in some measure compensated for by the +arrival of many English families, who visit the island for the sake of +its dry and mild climate. February is the finest month, and the island +is then resplendent with verdure, but the scorching heat of summer soon +dries up the vegetation. + +A governor appointed by the Crown exercises executive functions, and +enjoys the privilege of mercy. He is assisted by a Council of seven +members, by whom all laws are discussed and voted. The lord-lieutenant +of each district is chosen amongst the Maltese nobles, and deputies +appointed by the governor manage the affairs of the villages. Italian +is the language used in the courts, with the exception of the Supreme +Court, into which English was introduced in 1823. + +The revenues of the island, about £170,000 annually, are not sufficient +to cover the military expenses, and the deficiency is made up by the +imperial treasury. + +Most of the inhabitants are Roman Catholics. The bishop is appointed by +the Pope, and enjoys an income of £4,000.[116] + + +VIII.—SARDINIA. + +It is a curious fact that an island so fertile as Sardinia, so rich +in metals, and so favourably situated in the centre of the Tyrrhenian +Sea, should have lagged behind in the race of progress as it has. When +the Carthaginians held that island its population was certainly more +numerous than it is now, and the fearful massacres placed on record by +the historians of Rome testify to this fact. Its decadence was sudden +and thorough. In part it may be accounted for by the configuration of +the island, which presents steep cliffs towards Italy, whence emigrants +might have arrived, whilst its western coast is bounded by marshes +and insalubrious swamps. But the principal cause of this torpor, +which endured for centuries, is traceable to the actions of man. The +conquerors who succeeded the Romans and Byzantines in the possession +of the island, whether Saracens, Pisans, Genoese, or Aragonese, +monopolized its produce solely with a view to their own profit, and +further mischief was wrought by the pirates of Barbary, who frequently +descended upon its coasts. As recently as 1815 the Tunisians landed +upon Sant’ Antioco, massacring the inhabitants, or carrying them into +slavery. The coast districts became depopulated, and the inhabitants +retired to the interior, where, oppressed by their feudal lords, +they led a life of isolation from the rest of Europe. It is hardly a +generation since Sardinia began to participate in the general progress +made throughout Italy. + +[Illustration: Fig. 125.—THE SEA TO THE SOUTH OF SARDINIA. + +Scale 1 : 2,000,000.] + +Sardinia is nearly as large as Sicily, but has only a fourth of its +population.[117] Geographically it is more independent of Italy than +the southern island, and a profound sea, more than 1,000 fathoms in +depth, divides it from the African continent. Sardinia with Corsica +forms a group of twin islands, which is separated from the Tuscan +archipelago by a narrow strait only 170 fathoms in depth. {339} The +geological structure of the two islands is identical, and there can +be no doubt that the islands and rocks in the Strait of Bonifacio are +the remains of an isthmus destroyed by the sea. On the other hand, we +learn from a study of the geology of Sardinia that at a period not very +remote that island must have consisted of several separate islands. +The principal island formed a southerly continuation {340} of the +mountains of Corsica, whilst the smaller ones lay to the west. Alluvial +deposits, volcanic eruptions, and perhaps, also, an upheaval of the +soil, have converted the shallow straits which separated them into dry +land. + +The mountains of Sardinia may be said to begin with the islands of +Maddalena and Caprera, in the Strait of Bonifacio, and in the mountain +mass of the Gallura they attain already a considerable height. A +depression separates these from the southern portion of the great +back-bone of the island, which stretches along the whole of the eastern +coast, and terminates abruptly at Cape Carbonaro. These mountains, +like those of Corsica, consist of crystalline rocks and schists; but +whilst the slope on the latter island is steepest towards the west, the +reverse is the case on Sardinia, and that island may almost be said to +turn its back upon Italy. The general slope of the island is towards +the west, and its occupation by Spain could therefore be justified by +purely geographical arguments. + +[Illustration: Fig. 126.—THE STRAIT OF BONIFACIO. + +Scale 1 : 300,000.] + +The highest summits of the island are found in the central portion of +this crystalline chain, where the Gennargentu, or “silver mountain,” +rises to a height of 6,116 feet. A little snow remains in the crevices +of this mountain throughout the summer. The inhabitants of Northern +Sardinia formerly imagined that their own Gigantinu, or “giant,” in the +mountains of Limbarra, constituted the culminating point of the island, +but careful measurements have shown that that superb peak only attains +an elevation of 4,297 feet. + +The secondary mountain groups in the western portion of the island are +separated from the main chain by recent geological formations. The +granitic {341} region of La Nurra, to the west of Sassari, almost +uninhabited in spite of its fertile valleys, and the island of Asinara +adjoining it, which abounds in turtles, are amongst these insulated +mountain regions. Another, intersected by the beautiful valley of Domus +Novas, occupies the south-western extremity of the island. Geologists +look upon it as the most ancient portion of the island, and the plain +of Campidano, which now occupies the site of an ancient arm of the +sea, is of quaternary formation. The transversal range of Marghine +occupies the centre of the island, and there, too, we meet with vast +limestone plateaux pierced by volcanic rocks. The ancient craters, +however, no longer emit lava, nor even gases, and the villagers have +tranquilly built their huts within them. Thermal springs alone indicate +the existence of subterranean forces. Volcanic cones of recent age are +met with in the north-western portion of the island, as well as in +the valley of the Orosei, on the east coast. The trachytic rocks of +the islands of San Pietro and Sant’ Antioco are of greater age. They +sometimes present the appearance of architectural piles, especially +at the Cape of Columns, which is, however, rapidly disappearing, as +the stone is being quarried to be converted into pavement. On Sant’ +Antioco, which a bridge joins to the mainland, there are deep caverns, +the haunts of thousands of pigeons, which are caught by spreading a net +before their entrance. + +In addition to the changes wrought by volcanic agencies, Sardinia +exhibits traces of a slow upheaval or subsidence due to the expansion +or contraction of the upper strata of the earth. Raised beaches have +been discovered by La Marmora near Cagliari, at an elevation of 243 and +322 feet above the sea-level, where shells of living species are found +together with potsherds and other articles, proving that when this +upheaval took place the island was already inhabited. Elsewhere there +exist traces of a subsidence, and the old Phœnician cities of Nora, to +the south-west of Cagliari, and Tharros, on the northern peninsula of +the Gulf of Oristano, have become partly submerged. + +Amongst the rivers of the island there is only one which deserves that +name. This is the Tirso, or Fiume d’Oristano, which is fed by the +snows of the Gennargentu and the rains which descend on the western +mountain slopes. Other rivers of equal length are hardly more than +torrents, which at one time invade the fields adjoining them, and at +another shrink to a thin thread of water meandering between thickets of +laurel-trees. Most of the river beds are dry during eight months of the +year, and even after rain the water does not find its way into the sea, +but is absorbed by the littoral swamps. + +All these swamps have brackish water. The largest amongst them +communicate freely with the sea, at least during the rainy season, but +others are separated from it by a strip of sand. But these, too, are +brackish, for the sea-water percolates through the soil, and keeps them +at the same level. The water of the inland swamps is likewise saturated +with saline substances derived from the surrounding soil. They +generally dry up in summer, but the coating of salt which then appears +is hardly dry enough to repay the labour of collection and refinement. +The only salt marshes actually exploited are those of Cagliari and of +Carlo-Forte, on San {342} Pietro. They have been leased to a French +company, and yield annually nearly 120,000 tons of salt. + +Swamps and marshes envelop nearly the whole of the island in a +zone of miasmata, which are carried by the wind into the interior, +producing fever even in the more elevated mountain districts. There are +localities on the island the air of which no stranger can breathe with +impunity. The coast districts of Sardinia, with their stagnant waters, +are, in truth, the most unhealthy in Italy, and quite one-fourth of +the area of the island is exposed to the scourge of malaria, which +sufficiently accounts for the small population of the island and the +little progress made. + +Even when Sardinia was at the height of its prosperity, and supplied +Rome with an abundance of corn, cheese, pork, lead, copper, iron, and +textile fabrics, it was noted for its unhealthiness, and the emperors +exiled to it those whom they desired to get rid of. Then, as now, the +landed proprietors, about the middle of June, retired to the towns, the +walls of which offered some protection against the poisonous air. The +Italian Government officials are sent to the island as a punishment, +and for the most part look upon themselves as condemned to death. Even +the native villagers are bound to observe the greatest precautions, and +wear garments of skin or leather which are impenetrable to rain, mist, +and dew. They are dressed most warmly during the hottest part of the +year as a protection against the climate, and in their long _mastrucas_ +of sheepskin they almost look like Wallachian herdsmen. + +Ancient geographers, as well as the Sardinians themselves, ascribe the +unhealthiness of the climate to the rarity of north-easterly winds. +The mountains of Limbarra, in the north of the island, are popularly +supposed to act as a sort of screen, which diverts this health-bringing +wind, to the great detriment of Lower Sardinia; and there appears +to be much truth in this popular notion. South-westerly winds, or +_libeccios_, are almost equally rare, and when they blow they do so +with tempestuous violence. + +The regular winds of Sardinia blow from the north-west or south-east. +The former is known as the _maestrale_, the latter as the _levante_ or +_sirocco_, called _maledetto levante_ by the inhabitants of Southern +Sardinia. It becomes charged with moisture during its passage across +the Mediterranean, and its temperature is in reality much less than +might be supposed from the lassitude produced by it. The maestrale, on +the other hand, is hailed with joy, for it is an invigorating wind. On +reaching the coast it generally parts with its moisture, and when it +arrives at Cagliari it is perfectly dry. The capital of Sardinia is +indebted to this wind and to sea breezes for its low temperature (62·4° +F.), which is far lower than that of Genoa. + +Hurricanes are comparatively rare, and hailstorms, which work such +damage elsewhere, are hardly known. Most of the rain falls in autumn; +it ceases in December, when the pleasantest season sets in. These are +the “halcyon days” of ancient poets, when the sea calms down in order +that the sacred bird may build his nest. But these pleasant days are +succeeded by a wretched spring. February, the “double-faced month” of +Sardinian mariners, brings capricious frosts, to which {343} succeed, +in March and April, abrupt changes of temperature, winds, and rain. +Vegetation in consequence is far more backward than might be supposed +from the latitude. + +The vegetation of Sardinia resembles that of the other islands of the +Mediterranean. The forest in the highland valleys of the interior +and on the trackless mountain slopes consists of pines, oaks, and +holm-oaks, mixed here and there with yoke-elms and maples. The +villages are surrounded by chestnut-trees and groves of magnificent +walnut-trees. The hill-tops, robbed of their forests, are covered +with odoriferous plants and thickets of myrtles, strawberry-trees, +and heather. It is there the bees collect the bitter honey so much +despised by Horace. Vast tracts of uncultivated land near the seashore +are covered with wild olive-trees, which only need grafting to +yield excellent fruit. All the fruit trees and useful plants of the +Mediterranean flourish in Sardinia. Almond and orange trees, introduced +by the Moors at the close of the eleventh century, flourish vigorously. +The orange groves of Millis, which are protected by the extinct volcano +of Monte Ferru, are, perhaps, the most productive on the shores of +the Mediterranean, and in good seasons yield 60,000,000 oranges. +The gardens of Domus Novas, Ozieri, and Sassari are of surprising +fertility. In the southern part of the island, wherever the cultivated +fields gain upon the lands covered with rock-roses, fennel, and lilies, +they are fenced in with fig-trees. The fan-shaped foliage of the +date-palm is seen near every town, and more especially in the environs +of Cagliari. By a curious contrast the dwarf palm is not met with in +the southern lowlands of the island, though their climate is almost +African, but forms dense thickets in the solitudes of Alghero, in the +north of the islands. The inhabitants eat the roots of this tree, as do +also the Moors. + +Although all the plants of neighbouring countries become easily +acclimatized in Sardinia, that island is naturally poorer in species +than are continental regions lying under the same latitude. There +is nothing special about its flora, for the island is probably only +a remnant of a larger tract of land which formerly joined Europe to +Africa. As to the famous plant mentioned by ancient writers, which, +eaten by mistake, produced fits of “sardonic laughter,” or even death, +it does not appear to be peculiar to the island. Mimaut thinks, +from the descriptions of Pliny and Pausanias, that the large-leafed +water-parsley (_Sium latifolium_) is referred to. + +The number of species of animals, like that of plants, is smaller in +Sardinia than on the neighbouring continent. There are neither bears, +badgers, polecats, nor moles. Vipers or venomous serpents of any +description do not exist, and the only animal to be dreaded is the +tarentula (_arza_, or _argia_), a sting from which can be cured only +by dancing until completely exhausted, or by immersion in dung. The +ordinary frog, though common in Corsica, does not exist, but European +butterflies are numerous. The _moufflon_, which is, perhaps, the +ancestor of our domestic sheep, and has been exterminated in nearly +all the islands of the Mediterranean, still lives in the mountains of +Corsica and Sardinia. Wild horses roamed over Sant’ Antioco as recently +as the beginning of this century; myriads {344} of rabbits burrow in +the small islands lining the coast; and wild goats with long horns and +yellow teeth inhabit the limestone island of Tavolara, in the Gulf of +Terranova. These goats are descended from domestic animals abandoned +at some former period. Caprera, the residence of Garibaldi, is named +after the goats which formerly inhabited it, and animals of that kind +recently introduced there quickly returned to a state of nature. + +Naturalists have observed that the mammals of Sardinia are smaller +than the same species living on the continent. The goat is the only +exception to the rule. The stag, deer, wild boar, fox, wild cat, hare, +rabbit, marten, and weasel are all of them smaller than the continental +varieties. The same rule applies to domesticated animals, with the +exception of the pig, which grows to a great size, especially where +it is allowed to roam through oak forests. There is a variety of this +animal whose hoofs are not cloven, and which ought, therefore, to be +classed amongst solipeds. The horses and asses of Sardinia are dwarfs. +But the horse is distinguished by great sobriety, sureness of foot, +vigour, and endurance. If in addition to these advantages it possessed +a more attractive exterior, it would rank among the most highly +appreciated horses of Europe. As to the donkeys, though hardly larger +than a mastiff, they are brave little animals, and frequently share +with their masters the only room of their abode. The old-fashioned +mills, resembling in every respect the Roman bas-reliefs which may +be seen in the Vatican, are propelled by these donkeys, which thus +materially contribute towards the support of their proprietors. + +Sardinia abounds more than any other country of Western Europe in +prehistoric remains. There are megaliths, known as “giants’ stones,” +“altars,” or “long-stones,” as in Brittany, scarcely any of them +showing traces of the chisel. Dolmens, however, are rare, and the +genuineness of all is doubted. Amongst these monuments there are, +perhaps, some which were connected with the worship of some Eastern +deity, for Phœnicians and Carthaginians stayed for a considerable +time upon the island, where they founded Caralis, Nora, Tharros, and +other towns; and even during the time of the Romans it was customary +to place Punic inscriptions upon the tombstones. The ruins of Tharros +have yielded golden idols and other articles in large numbers, most +of them being of Egyptian origin. But the principal witnesses to the +civilisation of the ancient Sards are the curious structures known +as _nuraghi_. They generally occupy the hill-tops, and, seen from a +distance, resemble pyramids. The limestone plateau of Giara, near the +centre of the island, is surrounded by masonry structures of this +description, which abound also in other portions of the island, the +number still existing being nearly 4,000. They are most numerous in the +basaltic region to the south of Macomer, and are met with for the most +part in fertile districts, far away from the arid steppes. + +The origin and uses of these nuraghi have been a subject of much +discussion, but archæologists now almost universally adopt the views +of Signor Spano, the indefatigable explorer of Sardinian antiquities. +According to him these nuraghi were dwellings, and their Phœnician name +simply means “round house.” The rudest {345} among them, dating back +probably for forty centuries, contain but a single chamber. They were +erected during the age of stone, when man first gave up his cavern +dwellings. The more recent constructions date back to the age of +bronze, and even of iron. More skill is exhibited in their structure, +though no mortar has been used, and they contain two or more chambers, +forming as many floors, and accessible by means of stone stairs. +The ground floor of some is large enough for the accommodation of +forty or fifty persons, and is furnished with antechambers and small +semicircular recesses. The nuraghi of Su Domu or S’Orcu, near Domus +Novas, which has recently been demolished, contained ten chambers and +four courtyards; it was a fortress as well as a dwelling-place, capable +of accommodating a hundred persons and standing a siege. The dwellings +of the modern Albanians and of the Swaneti in the Caucasus still +resemble these ancient abodes. + +[Illustration: Fig. 127—LA GIARA. + +Scale 1 : 308,640.] + +The rubbish which accumulated in these nuraghi has yielded a multitude +of objects which throw light upon the daily life of the inhabitants, +and bear witness to their relative civilisation. The lower strata only +contain hand-made utensils, stone arms, and pottery, but in the upper +and more recent layers many articles of bronze have been found. Other +monuments of cyclopean structure stand near these ancient dwellings. +They are popularly known as “giants’ tombs,” and Signor {346} Sapi, +who has examined a large number of them, has discovered in every +instance the ashes of human beings. + +Though very superstitious, the Sardinians have no legends respecting +these dwellings of the aborigines, and at most attribute them to the +devil. This absence of traditions is no doubt traceable to the almost +total annihilation of the inhabitants by successive conquerors. The +Carthaginians showed no mercy to the aborigines, and during the first +centuries of Roman rule massacres and forcible emigration were the +order of the day, and the gaps thus created were filled up by Italian +colonists and exiles. + +The ancient Sards were most likely Iberians. They are of low stature, +and the climate, which has stunted the growth of wild and domesticated +animals, appears to have influenced man likewise; but they are well +proportioned and muscular, have an abundance of black hair and strong +beards, and scarcely ever grow bald. There are minor differences in +the Sards of the two provinces. Those of the north have generally oval +features and an aquiline nose, whilst those near Cagliari, who are +probably more mixed, have irregular features and prominent cheek-bones. + +The inhabitants of the interior of the island are, perhaps, of purer +race than any other Europeans. Their ancestors, no doubt, were of +the most diverse origin, but most invasions which took place after +the Roman era stopped short at the coast. The Vandals paid a visit +to Sardinia, but all the other Germanic tribes, who ravaged nearly +every other country of Western Europe, spared that island, and its +inhabitants were thus able to preserve their manners and language. The +Moors, Pisans, Genoese, Catalonians, and Spaniards, who successively +invaded the island, never penetrated beyond the coast. There is only +one exception to this rule, viz. that of the Barbaricini, who inhabit +the mountain district of Barbagia, in the very centre of the island, +and who are supposed to be the descendants of Berbers expelled from +Africa by the Vandals. When they came to the island they were still +pagans, and they intermarried with their neighbours, the Ilienses, +an aboriginal tribe, pagans like themselves. They were converted to +Christianity in the seventh century, and the sombre dress worn by their +women reminds us of Barbary. + +Of all the idioms derived from the Latin, that spoken in Sardinia has +most resemblance to the language of the ancient Romans. More than five +hundred words are absolutely identical. There are likewise a few Greek +words not met with in any other Latin idiom, as well as two or three +words which have no affinity with any other European tongue, and which +are, perhaps, derived from the language spoken by the aborigines. The +two leading dialects, those of Logoduro, in the north, and of Cagliari, +are directly derived from the Latin, and are, perhaps, most nearly +related to Spanish. At Sassari, and in some of the neighbouring coast +districts, an Italian dialect is spoken which is very much like that +of Corsica or Genoa. At Alghero the descendants of the Catalonian +immigrants who settled there about the middle of the fourteenth century +still speak their old Provençal. The _Maurelli_, or _Maureddus_, in +the environs of Iglesias, who are probably Berbers, {347} and can be +recognised by their narrow skulls, make use of a few African words. +Maltzan looks upon the inhabitants of the fertile district of Millis as +the purest representatives of African immigrants, and it was they who +introduced the cultivation of the orange into Sardinia. + +The Sardinians of the interior not only retain their ancient language, +but likewise many of their ancient customs. Their dances are still the +same as in the time of Greece. In the north the steps are regulated by +the human voice, the chanters occupying the centre of the ring. In the +south a musical instrument, the _launedda_, is used, which is nothing +but an ancient flute, made of two or three reeds. The customs observed +at christenings, weddings, and funerals are likewise of remote date. +Marriage, as amongst nearly all the ancient inhabitants of Europe, is +preceded by a feigned abduction of the bride. The latter, after she has +entered the house of her husband, must not stir from her place during +that day, nor speak a single word. Mute as a statue, she is no longer a +sentient being, but a “thing,” the property of her husband. She is not +permitted to see her relatives during three days, and in the south many +women partly conceal their features. + +The mountaineers likewise observe the lugubrious ceremony of a wake, +called _titio_ or _attito_. Women, who are either the friends of +the deceased or are engaged for the purpose, penetrate the mortuary +chamber, tear their hair, howl, and improvise hymns of mourning. These +old pagan ceremonies become truly terrific when the deceased has been +the victim of assassination, for in that case the mourners swear to +take the life of the murderer. Up to the beginning of this century +the practice of the vendetta annually cost the lives of hundreds of +young men. At the present day it is confined to the most secluded +parts of the island, and in the mountain districts of Nuoro and La +Gallura it is customary at christenings to place a few bullets in the +swaddling-clothes of the infants, these consecrated bullets being +supposed never to miss their mark. Another custom still more barbarous +has ceased to be observed since the beginning of the last century. +Women, called “finishers” (_accabadure_), were employed to hasten the +end of dying persons, a practice which often led to the most atrocious +deeds. + +The peasant of Sardinia, though not the proprietor of the soil, is +nevertheless permitted to enjoy the result of his labour. The feudal +system existed up to 1840, and many traces of it still survive. The +great barons, most of them of Spanish extraction, were almost the +absolute masters of the country, and up to 1836 they administered the +law, had their prisons, and erected gallows as a symbol of their power. +The peasants, however, were not tied to the land, but could migrate at +pleasure, and custom granted them a fair share of the produce of the +soil. By virtue of an _ademprivio_ they were permitted to cut wood in +the forests, to pasture their sheep on the hills, and to bring into +cultivation the waste lands of the plains. Agriculture was carried +on in the most primitive fashion, for the great lords of the land +usually resided abroad, and the management of their estates was left +to bailiffs. Government has now become the proprietor of most of the +unenclosed {348} land, 80,000 acres of which have been ceded to the +Anglo-Italian Company, which has undertaken to provide the island with +a network of railways. + +[Illustration: Fig. 128.—DISTRICT OF IGLESIAS. + +Scale 1 : 420,800.] + +In the more densely populated districts the division of the land is +exceedingly minute, and this subdivision is still progressing at a +most disastrous rate. The nomad herdsmen, on the other hand, possess +no land of their own, though, if inclined, they are at liberty to +enclose a plot. But vague proprietary rights like these render the +careful cultivation of the soil impossible. It has been seriously +proposed to expropriate the whole of the land, and to sell it to a few +enterprising capitalists, but this would simply amount to a restoration +of the old feudal times, and poverty, which is great even now, would +become greater. There are villages in the district of Ogliastra where +the peasants eat bread made of the acorns of _Quercus ilex_, the dough +being kneaded with water containing a fatty clay. This is, perhaps, the +only instance of earth-eating in Europe. The Spaniards, too, eat acorn +bread, but they use the fruit of _Quercus ballota_, which is really +edible, and are careful not to mix its flour with earth. + +The Sardinians, even when they are the owners of pasture-grounds or +of fields, never live in the country. Like the Sicilians, they are +concentrated in towns or large villages, and neither hamlets nor +isolated farmhouses are met with. Even {349} the shepherds in the +mountains build their huts in groups called _stazzi_, and combine for +mutual protection into _cussorgie_. Members of these associations, when +they lose their cattle from disease or any other cause, may claim one +or more beasts from every one of their comrades living within the same +district or canton. In other parts of the island—as, for instance, +near Iglesias—the produce of the orchards is looked upon as common +property. The mountaineers, though poor, practise the ancient virtue +of hospitality, and though the dwellings are rude, they find means of +making a stranger staying amongst them comfortable. + +The products of Sardinia form but a small proportion of those of all +Italy. Most of the peasants only work by fits and starts, and hardly +more than a fourth of the area of the island has been brought under +cultivation. It sometimes happens that the crops are destroyed by +the scorching heat of the sun, or eaten up by locusts, which come in +swarms from Africa. Except near Sassari no attempt is made to improve +the produce. The olive-tree alone is cultivated with some care, for +the grower of a certain number of these trees may claim political +privileges, and even the title of “Count,” and thousands of proprietors +have converted their sterile steppes into productive olive groves. The +millions of oranges grown in the gardens of Millis and elsewhere are +taken entirely for home consumption. Commercially these oranges are of +less importance than the saline plants collected in the marshes of the +coast districts, and the ashes of which are exported to Marseilles to +be converted into soda. + +The working of granite and marble quarries yields some profit, but the +mines, which were of such importance in the time of the Romans, are +hardly touched now. There is only one iron mine, that of San Leone, +where work has been carried on seriously by a French company since +1822. It yields about 50,000 tons of ore annually, and the oldest +railway of the island connects that mine with Cagliari. The district +of Iglesias, where the Romans founded Plumbea and Metalla, and the +Pisans searched for silver, has recently regained some of its ancient +importance on account of its lead and zinc mines. The waste of the old +mines is likewise being scientifically treated by French, English, +and Italian companies, to whom mining claims have been ceded, and a +curious stalactite cavern which traverses the hill near Domus Novas +has been utilised in gaining access to the scoriæ. Iglesias is rapidly +growing into a city of modern aspect, the village of Gonessa is already +a respectable town, and the little harbour of Porto Scuso, until +recently almost deserted, is now crowded with small craft employed in +carrying annually 900,000 tons of lead and zinc ore to the roadstead of +Carlo-Forte. Unfortunately the miners, especially those from abroad, +frequently succumb to the climate. + +The fisheries, being for the most part carried on in the bays exposed +to the sea breezes, are not attended by the same dangers. Certain +portions of the coast abound in fish, such as the Bay of Cagliari, and +the narrow arms of the sea in the archipelago of the Maddalena, which +the ancients searched for purple shells. Anchovies and “sardines” +periodically visit the coasts, and as many as 50,000 tunny-fish are +sometimes caught in a single season. The swamps or lagoons likewise +yield fish, which are caught in nets spread at the openings of the +channels {350} communicating with the sea. The swamp of Cagliari +abounds in shad, that of Oristano in mullets and eels, and that +of Alghero in pike and gold fish. The fisheries of Sardinia are +consequently of much importance, but most of their profits are reaped +by strangers. Corsicans fish near La Maddalena, Genoese around San +Pietro, and Italians monopolize the coral fisheries. These latter, too, +collect the _Pinna nobilis_, a shell, the silky byssus of which is +converted into stuff for garments. Nor do the Sardinians take to the +sea as sailors, and the commerce of the island is carried on almost +exclusively in Genoese and other Italian vessels. Out of 2,400 proverbs +collected by Spano, only three refer to the sea ! [118] + +[Illustration: Fig. 129—CAGLIARI, AS SEEN FROM THE PASS OF BONERIA.] + +The inhabitants of the northern “Cape” of Sassari, or _di Sopra_, +claim to be more intelligent and civilised than those of the southern +“Cape” of Cagliari, or _di Sotto_. The former do not call themselves +Sardinians at all, but apply that name, which to them is synonymous +with barbarians, to the inhabitants of the {351} interior and of the +south. In former times these two sections of the population hated +each other, and the spirit of the vendetta, which set family against +family, village against village, made its influence felt all over the +island. This old animosity has not yet completely died out; but the +people of Sassari can no longer claim to be the superiors of their +southern neighbours. They certainly are better agriculturists and more +industrious, but the southerners possess the richest mines, their +portion of the island is most productive, and it is the seat of the +capital. + +[Illustration: Fig. 130.—THE PORT OF TERRANOVA. + +Scale 1 : 250,000.] + +Cagliari, the ancient _Caralis_, has remained the great emporium of +the island since the days of Carthage. Only a few idols, sepulchral +chambers, the ruins of an aqueduct, and an amphitheatre excavated +in the rock, recall the dominion of Carthaginians and Romans, but +it could not be deprived of its excellent harbour and magnificent +roadstead. The town was only a short time under the rule of the Moors, +but its physiognomy is almost more oriental than that of any city in +Europe, many of its houses being provided with cupolas and balconies +overhanging the streets. Its position as a place of commerce is most +favourable, for it lies on the ocean highway connecting Sicily with +the Balearic Islands, and the coast of Africa is within a day’s sail. +It is sure to prosper, especially if a serious effort is made to +drain the marshes and to transform the plain of the Campidano into a +fertile garden. The latter, an ancient arm of the sea, extends to the +south-east towards Oristano, the “town of potters.” During the Middle +Ages {352} the latter was the seat of the most powerful lords of the +island, and it was thence Eleonora promulgated her famous _Carta de +logu_, which became the public law of the whole island. Oristano has +an excellent harbour, sheltered by the peninsula of Tharros, upon +which the Phœnicians had founded one of their settlements; its fields +are fertile, and, to bring about a return of its ancient prosperity, +it is only necessary to drain the marshes which now hem it in. In +former times fires were lighted upon the walls of the town during the +season of malaria, to purify the atmosphere; but the vast forests from +which the fuel for these fires was procured have disappeared, and this +portion of Sardinia is no longer entitled to its ancient epithet of +“Arborea.” It is said that in the marshes of Nurachi, to the north-east +of Oristano, may be heard now and then a noise resembling the bellowing +of a bull. This noise is probably produced by the passage of air +through some subterranean cavern, and similar phenomena have been +observed on the coast of Dalmatia. + +Sassari the delightful, the rival of Cagliari, is embosomed amidst +olive-trees, gardens, and country houses. It alone, of all the towns of +the island, could boast of a republican government during the Middle +Ages, and the public spirit of its present inhabitants is, perhaps, +traceable to this circumstance. Its geographical position, however, +is far less favourable than that of Cagliari, for a zone of swamps +separates it from the sea. It might export its produce through the +port of Alghero or the excellent harbour of Porto Conto, to the south +of the mountains of La Nurra; but facility of access has dictated +its choice of Porto Torres, a miserable village on the swampy shore +of the Gulf of Asinara. Porto Torres occupies the site of a Roman +city, and the arches of a huge aqueduct and the columns of a Temple +of Fortune still rise above the reeds. This old port certainly offers +great facility for the export of the olive oil of Sassari and the +wines of Tempio, as respects France and Genoa; but the intricate +navigation of the Strait of Bonifacio separates it from the nearest +Italian coast. Italy has therefore determined to create an additional +port on the east coast of the island, and the Bay of Terranova has +been selected for that purpose. _Olbia_, which at the time of the +Romans had no less than 150,000 inhabitants, occupied the site of the +present town, which the Italians fondly imagine may become the great +emporium of the island. Its port is certainly well sheltered, and the +roadsteads of the archipelago of La Maddalena near it afford additional +accommodation; but seriously to improve the condition of Sardinia it +will be necessary, above all things, to drain its dreary swamps, and to +“transform their poisonous exhalations into bread.”[119] + + +IX.—THE PRESENT AND FUTURE OF ITALY. + +No impartial spectator can deny that Italy, since it has again taken +its place among the nations of Europe, promises great things for the +future. Even its {353} political regeneration has brought to the +surface men of the highest intellect, courage, zeal, and public spirit. +There are some amongst them whom posterity will look upon as a credit +to all mankind. Possibly this period of excitement and nervous activity +may be succeeded by a sort of moral collapse, such as generally takes +place after every great crisis in the life of a nation. But this need +not render us anxious for the future, for generations exhausted by the +efforts they have made will be succeeded by others eager to continue +the work their predecessors have begun. + +In sciences and arts the native country of Volta, Cialdi, Secchi, +Rossini, Verdi, and Vela occupies even now a position of equality +with the most advanced nations of Europe. The Italian of the present +day is able to refer without shame to the two great centuries of the +Renaissance, for he has entered upon a second period of regeneration, +and the names of contemporaries can be mentioned by the side of the +great names of the past. Italy has its skilful painters and sculptors, +its celebrated architects and unrivalled musicians. The great works +achieved by its engineers are deserving the study of foreigners. +Amongst its physicists, geologists, astronomers, and mathematicians +there are some of the brightest ornaments of the age, and the assiduity +with which universities are frequented insures their having worthy +successors. A geographical society only recently established has +successfully taken up the work of exploration so gloriously carried +on by the Genoese and Venetians. It is not just, therefore, to say +ironically that “Italy has been made, but not Italians.” Individually +the Italians are inferior to no other race of Europe, and the +reorganization of the country would have been impossible had there been +any deficiency in men of mark. + +Italy is more densely inhabited than any other of the great states +of Europe, in spite of vast extents of almost uninhabitable mountain +tracts and swamps. The population, however, increases less rapidly +than in Russia, England, or Germany. It doubles in about a century, +whilst that of Russia doubles in fifty and that of France in two +hundred years. Italy thus occupies an intermediate position. In Apulia +and Calabria, which are amongst the poorest provinces, the birth rate +is highest, whilst in the wealthy Marches and Umbria it is lowest. +On an average the Italian dies when he is thirty-two, and his life +is consequently much shorter than that of the average Frenchman or +Englishman. + +Agriculture and the development of the natural resources of the soil +and the sea engage much more attention than industry properly so +called. Nearly fifty per cent. of the total area is under cultivation. +The cereals raised do not suffice for the wants of the inhabitants, +but other products are exported in considerable quantities. In its +production of oil Italy holds a foremost rank as regards quantity, but +not always with respect to quality. The amount of fruit grown, such +as figs, grapes, almonds, and oranges, is greater than in any other +country of Europe. The chestnut forests in the Apennines and Alps yield +rich harvests. Its mulberry plantations are four times more extensive +than those of France, and the raw silk produced in favourable years +exceeds in quantity that exported from China. The peninsula is still +entitled to its ancient epithet of {354} Œnotria (wine land), but, +apart from certain districts of continental Italy and Sicily, the +quality of wine produced, owing to carelessness on the part of the +growers, is inferior to what it is in France. The cultivation of cotton +is comparatively of small importance. The breeding of animals yields +large profits, and Italy is noted throughout Europe for the quality of +some kinds of cheese.[120] + +The working of the iron mines of Elba, the quarrying of marble and +granite in the Alps and Apuanic Alps, the extraction of borax and +boracic acid in the Tuscan Sub-Apennines, the mining for lead and zinc +in Sardinia, and for sulphur in Sicily,[121] lead up to industrial +pursuits properly so called. These latter extend nearly to everything, +from the manufacture of pins to the construction of steam-engines and +ships. Italy, however, is eminent only in the production of certain +_articles de luxe_, such as straw bonnets, cameos, coral jewellery, +glass, and in the preparation of macaroni and other farinaceous pastes. +The manufacture of silk, however, has taken a rapid development in +recent years, and Milan has become a dangerous rival of Lyons. In the +province of Novara, and more especially at Biella, there are hundreds +of woollen factories. The cotton manufacture is not of much importance, +and linen-weaving is for the most part carried on as a domestic +industry. Italy, in fact, cannot yet be called a manufacturing country. +The number of workmen is large, but they mostly labour at home or in +small workshops,[122] and a division of labour, such as exists in +England, France, or Germany, is hardly known. Manufactories, however, +are rapidly increasing, and economical conditions are gradually +becoming what they are already in most other countries of Europe. + +Italy possesses a powerful mercantile marine, manned by 150,000 seamen; +but its foreign commerce is far less than might have been expected +from its tonnage.[123] Most of the vessels are engaged in the coasting +trade. The first Italian vessel was seen in the Pacific in 1847, and +even now the Italian flag is very inadequately represented in the +navigation of the great oceans. Italian patriots are anxious to see +the commerce of the country extended to the most distant regions. For +the present Italy enjoys a sort of monopoly in the Mediterranean, and +any increase of {355} population or wealth in Northern Africa must +prove of immediate advantage to it. But there can be no doubt that the +proposed railway from Antwerp or Calais to Saloniki or Constantinople +will seriously affect the transit trade of Italian ports. Nor are +Italian shipowners able to compete with their rivals of Marseilles +or Trieste when it is a question of speed, for the number of their +steamers is very small. + +[Illustration: Fig. 131.—NAVIGATION OF ITALY.] + +The facilities for carrying on coasting trade have, in some measure, +interfered with the development of the inland trade of the country. +The construction of railways, however, is gradually bringing about a +change. Already five lines of {356} rails cross the Apennines, others +are projected, and one of the Italian railways, namely, that which +pierces the Alps in the tunnel of Mont Cenis, and finally follows the +eastern coast to Rimini, has become a portion of the great European +highway to India. Nor must the political importance of these railways +be underrated, for they knit together the most distant provinces of +Italy, and make the country really one.[124] + +[Illustration: Fig. 132.—ROUTES OF COMMERCE OF ITALY. + +Scale 1 : 6,000,000.] + +{357} + +The commerce of Italy has increased rapidly of late, but it is still +inferior not only to that of England, France, Germany, Austria, +and Russia, but likewise to that of much smaller countries, like +Belgium and the Netherlands. In 1875 the imports, including transit, +were estimated at £48,614,280, the exports at £42,301,800. France +participates in this commerce to the extent of 31 per cent., England +is represented by 23, Austria by 20, and all the other countries of +the world share in the remainder. Recently the commerce with North and +South America has assumed considerable proportions, and efforts are +being made to obtain a footing in Eastern Asia. + +The great scourge of Italy consists in the poverty of its peasantry +even in the most fertile provinces, as in Lombardy and the Basilicata. +These peasants live in foul hovels, and the united earnings of a +whole family are hardly sufficient to procure bread. Chestnuts, and a +polenta of maize and paste made of damaged flour, are the principal +articles of food, and nothing is left for luxuries, or even comfortable +clothing. Rickets and other diseases brought about by an insufficiency +of food are common, and, in fact, mortality is very great. Emigration +is under these circumstances of immense advantage to the country, for +the thousands of Italians who seek work or found new homes in South +America, the United States, France, Turkey, Egypt, and elsewhere, +not only earn their bread, but also render some assistance to those +of their relatives who remain behind. It is said that out of 500,000 +Italians living abroad, no less than 100,000 are engaged in art, either +as painters, sculptors, or musicians, the latter being frequently mere +street-singers or organ-grinders. + +Ignorance, the usual companion of poverty, is still very great +throughout the peninsula. We might err in condemning the Italians +because of their ignorance of the arts of reading and writing, for, as +the heirs of an ancient civilisation, they are more polished in their +manners than the educated peasants of the North. Still this ignorance +is most deplorable, for it precludes all progress. Nearly two-thirds of +the population over ten years of age are unable to read, and fifty-nine +men and seventy-eight women out of every hundred are unable to sign +the marriage registers. There are several thousand parishes without +elementary schools, and the number of pupils, instead of amounting +to the normal proportion of one to every six or seven inhabitants, +is only one to about eleven.[125] Education, however, is making fair +progress, but its influence upon the diminution of crimes of violence +has hitherto been small. In 1874 Signor Cantelli, the Home Secretary, +stated that there occurred annually 3,000 homicides, 4,000 cases of +highway robbery, and 30,000 violent assaults. + +The permanent confusion of the finances of Italy, attended as it is by +heavy and vexatious taxes, must be looked upon as one of the principal +causes which retard the development of the country. The national +debt may appear a small matter if we compare it with that of France, +but it has been raised in the course {358} of a single generation, +and is augmenting from year to year. The revenue increases but the +expenditure does so likewise, and the additional income resulting +from an increase of taxation and the sales of Church property is not +sufficient to cover the deficiency. The heavy cost of the army, an +absence of sustained efforts in carrying on public works, waste and +fraud by public servants, have hitherto prevented the establishment of +a balance between income and expenditure, and the paper money issued by +Government is nowhere accepted at its nominal value. + +This disorganization of the finances places Italy at the mercy of +foreigners, and the arrangements which have to be made from time to +time with foreign capitalists are not always of a purely financial +nature. The inefficiency of her military and naval organization, +moreover, compels her to cultivate foreign alliances as expediency may +direct, and to these alliances Italy is, in a large measure, indebted +for her political unity.[126] + +Nor is this unity even now as perfect as could be desired. The Pope +has been deprived of his temporal power; he resides at the Vatican +as a guest; and the money offered him by the Italian Government, +but which has never been accepted, is not tribute, but a gratuity. +But, in spite of this, the Pope is still a real power, and his very +presence interferes substantially with the permanent establishment of +the state. The Catholics of the world have not yet acquiesced in his +disestablishment, and they allow no opportunity for attacking the new +order of things to escape them. Political Europe is consequently much +interested in the home affairs of Italy, and feels tempted frequently +to intervene. The most expert diplomacy may not be able to avert this +danger, and if there is a struggle it will certainly not be confined to +the peninsula. + +In the end Italy will no doubt escape from the anomalous position +of having for her capital a city which is the seat of a theocratic +government claiming the allegiance of the Roman Catholics of the +entire world. The geographical conditions of no other country are +equally favourable to the development of national sentiments and +the maintenance of a national individuality. At the same time the +well-defined boundaries of the country deprive it of all force of +expansion. Italy will never play a great part beyond the bounds of the +Mediterranean, and though Italian may obtain a certain preponderance +in Tunis, Egypt, and the Levant, the noble language of Dante has no +chance, as regards universality, when opposed to English, French, +Spanish, German, or Russian. + + +X.—GOVERNMENT AND ADMINISTRATION. + +The charter promulgated in March, 1848, declares the old kingdom of +Sardinia to be an hereditary constitutional monarchy. It has gradually +been {359} extended to the other portions of the peninsula. Like most +similar documents, it guarantees equality before the law, personal +liberty, and inviolability of the domicile. The press is free, “subject +to a law repressing its abuses;” the right of meeting is recognised, +“but not in the case of places open to the general public;” and all +citizens are promised the enjoyment of equal civil and political +rights, “except in those cases which shall be determined by law.” + +The executive is intrusted to the King, but no law or act of government +is valid unless countersigned by a minister. The King, as such, is +commander of the naval and military forces, he concludes all treaties, +and the assent of the Chambers is only required if they concern +cessions of territory, or entail an expenditure of public money. +All Government officials are appointed by the King, he may dissolve +the Chamber of Deputies, justice is administered in his name, and +he possesses the right of pardon. He enjoys the fruits of the Crown +lands, and may dispose of his private property without reference to the +general laws of the country. The civil list of the King and the members +of his family annually exceeds £800,000 ! + +Senators are appointed by the King from amongst ecclesiastical, +military, and civil functionaries, persons of wealth, and men who +have deserved well of the country. Their number is not limited, and +they must be forty years of age. Deputies are elected for five years. +They must be thirty years of age. Neither senators nor deputies are +in receipt of emoluments, and this may explain the little zeal they +exhibit in the performance of their public duties. A quorum, consisting +of one-half the members of each house _plus_ one, is frequently +unattainable for weeks. + +The franchise is enjoyed by professors of universities and colleges, +civil servants, knights of orders of chivalry, members of the liberal +professions, merchants, persons who have an income of £24 from money +invested in Government securities, and all others twenty-five years of +age, able to read and write, and paying 32s. in taxes. The number of +electors is about 400,000, but hardly one-half of them ever go to the +poll. + +Each province occupies the position of a “corporation,” which may +hold property, and enjoys a certain amount of self-government. The +“Provincial Councils” consist of from twenty to sixty members, who +are chosen by the municipal electors for five years. These Councils +usually occupy themselves with the material interests of the province, +and, when not sitting, are represented by a “Deputation” charged with +controlling the acts of the prefect. + +The municipal organization is very similar to that of the provinces. +The Councils are elected for five years: all males of twenty-one years +of age paying from 4s. to 20s. in taxes (according to the importance +of the municipality), professors, civil servants, members of liberal +professions, and soldiers who have been decorated are in the enjoyment +of the franchise. The Council meets twice a year, and its sittings +are held in public if a majority demands it. It appoints a municipal +_giunta_ of from two to twelve members, charged with the conduct of +current affairs. The mayors, like the provincial prefects, are {360} +appointed by Government, but must be chosen from the members of the +Municipal Council. + +The great territorial divisions of the kingdom (see p. 362) consist +of 69 provinces and 284 circles (_circondarii_), or districts. +These latter again are subdivided into 1,779 judicial districts +(_mandamenti_) and 8,360 communes. The central Government is +represented in the provinces by a prefect, in the districts by a +sub-prefect, and in the communes by a mayor, or _sindaco_. This system +of administration is very much like that existing in modern France. + +The administration of justice was organized in 1865. In each commune +there is a “Conciliator,” appointed for three years by Government, +on the presentation of the Municipal Council. A “Pretor” administers +justice at the capital of each of the judicial districts: he is +assisted by one or more Vice-pretors. Next follow 161 civil and +correctional courts, 92 assize courts, 24 courts of appeal, 25 +commercial tribunals, and 4 courts of cassation; the latter at +Florence, Naples, Palermo, and Turin. The Code of Laws is an adaptation +of the Code Napoléon, and breathes the same spirit. + +In military matters Prussia has served as a model. Every Italian, +on attaining his twenty-first year, becomes liable to serve in the +army or navy. Men embodied in the first category of the standing army +(_esercito permanente_) remain from three to five years under the +colours, according to the arm to which they belong, and six to seven +years on furlough. The men of the second category, or reserve of the +standing army, drill fifty days, and are then dismissed to their homes. +The “mobilised militia” includes all men up to forty not belonging +to the standing army. A “levy en masse,” or _Milizia stanziole_, is +provided for by law, but nothing has been done hitherto to render it +a reality. The standing army includes 90 regiments of infantry, 20 +regiments of cavalry, 14 of artillery, and 1 of engineers, and numbers +410,000 men; the reserve amounts to 180,000 men; the mobilised militia +(247 battalions, 24 Alpine companies, 60 batteries, and 10 companies +of engineers), 277,000, and 234,000 officers and men are stated to be +under the colours. The four great fortresses of the north are Verona, +Mantua, Peschiera, and Legnago. These form the famous “Quadrilateral.” +Venice is likewise a place of great strength, and made an heroic +defence in 1849. Palmanova defends the frontier between the Julian +Alps and the Gulf of Trieste. Rocca d’Anfo, on an isolated rock to the +north of Lake Garda, commands the defiles of the Adige and Chiese. +Pizzighettone, on the Adda, is no longer of much importance, now that +Italy has acquired possession of the Quadrilateral; but Alessandria, at +the confluence of the Tanaro and Bormida, will always retain its rank +as the great strategical centre of Piemont, and one of the strongest +places of Europe. Casale may be looked upon as one of its outworks, and +together with Genoa defends the passages of the Apennines. Piacenza and +Ferrara command important passages of the Po. The other fortresses of +Italy are Ancona in the centre; Porto Ferrajo in Elba; Gaeta, Capua, +and Taranto in the south; and Messina in Sicily. + +The navy consists of 21 ironclads (179 guns, engines of 11,310 +horse-power, 76,842 tons) and 51 wooden steamers, manned by 20,000 +seamen. The great {361} naval arsenals and stations are at Spezia, +Genoa, Naples, Castellamare di Stabbia, Venice, Ancona, and Taranto. + +The Roman Catholic Church alone is acknowledged by the State, but +all other religions are tolerated. The conflict between Church and +State is favourable to the spread of Protestantism; but, apart from +the Waldenses and a few foreigners in the larger towns, there are +no Protestants in Italy. Many of those, however, who are nominally +Catholics have ranged themselves amongst the enemies of their Church, +or are perfectly indifferent. + +Italy occupies quite a special position in the world, owing to its +being the seat of the Papacy. Rome is the seat of two governments, +viz. that of the King and of the Sovereign Pontiff. The latter, though +shorn of his temporal power, is in principle one of the most absolute +monarchs. Once elected Vicar of Jesus Christ by the cardinals met in +conclave, he is responsible to no one for his actions, though it is +customary for him to listen to the advice of the Sacred College of +Cardinals before deciding questions of importance. The Pope alone, of +all men, is infallible; he can efface the crimes of others, “bind and +unbind,” and holds the keys of heaven and hell, his power extending +thus beyond the span of man’s natural life. + +The cardinals are the great dignitaries of this spiritual government. +They are created by the Pope. Their number is limited to 70, viz. 6 +Cardinal Bishops (who reside at Rome), 50 Cardinal Priests, and 14 +Cardinal Deacons. The Cardinal _Camerlengo_ represents the temporal +authority of the Holy See, and on the death of a pope he takes charge +of the Vatican and of the Fisherman’s Key, which is the symbol of the +power bestowed upon St. Peter and his successors. In special cases the +cardinals of the three orders may be convoked to an Œcumenical Council. +On the death of a pope the cardinals elect his successor, who must +be fifty-five years of age, and obtain two-thirds of the votes. His +investment with the pallium and tiara, however, only takes place after +the assent of the Governments of France, Spain, Austria, and Naples +(now represented by Italy) has been secured. + +In virtue of the formula of “A free Church in a free State,” so +frequently repeated since Cavour, the Pope is permitted to enjoy +sovereign rights. He convokes councils and chapters, appoints all +ecclesiastical officers, has his own post-office and telegraph, his +guard of nobles and of Swiss, pays no taxes, and enjoys in perpetuity +the palaces of the Vatican and Lateran, as well as the villa of +Castel-Gandolfo, on the Lake of Albano. In addition to this, he has +been voted by the Italian Parliament an annual “dotation” of £129,000. +This grant, however, he has not touched hitherto, but the “Peter’s +pence,” collected by the faithful in all parts of the world, amount to +more than double that sum. + +Italy is divided into 47 archiepiscopal and 206 episcopal sees. +There are more than 100,000 secular priests, and in 1866, when the +monasteries and convents were suppressed, their inmates receiving +pensions from Government, there were 32,000 monks and 44,000 nuns. The +ecclesiastical army consequently numbers 176,000 souls, and is nearly +as numerous as the military force on a peace footing. {362} + +The following table exhibits the area and population (estimated for +1875) of the great territorial divisions of Italy:― + + Area. + Square miles. Population. + Piemont 11,301 2,995,213 + Liguria 2,056 865,254 + Lombardy 9,084 3,553,913 + Venetia (Venezia) 9,060 2,733,406 + Emilia 7,921 2,153,381 + Umbria 3,720 563,582 + Marches 3,748 930,712 + Tuscany 9,287 2,172,832 + Rome (Latium) 4,601 839,074 + Abruzzos—Molise 6,676 1,302,966 + Campania 6,941 2,807,450 + Apulia (Puglie) 8,539 1,464,604 + Basilicata 4,122 517,069 + Calabria 6,663 1,229,614 + Sicily 11,290 2,698,672 + Sardinia 9,398 654,432 + ─────── ────────── + Total 114,407 27,482,174 + ═══════ ══════════ + +[Illustration] + +{363} + +[Illustration] + + + + +CORSICA.[127] + + +Corsica, with Sardinia, forms a world apart. At a remote epoch these +two islands were but one, and it is curious to find that Corsica, which +politically now forms part of France, is geographically as well as +historically much more Italian than its sister island. A glance at a +map is sufficient to convince us that Corsica is a dependency of Italy, +for while abyssal depths of more than 500 fathoms separate it from +Provence, it is joined to the coast of Tuscany by a submarine plateau, +the mountains of which rise above the surface of the waters as islands. +The climate and natural productions of the island are those of Italy, +and the language of its inhabitants is Italian. Purchased from the +Genoese, then conquered by main force, Corsica in the end voluntarily +united its destinies with those of France. It has now been connected +for more than three generations with the latter, and there can be no +doubt that most of its citizens look upon themselves as Frenchmen. + +Though only half the size of Sardinia, Corsica is nevertheless larger +than an average French department. The fourth island in size of the +Mediterranean, it follows next to Cyprus, but is far more important +than that island, and only yields to Sicily and Sardinia in wealth +and population.[128] It is a country of great natural beauty. Its +mountains, attaining an altitude of over 8,000 feet, remain covered +with snow during half the year, and the view from the summits embraces +nearly the whole of the island, its barren rocks, forests, and +cultivated fields. Most of the valleys abound in running water, and +cascades glitter in all directions. Old Genoese towers, standing upon +promontories, formerly defended the entrance to every bay exposed to +incursions of the Saracens, but they are hardly more nowadays than +embellishments of the landscape. + +Monte Cinto, the culminating point of the island, does not pierce the +region of {364} persistent snows. A huge citadel of granite, whose +fastnesses afforded a shelter to the Corsicans during their wars of +independence, it rises in the north-western portion of the island. From +its summit we can trace the whole of the coast from the French Alps +to the Apennines of Tuscany. There are other peaks to the north and +south of it which almost rival it in height.[129] This main chain of +the island consists throughout of crystalline rock. Transverse ridges +connect it with a parallel range of limestone mountains on the east, +which extend northward through the whole of the peninsula of Bastia, +and shut in, farther south, the old lake basin of Corte, now drained +by the Golo, Tavignano, and other rivers. The whole of the interior +of Corsica may be described as a labyrinth of mountains, and in order +to pass from village to village it is necessary to climb up steep +steps, or _scale_, and to ascend from the region of olives to that of +pasturage. The high-road which joins Ajaccio to Bastia has to climb a +pass 3,793 feet in height (Fig. 134), and even the road following the +populous western coast ascends and descends continuously, in order to +avoid the promontories descending steeply into the sea. These physical +obstacles sufficiently explain why railways have not yet been built. + +[Illustration: Fig. 133.—SUBMARINE PLATEAU BETWEEN CORSICA AND TUSCANY. + +Scale 1 : 1,850,000.] + +[Illustration: SPAIN AND PORTUGAL] + +The western coast of the island is indented by numerous gulfs and bays, +which resemble ancient fiords partly filled up by alluvial sediment. +On the eastern coast, {365} which faces Italy, the slopes are more +gentle; the rivers are larger and more tranquil, though not one of them +is navigable; and the ground is more level. This portion of the island +is known as _Banda di Dentro_, or “inner zone,” in distinction from +the _Banda di Fuori_, or “exterior (western) zone.” The eastern coast +appears to have been upheaved during a comparatively recent epoch, and +ancient gulfs of the sea have been converted into lagoons and swamps, +quite as dangerous from their miasmatic exhalations as those of the +sister island. If we add that the mountains in the west obstruct the +passage of the vivifying mistral, that the heat in summer is great, and +droughts frequent, we have said enough to account for the insalubrity +of the climate.[130] The maritime basin between Corsica and Italy is +almost shut in by mountains, and purifying breezes are rare there. +Between Bastia and Porto-Vecchio not a single town or village is met +with on the coast, and in the beginning of July the peasantry retire +to the hills in order to escape the fever. Only a few guards and the +unfortunate convicts shut up in the penitentiary of Casabianca remain +behind. Nothing more melancholy can be imagined than these fertile +fields deserted by their inhabitants. Plantations of eucalyptus have +been made recently with a view to the amelioration of the climate. + +[Illustration: Fig. 134.—PROFILE OF THE ROAD FROM AJACCIO TO BASTIA.] + +Owing to the great height of the mountains we are able to trace in +Corsica distinct zones of vegetation. Up to a moderate height the +character of the vegetation is sub-tropical, and resembles that of +Sicily or Southern Spain. There are districts which can be numbered +amongst the most fertile of the Mediterranean. One of these is the +_Campo dell’Oro_, or “field of gold,” around Ajaccio, where hedges of +tree-like cacti separate the gardens and orchards; such, also, is the +country to the north of Bastia, with its aromatic flowers and luscious +fruits. Olive forests generally cover the lower hills, their silvery +foliage contrasting with the sombre verdure of the chestnut woods +above. Balagna, near Calvi, on the north-western coast of the island, +is famous for its olives, whilst another valley, on the opposite +side of the island, near Bastia, can boast of the most magnificent +chestnut-trees. Chestnuts, in some parts, constitute the principal +article of food, {366} and enable the inhabitants, who are by no means +distinguished for their industry, to dispense with the cultivation of +cereals. Some political economists have actually proposed to fell these +trees, in order that the inhabitants may be forced to work. + +Chestnut-trees grow up to a height of 6,250 feet. The virgin forests +which formerly extended beyond them to the zone of pasturage have for +the most part disappeared. In the upper Balagna valley, Valdoniello, +and Aitone, however, magnificent forests may still be seen, and a larch +(_Pinus altissimus_), the finest conifer of all Europe, attains there +a height of 160 feet. These splendid trees, unfortunately, are rapidly +disappearing. They are being converted into masts, or sawn into staves +and planks. + +The pasturing grounds above these forests are frequented during summer +by herdsmen with their flocks of sheep and goats. The agile moufflon +is still met with there in a few rocky recesses, and the shepherds +assert that wild boars, though very numerous on the island, carefully +avoid its haunts. The wolf is unknown in the island, and the bear has +disappeared for more than a century. Foxes of large size and small deer +complete the fauna of the forest region of Corsica. The _malmignata_ +spider, whose bite is sometimes mortal, is probably of the same species +as that of Sardinia and Tuscany; the _tarentula_ is the same as that +of Naples, but the venomous ant known as _innafantato_ appears to be +peculiar to the island. + + * * * * * + +We know nothing about the origin of the aboriginal inhabitants +of Corsica. There are neither nuraghi, as in Sardinia, nor other +antiquities enabling us to form an opinion with respect to their +manners. But there exist near Sartène and elsewhere several dolmens, or +_stazzone_, menhirs, or _stantare_, and even avenues of stones, which +are similar in all respects to those of Brittany and England. We may +assume, therefore, that these countries were formerly inhabited by the +same race. + +The inhabitants of Corte, in the interior of the island, and the +mountaineers of Bastelica, boast of being Corsicans of the purest +blood. At Bastia the type is altogether Italian, but as we travel +into the interior we meet men with large fleshy faces, small noses +devoid of character, clear complexion, and eyes of a chestnut colour +rather than black. Phocæans, Romans, and Saracens, who maintained +themselves here until the eleventh century, were succeeded by Italians +and French. Calvi and Bonifacio were Genoese settlements, and at +Carghese, near Ajaccio, we even meet with a colony of Greek Mainotes, +who settled there in the seventeenth century, and whose descendants +now speak Greek, Italian, and French. But, in spite of these foreign +immigrations, the Corsicans have in a large measure retained their +homogeneity. Paoli was rather proud of a Genoese proverb, which said +that the “Corsicans deserved to be hanged, but knew how to bear it.” +History bears, indeed, witness to their patriotism, fearlessness, +and respect for truth; but it also tells us of foolish ambitions, +jealousies, and a furious spirit of revenge. Even in the middle of +last century the practice of the vendetta cost a thousand lives +{367} annually. Entire villages were depopulated, and in many parts +every peasant’s house was converted into a fortress, where the men +were constantly on the alert, the women, protected by custom against +outrage, sallying forth alone to cultivate the fields. The ceremonies +observed when a victim of the vendetta was brought home were terrible. +The women gathered round the corpse, and one amongst them, in most +cases a sister of the deceased, furiously called down vengeance upon +the head of the murderer. The _voceri_ of death are amongst the finest +national songs. Foreign domination is to blame, no doubt, for the +frequency of these assassinations. The judges sent to the country did +not enjoy the confidence of the inhabitants, and these latter returned +to the primitive law of retaliation. + +Though Corsica gave a master to France, the spirit of the people is +essentially republican. The Romans barely succeeded in enslaving it, +and even in the tenth century the greater portion of the island formed +a confederation of independent communities known as _Terra del Comune_. +The inhabitants of each valley formed a _pieve_ (_plebs_), by whom were +elected a _podesta_ and the “fathers of the commune.” These latter +appointed a “corporal,” who was charged with the defence of popular +rights. The podestas in turn elected a Council of twelve, who stood +at the head of the confederation. This constitution survived conquest +and invasion. In the eighteenth century, when fighting heroically +against Genoa and France, Corsica declared all citizens equal. It was +institutions like these which made Rousseau say that “that little +island would one day astonish Europe.” Since that time the Napoleonic +era has whetted the ambition of the Corsicans, and they appear to have +forgotten their traditions of freedom. + +Corsica is one of the least-populated departments of France.[131] The +eastern slope of the island, though more fertile and extensive than +the western, and formerly densely peopled, is now almost a desert. The +Roman colony of Mariana no longer exists, and the Phocæan emporium of +Aleria has dwindled down since the thirteenth century into an isolated +homestead standing close to a pestiferous swamp. At the present time +the great centres of population are on the western coast, which faces +France, enjoys a salubrious climate, and possesses magnificent ports. + +The Corsicans certainly appear to deserve the charge of idleness which +is brought against them, for they have done but little to develop the +great resources of their island. Fishing and cattle-breeding they +understand best. In many parts agricultural operations are carried +on almost exclusively with the help of Italian labourers, known as +Lucchesi, because most of them formerly came from Lucca. Thanks, +however, to the impulse given by France, a commencement has been made +in the cultivation of the soil, and olive oil, equal to the best of +Provence, wine, and dried fruits already constitute important articles +of export.[132] + +Corsica abounds in ores, but they do not appear to be as rich as those +of Sardinia. Formerly iron mines alone were worked, the ore being +conveyed to the {368} furnaces near Bastia and Porto Vecchio; but of +late years copper mines have been opened at Castifao, near Corte, and +argentiferous lead is being procured from a mine near Argentella, +not far from Ile Rousse. Red and blue granite, porphyry, alabaster, +serpentine, and marble are being quarried. There are many mineral +springs, but the only one enjoying a European reputation is that of +Orezzo, which rises in the picturesque district of Castagniccia. Its +ferruginous water contains a considerable quantity of carbonic acid, +and is recommended as efficacious in a host of diseases. + +[Illustration: Fig. 135.—VIEW OF BASTIA.] + +The most important town of Corsica, though not its capital, is Bastia, +thus named from a Genoese castle built towards the close of the +fourteenth century on the beach of the hill village of Cardo. Bastia +stands about a mile to the north of the two former capitals of the +island, viz. Mariana and Biguglia, of which the former has left no +trace, whilst the latter has dwindled down to a miserable village. The +geographical position of Bastia is excellent, for it is within easy +reach of Italy, and frequent communications with that country have +exercised a most happy influence upon its inhabitants, who are the +most civilised and industrious of the whole island. Its harbour is +small, and far from safe, but it is much frequented. The city rises +amphitheatrically upon hills, and is surrounded by delightful gardens +and numerous villas. {369} + +St. Florent, only six miles from Bastia, but on the western coast +of the island, has an excellent harbour, but the atmosphere hanging +over its marshes is deadly. Ile Rousse, farther to the west, is the +principal port of the fertile district of Balagna. It was founded by +Paoli in 1758, in order to ruin Calvi, which had remained faithful to +the Genoese. This object has been attained. Ile Rousse exports large +quantities of oil and fruit, whilst the old town of Calvi, on its +whitish rock, is a place without life, frequently visited by malaria. +The coast to the south of Calvi, as far as the Gulf of Sagone, though +exceedingly fertile, is almost a desert, and many parts of it suffer +from malaria. Ajaccio, however, at one time merely a maritime suburb of +Castelvecchio, standing a short distance inland, has risen into great +importance. It is the pleasantest and best-built town of the island, +and Napoleon, the most famous of its sons, showered favours upon it. +The inhabitants fish and cultivate their fertile orchards. They also +derive great advantages from a multitude of visitors, who go thither to +enjoy a delicious climate and picturesque scenery. + +The other towns of Corsica are of no importance whatever. Sartène, +though the capital of an arrondissement, is merely a village, and the +activity of the district centres in the little port of Propriano, +on the Gulf of Valinco, one of the trysting-places of Neapolitan +fishermen. Corte is famous in the history of the island as the +birthplace of the heroes of the wars of independence. Porto Vecchio, +though in possession of the best harbour of the island, is frequented +only by a few coasting vessels, whilst Bonifacio, an ancient ally of +the Genoese, is important only because of its fortifications. The +prospect from the isolated limestone rock upon which it is built is +exceedingly picturesque. The mountains of Limbara stand out clearly +against the sky, and in front we look down upon the granitic islets +dotting the Strait of Bonifacio, so dangerous to navigators. It was +here the frigate _La Sémillante_ foundered in 1855, with nearly a +thousand souls on board.[133] + +[Illustration] + +{370} + +[Illustration] + + + + +SPAIN.[134] + + +I.—GENERAL ASPECTS. + +The Iberian peninsula, Spain and Portugal, must be looked upon +geographically as one. Differences of soil, climate, and language +may have justified its division into two states, but in the organism +of Europe these two constitute but a single member, having the +same geological history, and exhibiting unity in their physical +configuration.[135] + +Compared with the other peninsulas of Southern Europe, viz. Italy and +that of the Balkans, Iberia is most insular in its character. The +isthmus which attaches it to the trunk of Europe is comparatively +narrow, and it is defined most distinctly by the barrier of the +Pyrenees. The contour of the peninsula is distinguished by its +massiveness. There are curving bays, but no inlets of the sea +penetrating far inland, as in the case of Greece.[136] + +It was said long ago, and with justice, that Africa begins at the +Pyrenees. Iberia, indeed, bears some resemblance to Africa. Its outline +is heavy, there are hardly any islands along its coasts, and few +plains open out upon the sea. But it is an Africa in miniature, only +one-fiftieth the size of the continent upon which it appears to have +been modelled. Moreover, the oceanic slope of the peninsula is quite +European as to climate, vegetation, and abundance of running water; and +{371} certain features of its flora even justify a belief that at some +remote epoch it was joined to the British Islands. African Hispania +only begins in reality with the treeless plateaux of the interior, +and more especially with the Mediterranean coasts. There we meet the +zone of transition between the two continents. Its general aspect, +flora, fauna, and even population, mark out that portion of Spain as an +integral part of Barbary; the Sierra Nevada and the Atlas, facing each +other, are sister mountains; and the strait which separates them is a +mere accident in the surface relief of our planet. + +[Illustration: Fig. 136.—THE TABLE-LANDS OF THE IBERIAN PENINSULA. + +Scale 1 : 10,300,000.] + +Spain, though nearly surrounded by the sea, is nevertheless essentially +continental in its character. Nearly the whole of it consists of +table-lands, and only the plains of the Tajo (Tagus) and of Andalusia +open out broadly upon the ocean. The coast, for the most part, rises +steeply, and the harbours are consequently difficult of access to the +inhabitants of the interior, a circumstance most detrimental to the +development of a large sea-borne commerce. + +Ever since the discovery of the ocean high-roads to America and the +Indies, the Atlantic coast of the Iberian peninsula has taken the +lead in commercial matters, {372} a fact easily accounted for by +the physical features of the country. Spain, like peninsular Italy, +turns her back upon the east. The plateaux slope down gently towards +the west; the principal rivers, the Ebro alone excepted, flow in that +direction; and the water-shed lies close to the Mediterranean shores. + + * * * * * + +Spain must either have given birth to an aboriginal people, or was +peopled by way of the Pyrenees and by emigrants crossing the narrow +strait at the columns of Hercules. The Iberian race actually forms +the foundation of the populations of Spain. The Basks, or Basques, +now confined to a few mountain valleys, formerly occupied the +greater portion of the peninsula, as is proved by its geographical +nomenclature. Celtic tribes subsequently crossed the Pyrenees, and +established themselves in various parts of the country, mixing in many +instances with the Iberians, and forming the so-called Celtiberians. +This mixed race is met with principally in the two Castiles, whilst +Galicia and the larger portion of Portugal appear to be inhabited +by pure Celts. The Iberians had their original seat of civilisation +in the south; they thence moved northward along the coast of the +Mediterranean, penetrating as far as the Alps and the Apennines. + +These original elements of the population were joined by colonists +from the great commercial peoples of the Mediterranean. Cádiz and +Málaga were founded by the Phœnicians, Cartagena by the Carthaginians, +Saguntum by immigrants from Zacynthus, Rosas is a Rhodian colony, and +the ruins of Ampurias recall the Emporiæ of the Massilians. But it +was the Romans who modified the character of the Iberian and Celtic +inhabitants of the peninsula, whom they subjected after a hundred +years’ war. Italian culture gradually penetrated into every part of the +country, and the use of Latin became universal, except in the remote +valleys inhabited by the Basques. + +After the downfall of the Roman empire Spain was successively invaded +by Suevi, Alani, Vandals, and Visigoths, but only the latter have +exercised an abiding influence upon the language and manners of the +Spaniards, and the pompous gravity of the Castilian appears to be a +portion of their heritage. + +To these northern invasions succeeded an invasion from the neighbouring +continent of Africa. The Arabs and Berbers of Mauritania gained a +footing upon the rock of Gibraltar early in the eighth century, and +very soon afterwards nearly the whole of Spain had fallen a prey to the +Mussulman, who maintained himself here for more than seven centuries. +Moors immigrated in large numbers, and they substantially affected +the character of the population, more especially in the south. The +Inquisition expelled, or reduced to a condition of bondage, hundreds +of thousands of these Moors, but its operations only extended to +Mussulmans or doubtful converts, whilst Arab and Berber blood had +already found its way into the veins of the bulk of the population. +Castilian bears witness to the great influence of the Saracens, for it +contains many more words of Arabic than of Visigothic origin, and these +words designate objects and ideas evidencing a state of progressive +civilisation, such as existed when the Arabs of Córdova and Granada +inaugurated the modern era of science and industry in Europe. {373} + +During the dominion of the Moors the Jews prospered singularly on the +soil of Spain, and their number at the time of the first persecution +is said to have been 800,000. Supple, like most of their faith, they +managed to get a footing in both camps, the Christian and Mohammedan, +and enriched themselves at the expense of each. They supplied both +sides with money to carry on the war, and, as farmers of taxes, they +oppressed the inhabitants. The Christian faith triumphed in the end; +the kings, to pay the cost of their wars, proclaimed a crusade against +the Jews; and the people threw themselves with fury upon their hated +oppressors, sparing neither iron, fire, tortures, nor the stake. A few +Jewish families may have escaped destruction by embracing Catholicism, +but the bulk of that people perished or were driven into exile. + +Far happier has been the lot of the Gipsies, or _Gitanos_, who are +sufficiently numerous in Spain to give a special physiognomy to several +large towns. These Gipsies have always conformed outwardly to the +national religion, and the Inquisition, which has sent to the stake so +many Jews, Moors, and heretics, has never interfered with them. The +Gipsies, in many instances, have settled down in the towns, but they +all have traditions of a wandering life, and most highly respect those +of their kinsmen who still range the woods and plains. These latter are +proud of their title of _viandantes_, or wayfarers, and despise the +dwellers in towns. These Spanish Gitanos appear to be the descendants +of tribes who sojourned for several generations in the Balkans, for +their lingo contains several hundred words of Slav and Greek origin. + +M. de Bourgoing has drawn attention to the great diversity existing +amongst the population of Spain. A Galician, for instance, is more +like an Auvergnat than a Catalonian, and an Andalusian reminds us +of a Gascon. Most of the inhabitants, however, have certain general +features, derived from a common national history and ancestry. + +The average Spaniard is of small stature, but strong, muscular, of +surprising agility, an indefatigable walker, and proof against every +hardship. The sobriety of Iberia is proverbial. “Olives, salad, and +radishes are fit food for a nobleman.” The physical stamina of the +Spaniard is extraordinary, and amply explains the ease with which the +_conquistadores_ surmounted the fatigues which they were exposed to in +the dreaded climate of the New World. These qualities make the Spaniard +the best soldier of Europe, for he possesses the fiery temperament +of the South joined to the physical strength of the North, without +standing in need of abundant nourishment. + +The moral qualities of the Spaniard are equally remarkable. Though +careless as to every-day matters, he is very resolute, sternly +courageous, and of great tenacity. Any cause he takes up he defends to +his last breath. The sons always embrace the cause of their fathers, +and fight for it with the same resolution. Hence this long series of +foreign and civil wars. The recovery of Spain from the Moors took +nearly seven centuries; the conquest of Mexico, Peru, and South America +was one continued fight lasting throughout a century. The war of +independence which freed Spain from the yoke of Napoleon was an almost +unexampled {374} effort of patriotism, and the Spaniards may justly +boast that the French did not find a single spy amongst them. The two +Carlist wars, too, would have been possible nowhere else but in Spain. + +Who need wonder, after this, if even the lowliest Spaniard speaks of +himself with a certain haughtiness, which in any one else would be +pronounced presumptuous? “The Spaniard is a Gascon of a tragic type;” +so says a French traveller. With him deeds always follow words. He is +a boaster, but not without reason. He unites qualities which usually +preclude each other, for, though haughty, he is kindly in his manners; +he thinks very highly of himself, but is considerate of the feelings +of others; quick to perceive the shortcomings of his neighbours, he +rarely makes them a subject of reproach. Trifles give rise to a torrent +of sonorous language, but in matters of importance a word or a gesture +suffices. The Spaniard combines a solemn bearing and steadfastness +with a considerable amount of cheerfulness. Nothing disquiets him; +he philosophically takes things as they are; poverty has no terrors +for him; and he even ingeniously contrives to extract pleasure and +advantage from it. The life of Gil Blas, in whom the Spaniards +recognise their own likeness, was more chequered than that of any other +hero of romance, and yet he was always full of gaiety, which even the +dark shadow of the Inquisition, then resting upon the country, failed +to deprive him of. “To live on the banks of the Manzanares,” says a +Spanish proverb, “is perfect bliss; to be in paradise is the second +degree of happiness, but only on condition of being able to look down +upon Madrid through a skylight in the heavens.” + +These opposites in the character of the Spaniards give rise to an +appearance of fickleness which foreigners are unable to comprehend, +and they themselves complacently describe them as _cosas de España_. +How, indeed, are we to explain so much weakness associated with so many +noble qualities, so many superstitions in spite of common sense and a +keen perception of irony, such ferocity of conduct in men naturally +generous and magnanimous? A Spaniard, in spite of his passions, will +resign himself philosophically to what he looks upon as inevitable. +_Lo que ha de ser no puede faltar_, “What is to be will be,” he says, +and, wrapped up in his cloak, he allows events to take their course. +The great Lord Bacon observed, three hundred years ago, that the +“Spaniards looked wiser than they were;” and, indeed, most of them are +passionately fond of gambling, and their apathetic fatalism accounts +for many of the ills their country suffers. The rapid decay which has +taken place in the course of three centuries has led certain historians +to number the Spaniards amongst fallen nations. The edifices met with +in many towns and villages speak of a grandeur now past, and the +_despoblados_ and _dehesas_, which we encounter even in the vicinity of +the capital, tell of once fertile fields returned to a state of nature. + +Buckle, in his “History of Civilisation,” traces this decay to the +physical nature of Spain and to a long succession of religious wars. +The Visigoths defended Arianism against the Franks, and when the +Spaniards had become good Catholics their country was invaded by Moors, +and for more than twenty generations they struggled against them. It +thus happened that patriotism became identical with {375} absolute +obedience to the behests of the Church, for every one, from the King +down to the meanest archer, was a defender of the faith rather than of +his native soil. The result might have been foretold. The Church not +only took possession of most of the land won from the infidels, but it +also exercised a baneful influence upon the Government, and, through +its dreaded tribunals of the Inquisition, over the whole of society. + +[Illustration: Fig. 137.—DEHESAS IN THE ENVIRONS OF MADRID. + +Scale 1 : 450,000.] + +But whilst these long religious struggles tended to the moral and +intellectual abasement of the Spaniards, there were other causes which +operated in an inverse sense, and these Buckle does not appear to have +properly appreciated. The kings, in order to secure the support of the +people in their wars against the Mussulmans, found themselves compelled +to grant a large measure of liberty. The towns governed themselves, +and their delegates, as early as the eleventh century, sat with the +nobility and clergy in the Cortes, and voted the supplies. Local +government conferred advantages upon Spain then enjoyed only in few +parts of Europe. Industry and the arts flourished in these prosperous +cities, and a stop was even put to the encroachments of the clergy long +before Luther raised his powerful voice in Germany. + +A struggle between the supporters of local government and of a +centralized monarchy at length became imminent, and no sooner had the +infidels been expelled than civil war began. It terminated in favour of +King and Church, for the _comuneros_ of the Castiles met with little +support in the other provinces, and their towns were ravaged by the +bloodthirsty generals of Charles V. + +The discovery of the New World, which happened about this period, +proved a disaster to Spain, for young men of enterprise and daring +crossed the Atlantic, and thus weakened the mother country, which was +too small to feed such huge colonies. The immense amount of treasure +(more than £2,000,000,000 between 1500 and 1702) sent home from the +colonies contributed still further to the rapid decay of Spain, for +it corrupted the entire nation. Money being obtainable without {376} +work, all honest labour ceased, and when the colonies no longer +yielded their metallic treasures the country saw itself impoverished, +for the gold and silver had found their way to foreign lands, whence +Spain had procured her supplies. + +[Illustration: Fig. 138.—DENSITY OF THE POPULATION OF THE IBERIAN +PENINSULA.] + +History affords no other example of so rapid a decadence brought +about without foreign aggression. The workshops were closed, the arts +of peace forgotten, the fields but indifferently cultivated. Young +men flocked to the 9,000 monasteries to enjoy a life of indolence, +and “science was a crime, ignorance and stupidity were the first of +virtues.” Population decreased, and the Spaniard even lost his ancient +renown for bravery. If the Bourbon kings placed foreigners in all +high positions of state, they did so because the Spaniards had become +incapable of conducting public business. + +But if we compare the Spain of our own days with the Spain of the +Inquisition, we cannot fail to be struck with the vast progress made. +Spain is no longer a “happy people without a history,” for ever since +the beginning of the century it has been engaged in struggles, and +during this period of tumultuous life it has done more for arts, +science, and industry than in the two centuries of peace which +succeeded the dark reign of Philip II. No doubt Spain might have done +{377} even more if the strength of the country had not been wasted +in internal struggles. Unfortunately the geographical configuration +of the peninsula is unfavourable to the consolidation of the nation. +The littoral regions combine every advantage of climate, soil, and +accessibility, whilst the resources of the inland plateaux are +comparatively few. The former naturally attract population; they abound +in large and bustling cities, and are more densely populated than the +interior of the country. Madrid, which occupies a commanding position +almost in the geometrical centre of the country, has become a focus of +life, but its environs are very thinly inhabited. + +This unequal distribution of the population could not fail to +exercise a powerful influence upon the history of the country. +Each of the maritime provinces felt sufficiently strong to lead +a separate existence. During the struggles with the Moors common +interests induced the independent kingdoms of Iberia to co-operate, +and facilitated the establishment of a central monarchy; but, to +maintain this unity afterwards, it became necessary to have recourse +to a system of terrorism and oppression. Portugal, being situated on +the open Atlantic, shook off the detested yoke of Castile after less +than a century’s submission. In the rest of the peninsula political +consolidation is making progress, thanks to the facilities of +intercommunication and the substitution of Castilian for the provincial +dialects; but it would be an error to suppose that Andalusians and +Galicians, Basques and Catalans, Aragonese and Madrileños, have been +welded into one nation. Indeed, the federal constitution advocated +by Spanish republicans appears to be best suited to the geographical +configuration of the country and the genius of its population. The +desire to establish provincial autonomy has led to most of the civil +wars of Spain, whether raised by _Carlists_ or _Intransigentes_. It is +therefore meet that, in our description of Spain, we should respect the +limits traced by nature, bearing in mind the fact that the political +boundaries of the province do not always coincide with water-sheds or +linguistic boundaries. + + +II.—THE CASTILES, LEON, AND ESTREMADURA.[137] + +The great central plateau of the peninsula is bounded on the north, +east, and south by ranges of mountains extending from the Cantabrian +Pyrenees to the Sierra Morena, and slopes down in the west towards +Portugal and the Atlantic. The uplands through which the Upper Duero, +the Tajo (Tagus), and the Guadiana take their course are thus a region +apart, and if the waters of the ocean were to rise 2,000 feet, they +would be converted into a peninsula attached by the narrow isthmus +of the Basque provinces to the French Pyrenees. The vast extent of +these plateaux—they constitute nearly half the area of the whole +country—accounts for the part they played in history, and their +commanding position enabled the Castilians to gain possession of the +adjacent territories. {378} + +The Castiles can hardly be called beautiful, or rather their solemn +beauty does not commend them to the majority of travellers. Vast +districts, such as the Tierra de Campos, to the north of Valladolid, +are ancient lake beds of great fertility, but exceedingly monotonous, +owing to the absence of forests. Others are covered with small +stony hillocks; others, again, may be described as mountainous. +Mountain ranges covered with meagre herbage bound the horizon, and +sombre gorges, enclosed between precipitous walls of rock, lead into +them. Elsewhere, as in the Lower Estremadura, we meet with vast +pasture-lands, stretching as far as the eye can reach to the foot of +the mountains, and, as in certain parts of the American prairies, not a +tree arrests the attention. Looking to the fearful nakedness of these +plains, one would hardly imagine that a law was promulgated in the +middle of last century which enjoins each inhabitant to plant at least +five trees. Trees, indeed, have been cut down more rapidly than they +were planted. The peasants have a prejudice against them; their leaves, +they say, give shelter to birds, which prey upon the corn-fields. +Small birds, nightingales alone excepted, are pursued without mercy, +and a proverb says that “swallows crossing the Castiles must carry +provisions with them.” Trees are met with only in the most remote +localities. The hovels of the peasantry, built of mud or pebbles, are +of the same colour as the soil, the walled towns are easily confounded +with the rock near them, and even in the midst of cultivated fields +we may imagine ourselves in a desert. Many districts suffer from want +of water, and villages which rejoice in the possession of a spring +proclaim the fact aloud as one of their attributes. Huge bridges span +the ravines, though for more than half the year not a drop of water +passes over their pebbly beds. + +The Sierra de Guadarrama and its western continuation, the Sierra de +Gredos, separate this central plateau of Spain into two portions, lying +at different elevations. Old Castile and Leon, which lie to the north, +in the basin of the Duero, slope down from east to west from 5,600 to +2,300 feet; whilst New Castile and La Mancha, in the twin basins of +the Tajo and the Guadiana, have an average elevation of only 2,000 +feet. In the tertiary age these two plateaux were covered with huge +lakes. One of them, the contours of which are indicated by the débris +carried down from the surrounding hills, originally discharged its +waters in the direction of the valley of the Ebro, but subsequently +opened itself a passage through the crystalline mountains of Portugal, +now represented by the gorges of the Lower Duero. At another epoch +this Lake Superior communicated with the lake which overspread what +are now the plains of New Castile and La Mancha. The area covered by +these two lakes amounted to 30,000 square miles, and Spain was then a +mere skeleton of crystalline mountains, joined together by saddles of +triassic, Jurassic, and cretaceous age, enclosing these two fresh-water +lakes, and bounded exteriorly by the ocean. This geological period +must have been of very long duration, for the lacustrine deposits are +sometimes nearly a thousand feet in thickness. The miocene strata which +form the superficial deposits of these two lake basins of the Castiles +are geologically of the same age, for fossil bones of the same great +animals—megatheria, mammoths, and hipparions—are found in both. {379} + +The Cantabrian Mountains bound Leon and Old Castile towards the +north-west and north, but broad mountain ranges run out from these +immediately to the east of the Peña Labra, and form the water-shed +between the basin of the Duero and the head-stream of the Ebro. These +ranges are known by various names. They form first the _Páramos_ of +Lora (3,542 feet), which slope gently towards the south, but sink +down abruptly to the Ebro, which flows here in a gorge many hundred +feet in depth. The water-shed to the east of these continues to the +mountain pass of the Brujula, across which leads the road (3,215 feet) +connecting Burgos with the sea. Beyond this pass the so-called _Montes_ +of Oca gradually increase in height, and join the crystalline Sierra de +Demanda, culminating in the Pico de San Lorenzo (7,554 feet). Another +mountain mass lies farther to the south-east. It rises in the Pico de +Urbion to a height of 7,367 feet, and gives birth to the river Duero. +The water-shed farther on is formed by the Sierra Cebollera (7,039 +feet), which subsides by degrees, its ramifications extending into the +basins of the Ebro and Duero. The Sierra de la Moncayo (7,905 feet), +a crystalline mountain mass similar to the San Lorenzo, but exceeding +it in height, terminates this portion of the enceinte of the central +plateau. The broad ranges beyond offer no obstacles to the construction +of roads, but there are several rugged ridges to the south of the +Cebollera and Moncayo, which force the Duero to take a devious course +through the defile of Soria. Numantia, the heroic defence of which has +since been imitated by many other towns of the peninsula, stood near +that gorge. + +[Illustration: Fig. 139.—PROFILE OF THE RAILWAY FROM BAYONNE TO CADIZ. + +(Altitudes in feet.)] + +The average height of the mountains separating the basin of the Duero +from that of the Tajo is more than that of those in the north-east of +Old Castile. The mountains gradually increase in height towards the +west and south-west, until they form the famous Sierra de Guadarrama, +the granitic rocks of which bound the horizon of Madrid in the north. +It constitutes a veritable wall between the two {380} Castiles, and +the construction of the roads which lead in zigzag over its passes +of Somosierra (4,680 feet), Navacerrada (5,834 feet), and Guadarrama +(5,030 feet) was attended with difficulties so considerable that +Ferdinand VI., proud of the achievement, placed the statue of a lion +upon one of the highest summits, and thus recorded that the “King +had conquered the mountains.” This sierra forms a natural rampart to +the north of the plains of Madrid, and many sanguinary battles have +been fought to secure a passage through them. The railway to Madrid +avoids them, but the depression of Ávila, through which it passes, is +nevertheless more elevated than the summit of the Mont Cenis Railway. + +[Illustration: Fig. 140.—SIERRAS DE GREDOS AND DE GATA. + +Scale 1 : 800,000.] + +The mountains to the south-west of the Peak of Peñalara (7,870 feet), +which is the culminating point of the sierra, sink down rapidly, and at +the Alto de la Cierva (6,027 feet) the chain divides into two branches, +of which the northern forms the water-shed between the Duero and the +Tajo, whilst the more elevated southern chain joins the Sierra de +Guadarrama to the Sierra de Gredos, but is cut in two by the defile +excavated by the river Alberche, which rises to the north of it. + +The Sierra de Gredos is, next to the Pyrenees and the Sierra Nevada of +Granada, the most elevated mountain chain of Spain, for in the Plaza +del Moro Almanzor it attains a height of 8,680 feet, and thus reaches +far beyond the zone of trees. Its naked summits of crystalline rocks +remain covered with snow during more than half the year. The country +extending along the southern slope {381} of these mountains is one of +the most delightful districts of all Spain. It abounds in streams of +sparkling water; groups of trees are dotted over the hill-slopes and +shield the villages; and Charles V., when he selected the monastery of +St. Yuste as the spot where he proposed to pass the remainder of his +days, exhibited no mean taste. In former times the foot of the sierra +was much more frequented, for the Roman road known as _Via Lata_ (now +called _Camino de la Plata_) crossed immediately to the west of it, by +the Puerto de Baños, and thus joined the valley of the Duero to that of +the Tajo. + +The Sierra de Gata, which lies beyond this old road, has a course +parallel with that of the Sierra de Gredos, and this parallelism is +observable likewise with respect to the minor chains and the principal +river beds of that portion of Spain. The Sierra de Gata rises to a +height of 5,690 feet in the Peña de Francia, thus named after a chapel +built by a Frankish knight. Within its recesses are the secluded +valleys of Las Batuecas and Las Hurdes. + +In the eastern portion of New Castile the country is for the most part +undulating rather than mountainous, and, if the deep gorges excavated +by the rivers were to be filled up, would present almost the appearance +of plains. The most elevated point of this portion of the country is +the Muela de San Juan (5,900 feet), in the Montes Universales, thus +called, perhaps, because the Tajo, the Júcar, the Guadalaviar, and +other rivers flowing in opposite directions take their rise there. + +The Sierra del Tremendal, in the district of Albarracin, farther north, +is said to be frequently shaken by earthquakes, and sulphurous gases +escape there where oolitic rocks are in contact with black porphyry and +basalt. Several triassic hills in the vicinity of Cuenca are remarkable +on account of their rock-salt, the principal mines of which are those +of Minglanilla. + +Farther south the height of land which separates the rivers flowing +to the Mediterranean from those tributary to the Tajo and Guadiana +is undulating, but not mountainous. We only again meet with real +mountains on reaching the head-waters of the Guadiana, Segura, and +Guadalimar, where the Sierra Morena, forming for 250 miles the natural +boundary between La Mancha and Andalusia, takes its rise. Seen from the +plateau, this sierra has the appearance of hills of moderate height, +but travellers facing it from the south see before them a veritable +mountain range of bold profile, and abounding in valleys and wild +gorges. Geographically this sierra belongs to Andalusia rather than to +the plateau of the Castiles. + +In the west, judging from the courses of the Tajo and the Guadiana, the +country would appear to subside by degrees into the plains of Portugal; +but such is not the case. The greater portion of Estremadura is +occupied by a mountain mass consisting of granite and other crystalline +rocks. The sedimentary strata of the region bounded in the north by the +Sierras of Gredos and Gata, and in the south by the Sierra de Aroche, +are but of small thickness. In former times these granitic mountains of +Estremadura retained pent-up waters of the lakes which then covered the +interior plateaux, until the incessant action of water forced a passage +through them. Their highest summits form a range between the rivers +Guadiana and Tajo known as the Sierra of Toledo, and attain a height +of 5,115 feet in {382} the Sierra de Guadalupe, famous in other days +on account of the image of a miracle-working Virgin Mary, an object of +veneration to Estremeños and Christianized American Indians. + +[Illustration: Fig. 141.—DEFILE OF THE TAJO IN THE PROVINCE OF +GUADALAJARA.] + +Geologically the series of volcanic hills known as Campo de Calatrava +(2,270 feet) constitute a distinct group. They occupy both banks of the +Guadiana, and the ancient inland lake now converted into the plain of +La Mancha washed their foot. From their craters were ejected trachytic +and basaltic lavas, as well as ashes, or _negrizales_, but acidulous +thermal springs are at present the only evidence of subterranean +activity. + + * * * * * + +The rivers of the Castiles are of less importance than might be +supposed from a look at a map, for, owing to a paucity of rain, they +are not navigable. The moisture carried eastward by the winds is for +the most part precipitated upon the {383} exterior slopes of the +mountains, only a small proportion reaching the Castilian plateaux. +Evaporation, moreover, proceeds there very rapidly, and if it were not +for springs supplied by the rains of winter there would not be a single +perennial river.[138] + +Of the three parallel rivers, the Duero, the Tajo, and the Guadiana, +the latter two are the most feeble, for the supplementary ranges +of the Sierras of Gredos and Guadarrama shut off their basins from +the moisture-laden winds of the Atlantic. Yet, in spite of their +small volume, the geological work performed by them in past ages was +stupendous. Both find their way through tortuous gorges of immense +depth from the edge of the plateaux down to the plains of Lusitania. +The gorge of the Duero forms an appropriate natural boundary between +Spain and Portugal, for it offers almost insurmountable obstacles to +intercommunication. The more considerable tributaries of the Duero—such +as the Tormes, fed by the snows of the Sierra de Gredos; the Yéltes; +and the Agueda—likewise take their course through wild defiles, which +may be likened to the _cañons_ of the New World. The Tajo presents +similar features, and below its confluence with the Alberche it enters +a deep defile, hemmed in by precipitous walls of granite. + +The Guadiana passes through a similar gorge, but only after it has +reached the soil of Portugal. The hydrography of its head-streams, +the Giguela and Záncara, which rise in the Serranio of Cuenca, offers +curious features; but, as they are for the most part dry during +summer, the bountiful springs known as the _ojos_, or “eyes,” of the +Guadiana are looked upon by the inhabitants as the true source of the +river. They are three in number, and yield about four cubic yards of +water a second. These springs are popularly believed to be fed by the +Ruidera, which, after having traversed a chain of picturesque lakelets, +disappears beneath a bed of pebbles; but Coello has shown that after +heavy rains this head-stream of the Guadiana actually reaches the +Záncara. + +The climate of the Castilian plateaux is quite continental in its +character. The prevailing winds of Spain are the same as in the rest +of Western Europe, but the seasons and sudden changes of temperature +in the upper basins of the Duero, the Tajo, and the Guadiana recall +the deserts of Africa and Asia. The cold in winter is most severe, the +heat of summer scorching, and the predominating winds aggravate these +features. In winter, the _norte_, which passes across the snow-covered +Pyrenees and other mountain ranges, sweeps the plains and penetrates +through every crevice in the wretched hovels of the peasants. In summer +a contrary wind, the _solano_, penetrates through breaks in the Sierra +Nevada and Sierra Morena, scorches the vegetation, and irritates man +and animals. The climate of Madrid[139] is typical of that of most of +the towns of Castile. The air, though pure, is exceedingly dry and +penetrating, and persons affected with diseases of the throat run +considerable risk during their period of acclimation. “The air of +Madrid does not put out a candle, but kills a man,” says a proverb, and +the climate of that city is described as “three months of winter and +nine of hell.” True, in the {384} time of Charles V., Madrid enjoyed +the reputation of having an excellent climate, and it is just possible +that its deterioration may be ascribable to the destruction of the +forests. + +[Illustration: Fig. 142.—THE STEPPES OF NEW CASTILE. + +According to Willkomm. Scale 1 : 1,500,000.] + +The greatest variety of plants is met with if we ascend from the +plains to the summits of the mountains, but taken as a whole the +vegetation is singularly monotonous, for the number of plants capable +of supporting such extremes of temperature is naturally limited. Herbs +and shrubs predominate. The thickets in the upper basin of the Duero +and on the plateaux to the east of the Tajo and the Guadiana consist +of thyme, lavender, rosemary, hyssop, and other aromatic plants; on +the southern slopes of the Cantabrian Mountains heaths with small +pink flowers predominate; vast areas in the mountains of Cuenca are +covered with Spanish broom, or esparto; and saline plants abound in +the environs of Albacete. These regions are generally described as +the “Steppes of Castile,” though “deserts” {385} would, perhaps, be +a more appropriate term. For miles around the village of San Clemente +not a rivulet, a spring, or a tree is met with, and the aspect of the +country throughout is exceedingly dreary. The interminable plains of La +Mancha—the “dried-up country” of the Arabs—adjoin these steppes in the +west, and there corn-fields, vineyards, and pasture-grounds alternate +with stretches of thistles, and the monotony is partly relieved by +the windmills, with their huge sweeps slowly revolving overhead. +Estremadura and the slopes of the Sierra Morena are principally +covered with rock-roses, and from the summit of some hills a carpet of +_jarales_, bluish green or brown, according to the season, extends as +far as the eye reaches, and in spring is covered with an abundance of +white flowers resembling newly fallen snow. + +Woods are met with only on the slopes of the mountains. Oaks of various +species and chestnut-trees occupy the lower zone, and conifers extend +beyond them to the extreme limit of trees. These latter likewise cover +the vast tracts of shifting sands which extend along the northern +foot of the Sierra de Guadarrama, and are the analogue of the French +_landes_. + +The remains of the ancient forests still shelter wild animals. In the +beginning of this century bears were numerous on the southern slopes of +the Cantabrian Mountains; the thickets of Guadarrama, Gredos, and Gata +still harbour wolves, lynxes, wild cats, foxes, and even wild goats. +Deer, hares, and other game abound. The oak forests are haunted by wild +boars of immense size and strength. Before the downfall of Islam it was +thought meritorious to keep large herds of pigs, and a traveller who +visits the remote villages of Leon, Valladolid, and Upper Estremadura +will find that this ancient custom still survives. The black hogs of +Trujillo and Montanchez are famous throughout Spain for their excellent +hams. + +The country offers great facilities for the breeding of sheep and +cattle; there are, however, several districts which are admirably +suited to the production of cereals. The Tierra de Campos, in the basin +of the Duero, is one of them. It owes its fertility to a subterranean +reservoir of water, as do also the _mesa_ of Ocaña and other districts +in the upper basins of the Tajo and the Guadiana, which are arid only +in appearance. The vine flourishes on stony soil, and yields excellent +wine, and the same may be said of the olive-tree, which constitutes +the wealth of the Campo de Calatrava. Agricultural pursuits would thus +appear to offer great advantages; and if thousands of acres are still +allowed to lie fallow, if nomad habits still predominate, this is +owing to sloth, force of habit, the existence of feudal customs, and +sometimes, perhaps, to discouragement produced by seasons of drought. + +Most of the herds of _merinos_ are obliged to traverse nearly half +Spain in search of the food they require. Each herd of about 10,000 +sheep is placed in charge of a _mayoral_, assisted by _rabadanes_ in +charge of detachments of from 1,000 to 1,200 animals. The shepherds and +sheep of Balia, in Leon, are reputed to be the best. In the beginning +of April the merinos leave their pasture-grounds in Andalusia, La +Mancha, and Estremadura for the north, where they pass the summer, +returning in September to the south. It may readily be imagined that +{386} these wandering herds do much damage to the fields through +which they pass, even though the privileges of the sheep-breeders were +abrogated in a large measure in 1836. Spain, however, in spite of every +advantage offered by nature, is obliged now to import sheep from abroad +to improve its flocks. Mules, too, which are almost indispensable in +so stony a country, are imported from France. Camels, llamas, and +kangaroos have been introduced, but their number has never been large, +and the fauna as well as the flora of the Castiles bears the stamp of +monotony. + + * * * * * + +As is the land, so are its inhabitants. The men of Leon and the +Castiles are grave, curt of speech, majestic in their gait, and of even +temper. Even in their amusements they carry themselves with dignity, +and those amongst them who respect the traditions of the good old time +regulate every movement in accordance with a most irksome etiquette. +The Castilian is haughty in the extreme, and _Yo soy Castellano !_ cuts +short every further explanation. He recognises no superiors, but treats +his fellows on a footing of perfect equality. A foreigner who mixes for +the first time in a crowd at Madrid or elsewhere in the Castiles cannot +fail of being struck by the natural freedom with which rich and poor +converse with each other. + +The Castilian, thanks to his tenacious courage and the central position +he occupies, has become the master of Spain, but he can hardly be said +to be the master in his own capital. Madrid is the great centre of +attraction of the entire peninsula, and its streets are crowded with +provincials from every part of Spain. This invasion of the capital, +and of the Castiles generally, is explained by the sparseness of the +population of the plateaux, a sparseness not so much due to the natural +sterility of the country as to political and social causes. There +can be no doubt that the Castiles formerly supported a much denser +population than they do now, but the towns of the valleys of the Tajo +and the Guadiana have shrunk into villages, and the river, which was +formerly navigable as far as Toledo, is so no longer, either because +its volume is less now than it used to be, or because its floods +are no longer regulated. Estremadura, at present one of the poorest +provinces of Spain, supported a dense population in the time of the +Romans, who founded there the Colonia Augusta Emerita (Mérida), which +became the largest town of Iberia. During the dominion of the Moors, +too, Estremadura yielded bounteous harvests, but the old cities have +disappeared, and the fields are now covered with furze, broom, and +rock-roses. + +The expulsion of the Moors no doubt contributed towards the decay of +these once fertile regions, but the principal cause must be looked for +in the growth of feudal, military and ecclesiastical institutions, +which robbed the cultivator of the fruits of his labours. Subsequently, +when Cortes, Pizarro, and other _conquistadores_ performed their +prodigious exploits in the New World, they attracted the enterprising +youth of the province. The peaceable cultivation of the soil was held +in contempt, fields remained untilled, and 40,000 nomadic shepherds +took possession of the country. It is thus the _Estremeños_ became what +they are, the “Indians” of the nation. {387} + +This decrease of population was unfortunately attended by a return +towards barbarism. Three hundred years ago the region on the southern +slopes of the Sierra de Guadarrama was famous for its industry. The +linen and cloth of Ávila, Medina del Campo, and Segovia were known +throughout Europe; Burgos and Aranda del Duero were the seats of +commerce and industry; and Medina de Rio Seco was known as “Little +India,” on account of the wealth displayed at its fairs. But +misgovernment led to the downfall of these industries, the country +became depopulated, and its ancient culture dwindled to a thing of the +past. At the famous university of Salamanca the great discoveries of +Newton and Harvey were still ignored at the close of last century as +being “contrary to revealed religion,” and the lower classes grovelled +in the most beastly superstitions. + +In this very province of Salamanca, close to the Peña de Francia, +exist the “barbarous” Batuecas, who are charged with not being able +to distinguish the seasons. Nor are the inhabitants of other remote +mountain districts of the Castiles what we should call civilised. +Amongst these may be noticed the _charros_ of Salamanca and the famous +_maragatos_ of Astorga, most of them muleteers. They only intermarry +amongst themselves, and are looked upon as the lineal descendants of +some ancient tribe of Iberia. The suggestion that they are a mixed race +of Visigoths and Moors is not deserving of attention, for neither in +their dress nor in their manners do they remind us of Mussulmans. They +wear loose trousers, cloth gaiters fastened below the knee, a short +and close-fitting coat, a leather belt, a frill round the neck, and +a felt hat with a broad brim. They are tall and strong, but wiry and +angular. Their taciturnity is extreme, and they neither laugh nor sing +when driving before them their beasts of burden. It is difficult to +excite their passion, but, once roused, they become ferocious. Their +honesty is above suspicion, and they may be safely trusted with the +most valuable goods, which they will defend against every attack, for +they are brave, and skilled in the use of arms. Whilst the men traverse +the whole of Spain as carriers of merchandise, the women till the soil, +which, being arid and rocky, yields but a poor harvest. + + * * * * * + +The vicissitudes of history explain the existence of numerous towns in +the Castiles which can boast of having been the capital of the country +at one time or other. Numantia, the most ancient of all those cities, +exists no longer, and the learned are not yet agreed whether the ruins +discovered near the decayed town of Soria are the remains of the walls +demolished by Scipio Æmilianus. But there are several cities of great +antiquity which possess some importance even at the present day. Leon +is one of these. It was the head-quarters of a Roman legion (_septima +gemina_), and its name, in reality a corruption of _legio_, is supposed +to be symbolized by the lions placed in its coat of arms. Leon was one +of the first places of importance taken from the Moors. Its old walls +are in ruins now, and the beautiful cathedral has been transformed into +a clumsy cube. Astorga, the “magnificent city” of Asturica Augusta, has +fallen even lower than Leon, whilst Palencia (the ancient Pallantia) +still enjoys a certain measure of prosperity, owing {388} to its +favourable geographical position at the Pisuerga, which has caused it +to be selected as one of the great railway centres of the peninsula. + +Burgos, the former capital of Old Castile, points proudly to its +graceful cathedral and other ancient buildings, but its streets are +nearly deserted, and the crowds which congregate occasionally in the +churches, hotels, or at the railway station are composed, for the most +part, of beggars. In the cathedral are preserved numerous relics, and +the Cid, whose legendary birthplace, Bivar, is near, lies buried in it. + +[Illustration: Fig. 143.—SALAMANCA AND ITS DESPOBLADOS. + +Scale 1 : 200,000.] + +Valladolid, the Belad Walid of the Moors, at one time the capital +of all Spain, enjoys a more favourable geographical position than +Burgos. It lies on the Lower Pisuerga, where that river enters the +broad plain of the Duero, at an elevation of less than 600 feet above +the sea. There are numerous factories, conducted by Catalans, and the +city boasts, like Burgos, of many curious buildings and historical +reminiscences. The houses in which Columbus died and Cervantes was born +are still shown, as is the beautiful monastery of San Pablo, in which +resided Torquemada, the monk, who condemned 8,000 heretics to die at +the stake. The castle of Simancas, where the precious archives of Spain +are kept, is near this city. + +Descending the Duero, we pass Toro, and then reach Zamora, the “goodly +walls” of which proved such an obstacle to the Moors. Zamora, though +on the direct line between Oporto and continental Europe, is an +out-of-the-way place at {389} present, and the same may be said of the +famous city of Salamanca, on the Tormes, to the south of it. + +[Illustration: Fig. 144.—THE ALCÁZAR OF SEGOVIA.] + +Salamanca, the Salmantica of the Romans, succeeded to Palencia as the +seat of a university, and during the epoch of the Renaissance was +described as the “mother of virtues, sciences, and arts,” and the +“Rome of the Castiles.” It still deserves the latter epithet, because +of its magnificent bridge built by Trajan, and the beautiful edifices +dating back to the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Its intellectual +superiority, however, is a thing of the past. + +Arevalo, and the famous town of Medina del Campo, to the north-east of +Salamanca, carry on a considerable trade with corn. Ávila occupies an +isolated hillock on the banks of the Adaja, to the north of the Sierra +de Gredos. Ávila still preserves its turreted walls of the fifteenth +century, and its fortress-like cathedral is a marvel of architecture. +There are also curious sculptures of animals, which are ascribed +{390} to the aboriginal inhabitants of the country. Similar works of +rude art in the vicinity are known as the “bulls of Guisando,” from a +village in the Sierra de Gredos. + +[Illustration: Fig. 145.—TOLEDO.] + +Segovia the “circumspect” is situated on an affluent of the Duero, like +Ávila, and in the immediate vicinity of the Sierra de Guadarrama. Its +turreted walls rise on a scarped rock, supposed to resemble a ship. +On the poop of this fancied ship, high above the confluence of the +Clamores and Eresma, rise the ruins of the Moorish Alcázar, whilst the +cathedral, in the centre of the city, is supposed to represent the +mainmast. A beautiful aqueduct supplies Segovia with the clear waters +of the Guadarrama. It is the finest Roman work of this class in Iberia, +and far superior to the royal palace of San Ildefonso or of La Granja, +in the neighbourhood of the city. + +[Illustration: PEASANTS OF TOLEDO, CASTILE.] + +[Illustration: ROMAN BRIDGE AT ALCANTARA.] + +Toledo is the most famous city to the south of the great rampart formed +by the {391} Sierras of Guadarrama, Gredos, and Gata. This is the +_Ciudad Imperial_, the “mother of cities,” the coronet of Spain and +the light of the world, as it was called by Juan de Padilla, the most +famous of its sons. Tradition tells us that it existed long before +Hercules founded Segovia, and, like Rome, it stands upon seven hills. +Toledo, with its gates, towers, Moorish and mediæval buildings, is +indeed a beautiful city, and its cathedral is of dazzling richness. +But, for all this, Toledo is a decayed place, and its famous armourers’ +shops have been swamped by a Government manufactory. + +Talavera de la Reyna, below Toledo, on the Tajo, still possesses some +of its ancient manufactures of silk and faience. Puente del Arzobispo +and the other towns on the Tajo are hardly more now than large +villages. The bridge of Almaraz crosses the river far away from any +populous town, and the old Roman bridge of Alconétar exists no longer. +Alcántara,—that is, _the_ bridge,—near the Portuguese frontier, still +remains a monument of the architectural skill of the Romans. It was +completed in the year 105, in the reign of Trajan, and its architect, +Lacer, appears to have been a Spaniard. Its centre is at an elevation +of 160 feet above the mean level of the Tajo, the floods of which rise +occasionally to the extent of a hundred feet. + +All the great towns of Estremadura lie at some distance from the Tajo, +and its great volume of water has hitherto hardly been utilised for +purposes of irrigation or navigation. On a fertile hill nearly twenty +miles to the north of this river, the old town of Plasencia may be seen +bounded in the distance by mountains frequently covered with snow. +Cáceres is about the same distance to the south, as is also Trujillo, +which received such vast wealth from the conquerors of Peru, but is now +dependent upon its pigs and herds of cattle. + +The position of those towns of Estremadura which lie on the banks +of the Guadiuna is more favourable. Badajoz, close to the Spanish +frontier, has lost its ancient importance as a fortress since it became +a place of commerce on the only railway which as yet joins Spain to +Portugal. Mérida, on the same railway, is richer in Roman monuments +than any other town of Spain, for there are a triumphal arch, the +remains of an aqueduct, an amphitheatre, a naumachy, baths, and an +admirable bridge of eighty granite arches, 2,600 feet in length; but in +population it is far inferior to Don Benito, a town hardly mentioned +in history, higher up the Guadiana, at the edge of the vast plain of +La Serena. It was founded in the beginning of the sixteenth century, +and together with its neighbour, Villanueva de la Serena, derives its +wealth from the fertility of the surrounding country. Its fruits, +and particularly its water-melons, are much esteemed. The plains on +the right bank of the Guadiana abound in phosphate of lime, which is +exported to France and England. + +The towns of La Mancha are of no historical note, and the province +owes its celebrity almost exclusively to Cervantes’ creation, the +incomparable “Don Quixote.” Ciudad Real, an industrious place formerly; +Almagro, known for its point-lace; Daimiel, near which stood the +principal castle of the military order of Calatrava; Manzanares; and +other towns are important principally because of their {392} trade +in corn and wine. Almaden,—that is, “the mine,”—in a valley on the +northern slope of the Sierra Morena, has become famous through its +cinnabar mines, which for more than three centuries supplied the New +World with mercury, and still yield about 1,200 tons annually. + +[Illustration: Fig. 146.—MADRID AND ITS ENVIRONS. + +Scale 1 : 200,000.] + +Eastern Castile, being at a considerable elevation above the sea-level, +and having a rugged surface, cannot support a population more dense +than either La Mancha or Estremadura. There are but few towns of +note, and even the capital, Cuenca, is hardly more than a third-rate +provincial city. Picturesquely perched {393} upon a steep rock +overhanging the deep gorges of the Huecar and Júcar, it merely lives +in the past. The only other towns of note in that part of the country +are Guadalajara, with a Roman acqueduct, and Alcalá, the native place +of Cervantes and seat of an ancient university, which at one time saw +10,000 students within its walls. Both these towns are situated on the +Henares, a tributary of the Tajo, and either would have been fit to +become the capital of the kingdom. + +Indeed, at the first glance, it almost appears as if Madrid owed its +existence to the caprice of a king. It has no river, for the Manzanares +is merely a torrent, its climate is abominable, and its environs +present fewer advantages than those of Toledo, the ancient capital of +the Romans and Visigoths. But once having been selected as the capital, +Madrid could not fail to rise in importance, for it occupies a central +position with respect to all other towns outside the basin of the Upper +Tajo. Pinto (_Punctum_), a short distance to the south of Madrid, is +popularly supposed to be the mathematical centre of the peninsula; +and thus much is certain, that the plain bounded in the north by the +Sierra de Guadarrama forms the natural nucleus of the country, and is +traversed by its great natural highways. + +Toledo occupies a position almost equally central. It was the capital +of the country during the reign of the Romans, and subsequently became +the capital of the ecclesiastical authorities and of the kings of the +Visigoths, and retained that position until it fell into the power of +the Moors. During the struggles between Moors and Christians the latter +shifted their capital from place to place, according to the varying +fortunes of the war, but no sooner had the former been expelled from +Córdova than the Christian kings again established themselves in the +plain to the south of the Sierra de Guadarrama. They had then to choose +between Toledo and Madrid. Toledo no doubt offered superior advantages, +but its citizens having joined the insurrection of the _comuneros_ +against Charles V., the Emperor-king decided in favour of Madrid. +Philip III. endeavoured to remove the capital to Valladolid, but the +natural attractions of Madrid proved too strong for him, and the +schools, museums, public buildings, and manufactories which have arisen +in the latter since then must for ever insure it a preponderating +position. The railways, which now join Madrid to the extremities +of the peninsula, countervail the disadvantages of its immediate +neighbourhood; and although the purest Castilian is spoken at Toledo, +it is Madrid which, through its press, has insured the preponderance +of that idiom throughout Spain. Madrid has long been in advance of all +other cities of the peninsula as regards political activity, industry, +and commerce, but its growth having taken place during a period devoid +of art, it is inferior to other towns with respect to the character of +its public buildings. The museums, however, are amongst the richest in +Europe, and make it a second Florence. Immediately outside the public +promenades of the Prado and Buen Retiro we find ourselves in a desolate +country covered with flints, and this must be crossed by a traveller +desirous of visiting the delightful gardens of Aranjuez, the huge +Escorial built by Philip II., or the villas in the wooded valleys of +the Sierra de Guadarrama. These latter supply Madrid with water, as the +neighbouring mountains do with ice. Formerly one of the most secluded +of these valleys became {394} the seat of a mock-kingdom, nominally +independent of the Kings of Castile. During the Moorish invasion +the inhabitants of the plain of Jarama had sought shelter in the +mountains, and the rest of the world forgot all about them. They called +themselves Patones, and elected an hereditary king. About the middle +of the seventeenth century the last of the line, by trade a carrier, +surrendered his wand of authority into the hands of a royal officer, +and the valley was placed under the jurisdiction of the authorities at +Uceda.[140] + + +III.—ANDALUSIA.[141] + +[Illustration: Fig. 147.—ARANJUEZ. + +Scale 1 : 75,000.] + +Andalusia embraces the whole of the basin of the Guadalquivir, together +with some adjoining districts. It is bounded in the north by the Sierra +Morena, which in the direction of Portugal becomes a rugged mountain +district of crystalline formation intersected by tortuous ravines, and +rising in the Sierra de Aracena, north of the mining region of the +Rio Tinto, to a height of 5,500 feet. Farther east the Sierra Morena +ascends in terraces above the valley of the Guadalquivir, and on its +reverse slope we meet with districts, such as that of Los Pedroches +(1,650 feet), hardly less monotonous of aspect than the plains of La +Mancha. The {395} Punta de Almenara (5,920 feet), in the Sierra de +Alcaraz, in the extreme east, may be looked upon as the culminating +point of this sierra, which is indebted for its name of “Black +Mountain” to the sombre pines which clothe its slopes. + +The line of water-parting does not pass through the highest summits +of this range. Most of the rivers rise on the plateau, and take +their course, by picturesque gorges, right through the heart of the +mountains. The most famous of these gorges is that of Despeñaperros +(2,444 feet), leading from the dreary plains of La Mancha to the +smiling valley of Andalusia. This pass has played a great part in every +war. At its foot was fought in 1212 the fearful battle of Navas de +Tolosa, in which more than 200,000 Mussulmans are said to have been +slaughtered. + +[Illustration: Fig. 148.—THE BASINS OF THE GUADIANA AND GUADALQUIVIR. + +Scale 1 : 3,000,000.] + +The mountains which shut in the basin of Andalusia on the east are cut +up by deep river gorges into several distinct masses or chains, of +which the Calar del Mundo (5,437 feet), Yelmo de Segura (5,925 feet), +and Sierra Sagra (7,675 feet) are the principal. The southern mountain +ranges uniformly extend from east to west. From north to south we cross +in succession the Sierras de María (6,690 feet), de las Estancias, and +de los Filabres (6,283 feet), so famous for its marbles. In the west +the latter two ranges join the Sierra de Baza (6,236 feet), itself +attached to the great culminating range of Iberia, the Sierra Nevada, +by a saddle of inconsiderable height (2,950 feet). {396} + +The Sierra Nevada consists mainly of schists, through which eruptions +of serpentine and porphyry have taken place. The area it occupies is +small, but from whatever side we approach it rises precipitously, +and the eye can trace the succeeding zones of vegetation up to that +of perennial snows pierced by the peaks of Mulahacen (11,661 feet), +Picacho de la Veleta (11,386 feet), and Alcazaba (7,590 feet). Vines +and olive-trees clothe the foot-hills; to these succeed walnut-trees, +then oaks, and finally a pale carpet of turf hidden beneath snow for +six months. Masses of snow accumulate in sheltered hollows, and these +_ventisqueros_, _ventiscas_, or snow-drifts, supply Granada with ice. +In the _Corral de la Veleta_ there even exists a true glacier, which +gives birth to the river Genil, and is the most southerly in all +Europe. The more extensive glaciers of a former age have disappeared +long ago. To the purling streams fed by the snows of the sierra the +Vega of Granada owes its rich verdure, its flowers, and its excellent +fruits, and the delightful valley of Lecrin its epithet of “Paradise of +the Alpujarras.” + +[Illustration: Fig. 149.—THE PASS OF DESPEÑAPERROS.] + +{397} + +No other district of Spain so forcibly reminds us of the dominion of +the Moors. The principal summit is named after a Moorish prince. On +the Picacho they lit a beacon on the approach of a Christian army, and +in the Alpujarras, on the southern slope, they pastured their sheep. +The Galician and Asturian peasants, who now occupy this district, are +superior in no respect to the converted Moors who were permitted to +remain at Ujijar, the capital of Alpujarras, when their compatriots +were driven forth. The natural riches of the mountains remain +undeveloped, and they are surrounded by a belt of _despoblados_. + +[Illustration: Fig. 150.—THE SIERRA NEVADA AS SEEN FROM BAZA.] + +From the Pass of Alhedin (3,300 feet), between Granada and Alpujarra, +we look down upon one of the most charming panoramas of the world. It +was here that Boabdil, the fugitive Moorish king, beheld for the last +time the smiling plains of his kingdom, and hence the spot is known as +the “Last Sigh of the Moor,” or the “Hill of Tears.” From the highest +summits of the sierra, however, the prospect is exceedingly grand. +Standing upon the Picacho de la Veleta, we see Southern {398} Spain +spread out beneath our feet, with its fertile valleys, rugged rocks, +and russet-coloured wilds. Looking south, across the blue waters of the +Mediterranean, the mountains of Barbary loom out in the distance, and +sometimes we are even able to hear the murmuring of the waves as they +beat against the coast. + +The mountains around these giants of Granada are very inferior to them +in height. The country in the north, which is bounded by the valleys of +the Genil, Guadiana Menor, and Guadalquivir, is occupied by an upland +intersected by deep ravines, and rising now and then into distinct +mountain chains, such as the Sierra Magina (7,047 feet) and Sierra de +Jabalcuz, near Jaen (1,800 feet); the chain Alta Coloma, farther south, +with its wild pass, Puerto de Arenas, between Jaen and Granada; and the +Sierra Susana, close to Granada, which extends westward to the mountain +mass of the Parapanda, the great prophet of the husbandmen of the Vega:― + + “Cuando Parapanda se pone la montera, + Llueve, aunque Dios no lo quisiera.” + + (“When Parapanda puts on his cap it rains, though God may not wish it.”) + +The mountains extending along the coast are cut up by transverse +valleys into several distinct masses. The Sierra de Gata, in the +south-east, is a detached mountain mass, pierced by several extinct +volcanoes. Farther west rises the Sierra Alhamilla, the torrents of +which are so rich in garnets that the huntsmen use them instead of +shot. Crossing a rivulet, we reach the superb Sierra de Gádor (7,620 +feet), consisting of schists. + +The Contraviesa (6,218 feet), which separates the Alpujarras from the +Mediterranean, rises so steeply from the coast that even sheep can +hardly climb it. The Sierra de Almijara, beyond the narrow valley of +the Guadalfeo, and its western continuation, the Sierra de Alhama +(7,003 feet), present similar features. The mountains on the other side +of the Pass of Alfarnate or de los Alazores (2,723 feet) constitute +the exterior rampart of an ancient lake bed, bounded in the north by +an irregular swelling of ground known as Sierra de Yeguas. The road +from Málaga to Antequera crosses that rampart in the famous Pass of +El Torcal (4,213 feet), the fantastically shaped rocks of which bear +some resemblance to the ruins of an extensive city. Archæologists have +discovered there some of the most curious prehistoric remains of Iberia. + +To the west of the basin of Málaga, drained by the Guadalhorce, the +emissary of the ancient lake referred to above, the mountains again +increase in height, and in the Sierra de Tolox attain an elevation of +6,430 feet. Snows remain here throughout the winter. From the Tolox +mountain chains ramify in all directions. The Sierra Bermeja (4,756 +feet) extends to the south-west, its steep promontories being washed by +the waves of the sea; the wild “Serrania” de Ronda (5,085 feet) extends +westward, and is continued in the mountain mass of San Cristóbal (5,627 +feet), which sends branches southward as far as the Capes of Trafalgar +and Tarifa. The rock of Gibraltar (1,408 feet), which rises so proudly +at the entrance of the Mediterranean, is a geological outlier attached +to the mainland by a strip of sand thrown up by the waves of the ocean. + +[Illustration: GORGE DE LOS GAITANES, DEFILE OF GUADALHORCE.] + +[Illustration: Fig. 151.—THE MOUTH OF THE GUADALQUIVIR. + +Scale 1 : 200,000.] + +{399} + +Erosion has powerfully affected the mountains occupying the country +between the basin of the Guadalquivir and the coast. Amongst the +numerous river gorges, that of the Gaytanos, through which the +Guadalhorce flows from the plateau of Antequera to the orange groves of +Alora, is one of the wildest and most magnificent in all Spain. Only +torrents enter the Mediterranean, and even of the rivers discharging +their waters into the Atlantic there is but one which is of some +importance, on account of its great volume and the facilities it offers +for navigation. This is the Guadalquivir, which rises in the Sierra +Sagra, at an elevation of 5,900 feet above the sea-level. Having +received the Guadalimar, its current becomes gentle, and it flows +through a wide and open valley, thus differing essentially from the +rivers of the Castiles, which, on their way to the sea, traverse narrow +gorges. Its volume fairly entitles it to its Arab name of Wad-el-Kebir, +or “large river.” The geological work performed by this river and its +tributaries has been enormous. Mountain ramparts have been broken +through, lakes drained, and immense quantities of soil spread over the +valley. Nowhere can this work be traced more advantageously than in the +valley of the Genil of Granada, for the fertile district of La Vega +was covered by a lake, the pent-up waters of which opened themselves a +passage near Loja. {400} + +The estuary of the river has been gradually filled up by sediment. The +tide ascends nearly as far as Seville, where the river is about 250 +yards wide. Below that city it passes through an alluvial tract known +as the _marismas_, ordinarily a dusty plain roamed over by half-wild +cattle, but converted by the least rain into a quagmire. Neither +villages nor homesteads are met with here, but the sands farther back +are covered with dwarf palms, and lower down a few hills of tertiary +formation approach close to the river, their vine-clad slopes affording +a pleasing contrast to the surrounding solitude. + +A contraction of the alluvial valley marks the exterior limit of the +ancient estuary silted up by the Guadalquivir. Sanlúcar de Barrameda, +a town of oriental aspect, stands on the left bank, whilst a range of +dunes intervenes between the sea and the flat country on the right +bank. The mouth of the river is closed by a bar, so that only vessels +of small draught can enter it. These _Arenas Gordas_, or “great sands,” +are for the most part covered with pines, and, except on their exterior +face, they have remained stable since the historical epoch. + +The Guadalquivir is the only river of Spain which is navigable for a +considerable distance above its mouth. Vessels of 200 tons ascend it as +far as Seville, a distance of sixty miles. Sanlúcar was formerly the +great port of Spain, and its coasting trade is still considerable. None +of the other rivers of Andalusia are navigable. The Guadalete, which +enters the Bay of Cádiz, is a shallow, sluggish stream; the Odiel and +the Rio Tinto are rapid torrents, and their estuary, below Huelva, has +been choked up by the sediment brought down by them; while Palos, so +famous as the port from which Columbus started upon his great voyage of +discovery, has dwindled down to a poor fishing village. + +But what are these changes compared with the great revolution which +joined the Mediterranean to the Atlantic? There can be no doubt that a +barrier of mountains separated the two seas. The destructive action of +the Atlantic appears to have been facilitated not only by the cavernous +nature of the rocks on both sides of the strait, but also by the fact +of the level of the Mediterranean having been much lower at that time +than that of the Atlantic. Even now the waters of the latter sometimes +rush through the strait with astounding velocity (see Fig. 6, p. +26). We cannot tell whether the strait has increased in width during +historical times, for ancient geographers are not very precise in their +measurements. Thus much, however, is certain, that the general features +of the strait have not changed, and the two pillars of Hercules, Calpe +and Abyla, may still be recognised in modern Gibraltar and Ceuta. + +The rock of Gibraltar does not form the southernmost promontory of +Iberia, but, being the most striking object along the strait, it has +given its name to it. Mariners look upon it as the true boundary +between the Mediterranean and the Atlantic, and it has been likened, +not inaptly, to a crouching lion guarding the gateway between the two +seas. It rises almost perpendicularly on the east, and the town, with +most of the batteries, has been constructed on the western slope, which +is more accessible. The famous rock, though a natural dependency of +Spain, has become, by right of conquest, one of the great strongholds +of England, and its {401} importance as a fortress as well as a place +of commerce is indisputable. In its caverns have been discovered stone +implements and the skeletons of dolichocephalous men. + +The frequent intercourse between Andalusia and the Berber countries +on the other side of the strait is explained by vicinity as well as +by similarity of climate. Algarve, Huelva, and the lower valley of +the Guadalquivir, as far as Seville and Écija, that “stewing-pan” or +“furnace” of Spain, form one of the hottest districts of Europe, and +the coast, from Algeciras and Gibraltar to Cartagena, Alicante, and +the Cabo de la Nao, is hardly inferior to it. The country around the +Bay of Cádiz and the hilly districts in the extreme south, which are +freely exposed to the _virazon_, or sea breeze, enjoy a more temperate +climate. In the two torrid coast regions delineated above frosts are +hardly known, and the mean temperature of the coolest month reaches 54° +F. The heat is greatest around the bays exposed to the full influence +of the hot African winds, and least on the Atlantic seaboard, where +westerly breezes moderate it. Contrary atmospheric currents naturally +meet in the Strait of Gibraltar, where the wind is generally high, and +tempests are frequent in winter. Westerly winds prevail during winter, +easterly winds in summer. The two promontories of Europe and Africa +are looked upon by mariners as trustworthy signallers of the weather: +when they are wrapped in clouds or mists rain and easterly winds may be +looked for, but when their profiles stand out clearly against the blue +sky it is a sure sign of fine weather and westerly winds.[142] + +The dry and semi-tropical climate of Lower Andalusia frequently +exercises a most depressing influence upon Northern Europeans. In the +plain and along the coast it hardly ever rains during summer, and the +heat is sometimes stifling, for the trade winds of the tropics are +unknown. At Cadiz the land wind blowing from the direction of Medina +Sidonia, and hence known as _medina_, is suffocating, and quarrels and +even murders are said to occur most frequently whilst it lasts. But the +most dreaded wind is the _solano_ or _levante_, which is hot as the +blast from a furnace. A curious vapour, known as _calina_, then appears +on the southern horizon, the air is filled with dust, leaves wither, +and sometimes birds drop in their flight as if suffocated. + +In the temperate regions of Europe summer is the season of flowers and +foliage, but in Andalusia it is that of aridity and death. Except in +gardens and irrigated fields all vegetation shrivels up and assumes a +greyish tint like that of the soil. But when the equinoctial autumn +rains fall in the lowlands, and snows in the mountains, the plants +recover rapidly, and a second spring begins. In February vegetation +is most luxuriant, but after March heat and dryness again become the +order of the day. Indeed, Andalusia suffers from a want of moisture. +There are steppes without water, trees, or human habitations, the most +extensive being on {402} the Lower Genil, where the depressions are +occupied by salt lakes, as in Algeria or Persia, and cultivation is +impossible. Another steppe of some extent stretches to the east of +Jaen, and is known as that of Mancha Real. The barren tracts on the +Mediterranean slopes are relatively even of greater extent than those +in the basin of the Guadalquivir. The volcanic region of the Sierra +de Gata is a complete desert, where castles and towers erected for +purposes of defence are the only buildings. Elsewhere the coast is +occupied by saline plains, which support a vegetation mainly consisting +of salsolaceæ, plumbagineæ, and cruciferæ, five per cent. of the +species of which are African. Barilla, the ashes of which are used in +the manufacture of soda, grows plentifully there. + +[Illustration: Fig. 152.—THE STEPPES OF ECIJA. + +Scale 1 : 750,000.] + +In the popular mind, however, Andalusia has at all times been +associated with fertility. Its name recalls the oranges of Seville, +the luxuriant vegetation of the Vega of Granada, the “Elysian Fields,” +and the “Garden of the Hesperides,” which the ancients identified with +the valley of the Bætis. The indigenous flora entitles Andalusia to +its epithet of the “Indies of Spain,” and, in addition to {403} the +tropical plants from Asia and Africa which grow there spontaneously, +we meet with others which have been successfully acclimatized. +Dates, bananas, and bamboos grow side by side with caoutchouc-trees, +dragon’s-blood trees, magnolias, chirimoyas, erythrinas, azedarachs; +ricinus and stramonium shoot up into veritable trees; the cochineal +cactus of the Canaries and the ground-nut of the Senegal do well; sweet +potatoes, cotton, and coffee are cultivated with success; and the +sugar-cane succeeds in sheltered places. The coast between Motril and +Málaga is supposed to yield annually £20,000 worth of sugar. + +[Illustration: Fig. 153.—ZONES OF VEGETATION ON THE COAST OF ANDALUSIA.] + +The fauna of Andalusia presents, also, some African features. The +molluscs met with in Morocco exist likewise in Andalusia; the ichneumon +may be seen on the right bank of the Lower Guadalquivir and elsewhere; +the chameleon is plentiful; and a species of wild goat is said to be +common to the mountains of Morocco and the Sierra Nevada. Nor should we +forget to state that an African monkey (_Inuus sylvanus)_ still lives +on the rock of Gibraltar, but whether he has been imported has not yet +been determined. + + * * * * * + +In the dawn of European history Andalusia was probably inhabited by an +Iberian race akin to that of the Basques. The Bastulæ, Bastarnæ, and +Bastesæ, in the hills facing the Mediterranean, and the Turdetani and +Turduli of the valley of the Bætis, bore Euskarian names, as did many +of their towns. But even thus early they must have been a mixed race. +Celtic tribes held the hills extending to the north-west of the Bætis, +in the direction of Lusitania; the Turdetani, who were relatively +civilised, for they possessed written laws, permitted Phœnicians, +Carthaginians, and Greeks to settle amongst them, and in the end became +thoroughly Latinised. Municipal charters discovered at Málaga, and more +recently at Osuna (_Colonia Julia Genitiva_), prove that the cities of +this province enjoyed a considerable degree of self-government. + +When the Roman world broke down, Southern Spain was invaded by Vandals, +{404} Byzantines, and Visigoths, to whom succeeded Arabs, Berbers, and +Jews. The influence exercised upon the country by the Moors—that is, by +a mixed race of Arabs and Berbers—has been more abiding than that of +their Teutonic predecessors. They maintained themselves for more than +seven centuries, were numerous in the towns, and cultivated the fields +conjointly with the ancient inhabitants of the country. When the order +of exile went forth against their whole race, Moorish blood circulated +in the veins of those who were charged with the execution of this +harsh measure. In certain portions of Andalusia, and more especially +in the Alpujarras, where the Moors maintained their independence until +the end of the sixteenth century, the mixture between the two races +had made such progress that religious profession, and not the colour +of the skin, decided nationality. Numerous Arabic words and phrases +have found their way into the Andalusian dialect, and the geographical +nomenclature of many districts is Arabic rather than Iberian or Latin. +Most of the large buildings in the towns are _alcázars_, or mosques, +and even the style of modern structures is Arabic, modified to some +extent by Roman influences. The houses, instead of looking upon the +street, face an interior court, or _patio_, where the members of the +family meet by the side of a cool fountain. No further ethnical element +has been added to the population since the epoch of the Arabs, for the +few German colonists who settled at Carolina, Carlota, and elsewhere +did not prosper, and either returned to their native country or became +merged in the general population. + +The Andalusians have frequently been called the Gascons of Spain. They +are generally of graceful and supple build, of seductive manners, +and full of eloquence, but the latter is too frequently wasted upon +trifles. Though not devoid of bravery, the Andalusian is a great +boaster, and his vanity often causes him to pass the bounds of truth. +At the same time he is of a contented mind, and does not allow poverty +to affect his spirit. The mountaineers differ in some respects from the +dwellers in the plains. They are more reserved in their manners, and +the _Jaetanos_, or mountaineers of Jaen, are known as the Galicians of +Andalusia. The beauty of the highland women is of a more severe type, +and, compared with the charming Gaditanes and the fascinating _majas_ +of Seville, the women of Granada, Guadix, and Baza are remarkable for +an air of haughty nobleness. + +No doubt there are men in Bætica who work, but as a rule love of labour +is not amongst the virtues of the Andalusian. The country might become +the great tropical storehouse of Europe, but its immense resources +remain undeveloped. To some extent this is explained by the fact that +nearly the whole country is owned by great landlords. Many estates, +which formerly were carefully cultivated, have been converted into +sheep-walks, and for miles we meet neither houses nor human beings. The +highlands, too, belong to large proprietors, but are leased to small +farmers, who pay one-third of their product in lieu of rent. + +The magnificent orange groves of Seville, Sanlúcar, and other towns, +the olive groves, vineyards, and orchards of Málaga, supply the world +with vast quantities of fruit; its productive corn-fields have made +Andalusia one of the great granaries of the world; but it is mainly +its wines which enable it to take a share in {405} international +commerce. Immense quantities of the wine known as sherry are grown in +the vineyards of Jerez, to the east of Cádiz. Many of the vineyards +belong to Englishmen, and merchants of that nation are busily occupied +in blending and other operations peculiar to their trade. Several +wines, however, maintain their superior character to the present time. +Such are the sweet _tintilla_ of Rota, _manzanilla_, and _pajarate_, +made from dried grapes. In spite of many malpractices, this branch of +industry has exercised a most beneficial influence upon the character +of the population. Santa María, on the Bay of Cádiz, is one of the +great wine ports of the world, and Spain has become a formidable rival +of its northern neighbour.[143] + +The ancient manufacturing industry of the country can hardly be said to +exist any longer, but mining is still carried on. Strabo exaggerates +the mineral wealth of the country, which is nevertheless very great. +Nearly all the productive mining districts of Southern Spain are in the +hills. The Sierra de Gádor is said to contain “more metal than rock.” +Hundreds of argentiferous lead, copper, and iron mines have been opened +there, and in the sierras of Guadix, Baza, and Almería. Near Linares, +on the Upper Guadalquivir, there are lead mines yielding about 210,000 +tons annually. The silver mines of Constantina and Guadalcanal, in the +Sierra Morena, are being worked only at intervals. The coal basins of +Bélmez and Espiel, to the north of Córdova, promise to become of great +importance, although the output at present hardly exceeds 200,000 tons +a year. Deposits of iron and copper exist near them. + +But of all the mines of Spain those situated in the province of Huelva +are the most productive. The Silurian rocks there are wonderfully +rich in pyrites of copper. The mines of Rio Tinto strike the beholder +by their stupendous extent; and the existence of ancient galleries, +buildings, and inscriptions proves that they have been worked since the +most remote time. The invasion of the Vandals temporarily put a stop to +the work, which was only resumed in 1730. The two principal deposits +have been computed to contain no less than 300,000,000 tons of ore. The +deposits at Tharsis are much less extensive, but within easier reach of +Huelva. They contain 14,000,000 tons of iron and copper pyrites, and +are worked like an open quarry. The deposit is no less than 450 feet +in thickness, and some of the ores yield twenty per cent. of copper. +Immense heaps of scoriæ have accumulated near the mine, where they are +bedded in regular strata dating back to the time of the Carthaginians. +The sulphurous vapours rising from hundreds of furnaces poison the +air and destroy the vegetation. The rivers Odiel and Rio Tinto run +with ferruginous water which kills the fish; yellow ochre is thrown up +along their banks; and in their estuary is precipitated a blackish mud +consisting of the metal mixed with the sulphur of decomposed marine +animals.[144] {406} + +Andalusia, though a desert in comparison with what it might be, rivals +Italy in the fame and beauty of its cities. The names of Granada, +Córdova, Seville, and Cádiz awaken in our mind the most pleasing +memories, for these old Moorish towns have become identified with a +great advance in arts and science. + +[Illustration: Fig. 154.—THE MINES OF HUELVA. + +Scale 1 : 487,300.] + +[Illustration: PEASANTS OF CORDOVA, ANDALUSIA.] + +Their advantageous geographical position accounts for their prosperity, +past and present. Córdova and Seville command the fertile plain of +the Guadalquivir, and the roads crossing the gaps of the neighbouring +mountains converge upon them; Granada has its plentiful supply of +water and rich fields; Huelva, Cádiz, {407} Málaga, and Almería are +considerable seaports; and Gibraltar occupies a commanding position +between two seas. There are other towns less populous, but of great +strategical importance, as they command the roads joining the valleys +of the Genil and Guadalquivir to the sea. + +Amongst the smaller towns which have played a part in history are +several to the east of Granada, such as Velez Rubio and Velez +Blanco, on the Mediterranean slope; Cullar de Baza, with its +subterranean houses excavated in the gypsum, on the western slope of +the _Vertientes_, or “the water-shed;” Huescar, the heir of an old +Carthaginian city; and Baza, environed by a fertile plain known as +_Hoya_, or “the hollow.” + +Granada, though it celebrates the anniversary of the entrance of +Ferdinand and Isabella, is a very inferior place to what it was as +the capital of a Moorish kingdom, when it had 60,000 houses and +400,000 inhabitants, and was the busiest and wealthiest town of the +peninsula. It is still the sixth city of Spain, but thousands of its +ragged inhabitants live in hideous dens, and close to the picturesque +suburb of Albaicin a mob largely composed of gipsies has settled down +in nauseous caverns. Remains of Moorish buildings are met with only +in the suburb named, but at some distance from the city there still +exist edifices which bear witness to the glorious reign of its ancient +masters. The _Torres Vermejas_, or “red towers,” occupy a hill to the +south; the _Generalife_, with its delightful gardens, crowns another +hill farther east; and between them rise the bastions and towers of the +_Alhambra_, or “red palace,” even in its present dilapidated condition +one of the masterpieces of architecture, which has served as a pattern +to generations of artists. From the towers of this magnificent building +we enjoy a prospect which indelibly impresses itself upon the memory. +Granada, with its towers, parks, and villas, lies beneath. The course +of the two rivers, Genil and Darro, can be traced amidst the foliage, +whilst naked hills bound the verdant plain of La Vega, which has been +likened to an “emerald enchased in a sapphire.” The contrast between +these savage mountains and the fertile plain, between the beautiful +city and precipitous rocks, struck the Moors with admiration, for they +saw reflected in them their own nature—an outward impassiveness and a +hidden fire. Granada, to them, was the “Queen of Cities,” the “Damascus +of the West.” Nor are the modern Spaniards behind them in their +admiration of Granada and its vicinity. + +There are other beautiful towns in the basin of the Genil, but none can +compare with Granada, not even Loja, a “flower in the midst of thorns,” +an oasis surrounded by rugged rocks and savage defiles. Jaen, however, +almost rivals Granada. It, too, was the seat of a powerful Moorish +king, the hills surrounding it are still crowned with the ruins of +fortifications buried beneath luxuriant foliage, and the aspect of the +town remains oriental to this day. + +The upper valley of the Guadalquivir abounds in cities. Baeza had more +than 150,000 inhabitants in the time of the Moors, but wars depopulated +it, many of the people removing to Granada. Close by is Ubeda, another +Moorish town. Higher up in the hills is the mining town of Linares, +hardly large enough to {408} shelter 8,000 residents, but actually +inhabited by 40,000. In descending the river we pass Andújar, famous on +account of its _alcarrazas_, and about twenty miles below the town of +Montoro we reach the marble bridge of Alcolea, celebrated for the many +battles which have been fought for its possession. + +[Illustration: Fig. 155.—THE ALHAMBRA.] + +Córdova dates back to the dawn of civilisation. It has been famous and +powerful at all times, and the Spanish noblemen are proud of tracing +their origin back to this fountain-head of the “blue blood” (_sangre +azul_) which is supposed to flow in the veins of Spanish nobles. It was +under the Moors that Córdova reached the apogee of its grandeur; from +the ninth century to the close of the twelfth it had nearly a million +of inhabitants; and its twenty-four suburbs spread far and wide over +the plain and along the lateral valleys. The wealth of its mosques, +palaces, and private houses was prodigious; but, more glorious still, +Córdova could boast of being the “nursery of science,” for it was the +greatest university of the world, abounding in schools and libraries. +Civil wars, foreign invasions, and religious fanaticism led to the +dispersion of its libraries, and Córdova can no longer boast of being +the first city of Andalusia. Most of the old monuments have perished, +but there still exists the marvellous _mezquita_, or mosque, built at +the close of the eighth century by Abderrahman and his son. The {409} +interior was fitted up in the most lavish manner, the floors being +paved with silver, and the walls covered with gold, precious stones, +ivory, and ebony, but a considerable portion of the building has been +pulled down to make room for a Spanish cathedral. + +The more fertile districts of the province of Córdova are at some +distance from the Guadalquivir, in the hills to the south. Montilla, +one of the towns there, is noted for its wines, as are Aguilar, Baena, +Cabra, and Lucena, the latter boasting likewise of some manufactures. +Between Córdova and Seville, a distance of over ninety miles, following +the sinuosities of the river, we do not meet with a single town of +note, for even Palma del Rio, at the mouth of the Genil, is only a +small place, though of some importance as the outlet of Ecija, a large +town higher up the Genil. + +Seville, the reigning queen of Andalusia, boasts of a few remarkable +buildings, including the alcazar, a gorgeous cathedral, and the palace +known as “Pilate’s House,” in which the Renaissance is admirably +wedded with the Moorish style. But more famous than either of these is +_Giralda’s Tower_, with the saint’s revolving statue on the top, like a +weathercock. But neither these buildings nor Murillo’s fine paintings +have won Seville its epithet of “Enchantress.” For this it is indebted +to its gaiety and to a succession of fêtes, amongst which bull-fights +figure prominently. Seville became Spanish about the middle of the +thirteenth century. Its citizens valiantly defended their municipal +liberties against the King of Castile, but they were defeated, and +most of its inhabitants then fled to Barbary. The town was repeopled +by Christian emigrants. Triana, however, a suburb with which an iron +bridge connects it, is inhabited by gipsies, whose secret tribunal has +its seat there. A short distance to the north of Triana are the ruins +of the amphitheatre of Italica, the old rival of Seville, and the +native town of Silius Italicus, and of the Emperors Trajan, Hadrian, +and Theodosius. Coria, another Roman city, which had its own mint +during the Middle Ages, lies below Seville. + +Seville has numerous potteries, but its silks and stuffs interwoven +with gold and silver have ceased to command the markets of the world. +The largest manufactory of the place, that of tobacco and cigars, is +carried on by Government, and employs several thousand workmen. + +Alcalá de Guadaira, to the south-east of Seville, supplies the latter +with bread, and its delicious springs feed the aqueduct known as Arcos +de Carmona, thus called because it runs parallel with the old Roman +road leading to Carmona (Carmo). + +The towns to the south of Seville are no longer of importance. Utrera, +the most considerable amongst them, is a great railway centre, where +the line to the marble quarries of Moron, and that passing through the +fertile districts of Marchena and Osuna, branch off from the Andalusian +main line. The town is well known to _aficionados_, or sportsmen, on +account of the wild bulls which pasture in the neighbouring _marismas_. +Lebrija, with its fine tower imitated from that of Giralda, is still +nearer to these marshes, which extend almost to the mouth of the +Guadalquivir. {410} + +Sanlúcar de Barrameda, at the mouth of the Guadalquivir, with its white +and pink houses shaded by palms, is not now the great port it was in +the time of the Arabs. It may justly boast of having sent forth, in +1519, the first vessel which circumnavigated the globe, but it is +now rather a pleasure resort than a place of commerce. Jerez de la +Frontera, in the basin of the Guadalete, is the busiest town between +Seville and Cádiz. It is a neat and showy place, surrounded by immense +_bodegas_, or wine vaults, in which are stored the wines grown in the +fertile valley of Guadalete, and known as sherry. Near Arcos de la +Frontera, in the upper part of the valley, is pointed out the site +upon which was fought the famous battle which delivered Spain to the +Mussulmans. + +The Bay of Cádiz, so well sheltered against winds and waves by the +tongue of land which begins at the island of Leon, is surrounded by +numerous towns, forming, as it were, but a single city. Rota, on the +northern coast of the bay, is encircled by walls of cyclopean aspect. +It is the resort of fishermen, and its vintners, though reputed +Bœotians, produce one of the best wines of Spain. Farther south, at +the mouth of the Guadalete, is the Puerto de Santa María, with its +wine stores, at all times a bustling place. Puerto Real, the _Portus +Gaditanus_, lies in a labyrinth of brackish channels, and is now merely +a landing-place. The neighbouring dockyard, known as _Trocadero_, and +the arsenal of Carraca, are frequently inhabited only by galley-slaves +and their gaolers. The salt-pans near that place are most productive. + +San Fernando is the most important town on the island of Leon, to the +south of Cádiz. The initial meridian of Spanish mariners is drawn +through its observatory. Looking across the navigable channel of San +Pedro, which separates the island from the main, we perceive the +villas of Chiclana, famous as the training-place of the _toreros_, or +bull-fighters, of Andalusia. Turning to the north, we reach the narrow +ridge of the Arrecife, which may be likened to a stalk with Cádiz as +its expanded flower. Boatmen point out the supposed ruins of a temple +of Hercules, now covered by the sea; and thus much is certain, that the +land is at present subsiding, though this subsidence must have been +preceded by an upheaval, as the peninsula upon which Cádiz has been +built rests upon a foundation of shells, oysters, and molluscs. + +[Illustration: Fig. 156.—CADIZ AND ITS ROADSTEAD.] + +We pass several forts, cross the ramparts of the Cortadura, erected in +1811, and at length find ourselves in the famous city of Cádiz, the +heir of the Gadir of the Phœnicians, called Gadira by the Greeks, and +Gades by the Romans. Cádiz was the leading city of Iberia when that +country first became known. Like other cities, it has known periods of +decay, but its great geographical advantages have always enabled it to +recover quickly. It is the natural outlet of an extensive and fertile +region, and its position near the extremity of the continent enables +it successfully to compete with Lisbon for the trade of the New World. +Palos may boast of having sent forth the _caravelas_ which discovered +the West Indies, but it was Cádiz which reaped all the advantages +of this discovery, more especially since the Tribunal of the Indies +was transferred to it from Seville (1720). In 1792 Cádiz exported +merchandise valued at £2,500,000 sterling to America, {411} {412} and +received precious metals and other articles of a value of £7,000,000 in +return. Soon afterwards Spain paid for a commercial monopoly maintained +during three centuries by the sudden loss of her colonies, and Cádiz +found itself dependent upon its fisheries and salt-pans. But recently +fortune has again smiled upon the city, and its harbours are crowded +with merchantmen.[145] Cádiz, with the towns surrounding its bay, has +a population of 200,000 souls. The site of the city proper is limited +by nature, and its houses have been built to a height of five and six +stories. The inhabitants are fond of pleasure, vivacious, and quick at +repartee. They have at all times shown themselves to be good patriots, +and it was on the island of Leon that the Cortes met to protest against +the occupation of the country by the French. + +Almería, on the Mediterranean coast of Andalusia, rivalled Cádiz in +importance as long as it remained in the possession of the Moors, +but prosperity fled the place immediately the Spaniards occupied it. +Subsequently the town suffered greatly from the pirates of Barbary, +as is proved by the fortress-like cathedral built in the sixteenth +century. The aspect of the place, with its narrow streets and old +_kasba_, is quite oriental. + +The towns to the west of Almería have a tropical climate and tropical +productions. Dailas, said to be the first permanent settlement of the +Arabs, is famous for its raisins; to it succeed Adra, at the mouth +of the Rio Grande of Alpujarra, Motril, Vélez Málaga, and Málaga, +embosomed in gardens watered by the Guadalmedina. + +Málaga, like most of the ports on that coast, is of Phœnician origin, +and the most populous town of Andalusia. Less rich than Granada, +Córdova, and Seville in Moorish monuments, or than Cádiz in historical +traditions, it is indebted to its port and to the fertile country +surrounding it for its commercial pre-eminence. Its exports, consisting +of raisins (_pasas_), almonds, figs, lemons, oranges, wine, olive oil, +&c., are the product of the immediate vicinity. There are foundries, +sugar refineries, and factories. Seen from the sea, the cathedral +appears to be almost as large as the rest of the town, but in the +latter must be included not only the houses standing at the foot of +the citadel of Gibralfaro, but also the numerous villas dotting the +surrounding hills. Nay, even the picturesque towns and watering-places +in the neighbouring mountains, such as Alora, Alhaurin, Carratraca, and +Alhama, may be looked upon as dependencies of the city, for scarcely +any but _Malagueños_ resort to them. + +[Illustration: Fig. 157.—GIBRALTAR. + +Scale 1 : 150,000.] + +Antequera and Ronda, in the interior of the country, belong to the +basin of the Mediterranean, for the one stands on the Guadalhorce, +which enters the sea near Málaga, whilst the other occupies a position +in the upper basin of the Guadiaro, which washes the foot of the hills +of San Roque, to the north of Gibraltar. Antequera is one of the most +ancient towns of Spain, and acts as an intermediary between Málaga and +the valley of the Guadalquivir. On a hill near it stands a curious +dolmen, twenty feet in height, known as _Cueva del Mengal_. {413} The +picturesque Moorish town of Ronda is surrounded on three sides by a +gorge 600 feet in depth, 120 to 300 feet wide, and spanned by three +bridges, one Roman, one Arab, and the last (built 1740–88) Spanish. +Ronda still possesses some strategical importance, for it defends the +road leading from the valley of the Genil to that of the Guadiaro. The +_Rondeños_ are noted for the skill with which they train horses for +mountain travel. They are notorious smugglers, as are also many {414} +of the inhabitants of the small seaport towns of Marbella, Estepona, +and Algeciras, near Gibraltar.[146] + +The rock of Gibraltar, of which the English obtained possession in +1704, has not only been converted into a first-rate fortress, but is +likewise a busy place of commerce. Gibraltar produces nothing except a +little fruit, and most of its provisions, including meat and corn, are +imported from Tangiers, in Morocco. The inhabitants of the town are +dependent for their support upon passing vessels, the English garrison, +and a brisk contraband trade with Spain. Gibraltar affords very +indifferent shelter, and only one-fourth of the vessels passing through +the strait call there, and even these generally confine themselves +to replenishing their stock of coal. Nor is a residence on this +picturesque rock very pleasurable, for fevers prevail, and the military +character of the place entails numerous restrictions. During the heat +of summer many of the English residents—facetiously called “lizards of +the rock”—seek refuge at San Roque, a village to the north of the bay, +the neighbourhood of which affords excellent sport.[147] + + +IV.—THE MEDITERRANEAN SLOPE OF THE GREAT PLATEAU. MURCIA AND +VALENCIA.[148] + +In a few hours we are able to travel from the inhospitable plateaux to +the hot valleys and plains of Murcia and Valencia debouching upon the +Mediterranean. + +[Illustration: GIBRALTAR, AS SEEN FROM THE “LINES.”] + +The spurs from the Sierra Nevada, which approach the coast to the +north of the Cabo de Gata, are separated by _ramblas_, or torrent +beds, and gradually decrease in height as we proceed north. The +torrent of Almanzora separates the Sierra de los Filabros from its +northern continuation, the Sierra de Almenara, which for a considerable +distance runs parallel with the coast. It sends out a spur in the +direction of Cartagena, which terminates in Cabo de Palos. The inland +ranges run almost parallel with this coast range, and are separated +by longitudinal valleys opening out into the great transverse one of +the Segura. These ranges are the Sierra de María, “el Gigante” (4,918 +feet), with the Sierra de Espuña (5,190 feet), the Sierra de Taibilla, +the Calar del Mundo (5,440 feet), and the Sierra de Alcaraz {415} +(5,910 feet). The ranges to the north and east of the Segura must be +looked upon as continuations of those mentioned. They attain their +greatest altitude in the Moncabrer (4,543 feet), and their spurs form +several notable promontories, amongst which are the volcanic Peñon +de Ifach and the Cabos de la Nao and San António. Near the latter +rises the Mongo (2,337 feet), which has become known as a crucial +trigonometrical station. + +The mountains which dominate the valley of the Júcar present the +feature of a denuded plateau, above which rise a few isolated summits. +The aspect of the basin of the Guadalaviar is far more mountainous. On +the west it is bounded by the sierras having their nucleus in the Muela +de San Juan (5,280 feet), and to the east rise the imposing mountain +masses of the Javalambre (6,569 feet) and Peña Golosa (5,942 feet). The +summits of the range which extends from the latter to the great bend +of the Lower Ebro, such as the Muela de Ares (4,332 feet), the Tosal +de Encanades (4,565 feet), and Bosch de la Espina (3,868 feet), bear +Catalan names. A range of inferior heights runs parallel with it along +the coast, the interval between the two forming a strath, or vale. This +coast range terminates abruptly in the Sierra de Montsia (2,500 feet), +close to the delta of the Ebro, and before the pent-up waters of the +river had excavated themselves a path to the sea it extended right to +the Pyrenees. + +All these mountains are for the most part naked, and shrubs appear like +black patches upon their whitish slopes. They stand out clearly against +the blue and limpid sky, whose transparency has won Murcia the title of +the “most serene kingdom.” The climate in the valley of the Segura is +even more African in its character than that of Andalusia. There are +only two seasons, summer and winter, the latter lasting from October to +January, but the temperature throughout the year is equable, owing to +the mistral which blows from the cool plateau and the sea breezes. + +The flora, especially along the coast of Murcia, is a mixture of +tropical and temperate plants. There are trees which shed their leaves +in winter, others which retain their foliage throughout the year, and +by the side of wheat, rice, maize, olives, oranges, and grapes are +grown cotton, sugar-cane, sweet potatoes, nopals, agaves, and dates. +Tropical diseases have found a congenial soil in this country. Yellow +fever has been imported occasionally from America. The putrefying +substances left upon the fields after floods poison the air, and the +brackish waters of the lagoons, or _albuferas_, are the breeding-places +of fever. The salt lakes to the south of the Segura, however, exercise +no deleterious influence upon the climate. + +Nowhere else in Spain is the rainfall so inconsiderable. Between +Almería and Cartagena only eight inches fall during the year; in the +environs of Alicante and Elche the rains are, perhaps, a trifle more +copious; and at Murcia and Valencia, which lie at the foot of mountains +that intercept the moisture-laden winds, they are more abundant still, +though even there they do not exceed eighteen inches. Moreover, most of +the rain is immediately absorbed by the thirsty air, and only a very +small quantity finds its way through _ramblas_ to the sea. The quantity +is altogether insufficient for agricultural purposes, and if it were +not for the rivers the {416} country would be a desert. Cultivation +is carried on only along the rivers and in a few other favoured spots. +Veritable steppes extend on both banks of the Segura. The _campos_ +between Almería and Villajoyosa, for a distance of 300 miles, are +sterile and bare. The brine and magnesia springs, which rise at the +foot of the saliferous triassic rocks, fill small lakes, which dry up +in summer, and in August the lagoons near Orihuela become covered with +a thick crust of salt. + +[Illustration: Fig. 158.—STEPPES OF MURCIA. + +Scale 1 : 992,000.] + +{417} + +The beneficent rivers, whose waters are drunk by the _huertas_, or +gardens, near their banks, are the Segura, Vinalapo, Júcar, Guadalaviar +(known as Turia in its lower course), Mijaros, and several others. +They all resemble each other as regards the ruggedness of their upper +valleys and the savageness of the gorges through which they pass. +The Segura forces itself a passage through several mountain defiles +before it reaches the plain of Murcia. The Júcar and Guadalaviar +(Wad-el-Abiad, or “white river”) have fewer obstacles to overcome, +but some of the gorges through which they pass are nevertheless of +surpassing beauty. + +The volume of these rivers is comparatively small, and the husbandmen +dwelling along their banks economize the water as far as possible. +Reservoirs, or _pantanos_, have been constructed at the outlet of +each valley, whence the water is distributed over the fields by means +of innumerable canals of irrigation. The irrigated huertas contrast +most favourably with the cultivated campos in their neighbourhood. +Irrigation has probably been practised at Valencia since the time of +the Romans, but the Moors appear to have been the first to construct a +regular system of canals. Eight of these, ramifying into innumerable +_acequias_, have converted the environs of Valencia into an Eden. +Carefully manured as they are, these fields are never allowed to lie +fallow. Stalks of maize fifteen and even twenty-five feet in height +may be seen in the gardens, the mulberry-tree yields three or four +harvests annually, four or five crops are obtained from the same field, +whilst the grass is mown as many as nine or ten times. This luxuriant +vegetation, however, is said to be watery, and hence the proverb, +“In Valencia meat is grass, grass is water, men are women, and women +nought.” + +The huertas of the Júcar, though less famous than those of Valencia, +are even more productive. Orange-trees predominate, and around Alcira +and Carcagente alone 20,000,000 oranges are picked annually, and +exported to Marseilles. + +The oases in the great steppe which extends from Alcoy to Almería are +less fertile than those on the Júcar and Guadalaviar. That of Alicante +is fertilised by the Castalla, the waters of which are collected +in the reservoir of Tibi. The huerta of Elche, on the Vinalapo, is +chiefly occupied by a forest of palm-trees, the principal wealth of the +inhabitants, who export the dates to France, and the leaves to Italy +and the interior of Spain. + +The huerta around Orihuela, on the Lower Segura, cannot boast of a palm +forest like that of Elche, but is more productive. The inhabitants +of Murcia, higher up on the same river, though they enjoy similar +advantages, have failed to profit by them to the same extent. Their +huerta, which contains a third of the total population of the province, +is fertile, but cannot compare with that of their neighbours. Nor do +the fields of Lorca equal them. They have not yet recovered from the +bursting of a reservoir, the freed waters of which carried destruction +as far as Murcia and Orihuela. + + * * * * * + +The moral and physical character of the inhabitants of a country +exhibiting such great contrasts could hardly fail to present +corresponding differences, and, indeed, we find that the inhabitants +of the fertile gardens and those of the barren steppes and mountains +differ essentially, in spite of their common origin. {418} + +[Illustration: Fig. 159.—THE PALM GROVE OF ELCHE.] + +[Illustration: PEASANTS OF LA HUERTA, AND CIGARRERA OF VALENCIA.] + +The people of Murcia cannot be said to have issued victoriously from +the struggle against barren rocks, desiccating winds, and a dry +atmosphere. They abandon themselves to a fatalism quite oriental, and +make hardly any effort at improvement. Lazily inclined, they take their +siesta in and out of time, and even when awake preserve an aspect of +impassiveness as if they pursued a reverie. They are not much given +to gaiety, and, though neighbours of Andalusia and La Mancha, do not +dance. They are full of rancour and savage hatred when offended, and +have exercised but small influence upon the destinies of Spain. They +cannot compare in industry with Catalans, Navarrese, and Galicians, +nor in intelligence with natives of any other part of Spain. The +Valencians, on the other hand, are an industrious race. They not only +cultivate their plains, but scale the barren slopes of the rocks with +their terraced gardens. They are a gay people, famous for their dances. +Ferocious instincts are asserted to underlie this outward gaiety, and a +proverb says that “the paradise of La Huerta is inhabited by demons.” +Human life is held very {419} cheaply in Valencia. Formerly that +town supplied the courtiers of Madrid with hired assassins, and the +numerous crosses in and around it are evidence of so many murders +committed in the heat of passion. In Valencia, however, the use of the +knife is a tradition of chivalry, as are duels in some other parts of +Europe. The conscience of the murderer is perfectly at ease; he wipes +the blood-stained knife upon his girdle, and immediately afterwards +cuts his bread with it. The dress of the Valencians consists of loose +drawers confined round the waist by a red or violet scarf, velvet +waistcoats with pieces of silver, white linen gaiters leaving the +knees and ankles bare, a bright kerchief wrapped round the shaved +head, and a low hat with brim turned up and ornamented with ribbons. A +many-coloured cloak with a broad fringe completes this costume, and, +draped in it, even the meanest beggar possesses an air of distinction. +In their customs and modes of thought the Valencians differ equally +from their neighbours. They speak a Provençal dialect, mixed with +many Arabic words, but more closely related to the language of the +troubadours than the dialect of the Catalans. + +[Illustration: Fig. 160.—THE PALM GROVE OF ELCHE AND THE HUERTAS OF +ORIHUELA. + +Scale 1 : 400,000.] + +Agriculture is the leading pursuit of Valencia and Murcia, and a few +branches of industry are carried on. Many hands are occupied in making +the white wines of Alicante and the red ones of Vinaroz and Benicarló; +the grapes of the vineyards of Denia, Javea, and Gandia, to the north +of Cabo de la Nao, are converted {420} by a complicated process into +raisins; and the _esparto grass_ growing abundantly on the sunny slopes +of Albacete and Murcia is employed in the manufacture of mats, baskets, +sandals, and a variety of other objects.[149] There are hundreds of +metalliferous lodes, but only the lead mines in the hills of Herrerías, +to the east of Cartagena, are being worked on a large scale, and that +by foreigners. Zinc has been worked since 1861, and mines of copper, +lead, silver, mercury, and rock-salt abound at some distance from the +coast; but, from want of means of communication, their exploitation +would not pay. + +[Illustration: Fig. 161.—RUINS OF THE DYKE OF THE RESERVOIR ABOVE +LORCA.] + +Valencia is the more industrial province of the two. Albacete +manufactures the dreaded _navajas_, or long knives; Murcia has +silk-mills; Cartagena rope-walks and other establishments connected +with shipping; Játiva has a few paper-mills; but Valencia and Alcoy are +now the great centres of industry. The former {421} manufactures the +plaids worn by the peasantry, silks and linens, earthenware and glazed +tiles. Alcoy supplies most of the paper for making Spanish cigarettes. + +[Illustration: Fig. 162.—PEASANTS OF MURCIA.] + +{422} + +The towns of Albacete and Almansa are important, as lying on the +great high-road which connects the plateau of La Mancha with the +Mediterranean seaboard. But they cannot vie in wealth and population +with the towns situated on the coast, or within twenty-five miles of +it. Lorca, the southernmost of these towns, lies picturesquely on the +slopes and at the foot of a hill crowned by a Moorish citadel. The old +town, with narrow tortuous streets and the remains of Arab palaces, has +been given up to Gitanos, and a new town with wide and straight streets +built in the fertile plain irrigated by the Guadalentin. A fine road +joins Lorca to the small harbour of Aguilas, twenty miles to the south. + +In descending the valley of the Guadalentin we pass Totana, the +head-quarters of the Gitanos of the country, and Alhama, well known +on account of its hot springs, and finally enter the mulberry and +orange groves which surround the capital of the province. Murcia, +though an extensive city, hardly looks like it, for its streets are +deserted, its houses without beauty, and the only objects of interest +are the cathedral, the shady walks along the banks of the Segura, and +the canals irrigating the terrace gardens. Far more interesting is +the neighbouring Cartagena, which was destined by its Punic founders +to become a second Carthage in truth, and its magnificent harbour +certainly affords great advantages for commercial and military +purposes. The discovery of the rich lead and silver mines near the town +contributed much towards its prosperity. Successive Spanish Governments +have attempted to restore to Cartagena its ancient strategical +importance. They have constructed docks and arsenals, and erected +impregnable fortifications, but, in spite of this, the population +of the town is hardly a third of what it was in the middle of the +eighteenth century. The character of its commerce is almost local, +notwithstanding its excellent port, and esparto grass, mats, fruits, +and ore constitute the leading articles of export. + +Alicante, though far less favoured by nature, is a much busier place, +thanks to the fertility of the huertas of Elche, Orihuela, and Alcoy, +and the railway which connects it with Madrid. Only small vessels +can approach the quays and piers of the town, nestling at the foot +of a steep rock crowned by a dismantled citadel. Larger vessels +are compelled to anchor in an open roadstead. Other coast towns +of Valencia, such as Denia and Cullera, offer still less shelter, +but are nevertheless much frequented by coasting vessels. Formerly +vessels which entered the Bay of Valencia during winter were bound +to exercise the greatest caution, owing to violent easterly and +north-north-easterly winds and fogs, for there existed not a single +port of refuge. This want has now been supplied by the construction of +a port at the mouth of the Guadalaviar, known as El Grao (strand) de +Valencia. + +Valencia, the fourth city of Spain in population, is the natural centre +of the most fertile huertas. The “City of the Cid” still preserves +its crenellated walls, turrets, gates, narrow and tortuous streets, +balconied houses, the windows of which are shaded by blinds, and +awnings spread over the streets to protect passers-by from the rays +of the sun. Amongst its numerous buildings there is but one which +is really curious: this is the _Lonja de Seda_, or silk exchange, a +graceful structure of the fifteenth century. Gardens constitute the +real delight of Valencia, and {423} the Alameda, which extends along +the banks of the Guadalaviar, is, perhaps, the finest city promenade in +Europe. The commerce of Valencia rivals that of Cádiz.[150] + +[Illustration: Fig. 163.—THE HARBOUR OF CARTAGENA. + +Scale 1 : 54,000.] + +To the north of Valencia the cultivable country along the coast is +narrow, and incapable of supporting large towns. Castellon de la Plana, +at the mouth of the Mijaros, has attained a certain importance, but +farther north we only meet with small places inhabited by fishermen +and vine-growers. Formerly the coast road was defended by castles, +chief among which was Saguntum, famous for its glorious defence against +Hannibal. Its site is occupied by the modern town of Murviedro, _i.e._ +“old walls,” and its ruins are not very imposing.[151] + + +V.—THE BALEARIC ISLANDS. + +The Balearic Islands are attached to the mainland of Spain by a +submarine {424} plateau, and are geographically as well as historically +a dependency of Valencia and Catalonia. The ranges of hills traversing +these islands have the same direction as those of Murcia and Valencia. +On the other hand, the peninsula of La Baña, at the mouth of the Ebro, +extends beneath the sea in the direction of Ibiza, and from this +submarine tongue of land rises a group of volcanic rocks. These are the +Columbretes, from the Latin _colubraria_, signifying “serpents’ islets.” + +[Illustration: Fig. 164.—EL GRAO DE VALENCIA. + +Scale 1 : 18,000.] + +The Baleares are small in area, but favoured by climate, +productiveness, and natural beauty. They are the “Happy Islands” of +the ancients, and, compared with many of the coast lands, are indeed a +favoured region. War and pestilence have been no strangers to them, but +continual troubles have not interfered with their development. + +The islands consist of two groups, the Pityuses and the Baleares +proper. The name of the latter is said to refer to the expertness of +the natives as slingers; and, when Q. Metellus prepared to land upon +them, he took care to shelter his men beneath an awning of hides. The +climate is moister and more equable than that of neighbouring Spain. +Violent storms occur frequently. + +[Illustration: WOMEN OF IBIZA, BALEARIC ISLES.] + +The structures called _talayots_ (watch-towers) prove that the islands +were inhabited before the historic epoch. These were built probably +by the same race to whom the nuraghi of Sardinia owe their existence; +but the present population is a very mixed one, for every nation of +antiquity has successively invaded the island. {425} The language +spoken is a Catalan dialect resembling that of Limousin. The Majorcans +are generally small of stature, but well proportioned, and the women +of some of the districts are famed for their beauty and expressive +features. The peasantry are suspicious and thrifty, but honest and +hospitable; and their dress, consisting of loose breeches, a belt, a +bright-coloured vest, and a goatskin cloak, is picturesque. Dancing to +the music of a guitar or flute is their favourite amusement. + +IBIZA (IVIZA), the largest island of the Pityuses, is hardly more than +fifty miles from Cabo de la Nao. Its surface is hilly and intersected +by numerous torrent beds. Puerto Magno (Pormany, or Grand Port) lies +on the west side, and a similar bay, the trysting-place of numerous +fishing-smacks, on the south side. On its shore stands the capital +of the island, an ancient Carthaginian colony. A chain of islets and +rocks, similar to the Adam’s Bridge of Ceylon, joins the southernmost +cape of Ibiza to Formentera Island. The climate is said to be so +salubrious that neither serpents nor other noxious reptiles can bear +it. The population is small, in spite of the fertility of the island. +Watch-towers and castles of refuge near every village recall the time +when the inhabitants suffered from Moorish pirates. The islanders are +happy, for the central Government leaves them pretty much to themselves. + +MALLORCA, or MAJORCA, the largest of the group, is the only one which +can boast of a regular range of mountains, rising precipitously along +the north-western coast, and culminating in the twin peaks of Silla +de Torrella (4,940 feet) and Puig Mayor (4,920 feet). These mountains +are amongst the most picturesque in all Europe, and from their summits +may be enjoyed a magnificent prospect. The moufflon is said still +to haunt their pine woods and recesses. The greater portion of the +island consists of a plain lying at an elevation of 150 feet above the +sea-level, and dotted over with isolated _puigs_, or conical peaks, +surmounted in many instances by an old church or castle. The eastern +extremity of the island is hilly, and the Bec de Farruch (1,863 feet) +still bears its old Arabic name. Near it are the wonderful stalactite +caverns of Arta, which extend beneath the sea. The extremities of the +most depressed portion of the island open out towards two great bays, +one in the north-east, the other in the south-west. Palma, the capital +of the island, lies on the former of these, though the other, known +as Puerto de Alcudia, would offer greater advantages were it not for +the pestilential swamps which surround it. On the iron-bound northern +coast there are no harbours, but coasting vessels frequent the creek of +Soller, whence they export oranges. + +The peasants, or _pageses_, of Majorca have the reputation of being +good agriculturists, but much of the progress made is due to Catalan +immigrants. The island produces delicious wines (Benisalem), olive +oil, oranges, vegetables, and pigs, all of which find a market at +Barcelona or in France. The corn grown is not, however, sufficient for +the support of the population, and Majorcans as well as “Mahonian” +gardeners are met with in every town of the Mediterranean. Bay-salt +is made at Cape Salinas. Shoes, cottons, linens, baskets, and porous +vases are produced; but the manufacture of _majolica_ has ceased. +Palma is a busy place of 40,000 inhabitants, and its bastioned walls, +castle, cathedral, and amphitheatrically built houses present a fine +appearance from the sea. The inhabitants are proud of {426} their +public buildings, and assert that their _lonja_ is superior to that +of Valencia. The _Chuctas_, or converted Jews, are a curious element +of the population. They occupy a separate quarter, marry amongst +themselves, and have preserved their race distinctions and mercantile +genius. A large portion of the landed property of the island has passed +into their hands. A railway traversing the rich districts of Santa +María and Benisalem, to the south of the populous towns of Manacor and +Felanitx, connects Palma with Alcudia.[152] + +[Illustration: Fig. 165.—THE BALEARIC ISLANDS. + +Scale 1 : 3,700,000.] + +MENORCA, or MINORCA, twenty-four miles to the east of Majorca, is +generally level, its culminating point, Monte Toro, in the centre of +the island, only attaining a height of 1,171 feet. The strong northerly +winds which sweep over its plains cause the trees to turn their +branches in the direction of Africa, and orange-trees find shelter only +in the _barrancas_, or ravines, which intersect them. The climate is +less pleasant than that of the neighbouring island, and the soil less +fertile, for, consisting for the most part of limestone, it rapidly +absorbs the rain. There are two ports and two cities, one at each +extremity of the island, which from time {427} immemorial have claimed +precedence. Ciudadela (7,500 inhabitants) enjoys the advantage of +closer proximity to Majorca, but its harbour is bad. Port Mahon (15,000 +inhabitants), on the other hand, possesses an admirable port, and +Andreas Doria says with reference to it that “June, July, and Mahon are +the best ports of the Mediterranean.” The English made Mahon a wealthy +city, but its trade fell off immediately when they abandoned it in 1802. + +[Illustration: Fig. 166.—VIEW OF IBIZA.] + + +VI.—THE VALLEY OF THE EBRO. ARAGON AND CATALONIA. + +The central portion of the valley of the Ebro is as distinctly +separated from the remainder of Spain as is that of the Guadalquivir. +It forms a vast depression, bounded by the midland plateau of Spain and +the Pyrenees, and if the waters of the Mediterranean were to rise 1,000 +feet, this ancient lake, which existed until its pent-up waters had +forced themselves a passage through the mountains of {428} Catalonia, +would be converted into a gulf of the sea. The Pyrenees in the north, +the barren slopes of the plateaux to the south and south-west, form +well-defined boundaries, but in the north-west the plain of the Ebro +extends beyond Aragon, into a country inhabited by men of a different +race. + +[Illustration: Fig. 167.—THE PITYUSES. + +Scale 1 : 400,000.] + +Historically and geographically, Aragon and Catalonia form one of the +great natural divisions of Spain, less extensive than the Castiles, +but hardly less important, and far more densely populated.[153] The +political destinies of Aragon and Catalonia have been the same for +more than seven centuries, but, in spite of this, {429} there exist +great contrasts, which have not been without their influence upon the +character of the population. Aragon, a country of plains surrounded by +mountains, is an inland province, and its inhabitants have remained for +the most part herdsmen, agriculturists, and soldiers. Catalonia, on +the other hand, possesses an admirable seaboard. Its natural wealth, +joined to favourable geographical position, has developed commerce +with neighbouring countries, and more especially with Roussillon and +Languedoc. Indeed, seven or eight centuries ago, the Catalans were +Provençals rather than Spaniards, and in their language and customs +they were closely related to the people to the north of the Pyrenees. + +In the course of the great political revolution, the most terrible +feature of which was the war of the Albigenses, Catalonia became a +prey to the Castilians. As long as the Provençal world maintained its +natural centre between Arles and Toulouse, the populations of the +Mediterranean coasts, as far as the Ebro, Valencia, and the Baleares, +were attracted towards it as to their common focus. Those Christian +populations who found themselves placed between Provence on the one +hand and the Arab kingdoms on the other, naturally gravitated towards +the former, with whom they possessed community of race, religion, and +language. Hence the wide range of the idiom known as Limousin, and +its flourishing literature. But when an implacable war had converted +several towns of the Albigenses into deserts; when the barbarians of +the North had destroyed the civilisation of the South, and the southern +slopes of the Cévennes had been reduced by violence to the position of +a political dependency of the valley of the Seine, Catalonia was forced +to look elsewhere for natural allies. The centre of gravity was shifted +from the north to the south, from Southern France to the peninsula of +the Pyrenees, and Castile secured what Provence had lost. + +The plateau to the south of the Ebro has been cut up, through the +erosive action of rivers, into elongated sierras and isolated _muelas_ +(molars), and its edge is marked by numerous notches, through which +these rivers debouch upon the plain. The Sierra de San Just (4,967 +feet), now separated from that of Gúdar by the upper valley of the +Guadalupe, is a remnant of this ancient plateau, as are the Sierras de +Cucalon (4,284 feet), de Vicor, and de la Virgen, which join it to the +superb mass of the Moncayo, in the north-west; and the same applies to +the Sierra de Almenara (4,687 feet), which rises to the west of them. + +The granitic mountain mass of the Moncayo (7,705 feet) has offered +greater resistance to the erosive action of the waters than have the +cretaceous rocks of the plateau to the east of it. The Moncayo is +the storm-breeder of the plains of Aragon, and from its summit the +Castilian can look down upon the wide valley of the Ebro. To the +Aragonese the plateau is accessible only through the valleys of the +Guadalupe, Martin, and Jiloca, and it is these which have enabled +them to obtain possession of the upland of Teruel, which is of such +strategical importance, from its commanding position between the basins +of the Guadalaviar, Júcar, and Tajo. + +To the north of the Ebro rises the snow-clad range of the Pyrenees, +which separates Spain from the rest of Europe. Several spurs descend +from this master range into Aragon. But there are also independent +ranges, one of which, that of {430} the Bardenas, rises immediately +to the north of the Ebro, right opposite to the gigantic Moncayo. The +parallel ridges of the Castellar and of the “district of the Five +Towns” form a continuation of these hillocks to the east of the Arba, +and then, crossing the valley of the Gallego, we reach the barren +terraces of the Monegros, upon which rises the insular Sierra de +Alcubierra, in the very centre of the ancient lake of Aragon. A saddle, +elevated only 1,247 feet above the sea-level, connects the latter with +the mountains of Huesca in the north. + +[Illustration: Fig. 168.—PORT MAHON. + +Scale 1 : 50,000.] + +Several mountain masses of considerable height occupy the centre of +the country, and separate these riverine hills from the main range of +the Pyrenees. They consist for the most part of chalk, through which +the bounteous rivers descending from the Pyrenees have excavated their +beds. These channels, with their precipices, defiles, and cascades, +form one of the most picturesque mountain districts of Spain. The most +famous of these Pyrenean foot-hills is the Sierra de la Peña, which +is separated from the Pyrenees by the deep valley of the Aragon. At +the eastern extremity of this chain, high above the ancient city of +Jaca, rises the pyramidal sandstone mass of the Peña de Oroel (5,804 +feet), from which we are able to embrace an immense horizon, extending +from the Pyrenees to the Moncayo. The wild district which occupies the +centre of this magnificent panorama is the famous country of Sobrarbe, +held in high veneration by patriotic Spaniards, for it was there they +commenced their struggles against the Moors. + +[Illustration: MONSERRAT, CATALONIA.] + +{431} + +An elevated saddle connects the Sierra de la Peña with the irregular +mountain mass of the Sierra de Santo Domingo, to the south of it, whose +spurs descend in terraces into the rugged plain of the Five Towns. It +is separated by a narrow cleft, through which passes the Gallego from +the Sierra de Guara, which extends to the river Cinca in the east, and +several minor chains run parallel with it. This parallelism in the +mountain ranges may be traced, likewise, as far as the river Segre. + +The Monsech, thus called from its arid calcareous ravines, presents the +appearance of an unbroken rampart from the south, but is intersected +at right angles by the gorges of two Nogueras—the Ribagorzana and +Pallaresa. The Peña de San Gervas and the Sierra de Boumort, which rise +to the north of it, are much less regular in their contours, but exceed +it in height. + +The Pyrenees terminate with the gigantic mountains surrounding the +valley of Andorra, and with the Peak of Carlitte (9,583 feet). The +Sierra del Cadi (8,322 feet) belongs to a detached chain hardly +inferior to them in height, and culminating on French soil in the +superb pyramid of the Canigou (9,140 feet). Numerous spurs extend from +this sierra towards the sea. + +In this rugged mountain region we meet with geological formations of +every age, from the Silurian to the cretaceous. Iron, copper, and +even gold abound, and might be worked with great profit if roads and +railways penetrated into the upper valleys. A coal-field on the Upper +Ter, near San Juan de las Abadesas, is being worked very sluggishly, +and others on the western slope of the Cadi have not even been touched. +The famous rocks of salt at Solsona and Cardona lie at the foot of the +Sierra del Cadi, and that of Cardona alone, though it has been worked +for centuries, is estimated to contain nearly 400,000,000 cubic yards. + +The abundance of mineral veins is due, perhaps, to the existence of +subterranean lava lakes. The only volcanic hills in the north of Spain +are those near Olot and Santa Pau, in the upper basin of the Fluvia. +Immense sheets of basaltic lava have been ejected there during the +tertiary age from fourteen craters, one of them, upon which stands the +old town of Castelfollit, forming a huge rampart of picturesque aspect. +Jets of steam issue even now from many fissures in the rocks. + +The mountains along the coast of Catalonia resemble in every respect +those of Valencia, from which they are separated by the gorge of the +Ebro. Near the mouths of that river the rugged and mountainous region +extends about thirty miles inland, as far as the Llanos del Urgel; +but farther north it widens, until it finally merges in the spurs +descending from the Pyrenees. The principal summits are the Mont Sant +(3,513 feet), the Puig de Montagut (2,756 feet), the Monserrat (4,057 +feet), and Monseny (5,276 feet). The best-known passes are at the head +of the Francoli, through which runs the railway from Tarragona to +Lérida, the pass at the head of the Noya, and the Pass of Calaf. + +Of the last-named mountains that of Monserrat is the most famous, for +suspended upon one of its flanks hang the remains of the celebrated +monastery in which Loyola deposited his sword. Monserrat has lost +its prestige as a holy place, but still remains one of the most +interesting subjects for the study of {432} geologists. It consists +of conglomerate, and has been worn by atmospheric agencies into +innumerable pillars, pinnacles, and earth pyramids surmounted by huge +boulders. Hermitages and the ruins of castles abound, and the prospect +from the highest summit extends from the Pyrenees to the Balearic Isles. + +Crossing the valleys of the Llobregat and Ter, we reach the +swampy plain of Ampurdan, an old gulf of the sea, and with it the +north-eastern extremity of Spain, separated from France by the +Albères Mountains. The surrounding hills abound in the remains of +ecclesiastical buildings. One of these, near Cabo de Creus, the +easternmost promontory of Spain, and the Aphrodision of the ancients, +marks the site of a temple of Venus. + +The basin of the Ebro forms a huge triangle, the mountains of Catalonia +being the base, whilst its apex lies in the hills of Cantabria, close +to the Atlantic. The surrounding hills differ much in height, but the +nucleus of all consists of granite, upon which have been deposited +sedimentary strata, the silent witnesses of the gradual filling up of +the old inland lake. The river itself traverses the very centre of +this triangle, at right angles to the Mediterranean, and only when it +reaches the mountain barrier separating it from the sea does it wind +about in search of an outlet. + +The Fontibre, or “fountain of the Ebro,” gives birth at once to a +considerable stream, which, fed by the snows of the Peña Labra, rushes +with great impetuosity past Reinosa (2,687 feet), then passes through a +succession of defiles, and finally, having received the Ega and Aragon +with the Argo from the north, emerges from Navarra a great river. Below +Tudela (800 feet) it is large enough to feed two canals, viz. that of +Tauste, which carries fertility into the once-sterile tracts at the +foot of Bardenas, and the navigable Imperial Canal, which follows the +valley down to Zaragoza. The ordinary volume of the latter amounts +to no less than 494 cubic feet per second, but much of this water is +sucked up by the calcareous soil. + +The tributary rivers which enter the Ebro in the plains of Aragon +compensate for the loss sustained through canals of irrigation. The +Jalon, Huerva, Martin, and Guadalupe join on the right; the Arba, +Gallego, and Segre on the left. This last is the most important of all, +for it drains the whole of the Pyrenean slope from Mont Perdu to the +Carlitte. + +The Ebro, after its junction with the Segre, immediately plunges +into the coast ranges of Catalonia, and though the fall thence to +the sea amounts to 183 feet in 95 miles, no rapids or cataracts are +met with. The suspended matter brought down by the river has been +deposited in the shape of a delta which juts out fifteen miles into +the Mediterranean, covers an area of 150 square miles, and abounds in +salt marshes, lagoons, and dead river arms. A canal, twenty-two miles +in length, connects the harbour of refuge at Alfaques with the Ebro, +but is not available for ships of great draught, owing to the bar which +closes its mouth. The other embouchures of the river are likewise +closed by bars. + +The volume of the Ebro[154] decreases annually, on account of the +increasing {433} quantities of water which it is called upon to +furnish for purposes of irrigation, and sooner or later it will be +reduced to the condition of the rivers of Valencia. + +The productiveness of the irrigated fields of Aragon and Catalonia +bears witness to the fertility of the soil. Even saline tracts have +been converted into gardens. Tropical plants, agaves, cacti, and a +few feathery palms on the coast to the south of Barcelona recall the +beautiful landscapes of Southern Spain. The valley of the Ebro holds an +intermediate position between Murcia and Valencia and the bleak plateau +and mountains of the interior; but water, except in the immediate +neighbourhood of the rivers, is nowhere abundant. On some of the +hill-tops may be seen houses the walls of which are dyed red, because +it was found more economical to mix the mortar with wine than to +convey thither water for that purpose. This deficiency of moisture is +a great drawback to certain districts in the lower valley of the Ebro. +The greater portion of Bárdenas, the Monegros, and the terraces of +Calanda are treeless steppes. Cold and heat alternate abruptly, without +reference to seasons, and the climate, in spite of the proximity of +the sea, is quite continental in its character. The hot winds, so much +dreaded on the coast of Catalonia, do not blow from Africa, but from +the parched plains of Aragon. + +The climate of Catalonia, owing to the breezes blowing from the +Mediterranean, is far more equable than that of Aragon, and to +this circumstance, no less than to differences of race and greater +facilities for commerce, this province is indebted for its distinct +individuality.[155] + +Catalonia, being open to invasions from the sea as well as by land, has +a much more mixed population than its neighbour Aragon. On the other +hand, a conqueror once in possession of the latter had but little to +fear expulsion at the hands of new-comers, and the Moors maintained +themselves in Aragon three hundred years after they had been expelled +from Barcelona. + +The inhabitants of the valley of the Ebro are offensively haughty, of +sluggish minds, given to old customs and superstitions, but they are +at the same time singularly persistent, and their bravery does credit +to their Celtiberian ancestors. These fine broad-shouldered men, who +follow their donkeys along the high-roads, the head enveloped in a +silken kerchief, and the waist confined by a violet-coloured belt, are +at all times ready for a fight. Up to the close of last century it was +customary to get up fights between villages in mere wantonness, and +the _rondallas_, a term now employed for open-air concerts, scarcely +ever terminated without bloodshed. In trifles the Aragonese are as +stubborn as in matters of importance, and they are said to “drive in +nails with their head.” For several centuries the Aragonese struggled +with the Moors, and the kings, dependent as they were upon the support +of the people, felt constrained to submit to a considerable limitation +of their power. It was Philip II. of Castile who suppressed these +ancient provincial privileges, and condemned Aragon to lead a life of +intellectual stagnation. + +The Catalans are as self-opinionated as their neighbours the Aragonese; +noisy quarrels frequently take place amongst them; but they rarely +come to blows. They {434} are said to be less firm of character than +the Aragonese, yet they succeeded in maintaining their provincial +independence much longer. Few towns have stood more sieges than +Barcelona, and fewer still have offered a more valiant defence. The +Catalans are undoubtedly industrious. They have not only converted +the irrigable valleys facing the sea into gardens, but have likewise +attacked the arid mountains, and, by triturating the rocks and +carrying thither soil from the plain, have made them produce grapes, +olives, and corn. Hence the proverb, “A Catalan can turn stones into +bread.” Agriculture, however, does not wholly supply the wants of +so dense a population, and Barcelona with its suburbs has become a +huge manufacturing centre, where cottons, woollens, and other textile +fabrics, hardware, chemical preparations, glass, paper, and various +articles are produced. The province of Barcelona is the chief seat +of the cotton industry in Spain, and fully deserves to be called the +Spanish Lancashire.[156] The Catalans are a migratory race. They are +met with not only in every other province of Spain, but in all the +Spanish colonies. Everywhere they are reputed for their thrift, and in +Cuba are hated as rivals or masters by creoles and blacks. + +The towns of Aragon and Catalonia present the same contrasts as do the +inhabitants of the two provinces. Those of the former are of solemn +and even gloomy aspect, whilst the picturesque cities of the maritime +province are full of bustle and mirth. The former represent the Middle +Age, the latter our modern era. + +Zaragoza (Saragossa) is most favourably situated in the very centre of +the plain of Aragon. It has its Moorish alcázar (the Aljaferia), now +used as a barrack; a curious leaning tower similar to that of Pisa; and +fine promenades, including the Coso and shaded walks. But prouder than +of all these attractions are the inhabitants of the epithet “heroic,” +which was bestowed upon their city in consequence of the valiant +resistance it offered in 1808 and 1809, when they not only defended +their homes, but also their patron saint, the Virgen del Pilar. + +At Zaragoza a few wide avenues have been cut through the labyrinth of +tortuous streets, but the other towns of the province have preserved +their physiognomy of former days. Jaca, in the upper valley of the +Aragon, between the Pyrenees and the Sierra de la Peña, with its grey +houses, still retains its turreted walls and ancient citadel. It +is the old capital of the kingdom of Sobrarbe, but would hardly be +mentioned now if it were not for its position at the foot of the Pass +of Canfranc, and the neighbouring monastery of La Peña. Huesca, at the +base of the hills, the Osca of the Romans, recalls the dominion of the +Ausks, or Euskarians. Standing in the midst of an irrigated plain, it +still enjoys a certain importance. It boasts of a richly decorated +cathedral, deserted monasteries, an old royal palace now occupied by +the university, and the remains of a turreted wall. Barbastro, near +the river Cinca, occupies a position similar to that of Huesca. The +carriage road over the Somport connects it with France. + +The Arab city of Calatayud, on the river Jalon, is commercially the +second city of Aragon, and replaces Bilbilis of the Iberians, which +stood on a hill near it. {435} One of its most nauseous suburbs +is wholly inhabited by mendicants. Teruel, on the Guadalaviar, the +chief town of the Maeztrazgo, with its crenellated walls and turrets, +resembles a mediæval fortress. The Arab tower of its church is one of +the curiosities of “untrodden” Spain, and its aqueduct, which crosses a +valley on 140 arches, is a remarkable work of the sixteenth century. + +Several towns of the interior of Catalonia are equally venerable +in their aspect. “Proud” Puigcerda (Puycerda), close to the French +frontier, on the Upper Segre, is hardly more than a collection of +hovels surrounded by a rampart. Seo de Urgel, in a fertile portion of +the same valley, is no doubt of some importance as a fortress, but its +streets are dirty, its houses mean, and its mud walls dilapidated. + +[Illustration: Fig. 169.—THE DELTA OF THE EBRO. + +Scale 1 : 375,000.] + +Still lower down the Segre we meet with the ancient city of Lérida, +whose origin dates back to prehistoric times, and which, owing to +its strategical position, has at all times played a prominent part +in military history. The gardens of Lérida supply much produce for +exportation, but the place cannot rise into importance until the +Franco-Spanish coast railway shall have been completed. + +Tortosa, a picturesque city just above the delta of the Ebro, and +formerly the capital of an Arab kingdom, commands one of the passages +over the Ebro, {436} and its commerce would increase if the river +offered greater facilities for navigation. + +Tarragona in the time of the Romans was the great maritime outlet +of the valley of the Ebro. The city was then nearly forty miles in +circumference, with arenas, amphitheatres, palaces, temples, and +aqueducts, and a population of hundreds of thousands. The ruins of this +ancient Tarraco have been made use of in the construction of the modern +city, with its clumsy cathedral, towers, decayed ramparts, and Roman +aqueduct intersecting the suburban orange groves. The manufacturing +town of Reus may almost be looked upon as a suburb of it, and is +rapidly increasing in population. Near it is the monastery of Poblet, +in which are deposited the remains of the Kings of Aragon. + +[Illustration: Fig. 170.—THE STEPPES OF ARAGON. + +According to Willkomm. Scale 1 : 2,000,000.] + +[Illustration: BARCELONA, SEEN FROM THE CASTLE OF MONJUL.] + +The country between Tarragona and Barcelona is densely populated. We +pass through the fertile district of El Panadés, the equally fertile +valley irrigated by the reddish waters of the Llobregat, with towns and +villages in rapid succession, until we reach the suburbs of Barcelona. +The city proper lies on the sea, at the foot of the fortifications +crowning the steep heights of Monjuich. There is another citadel +of immense size to the east of the city, yet this latter reposes +gaily beneath its batteries, which could easily reduce it to ashes. +Barcelona boasts of being the great pleasure town of Spain. Its +population is less than that of Madrid, but there are more theatres +and concert halls. The dramatic performances are of a superior class, +and the taste of the people is more refined. The public promenades, +such as the Rambla, occupying the bed of an ancient torrent, the +{437} sea-walls, and the avenues of trees which separate Barcelona +from the citadel and the suburb of Barceloneta, are crowded on fine +evenings. Barcelona is no doubt the “unique city” of Cervantes, and +perhaps “the home of courtesy and of valiant men;” but we doubt its +being the “common centre of all sincere friendships.” Barcelona exceeds +all other towns of Spain by its commerce.[157] The harbour is exposed +to southerly winds, and somewhat difficult of access. Barcelona is ever +renewing itself. There are broad streets of uniformly built houses, +and some quarters, as that of Barceloneta, on a tongue of land to the +east of the port, are laid out with all the regularity of an American +city. The only architectural monuments of note are a Gothic cathedral +and the old palace of the Inquisition. But all around the town, beyond +the suburbs with their factories and workmen’s dwellings, we meet with +numerous villas, occupying delightful nooks in verdant valleys or the +steep hill-slopes. No more charming district exists in Spain than that +to the north of Barcelona and Badalona, extending as far as Masnou, +Mataró, and the river Tordera. Promontories covered with vines, pines, +and cork-oaks, and sometimes crowned by the ruins of a castle, project +into the sea; the valleys are laid out in gardens enclosed with aloe +hedges; towns and villages follow in rapid succession; and the boats +and nets of fishermen are seen on the beaches. + +Most towns of the province of Barcelona emulate the manufacturing +industry of the capital. Igualada, at the foot of the Monserrat; +Sabadell, in a valley, full of factories; Tarrasa, the old Roman city, +near which are the famous baths of La Puda; Manresa, on the Cardoner +rivulet; Vich, the old primatial city of Catalonia; and Mataró, on the +coast, are all distinguished for the manufacture of cloth, linens, +silks, cotton stuffs, ribbons, lace, leather, hats, faience, glass, or +paper. Manufacturing industry has likewise spread into the neighbouring +province of Gerona, and notably to the city of Olot; but the vicinity +of the French frontier, the practice of smuggling, and the presence of +large garrisons in the fortresses of Gerona and Figueras have hindered +its development. Gerona has sustained many a siege, and Figueras, in +spite of its huge citadel, has been repeatedly captured. The walls of +Rosas are crumbling to pieces, and every vestige of the Greek city of +Emporion has been buried beneath the alluvium brought down by the river +Fluvia, but it still lives in the name of the surrounding district of +Ampurdan.[158] + + * * * * * + +The crest of the Pyrenees constitutes for the most part the political +boundary between France and Spain, but there are exceptions to this +rule. At the western extremity of the chain Spain enjoys the advantage, +for the valley of the Bidassoa, on the French slopes, belongs to it; +but France is compensated in the east by the possession of Mount +Canigou and the valley of the Upper Segre. As a rule, however, Spain +has the best of the bargain, and this is only natural, as the Pyrenees +are most accessible from the south, and the population there is more +dense. The {438} herdsmen of Aragon and the Basque provinces never +missed an opportunity of taking possession of pastures on the northern +slopes of the mountains, and these encroachments were subsequently +ratified by international treaties. + +The valley of Aran, in the very heart of the Pyrenees, is one of these +bloodless conquests of Spain. The French Garonne rises in that valley, +but the defile through which it leaves it is very narrow and easily +obstructed. Up to the eighteenth century the Aranese enjoyed virtual +independence; and as they are shut off from the rest of the world by +mountains covered with snow during the greater part of the year, these +21,000 mountaineers would appear to possess more claim to constitute +themselves an independent republic than any other people in Europe. + +Farther east there is another mountain valley which, nominally at +least, forms an independent republic. This is Andorra, a territory of +230 square miles, with 6,000 inhabitants. A few pastures on the French +slope excepted, the whole of this valley is drained by the beautiful +stream of Embalira, or Valira, which joins the Segre in the smiling +plain of Seo de Urgel. Most of the mountains of Andorra have been +robbed of their trees, and the destruction of the few remaining forests +is still going on. The vegetable soil is being rapidly washed away, +and the moraines of ancient glaciers gradually slide down the mountain +slopes. + +The republic of Andorra is said to owe its existence to a defeat of the +Saracens by Charlemagne or Louis le Débonnaire, but in reality up to +the French Revolution the valley enjoyed no sovereign rights whatever. +It was a barony of the Counts of Urgel and of Aragon. In 1278 it was +decided that Andorra should be held jointly by the Bishops of Urgel and +the Counts of Foix. In 1793 the French republic declined to receive the +customary tribute, and in 1810 the Spanish Cortes abolished the feudal +régime. Andorra thus became an independent state. The inhabitants, +however, continue to govern themselves in accordance with old feudal +customs, which are not at all reconcilable with the principles of +modern republics. The land belongs to a few families. There is a law +of entail, and younger brothers become the servants of the head of the +family, whose hospitality they enjoy only on condition of their working +for him. The tithes were only abolished in 1842. The “liberty” of these +mountaineers consists merely in exemption from the Spanish conscription +and impunity in smuggling; and, to increase their revenues, they have +recently established a gambling-table. Their legitimate business +consists in cattle-breeding, and there are a few forges and a woollen +factory. + +The republic of Andorra recognises two suzerains, viz. the Bishop +of Urgel, who receives an annual tribute of £25, and the French +Government, to whom double that sum is paid. Spain and France are +represented by two provosts, the commandant of Seo de Urgel exercising +the functions of viceroy. The provosts command the militia and appoint +the bailiffs, or judges. They, together with a judge of appeal, +alternately appointed by France and Spain, and two _rahonadores_, or +defenders of Andorran privileges, form the Cortes. Each parish is +governed by a consul, a vice-consul, and twelve councillors elected +by the heads of families. A General Council, of which the consuls and +delegates of the parishes are members, meets at the village of Andorra. +But in spite of these fictions Andorra is an {439} integral part of +Spain, and the carabineers never hesitate to cross the frontiers of +this sham republic. By language, manners, and customs the Andorrans are +Catalans. Exemption from war has enabled them to grow comparatively +rich. They are intelligent and cunning, and well know how to assume +an air of astonishment when their interests are at stake. Acting the +fool, in order to take some one in or avoid being ensnared, is called +by their neighbours “playing the Andorran.” Andorra, a neat village, +is the capital of the territory, but San Julia de Loria is the most +important place, and the head-quarters of the smugglers. + + +VII.—BASQUE PROVINCES, NAVARRA, AND LOGROÑO.[159] + +The Basque provinces (Vascongadas) and the ancient kingdom of Navarra, +though scarcely a thirtieth part of Spain, constitute a separate +region, not only on account of geographical position, but also because +they are inhabited for the most part by a distinct race, having its own +language, manners, and political institutions. + +Looked at from a commanding position, the hills connecting the Pyrenees +with the Castilian plateau resemble a sea lashed by contrary winds, for +there are no prominent mountain ranges. Even the Pyrenees have sunk +down to a mean height of 3,000 feet, and the Lohihulz (3,973 feet), +where they cease to form the frontier, scarcely deserves to be called a +mountain. They extend thence to the Pass of Azpiroz (1,860 feet), where +they terminate. The vague range beyond is known as Sierra de Aralar +(4,330 feet), and still farther west by a variety of local names. +These mountains are traversed by several low passes, facilitating +communication with the valley of the Ebro, the most important of which +is the Pass of Orduña (2,134 feet), which is crossed by the railway +from Bilbao to Miranda, and dominated by the Peña Gorbea (5,042 feet) +and the Sierra Salvada (4,120 feet). + +The spurs which descend from these mountains towards the Bay of Biscay +are likewise very irregular in their features. Most of them are +connected by transversal chains, through which the rivers have only +with difficulty forced for themselves an outlet towards the sea. The +Bidassoa, for instance, sweeps far to the south, through the valley of +Bastan, before it takes its course to the northward, in the direction +of its estuary at Fuenterrabia. Within its huge bend it encloses a +detached portion of the Pyrenees, the principal summit of which is the +famous Mont La Rhune (2,954 feet), on the French frontier. Equally +isolated is the Jaizquibel (1,912 feet), which rises from the plains of +Irun, close to the mouth of the Bidassoa, and from whose summit there +is a view of incomparable beauty. It terminates in Cape Higuer, or +Figuer, the northernmost point of Cantabria. + +The maritime slope of the Basque countries presents a great variety +of geological formations, including Jurassic limestones and chalk, +granites and porphyries. The mineral resources are immense; copper +and lead abound, but the great wealth consists in iron. The mines of +Mondragon, in Guipúzcoa, have long been famous, but the most productive +mining district is Somorrostro, to the west of Bilbao. {440} + +[Illustration: Fig. 171.—THE ENVIRONS OF BARCELONA. + +Scale 1 : 100,000.] + +[Illustration: GORGES OF PANCORBO.] + +The sierras of Aragon running parallel with the Pyrenees extend also +into Navarra and the Vascongadas, and are frequently connected with the +main range by lateral branches. To the west of Pamplona they spread +out into a rugged plateau, surmounted by the Sierra de Andía (4,769 +feet), the labyrinthine ramifications of which occupy the district of +Amezcuas, a region offering great advantages to partisan warfare. The +southern chain, not so well defined, bounds the Carrascal, or “country +of evergreen oaks,” in the south. This region, too, has frequently been +the scene of civil war. Farther west the famous defile of Pancorbo +leads through the Montes {441} Obarenes (4,150 feet) to the plateau +of Castile. The saddle of Alsásua (1,955 feet), over which passes the +railway from Vitoria (1,684 feet) to Pamplona (1,378 feet), connects +the Pyrenees with the Sierra de Andía, whilst as to the mountains of +the province of Logroño, they are spurs of the mountain masses forming +the northern edge of that plateau, viz. the Sierra de la Demanda in the +west, and the Sierra de Cebollera in the east, the latter giving birth +to the Sierras de Camero. + +Several of the mountain districts are quite Castilian in their asperity +and nakedness, for the forests have been cut down to feed the iron +furnaces. In Southern Navarra we meet with veritable deserts. But in +the Basque countries and Western Navarra, where it rains copiously, the +hills are clad with forests, the valleys with turf, and rivulets wind +amongst groves of elder-trees. Naked precipices of sand or limestone +contrast well with this verdure, from which peep out the small white +houses of villages embosomed in orchards, and scattered in the valleys +and hill-sides. + +[Illustration: Fig. 172.—THE SAND-BANKS OF MATARÓ. + +Scale 1 : 125,000.] + +Moist north-westerly winds are frequent in the Bay of Biscay, +and account for the equable temperature of the country. It rains +abundantly, and in all seasons. The climate resembles that of Ireland, +and, though damp, it is healthy and most conducive to the growth +of vegetation. The country is rich in corn, wine, oil, and cattle; +the northern slopes are covered with fruit trees of every kind, and +_zagardua_, or cider, is a favourite drink; and in the more remote +valleys of the Pyrenees we meet with some of the most magnificent +forests in Spain. That of Val Cárlos (valley of Charlemagne), near the +famous Pass of Roncevaux, or Roncesvalles, though none of the largest, +is reputed for its beauty and legendary associations. {442} + +Who are the Basques, whose bravery is traditional? What is their +origin? What their relationship to the other peoples of Europe? +All these questions it is impossible to answer. The Basques are a +mysterious race, and can claim kinship with no other nation. It is not +even certain whether all those who pass by that name are of the same +race. There is no typical Basque. No doubt most of the inhabitants of +the country are distinguished by finely chiselled features, bright and +firm eyes, and well-poised bodies, but the differences in stature, +form of skull, and features are very considerable. Between Basque and +Basque the differences are as great as between Spaniards, Frenchmen, +and Italians. There are tall men and short, brown and fair, long +skulls and broad, and almost every district has its distinct type. +The solution of this problem is daily becoming more difficult, for, +owing to a continual intermixture with their neighbours, the original +type, if there really existed one, is gradually being obliterated. It +is possible that at some remote time the remnants of various races +occupied this country, and adopted the language of the most civilised +among them. Instances of this kind abound in every people. + +Leaving out of sight the differences existing between the Basques +of Spain and those of French Navarra, the Basques may be described +as having broad foreheads, straight noses, finely shaped mouths and +chins, and well-proportioned figures. Their features are exceedingly +mobile, and every sentiment is reflected upon them by a lighting up of +the eyes, a movement of the eyebrows, or a trembling of the lips. The +women especially are distinguished by the purity of their features; +their large eyes, smiling lips, and small waists are universally +admired. Even in the towns, where the race is least pure, most of them +are strikingly beautiful and full of grace. There are districts where +obesity is a veritable phenomenon. Men and women carry themselves +nobly; they are polite to strangers, but always dignified. + +The Basques call themselves Euskaldunac, or Euskarians, and their +language Euskara, or Eskuara. The exact meaning of these terms is +not known, but in all probability it is “speech.” This speech of the +Basques differs in its words and structure from every other language +of the world; but many words have been borrowed from neighbouring +languages. Everything with which they became acquainted through +foreigners, all ideas imported since prehistoric times, are designated +by words not forming part of the original stock of the language. Even +the names of domestic animals and metals are of foreign origin. The +language may, perhaps, be classed with the polysynthetic languages of +the American Indians, or with the agglutinant idioms of the Altai, and +belongs, consequently, to the most remote period of human history. As +to the Basques themselves, they declare their speech to be superior to +every other, and according to some it was in Euskara that man first +saluted the sun. + +For the present we are compelled to look upon the Basques as the last +remnant of an ancient race. There are not wanting proofs that the +Euskaldunac formerly occupied a far wider territory. No monuments, +no inscriptions, nor even legends give a clue to this; but we find +it, after thousands of years, in the names of mountains, rivers, and +towns. Euskarian names abound in the Pyrenean valleys of Aran, Bastan, +Andorra, and Querol, and in the plain to the north of them. {443} + +[Illustration: Fig. 173.—THE VALLEY OF ANDORRA. + +Scale 1 : 375,000.] + +Most writers on Spain identify these Euskarians with the Iberians of +the ancients, and they have been credited with being the authors of +various inscriptions upon coins written in unknown characters which +have been discovered in Spain and Southern France, and which M. Boudard +has shown to be really in Euskarian. They must thus have occupied the +whole of the peninsula and Southern France, and even in Africa traces +of their presence have been discovered. {444} + +The extent of territory occupied by Basque-speaking populations in the +time of the Romans is not known, but probably it was not any greater +than it is now, for the Euskarians have ever since maintained their +independence, and nothing compelled them to adopt the language of their +despised neighbours. Bilbao has almost become Spanish, as have also +the towns in the plain of Álava. Pampeluna, the Irun of the Iberians, +is Euskarian merely by historical tradition, whilst farther east +Basque is only spoken in the upper valleys of Roncevaux, Orbaiceta, +Ochagavia, and Roncal. The Peak of Anie marks the extreme limit of +Basque on both slopes of the Pyrenees. Out of four Euskarian provinces +there is only one—viz. Guipúzcoa—where Basque predominates; but even +in that province the inhabitants of the cities of St. Sebastian and +Irun speak Castilian. In the south of Navarra and of the so-called +Basque provinces the inhabitants have spoken a Latin dialect from time +immemorial. Spanish and French are slowly but surely superseding the +Basque, and the time when it will be a thing of the past is not very +distant.[160] + +Strabo speaks of the Cantabrians, the direct ancestors of the Basques, +with an admiration akin to horror. Their bravery, love of freedom, and +contempt of life he looked upon as superhuman qualities. In their wars +against the Romans they killed each other to escape captivity, mothers +strangled their children to spare them the indignities of slavery, +and prisoners nailed to the cross burst into a chant of victory. The +Basques have never been wanting in courage. History shows that they +were superior to the surrounding nations in uprightness, generosity, +love of independence, and respect for personal liberty. The serfs of +the neighbouring provinces looked upon them as nobles, for in their +abject condition they fancied that personal liberty was a privilege of +nobility. This equality, however, existed only in Guipúzcoa and Biscay, +whilst in Álava and Navarra, where the Moors gained a footing, and +Castilian influences made themselves felt later on, there originated a +feudal nobility, with its usual train of vassals and serfs. However, +all the provinces have jealously watched over their local privileges. +At a period when European history was one continual series of wars, +the Basques lived in peace. Their small commonwealths were united into +a fraternal confederation, and enabled to resist invaders. They were +bound to sacrifice life and property in the defence of their common +fatherland, and their standards were emblazoned with three hands +joined, and the motto, _Irurak bat_, _i.e._ “The three (provinces) are +but one.” + +Nothing exhibits more strikingly the comparative civilisation of these +Euskarians than their respect for personal liberty. The house of a +Basque was inviolable, and he could not be deprived of his horse or his +arms. At their national meetings all voted, and in some of the valleys +even the women were permitted to take part in the discussions. It was +not, however, customary for the women to sit down at the same table +with the _etcheco-jauna_, or master of the house, and his sons; they +took their meals separately by the side of the hearth. This old custom +is still observed in country districts; and so strong is the force of +tradition, that the wife would almost consider it a disgrace to be seen +sitting by {445} the side of her husband on any other occasion than +her wedding-day. On fête-days the women keep apart; they dance amongst +themselves, allowing the men to engage in ruder sports. If a nation +may be judged from its pastimes, the Basques deserve to rank high in +our estimation. They are fond of athletic sports, and mysteries and +pastoral pieces are still performed in the open air. + +[Illustration: Fig. 174.—JAIZQUIBEL. + +Scale 1 : 200,000.] + +But the Basques have their faults. Anxious to retain their ancient +privileges, or _fueros_, they have become the champions of despotism. +These fueros date from 1332, when deputies from the provinces went +to Burgos, and offered the title of Lord to Alfonso the Judge, King +of Castile. In accordance with the treaty then {446} concluded, the +sovereign is prohibited from possessing any fortress, village, or +even house within the territory of the Euskarians. The Basques are +exempt from the conscription, and their militiamen, or _miqueletes_, +remain within the provinces except in time of war. The taxes can +only be levied with the consent of the provincial juntas, and must +be expended within the provinces, except what may be granted as a +“gift.” Commerce is not subjected to the same restrictions as in the +rest of Spain, and there are no monopolies. The municipalities enjoy +absolute self-government, carried on by an alcalde, an _ayuntamiento_, +or town council, and _parientes mayores_, or elders. In appearance +this organization is quite democratic, but in reality there exist many +feudal usages. In some places the town councils are self-elected; +in others they are elected by persons paying a specified amount in +taxes, or by nobles of a certain category; in others, again, they are +appointed by the lord of the manor. The provincial juntas are elected +in most diverse ways. The franchise, far from being universal, is a +privilege, and its exercise is attended with puerile formalities. The +laws of precedence are rigidly adhered to. + +It is quite clear that the exceptional position of the Basque provinces +cannot be maintained. Navarra was assimilated with the rest of Spain +in 1839, and this process is progressing irresistibly in the other +provinces. If the descendants of the Euskarians decline to share free +institutions with the rest of Spain, they can never maintain them on +their own behalf. Twice already have they been defeated on an appeal +to arms; but more powerful than war is the influence exercised by +industry, commerce, and increased facilities for intercommunication. +This fusion is being hastened by emigration and migration, for the +Basques not only seek work during winter in the more hospitable lowland +districts, but they also emigrate in thousands. They are very clannish, +and at Madrid and elsewhere have founded “Patriotic Societies,” but in +spite of these they soon become merged with the rest of the population. +The few towns are principally inhabited by strangers, for the Basques +prefer a country life. Their homesteads are scattered over hill-slopes +and through the valleys, and beneath the oaks in front of them the +inmates meet after the day’s labour to pass their time in music and +dancing. + +Bilbao, the largest town of the Basque provinces, has at all times +proved a rival of Valencia, Santander, and Cádiz. Its exports consist +principally of iron ores from neighbouring mines. Most of its +inhabitants are Spaniards, and during the Carlist wars the environs of +the town were frequently stained with blood. It was under its walls +that Zumalacarreguy, the Carlist leader, received his deadly wound. The +river Nervion connects Bilbao with its harbour at Portugalete. + +[Illustration: LOS PASAGES.] + +St. Sebastian, the largest city of Guipúzcoa, is likewise Spanish. A +seaport and fortress defended by a Castilian garrison, it resembles in +aspect and language the towns of the interior of the peninsula. Monte +Orgullo (475 feet), crowned by the Castle de la Mota, and bristling +with fortifications; the beautiful Bay of La Concha, to the west of the +town, with its fine beach; the river Urumea, which flows to the east of +the citadel, and struggles at its mouth with the foam of the sea; shady +walks and an amphitheatre of verdant hills dotted with villages, render +St. Sebastian a delightful spot, the favourite resort of worn-out and +idle {447} cosmopolitans. The town itself is devoid of interest, +for since its destruction by the English in 1813 it has been rebuilt +with monotonous regularity. Its harbour, though frequented by coasting +vessels, is shallow and insecure. The magnificent Bay of Pasages, +to the east of the town, might have been converted into a splendid +harbour, but its great advantages have never been appreciated, and its +mouth is now closed by a bar of alluvium brought down by the Oyarzun. + +[Illustration: Fig. 175.—AZCOITIA AND AZPEITIA. + +Scale 1 : 50,000.] + +Delightful Fuenterrabia (Fontarabie), with its escutcheoned houses, +is likewise shut off from the sea by a bar, and is indebted for such +importance as it possesses to its sea baths and the vicinity of France, +which is visible from its battered walls. Irun, the terminal station +of the Spanish railways, close to the French frontier, is an important +strategical position; and Tolosa, with its factories, is the capital of +Guipúzcoa. Zarauz, Guetaria (on the neck of a peninsula), and Lequeitio +are seaside resorts. Zumaya, at the mouth of the Urola valley, has +quarries of gypsum, which furnish excellent cement. Near Vergara are +ferruginous springs, and a famous college founded in 1776 by the Basque +Society. The convention which put a stop to the first Carlist war in +1839 was signed here. Durango, likewise, has frequently been mentioned +in connection with the civil wars carried on in the north of Spain. +Guernica, in Biscay, boasts of a palace of justice and an old oak +beneath which the legislature is in the habit of meeting; but, like all +other Basque towns, it is hardly more than a village. + +The centres of population are not more numerous on the southern +slope of the Pyrenees. Vitoria, the capital of Álava, on the railway +connecting Madrid with Paris, is a commercial and manufacturing town. +Pamplona, or Pampeluna, recalls the name of Pompey, who rebuilt it. It +is a fortress, often besieged and captured. Its cathedral is one of the +finest in Spain. Tafalla, _la flor de Navarra_, the ancient capital of +the kingdom, has the ruins of a palace, which Carlos the Noble, who +{448} built it, desired to unite by means of a covered gallery with +the palace of Olite, three miles lower down in the same valley. Puente +la Reina is celebrated for its wines. Estella, one of the most charming +towns of Navarra, commands several roads leading to Castile and +Aragon, and its strategical importance is consequently considerable. +The Carlists, during the late war, transformed it into a formidable +fortress. + +Tudela, abounding in wines, Calahorra, and Logroño, all in the +adjoining province of Logroño, are likewise of some value from a +military point of view, for they command the passages over the Ebro. +Calahorra, with its proud motto, “I have prevailed over Carthage and +Rome,” was the great bulwark of defence when Sertorius fought Pompey, +but was made to pay dearly for its heroism. Besieged by the Romans, its +defenders, constrained by hunger, fed upon their women and children, +and most of them perished. Though situated in the fertile district of +Rioja, beyond the frontiers of the Euskarian language, the history of +Calahorra is intimately connected with that of the Basque provinces, +for upon its ancient laws were modelled the fueros of Álava.[161] + + +VIII.—SANTANDER, THE ASTURIAS, AND GALICIA. + +The Atlantic slope of the Cantabrian Pyrenees is a region completely +distinct from the rest of Spain. Mountains, hills, valleys, and +running waters succeed each other in infinite variety, and the coast +throughout is steep, with bold promontories and deep inlets, into +which flow rapid torrents. The climate is moist and salubrious. The +Celto-Iberian inhabitants of the country have in most instances escaped +the commotions which devastated the other provinces of the peninsula, +and the population, in proportion to the cultivable area, is more +dense than elsewhere. This region, being very narrow compared with its +length, has been split up into several political divisions, in spite of +similarity of physical features. The old kingdom of Galicia occupies +the west, the Asturias the centre, and Santander the east.[162] + +The mountain region of Santander begins immediately to the east of +the Sierra Salvada and the depression known as Valle de Mena. The +Cantabrian Mountains slope down steeply there towards the Bay of +Biscay, whilst their height above the upland, through which the Ebro +has excavated its bed, is but trifling. The Puerto del Escudo attains +an elevation of 3,241 feet above Santander, its southern descent to +the valley of the Virga hardly exceeding 500 feet. The Pass of Reinosa +(2,778 feet), farther west, through which runs the railway from Madrid +to Santander, is even more characteristic. An almost imperceptible +height of land there separates the plateau from the steep declivity +which leads down to the coast, and by means of a canal sixty feet deep, +and a mile in length, the waters of the Ebro might be diverted into +the river Besaya, which enters the Atlantic at San Martin de Suances. +This height of land forms the natural outlet of {449} the Castiles to +the sea, and its possession is as important to the inhabitants of the +plateau as is that of the mouth of a river to a people dwelling on its +upper course. + +[Illustration: Fig. 176.—THE ENVIRONS OF BILBAO. + +Scale 1 : 200,000.] + +Immediately to the east of this pass the aspect of the mountains +changes. They rise to a great height, piercing the zone of perennial +snow, and their southern escarpments are of great steepness. The Peña +Labra (8,295 feet) dominates the first of these mountain masses. Rivers +descend from it in all directions: the Ebro in the east, the Pisuerga +in the south, and the Nansa, or Tinamenor, in the north-west. Farther +west the Peña Prieta rises to a height of 8,295 feet, its snows feeding +the Carrion and Esla. It is joined in the north to a mountain mass even +more considerable, which bears the curious name of Peñas de Europa, or +“rocks {450} of Europe,” and culminates in the Torre de Cerredo (8,784 +feet), covered with snow throughout the year, and boasting even of a +few glaciers, due to the excessive amount of precipitation. + +[Illustration: Fig. 177.—ST. SEBASTIAN. + +Scale 1 : 30,000.] + +The valley of La Liébana, at the eastern foot of the Peñas de Europa, +resembles a vast caldron of extraordinary depth. Shut in on the west, +south, and east by huge precipices rising to a height of 6,500 feet, +it is closed in on the north by a transversal chain, through which +the waters of the Liébana have excavated for themselves a narrow +passage. The village of Potes, in the centre of this valley, lies at +an elevation of only 981 feet above the level of the sea. In Santander +and the Asturias, even more frequently than in the Basque country, we +meet with secondary chains running parallel with the coast. These are +composed of triassic, Jurassic, and cretaceous rocks, and rise like +advanced walls of defence in front of the main range of the mountains, +which consist of Silurian slates upheaved by granite. It results from +this that the course of the rivers is most erratic. On leaving their +upper valleys, where they frequently form cascades, their farther +progress is arrested by these parallel ranges, and they twist about +to the east and west until they find an outlet through which they may +escape. + +The two funnel-shaped valleys of Valdeon (1,529 feet) and Sajambre are +enclosed between spurs of the Peñas de Europa. Their torrents drain +into the Bay of Biscay, but they are most readily accessible from the +plateau. Farther west the mountains decrease in height, and their main +crest gradually recedes from the coast. They are crossed here by the +Pass of Pajares (4,471 feet), which connects Leon with Oviedo. {451} + +The Asturian Mountains are objects of veneration to every patriotic +Spaniard. Beautiful as they are, their lower slopes being covered with +chestnut-trees, walnut-trees, and oaks, whilst higher up forests of +beeches and hazel alternate with meadows, their beauty is enhanced by +the fact of their having afforded a refuge to the Christians whilst the +Moors held the rest of the country. Mount Ansena sheltered St. Pelagius +and his flock, and at Covadonga he built himself an abbey. These +“illustrious mountains” do not, however, merely boast of historical +associations, delightful villages, herds, and pastures; they hide +within their bowels a rich store of coal, one of the principal sources +of wealth to the Asturias. + +[Illustration: Fig. 178.—ST. SEBASTIAN.] + +Galicia is separated from the Castilian plateau by a continuation of +the Cantabrian Pyrenees, which here swerve to the south, and through +which the Sil has excavated its bed. To the north of that river they +culminate in the Pico de Miravalles (6,362 feet), and are crossed by +the Pass of Predrafita (3,600 feet), through which runs the main road +from Leon to Galicia. + +[Illustration: Fig. 179.—GUETARIA. + +Scale 1 : 8,000.] + +In Galicia the hills rarely form well-defined chains, and mostly +consist of {452} primitive rocks or small table-lands, with peaks +or summits rising a few hundred feet above the general level of the +country. The disposition of the small ranges generally corresponds +with that of the coast. The Sierra de Rañadoiro (3,612 feet), a spur +of the Cantabrian Mountains, forms the natural boundary between the +{453} Asturias and Galicia. West of it, the Sierra de Meira (2,982 +feet) runs in the same direction, but the chains which terminate in +Capes Estaca de Vares and Ortegal (_i.e._ Nortegal, “north cape”) run +from east to west, and are dominated by the pyramid of Monte Cuadramon +(3,342 feet). The hills to the west of the river Miño (Minho) terminate +in the famous promontories of Toriñana and Finisterre, or “land’s-end.” +This latter, a steep cliff rising boldly above the waters to the west +of the wide Bay of Corcubion, formerly bore a temple of the ancient +gods, since replaced by a church dedicated to the Virgin. + +[Illustration: Fig. 180.—GUERNICA. + +Scale 1 : 100,000.] + +{454} + +The coast of the Asturias abounds in small bays, or _rias_, bounded by +steep cliffs. In Galicia these rias assume vast proportions, and are +of great depth. They may fitly be likened to the fiords of Northern +Europe, and their origin appears to be the same. The marine fauna of +these Galician rias is Britannic rather than Lusitanian, for amongst +two hundred species of testacea collected by Mr. MacAndrew there are +only twenty-five which were not also found on the coasts of Britain. +Moreover, the flora of the Asturian Mountains is very much like that of +Ireland; and these facts go far in support of the hypothesis, started +by Forbes, that the Azores, Ireland, and Galicia, anterior to the +glacial epoch, were connected by land. + +[Illustration: Fig. 181.—PASS OF REINOSA. + +Scale 1 : 300,000.] + +The climate, too, resembles that of Great Britain. The rainfall on +the exterior slopes of the mountains is abundant, whilst to the south +of them, in the arid plains of Leon and Castile, it hardly rains at +all. There are localities in the Asturias where the rainfall amounts +to more than six feet annually, a quantity only again met with on the +western mountain slopes of Scotland and Norway, and on the southern +declivities of the Swiss Alps. There is no season without rain, and +{455} droughts are exceedingly rare. Equinoctial storms are frequent +in autumn, and render the Bay of Biscay dangerous to mariners. The +temperature is equable, and fogs, locally known as _bretimas_, are +as frequent as in the British Islands. These fogs exercise a strong +influence upon the superstitious minds of the Galicians, who fancy they +see magicians, or _nuveiros_, ride upon the clouds, expand into mists, +and shrink back into cloudlets. They also believe that the bodies of +the dead are conveyed by the mists from cemetery to cemetery, these +fearful nocturnal processions being known to them as _estadeas_, or +_estadhinas_.[163] + +In spite of an abundance of running water, the Cantabrian provinces +cannot boast of a single navigable river. In the Asturias the littoral +zone is too narrow, and the slope too considerable, to admit of +torrents becoming tranquil rivers. Nor are the Tambre and Ulla, in +Galicia, of any importance; and the only true river of the country is +the Miño, called Minho by the Portuguese on its lower course, where it +forms the boundary between the two states of Iberia. The Miño is fed +from both slopes of the Cantabrian Mountains, the Miño proper rising +on the western slope, whilst the Sil comes from the interior of the +country. The latter is the main branch. “The Miño has the reputation,” +say the Spaniards, “but the Sil has the water.” The Sil, before leaving +the province of Leon, passes through the ancient lake basin of the +Vierzo, now shrunk to a small sheet of water known as the Lago de +Carrocedo. It then passes in succession through a wild gorge, a second +lake basin, the tunnel of Monte Furado (“pierced mountains”), excavated +by the Romans to facilitate their mining operations, and finally rushes +through a gorge intersecting the Cantabrian Mountains, and one of the +wildest in all Spain, with precipitous walls more than 1,000 feet in +height. Immediately below the confluence with the Miño a second gorge +has to be passed, but then the waters of the river expand, and flow +into the sea through a wide estuary. Below Tuy, for a distance of about +twenty miles, the river is navigable. But though of small service to +navigation, the Miño is nevertheless one of the eight great rivers of +the Iberian peninsula, and proportionately to the extent of its basin +it is the most copious.[164] + +The water of this and other rivers is not needed for agricultural +purposes, for it rains abundantly in Galicia and the Asturias, and the +emerald meadows of these provinces are as famous as those of England. +The flora, however, is upon the {456} whole more southerly in its +features than that of the countries to the north of the Bay of Biscay. +The orchards produce not only apples, chestnuts, and walnuts, but +also oranges, and in a garden at Oviedo dates ripen in the open air. +The great moisture, however, prevents certain plants from attaining +the commercial importance they would otherwise possess. The mulberry +flourishes, but the culture of silk-worms has only yielded indifferent +results, and even the grapes, except in a few favoured localities, +yield but sour wine of disagreeable flavour. Cider, on the other hand, +enjoys a high reputation, and is even exported to America. + +[Illustration: Fig. 182.—THE PEÑAS DE EUROPA. + +Scale 1 : 660,000.] + +The Asturian boasts of having never submitted to the yoke of +Mussulmans. Some of the mountain districts preserved their independence +throughout, and nowhere could the Arabs maintain themselves for any +length of time. Oviedo was called the “city of bishops,” from the +great number of prelates who found a refuge there. The Galicians were +equally successful in their resistance to the Moors, and the blood of +the Celtic inhabitants of these remote provinces is thus purer than +anywhere else in Spain. + +In some districts the customs are said to have remained unchanged +since {457} the time of the Romans. The herdsmen, or _vaqueros_, of +Leitariegos, on the Upper Narcea, form almost a distinct tribe. They +keep apart from the rest of the Asturians, and always marry amongst +themselves. Old dialects maintain their ground. The peasants on the +coast of Cantabria talk their _bable_, and in Galicia the dialects +differ even from village to village. The _gallego_, especially as +spoken near the Miño, is Portuguese rather than Spanish, but a +Lusitanian is nevertheless unable to understand a Galician, owing to +the curious sing-song intonation of the latter. + +The country supports a dense population, but there are few towns. Many +of these consist merely of a church, a town-hall, and an inn. The +homesteads are scattered over the whole country. This may be due to +an innate love of nature, or perhaps, as in the Basque provinces, to +the security which the country has enjoyed during centuries. Foreign +and civil wars have scarcely ever affected these outlying provinces of +Spain. The manners are gentle, and the bloodthirsty bull-fights of the +Castilians unknown. The isolation and peace in which the Cantabrians +were permitted to exist did not, however, prove of advantage in +all respects. Elsewhere in Europe, nobles, priests, citizens, and +the peasantry, when threatened by danger, felt constrained to make +concessions to each other. Not so in the Asturias, where the peasants +were reduced to the condition of serfs, and sold with the land. At +the commencement of this century nearly the whole of the land in the +two Asturias was in the hands of twenty-four proprietors, and in the +neighbouring Galicia the conditions were not much more favourable. +Matters have changed since then. The lords have grown poor, the +monasteries have been suppressed, and the industrious Asturians and +Galicians have invested their hard-earned savings in land. Formerly the +feudal lords leased the land to the cultivators, who rendered homage +and paid a quit-rent, the lease remaining in force during the reign +of two or three kings, for a hundred years, or even for three hundred +and twenty-nine years, according to the custom of different districts. +These leases, however, frequently led to disputes; the leaseholders, on +the expiration of their leases, often refused to surrender possession, +and in numerous instances the law courts sustained them in this refusal. + +The Galicians on the coast divide their time between the cultivation +of the land and fishing. During the season no less than 20,000 men, +with 3,000 or 4,000 boats, spread their nets in the Bays of La Coruña, +Arosa, Pontevedra, and Vigo, where tunny-fish and sardines abound. The +local consumption of sardines is enormous, and La Coruña alone exports +about 17,000 tons annually to America. These pursuits, however, are +not capable of supporting an increasing population, and thousands +of Galicians emigrate annually. Thrifty and clannish, they usually +succeed in amassing a small competency, and those among them who return +exercise a civilising influence upon their less-cultivated countrymen. +Ignorance and poverty, with all their attendant evils, are great in +Galicia, and leprosy and elephantiasis are common diseases. + +One great hindrance to the development of the resources of the country +consists in the paucity of roads and railways. A beginning has been +made, but, looking to the financial condition of Spain, progress will +hardly be rapid. {458} + +Most of the towns of the Asturias are close to the coast. +Castro-Urdiales, Laredo, and Santoña, immediately to the west of +the Basque provinces, have frequently served as naval stations. The +roadstead of Santoña is one of the most commodious and best sheltered +of the peninsula, and when Napoleon gave Spain to his brother Joseph he +retained possession of that place, and began fortifications which would +have converted it into a French Gibraltar. + +[Illustration: Fig. 183.—RIAS OF LA CORUÑA AND FERROL. + +Scale 1 : 210,400.] + +The great commercial port of the country is Santander, with its +excellent harbour, quays, docks, and warehouses, built upon land won +from the sea. Santander is the natural outlet of the Castiles, and +exports the flour of Valladolid and Palencia, as well as the woollen +stuffs known as _sorianas_ and _leonesas_ from the places where they +are manufactured. It supplies the interior with the colonial produce +of Cuba and Puerto Rico, and its merchants keep up regular intercourse +with France, England, Hamburg, and Scandinavia.[165] The ship-building +yards at the head of the bay have lost their former importance, and +the manufacture of cigars is now the great industry of the country. +Sardinero, a bathing-place to the north of the town, and the hot +springs of Alcedo, Ontaneda, Las Caldas de Besaya, in the hills to the +south, are favourite places of resort. + +Along the coast to the west of Santander, as far as Gijon, we only +meet with {459} villages, such as San Martin de la Arena (the port of +the decayed town of Santillana), San Vicente de la Barquera, Llanes, +Rivadesella, and Lástres. Nor is Gijon, with its huge tobacco factory, +a place of importance, though formerly it was the capital of all +Asturias. It exports, however, the coal brought by rail from Sarna +(Langres), and with Aviles, on the other side of the elevated Cabo de +Peñas, enjoys the advantage of being the port of Oviedo, situated in a +tributary valley of the Nalon, fifteen miles in the interior. Oviedo +has flourishing iron-works, a university, and a fine Gothic cathedral, +said to be richer in relics than any other church in the world. The +mountain of Naronca shelters the town against northerly winds, and +its climate is delicious. The environs abound in delightful spots. At +Cangas de Onis, which was the first capital of the kingdom, founded +by St. Pelagius, but now merely a village in a charming valley, are +the caverns of Covadonga, in which the ashes of the saint have found a +last resting-place, and which are consequently objects of the highest +veneration to patriotic Spaniards. Trubia, the Government gun and +small-arms factory, lies seven miles to the west of Oviedo. + +Cudillero, Luarca, Navia (a place said to have been founded by Ham, +the son of Noah), Castropol, and Galician Rivadeo are mere fishing +villages, and only when we reach the magnificent rias opening out into +the Atlantic do we again meet with real towns. The first of these is +Ferrol, which was only a village up to the middle of last century, +but has since been converted into a great naval station and fortress, +bristling with guns, and containing dockyards and arsenals. + +La Coruña, the Groyne of English sailors, depends rather upon commerce, +manufactures, and fishing than upon its military establishments and +fortifications. It is one of the most picturesque towns of Spain, and +its favourable geographical position will enable it, on the completion +of the railway now building, considerably to extend its commerce, which +at present is almost confined to England.[166] On a small island near +it stands the Tower of Hercules, the foundations of which date back to +the Romans, if not Phœnicians. It was from the ria of Coruña that the +“Invincible Armada” set out upon its disastrous expedition. + +Each of the rias of Southern Galicia has its port or ports. That of +Corcubion is sheltered by the Cape of Finisterre; on the ria of Noya +are the small towns of Noya and Muros; that of Arosa is frequented by +vessels which convey emigrants from the ports of Padron and Carril to +La Plata; the ria of Pontevedra extends to the town after which it +is named; and farther south still, the towns of Vigo and Bayona rise +on the shore of a magnificent bay, protected by a group of islands +known to the ancients as “Isles of the Gods.” Vigo, with its excellent +harbour, has become the great commercial port of the country,[167] but +is, perhaps, better known on account of the galleons sunk by Dutch and +English privateers. + +Three of the principal inland towns of Galicia—viz. Lugo, Orense, and +Tuy—rise on the banks of the Miño. The old Roman city of Lugo (Lucus +Augusti) is enclosed within mediæval walls, and has warm sulphur +springs. Orense, with its superb old bridge, is likewise celebrated for +its hot springs, or _burgas_, which are {460} said to raise sensibly +the temperature of the plain in winter, and supply the whole town with +water for domestic purposes. Tuy, opposite the Portuguese town of +Valença do Minho, is important only as a frontier fortress. Santiago +de Compostela, the famous old capital of Galicia, on a hill near the +winding banks of the Saria, is the most populous town of North-western +Spain. It was here the grave of St. James the apostle was discovered +in the ninth century. The attraction which it formerly exercised upon +pilgrims was immense.[168] + + +IX.—THE PRESENT AND FUTURE OF SPAIN. + +Contemporaneous Spain is full of disorder. The political, financial, +and social machinery is out of joint, and civil war, active or latent, +is carried on almost in every province. The ruin wrought by these +incessant domestic wars is incalculable. + +[Illustration: Fig. 184.—SANTOÑA AND SANTANDER. + +Scale 1 : 360,000.] + +Successive Governments have had recourse to miserable expedients +without being able to disguise the bankrupt condition of the country. +The creditors of the State, no less than the Government officials, +remained unpaid, and even schools had to be closed because the pittance +due to the schoolmaster was not forthcoming. + +But in spite of this apparent ruin real progress has been made. In +order to fairly judge Spain we must remember that the period when +the Inquisition was permitted to commit its judicial murders is not +very remote. In 1780 a woman of Seville was burnt at the stake for +“sorcery and witchcraft.” At that time the greater part of Spain was +held in mortmain, and the cultivation of the remainder {461} was very +indifferently attended to. Ignorance was universal, more especially at +the universities, where science was held in derision. + +The great events in the beginning of the nineteenth century have roused +the Spaniards from their torpor, and the country, in spite of temporary +checks, has increased in population and wealth. Labour is more highly +respected now than it was formerly, and whilst monasteries and convents +have been emptied, the factories are crowded with workmen. For much +of this progress Spain is indebted to foreigners. Millions have been +invested by them, and, though the expected profits have scarcely ever +been realised, the country at large has permanently profited from +this inflow of capital. The English have given an immense impetus to +agriculture by buying the wines of Andalusia, the corn and flour of +the Castilians, and the cattle of the Galicians. They have likewise +developed the mining industry of Huelva, Linares, Cartagena, and +Somorrostro. The French have vastly aided the manufacturing industry. +Foreign capitalists and engineers have established steamboat lines +and railways. The small towns of the interior are awakening from +their lethargy, and modern life is beginning to pulsate through their +veins.[169] + +In intellectual matters Spain has made even greater progress. Ignorance +is still a great power, especially in the Castiles, where schoolmasters +are little respected, populous towns are without libraries, and +catechisms and almanacs are the only literature of the peasantry. +But the position which Spain now holds in literature and the arts +sufficiently proves that the country of Cervantes and Velasquez is +about to resume its place amongst the other countries of Europe. In +science, however, Spain lags far behind, and Michael Servetus is the +only Christian Spaniard whose works mark an epoch in the progress of +human knowledge. But the spirit of inquiry at one time alive amongst +the Moors of Andalusia may possibly revive amongst their descendants. + +It is very much to be desired that intellectual progress should mollify +the manners of the people.[170] It is a scandal that the “noble science +of bull-baiting” should still meet with so large a measure of support +in Spain. These bull-fights, as well as the cock-fights so popular in +Andalusia, are sports unworthy a great nation, and should be put down, +just as _autos da fé_ have been put down. + +[Illustration: Fig. 185.—OVIEDO AND GIJON. + +Scale 1 : 300,000.] + +[Illustration: Fig. 186.—TOWER OF HERCULES (LIGHTHOUSE), CORUÑA.] + +Since a generation or two Spain has got rid of most of her colonies, +which only {462} hindered her moral and material progress. The +metropolis is no longer called upon to uphold slavery, the Inquisition, +commercial monopolies, and similar institutions, “devised to insure the +happy government of these colonies.” These {463} latter certainly have +had their revolutions and counter-revolutions, but they have made some +progress in population and wealth. Unfortunately the entire colonial +empire was not lost. Cuba and the Philippine Islands are frequently +represented {464} as adding to the wealth of Spain, and large sums +have certainly been paid by them into the treasury. But these results +have been achieved at the cost of fearful suffering and demoralisation +to governors and governed, and unless Spain adopts the colonial system +of England, by granting self-government to colonies, it will to a +certainty lose the last shreds of its colonial empire, after having +exhausted its strength in vain efforts to maintain it. + +[Illustration: Fig. 187.—RIA DE VIGO. + +Scale 1 : 280,000.] + +But though the colonies be lost, the influence of Spain upon the rest +of the world will endure for centuries. Spain has impressed her genius +upon every country subjected at one time or other to her power. Sicily, +Naples, Sardinia, and even Lombardy still exhibit traces of Spanish +influence in their architecture and customs. In Spanish America we find +towns inhabited by Indians which are quite Spanish in their aspect, +and almost resemble detached portions of Badajoz and Valladolid. The +Indians themselves have adopted the Castilian tongue, and with it +Castilian manners and modes of thought. A vast territory, twice the +size of Europe, and capable of supporting millions of inhabitants, is +occupied now by Spanish-speaking peoples. {465} + + +X.—GOVERNMENT AND ADMINISTRATION. + +Since September, 1868, when a revolution upset the Government of +Isabella II., Spain has passed through a series of revolutions and +convulsions, terminating in December, 1874, in the accession of Alfonso +XII., a son of Isabella. Soon afterwards the revolt in the Basque +provinces raised by Don Carlos, the “legitimate” king of the country, +was suppressed, and the work of internal organization could begin. +The legislative power is vested in the King and the Cortes. These +latter include a Senate and a House of Deputies. The Senate consists +of hereditary members (such as royal princes and grandees), of life +members chosen by the King, and of senators elected by corporations. +The members of the House of Deputies are elected for five years. The +President and Vice-President of the Senate are appointed by the King, +who enjoys the right of dissolving the Cortes on condition of fresh +elections being ordered within three months. + +[Illustration: Fig. 188.—RAILROADS OF THE IBERIAN PENINSULA. + +Scale 1 : 10,300,000.] + +These governmental revolutions scarcely affected the administration +of the country. The treasury is always empty, the annual receipts do +not suffice to pay the interest upon the national debt, taxes have +increased, the conscription demands more men than ever, and the schools +diminish in numbers.[171] {466} + +The political and administrative divisions of the country have remained +the same since 1841. Spain is divided into forty-nine provinces, +including the Canaries. Each province is subdivided into districts, +and has its civil governor. The communes are governed by an _alcalde_, +or mayor, assisted by an _ayuntamiento_, or municipal council, of from +four to twenty-eight members. The judicial administration is modelled +on that of France. There are 9,400 justices of the peace (one for each +commune), about 500 inferior courts, 15 courts of appeal, and a supreme +court sitting at Madrid. + +[Illustration: Fig. 189.—FOREIGN COMMERCE OF THE IBERIAN PENINSULA.] + +For military purposes continental Spain is divided into twelve +districts, each under a captain-general. These are New Castile, +Catalonia, Aragon, Andalusia, Valencia with Múrcia, Galicia, Granada, +Old Castile, Estremadura, Burgos, Navarra, and the Basque provinces. +The Balearic Isles, the Canaries, Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the +Philippines constitute five additional districts. Military service is +compulsory, but substitutes are admitted on payment of a heavy ransom. +The annual levy varies exceedingly, and as many as 80,000 men are +officially stated to have been levied in a single year, though 60,000 +would appear to be the utmost the population can supply. The term of +service is seven years in the cavalry and artillery, eight years in +the infantry, of which three are passed in the “provincial militia.” +About 100,000 men are supposed to be actually under arms in the {467} +peninsula, 130,000 are on furlough, and 70,000 men are stationed in +the colonies, mostly in Cuba, where about one-fourth of the total +strength perish annually. + +The principal fortresses are St. Sebastian, Santoña, and Santander, on +the Bay of Biscay; Ferrol, La Coruña, and Vigo, on the rias of Galicia; +Ciudad Rodrigo, on the Portuguese frontier; Cádiz and Tarifa, at the +entrance of the Strait of Gibraltar; Málaga, Cartagena, Alicante, and +Barcelona, on the Mediterranean; Figueras, Pamplona, and Zaragoza, at +the foot of the Pyrenees. + +The navy consists of 123 steamers, propelled by engines of 24,694 +horse-power, armed with 755 guns, and manned by 14,000 sailors and +5,500 marines. Six of these vessels are ironclad frigates. The number +of superior officers is exceedingly large, and their salaries weigh +heavily upon the treasury. + +[Illustration: Fig. 190.—DIAGRAM EXHIBITING THE EXTENT OF THE CASTILIAN +LANGUAGE. + +Scale 1 : 36,000,000.] + +Officially the privileges of the nobility have been abrogated. The +number of “noblemen” is, perhaps, larger in Spain than anywhere else in +Europe, for the population of entire provinces, such as the Vascongadas +and the Asturias, claims to have “blue blood” in its veins. In 1787 no +less than 480,000 “gentlemen” were enumerated, not including minors, +and if the proportion is the same now, there must exist at the least +3,000,000 Spaniards who claim to be _hidalgos_, or “sons of somebody.” +About 1,500 grandees are privileged by custom to remain covered in the +presence of the King, and about 200 of these belong to the highest +rank. All of these do not, however, owe their rank to birth, for many +plebeians, taking advantage of the financial miseries of the country, +have succeeded in getting themselves ennobled. The order of the Golden +Fleece, founded in 1431 by Philip the Good, is one of the distinctions +most coveted by princes and diplomatists. {468} + +The Roman Catholic religion is that of the State, and its prelates +enjoy great privileges, but all other confessions are supposed to +be tolerated. The schools, unfortunately, still remain in the hands +of ecclesiastics, who likewise exercise a censorship with respect +to pieces to be produced on the stage. Formerly Spain was the most +priest-ridden country in Europe. At the close of last century there +were 144,000 priests, 71,000 monks, and 35,000 nuns, but only 34,000 +merchants. War and revolutions played havoc with the conventual +institutions, but as recently as 1835 they still harboured 50,000 +inmates. Subsequently the whole of them were suppressed, and in 1869 +the last Spanish monk retired from the Carthusian monastery of Granada +to find a refuge in Belgium. Since then, however, the laws of the land +have again been relaxed in favor of monks and priests. There are 9 +archbishops and 54 bishops. + +AREA AND POPULATION OF SPAIN AND ITS COLONIES. + + Area. Population + Sq. m. (1870). Density. + NEW CASTILE (Castilla):― + + Madrid 2,997 487,482 162 + Toledo 5,586 342,272 61 + Guadalajara 4,870 208,638 41 + Cuenca 6,725 238,731 35 + Cuidad Real 7,840 264,649 34 + + OLD CASTILE:― + + Santander 2,113 241,581 114 + Burgos 5,650 353,560 62 + Logroño 1,945 182,941 94 + Ávila 2,981 175,219 60 + Segovia 2,714 150,812 53 + Soria 3,836 158,699 41 + Palencia 3,126 184,668 59 + Valladolid 3,043 242,384 80 + + LEON:― + + Salamanca 4,940 280,870 57 + Zamora 4,135 250,968 61 + Leon 6,167 350,992 56 + + ESTREMADURA:― + + Cáceres 8,013 302,455 34 + Badajoz 8,687 431,922 49 + + ANDALUSIA:― + + Almería 3,302 361,553 110 + Cádiz 2,809 426,499 152 + Córdova 5,190 382,652 73 + Granada 4,937 485,346 98 + Huelva 4,122 196,469 48 + Jaen 5,184 392,100 75 + Málaga 2,824 505,010 180 + Seville 5,295 515,011 97 + + VALENCIA:― + + Castellon de la Plana 2,446 296,222 121 + Valencia 4,352 665,141 153 + Alicante 2,098 440,470 210 + + MURCIA:― + + Albacete 5,972 220,973 37 + Murcia 4,478 439,067 98 + + BALEARIC ISLES:― + + Baleares 1,860 289,225 155 + + CATALONIA (Cataluña):― + + Lérida 4,775 330,348 69 + Gerona 2,272 325,110 143 + Barcelona 2,985 762,555 256 + Tarragona 2,451 350,395 143 + + ARAGON:― + + Huesca 5,878 274,623 47 + Zaragoza (Saragossa) 6,607 401,894 61 + Teruel 5,491 252,201 46 + + NAVARRA AND BASQUE PROVINCES (Vascongadas):― + + Navarra 4,046 318,687 80 + Vizcaya (Biscay) 849 187,926 221 + Guipúzcoa 728 180,743 248 + Alava 1,205 103,320 86 + + ASTURIAS:― + + Oviedo 4,091 610,883 152 + + GALICIA:― + + Orense 2,739 402,796 147 + Pontevedra 1,739 480,145 282 + La Coruña 3,079 630,504 210 + Lugo 3,787 475,836 126 + ――――――― ―――――――――― + TOTAL SPAIN 192,959 16,835,506 87 + ――――――― ―――――――――― + + AFRICA:― + + Canaries 2,808 283,859 101 + West Coast 850 35,000 41 + + AMERICA:― + + Cuba 45,983 1,400,000 30 + Puerto Rico 3,596 625,000 173 + + OCEANIA:― + + Philippines 65,870 6,000,000 91 + Carolines 534 18,800 35 + Pelew Islands 345 10,000 29 + Marianas 417 8,000 19 + ――――――― ――――――――― + TOTAL COLONIES 120,403 8,380,659 70 + ――――――― ――――――――― + + SPAIN AND COLONIES 313,362 25,216,165 80 + +{469} + +[Illustration] + + + + +PORTUGAL.[172] + + +I.—GENERAL ASPECTS. + +Portugal, one of the smallest states of Europe, was nevertheless during +a short epoch one of the most powerful. + +It might appear at the first glance that Portugal ought to be a member +of a state including the whole of the Iberian peninsula; but it is +neither to chance nor to events purely historical that Portugal owes +its separate existence. The country is one by its climate, fauna, and +vegetation, and the inhabitants dwelling within it naturally adopted +the same sort of life, nourished the same ideas, and joined in the same +body politic. It was by advancing along the coast, from river to river, +from the Douro to the Minho and Tejo, from the Tejo to the Guadiana, +that Portugal constituted itself an independent state. + +Soil and climate mark off Portugal very distinctly from the rest of +the Iberian peninsula. Speaking generally, that country embraces +the Atlantic slopes of the plateau of Spain, and the limit of the +heavy rains brought by westerly winds coincides very nearly with the +political boundary between the two countries. On one side of the line +we have a humid atmosphere, frequent rains, and luxuriant forests; +on the other a brazen sky, a parched soil, naked rocks, and treeless +plains. These abundant rains convert the feeble streams flowing +from the plateau into great rivers. The natural obstacles, such as +rapids, which obstruct the principal amongst them, are met with near +the political frontier of the country. The harbour of Lisbon was the +kernel, as it were, around which the rest of the country has become +crystallized. Its power of attraction proved equal to that which caused +the rest of the peninsula to gravitate towards Madrid and Toledo. + +As frequently happens where neighbouring nations obey different laws +and are made to fight each other at the caprice of their sovereigns, +there is no love lost between Spaniards and Portuguese. The former, +being the stronger, sneer at “Portugueses pocos y locos” (small and +crack-brained). The Portuguese are far more demonstrative in giving +expression to their aversion. Formerly “Murderer {470} of the +Castilians” was a favourite sign-board of houses of entertainment, and +the national poetry breathes passionate hatred of the Spaniard. This +animosity must interfere with the Iberian union, advocated only by a +handful of people. + +[Illustration: Fig. 191.—RAINFALL OF THE IBERIAN PENINSULA. + +According to Jelinek and Hann. Scale 1 : 10,300,000.] + +Ancient Lusitania was inhabited by Celtic and Iberian tribes, who +resisted for a considerable time the conquering arms of Rome. Those +dwelling near the coast had been subjected to the influence of Greek, +Phœnician, and Carthaginian colonists; but the influence exercised +by the Romans, who forced their language and form of government upon +the people, was far more durable. Suevi and Visigoths have left +but few traces of their presence. The Mohammedans of various races +have largely modified the blood and manners of the inhabitants, +especially in Algarve, where they maintained themselves to the middle +of the thirteenth century. The numerous ruins of fortresses existing +throughout the country bear witness to the severe struggles which took +place between these races before uniformity of government and religion +was established. + +The Kings of Portugal, taking the advice of the Inquisition, expelled +all heretics. The persecution of the Moors was pitiless, but the Jews +were occasionally granted a respite. The Spanish Jews settled near the +frontier, having outwardly embraced {471} the Christian religion, were +permitted to remain; but the more conscientious Jews kept true to their +faith, and carried the knowledge they possessed to other countries of +Europe and to the East. At the time of their exile they were engaged in +literature, medicine, and law, as well as in commerce; at Lisbon they +had founded an academy of high repute; it was a Jew who introduced the +art of printing into Portugal; and Spinoza, that noble and powerful +thinker, was a Jew of Portuguese extraction. + +But the Portuguese have not only the blood of Arabs, Berbers, and +Jews in their veins, they are likewise much mixed with negroes, more +particularly in the south and along the coast. The slave trade existed +long before the negroes of Guinea were exported to the plantations +of America. Damianus a Goes estimated the number of blacks imported +into Lisbon alone during the sixteenth century at 10,000 or 12,000 per +annum. If contemporary eye-witnesses can be trusted, the number of +blacks met with in the streets of Lisbon equalled that of the whites. +Not a house but had its negro servants, and the wealthy owned entire +gangs of them. The immunity of Portuguese immigrants who face the +deadly climates of the tropics is sometimes ascribed to this infusion +of negro blood, but erroneously as we think. Most of these immigrants +come from the mountains of the north, where the race is almost pure; +and if the Portuguese become acclimatized more rapidly than individuals +of other nations, they owe it to their sobriety. + +At the present day it is the Galicians who exercise most influence upon +the population of Lusitania. They immigrate in large numbers to Lisbon +and other towns, where they gain their living as bakers, porters, +doorkeepers, and domestic servants. Being ridiculed on account of their +uncouth language and rustic manners, they mix but little with the rest +of the population. Their numbers, however, are ever increasing, and +their thrift and industry soon place them in a position of ease. + +The mixture of these diverse elements has not produced a handsome race. +The Portuguese possess but rarely the noble mien of the Spaniard. Their +features, as a rule, are irregular, the nose is turned up, and the lips +are thick. Cripples are rare amongst them, but so are tall men. Squat +and short, they are inclined to corpulency. The women cannot boast the +fiery beauty of the Spaniards, but have brilliant eyes, an abundance of +hair, animated features, and amiable manners. + +[Illustration: Fig. 192.—PORTUGUESE TYPES: PEASANT OF OVAR; WOMAN OF +LEÇA; PEASANT WOMAN OF AFFIFE.] + +Travellers speak highly of the manners, civility, and kindness of the +peasantry not yet contaminated by commerce. The cruelties committed +by Portuguese conquerors in the Indies and the New World have given +the nation a bad reputation, though, as a rule, the Portuguese has +compassion for all sorts of suffering. He is a gambler, but never +quarrels; he is fond of bull-fights, but takes care to wrap up the +bull’s horns in cork, in order that the animal may be saved for future +contests; and he is exceedingly kind to domestic animals. In their +intercourse the Portuguese are good-tempered, obliging, and polished. +To tell a Lusitanian that he has been “brought up badly” is to offend +him most seriously. Their oratory is elegant, though ceremonious. Even +the peasants express themselves with a facility and command of words +remarkable in a people so badly educated. Oaths {472} and indecent +expressions scarcely ever pass their mouth, and, though great talkers, +and even boasters, they are most guarded in their conversation. +Portugal has {473} produced great orators, and one of her poets, +Camões, is amongst the most illustrious the world has ever seen. On +the other hand, Portugal has given birth to no great artist, for Gran +Vasco is a mythical personage. Camões himself avows this when he says, +“Our nation is the first because of its great qualities. Our men are +more heroic than other men; our women better-looking than other women; +and we excel in all the arts of peace and war, excepting in the art of +painting.” + +Portuguese is very much like Castilian as far as root-words and general +construction are concerned, but is far less voluminous and sonorous. +Nasal and hissing sounds, which a foreigner finds it difficult to +pronounce, abound, but there are no gutturals. Arab words are less +numerous in Portuguese than in Castilian, but the Lusitanians, as well +as the Spaniards, still swear by the god of the Mohammedans—_Oxala_ +(_Ojalà_); that is, “If Allah wills it.” + +The Portuguese cannot compare in numbers with the other nations +of Europe, and their influence upon the destinies of the world is +consequently small. At one time of their history, however, they +surpassed all other nations by their maritime enterprise. The Spaniards +certainly shared in the great discoveries of the fifteenth century, +but it was the Portuguese who made them possible by first venturing to +navigate the open ocean. It was a Portuguese, Magalhães, who undertook +the first voyage round the world, terminated only after his death. A +similar pre-eminence amongst nations will never be met with again, +for the increased facilities of communication exercise a levelling +influence upon all. Portugal, therefore, can never again hope to resume +the national status which she held formerly, but her great natural +resources and favourable geographical position at the extremity of the +continent must always insure her an honourable place amongst them. + + +II.—NORTHERN PORTUGAL. THE VALLEYS OF THE MINHO, DOURO, AND MONDEGO. + +The mountains of Lusitania are a portion of the great orographical +system of the whole peninsula; but they are not mere spurs, gradually +sinking down towards the sea, for they rise into independent ranges; +and the individuality of Portugal is manifested in the relief of its +soil quite as much as in the history of its inhabitants. + +The mountains rising in the north-eastern corner of Portugal, to +the south of the Minho, may be looked upon as the outer barrier of +an ancient lake, which formerly covered the whole of the plains of +Old Castile. From the Pyrenees to the Sierra de Gata this barrier +was continuous, and the breaches now existing date only from a +comparatively recent epoch, and are due to the erosive action of +torrents. The most considerable of these breaches, that of the Douro, +could have been effected only by overcoming most formidable obstacles. + +The most northern mountain mass of Portugal, that of the Peneda of +Gavieiro (4,727 feet), rises abruptly beyond the region of forest, and +commands the Sierra Peñagache (4,065 feet) on the Spanish frontier to +the east, as well as the hills of Santa Luzia (1,814 feet) and others +near the coast. Another mountain mass rises {474} immediately to +the south of the gorge through which the Limia passes after leaving +Spain. This is the Serra do Gerez (4,815 feet), a range of twisted, +grotesquely shaped mountains, the only counterpart of which in the +peninsula is the famous Serranía de Ronda. This range, together with +the Larouco (5,184 feet), to the east of it, must be looked upon as the +western extremity of the Cantabrian Pyrenees, and like them it consists +of granitic rocks. + +The flora of these northern frontier mountains of Portugal much +resembles that of Galicia, and on their slopes the botanist meets with +a curious intermingling of the vegetation of France, and even Germany, +with that of the Pyrenees, Biscay, and the Portuguese lowlands. On the +southern summits, however, and more especially on the Serra de Marão +(4,665 feet), which forms a bold promontory between the Douro and its +important tributary the Tamega, and shelters the wine districts of +Oporto from north-westerly winds, the opportunities for examining into +the arborescent flora are but few, for the forests which once clad +them have disappeared. The schistose plateaux to the east of them and +to the north of the Douro have likewise been robbed of their forests +to make room for vineyards. Most wild animals have disappeared with +the forests, but wolves are still numerous, and are much dreaded by +the herdsmen. The mountain goat (_Capra ægagrus_), which existed until +towards the close of last century in the Serra do Gerez, has become +extinct. The Serra da Cabreira (4,196 feet), to the east of Braga, is +probably indebted for its name to these wild goats. + +If the Serra do Gerez may be looked upon as the western extremity of +the Pyrenean system, the magnificent Serra da Estrella (6,540 feet), +which rises between the Douro and Tejo, is undoubtedly a western +prolongation of the great central range of Spain which separates the +plateaux of the two Castiles. These “Star Mountains” are attached +to the mountains of Spain by a rugged table-land, or _mesa_, of +comparatively small height. The great granitic Serra da Estrella rises +gently above the broken ground which gives birth to the Mondego. It can +easily be ascended from that side, and is hence known as the _Serra +Mansa_, “the tame mountain.” On the south, however, above the valley +of the Zezere, the slopes are abrupt and difficult of access, and are +known for that reason as _Serra Brava_; that is, “wild mountain.” +Delightful lakelets, similar to those of the Pyrenees and Carpathians, +are met with near the highest summit of the range, the Malhão de +Serra. The tops of the Serra da Estrella remain covered with snow +during four months of the year, and supply the inhabitants of Lisbon +with the ice required for the preparation of their favourite sherbet. +The orographical system of the Estrella ends with the Serra de Lousão +(3,940 feet), for the hills of Estremadura, which terminate in the +Cabo da Roca, a landmark well known to mariners, belong to another +geological formation, and consist for the most part of Jurassic strata +overlying the cretaceous formation. + +The mountains of Beira and Entre Douro e Minho are exposed to the full +influence of the moisture-laden south-westerly winds, and the rainfall +is considerable. The rain does not descend in torrents, as in tropical +countries, but pours down steadily. It is more abundant in winter and +spring, but not a month passes {475} without it. Fogs are frequent at +the mouths of valleys and along the coast as far south as the latitude +of Coimbra. At that place as much as sixteen feet of rain has fallen in +a single year, an amount only to be equalled within the tropics. + +[Illustration: Fig. 193.—THE VALLEY OF THE LIMIA, OR LIMA. + +Scale 1 : 300,000.] + +The humidity of the air accounts for the great equability of the +climate of Northern Portugal. At Coimbra the difference between the +coldest and warmest month amounts to but 20° F. Frosts are severe +only on the plateaux exposed to the north-easterly winds, and the +heat becomes unbearable in deep valleys alone, where the air cannot +circulate freely.[173] At Penafiel, where the rays of the sun are +thrown back by the rocky precipices, the heat is almost that of a +furnace. This, however, is an exception, and the climate generally can +be described as temperate. + +Running water is abundant. Camões has sung the beauties of the fields +of Coimbra watered by the Mondego, the charms of cascades sparkling +amidst foliage, and the purity of the springs bursting forth from rocks +clad with verdure. The Vouga, the affluents of the Douro, the Ave, +Cavado, and Lima, likewise take their {476} devious courses through +smiling landscapes whose beauties are set off by rocks and mountains. +The Lima, whose delights might well cause Roman soldiers to forget the +rivers of their own country, is the only river of the peninsula still +in a state of geological transition. All others have drained the lakes +which gave birth to them, but in the case of the Lima that old lake +basin is still occupied by a swamp, known as Laguna Beon, or Antela, +the only remains of a mountain-girt inland lake as large as that of +Geneva. + +[Illustration: Fig. 194.—DUNES OF AVEIRO. + +Scale 1 : 400,000.] + +The current of the rivers of Northern Portugal is too great to permit +of their being utilised as high-roads of commerce. They have ports at +their mouths, but the Douro, which drains nearly a sixth of the Iberian +peninsula, is the only one amongst them which facilitates access to an +inland district. Mariners dread to approach the coast when the wind +blows on shore. Between the Minho and Cabo Carvoeiro, a distance of +200 miles, the coast presents features very much like those of the +French landes. Its original indentations and irregularities have been +obliterated by barriers of sand. The lower valley of the Vouga was +formerly an inlet of the sea extending far inland. The basin of Aveiro +resembles geologically that of Arcachon. Its waters abound in fish, but +the Douro is the southernmost river of Europe visited by salmon. The +abundance of life in certain localities of it is figuratively expressed +by a Spanish proverb, which says, “The water of the Douro is not water, +but broth.” + +The rectilinear beach of Beira-mar is lined for the most part with +dunes, the old gulfs behind which are gradually being converted into +insalubrious swamps, fringed by heath, ferns, strawberry-trees, and +broom, whilst the neighbouring forests consist of oaks and pines. +Formerly these dunes invaded the cultivated portions of the country, +as they still do in France, where like geological causes have produced +like results. But long before a similar plan was thought of in France +these Portuguese dunes were planted with pines, and as early as the +reign of King Diniz “the Labourer,” at the beginning of the fourteenth +century, they had ceased to “march.” {477} + +The population of the cultivable portions of the basins of the Minho +and Douro is very dense, and in order to maintain themselves the +inhabitants are forced to work zealously. Their country is the most +carefully cultivated of the peninsula. In a large measure this industry +is due to the fact of the peasantry being the owners of the land they +cultivate, or at least _affarádos_—that is, copyholders—who only pay +a few shillings annually to the lords of the manors. Many of the +peasants are wealthy, and the women are fond of loading themselves with +jewellery, amongst which necklaces made in the Moorish taste are most +prominent. The cultivation of the fields is attended to with scrupulous +care; and the most ingenious methods are employed for the irrigation +of the upper slopes of the hills, which are frequently cut up into +terraces, or _geios_. These Northern Portuguese are as distinguished +for moral excellence as they are for industry. Their sweetness of +disposition, gaiety and kindliness are the theme of universal praise, +and as regards their love of dancing and music they are veritable +Theocritan shepherds. Challenges in improvised verses form one of the +amusements of young men. Nor is the population devoid of physical +beauty. The women of Aveiro, though often enfeebled by malaria, have +the reputation of being the prettiest in all Portugal. + +The cultivation of the vine and the making of port wine constitute the +principal branch of industry of the country. The chief vine-growing +district, ordinarily known as _Paiz do Vinho_, lies to the north of +the Douro, between the Serra de Marão and the Tua, and is exposed to +the full force of the rays of the summer sun. In the middle of the +seventeenth century the cultivation of this district had hardly begun. +The English had not then learnt to appreciate these growths, and were +content with the various Portuguese wines shipped from Lisbon. It +was only after the treaty concluded by Lord Methuen in 1702 that the +cultivation of the vine assumed certain dimensions in the district +of the Douro, and ever since the reputation of port has been on the +increase. The Marquis of Pombal founded a company for the production +of wine, and the small town of Pezo da Regoa, on the Corgo, then +became famous for its wine fairs, at which fortunes were lost and won, +and a town of wine cellars and stores sprang up opposite the town of +Porto, or Oporto, near the mouth of the Douro. For more than a hundred +years port and sherry have kept their place on the tables of English +gentlemen, and nearly all the wine produced on the banks of the Dóuro +finds its way to England or to British colonies. Indeed, up to 1852 the +best quality, known as “factory wine,” could be exported to England +alone. Next to the English the Brazilians are the best customers of +Oporto: they receive nearly 1,000,000 gallons of wine annually.[174] + +The breeding of mules and fattening of Spanish cattle for the London +market yield considerable profit. Early vegetables are forwarded not +only to London but also to Rio de Janeiro. Manufactures were already +of some importance in the {478} Middle Ages, and have recently been +much developed by enterprising English capitalists. Oporto has cotton, +linen, silk, and woollen mills, foundries and sugar refineries, and +its jewellers and glove-makers enjoy a good repute. But agriculture, +industry and legitimate commerce, and even the smuggling carried on +in the frontier district of Bragança, do not suffice to support the +ever-increasing population, and thousands emigrate annually to Lisbon +and Brazil. + +[Illustration: Fig. 195.—OPORTO AND THE PAIZ DO VINHO. + +Scale 1 : 1,000,000.] + +Northern Portugal may be described as the cradle of the existing +kingdom, and it was Porto Cale, on the site of Villanova de Gaia, +the southern suburb of Oporto, which gave a name to all Lusitania. +At Lamego, to the south of the Douro, the Cortes met, according to +tradition, in 1143, and constituted the new kingdom of which Oporto +became the capital. When the country recovered its independence after +the short dominion of Spain, the Dukes of Bragança were invested +with the regal power. Though Lisbon occupies a more central position +than Oporto, the latter frequently takes the initiative in political +movements, and the success of any revolution is said to depend upon the +side taken by the energetic population of the north. If we may accept +the estimate of the _Portuenses_, they are morally and physically +the superiors of the _Lisbonenses_. They alone are the true sons of +the great people whose vessels ploughed the ocean during the age +of discoveries, and there can be no doubt that their gait is more +determined, their speech and their glance more open, than those of the +inhabitants of the capital. In vulgar parlance, people of Oporto and +Lisbon are known as _tripeiros_ and _alfasinhos_; that is, tripe and +lettuce eaters. + +[Illustration: OPORTO.] + +Porto, or O Porto, the “Port” _par excellence_, is the natural capital +of Northern Lusitania, the second city of Portugal on account of its +population and commerce, the first in manufactures. As seen from +the banks of the Douro, here hardly {479} more than 200 yards in +width, and spanned by a magnificent railway bridge, it rises like a +double amphitheatre, whose summits are crowned by the cathedral and +the belfry _dos Clerigos_, and the narrow valley separating them +covered with houses. The lower town has broad streets, intersecting +each other at right angles, but the streets climbing the hills are +narrow and tortuous, and even stairs have frequently to be ascended +in order to reach the more elevated quarters of the town. Cleanliness +is attended to throughout, and the citizens are most anxious in that +respect to insure the praises of their numerous English visitors. Gaia, +a long suburb, occupies the opposite side of the river. It abounds +in factories and storehouses, and its vast cellars are stated on an +average to contain 80,000 pipes of wine. Beautiful walks extend along +the river bank and its terraces, and the long reaches of the stream are +covered with shipping, and fringed with gardens and villas. The hills +in the distance are crowned with ancient convents, fortifications, and +villages half hidden amongst verdure. Avintes, famous for the beauty +of its women, who supply the town daily with _broa_, or maize bread, +is one of them. Suburbs extend along both banks of the river in the +direction of the sea. The river at its mouth is only two fathoms in +depth during low water, and dangerous of access when the wind blows +from the west. Even at Oporto vessels of 400 or 500 tons are exposed to +danger from sudden floods of the river, which cause them to drag their +anchors. The port of the Douro has therefore to contend with great +difficulties in its rivalry with Lisbon.[175] + +The small town of São João da Foz, at the mouth of the Douro, has a +lighthouse, but carries on no commerce. Near it are Mattozinhos and +Leça, the latter of which boasts of an ancient monastery resembling +a fortress, and is much frequented on account of its fine beach and +refreshing sea breezes. Espinho, to the south of the Douro, is another +favourite seaside resort, in spite of the all-pervading smell of +sardines. The small ports to the north of the Douro are frequented only +by coasting vessels or by seaside visitors. The entrance to the Minho +is defended by the castle of Insua, on a small island, as its name +implies, and by the insignificant fortress of Caminha. The river is +accessible only to vessels drawing less than six feet. The mouth of the +Lima, though even more difficult of access, is nevertheless occupied by +a town of some importance—coquettish Vianna do Castello, beautifully +ensconced amidst the verdure of its fertile plain. Other towns are +Espozende, at the mouth of the Cávado, and Villa do Conde, at that of +the Ave. Formerly most of the vessels engaged in the slave trade and +those employed in the great maritime enterprises of the Portuguese were +built here, and it still boasts of a few ship-yards. + +Amongst the inland towns of Entre Douro e Minho are Ponte de Lima, +famous for the beauty of the surrounding country; Barcellos, +overhanging the shady banks of the Cávado; and Amarante, celebrated for +its wines and peaches, and proud of a fine bridge spanning the Tamega. +But the only towns important on account of their population are Braga +and Guimarães, both placed on commanding heights overlooking a most +fertile country. Braga (Bracara Augusta), an ancient Roman colony, the +capital of the Galicians, then of the Suevi, and later on the residence +of {480} the Kings of Portugal, became the primatial city of the whole +of the peninsula when the two kingdoms were temporarily united under +the same sovereign. But Braga is not only a town of the past, it is +even now a bustling place, where hats, linens, arms, and beautiful +filigree are manufactured for exportation to the rest of Portugal +and the Portuguese colonies. Guimarães is equally as interesting as +Braga on account of its monuments and mediæval legends. Visitors are +still shown the sacred olive-tree which sprang from a seed placed in +the soil by King Wamba, when still a common labourer; and Affonso, +the founder of the Portuguese monarchy, was born in the old castle. +Guimarães is a busy manufacturing town; it produces cutlery, hardware, +and table-linen, and English visitors never fail to purchase there +a curiously ornamented box of prunes. Near it are much-frequented +sulphur springs, known to the Romans as _Aquæ Levæ_. But the most +famous mineral springs of modern Portugal are the Caldas do Gerez, in a +tributary valley of the Upper Cávado. + +[Illustration: Fig. 196.—SÃO JOÃO DA FOZ AND THE MOUTH OF THE DOURO.] + +The towns of Traz os Montes and Beira Alta are too far removed from +highways to have attracted a considerable population. Villa Real, +on the Corgo, is the busiest place of Traz os Montes, owing to the +vineyards in its neighbourhood. {481} Chaves, an old fortress near +the Spanish frontier, boasts of one of those Roman bridges which have +rendered the century of Trajan famous: it was formerly noted for its +mineral springs (_Aquæ Flaviæ_). Bragança, the old provincial capital, +has a commanding citadel, and, owing to its geographical position, is +an important place for smugglers, the legitimate exports fluctuating +regularly with the customs tariff. It is the most important place in +Portugal for the production of raw silk. Lamego, a picturesque town +to the south of the Douro, opposite the Paiz do Vinho, enjoys a great +reputation for its hams; Almeida, which keeps in check the garrison of +Spanish Ciudad Rodrigo, was anciently one of the strongest fortresses +of Portugal; and Vizeu is an important station between the Douro and +the Mondego. Its fairs are more frequented than any others in Portugal, +and in its cathedral may be seen the famous masterpiece painted by the +mythical Gran Vasco. The herdsmen around Vizéu are noted for their +strength and beauty. Their uncovered heads and bare legs give them an +appearance of savagery, but their manners are as polished and dignified +as those of the rest of their countrymen. + +Coimbra (_Æminium_), in Beira-mar, is the most populous town between +Oporto and Lisbon. It is known more especially for its university, +whose professors and students impart to it the aspect of a mediæval +seat of learning. The purest Portuguese is spoken there. The environs +are delightful, and in the botanical garden the plants of the tropics +mingle with those of the temperate zones. From the banks of the +Mondego, upon which the city is built, visitors frequently ascend to +the _Quinta das Lagrimos_ (“house of tears”), the scene of the murder +of the beauteous Inez de Castro, whose death was so cruelly revenged by +her husband, Peter the Judge. + +Few countries in the world can rival the beautiful valley of the +Mondego, that “river of the Muses” held dear by all the Lusitanians, +because it is the only one which belongs to them exclusively. Condeixa, +a town near Coimbra, fully deserves to be called the “Basket of Fruit,” +for its gardens produce most exquisite oranges. In the north the ruins +of the monastery of Bussaco occupy a mountain terrace covered with a +dense forest of cypresses, cedars, oaks, elms, and exotic trees. This +delightful place and the hot springs of Luso, near it, are a favourite +summer residence of the citizens of Lisbon and Coimbra. + +Figueira da Foz, the port of Coimbra, is well sheltered, but, like most +other ports of Northern Portugal, is obstructed by a bar of sand. It +is nevertheless much frequented by coasting vessels, and amongst its +exports are the wines of Barraida. Ovar and Aveiro, in the “Portuguese +Netherlands,” on the banks of a lagoon separated by a series of dunes +from the high sea, are the two other ports of this part of the coast. +They were important places during the Middle Ages, but the shifting +bars, which render access to them difficult, have put a stop to their +prosperity. The seamen of these two places have a high reputation +for daring. They engage in sardine-fishing, oyster-dredging, and the +manufacture of bay-salt.[176] {482} + + +III.—THE VALLEY OF THE TEJO (TAGUS). + +The lower course of the Tejo, called Tajo in Spain, separates Portugal +into two portions differing much in their general aspect, climate, and +soil. The valley itself is a sort of intermediary between the north and +south, and the vast estuary into which the river discharges itself. + +[Illustration: Fig. 197.—COIMBRA.] + +Where the Tejo enters Portugal, below the magnificent bridge of +Alcántara, it is still hemmed in between precipitous banks, and is +neither navigable nor available for purposes of irrigation. Having +traversed the defile of Villa Velha do Rodão, its valley gradually +widens, and after having received its most considerable tributary, +the Zezere, it becomes a tranquil stream, abounding in islands and +sand-banks, and is navigable during the whole of the year. Below +Salvaterra the river bifurcates, its two branches enclosing the marshy +island of Lezirias. The vast estuary which begins below this island +is an arm of the sea rather than a river; its waters are saline, and +between Sacavem and Alhandra there are {483} salt-pans. The Tejo +affords one of the most striking instances of a river encroaching upon +its western bank, which is steep and hilly, whilst the left bank is low. + +[Illustration: Fig. 198.—ESTUARY OF THE TEJO (TAGUS). + +Scale 1 : 580,000.] + +The irregular range of hills which forms the back-bone of the peninsula +enclosed by the Lower Tejo and the ocean is attached to the mountain +of Estrella by a ravined plateau of trifling elevation, crossed by the +railway connecting Coimbra with Santarem. From the summit of the Serra +do Aire (“wind mountain,” 2,222 feet) we look down upon the verdant +valley of the Tejo and the reddish-hued plains of Alemtejo beyond it. +Monte Junto (2,185 feet), farther south, is another commanding summit. +The rocky promontory of Carvoeiro is joined to the mainland by a sandy +beach. Upon it stands the little fortress of Peniche, whose inhabitants +lead a life of seclusion, and are engaged in the manufacture of lace. A +submarine plateau connects this promontory with Berlinga Island, with +an old castle now used as a prison, and with the Farilhãos, dreaded by +mariners. + +The hills on the narrow peninsula to the north of Lisbon are of small +height, but, owing to their rugged character, they present great +obstacles to intercommunication. It was here Wellington constructed +the famous lines of Torres Vedras, which converted the environs of +Lisbon into a vast entrenched camp. To the south of these rise the +beautiful heights of Cintra, celebrated for their palaces, shady +valleys, delightful climate, and historical associations. Sheets of +basalt, {484} ejected from some ancient volcano, cover the hills +between Lisbon and Sacavem, and the great earthquakes of 1531 and 1755 +prove that subterranean forces were then not quite extinct. The second +of these earthquakes was probably the most violent ever witnessed in +Europe. The very first shock destroyed 3,850 houses in Lisbon, burying +15,000 human beings beneath the ruins; a minute afterwards an immense +wave, nearly forty feet in height, swept off the fugitives who crowded +the quay. Only one quarter of the town, that anciently inhabited by the +Moors, escaped destruction. The Marquis de Pombal erected a gallows in +the midst of the ruins to deter plunderers. From the focus of vibration +the oscillations of the soil were propagated over an immense area, +estimated at no less than 1,000,000 square miles. Oporto was destroyed +in part, the harbour of Alvor in Algarve was silted up, and it is said +that nearly all the large towns of Morocco tumbled into ruins. + +The gully which connects the open ocean with the inland sea of Lisbon, +and through which the Tejo discharges its waters, separates the +cretaceous hills of Cintra from the isolated Serra da Arabida (1,537 +feet), to the west of Setúbal, which belong to the same geological +formation. These two groups of hills were probably portions of one +range at a time when the Tejo still took its course across what are now +the tertiary plains of Alemtejo, and reached the sea much farther to +the south, through the estuary of the Sado. + +Lisbon (Lisbõa), though the number of its inhabitants is less than half +what it was in the sixteenth century, exhibits no trace of the havoc +wrought in 1755. Even the central portions of the town have risen from +the ruins, and huge blocks of houses, imposing by their size, if not +by their architecture, have taken the places of the older structures. +The present city extends four miles along the Tejo, but including its +suburbs, between Poco do Bispo and the Tower of Belem, its extent is +nine miles. The city stretches inland a distance of two or three miles, +and, like Rome, is said to be built upon seven hills. A beautiful +promenade connects it with Belem. As seen from the Tejo, or from the +hills opposite, Lisbon, with its towers, cupolas, and public walks, +certainly presents a magnificent spectacle, and there is some truth in +the proverb which says― + + “Que não tem visto Lisbõa, Não tem visto cosa bõa !” + (“Who has not seen Lisbon has not seen a thing of beauty.”) + +Unfortunately the interior of the superb metropolis does not correspond +with the imposing beauty of its exterior. Lisbon has a noble square, +called Largo do Comercio; it has all the various buildings which one +expects to meet with in the capital of a kingdom and an important +maritime town; but, with the exception of the chapel of São João +Baptista, not one amongst them is remarkable for its architecture. The +only important structure outside the city is the famous aqueduct Os +Arcos das Agoas, which was built by João V., the _Rei Edificador_, in +the beginning of the eighteenth century, and sustained no injury during +the earthquake of 1755. On approaching the city it crosses a valley on +a superb marble bridge of thirty-five arches, the highest of which is +246 feet in height. + +[Illustration: LISBON.] + +Lisbon is relatively poor in interesting monuments, but few towns can +rival it in natural advantages of soil, climate, and geographical +position. Its situation is {485} most central; its harbour, at the +mouth of a navigable river, is one of the most excellent in the world; +and its entrance can be easily defended, the principal works erected +for that purpose being Fort São Julião and the Tower of Bugio. + +[Illustration: Fig. 199.—PENICHE AND THE BERLINGAS. + +Scale 1 : 142,860.] + +Lisbon is important not only as regards Portugal, but also, on account +of its position, with reference to the rest of Europe—nay, of the +entire world. As long as the Mediterranean was the theatre of human +history it remained in obscurity, but no sooner had mariners ventured +beyond the columns of Hercules than the beautiful harbour at the mouth +of the Tejo became one of the principal points of departure for vessels +starting upon voyages of discovery. Lisbon became the most advanced +outpost of Europe on the Atlantic, for it offered greater facilities +than any other port for voyages directed to the Azores, Madeira, +the Canaries, and the western coasts of Africa. The achievements of +Portuguese mariners have passed into history. Vast territories in every +quarter of the globe became tributary to little Portugal, and it needed +the epic force of a Camões to celebrate these wonderful conquests. + +That age of glory lasted but a short time, for proud Lisbon, which had +become known to Eastern nations as the “City of the Franks,” as if it +were the capital of Europe, lost its pre-eminent position towards the +close of the sixteenth century. {486} Portugal capsized suddenly, like +a small barge overcrowded with sails. Crushed by the terrible reign of +Philip II., enervated by luxury, and grown disdainful of honest labour, +as slaveholders always will, Lisbon was constrained to see much of +its commerce and most of its valued colonies pass into the hands of +Spaniards and Dutchmen. But, in spite of these disasters, Lisbon is +still a commercial port of great importance, although as yet no direct +line of railway connects it with Madrid and the rest of Europe. England +occupies the foremost position amongst the customers of the town, and +the Brazilians, whose severance from the mother country was at first +looked upon as an irremediable disaster, follow next.[177] Spain, +though it borders upon Portugal for several hundred miles, scarcely +enters into commercial relations with it. Civil wars have, however, +driven many Spanish exiles to Lisbon, and these have already exercised +a considerable influence upon manners. Formerly only men were to be +seen in the streets of Lisbon, the women being confined almost with the +same rigour as in a Mohammedan city, but the example set by Spanish +ladies has found many imitators amongst their Portuguese sisters. The +towns in the immediate vicinity of Lisbon are celebrated for their +picturesque beauties. + +[Illustration: Fig. 200.—MOUTH OR THE TEJO (TAGUS). + +Scale 1 : 162,400.] + +Portuguese Estremadura, which neither suffers from northern frosts nor +from fogs and aridity, can boast of a climate approaching that of the +fabled Islands of the Happy. At Lisbon snow, or “white rain,” as it +is called, falls {487} rarely, but it may be seen glittering on the +summits of the Serras da Estrella and de Lousão. Its fall near the +sea-coast is looked upon as an evil omen, and a heavy snow-storm, as +recently as last century, frightened the inhabitants of Lisbon to such +an extent that they fancied the day of judgment had come, and rushed +into the churches. + +The regular alternation between land and sea breezes is likewise an +advantage possessed by the neighbourhood of Lisbon. From the beginning +of May throughout the fine season the wind blows from the land in the +morning, by noon it has shifted to the south, in the evening it blows +from the west and north-west, and during the night from the north. +Hence its name of _viento roteiro_; that is, “rotary wind.” As to the +winds forming part of the regular system of atmospheric circulation, +they blow with far less regularity. The polar winds, stopped by the +transversal mountain ranges of the country, either follow the direction +of the coast or are diverted to the plateaux of Spain, and make +their appearance in Portugal as easterly winds. It is these latter +which render the summer oppressively hot. At Lisbon the thermometer +rises occasionally to 100° F., and in 1798 even 104° were observed. +Experience has taught us that although the heat at Rio de Janeiro is +in excess of that of Lisbon, the dog-days at the latter place are more +unbearable.[178] + +The vegetation of the happy district where the climate of North and +South intermingle is twofold in its aspect. The date-palm makes its +appearance in the gardens of Lower Estremadura; the dwarf palm grows +in the open air along the coast; the agave raises its candelabra-like +branches as on the coast of Mexico; the camellias are more beautiful +than anywhere else in Europe; and the hedges are composed of prickly +cacti (_Nopal_), as in Sicily and Algeria. The fruits of the +Mediterranean ripen to perfection; and even the mango of the Antilles, +only recently introduced, has found a congenial climate. Oranges are +known as _portogalli_ in several countries as far as Egypt, as if the +inhabitants of Portugal had been the first to whom these golden apples +were known; and even the word _chintarah_, or _chantarah_, by which the +orange is known in some parts of India, is supposed to be a corruption +of the name of the Portuguese town of Cintra. + +Belem (Bethlehem) is the nearest of the suburban towns of Lisbon, being +separated from it merely by a rivulet named Alcántara, after an old +Moorish bridge. It is the first place beheld by a mariner approaching +Lisbon, and its square tower, built by King John the Perfect, is seen +from afar. It was hence Vasco da Gama started upon the memorable +expedition which taught the Portuguese the road to India, and a +magnificent monastery, now converted into an educational institution, +was built in commemoration of this glorious event. + +Oeiras, at the mouth of a small rivulet coming down from the heights of +Cintra, defends the entrance to the Tejo by means of Fort São Julião; +Carcavellos, noted for its wines, lies farther on; and Cascães, with +a small harbour defended by a citadel, brings us to the open ocean. +The coast beyond this is protected by {488} towers, but there are no +inhabitants. The hills of Cintra, however are one of the most populous +districts of the country, and they are much frequented by foreigners. +Whether we follow the carriage road or the tramroad from Lisbon, we +pass the castles and villas of Bomfica, the royal palace of Queluz, and +the country seats of Bellas, the fountain of which supplies the capital +with water. Cintra itself is surrounded by hotels and gardens. On a +hill to the south of it stands the sumptuous Castle de la Penha, whose +eccentricities of architecture are softened down by luxuriant masses of +vegetation. Strangers likewise visit the ruins of an old Moorish castle +and the caverns of the “Monastery of Cork,” thus named because its +walls are covered with cork as a protection against damp. The prospect +from all the surrounding heights is magnificent, and most so from the +cliffs terminating in the famous Cabo da Roca, the westernmost point of +continental Europe. + +[Illustration: Fig. 201.—ZONES OF VEGETATION IN PORTUGAL. + +Scale 1 : 6,000,000.] + +The city of Mafra occupies a sterile plateau not far from the seaside +resort of Ericeira. Like Cintra, it boasts of an immense palace, +the Escorial of the kings of the house of Bragança, now used as a +military school. João V., who erected this structure, with its numerous +churches, chapels, and cells, expended for that purpose all the coin +he could command, and when he died there was not enough money left in +the treasury to pay for a mass for the repose of his soul. Far more +{489} curious than this immense barrack, with its 5,200 windows, is +the forsaken monastery of Alcobaça, about sixty miles farther north, +which was built in the twelfth century to commemorate the victories +over the Moors. Near it stands the monastery of Batalha, which recalls +the defeat of the Castilians in the plain of Aljubarrota in 1385. The +portals, cloisters, chapel, and chapter-room abound in sculptures of +marvellous finish, though of doubtful taste. + +[Illustration: Fig. 202.—CASTLE DE LA PENHA DE CINTRA.] + +Leiria, the town nearest to Batalha, occupies a fine site at the +confluence of the rivers Liz and Lena, and is commanded by a Moorish +castle, the old residence of King Diniz the “Labourer,” who planted the +_pinhal_ of Leiria, the finest forest in Portugal. After a long period +of decadence this portion of the country has entered upon a new epoch +of activity. At Marinha Grande, near it, there are large glass-works, +which communicate by rail with the circular harbour of Concha (shell) +de São Martinho. + +Thomar, formerly famous on account of its monastery, stands on the +eastern {490} slope of the hills commanding the plains of Batalha +and Alcobaça. It is the capital of the Knights of Christ, to whom was +conceded the privilege of conquering the Indies and the New World. +They performed great deeds, but in the end their rapacity led to the +decadence of their native country. Thomar is a town of cotton-mills +now, but commerce is more active in the places on the Tejo, and notably +at Santarem, which, from its “marvellous” hill, looks down upon the +verdant isles of the river and the plains of Alemtejo. Santarem and the +neighbouring fortress of Abrantes supply Lisbon with vegetables and +fruit, and the country around them is a veritable forest of olive-trees. + +The sandy soil and shallow rivers bounded by marshes of the country to +the south of the Tejo oppose serious obstacles to the establishment of +important towns, and if it were not for the vicinity of Lisbon it would +probably be uninhabited. Almada, opposite Lisbon, Seixal, Barreiro, +Aldea Gallega, and Alcochete are mere suburbs of the capital, and share +in its prosperity or adversity. Setúbal, or St. Ives, however, which +lies farther to the south, on the estuary of the Sado, and which has an +excellent harbour, suffers from too great a proximity to Lisbon, for +Portugal is not rich enough to feed two ports so close to each other. +Cezimbra, on the steep coast which terminates in Cape Espichel, to the +west of Setúbal, is likewise a decayed place, and Troja, which preceded +Setúbal as the emporium of the Sado, now lies buried beneath the dunes. +Excavations recently made on its site have led to the discovery of +Roman mosaics and of a street laid out, perhaps, by the Phœnicians; and +Link, the botanist, who visited the spot at the end of last century, +still found there the ruined courts of Moorish houses. + +Setúbal, though its commercial activity is very much inferior to that +of Lisbon, still exports muscat wines, delicious oranges, and salt +procured from the ponds in its vicinity.[179] The sea near Setúbal and +Cezimbra abounds in fish and other marine animals, and in comparison +with it the Mediterranean and Bay of Biscay may almost be described +as deserts. Long before scientific men explored the bottom of the sea +the fishermen of Setúbal hauled up from a depth of 300 fathoms immense +sharks. Ordinary fish are caught in myriads, and the inhabitants of +Cezimbra feed their pigs upon sardines. When Portugal was at the +height of its commercial prosperity it supplied a considerable portion +of Europe with fish, and almost enjoyed a monopoly in cod, which was +exported even to Norway.[180] + + +IV.—SOUTHERN PORTUGAL. ALEMTEJO AND ALGARVE. + +The mountains beyond the Tejo rarely assume the aspect of chains. For +the most part they rise but little above the surrounding plateau. This +region is the least attractive of all Portugal, and between the Tejo +and the mountains of Algarve there are only plains, monotonous hills, +woods, and naked landes. Human habitations are few and far between. The +lowlands along the Tejo and {491} the coast are covered with a thick +layer of fine sand resting upon clay, and they still exhibit clumps of +maritime pines and holm-oaks, the remains of the ancient forests which +formerly covered the whole of the country. Farther inland we reach +the great landes, or _charnecas_, covered with an infinite variety of +plants. There are heaths growing sometimes to a height of six feet, +rock-roses, juniper-trees, rosemary, and creeping oaks. But the general +aspect of the country is dreary, in spite of the white and yellow +flowers which cover it until the middle of winter, for there are hardly +any cultivated fields. The hills consist for the most part of micaceous +schists, and are covered with a monotonous growth of labdanum-yielding +rock-roses. This is a western extension of the zone of _jarales_, which +covers so many hundred square miles of the Sierra Morena and other +mountain regions of Spain. + +[Illustration: Fig. 203.—MONASTERY OF THE KNIGHTS OF CHRIST AT THOMAR.] + +The Serra de São Mamede (3,363 feet), on the confines of Portugal, +between the valleys of the Tejo and Guadiana, is the highest mountain +mass of Southern Portugal; but its granitic ridges, enclosing narrow +valleys between them, hardly {492} rise 1,500 feet above the general +level of the plateau. A second granitic mountain mass rises to the +south of the depression crossed by the railway from Lisbon to Badajoz. +This is the Serra de Ossa (2,130 feet). An undulating tract of country +joins it to other serras, forming steep escarpments towards the valleys +of the Guadiana and Sadão, and the monotonous plain known as Campo de +Beja (870 feet). The famous Campo de Ourique (700 feet), upon which +200,000 Moors, commanded by five kings, were defeated by the Portuguese +in the middle of the twelfth century, forms a southern continuation +of that plain. This battle, and the massacres which succeeded it, +converted the plains to the south of the Tejo into deserts. + +[Illustration: Fig. 204—ESTUARY OF THE SADO. + +Scale 1 : 350,000.] + +The hills of that portion of Alemtejo which lies to the east of the +Guadiana belong to the system of the Sierra Morena of Spain. The +river, which separates them from the hills and plateaux of the west, +is confined in a deep and narrow gorge. At the _Pulo do Lobo_ (“wolf’s +leap”) it still descends in cataracts, and becomes navigable only at +Mertola, thirty-seven miles above its mouth. + +The hills of Southern Alemtejo and Algarve, to the west of the +Guadiana, are at first mere swellings of the ground known as +_cumeadas_, or “heights of land,” but in the Serra do Malhão (1,886 +feet) and the Serra da Mezquita they attain some height. A plateau, +traversed by the upper affluents of the Mira, joins the range last +mentioned to the Serra Caldeirão (1,272 feet), supposed to be named +after some ancient crater, or “caldron,” which terminates, to the +north of Cape Sines, with the Atalaya, or Sentinel (1,010 feet). +The principal range continues towards the west, and in the Serra +de Monchique (2,963 feet), a mountain mass filling up the {493} +south-western corner of Portugal, it attains its culminating point. A +steep ridge, known as Espinhaço de Cão (“dog’s back”), extends from the +latter in the direction of the Capes of St. Vincent and Sagres. + +The latter was selected by Henry the Navigator as the seat of the +naval school founded by him, and from its heights he watched for the +return of the vessels which he dispatched on exploratory expeditions. +Associations such as these are far more pleasurable than those +connected with the neighbouring Cape St. Vincent, where Admiral Jervis, +in 1797, destroyed a Spanish fleet. + +[Illustration: Fig. 205.—SERRA DE MONCHIQUE AND PROMONTORY OF SAGRES. + +Scale 1 : 500,000.] + +The hills of Sagres are of volcanic origin, and the subsidence of +portions of the coast of Algarve appears to prove that subterranean +forces are still active. Wherever this subsidence has been observed the +coast is fringed by sand-banks, thrown up by the waves of the sea, the +channel separating them from the mainland being navigable for small +vessels. + +If a traveller ascend one of the culminating points of the mountains +of Algarve, he cannot fail to be struck with the remarkable contrast +existing between the districts to the north and south of him. On the +one side he looks down upon vast solitudes resembling deserts; on +the other he perceives forests of chestnut-trees, numerous villages, +towns bordering the seashore, and fleets of fishing-boats rocking +upon the blue waves. The contrasts between the inhabitants of these +two districts {494} are scarcely less striking. The inhabitants of +Alemtejo are the most solemn of Portuguese, and even object to dancing. +Very thinly scattered over the landes which they inhabit, they either +engage in agriculture or follow their herds of pigs and sheep into +the forests of holm-oaks and thickets of rock-roses. In summer they +cross the Tejo with their pigs, and pasture them in the mountains of +Beira. The population of Algarve, on the other hand, is thrice as +dense as that of Alemtejo, and not only are fields, vineyards, and +orchards carefully tended, but the sea likewise is made to yield a +portion of its food. The contrast between the two provinces is partly +accounted for by the fact that most of the great battles were fought +on the undulating plains of Alemtejo. When the Romans held the country +Alemtejo supported a numerous population, as is proved by the large +number of inscriptions found. + +[Illustration: Fig. 206.—GEOLOGY OF ALGARVE. + +Scale 1 : 1,500,000.] + +Differences of altitude and geographical position sufficiently account +for the differences of climate existing between the two provinces. +Alemtejo, with its monotonous plains and stunted vegetation, is almost +African in its aspect, whilst Algarve, with its forests of olive-trees, +groves of date-palms, agaves, and prickly cacti, presents us with +tropical features. The mean temperature near the coast is probably no +less than 68° F. The Serra de Monchique bars the cool winds of the +north, whilst the sandy islands fringing a portion of the coast keep +off refreshing sea breezes. The hottest wind of all is that which blows +from the east. It is often laden with fever-breeding miasmata, and a +proverb says, _De Espanha nem bom vento nem bom casamento_: “Neither +good winds nor good weddings are bred in Spain.” + +Villanova de Portimão, to the south of the Serra de Monchique, has +long been looked upon as the hottest place in Europe; there are, +however, several localities in Spain which rival it in that respect. +Thus much is certain, that Algarve, with {495} the lower valley of +the Guadalquivir and the southern coasts of Andalusia and Murcia, +constitutes the most torrid portion of Europe. The Arabs were quite +right when they designated Southern Lusitania and the opposite shore of +Morocco by the same name of “el Gharb;” that is, the two Algarves, or +“eastern districts.” Portuguese Algarve, in spite of the conversion of +its inhabitants to Christianity, has retained its ancient Moorish name; +and the Berber and Semitic blood is very conspicuous there. + +In Upper Alemtejo there are but few towns, and these would be +altogether insignificant if it were not for the overland commerce +carried on with Spain. Crato, which is the most considerable station +on the railway which joins the Tejo to the Guadiana, and its neighbour +Portalegre, were formerly important stages on the great overland +route. Elvas, farther to the south, is surrounded by orchards, and +defended by forts which were looked upon in the last century as +masterpieces of military architecture. It faces the Spanish fortress +of Badajoz, as well as Olivença, which was assigned to Portugal by +the treaty of Vienna, but never surrendered by Spain. Estremoz, on +a spur of the Serra de Ossa, is famous throughout Portugal for its +_búcaros_—elegantly modelled earthen jars which diffuse a sweet odour. +Montemor looks down from its hill upon vast landes and monotonous +woods. Evora, likewise built on a hill, commands an extensive plain. +It was a populous place during the dominion of the Romans, and in the +Middle Ages became the second residence of the Kings of Portugal. +There exist now only a Roman aqueduct, the ruins of a temple of Venus, +Corinthian columns, and the remains of mediæval castles to remind us of +its ancient splendours. + +Beja, the ancient _Pax Julia_ or _Colonia Pacensis_ of the Romans, has +likewise lost its former importance, but Minas de São Domingos, on the +peninsula formed by the confluence of the Guadiana and the Chanza, +is rapidly increasing, thanks to its mines of pyrites of copper and +other minerals, which are being worked by an English company. The ore +is conveyed by rail to Pomarão, on the Guadiana, and thence on barges +to Villa Real de Santo Antonio, at its mouth, formerly a mere fishing +village, but now a busy port. Castro Marim, where the expeditions +against the Moors used to be fitted out, is close to it. + +Silves, the ancient Moorish capital of Algarve, lies in the interior +of the country, far removed from the present highways of commerce. +Faro, the modern capital, has the advantage of lying on the seashore, +and of possessing a secure harbour, whence small coasters are able to +export fruit, tunny-fish, sardines, and oysters. Tavira possesses the +same advantages, and exports the same articles: it is said to be the +prettiest town of Algarve. Loulé, in a delightful inland valley, is a +pretty place, and, when invalids have learnt the road to Algarve, may +obtain some importance as a winter resort. The Caldas (warm baths) de +Monchique (600 feet) enjoy a world-wide reputation even now, not only +because of their efficacy, but also on account of the delicious climate +and charming environs. This district is said to produce the best +oranges in Portugal.[181] {496} + + +V.—THE PRESENT AND FUTURE OF PORTUGAL. + +[Illustration: Fig. 207.—FARO AND TAVIRA. + +Scale 1 : 500,000.] + +Little Portugal no longer shares with her neighbour, Spain, in the +dominion of the world, as in the fifteenth century. The secrecy +observed with a view to the retention of the monopoly of trade with +countries newly discovered proved in the end most injurious to +Portugal. Other nations appeared upon the stage which the Portuguese +had dreamt of occupying for ever, and though the latter still hold +colonies vastly superior in area to the mother country, this is nothing +in comparison with what has been irretrievably lost. Vasco da Gama +discovered the ocean high-road to India, but the few settlements which +Portugal still holds there she owes to the favour of England. In the +Malay Archipelago Portugal has been supplanted almost completely by +the Dutch, and Macao, at the entrance of the Canton River, was hardly +more than a slave market until quite recently, from which Chinese +“emigrants” were exported to Peru. In Africa Portugal holds vast +possessions, if we are to believe in official documents and maps, but +in reality only a very small tract of territory is under the dominion +of the Portuguese, and most of the commerce is carried on through Dutch +and other foreign houses. As to Brazil, it now surpasses the mother +country in population and wealth. Madeira and the {497} Azores, the +first conquests made by Lisbon navigators, are looked upon as integral +portions of Portugal; they enjoy the same rights, and are quite equal +to it in wealth.[182] + +[Illustration: Fig. 208.—GEOGRAPHICAL EXTENT OF THE PORTUGUESE +LANGUAGE.] + +When Brazil was lost to Portugal that small country found itself +in a position of lamentable prostration. Exhausted by foreign and +internecine wars, its finances utterly ruined, and without roads to +enable it to export its produce, it might have disappeared from our +maps without any interests, except those of a few English vine-growers +and Spanish smugglers, being affected. Even in 1851 there only existed +a single carriage road in the country, namely, that which connected +Lisbon with the royal palace at Cintra. No attention whatever was paid +to education, and about a generation ago a girl able to read was a +phenomenon. At the same time we must not forget that these illiterate +Portuguese knew how to discuss a subject without quarrelling, had great +command of their language, and were able even to improvise verses +of great poetical merit, in all of which respects they contrasted +favourably with the peasantry of Northern Europe. + +In the course of the last generation education has made much progress +in Portugal;[183] and in other respects, too, the country has gradually +assimilated with the rest of Europe. Roads and railways have been +constructed,[184] and the latter connect Lisbon not only with the +leading provincial towns, but also with Spain. The commerce with the +latter country increases regularly with the occurrence of civil war, +when Portugal profits at the expense of the Spanish ports of the +Mediterranean. {498} Much of the ordinary commerce with Spain never +appears in the customs registries, for it is carried on by smugglers, +who glory in evading the vigilance of the frontier police. + +[Illustration: Fig. 209.—TELEGRAPH FROM LISBON TO RIO DE JANEIRO.] + +The commerce of Portugal has increased very much in the course of the +last thirty years. More than half of it falls to the share of Great +Britain, a circumstance not to be wondered at when we bear in mind +the relative geographical position of the two countries, for Portugal +lies upon the direct route followed by English steamers proceeding to +the Mediterranean, Western Africa, or Brazil. The assistance which +England rendered Portugal during the peninsular war has cemented these +commercial bonds. + +The commercial relations with Brazil, now joined to Lisbon by a +submarine cable, are likewise the natural result of the relative +positions of the two countries and of the common origin of their +populations. Portugal, in fact, participates in every progress made by +its old colony, and its commerce will assume immense proportions when +slavery is abolished in Brazil, when the solitudes of the Amazonas +resound with the stir of industrious populations, and the coasts of the +Pacific are joined to the Atlantic by means of railways crossing the +Andes.[185] + +But, after all, it will be Spain with which the most intimate +commercial relations must finally be established, in spite of national +prejudices and dynastic interests. The two nations will in the end +become one, as the Aragonese and Castilians, the Andalusians and +Manchegos, have become one. It is merely a question of time; but who +can doubt that community of industrial and social relations will lead +to a political union. We only trust that this union may be brought +about without a resort to brute force, and with due regard to special +interests. + + +VI.—GOVERNMENT AND ADMINISTRATION. + +Portugal is an hereditary and constitutional monarchy. In accordance +with the Carta de Ley of 1826, as revised in 1852, the King is charged +with the executive, {499} and shares the power of making laws with two +chambers. He receives a civil list of £144,000, enjoys the income from +certain Crown lands, and possesses magnificent Crown jewels, amongst +which the “diamond of Bragança” is the most famous. In default of +male heirs the crown descends in the female line. “His most faithful +Majesty” still claims to be “King of the two Algarves, Lord of Guinea +and of the Conquests.” The seven ministers of the Crown are responsible +for the King’s actions; they may be impeached by the Chamber of +Deputies, and are judged by the Chamber of Peers. A Privy Council of an +indefinite number of members, appointed for life, advises the King in +all questions of administration. The heir presumptive takes part in its +deliberations on attaining his eighteenth year. + +The Chamber of Peers consists of about a hundred members, some of +them hereditary and others appointed by the King. Its meetings are +presided over by the Patriarch of Lisbon. The Chamber of Deputies is +elective, and the discussion of the budget and granting of supplies +are specially reserved to it. All males more than twenty-five years +of age are entitled to the franchise if they pay 4s. 6d. in direct +taxes, or 22s. from real estate. Graduates of universities, certified +teachers, officers, and priests are not required to possess any +property qualification, and they, as well as all married men, become +enfranchised on completing their twenty-first year. All electors are +eligible as deputies if they pay 18s. in direct taxes, or 90s. from +real estate. Every 25,000 inhabitants are represented by a deputy. The +President of the Chamber is selected by the King from five candidates +presented by the deputies. The latter are entitled to remuneration. + +For judicial purposes the country is divided into twenty-six districts, +or _comarcas_, with eighty-five courts. There are courts of appeal at +Lisbon and Oporto, and a supreme court at Lisbon. Parish judges (_juiz +eleito_), elected by the people, exercise the inferior jurisdiction. +Juries give their verdict on questions of fact in civil as well as in +criminal cases. The principal codes still in force are the “Codigo +Alfonsino” of the fifteenth century, the “Codigo Manoelino” (1513), and +the “Codigo Filippino,” introduced by Philip IV. of Spain. A Commercial +Code was published in 1833. + +The Roman Catholic religion is that of the State, but Protestant places +of ship are suffered to exist in the seaports. The hierarchy includes +a patriarch residing at Lisbon, two archbishops at Braga and Evora, +and fourteen bishops. The Inquisition was abolished in 1821, and the +monasteries, 750 in number, as well as most of the convents, were +suppressed in 1834, and their revenues confiscated for the benefit of +the State. + +The army numbers 1,650 officers and 38,000 men, of whom about +two-thirds are under colours during peace. On a war footing it is +to be raised to 2,418 officers and 70,687 men. All men are obliged +to serve either in the army or in the reserve, and exemption can no +longer be purchased. The fortresses are numerous, but only a few of +them are capable of being defended against modern artillery. The most +important are Elvas, Abrantes, and Valença, near the Spanish frontier, +the fort of São Julião and the citadel of Peniche on the coast. +The navy no longer numbers a thousand vessels, as it did when King +Sebastian started for {500} the invasion of Morocco. It consists now +of twenty-seven steamers, including an ironclad corvette, and eleven +sailing vessels, manned by 3,000 men and armed with 171 guns. + +The public revenue approaches £6,000,000 sterling, and ever since 1834 +there has been annually a deficit, which has resulted in a national +debt of more than £80,000,000, a burden almost too heavy for a small +country like Portugal. The revenue is, however, increasing, a balance +between income and expenditure has been established within the last +year or two, and the wretched expedient of deducting from 5 to 30 per +cent. of the salaries of Government officials could be dispensed with +for the first time in 1875. + +POLITICAL DIVISIONS, AREA, AND POPULATION. + + Provinces. Districts. Area, Sq. Population, Density. + Miles. 1874. + + Entre Douro e Minho Vianna 864 221,049 256 + Braga 1,054 346,429 329 + Porto 903 451,212 500 + + Traz os Montes Villa Real 1,718 239,591 140 + Bragança 2,573 177,170 ―― + + Beira Alta Aveiro 1,216 272,763 69 + Vizeu 1,922 398,477 207 + Coimbra 1,500 305,237 203 + + Beira Baixa Guarda 2,148 234,912 109 + Castello Branco 2,559 178,703 69 + + Estremadura Leiria 1,348 194,944 145 + Santarem 2,651 217,316 82 + Lisbon 2,936 491,205 168 + + Alemtejo Portalegre 2,497 109,192 44 + Évora 2,740 112,477 41 + Beja 4,198 154,327 37 + + Algarve Faro 1,875 193,877 104 + ―――――― ――――――――― ――― + Continental Europe 34,702 4,298,881 124 + ══════ ═════════ ═══ + +COLONIAL POSSESSIONS. + + Area, Sq. Miles. Population. Density. + Azores 921 60,072 65 + AFRICA:― + Madeira 310 118,609 383 + Cape Verde Island 1,487 90,704 61 + Senegambia 27 9,282 344 + St. Thome and Principe 417 31,692 75 + Fort Ajuda 13 700 54 + Angola, Benguela, and Mossamedes 312,000 2,000,000 6 + Moçambique and Sofala 40,000 300,000 8 + ASIA:― + Goa, &c. 1,395 474,234 339 + Damão 30 40,980 1336 + Diu 12 12,303 1025 + Timor and Kambing 5,527 250,000 45 + Macao 1½ 71,834 47·223 + ――――――― ――――――――― ―――――― + Colonies 362,140 3,460,410 10 + ――――――― ――――――――― ―――――― + Total, Portugal and Colonies 396,842 7,759,291 20 + +[Illustration] + + + + +NOTES: + +[1] Houzeau, “Histoire du Sol de l’Europe.”—Carl Ritter, +“Europa.”—Kohl, “Die Geographische Lage der Haupstadte Europa’s.” + +[2] Modern Sea of Azof and River Don. + +[3] Latham, Benfey, Cuno, Spiegel, and others. + +[4] Population of Europe, about 305,000,000:― + +Greco-Latin. + + Greeks 2,600,000 + Albanians 1,250,000 + Italians 27,700,000 + French 39,700,000 + Spaniards and Portuguese 20,210,000 + Rumanians 8,400,000 + Rhætians (“Romans”) 42,000 + ―――――――――― + 99,902,000 + ══════════ + +Germanic. + + Germans 53,400,000 + Dutch and Flemish 6,720,000 + Scandinavians 5,640,000 + Anglo-Saxons 30,600,000 + ―――――――――― + 96,360,000 + ══════════ + +Slavonic. + + Russians 59,000,000 + Poles 11,800,000 + Chechians, &c. 6,750,000 + Servians 5,750,000 + Slovenes 1,200,000 + Bulgarians 3,100,000 + ―――――――――― + 87,600,000 + ══════════ + + Finns 4,700,000 + Osmanli 1,300,000 + Magyars 5,770,000 + Tartars 2,500,000 + Calmucks 100,000 + Celts 1,600,000 + Basks 700,000 + Letts, &c. 2,900,000 + Armenians 280,000 + Gipsies 590,000 + Circassians 400,000 + +Included above are 4,500,000 Jews. + +[5] W. H. Smith, “The Mediterranean.”—Dureau de la Malle, “Géographie +Physique de la Mer Noire et de la Mediterranée.”—Böttger, “Das +Mittelmeer.” + +[6] Area of the Mediterranean basin:― + + Europe 683,500 square miles. + Asia 232,000 square miles. + Drainage of Africa 1,737,500 square miles. + Mediterranean Sea 1,153,300 square miles. + ――――――――― + 3,806,300 + ═════════ + +[7] + + Western Eastern Archi- Black Mediter- + basin. basin. Adriatic. pelago. Sea. ranean. + Area 355,200 502,000 50,200 60,600 185,300 1,153,300 + Greatest depth, fathoms 1,640 2,170 565 540 1,070 2,170 + Average depth, fathoms 640 960 110 320 320 640 + +[8] Quantity of salt held in solution in the Atlantic, 36 parts in +1,000; in the Mediterranean (mean), 38 parts; in the Black Sea, 16 +parts. + +[9] There are found in the Mediterranean 444 species of fish (Goodwin +Austen), 850 species of molluscs (Jeffreys), and about 200 species of +foraminiferæ. + +[10] The production of salt on the coasts of the Mediterranean is thus +distributed among its coast-lands:—Spain, 200,000 tons; France, 250,000 +tons; Italy, 300,000 tons; Austria, 70,000 tons; Russia, 120,000; other +countries, 200,000 tons. Total, 1,140,000 tons, valued at £480,000. + +[11] The annual produce of the fisheries has been estimated at +£3,000,000, of the coral fisheries at £640,000, of the sponge fisheries +at £40,000. Total, £3,680,000. + +[12] Shipping and commerce of the Mediterranean (estimated):― + + ENTERED AND VALUE OF EXPORTS + COMMERCIAL MARINE. CLEARED. AND IMPORTS. + Sail-vessels. Steamers. Tonnage. Tons. £ + Spain (Mediterranean) 2,500 100 250,000 5,000,000 24,000,000 + France (Mediterranean) 4,000 230 300,000 6,000,000 80,000,000 + Italy 18,800 140 1,030,000 21,000,000 104,000,000 + Austria 3,000 92 380,000 8,000,000 18,000,000 + Greece 5,400 20 502,000 8,500,000 8,000,000 + Turkey in Europe and Asia 2,200 10 210,000 25,000,000 24,000,000 + Rumania ――――― ―― ――――――― 1,300,000 8,000,000 + Russia (Mediterranean) 500 50 50,000 2,000,000 24,000,000 + Egypt (Mediterranean) 100 25 15,000 4,000,000 20,000,000 + Malta and Gibraltar 200 13 39,000 12,000,000 23,000,000 + Algeria 170 ―― 10,000 2,000,000 16,000,000 + Tunis, Tripoli, &c. 500 ―― 10,000 500,000 4,000,000 + ―――――― ――― ――――――――― ―――――――――― ――――――――――― + 37,370 680 2,796,000 95,300,000 353,000,000 + ══════ ═══ ═════════ ══════════ ═══════════ + +[13] Greece within its political limits:― + + Area. Population + Sq. m. (1870). Density. + Continental Greece 7,558 466,918 62 + Peloponnesus 8,288 545,389 66 + Ægean Islands 2,500 205,840 82 + Ionian Islands 1,007 218,879 217 + Army, navy, and sailors ───── 20,868 ─── + ────── ───────── ──── + Total 19,353 1,457,894 75 + ══════ ═════════ ════ + +[14] Altitudes of mountains in continental Greece (in feet):― + + Gerakavuni (Othrys) 5,673 + Velukhi (Tymphrestus) 7,610 + Khonia 8,186 + Vardusia 8,242 + Katavothra (Œta) 6,560 + Mountains of Acarnania 5,216 + Varassova 3,010 + Liakura (Parnassus) 8,068 + Palæovouni (Helicon) 5,738 + Elatea (Cithæron) 4,630 + Parnes 4,645 + Pentelicus 3,693 + Hymetius 3,400 + Gerania (Pera Khora) 4,482 + +[15] Orchomenus, a town on the Cephissus, the capital of Northern +Bœotia, destroyed by the Thebans 371 B.C. + +[16] Heights of the principal mountains in the Peloponnesus (in English +feet):― + + Cyllene (Zyria) 8,940 + Aroanian Mountain (Khelmos) 7,726 + Erymanthus (Olonos) 7,297 + Artemisium (Malevo) 5,814 + Parnon (Hagios Petros) 6,355 + Lycæus (Diaforti) 4,660 + Ithome 2,630 + Taygetus 7,904 + Arachnæus (Argolis) 3,935 + Mean height of peninsula 2,000 + +[17] The isthmus is 6,496 yards wide, and rises to a height of 250 feet +where it is narrowest, its mean height being 130 feet. + +[18] Principal altitudes of the islands of Greece:― + + Feet. + Mount Delphi, on Eubœa 5,730 + Mount St. Elias, on Eubœa 4,840 + Mount Kokhilas, on Scyros 2,565 + Mount Kovari, on Andros 3,200 + Mount Oxia, on Naxos 3,290 + Mount St. Elias, on Siphnos 2,280 + Mount St. Elias, on Nios 2,410 + Mount St. Elias, on Santorin 1,887 + +[19] Ionian Islands:― + + Area. Inhabitants. + Sq. m. Highest Mountains. Feet. (1870.) + Corfu 224 Pantokratoros 3,280 72,450 + Paxos and Antipaxos 27 3,600 + Leucadia 183 Nomali 3,870 21,000 + Cephalonia 292 Elato 5,310 67,500 + Ithaca 42 Neriton 2,640 10,000 + Zante 162 Skopos 1,300 44,500 + +[20] Population of the principal towns of Greece (1870):― + + Towns. Population. + Athens and Piræus 59,000 + Patras 26,000 + Corfu 24,000 + Hermopolis, or Syra 21,000 + Zante 20,500 + Lixuri (Cephalonia) 14,000 + Pyrgos, or Letrini 13,600 + Tripolis, or Tripolitza 11,500 + Chalcis, in Eubœa 11,000 + Sparta 10,700 + Argos 10,600 + Argostoli (Cephalonia) 9,500 + Calamata 9,400 + Histiæa, in Eubœa 8,900 + Karystos, in Eubœa 8,800 + Ægion, or Vostitza 8,800 + Nauplia 8,500 + Spezzia 8,400 + Kranidhi, in Argolis 8,400 + Lamia 8,300 + Missolonghi 7,500 + Andros 9,300 + +[21] Commerce of Greece (1873):—Mercantile marine: 6,135 vessels of +419,350 tons; entered, 112,814 vessels of 6,336,487 tons; imports, +£4,166,239; exports, £2,721,877. + +[22] Public income (1875), £1,404,053; expenditure, £1,409,288; debt, +£15,232,202. + +[23] Authorities:—R. Pashley, “Travels in Crete;” Raulin, “Description +Physique de l’Ile de Crète;” G. Perrot, “L’Ile de Crète;” Viquesnel, +“Voyage dans la Turquie d’Europe;” Ami Boué, “La Turquie d’Europe;” +A. Dumont, “Le Balkan et l’Adriatique;” Lejean, “Ethnographie de la +Turquie d’Europe;” Von Hammer, “Konstantinopel und der Bosporus;” +P. de Tchihatchef, “Le Bosphore;” Heuzey, “Voyage archéologique en +Macédoine;” Fanshawe Tozer, “Researches in the Highlands of Turkey;” +Barth, “Reisen in der europäischen Türkei;” Von Hahn, “Albanesische +Studien;” Hecquard, “Histoire et Description de la Haute-Albanie;” Dora +d’Istria, “Nationalité albanaise;” F. Maurer, “Reise durch Bosnien;” +F. de Sainte-Marie, “L’Herzégovine;” Kanitz, “Donau-Bulgarien und der +Balkan;” H. Kiepert, Map of Turkey in Europe. + +For changes made by the Berlin treaty, see page 153. + +[24] We mention Palma, Vaudoncourt, Lapic, Boué, Viquesnel, Lejean, +Kanitz, Barth, Hochstetter, and Abdullah Bey. + +[25] Heights of principal mountains:—Aspra Vuna (White Mountain of +Leuca-Ori), 8,100 feet; Psiloriti, or Ida, 8,000 feet; Lasithi, or +Dicte, 7,100 feet. Towns:—Canea, 12,000 inhabitants; Megalokastron, +12,000; Retimo, 9,000. Total population of the island, 210,000. + +[26] The islands of Thracia:― + + Sq. m. Inhabitants. Highest Mountains. Feet. + Thasos 74 10,000 Mount Ipsario 3,000 + Samothrace 66 200 Mount Phengari 5,240 + Imbro 85 4,000 Mount St. Elias 1,950 + Lemnos 170 22,000 Mount Skopia 1,410 + +[27] Consul Sax (1873) estimates the population as follows:—Stamboul, +210,000; Pera, 130,000; European suburbs, 150,000; Asiatic suburbs, +110,000; total, 600,000 souls, including 200,000 Mohammedans. Dr. +Yakshity, on the other hand, estimates the population of Constantinople +(exclusive of its Asiatic suburbs) at 358,000 souls, of whom 193,540 +are Mohammedans, 144,210 oriental Christians, and 30,000 Franks. + +[28] Length of the Bosphorus, 98,500 feet, or 18·6 miles; average +width, 5,250 feet; average depth, 90 feet; greatest depth, 170 feet. + +[29] Dimensions of the Dardanelles:—Length, 42·3 miles; average width, +2·7 miles, or 13,100 feet; minimum width, 6,400 feet; average depth, +180 feet; greatest depth, 320 feet. + +[30] Altitudes:—Mount Pilav Tepe, 6,183 feet; Kortach, 3,893 feet; +Athos, 6,786 feet. + +[31] Mount Olympus, 9,750 feet; Mount Ossa, 5,250 feet; Mount Pelion, +5,130 feet. + +[32] The following are the principal towns of the Greek provinces of +Turkey, together with the number of their inhabitants:― + + Adrianople (Edirneh) 110,000 + Saloniki (Salonica) 80,000 + Seres 30,000 + Larissa 25,000 + Rodosto 20,000 + Gallipoli (Geliboli) 20,000 + Trikala (Tirhala) 11,000 + Demotika 10,000 + Verria 10,000 + Enos 7,000 + +[33] Altitudes in Albania:― + + Feet. + Skhar 8,200 + Tomor 5,413 + Zygos (Lachmon) 5,500 + Smolika 5,970 + Kundusi 6,270 + Acroceraunian Mountain 6,700 + Lake Okhrida 2,270 + Lake of Yanina 1,700 + +[34] Population of the principal cities of Albania:—Prisrend, 35,000; +Soutari (Shkodra), 35,000; Yanina, 25,000; Jakovitza (Yakova), 17,000; +Ipek (Pech), 16,000; Elbasan, 12,000; Berat, 11,000; Prishtina, 11,000; +Tirana, 10,000; Koritza, 10,000; Argyrokastro, 8,000; Prevesa, 7,000 +Dulcigno, 7,000; Durazzo, 5,000. + +[35] Altitudes:—Mount Kom, 9,350 feet; Mount Durmitor, 8,860 feet; +Glieb, 5,775 feet. + +[36] According to Blau (1872), Bosnia, including the Herzegovina and +Rascia, has 1,150,000 inhabitants, comprising 590,000 Greek Catholics, +164,000 Roman Catholics, 378,000 Mussulmans, 12,300 gipsies, and 5,700 +Jews. The same author states the population for 1855 to have amounted +to 893,384 souls, including 286,000 Mussulmans. According to an English +Consular Report (1873), the population is 1,084,162, including 461,048 +Mussulmans; and according to Professor Yakshity, 1,357,984 souls, +including 474,000 Mussulmans. + +[37] Principal towns of Bosnia:—Sarayevo, 50,000 inhabitants; +Banyaluka, 18,000 inhabitants; Zvornik, 14,000 inhabitants; Travnik, +12,000 inhabitants; Novibazar, 9,000 inhabitants; Trebinye, 9,000 +inhabitants; Mostar, 9,000 inhabitants; Tuzla, 7,000 inhabitants. + +[38] Altitudes in Bulgaria, according to Hochstetter, Viquesnel, Boué, +Barth, and others:—Vitosh, 8,080 feet; Balkan, mean height, 5,600 feet; +Chatal, 3,600 feet; hills of the Dobruja, 1,650 feet; Trajan’s Gate, +2,625 feet; Pass of Dubnitza, 3,560 feet; Rilo Dagh, 9,500 feet; Perim +Dagh, 7,875 feet; Gornichova, or Nije, 6,560 feet; Peristeri, 7,700 +feet; basin of Sofia, 1,710 feet; basin of Monastir, 1,820 feet; Lake +of Ostrovo, 1,680 feet; Lake of Kastoria, 2,050 feet. + +[39] Cleared from Sulina (1873), 1,870 vessels of 532,000 tons. Value +of cereals exported, £6,000,000. + +[40] The following are the principal towns of Bulgaria, with the number +of their inhabitants:― + + Shumna (Shumla) 50,000 + Rustchuk 50,000 + Philippopoli (Felibe) 40,000 + Bitolia (Monastir) 40,000 + Skoplie (Uskub) 28,000 + Kalkandelen 22,000 + Sofia 20,000 + Vidin 20,000 + Silistria 20,000 + Shishtova 20,000 + Varna 20,000 + Eski-Za’ara 18,000 + Bazarjik 18,000 + Nish 16,000 + Veleze (Koprili) 15,000 + Razgrad 15,000 + Turnov (Tirnova) 12,000 + Sliven (Slivno) 12,000 + Prilip 12,000 + Kezanlik 10,000 + Stanimako 10,000 + Florina 10,000 + Kurshova 9,000 + Sulina 5,000 + +[41] Receipts for 1874, £20,400,000; debts in 1875, £220,000,000. + +[42] Races and religions of Turkey in Europe (Servia, Montenegro, and +Rumania excluded):― + + Total. Mussulmans. Greek Roman Other + Catholics. Catholics. Christians. + + Slavs Servians 1,114,000 442,000 492,000 180,000 ―― + Bulgarians 2,861,000 790,000 2,051,000 20,000 ―― + Russians, &c. 10,000 ―― ―― 2,000 8,000 + Greeks 1,176,000 38,000 1,138,000 ―― ―― + Greco-Latins Rumanians 50,000 ―― 50,000 ―― ―― + Zinzares 150,000 ―― 150,000 ―― ―― + Albanians Gheges 1,031,000 773,000 178,000 80,000 ―― + Tosks + Turks Osmanli 1,352,000 1,352,000 ―― ―― ―― + Tartars 40,000 40,000 ―― ―― ―― + Semites Arabs 3,000 3,000 ―― ―― ―― + Jews 72,000 ―― ―― ―― ―― + Armenians 100,000 ―― ―― 10,000 ―― + Circassians 144,000 144,000 ―― ―― ―― + Tsiganes (Gipsies) 104,000 52,000 52,000 ―― ―― + Franks 60,000 ―― ―― 50,000 10,000 + ――――――――― ――――――――― ――――――――― ――――――― ――――――― + Total 8,267,000 3,584,000 4,111,000 342,000 108,000 + ═════════ ═════════ ═════════ ═══════ ═══════ + +[43] Area and population of the Turkish Empire:― + + Area, Mohammedans + Square Miles. Population. per cent. + + Constantinople (including Army, &c.) 1,040 531,000 55 + _Vilayets_:― + Edirneh, or Adrianople (Thracia) 26,160 1,307,000 39 + Tuna (Danube), or Bulgaria 34,120 2,303,000 40 + Saloniki (Macedonia) 12,950 499,000 50 + Prisrend (Upper Macedonia) 18,320 1,392,000 57 + Shkodra, or Scutari (Upper Albania) 5,310 171,000 48 + Bosna Serai, or Serayevo (Bosnia) 17,900 940,000 42 + Herzegovina 5,720 144,000 41 + Yanina (Epirus and Thessaly) 18,320 711,000 35 + Crete, or Candia 3,326 210,000 18 + European Islands 400 60,000 7 + ―――――――― ―――――――――― ―― + Turkey in Europe 143,566 8,267,000 44 + Turkey in Asia 745,000 13,176,000 86 + Tripoli, &c. 344,000 1,150,000 99 + ――――――――― ―――――――――― ―― + Total Ottoman Empire 1,231,566 22,593,000 71 + Tributary States + Rumania 46,710 5,180,000 ―― + Servia 16,820 1,377,000 ―― + Egypt 869,360 17,000,000 70 + Tunis 45,700 2,000,000 99 + ――――――――― ―――――――――― ―― + Total Turkish Empire 2,210,156 48,150,000 63 + ═════════ ══════════ ══ + +[44] Officially called Romania, and frequently spelt Roumania: in +French it is Roumanie. + +[45] + + Wallachia and Moldavia 4,460,000 + Austro-Hungary 2,896,000 + Bessarabia and other parts of Russia 600,000 + Servia 155,000 + Turkey 200,000 + Greece 4,000 + ――――――――― + Total 8,315,000 + +[46] Mean temperature at Bucharest, 46° F.; maximum, 113° F.; minimum, +−22° F.; difference, 135° F. + +[47] Mean volume of the Danube (according to C. Hartley), 2,000,000 +gallons per second; maximum volume, 6,160,000 gallons; mean volume of +Kilia mouth, 1,276,000 gallons; mean of St. George’s mouth, 572,000 +gallons; mean of Sulina mouth, 176,000 gallons per second. Mean +alluvial deposits of Danube, 2,119 cubic feet per annum. + +[48] Approximate population of Rumania in 1875, 5,232,500 souls, of +whom 3,260,000 were in Wallachia, and 1,972,500 in Moldavia. There +were 4,460,000 Rumanians, 90,000 Bulgarians, 40,000 Russians and other +Slavs, 50,000 Magyars, 130,000 Tsigani, 400,000 Jews, 10,000 Armenians, +and 52,500 foreigners (30,000 Austrians, 10,000 Greeks, 5,000 Germans, +1,500 French). + +[49] Of the total area of Rumania 6,000,000 acres are corn-lands, +600,000 acres produce wine, tobacco, &c., 5,000,000 consist of forests, +9,000,000 of pastures and meadows, and 8,000,000 are uncultivated. +In 1874 there were 600,000 horses, 2,900,000 head of cattle, 100,000 +buffaloes, 5,000,000 sheep, 1,200,000 pigs, and 500,000 goats. + +[50] Exports, average of 1865–75, £6,700,000; imports, £4,300,000. + +[51] Railroads, 1,800 miles; high-roads, 2,650 miles; telegraphs, 2,500 +miles; steamers on the Danube, 29, of 7,620 tons burden. + +[52] Number of inhabitants of the principal towns of Rumania (official +spelling; vulgar or phonetic spelling in parenthesis):― + +_Wallachia._—Bucuresci (Bucharest), 221,800; Ploiesti (Ploeshti), +33,000; Braila, 28,270; Craiova, 22,764; Giurgiu (Jurjevo, or +Giurgevo), 20,866; Buzeu (Busau), 11,100; Alecsandria, 11,000; +Campulung, 9,900; Pitesci (Piteshti), 8,500; Caracalu, 8,600. + +_Moldavia._—Jasi (Yassy), 90,000; Galati (Galatz), 80,000; Botosani, +39,900; Barladu (Byrlat), 26,600; Smeilu (Ismail), 21,000; Focsani, +20,300; Peatra, 20,000; Husi, 18,500; Roman, 16,900; Falticeni, 15,000; +Bacau, 13,000; Dorohoi, 10,000; Bolgradu, 9,600; Chilie (Kilia), 8,900; +Reni, 7,600. + +[53] Average annual expenditure, 1871–76, £3,650,000; public debt, +£19,500,000, including £13,000,000 expended upon railways; estimated +value of the domains, £20,000,000. + +[54] Authorities:—Kanitz, “Serbien;” Ubicini, “Les Serbes de Turquie;” +Cyprien Robert, “Les Slaves de Turquie;” Louis Léger, “Le Monde Slave;” +Lejean, “Visite au Montenegro.” + +[55] Mean temperature at Belgrad, 48° F.; extremes, 106° and 3°; range, +103° F. + +[56] The population of Servia in 1875 was 1,377,068, of whom about +1,110,000 were Servians, 160,000 Wallachians, 20,000 Zinzares, 50,000 +Bulgarians, 30,000 gipsies, &c. + +[57] The exports in 1874 were valued at £1,400,000, and included 34,104 +head of cattle, 271,219 pigs 1,172,571 sheep and goat skins, wheat, +raki, &c. + +[58] There are a university, a military academy, a seminary, an +agricultural school, 11 superior schools, and 377 elementary schools, +with 567 teachers, and about 20,000 pupils. + +[59] Authorities:—Zuccagni Orlandini, “Corografia fisica, storica e +statistica dell’ Italia e delle sue Isole;” Marmocchi, “Descrizione +d’Italia;” Amato Amati, “L’Italia sotto l’aspetto fisico, storico, +artistico e statistico;” Taine, “Voyage en Italie;” Gregorovius, +“Wanderjahre in Italien,” “Geschichte der Stadt Rom;” Ann. di Saluzzo, +“Le Alpi che cingono l’Italia;” Cattaneo e Lombardini, “Notizie +naturali e civili su la Lombardia;” Lombardini, “Pianura subapennina,” +“Condizione idraulica del Po;” Martins, Gastaldi, “Terrains +superficiels de la vallée du Pô;” De Mortillet, “Anciens glaciers +du versant méridional des Alpes,” “Mémoires divers;” Bertolotti, +“Liguria maritima;” Targioni Tozzetti, “Voyage en Toscane;” Salvagnoli +Marchetti, “Maremme Toscane;” Noël des Vergers, “L’Étrurie et les +Étrusques;” Beulé, “Fouilles et découvertes;” Giordano, “Roma e suo +territorio;” Ponzi, “Histoire naturelle du Latium;” De Prony, “Marais +Pontins;” Works of D’Ampère and Stendhal, &c.; Davies, “Pilgrimage +of the Tiber;” Francis Wey, “Rome;” Spallanzani, “Voyage dans les +Deux-Siciles;” Smyth, “Sicily and its Islands;” Dolomieu, “Voyage aux +îles de Lipari;” De Quatrefages, “Souvenirs d’un naturaliste;” La +Marmora, “Voyage en Sardaigne, Description statistique, physique et +politique de l’île;” Mantegazza, “Profili e paesaggi della Sardegna;” +Von Maltzan, “Reise auf der Insel Sardinien;” Spano, “Itinerario della +Sardegna;” Correnti e Maestri, “Statistica dell’ Italia.” + +[60] Area of the kingdom of Italy, 114,413 square miles; population in +1875, 27,482,174. + +[61] Pié di Monte, Piedmont, or Piemonte, _i.e._ mountain-foot. + +[62] Principal Alpine summits of Italy:—Monte Viso, 12,585 feet; Grand +Paradis, 13,271 feet; Monte della Disgrazia, 11,840 feet; Adamello, +11,677 feet; Antelao, 10,680 feet; Brunone (Orobia range), 10,370 feet; +Generoso, 5,670 feet; Monte Baldo, 7,310 feet; Monte Bolca, 3,143 feet. + +[63] Altitudes:—Source of the Po, 6,400 feet; Saluzzo, 1,200 feet; +Turin, 755 feet; Pavia (mouth of Ticino), 330 feet; Piacenza, 217 feet; +Cremona, 150 feet; Mantua, 89 feet; Ferrara, 20 feet. + +[64] Italian Alpine lakes having an area of more than five square +miles:― + + Average Area. Average Altitude. Depth, Feet. Capacity. + Name. Sq. Miles. Feet. Max. Average. Millions of Galls. + Lake of Orta 5·4 1,122 820(?) 490(?) 462,000 + Verbano, or Lago Maggiore 81·4 646 1,230 690 9,680,000 + Lake of Varese 6·2 771 85 33 35,200 + Ceresio, or Lake of Lugano 19·3 889 950 490 1,584,000 + Lario, or Lake of Como 60·2 663 1,352 810 7,700,000 + Sebino, or Lake of Iseo 23·0 646 980 490 1,980,000 + Lake of Idro 5·4 1,240 400(?) (?) (?) + Benaco, or Lake of Garda 115·8 226 960(?) 490 9,900,000 + +[65] Volume of Adda and Ticino at their point of egress from the Alpine +lakes, according to Lombardini:― + +_Adda._—Average 6,600, minimum 567, maximum 29,000 cubic feet per +second. _Ticino._—Average 11,400, minimum 1,770, maximum 77,400 cubic +feet per second. + +[66] Principal rivers of Northern Italy:― + + Length. Area of Basin. Volume in Cubic Feet per Second. + Miles. Sq. Miles. Maximum. Minimum. Average. + + Isonzo 80 1,235 ―― ―― 4,240? + Tagliamento 105 800 ―― ―― 5,300? + Livenza 72 795 25,400 ―― 1,400? + Piave 134 2,010 ―― ―― 11,300 + Sile 37 540 1,550 350 700? + Brenta 105 1,510 30,000 137 1,930 + Bacchiglione 74 187 320 ―― 1,270 + Adige 246 8,648 85,000 70 16,950 + Po 416 26,799 182,500 550 60,700 + Reno 112 1,930 53,500 35 8,300 + +[67] Average volume of the canals of the valley of the Po (cubic feet +per second):—Muzza, 2,153; Naviglio Grande, 1,800; Canal Cavour, 1,482; +Martesana, 918 cubic feet. + +[68] Humidity of the air at Milan, 74·5 per cent.; annual rainfall +at Milan, 38·8 in.; at Turin, 31·8 in.; at Tolmezza, on the Upper +Tagliamento, 82·3 in. + +[69] Mean annual temperature of Turin, 53·10° F.; hottest month +(April), 73·13°; coldest month (January), 33·10°. Milan: mean, 14·04°; +July, 74·84°; January, 23·26°. Venice: mean, 55·52° F.; July, 25·06°; +January, 35·28°. + +[70] + + Area, Square Miles. + Dec. 31st, 1875. Population. Density. + + Piemont 11,308 2,995,213 265 + Lombardy 9,084 3,553,913 391 + Venice 9,060 2,733,406 302 + Emilia 7,921 2,153,381 272 + ―――――― ―――――――――― ――― + Total 37,373 11,435,913 306 + +[71] Population of the principal towns of Piemont (1871):—Turin, +192,442; Alessandria, 29,102; Novarra, 24,185; Vercelli, 20,626; Casale +Monferrato, 20,436; Asti, 19,466; Novi Ligure, 12,162; Mondovi, 11,958; +Cuneo, 11,859; Pinerolo, 11,832; Biella, 11,814; Saluzzo, 9,796; +Savigliano, 9,544; Bra, 9,196; Alba, 9,147; Chieri, 8,986; Tortona, +8,620; Acqui, 8,332; Fossano, 7,272; Carmagnola, 3,830. + +[72] Population of the towns of Lombardy (1871):—Milan (Milano), +261,985; Brescia, 38,906; Bergamo, 34,555; Cremona, 30,919; Pavia, +29,618; Mantua (Mantova), 26,687; Como, 24,350; Lodi, 19,088; Monza, +17,431; Vigevano, 14,096; Busto Arsizio, 12,909; Varese, 12,605; +Voghera, 11,903; Treviglio, 11,883. + +[73] Population of the principal towns of Emilia (1871):—Bologna, +89,104; Parma, 41,915; Piacenza, 34,908; Ferrara, 33,327; Modena, +30,854; Faenza, 23,752; Ravenna, 21,774; Reggio, 19,131; Imola, 18,189; +Cesena, 17,594; Forli, 15,324; Rimini, 9,747; Lugo, 8,664; Comacchio, +7,007. + +[74] Tonnage of vessels which entered and cleared (including the +coasting trade):—588,095 tons in 1865; 1,070,600 tons in 1875. Value of +imports by sea (1874):—£5,960,200; of exports, £2,848,040. + +[75] Population of the principal towns of Venetia (1871):—Venice +(Venezia), 128,901; Verona, 65,876; Padua (Padova), 52,011; Vicenza, +26,994; Udine, 22,692; Chioggia, 19,841; Treviso 18,547; Cavarzere, +12,336; Vittoria (formerly called Ceneda), 10,533; Adria, 9,834; +Rovigo, 7,974; Feltre, 6,570; Belluno, 5,770; Este, 5,743. + +[76] Area, 2,153 square miles; population (1871), 843,250; density, 391. + +[77] Principal altitudes in Liguria:—Clapier de Pagarin, 10,073 feet; +Col di Tenda, 6,146 feet; Monte Carsino, 8,794 feet; Col d’Altare, +1,600 feet; Col di Giovi, 1,538 feet; Monte Penna, 5,709 feet. + +[78] Average temperature of Genoa, 60·8° F.; days with rain, 121; +rainfall, 45 inches. Average temperature of San Remo, 62·6; days with +rain, 45; rainfall, 3·15 in. + +[79] Tonnage of vessels which entered and cleared (including coasting +vessels):—1861, 1,936,764; 1867, 2,330,000; 1875, 3,109,796 tons. In +the last-named year 3,144 sailing vessels and 970 steamers entered in +the coast trade, 1,462 sailing vessels and 860 steamers from abroad. + +[80] Annual produce of olive oil in the province of Porto Maurizio, +which includes San Remo, 778,500 gallons. + +[81] Population of the principal towns of Liguria (1871):—Genoa +(Genova), 132,521; Savona, 24,851; Spezia, 15,636; San Pier d’Arena, +15,568; Sestri Ponente, 9,605; San Remo, 9,017; Chiavari, 8,414; +Oneglia, 7,944. + +[82] Area of Tuscany, 9,287 square miles; population (1871), 1,983,810; +density, 214. + +[83] Altitudes (in English feet):― + +_Apennines._—Alps of Succiso, 6,625; Alps of Camporaghena (Garfagnana), +6,565; Monte Cimone, 7,111; Monte Falterone, or Falterona, 5,407. + +_Passes._—Pass of Pontremoli, or La Cisa (Sarzana to Parma), 3,410; +Pass of Fiumalbo (Lucca to Modena), 3,940; Pass of Futa, or Pietramala +(Florence to Bologna), 3,002; Pass of Camaldoli, 3,290. + +_Anti-Apennines._—Pisanino (Alpe Apuana), 6,608; Pietra Marina (Monte +Albano), 1,886; Prato Magno, 5,183; Alpe di Catenaja, 4,595 feet. + +[84] 134,000 tons of marble were quarried in 1873, valued at nearly +£500,000 sterling. + +[85] In 1873 5,466 vessels of 920,626 tons entered: 5,314 vessels of +901,533 tons cleared, inclusive of coasting vessels. + +[86] Area, 85 square miles; population, 21,722 souls. + +[87] Population of the principal towns of Tuscany (in 1871):—Florence +(Firenze), 167,093; Leghorn (Livorno), 89,462; Pisa, 41,796; Siena, +22,965; Lucca, 21,286; Prato, 15,924; Carrara, 10,848; Pistoja, 12,966; +Arezzo, 11,151; Viareggio, 9,983; Pontedera, 7,991; San Casciano, +6,862; Fojano della Chiana, 6,127; Empoli, 5,949; Volterra, 5,796; +Massa Maritima, 5,766; Porto Ferrajo, 5,779; Fucecchio, 5,755; Figline +Valdarno, 5,673; Montalcino, 5,186; Pontassieve, 5,141; Pontelungo, +5,039; Buti, 5,029; Massa, 4,786; Orbetello, 4,674; Pontremoli, 4,473. + +[88] + + Area, Square Population Density. + Miles. (1871). + + Rome 4,552 836,700 184 + Umbria 3,720 549,600 148 + Marches 3,751 915,420 244 + Abruzzos 4,898 918,770 188 + ―――――― ――――――――― ――― + 16,921 3,220,490 190 + ══════ ═════════ ═══ + +[89] VOLCANIC LAKES:—_Bolsena_: area, 42 sq. m.; height, 995 ft.; +depth, 460 ft. _Bracciano_: area, 22 sq. m.; height, 495 ft.; depth, +820 ft. _Albano_: area, 2·3 sq. m.; height, 1,000 ft.; depth, 466 ft. +_Nemi_: area, 0·8 sq. m.; height, 1,108 ft.; depth, 164 ft. SHALLOW +LAKES:—_Trasimeno_: area, 46 sq. m.; height, 843 ft.; depth, 21 ft. +_Fucino_ (in 1860): area, 61 sq. m.; height, 2,300 ft.; depth, 92 ft. + +[90] Basin, 6,475 square miles; length, 260 miles, of which 60 are +navigable. + +[91] Annual rainfall at Rome, 30·7 inches; at the foot of the +Apennines, 43·3 in.; on the summits, 94·5 in. Volume of the Tiber: +average 10,180 cubic ft.; maximum, 60,400 cubic ft.; minimum, 4,650 +cubic ft., a second. + +[92] Water supply of some leading cities (in gallons):― + + Per Second. Per Day. Per Inhabitant. + Rome (1869) 481 41,580,000 208 + Paris (1875) 904 78,100,000 44 + London (1874) 1,262 110,000,000 27·5 + Glasgow (1874) 373 32,482,500 52 + Washington (1870) 741 66,000,000 660 + +[93] Value of exports and imports, 1863, £1,348,000; 1868, £999,660. + +[94] Tonnage of vessels which entered and cleared at the ports of +Latium in 1873:—Cività Vecchia, 520,000 (1875, 600,351); Fiumicino, +63,000; Porto d’Anzio, 30,900; Terracina, 335,000 tons. + +[95] Towns of Latium (1871):—Rome, 229,356 (1876, 264,280); Viterbo, +16,326; Velletri, 14,798; Cività Vecchia, 10,484; Ferentino, 8,360; +Tivoli, 7,730; Frosinone, 7,714; Subiaco, 6,990; Sezze, 6,659; Alatri, +6,393 inhabitants. + +[96] Population of the principal towns of Umbria (1871):—Perugia, +16,708; Rieti, 12,905; Terni, 12,419; Foligno, 8,471; Spoleto, 7,490; +Orvieto, 7,423; Città di Castello, 6,588; Assisi, 6,225; Gubbio, 5,343. + +[97] Tonnage of vessels which entered and cleared from Ancona in the +coast and foreign trade; 258,292 tons in 1858, 372,877 tons in 1867, +751,689 tons in 1875. + +[98] Towns of the Marches having over 10,000 inhabitants:—Ancona, +35,111; Jesi, 13,472; Sinigaglia, 11,173; Ascoli-Piceno, 11,373; Fermo, +15,862; Macerata, 11,194; Pesaro, 12,375; Urbino, 10,194. + +_Abruzzos_:—Lanciano, 15,432; Chieti, 14,321; Aquila, 13,513; +Campobusso, 13,345; Solmona, 12,583; Vasto, 10,093. + +[99] Area of San Marino, 24 square miles; population (1874), 7,816. + +[100] Area, exclusive of the Abruzzos, 28,002 square miles; population, +6,251,750. + +[101] Mean annual temperature of Naples, 62° F.; extremes, 23° and +104°; rainfall, 37 inches. + +[102] In 1868 69 per cent. of the men and 88 per cent. of the women +married in the Campania, the most educated province of Naples, were not +able to sign their names. In the Basilicata the proportions were 85 and +96 per cent. ! + +[103] In 1873 there were 363 fishing-boats, and 90,000 lbs. of coral, +valued at £92,000, were obtained. + +[104] In 1864 10,694 vessels, of 1,496,500 tons burden, entered and +cleared the port of Naples; in 1875 11,288 vessels, of 2,923,922 tons. + +[105] In 1862 1,100 vessels, of 75,000 tons, entered and cleared at +Brindisi; in 1875, 1,342 vessels, inclusive of 396 steamers, of 771,096 +tons, in the foreign trade. + +[106] Towns of Naples having over 10,000 inhabitants (in 1870):—Naples +(Napoli), 421,803; Bari, 49,423; Foggia, 34,181; Andria, 32,678; +Reggio, 29,854; Barletta, 27,444; Molfetta, 26,516; Corato, 26,018; +Trani, 24,026; Bitonto, 23,087; Taranto, 22,858; Castellamare di +Stabia, 22,037; Cerignola, 21,739; Lecce, 21,081; Salerno, 20,611; +Aversa, 19,734; Bisceglia, 19,007; Torre del Greco, 18,950; Catanzaro, +18,781; Potenza, 18,513; Gaeta, 18,385; Avellino, 18,260; Gerlizzi, +18,175; Maddaloni, 17,578; Afragola, 17,541; Francavilla Fontana, +17,457; Benevento, 17,370; Altamura, 17,004; Santa Maria di Capua +Vetere, 16,785; San Severo, 16,545; Torre dell’ Annunziata, 15,321; +Ruvo di Puglia, 15,055; Monte Sant’ Angelo, 14,902; Rossano, 14,818; +San Marco in Lamis, 14,540; Cosenza, 14,522; Caserta, 14,578; Canosa +di Puglia, 14,458; Ostuni, 14,422; Ariano di Puglia, 14,347; Matera, +14,262; Monopoli, 13,800; Minervino Murge, 13,630; Martina Franca, +13,440; Campobasso, 13,345; Brindisi, 13,194; Lucera, 13,064; Acerra, +12,858; Ceglia Messacapio, 12,582; Gioja del Colla, 12,442; Pagani, +12,208; Fasano, 12,190; Capua, 12,174; Cittanova, 12,137; Palo di +Colla, 11,887; Mola di Bari, 11,775; Pozzuoli, 11,751; Rionera in +Voltara, 11,520; Amalfi, 11,225; Resina, 11,132; Sarno, 10,933; San +Giovanni del Teduccio, 10,898; Nola, 10,771; Giugliano in Campania, +10,751; Lauria, 10,609; Frattamaggiore, 10,486; Corigliano Calabro, +10,481; Nicastro, 10,418; Cairano, 10,081; Montecorvo, 10,020; +Conversano, 10,012. + +[107] Minimum width of the Strait of Messina, 10,330 feet; maximum +depth, 1,090 feet; average depth, 246 feet. + +[108] Area of Sicily, 11,290 square miles; population in 1870, +2,565,300 souls; density, 227. + +[109] Mean annual temperature at Palermo and Messina, 64° F.; at +Catania and Girgenti, 68° F.; rainfall at Palermo, 26 inches. + +[110] The salt marshes of the province of Trapani cover an area of +2,100 acres, and yielded, in 1865, 55,000 tons of salt, valued at +£24,200. + +[111] In 1862 27,596 vessels, of 1,825,232 tons burden, entered and +cleared from Sicilian ports; in 1869 34,989 vessels, of 2,869,327 +tons; in 1873 70,974 vessels, of 5,942,700 tons. In 1875 the number of +vessels and tonnage which entered and cleared was—at Messina, 9,213 +vessels, of 2,335,144 tons; at Palermo, 11,692 vessels, of 1,812,195 +tons; at Catania, 5,137 vessels, of 529,539 tons; and at Trapani, 5,407 +vessels, of 288,475 tons. + +[112] Towns of Sicily having more than 10,000 inhabitants (in +1871):—Palermo, 186,406; Messina, 71,921; Catania, 84,397; Marsala, +34,202; Modica, 33,169; Trapani, 28,052; Acireale, 26,692; Caltagirone, +25,978; Ragusa Superiore, 21,494; Caltanissetta, 21,464; Canicatti, +20,908; Alcamo, 20,890; Castelvetrano, 20,420; Partinico, 20,098; +Syracuse (Siracusa), 20,035; Termini Imerese, 19,646; Girgenti, 19,603; +Sciacca, 18,896; Piazza Armerina, 18,252; Vittoria, 17,528; Giarre, +17,414; Comiso, 16,694; Corleone, 16,150; Licata, 15,966; Favara, +15,233; Vizzini, 14,942; Terranova di Sicilia, 14,911; Paterno, +14,790; Noto, 14,767; Aderno, 14,673; Bronte, 14,589; Nicosia, 14,544; +Castrogiovanni, 14,511; Barcellona or Pozzo di Gotto, 14,471; Salemi, +14,096; Palma di Montechiaro, 13,497; Monreale, 13,496; Gangi, 13,057; +San Cataldo, 12,899; Biancavilla, 12,631; Partana, 12,467; Mazzara del +Valle, 12,155; Leonforte, 12,010; Mazzarino, 11,951; Avola, 11,912; +Agira, 11,876; Bagheria, 11,651; Riesi, 11,548; Agosta, 11,382; +Castellamare del Golfo, 11,280; Mistretta, 11,218; Racalmuto, 11,012; +Niscemi, 10,750; Sciecli, 10,724; Lentini, 10,578; Cefalù, 10,194; +Froina, 10,193; Grammicheli, 10,192; Pietraperzia, 10,149; Palazzolo +Acreide, 10,132. + +[113] Area and population of the Liparic Islands:—Lipari, 12·4 square +miles, 14,000 inhabitants; Vulcano, 9·7 square miles, 100 inhabitants; +Panaria and neighbouring islets, 7·7 square miles, 200 inhabitants; +Stromboli, 7·7 square miles, 500 inhabitants; Salina, 10·8 square +miles, 4,500 inhabitants; Felicudi, 5·9 square miles, 800 inhabitants; +Alicudi, 3 square miles, 300 inhabitants. Total, 57·2 square miles, +18,400 inhabitants. + +[114] Pantellaria, 39·7 square miles, 6,000 inhabitants; Linosa, +4·6 square miles, 900 inhabitants; Lampedusa, 3 square miles, 600 +inhabitants. + +[115] The tonnage of vessels which enter and clear annually from +foreign ports amounts to 4,300,000 tons; the value of dutiable articles +imported is nearly £9,000,000 sterling, and the value of the exports +about the same. + +[116] Area of Malta, Gozzo, and Comino, 146 square miles; population +149,084, inclusive of 7,309 military and their families. + +[117] Area, 9,440 square miles; population (1871), 636,500. + +[118] In 1873 11,256 vessels, of 1,080,000 tons, entered and cleared +the five ports of the island. In 1875 2,516 vessels, of 504,756 tons, +entered and cleared at Cagliari alone, the increase since 1861 having +been nearly 100 per cent. + +[119] Population of the principal towns of Sardinia (1871):—Cagliari, +31,9 5; Sassari, 30,542; Alghero, 8,769; Ozieri, 7,965; Iglesias, +7,191; Oristano, 6,963; Terranova, 1,976. + +[120] Agricultural statistics of Italy, 1869 (according to +Maestri):—_Distribution of Area_:—Fields, vineyards, and orchards, +27,267,360 acres; olive plantations, 1,371,400 acres; chestnut +plantations, 1,445,000 acres; forests, 10,240,400 acres; meadows, +2,900,000 acres; pastures, 13,337,000 acres. _Annual Produce_:—Cereals, +206,300,000 bushels (value £84,000,000); potatoes, 27,500,000 bushels +(£2,000,000); wines, 880,000,000 gallons (£44,000,000); raw silk, +6,889,437 lbs. in 1873, 6,305,214 lbs. in 1874; tobacco, 7,235,000 +lbs.; oil, 3,747,850 lbs. (£8,800,000); chestnuts, 14,860,000 bushels. +_Domesticated Animals_ (1868):—1,196,128 horses, 3,489,125 heads of +cattle, 8,674,527 sheep and goats, 1,553,582 pigs. + +[121] Annual mineral produce of Italy (in tons):—Iron, 85,000; copper, +13,000; lead, 32,250; zinc, 30,000; coal, 110,750; sulphur, 285,611; +salt, 388,000; besides small quantities of silver, nickel, mercury, &c. + +[122] _Occupations_:—Amongst every 1,000 inhabitants there are 342 +agriculturists; 163 miners and artisans; 29 commercial men; 23 +artists and scientific men; 7 priests; 6 officials; 1 soldier; 31 +“proprietors;” 21 domestic servants; 13 paupers; and 382 without +occupation. + +[123] In 1874 there were 10,929 vessels (including 138 steamers), of a +burden of 1,031,889 tons; 37,560 vessels, of 7,580,317 tons, entered +from or cleared for foreign ports; 197,896 vessels, of 16,500,000 tons, +entered and cleared in the home trade. Of every 1,000 tons engaged +in the foreign commerce, 368 sailed under the Italian, 266 under the +English, and 173 under the French flag. The commerce with France +engaged 1,779,672 tons; that with England 1,388,300 tons; and that with +Austria 998,740 tons. + +[124] In 1876 4,791 miles of railway had been opened for traffic, and +460 miles were building. There were also 1,858 miles of canals and +navigable rivers, and 77,140 miles of public roads. + +[125] _Public Schools_ (1872):—58,322 elementary and evening +schools, 2,274,999 pupils; 1,082 superior schools, 64,044 pupils; 21 +universities, 10,000 students; 651 professional, technical, and art +schools, 33,311 students. Total, 60,076 schools, &c., with 2,382,354 +pupils and students. + +[126] + + 1861. 1873. 1875. + Expenditure £24,206,920 £61,704,000 £56,618,600 + Revenue £18,332,880 £52,384,000 £55,499,800 + ─────────── ─────────── ─────────── + Deficit £5,874,040 £9,340,000 £1,118,800 + National Debt £100,000,000 £402,400,000 £460,000,000 + +[127] _Authorities_:—Marmocchi, “Géographie de la Corse;” Gregorovius, +“Corsica;” Pr. Mérimée, “Voyage en Corse.” + +[128] Area of Corsica, 3,378 square miles; length from north to south, +114 miles; width, 52 miles; development of coast-line, 300 miles. + +[129] From north to south:—Monte Padro, 7,846 feet; Monte Cinto, 8,878 +feet; Paglia Orba, 8,283 feet; Rotondo, 8,607 feet; Monte d’Oro, 7,890 +feet; Incudine, 6,746 feet. + +[130] Mean annual temperature at Bastia, 66·7° F.; rainfall, 23 inches. + +[131] Area, 3,378 square miles; population in 1740, 120,380; in 1872, +259,861. + +[132] _Average annual produce_:—Cereals, 2,613,000 bushels; oil, +3,300,000 gallons; wine, 6,600,000 gallons. + +[133] Towns of Corsica (1872):—Bastia, 17,950; Ajaccio, 16,550; Corte, +5,450; Sartène, 4,150; Bonifacio, 3,600; Bastelica, 2,950; Calenzana, +2,600; Calvi, 2,175 inhabitants. + +[134] Authorities:—Coello, F. de Luxan y A. Pascual, “Reseñas +Geográfica, Geológica y Agrícola de España;” Baron Davillier et +Gust. Doré, “Voyage en Espagne;” De Laborde, “Itinéraire Descriptif +de l’Espagne;” Bory de Saint-Vincent, “Résumé Géographique de la +Péninsule Ibérique;” De Verneuil et Collomb, “Mémoires Géologiques sur +l’Espagne;” Ford, “Handbook for Travellers in Spain;” Fern. Garrido, +“L’Espagne Contemporaine;” Cherbuliez, “L’Espagne Politique;” Ed. +Quinet, “Mes Vacances en Espagne;” Th. Gautier, “Tras los Montes,” +“Voyage en Espagne;” M. Willkomm, “Die Pyrenäische Halbinsel,” +“Strand- und Steppengebiete der iberischen Halbinsel;” George Sand, +“Un Hiver à Majorque;” Ludw. Salvator, “Balearen in Wort und Bild;” +Bladé, “Études Géographiques sur la Vallée d’Andorre;” W. von Humboldt, +“Urbewohner Spaniens;” Eug. Cordier, “Organisation de la Famille chez +les Basques;” Paul Broca, “Mémoires d’Anthropologie.” + +[135] Area of the Iberian peninsula, exclusive of the Balearic Islands, +225,605 square miles; area of Spain, 191,104 square miles; of Portugal +(without the Azores), 34,501 square miles. Average height, according to +Leipoldt, 2,300 feet. + +[136] Contour of peninsula, 2,015 miles, of which 1,301 are on the +Atlantic, and 714 on the Mediterranean. Width of the isthmus of the +Pyrenees, 260 miles. + +[137] + + Area. Population (1870). Density. + Basin of the Duero (Leon and Old + Castile, exclusive of Logroño + and Santander) 36,593 sq. m. 2,550,000 69 + + Basins of the Tajo and the + Guadiana 44,719 sq. m. 2,276,000 51 + +[138] Average rainfall at Madrid, 10·7 inches; evaporation, 72·6 inches. + +[139] Mean annual temperature, 57·9°; extremes, 104° and 14° F. + +[140] Population of the principal towns of the Castiles (1870):—_Old +Castile_: Valladolid, 60,000; Burgos, 14,000; Salamanca, 13,500; +Palencia, 13,000; Zamora, 9,000; Segovia, 7,000; Leon, 7,000; Ávila, +6,000. _New Castile_: Madrid, 332,000; Toledo, 17,500; Almagro, 14,000; +Daimiel, 13,000; Ciudad Real, 12,000; Val de Peñas, 11,000; Almaden, +9,000; Manzanares, 9,000; Cuenca, 7,000; Talavera de la Reyna, 7,500; +Guadalajara, 6,000. _Estremadura_: Badajoz, 22,000; Don Benito, 15,000; +Cáceres, 12,000; Villanueva de la Serena, 8,000; Plasencia, 6,000; +Mérida, 6,000. + +[141] Area of the basin of the Guadalquivir, 21,000 square miles; +area of Andalusia, 28,370 square miles; population (1870), 2,749,629; +density, 91. + +[142] + + Mean Annual Rainfall. Rainfall. Rainfall. + Temp., °F. Year, in. Oct.–March, in. April–Sept., in. + Granada 66 48·5 40·3 8·2 + Seville 68 26·1 23·1 3·0 + Gibraltar 70 28·9 20·3 8·6 + +[143] Export of wine from Cádiz and Santa María:—1858, 3,597,000 +gallons; 1862, 5,115,000 gallons; 1873, 10,446,480 gallons, valued at +£2,937,000. + +[144] In 1873 600,000 tons of pyrites were exported from the district +of Huelva, of which 340,000 tons came from the mine of Tharsis. + +[145] In 1874 3,639 vessels, of 616,060 tons burden, entered; the +imports had a value of £633,700, the exports (consisting for the most +part of wine) of £3,116,000. + +[146] Approximate population of the principal towns of Andalusia:― + +Cádiz, 62,000; Jerez, 35,000; Chiclana, 22,000; Puerto de Santa María, +18,000; San Fernando, 18,000; Sanlúcar de Barrameda, 17,000; Puerto +Real, 14,000; Arcos de la Frontera, 12,000; Algeciras, 18,000; Medina +Sidonia, 10,500. + +Huelva, 10,000. + +Seville (Sevilla), 80,000; Ecija, 24,000; Carmona, 18,000; Osuna, +16,000; Utrera, 14,000; Lebrija, 12,000; Marchena, 12,000. + +Córdova, 45,000; Lucena, 16,000; Montilla, 15,500; Montoro, 12,000; +Aguilar, 12,000; Baena, 14,500; Cabra, 11,500. + +Jaen, 18,000; Linares, 40,000; Ubeda, 15,000; Baeza, 15,000; Alcalá la +Real, 11,500; Andújar, 9,500. + +Granada, 65,000; Loja, 15,000; Motril, 13,500; Baza, 13,500. + +Málaga, 92,000; Antequera, 30,000; Velez Málaga, 15,000; Ronda, 14,000. + +Almería, 27,000; Velez Rúbio, 13,000. + +[147] Gibraltar in 1871 had 16,454 inhabitants, exclusive of the +military: its annual revenue exceeds £40,000, and the burden of the +vessels which enter and clear annually amounts to 3,500,000 tons. + +[148] + + Murcia 10,450 square miles. 660,040 inhabitants, or 63 to a sq. m. + + Valencia 8,896 square miles. 1,401,833 inhabitants, or 158 to a sq. m. + +[149] 82,000 tons of esparto grass are estimated to have been collected +in 1873, of which 67,000 tons were exported to England. + +[150] Value of exports and imports in 1867, £2,707,000. + +[151] Population of the principal towns of the Mediterranean slope +between Cabo de Gata and the Ebro:—Valencia, 108,000; Murcia, 55,000; +Lorca, 40,000; Alicante, 31,000; Cartagena, 25,000; Orihuela, 21,000; +Castellon de la Plana, 20,000; Alcoy, 16,000; Albacete, 15,000; Játiva, +13,000; Alcira, 13,000; Almansa, 9,000. + +[152] Towns of Majorca:—Palma, 40,000; Manacor, 15,000; Felanitx, +10,500; Lluchmayor, 8,800; Pollenza, 8,000; Inca, 8,000; Soller, 8,000; +Santañia, 8,000. + +[153] Catalonia, 12,483 square miles, 1,778,408 inhabitants; Aragon, +17,676 square miles, 928,718 inhabitants. + +[154] Area of the basin of the Ebro, 25,100 square miles; discharge +during floods, 175,000 cubic feet, average, 7,100 cubic feet; during +summer, 1,750 cubic feet; annual rainfall, 18 inches; surface drainage, +1·4 inches; proportion between the two, 13 : 1. + +[155] _Zaragoza_:—Mean temperature, 61°; extremes, 106° and 21°; +difference, 85°; rainfall, 13·6 inches. _Barcelona_:—Mean temperature, +63°; extremes, 88° and 32°; difference, 56°; rainfall, 15·7 inches. + +[156] In 1873 there were 700 cotton-mills, with 104,000 hands and +1,400,000 spindles, consuming 67,200,000 lbs. of cotton. + +[157] Value of exports and imports in 1867, £10,691,000. + +[158] Population of the principal towns:—_Aragon_: Zaragoza, 56,000; +Calatayud, 12,000; Huesca, 10,000; Teruel, 7,000. _Catalonia_ +(Cataluña): Barcelona, 180,000; Reus, 25,000; Tortosa, 22,000; Mataró, +17,000; Sabadell, 15,000; Manresa, 14,000; Tarragona, 13,000; Lérida, +12,000; Vich, 12,000; Badalona, 11,000; Igualada, 10,500; Olot, 10,000; +Tarrasa, 9,000; Gerona, 8,000; Figueras, 8,000. + +[159] Navarra and Basque provinces, 6,828 square miles, 790,676 +inhabitants; Logroño, 1,945 square miles, 182,941 inhabitants. + +[160] In 1875 Basque was spoken by 556,000 individuals, viz. by 116,000 +in France, by 340,000 in the three Basque provinces of Spain, and by +100,000 in Navarra. + +[161] Population of principal towns (approximately):—Biscay (Vizcaya): +Bilbao, 30,000. _Guipúzcoa_ St. Sebastian, 15,000; Tolosa, 8,000. +_Alava_: Vitoria, 12,500. _Navarra_: Pamplona, 22,000; Estella, 6,000. +_Logroño_: Logroño, 12,000; Calahorra, 7,000. + +[162] + + Santander 2,113 sq. m. 241,581 inhabitants 114 to a sq. m. + Asturias 4,091 sq. m. 610,883 inhabitants 152 to a sq. m. + Galicia 11,344 sq. m. 1,989,281 inhabitants 176 to a sq. m. + +[163] Climate in 1858:—_Oviedo_: 750 feet above the sea-level, mean +temperature, 49·46° F.; extremes, 23·9° and 82°; rainfall, 81·3 inches. +_Santiago_: 720 feet above sea-level, mean temperature, 59·07°; +extremes, 28° and 95°; rainfall, 42·7 inches. + +[164] Area of Length of Average Average Surface Drainage Catchment Main +Rainfall. Discharge. in Proportion to Basin. Branch. Rainfall. Sq. m. +Miles. Inches. Cub. ft. Per cent. per sec. + + Miño (and Sil) 9,650 190 47 17,700 50 + Duero 38,610 507 20 22,950 40 + Tajo (Tagus) 28,960 556 16 11,600 33 + Guadiana (and Záncara) 23,170 553 14 5,680 25 + Guadalquivir 21,240 348 19 9,220 30 + Segura 8,500 217 12 710 10 + Júcar 5,800 318 13 880 15 + Ebro 25,100 466 18 7,100 20 + ――――――― ―― ―――――― ―― + Total 161,030 16 75,810 33 + +[165] Imports (1873), £2,348,720; exports, £2,341,360. + +[166] Imports (1873), £310,227; exports, £210,532. + +[167] Imports (1873), £873,286; exports, £381,636. + +[168] Population of towns:—Santander, 21,000; Oviedo, 9,000; Gijon, +6,000; Santiago de Compostela, 29,000; La Coruña, 20,000; Ferrol, +17,000; Lugo, 8,000; Vigo, 6,000; Orense, 5,000; Pontevedra, 4,200. + +[169] Of the total area 26·1 per cent. consists of arable land, 2·8 of +vineyards, 1·7 of olive plantation, 13·7 of meadows and pasture, 16·3 +per cent. of woods: 39·4 per cent. are uncultivated. The total value of +agricultural produce is estimated at £80,000,000. + +The produce of the mines in 1871 represented a value of £6,271,000. + +In 1865 there were enumerated 680,373 horses, 1,020,512 mules, +1,298,334 asses, 2,967,303 heads of horned cattle, 22,468,969 sheep, +4,531,736 goats, 4,531,228 pigs, and 3,104 camels. + +The products of manufactures are estimated by Garrido at £63,480,000. +Imports (1871), £22,780,000, (1874) £15,280,000; exports (1871), +£17,688,000, (1874) £16,120,000. + +Commercial marine (1874), 2,836 sea-going vessels (inclusive of 212 +steamers), of 625,184 tons, besides 6,498 lighters (26,000 tons) and +12,000 fishing-boats. + +Railways, 3,602 miles in 1876. + +[170] Educational statistics (1870):― + + Men. Women. Total. + + Able to read and write 2,414,000 716,000 3,130,000 + Able to read only 317,000 389,000 706,000 + Illiterate 5,035,000 6,803,000 11,838,000 + +[171] Revenue (1876–7), £26,300,069; estimated expenditure, +£26,251,518, of which more than half is for army and navy; national +debt, £420,322,000. + +[172] Link und Hoffmannsegg, “Voyage en Portugal;” Minutoli, “Portugal +und seine Kolonien;” Vogel, “Le Portugal et ses Colonies;” Lady +Jackson, “Fair Lusitania;” Latouche, “Travels in Portugal.” + +[173] Temperature of Coimbra (according to Coello):—Year, 61·1°; +winter, 52·2; spring, 63; summer, 68·9, autumn, 62·3; coldest +month (January), 50·2; hottest month (July), 69·4; difference, +19·2 F. Temperature of Oporto (according to De Luiz, mean of eight +years):—Year, 60·2; winter, 51·1; spring, 58·6; summer, 69·8; autumn, +61·2; coldest month (January), 50·2; hottest month (August), 70·3; +difference, 20·1 F. + +[174] Production of wine in Portugal before the appearance of oidium, +in 1853, 105,600,000 gallons. Average annual produce of the vineyards +of Alto-Douro (Oporto) in 1848, 11,726,000; in 1870, 11,374,000 +gallons. Exports to England, 3,718,000 gallons; Brazil, 994,000 +gallons. In 1874 Oporto alone exported 6,623,000 gallons, or more than +ever before. + +[175] Imports and exports about £4,000,000. + +[176] Towns of over 5,000 inhabitants in Northern Portugal +(1864):—_Entre Douro e Minho_: Oporto, 86,257; Braga, 19,512; Pavoa de +Varzim, 10,110; Guimarães, 7,865; Villanova de Gaia, 7,517; Vianna do +Castello, 6,049; Mattozinhos, 5,089. _Traz os Montes_: Chaves, 6,382; +Bragança, 5,111; Villa Real, 5,097. _Beira_: Coimbra, 18,147; Ovar, +10,374; Covilhã, 9,022; Lamego, 8,638; Ilhavo, 8,215; Murtoza, 7,666; +Vizeu, 6,815; Castello Branco, 6,583; Avéiro, 6,557; Mira, 6,014; +Soure, 5,855; Lavos, 5,837; Miranda do Corvo, 5,261; Paião, 5,097. + +[177] In 1874 Lisbon exported 5,900 tons of potatoes, 447,450 gallons +of olive oil, 4,400,000 gallons of wine, 157,200 bushels of salt, +200,000 tons of copper ore, figs, almonds, oranges, &c.: 4,092 vessels +entered the harbour. + +[178] Mean temperature of July, 90·6° F.; extremes of temperature, +27·5° and 102° F.; cloudless days, 150. + +[179] In 1870 Portugal produced 320,000 tons of salt, of which 184,000 +tons were from Setúbal. + +[180] Towns of Estremadura having over 5,000 inhabitants +(1864):—Lisbon, 224,063; Setúbal, 13,134; Santarem, 7,820; Torres +Novas, 6,878; Caparica, 6,311; Palmella, 6,260; Cezimbra, 5,797; +Abrantes, 5,590; Cartaxo, 5,218; Louriçal, 5,182. + +[181] Towns of Southern Portugal having over 5,000 inhabitants +(1864):—_Alemtejo_: Evora, 11,965; Elvas, 11,086; Estremoz, 7,274; +Beja, 7,060; Portalegre, 6,731; Serpa, 5,595; Móura, 5,489; Castello +de Vido, 5,285; Campo Maior, 5,277. _Algarve_: Loulé, 12,156; Tavira, +10,903; Faro, 8,361; Lagos, 7,771; Olhão, 7,025; Alportel, 6,043; +Villanova de Portimão, 5,531; São Bartholomeu de Messires, 5,318; +Monchique, 5,251; Silves, 5,103. + +[182] For a list of Portuguese colonies see p. 500. + +[183] In 1874 there were 2,649 elementary and middle-class schools, +attended by 122,004 pupils, besides a university and nine special +schools, with 4,300 students. + +[184] In 1875, 2,237 miles of royal high-roads, 600 miles of railroads. + +[185] Value of exports and imports in 1840, £4,016,320; in 1856, +£8,127,400; 1875, £12,916,020. The commercial marine consisted in 1875 +of 433 vessels (inclusive of 23 steamers), measuring 111,260 tons. + + + + +INDEX. + + + Abrántes, 490 + + Abruzzos, 258 + + Achelous, 48 + + Adrianople, 106 + + Ægadian Islands, 334 + + Ægean Sea, 69, 95 + + Ægina, 56 + + Ægium, 67 + + Æolian Islands, 331 + + Ætolia, 53 + + Ætoliko, 49, 53 + + Aitone, 366 + + Ajaccio, 365, 369 + + Albacete, 420 + + Albania, 115 + + Albanians, 44, 119, 120; in Italy, 295 + + Albano, 260 + + Alcalá, 393 + + Alcántara, 391 + + Alcóy, 420 + + Alecsandria, 170 + + Alemtejo, 490 + + Algarve, 490 + + Alhama, 422 + + Alhambra, 407, 408 + + Alicante, 417, 422 + + Almaden, 392 + + Almagro, 391 + + Almeida, 481 + + Almería, 412 + + Alpheus, 61, 63 + + Alps, 10 + + Alpujarras, 397 + + Amarante, 479 + + Anadoli-kavak, 104 + + Ancona, 282 + + Andalusia, 394 + + Andorra, 438 + + Andros, 72 + + Anio, 273 + + Antequera, 412 + + Antimilos, 71 + + Antiparos, 71 + + Apennines, 257 + + Aquila, 284 + + Aragon, 427 + + Aragon Steppes, 436 + + Arán, 438 + + Aranjuez, 393, 394 + + Arcadia, 58, 65 + + Arezzo, 252 + + Argentaro, Monte, 243 + + Argolis, 59, 65 + + Argos, 68 + + Argostoli, 79 + + Ariano, 305 + + Armenians, 102 + + Arno, 240 + + Arosa, 459 + + Arta, Gulf of, 48, 53 + + Aspromonte, 288 + + Astorga, 387 + + Asturias, 448 + + Astypalæa, 94 + + Athens, 54 + + Athos, Mount, 108 + + Attica, 53 + + Avéiro, 476, 481 + + Ávila, 389 + + Azcoitia, 447 + + Azof, Sea of, 25 + + Badajoz, 391 + + Baéza, 407 + + Balagna, 365 + + Balearic Islands, 423–427 + + Balkans, 133 + + Baragan, 159 + + Barcellos, 479 + + Barcelona, 436 + + Bari, 306 + + Barletta, 306 + + Basque Provinces, 439 + + Basques, 372, 442 + + Bastelica, 366 + + Bastia, 368 + + Batalha, 489 + + Batuecas, 387 + + Bayona, 459 + + Beja, 495 + + Belem, 487 + + Belgrad, 174 + + Bellas, 488 + + Benevento, 305 + + Berda, 179 + + Berici, 193 + + Berlingas, 483 + + Bessarabia, 164 + + Bidassoa, 437 + + Bientina, 245 + + Biguglia, 368 + + Bilbao, 446 + + Biscay, Bay of, 441 + + Black Sea, 25 + + Bœotia, 53 + + Bologna, 228 + + Bolsena, 259 + + Bomfica, 488 + + Bonifacio, 369 + + Bosnia, 127 + + Bosphorus, 98 + + Botosani, 169 + + Braga, 479 + + Bragança, 481 + + Braila, 170 + + Brenner, 222 + + Brindisi, 306 + + Bucharest, 168 + + Bulgaria, 131 + + Bulgarians, 138 + + Búrgos, 388 + + Bussaco, 481 + + Butrinto, 76 + + Buyukdere, 103 + + Cabo da Roca, 488 + + Cáceres, 391 + + Cádiz, 401, 410 + + Calabria, 287, 295, 296, 308 + + Calahorra, 448 + + Calamata, 67 + + Calatayud, 434 + + Calvi, 369 + + Caminha, 479 + + Campania, 289 + + Campo dell’ Oro, 365 + + Campo de Ourique, 492 + + Candia, 90 + + Canea, 92 + + Cantabrian Pyrenees, 451 + + Capri, 302 + + Capua, 304 + + Carcavellos, 487 + + Cardona, 431 + + Carghese, 366 + + Casabianda, 365 + + Cascães, 487 + + Caserta, 304 + + Casino, 304 + + Castelfollit, 431 + + Castel-Gandolfo, 361 + + Castiles, 377 + + Castro Marim, 495 + + Catalonia, 427 + + Catania, 325 + + Catanzari, 309 + + Celtiberians, 372 + + Celts, 372 + + Cephalonia, 78 + + Cephissus, 51 + + Cerigo, 69 + + Cezimbra, 490 + + Chalcidice, 107 + + Chalcis, 70, 71 + + Chaves, 481 + + Chiana, 244 + + Cintra, 483 + + Circassians, 142 + + Cithæron, 47 + + Ciudad Real, 391 + + Civita Vecchia, 281 + + Coimbra, 481 + + Columbretes, 424 + + Comacchio, 220 + + Como, 198 + + Constantinople, 88, 98, 150 + + Copais, 51, 52 + + Corcubion, 459 + + Córdova, 406, 408 + + Corfu, 75 + + Corinth, 57, 66 + + Corsica, 363 + + Corte, 366, 369 + + Corunna, 459 + + Cosenza, 309 + + Cotrone, 309 + + Cranz, 65 + + Crato, 495 + + Crete, 90 + + Cuenca, 392 + + Cyclades, 70 + + Cyllene, 57 + + Cythera, 69 + + Cythnos, 71 + + Daimiel, 391 + + Danube, 136, 159 + + Dardanelles, 105 + + Dede Aghach, 107 + + Delos, 71, 74 + + Delphi, 47 + + Despeñaperros, 395, 396 + + Dobruja, 134, 142 + + Dodona, 118 + + Dolomites, 192 + + Dora Baltea, 197 + + Dóuro, 473 + + Drin, 115 + + Drina, 174 + + Duero, 383 + + Durango, 447 + + Durazzo, 125 + + Ebro, 427 + + Ebro Delta, 432 + + Ecija, 402 + + Elba, 255 + + Elche, 417–419 + + Eleusis, 55 + + Elis, 59 + + El Torcal, 398 + + Élvas, 495 + + Etna, 311 + + Epakto, 53 + + Epidaurus, 68 + + Epirus, 115, 117 + + Erasinus, 61 + + Erymanthus, 57 + + Escorial, 393 + + Espinho, 479 + + Espozende, 479 + + Estrella, 483 + + Estremadura, 377 + + Estremoz, 495 + + Etruscans, 248 + + Eubœa, 70, 71 + + Euganean Hills, 193 + + Euripus, 70 + + Eurotas, 62, 67 + + Euskarians, 442 + + Evora, 495 + + Falticeni, 169 + + Farilhãos, 483 + + Faro, 495 + + Ferdinandea, 316 + + Ferrara, 228 + + Ferrol, 459 + + Figuéira da Foz, 481 + + Fiumicino, 271, 273 + + Florence, 251 + + Foggia, 306 + + Fontibre, 432 + + Fucino, 262 + + Fuenterrabia, 447 + + Gaeta, 304 + + Gaia, 479 + + Galaxidi, 53 + + Galatz, 169 + + Galicia, 448 + + Gallipoli, 106, 308 + + Gastuni, 63, 64 + + Gata, Sierra de, 381 + + Gaytanos, 399 + + Genoa, 234 + + Gerania, 48 + + Gerona, 437 + + Gibraltar, 400, 413 + + Gibraltar, Strait of, 26 + + Gijon, 459 + + Gipsies, 373 + + Girgenti, 329 + + Giurgevo, 170 + + Giurgiu, 170 + + Golden Horn, 98 + + Golfolino of Arno, 240 + + Granada, 407 + + Grand Paradis, 191 + + Gráo de Valencia, 424 + + Grédos, Sierra de, 380 + + Greece, 36 + + Greeks in Turkey, 102, 114, 141, 153 + + Guadalajara, 393 + + Guadalaviar, 415, 417 + + Guadalquivir, 395, 399 + + Guadarrama, 378 + + Guadiana, 395, 383 + + Gubbio, 282 + + Guernica, 447, 453 + + Guetaria, 447, 452 + + Guimarães, 479, 480 + + Guipúzcoa, 446 + + Gythion, 65 + + Hagio Rumeli, 91 + + Helicon, 47 + + Hellenes, 41 + + Hellespont, 105 + + Hercules, Tower of, 459, 463 + + Hermopolis, 74 + + Herzegovina, 127 + + Huelva, 406 + + Hydra, 60 + + Hylice, 51 + + Hymettus, 48 + + Iberia, 369 + + Iberians, 372 + + Ibiza, 425, 427 + + Ile Rousse, 369 + + Illyria, 127 + + Imbro, 96 + + Insua, 479 + + Ionian Isles, 75 + + Iri, 62 + + Ischia, 291 + + Iseo, 200 + + Isker, 132 + + Ismail, 169 + + Italy, 183 + + Ithaca, 78 + + Iviza, 425, 427 + + Jarama, 394 + + Jaizquibel, 439, 445 + + Jerez, 405, 410 + + Júcar, 415, 417 + + Katavothras, 48 + + Kilia, 169 + + Kraguyevatz, 174 + + Kraina, 129 + + Krushevatz, 173 + + Kutzo-Wallachians, 44 + + Laconia, 69 + + La Coruña, 459 + + Lago Maggiore, 198 + + Lagoons of Venice, 202, 207 + + La Mancha, 378, 385, 391 + + Lamego, 478, 481 + + Lamia, 56 + + Larouco, 480 + + Laurium, 48 + + Lebrija, 409 + + Leça, 479 + + Lecco, 308 + + Leghorn, 255 + + Leiria, 489 + + Lemnos, 97 + + Lentini, 316 + + Leon, 377, 387 + + Lepanto, 53 + + Lerida, 435 + + Leucadia, 77 + + Lezirias, 482 + + Liébana, 450 + + Liguria, 230 + + Lima, 475 + + Limans, 161 + + Limia, 475 + + Lináres, 405, 407 + + Lipari, 331 + + Lisbon, 484 + + Livadia, 56 + + Logroño, 439, 448 + + Lorca, 417 + + Loreto, 283 + + Loulé, 495 + + Lucca, 253 + + Lugo, 459 + + Lycæus, 58 + + Maccalubas, 317 + + Macedonia, 98 + + Madrid, 392, 393 + + Maffia, 321 + + Mafra, 488 + + Magra, 254 + + Mainotes, 43 + + Majorca, 425 + + Málaga, 412 + + Malaria, 247 + + Malea, 57 + + Mallorca, 425 + + Malta, 335 + + Malvoisie, 67 + + Mancha Real, 402 + + Manfredonia, 306 + + Mantinea, 61, 62 + + Mantua, 227 + + Marathon, 56 + + Marathonisi, 65 + + Marchena, 409 + + Marches, 257 + + Maremma, 246 + + Mariana, 367, 368 + + Maritza, 136 + + Marmara, Sea of, 104 + + Marsala, 326 + + Matapan, 59 + + Mataró, 437 + + Mattozinhos, 479 + + Medina del Campo, 389 + + Mediterranean, 23 + + Megara, 56 + + Mega-Spileon, 57 + + Menorca, 426 + + Mérida, 391 + + Merinos, 385 + + Messenia, 65, 68 + + Messina, 325 + + Messina, Strait of, 309 + + Meteora, 113 + + Methone, 59 + + Milan, 225 + + Milos, 72 + + Minho, 455, 473 + + Miño, 455 + + Minorca, 426 + + Mirdits, 116, 123 + + Missolonghi, 49, 53 + + Mistra, 68 + + Moldavia, 157 + + Moncayo, 429 + + Monchique, 495 + + Mondego, 473 + + Monjuich, 436 + + Monserrat, 431 + + Monte Cinto, 363 + + Monte Gargano, 287 + + Montemor, 495 + + Montenegro, 179 + + Monte Pellegrino, 316 + + Montepulciano, 253 + + Monte Viso, 189 + + Montieri, 242 + + Montilla, 409 + + Moors in Spain, 372 + + Morava, 127, 173 + + Morea, 56 + + Múrcia, 413, 417–420 + + Mycenæ, 68 + + Naples, 286, 300 + + Narenta, 128 + + Naupactus, 53 + + Navarino, 67 + + Navarra, 439 + + Navas de Tolosa, 395 + + Naxos, 71, 74 + + Nea Kaimeni, 72 + + Negroponte, 71 + + Nemea, 68 + + Nicosia, 326 + + Nish, 143 + + Noya, 459 + + Numancia, 379 + + Numantia, 387 + + Oeiras, 487 + + Okhrida, 116 + + Olite, 448 + + Olivença, 495 + + Olot, 437 + + Olto, 158 + + Olympus, Mount, 110 + + Oporto, 478 + + Orense, 459 + + Orezza, 368 + + Orihuela, 417, 419 + + Orvieto, 282 + + Ostia, 271, 273 + + Osuna, 409 + + Otranto, 306 + + Ovar, 481 + + Oviedo, 459 + + Pæstum, 303 + + Paiz do Vinho, 477 + + Palatine Hill, 277 + + Palencia, 387 + + Palermo, 322 + + Palma, 429 + + Palmanova, 229 + + Pamisus, 63 + + Pantellaria, 334 + + Parnassus, 47 + + Parnes, 47 + + Parnon, 57 + + Paros, 71 + + Patones, 394 + + Patras, 66 + + Pelasgians, 41 + + Peloponnesus, 56 + + Pelorus, 315 + + Peñagache, 473 + + Peñas de Europa, 449 + + Peneus, 64, 113 + + Penha de Cintra, 489 + + Peniche, 483 + + Pentelicus, 47 + + Pergusa, 317 + + Perugia, 263, 282 + + Pesaro, 283 + + Pezo da Régoa, 477 + + Phanar, 102 + + Phenea, 63 + + Pheneus, 60 + + Phigalia, 68 + + Phlegrean Fields, 290 + + Phonia, 60 + + Piave, 191, 205 + + Pietra Mala, 194 + + Pindus, 45, 116 + + Pirnatza, 63 + + Pizzighettone, 360 + + Plasencia, 391 + + Po, River, 210 + + Po, Valley of, 189 + + Pomarão, 495 + + Pompeii, 301 + + Ponte de Lima, 479 + + Pontevedra, 459 + + Pontine Marshes, 267 + + Poros, 69 + + Portalegre, 495 + + Port Mahon, 427 + + Porto, 478 + + Portugal, 469 + + Potenza, 308 + + Pozzuoli, 290 + + Prato, 253 + + Prevesa, 125 + + Prisrend, 125 + + Procida, 291 + + Pruth, 159 + + Puigcerda, 435 + + Pylos, 66 + + Pyrenees, 429 + + Pyrgos, 67 + + Pytiuses, 424, 425 + + Queluz, 488 + + Rascia, 129 + + Ravenna, 228 + + Reggio, 294, 309 + + Reinosa Pass, 454 + + Reni, 169 + + Reno, 208 + + Rhium, 53 + + Rhodope, 135 + + Rias of Galicia, 454 + + Rimini, 222 + + Rioja, 448 + + Rio Tinto, 405 + + Riviera, 230 + + Rocca d’Anfo, 360 + + Rodosto, 108 + + Roman Campagna, 265 + + Rome, 274 + + Ronda, 413 + + Rosas, 437 + + Rota, 405 + + Rumania (Roumania), 155 + + Rumanians, 162 + + Rumili-kavak, 104 + + Ruphia, 63 + + Sado, 492 + + Sagres, 493 + + Saguntum, 423 + + Salamanca, 388, 389 + + Salamis, 56 + + Salerno, 302 + + Saloniki, 109 + + Salpi, 305 + + Salvaterra, 482 + + Samothrace, 96 + + San Fernando, 410 + + Sanlúcar, 400, 410 + + San Marino, 284 + + Santa Maura, 77 + + Santander, 448, 458 + + Santarem, 490 + + Santiago de Compostela, 460 + + Santoña, 458 + + Santorin, 72 + + São João da Foz, 479 + + Saragossa, 434 + + Sarayevo, 130 + + Sarno, 303 + + Sciacca, 330 + + Scutari, 115, 125, 180 + + Scyros, 70 + + Sebino, 200 + + Segovia, 389, 390 + + Segre, 431 + + Segura, 416, 417 + + Serbelloni, 201 + + Serchio, 242, 253 + + Serena, 391 + + Sereth, 159 + + Serra da Estrella, 474 + + Serra de Monchique, 492 + + Serra do Gerez, 474 + + Servia, 172 + + Servians, 119 + + Setúbal, 490 + + Seville, 409 + + Shil, 158 + + Sicily, 309 + + Sierra Morena, 395 + + Sierra Nevada, 396 + + Sil, 455 + + Silves, 495 + + Sobrarbe, 430 + + Sofia, 143 + + Soria, 387 + + Spain, 369 + + Spaniards, 373 + + Sparta, 68 + + Spartans, 65 + + Sperchius, 50 + + Spezia, 69, 237 + + Sphakiotes, 92 + + Spoleto, 282 + + Sporades, 70 + + St. Florent, 369 + + Stromboli, 333 + + Strymon, 136 + + St. Sebastian, 446 + + Stymphalus, 61 + + St. Yuste, 381 + + Styx, 57 + + Sulina, 138 + + Suliotes, 119 + + Sybaris, 308 + + Syra, 74 + + Syracuse, 327 + + Tafalla, 447 + + Tagliamento, 191, 205 + + Tagus, see Tajo and Tejo + + Tajo, 383, 482 + + Talavera de la Reina, 391 + + Taranto, 307 + + Tarragona, 436 + + Tavira, 495 + + Tavogliere of Puglia, 286, 299 + + Taygetus, 58 + + Tejo, 482 + + Tempe, 111 + + Terni, 270, 282 + + Tharsis, 405 + + Thasos, 94 + + Thebes, 56 + + Thera, 72 + + Therapia, 103 + + Thermia, 71 + + Thermopylæ, 50 + + Thessaly, 98, 111 + + Thomar, 489 + + Thracia, 98 + + Tiber, 257, 268 + + Tierra de Campos, 385 + + Tirgovist, 170 + + Tirnova, 133 + + Tivoli, 271 + + Toledo, 390, 393 + + Tolosa, 447 + + Topino, 269 + + Torres Vedras, 483 + + Tortosa, 435 + + Trajan’s Wall, 161 + + Trani, 306 + + Transylvanian Alps, 157 + + Trapani, 326 + + Trasimeno, 264 + + Trichonis, 48 + + Tripolis, 66 + + Tripolitza, 66 + + Trujillo, 391 + + Tudela, 448 + + Turin, 224 + + Turkey in Europe, 87 + + Turkish Empire, 151 + + Turks, 147 + + Turnu Severinu, 170 + + Tuscans, 248 + + Tuscany, 239 + + Tuy, 459 + + Tyrrhenian Sea, 248 + + Ubeda, 407 + + Urbino, 283 + + Utrera, 409 + + Valdeon, 450 + + Valdoniello, 366 + + Valencia, 413, 419, 422 + + Valladolid, 388 + + Vardar, 135 + + Vendetta, 367 + + Venice, 202, 207, 229 + + Verbano, 197 + + Vergara, 447 + + Verona, 229 + + Vesuvius, 288, 291 + + Vianna do Castello, 479 + + Vigo, 459 + + Vilkof, 169 + + Villa do Conde, 479 + + Villanova de Portimão, 494 + + Villa Real, 480 + + Villa Real de Santo Antonio, 495 + + Vitosh, 132 + + Vizéu, 481 + + Vostitza, 67 + + Vóuga, 476 + + Vulcano, 332 + + Wallachians, 120, 162 + + Yalomitza, 161 + + Yanina, 116, 125 + + Yassy, 168 + + Yuruks, 107 + + Zamora, 388 + + Zante, 79 + + Zaragoza, 434 + + Zezere, 482 + + Zinzares, 114, 119 + + Zyria, 57 + +END OF VOL. I. + + + + +TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE + +Original spelling and grammar have generally been retained, with some +exceptions noted below. Footnotes have been converted to endnotes, +inserted ahead of the Index, and renumbered 1–185. Original printed +page numbers are shown like this: {52}. Original small caps are now +uppercase. Italics look _like this_. Enlarged curly brackets } or { +used as graphic devices to combine information on two or more lines +of text have been eliminated. Ditto marks have been eliminated. The +transcriber produced the cover image and hereby assigns it to the +public domain. Illustrations originally printed within paragraphs +of text have been moved to nearby locations between paragraphs. +Original page images are available from archive.org — search for +“earthitsinhabita01recl”. + +Page 5. There are two pages numbered 5, which are the last page of +the Introductory Remarks—the latter is now {5a}—and the first page of +Chapter I. + +Page 86. The number 44,557 at the end of the table was not printed +clearly, and so could be erroneous in this edition. + +Page 93, Fig. 29. “1 : 2 470,000” to “1 : 2,470,000”. + +Page 104n. The note beginning “Length of the Bosphorus” had no anchor +in the text. A new one has been placed on page 103, after “shores of +Europe and Asia.” + +Page 152n. In the table, the row headings in the left columns were +indented in the printed book in an unhelpful fashion. Of the three +rows headed “Turkey in Europe”, “Turkey in Asia”, and “Tripoli, &c.”, +the first represents the sum of the rows above, while the next two are +independent, but all three were indented the same. In this edition, the +row heading indents have been modified to more helpfully reflect the +structure of the table. + +Page 166n. Changed the phrase “52,500 foreigners 30,000 Austrians, +10,000 Greeks, 5,000 Germans, 1,500 French)” to “52,500 foreigners +(30,000 Austrians, 10,000 Greeks, 5,000 Germans, 1,500 French)”. + +Page 223. “Quadilateral” to “Quadrilateral”. + +Page 238n. “Chiavari, 8 414” to “Chiavari, 8,414”. + +Page 280n. The number printed for the water supply of Washington, per +inhabitant, is not clear, but might be 660, as rendered herein. + +Page 283n. “foriegn” to “foreign”. + +Page 284n. “Pesaro, 12, 75;”, where the blank shown here was not quite +blank in the print, is changed to “Pesaro, 12,375;”, on weak evidence. + +Page 352n. “Cagliari, 31,9 5” is retained from the printed book. + +Page 470, Fig. 191. In the caption, the name rendered herein as +“Jelinek” was not printed clearly. + +Page 491, Fig. 203. In the caption, “THOMAH” to “THOMAR”. + +Page 500. In the second table, the number “47·223” means forty-seven +thousand two hundred twenty-three. This may be the only instance in +this book of a middle dot used as a digit grouper, instead of a decimal +mark. + + + + + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Earth and its inhabitants, Volume +1: Europe., by Élisée Reclus + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EARTH AND ITS INHABITANTS--EUROPE *** + +***** This file should be named 54760-0.txt or 54760-0.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/5/4/7/6/54760/ + +Produced by Josep Cols Canals, RichardW, and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This +file was produced from images generously made available +by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.) + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will +be renamed. + +Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright +law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works, +so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United +States without permission and without paying copyright +royalties. 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You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of +the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at +www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have +to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. + +Title: The Earth and its inhabitants, Volume 1: Europe. + Greece, Turkey in Europe, Rumania, Servia, Montenegro, + Italy, Spain, and Portugal. + +Author: Élisée Reclus + +Editor: E.G. Ravenstein + +Release Date: May 22, 2017 [EBook #54760] + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: UTF-8 + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EARTH AND ITS INHABITANTS--EUROPE *** + + + + +Produced by Josep Cols Canals, RichardW, and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This +file was produced from images generously made available +by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.) + + + + + + +</pre> + + +<div class="dctr03"> +<img id="coverpage" + src="images/cover.jpg" width="600" height="798" alt="" /></div> + +<div class="dfront"> +<h1 class="h1herein fsz5">THE + <span class="spblk">EARTH AND ITS INHABITANTS.</span> + <span class="spblk fsz1">EUROPE.</span></h1> + +<div class="fsz5 padtopa"><span class="spblk fsz8">BY</span> + ÉLISÉE RECLUS.</div> + +<div class="fsz6 padtopa"><span class="spblk fsz8">EDITED BY</span> + E. G. RAVENSTEIN, F.R.G.S., F.S.S., + <span class="smcap">E<b>TC.</b></span></div> + +<div class="fsz6 padtopa">VOL. I.</div> + +<p class="pfirst fsz6">GREECE, TURKEY +IN EUROPE, RUMANIA, SERVIA, MONTENEGRO, +ITALY, SPAIN, AND PORTUGAL.</p> + +<div class="dctr06"> +<img src="images/ititle.png" width="528" height="268" alt="" /> +</div> + +<div class="fsz7"><i>ILLUSTRATED BY NUMEROUS ENGRAVINGS AND MAPS.</i></div> + +<div class="fsz6 padtopa"> +<span class="spblk">NEW YORK:</span> +<span class="spblk">D. APPLETON AND COMPANY,</span> +<span class="spblk fsz6">1, 3, AND 5 BOND STREET.</span> +<span class="spblk">1883.</span></div> +</div><!--dfront--> + +<div class="chapter"> +<div class="dctr01"> +<img src="images/ia003.jpg" width="600" height="120" alt="" /> +</div> + +<h2 class="h2herein" title="Contents.">CONTENTS. +<span class="sphr"><img class="ihra" src="images/hr-ia011.png" + width="281" height="20" alt="" /></span></h2></div> + +<ul id="ulcontents" class="boralldk"> +<li class="borall">Introductory Remarks . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p001" title="go to p. 1">1</a></li> + +<li class="borall">EUROPE. +<ul> +<li><span class="spromnum">I.</span> + Geographical Importance . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p005" title="go to p. 5">5</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">II.</span> + Extent and Boundaries . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p006" title="go to p. 6">6</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">III.</span> + Natural Divisions and Mountains . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p009" title="go to p. 9">9</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">IV.</span> + The Maritime Regions . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p013" title="go to p. 13">13</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">V.</span> + Climate . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p016" title="go to p. 16">16</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">VI.</span> + Inhabitants . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p018" title="go to p. 18">18</a></li></ul></li> + +<li class="borall">THE MEDITERRANEAN. +<ul> +<li><span class="spromnum">I.</span> + Hydrology . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p023" title="go to p. 23">23</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">II.</span> + Animal Life, Fisheries, and Salt-pans . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p028" title="go to p. 28">28</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">III.</span> + Commerce and Navigation . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p031" title="go to p. 31">31</a></li></ul></li> + +<li class="borall">GREECE. +<ul> +<li><span class="spromnum">I.</span> + General Aspects . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p036" title="go to p. 36">36</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">II.</span> + Continental Greece . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p045" title="go to p. 45">45</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">III.</span> + The Morea, or Peloponnesus . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p056" title="go to p. 56">56</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">IV.</span> + The Islands of the Ægean Sea . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p069" title="go to p. 69">69</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">V.</span> + The Ionian Isles . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p075" title="go to p. 75">75</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">VI.</span> + The Present and Future of Greece . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p080" title="go to p. 80">80</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">VII.</span> + Government and Political Divisions . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p085" title="go to p. 85">85</a></li></ul></li> + +<li class="borall">TURKEY IN EUROPE. +<ul> +<li><span class="spromnum">I.</span> + General Aspects . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p087" title="go to p. 87">87</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">II.</span> + Crete and the Islands of the Archipelago . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p090" title="go to p. 90">90</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">III.</span> + Turkey of the Greeks (Thracia, Macedonia, and Thessaly) . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p098" title="go to p. 98">98</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">IV.</span> + Albania and Epirus . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p115" title="go to p. 115">115</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">V.</span> + The Illyrian Alps, Bosnia, and Herzegovina . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p126" title="go to p. 126">126</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">VI.</span> + Bulgaria . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p131" title="go to p. 131">131</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">VII.</span> + Present Position and Prospects of Turkey . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p145" title="go to p. 145">145</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">VIII.</span> + Government and Administration . . . 150 +<ul> +<li>Treaties of San Stefano and Berlin . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p153" title="go to p. 153">153</a></li></ul></li> +<li>RUMANIA . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p155" title="go to p. 155">155</a></li></ul></li> + +<li class="borall">SERVIA AND MONTENEGRO. +<ul> +<li><span class="spromnum">I.</span> + Servia . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p172" title="go to p. 172">172</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">II.</span> + Montenegro . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p179" title="go to p. 179">179</a></li></ul></li> + +<li class="borall">ITALY. +<ul> +<li><span class="spromnum">I.</span> + General Aspects . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p183" title="go to p. 183">183</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">II.</span> + The Basin of the Po: Piemont, Lombardy, Venetia, and Emilia . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p189" title="go to p. 189">189</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">III.</span> + Liguria and the Riviera of Genoa . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p230" title="go to p. 230">230</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">IV.</span> + Tuscany . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p239" title="go to p. 239">239</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">V.</span> + The Roman Apennines, the Valley of the Tiber, the Marches, and the Abruzzos . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p257" title="go to p. 257">257</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">VI.</span> + Southern Italy: Naples . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p286" title="go to p. 286">286</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">VII.</span> + Sicily . . . 309 +<ul> +<li>The Æolian or Liparic Islands . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p331" title="go to p. 331">331</a></li> +<li>The Ægadian Islands . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p334" title="go to p. 334">334</a></li> +<li>Malta and Gozzo . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p335" title="go to p. 335">335</a></li></ul></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">VIII.</span> + Sardinia . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p338" title="go to p. 338">338</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">IX.</span> + The Present and Future of Italy . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p352" title="go to p. 352">352</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">X.</span> + Government and Administration . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p358" title="go to p. 358">358</a></li> +<li>CORSICA . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p363" title="go to p. 363">363</a></li></ul></li> + +<li class="borall">SPAIN. +<ul> +<li><span class="spromnum">I.</span> + General Aspects . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p370" title="go to p. 370">370</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">II.</span> + The Castiles, Leon, and Estremadura . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p377" title="go to p. 377">377</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">III.</span> + Andalusia . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p394" title="go to p. 394">394</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">IV.</span> + The Mediterranean Slope: Murcia and Valencia . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p414" title="go to p. 414">414</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">V.</span> + The Balearic Islands . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p423" title="go to p. 423">423</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">VI.</span> + The Valley of the Ebro: Aragon and Catalonia . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p427" title="go to p. 427">427</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">VII.</span> + Basque Provinces, Navarra, and Logroño . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p439" title="go to p. 439">439</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">VIII.</span> + Santander, the Asturias, and Galicia . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p448" title="go to p. 448">448</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">IX.</span> + The Present and Future of Spain . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p460" title="go to p. 460">460</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">X.</span> + Government and Administration . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p465" title="go to p. 465">465</a></li></ul></li> + +<li class="borall">PORTUGAL. +<ul> +<li><span class="spromnum">I.</span> + General Aspects . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p469" title="go to p. 469">469</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">II.</span> + Northern Portugal: the Valleys of the Minho, Douro, and Mondego . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p473" title="go to p. 473">473</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">III.</span> + The Valley of the Tagus . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p482" title="go to p. 482">482</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">IV.</span> + Southern Portugal: Alentejo and Algarve . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p490" title="go to p. 490">490</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">V.</span> + The Present and Future of Portugal . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p496" title="go to p. 496">496</a></li> +<li><span class="spromnum">VI.</span> + Government and Administration . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p498" title="go to p. 498">498</a></li></ul></li> + +<li class="borall">INDEX . . . <a class="atoc" + href="#p501" title="go to p. 501">501</a></li></ul> + +<div class="chapter"> +<div class="dctr01"> +<img src="images/ia005.jpg" width="600" height="116" alt="" /> +</div> + +<h2 class="h2herein" title="List of Illustrations.">LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS. + <span class="sphr"><img class="ihra" src="images/hr-ia013.png" + width="248" height="27" alt="" /></span></h2></div> + +<ul id="ulillos" class="boralldk"> +<li class="borall">MAPS PRINTED IN COLOURS. +<ul> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#map1" title="go to map 1">1.</a> + Ethnographical Map of Europe . . . 18</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#map2" title="go to map 2">2.</a> + Turkey-in-Europe and Greece . . . 85</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#map3" title="go to map 3">3.</a> + The Bosphorus and Constantinople . . . 98</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#map4" title="go to map 4">4.</a> + Ethnographical Map of Turkey . . . 148</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#map5" title="go to map 5">5.</a> + Italy . . . 183</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#map6" title="go to map 6">6.</a> + The Delta of the Po . . . 210</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#map7" title="go to map 7">7.</a> + The Bay of Naples . . . 288</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#map8" title="go to map 8">8.</a> + Spain and Portugal . . . 365</li> +</ul></li> + +<li class="borall">PLATES. +<ul> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt01" title="go to plate 01">01.</a> + Peasants from the Environs of Athens . . . <i>To face page</i> . . . 53</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt02" title="go to plate 02">02.</a> + Constantinople and the Golden Horn, from the Heights of Eyub . . . 99</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt03" title="go to plate 03">03.</a> + Albanians . . . 118</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt04" title="go to plate 04">04.</a> + Wealthy Arnauts . . . 124</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt05" title="go to plate 05">05.</a> + Turkish Muleteers in the Herzegovina . . . 127</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt06" title="go to plate 06">06.</a> + Tirnova . . . 133</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt07" title="go to plate 07">07.</a> + Bulgarians . . . 138</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt08" title="go to plate 08">08.</a> + Mussulman of Adrianople, and Mussulman Lady of Prisrend . . . 147</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt09" title="go to plate 09">09.</a> + Wallachians (Valakhs) . . . 162</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt10" title="go to plate 10">10.</a> + Belgrade . . . 174</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt11" title="go to plate 11">11.</a> + The Pennine Alps, as seen from the Becca di Nona (Pic Carrel), 10,380 feet . . . 195</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt12" title="go to plate 12">12.</a> + Venice . . . 207</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt13" title="go to plate 13">13.</a> + The Palace at Ferrara . . . 228</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt14" title="go to plate 14">14.</a> + Verona . . . 229</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt15" title="go to plate 15">15.</a> + Peasants of the Abruzzos . . . 258</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt16" title="go to plate 16">16.</a> + Naples . . . 300</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt17" title="go to plate 17">17.</a> + Capri, seen from Massa Lubrense . . . 302</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt18" title="go to plate 18">18.</a> + Amalfi . . . 304</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt19" title="go to plate 19">19.</a> + La Valetta, Malta . . . 337</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt20" title="go to plate 20">20.</a> + Peasants of Toledo, Castile . . . 390</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt21" title="go to plate 21">21.</a> + Roman Bridge at Alcántara . . . 391</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt22" title="go to plate 22">22.</a> + Gorge de los Gaitanes, Defile of Guadalhorce . . . 399</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt23" title="go to plate 23">23.</a> + Peasants of Córdova, Andalusia . . . 406</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt24" title="go to plate 24">24.</a> + Gibraltar, as seen from the “Lines” . . . 414</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt25" title="go to plate 25">25.</a> + Peasants of La Huerta, and Cigarrera of Valencia . . . 419</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt26" title="go to plate 26">26.</a> + Women of Ibiza, Balearic Isles . . . 425</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt27" title="go to plate 27">27.</a> + Monserrat, Catalonia . . . 431</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt28" title="go to plate 28">28.</a> + Barcelona, seen from the Castle of Monjuich . . . 437</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt29" title="go to plate 29">29.</a> + Gorges of Pancorbo . . . 440</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt30" title="go to plate 30">30.</a> + Los Pasages . . . 447</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt31" title="go to plate 31">31.</a> + Oporto . . . 478</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#plt32" title="go to plate 32">32.</a> + Lisbon . . . 484</li></ul></li> + +<li class="borall">ILLUSTRATIONS IN TEXT. +<ul> +<li class="borall">EUROPE. +<ul> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg001" title="go to fig. 1">1.</a> + The Natural Boundary of Europe . . . 7</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg002" title="go to fig. 2">2.</a> + The Relief of Europe . . . 8</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg003" title="go to fig. 3">3.</a> + Development of Coast-lines relatively to Area . . . 14</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg004" title="go to fig. 4">4.</a> + The Isothermal Zone of Europe . . . 17</li></ul></li> + +<li class="borall">THE MEDITERRANEAN. +<ul> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg005" title="go to fig. 5">5.</a> + The Depth of the Mediterranean . . . 24</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg006" title="go to fig. 6">6.</a> + The Strait of Gibraltar . . . 26</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg007" title="go to fig. 7">7.</a> + Principal Fisheries of the Mediterranean . . . 30</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg008" title="go to fig. 8">8.</a> + Steamer Routes and Telegraphs . . . 34</li></ul></li> + +<li class="borall">GREECE. +<ul> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg009" title="go to fig. 9">9.</a> + <span class="smcap">M<b>AINOTE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>PARTAN</b></span> + . . . 42</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg010" title="go to fig. 10">10.</a> + Foreign Elements in the Population of Greece . . . 44</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg011" title="go to fig. 11">11.</a> + <span class="smcap">M<b>OUNT</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ARNASSUS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">D<b>ELPHI</b></span> + . . . 46</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg012" title="go to fig. 12">12.</a> + Lower Acarnania . . . 49</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg013" title="go to fig. 13">13.</a> + Thermopylæ . . . 50</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg014" title="go to fig. 14">14.</a> + Lake Copais . . . 52</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg015" title="go to fig. 15">15.</a> + <span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>CROPOLIS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>THENS</b></span> + . . . 54</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg016" title="go to fig. 16">16.</a> + Athens and its Long Walls . . . 55</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg017" title="go to fig. 17">17.</a> + Ancient Athens . . . 56</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg018" title="go to fig. 18">18.</a> + <span class="smcap">M<b>OUNT</b></span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>AYGETUS</b></span> + . . . 58</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg019" title="go to fig. 19">19.</a> + Lakes Phenea and Stymphalus . . . 60</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg020" title="go to fig. 20">20.</a> + The Plateau of Mantinea . . . 62</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg021" title="go to fig. 21">21.</a> + Bifurcation of the Gastuni . . . 63</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg022" title="go to fig. 22">22.</a> + The Valley of the Eurotas . . . 67</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg023" title="go to fig. 23">23.</a> + Euripus and Chalcis . . . 70</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg024" title="go to fig. 24">24.</a> + Nea Kaimeni . . . 72</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg025" title="go to fig. 25">25.</a> + <span class="smcap">C<b>ORFU</b></span> + . . . 76</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg026" title="go to fig. 26">26.</a> + The Channel of Santa Maura . . . 77</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg027" title="go to fig. 27">27.</a> + Argostoli . . . 79</li></ul></li> + +<li class="borall">TURKEY IN EUROPE. +<ul> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg028" title="go to fig. 28">28.</a> + <span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>ORGE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">H<b>AGIO</b></span> + <span class="smcap">R<b>UMELI</b></span> + . . . 91</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg029" title="go to fig. 29">29.</a> + Crete, or Candia . . . 93</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg030" title="go to fig. 30">30.</a> + The Ægean Sea . . . 95</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg031" title="go to fig. 31">31.</a> + Geological Map of the Peninsula of Constantinople . . . 99</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg032" title="go to fig. 32">32.</a> + The Hellespont, or Dardanelles . . . 105</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg033" title="go to fig. 33">33.</a> + Mount Athos . . . 108</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg034" title="go to fig. 34">34.</a> + <span class="smcap">M<b>OUNT</b></span> + <span class="smcap">O<b>LYMPUS</b></span> + . . . 110</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg035" title="go to fig. 35">35.</a> + Mount Olympus and the Valley of Tempe . . . 111</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg036" title="go to fig. 36">36.</a> + Southern Epirus . . . 117</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg037" title="go to fig. 37">37.</a> + Subterranean Beds of the Affluents of the Narenta . . . 128</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg038" title="go to fig. 38">38.</a> + Mount Vitosh . . . 132</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg039" title="go to fig. 39">39.</a> + Delta of the Danube . . . 137</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg040" title="go to fig. 40">40.</a> + Comparative Discharge of the Mouths of the Danube . . . 138</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg041" title="go to fig. 41">41.</a> + Commercial Highways converging upon Constantinople . . . 150</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg042" title="go to fig. 42">42.</a> + The Turkish Empire . . . 151</li></ul></li> + +<li class="borall">RUMANIA. +<ul> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg043" title="go to fig. 43">43.</a> + The Rumanians . . . 156</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg044" title="go to fig. 44">44.</a> + The Rivers Shil and Olto . . . 158</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg045" title="go to fig. 45">45.</a> + The Danube and Yalomitza . . . 161</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg046" title="go to fig. 46">46.</a> + Ethnological Map of Moldavian Bessarabia . . . 164</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg047" title="go to fig. 47">47.</a> + <span class="smcap">B<b>UCHAREST</b></span> + . . . 169</li></ul></li> + +<li class="borall">SERVIA AND MONTENEGRO. +<ul> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg048" title="go to fig. 48">48.</a> + Confluence of the Danube and Save . . . 174</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg049" title="go to fig. 49">49.</a> + Montenegro and the Lake of Skodra . . . 180</li></ul></li> + +<li class="borall">ITALY. +<ul> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg050" title="go to fig. 50">50.</a> + Rome and the Roman Empire . . . 186</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg051" title="go to fig. 51">51.</a> + <span class="smcap">M<b>ONTE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>ISO</b></span> + . . . 189</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg052" title="go to fig. 52">52.</a> + Grand Paradis . . . 191</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg053" title="go to fig. 53">53.</a> + Plain of Débris between the Alps and Apennines . . . 192</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg054" title="go to fig. 54">54.</a> + Slope of the Valley of the Po . . . 193</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg055" title="go to fig. 55">55.</a> + Mud Volcanoes of the Northern Apennines . . . 194</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg056" title="go to fig. 56">56.</a> + Ancient Glaciers of the Alps . . . 195</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg057" title="go to fig. 57">57.</a> + Serra of Ivrea and Ancient Glacier Lakes of the Dora . . . 196</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg058" title="go to fig. 58">58.</a> + Ancient Lakes of Verbano . . . 197</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg059" title="go to fig. 59">59.</a> + Lake Como . . . 198</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg060" title="go to fig. 60">60</a>–62. + Sections of Lake Como . . . 199</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg063" title="go to fig. 63">63.</a> + <span class="smcap">V<b>ILLA</b></span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>ERBELLONI</b></span> + . . . 201</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg064" title="go to fig. 64">64.</a> + Beech and Pine Woods of Ravenna . . . 203</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg065" title="go to fig. 65">65.</a> + Shingle Beds of the Tagliamento, &c. . . . 205</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg066" title="go to fig. 66">66.</a> + Old Bed of the Piave . . . 206</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg067" title="go to fig. 67">67.</a> + Lagoons of Venice . . . 207</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg068" title="go to fig. 68">68.</a> + Colonies of the Roman Veterans . . . 209</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg069" title="go to fig. 69">69.</a> + The Po between Piacenza and Cremona . . . 211</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg070" title="go to fig. 70">70.</a> + German Communes of Northern Italy . . . 216</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg071" title="go to fig. 71">71.</a> + <span class="smcap">M<b>ONTE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">R<b>OSA</b></span> + . . . 217</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg072" title="go to fig. 72">72.</a> + The Lagoons of Comacchio . . . 220</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg073" title="go to fig. 73">73.</a> + The Fisheries of Comacchio . . . 221</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg074" title="go to fig. 74">74.</a> + Mouth of the Adige Valley . . . 223</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg075" title="go to fig. 75">75.</a> + The Passages over the Alps . . . 224</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg076" title="go to fig. 76">76.</a> + The Lakes and Canals of Mantua . . . 227</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg077" title="go to fig. 77">77.</a> + Palmanova . . . 229</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg078" title="go to fig. 78">78.</a> + Junction of the Alps and Apennines . . . 231</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg079" title="go to fig. 79">79.</a> + Genoa and its Suburbs . . . 234</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg080" title="go to fig. 80">80.</a> + <span class="smcap">G<b>ENOA</b></span> + . . . 235</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg081" title="go to fig. 81">81.</a> + The Gulf of Spezia . . . 237</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg082" title="go to fig. 82">82.</a> + <span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>OLFOLINO</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>RNO</b></span> + . . . 240</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg083" title="go to fig. 83">83.</a> + Defiles of the Arno . . . 241</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg084" title="go to fig. 84">84.</a> + Monte Argentaro . . . 243</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg085" title="go to fig. 85">85.</a> + Val di Chiana . . . 244</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg086" title="go to fig. 86">86.</a> + The Lake of Bientina . . . 245</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg087" title="go to fig. 87">87.</a> + The Malarial Regions . . . 247</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg088" title="go to fig. 88">88.</a> + <span class="smcap">F<b>LORENCE</b></span> + . . . 252</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg089" title="go to fig. 89">89.</a> + The Harbour of Leghorn . . . 255</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg090" title="go to fig. 90">90.</a> + The Lake of Bolsena . . . 260</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg091" title="go to fig. 91">91.</a> + La Montagna d’Albano . . . 261</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg092" title="go to fig. 92">92.</a> + Ancient Lake of Fucino . . . 263</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg093" title="go to fig. 93">93.</a> + Lake of Trasimeno . . . 264</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg094" title="go to fig. 94">94.</a> + <span class="smcap">C<b>AMPAGNA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">R<b>OME</b></span> + . . . 265</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg095" title="go to fig. 95">95.</a> + Pontine Marshes . . . 267</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg096" title="go to fig. 96">96.</a> + Ancient Lakes of the Tiber and Topino . . . 269</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg097" title="go to fig. 97">97.</a> + <span class="smcap">C<b>ASCADES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>ERNI</b></span> + . . . 270</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg098" title="go to fig. 98">98.</a> + The Delta of the Tiber . . . 271</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg099" title="go to fig. 99">99.</a> + <span class="smcap">P<b>EASANTS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">R<b>OMAN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>AMPAGNA</b></span> + . . . 272</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg100" title="go to fig. 100">100.</a> + <span class="smcap">R<b>OME</b></span> + . . . 276</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg101" title="go to fig. 101">101.</a> + The Hills of Rome . . . 278</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg102" title="go to fig. 102">102.</a> + Civita Vecchia . . . 281</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg103" title="go to fig. 103">103.</a> + Valleys of Erosion on the Western Slope of the Apennines . . . 283</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg104" title="go to fig. 104">104.</a> + Rimini and San Marino . . . 285</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg105" title="go to fig. 105">105.</a> + Monte Gargano . . . 287</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg106" title="go to fig. 106">106.</a> + Ashes of the Campania . . . 289</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg107" title="go to fig. 107">107.</a> + <span class="smcap">E<b>RUPTION</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>OUNT</b></span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>ESUVIUS</b></span> + . . . 292</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg108" title="go to fig. 108">108.</a> + Educational Map of Italy . . . 297</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg109" title="go to fig. 109">109.</a> + Pompeii . . . 301</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg110" title="go to fig. 110">110.</a> + The Marshes of Salpi . . . 305</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg111" title="go to fig. 111">111.</a> + Harbour of Brindisi in 1871 . . . 307</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg112" title="go to fig. 112">112.</a> + Harbour of Taranto . . . 308</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg113" title="go to fig. 113">113.</a> + Strait of Messina . . . 310</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg114" title="go to fig. 114">114.</a> + Profile of Mount Etna . . . 311</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg115" title="go to fig. 115">115.</a> + Lava Stream of Catania . . . 313</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg116" title="go to fig. 116">116.</a> + Subsidiary Cones of Mount Etna . . . 314</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg117" title="go to fig. 117">117.</a> + The Maccalubas and Girgenti . . . 317</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg118" title="go to fig. 118">118.</a> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ALERMO</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>ONTE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ELLEGRINO</b></span> + . . . 324</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg119" title="go to fig. 119">119.</a> + Trapani and Marsala . . . 326</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg120" title="go to fig. 120">120.</a> + Syracuse . . . 328</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg121" title="go to fig. 121">121.</a> + <span class="smcap">T<b>EMPLE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>ONCORD</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AT</span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>IRGENTI</b></span> + . . . 329</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg122" title="go to fig. 122">122.</a> + The Central Portion of the Æolian Islands . . . 332</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg123" title="go to fig. 123">123.</a> + The Mediterranean to the South of Sicily . . . 334</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg124" title="go to fig. 124">124.</a> + The Port of Malta . . . 336</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg125" title="go to fig. 125">125.</a> + The Sea to the South of Sardinia . . . 339</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg126" title="go to fig. 126">126.</a> + Strait of Bonifacio . . . 340</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg127" title="go to fig. 127">127.</a> + La Giara . . . 345</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg128" title="go to fig. 128">128.</a> + District of Iglesias . . . 348</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg129" title="go to fig. 129">129.</a> + <span class="smcap">C<b>AGLIARI</b></span> + . . . 350</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg130" title="go to fig. 130">130.</a> + Port of Terranova . . . 351</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg131" title="go to fig. 131">131.</a> + Navigation of Italy . . . 355</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg132" title="go to fig. 132">132.</a> + Commercial Routes of Italy . . . 356</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg133" title="go to fig. 133">133.</a> + Submarine Plateau between Corsica and Tuscany . . . 364</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg134" title="go to fig. 134">134.</a> + Profile of the Road from Ajaccio to Bastia . . . 365</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg135" title="go to fig. 135">135.</a> + <span class="smcap">B<b>ASTIA</b></span> + . . . 368</li></ul></li> + +<li class="borall">SPAIN. +<ul> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg136" title="go to fig. 136">136.</a> + Table-lands of Iberian Peninsula . . . 371</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg137" title="go to fig. 137">137.</a> + Dehesas near Madrid . . . 375</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg138" title="go to fig. 138">138.</a> + Density of Population . . . 376</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg139" title="go to fig. 139">139.</a> + Profile of Railway from Bayonne to Cádiz . . . 379</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg140" title="go to fig. 140">140.</a> + Sierras de Grédos and de Gata . . . 380</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg141" title="go to fig. 141">141.</a> + <span class="smcap">D<b>EFILE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>AJO</b></span> + . . . 382</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg142" title="go to fig. 142">142.</a> + Steppes of New Castile . . . 384</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg143" title="go to fig. 143">143.</a> + Salamanca . . . 388</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg144" title="go to fig. 144">144.</a> + <span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>LCAZAR</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>EGOVIA</b></span> + . . . 389</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg145" title="go to fig. 145">145.</a> + <span class="smcap">T<b>OLEDO</b></span> + . . . 390</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg146" title="go to fig. 146">146.</a> + Madrid and its Environs . . . 392</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg147" title="go to fig. 147">147.</a> + Aranjuez . . . 394</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg148" title="go to fig. 148">148.</a> + Basins of the Guadiana and Guadalquivir . . . 395</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg149" title="go to fig. 149">149.</a> + <span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ASS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">D<b>ESPEÑAPERROS</b></span> + . . . 396</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg150" title="go to fig. 150">150.</a> + <span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>IERRA</b></span> + <span class="smcap">N<b>EVADA</b></span> + . . . 397</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg151" title="go to fig. 151">151.</a> + The Mouth of the Guadalquivir . . . 399</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg152" title="go to fig. 152">152.</a> + The Steppes of Ecija . . . 402</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg153" title="go to fig. 153">153.</a> + Zones of Vegetation on the Coast of Andalusia . . . 403</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg154" title="go to fig. 154">154.</a> + The Mines of Huelva . . . 406</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg155" title="go to fig. 155">155.</a> + <span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>LHAMBRA</b></span> + . . . 408</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg156" title="go to fig. 156">156.</a> + Cádiz and its Roadstead . . . 411</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg157" title="go to fig. 157">157.</a> + Gibraltar . . . 413</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg158" title="go to fig. 158">158.</a> + Steppes of Múrcia . . . 416</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg159" title="go to fig. 159">159.</a> + <span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ALM</b></span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>ROVE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>LCHE</b></span> + . . . 418</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg160" title="go to fig. 160">160.</a> + The Palm Grove of Elche and the Huertas of Orihuela . . . 419</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg161" title="go to fig. 161">161.</a> + <span class="smcap">R<b>UINS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">D<b>YKE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">ABOVE</span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>ORCA</b></span> + . . . 420</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg162" title="go to fig. 162">162.</a> + <span class="smcap">P<b>EASANTS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>URCIA</b></span> + . . . 421</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg163" title="go to fig. 163">163.</a> + The Harbour of Cartagena . . . 423</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg164" title="go to fig. 164">164.</a> + The Gráo de Valencia . . . 424</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg165" title="go to fig. 165">165.</a> + The Balearic Islands . . . 426</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg166" title="go to fig. 166">166.</a> + <span class="smcap">V<b>IEW</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">I<b>BIZA</b></span> + . . . 427</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg167" title="go to fig. 167">167.</a> + The Pytiuses . . . 428</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg168" title="go to fig. 168">168.</a> + Port Mahon . . . 430</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg169" title="go to fig. 169">169.</a> + The Delta of the Ebro . . . 435</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg170" title="go to fig. 170">170.</a> + The Steppes of Aragon . . . 436</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg171" title="go to fig. 171">171.</a> + The Environs of Barcelona . . . 440</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg172" title="go to fig. 172">172.</a> + The Sand-banks of Mataró . . . 441</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg173" title="go to fig. 173">173.</a> + Andorra . . . 443</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg174" title="go to fig. 174">174.</a> + Jaizquibel . . . 445</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg175" title="go to fig. 175">175.</a> + Azcoitia and Azpeitia . . . 447</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg176" title="go to fig. 176">176.</a> + The Environs of Bilbao . . . 449</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg177" title="go to fig. 177">177.</a> + St. Sebastian . . . 450</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg178" title="go to fig. 178">178.</a> + <span class="smcap">S<b>T.</b></span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>EBASTIAN</b></span> + . . . 451</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg179" title="go to fig. 179">179.</a> + Guetaria . . . 452</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg180" title="go to fig. 180">180.</a> + Guernica . . . 453</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg181" title="go to fig. 181">181.</a> + Pass of Reinosa . . . 454</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg182" title="go to fig. 182">182.</a> + Peñas de Europa . . . 456</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg183" title="go to fig. 183">183.</a> + Rias of La Coruña and Ferrol . . . 458</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg184" title="go to fig. 184">184.</a> + Santoña and Santander . . . 460</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg185" title="go to fig. 185">185.</a> + Oviedo and Gijon . . . 462</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg186" title="go to fig. 186">186.</a> + <span class="smcap">T<b>OWER</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">H<b>ERCULES</b></span> + . . . 463</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg187" title="go to fig. 187">187.</a> + Ria de Vigo . . . 464</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg188" title="go to fig. 188">188.</a> + Railroads of the Iberian Peninsula . . . 465</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg189" title="go to fig. 189">189.</a> + Foreign Commerce of the Iberian Peninsula . . . 466</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg190" title="go to fig. 190">190.</a> + Diagram exhibiting the Extent of the Castilian Language . . . 467</li></ul></li> + +<li class="borall">PORTUGAL. +<ul> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg191" title="go to fig. 191">191.</a> + Rainfall of the Iberian Peninsula . . . 470</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg192" title="go to fig. 192">192.</a> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ORTUGUESE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>YPES</b></span> + (Peasants) . . . 472</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg193" title="go to fig. 193">193.</a> + The Valley of the Limia, or Lima . . . 475</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg194" title="go to fig. 194">194.</a> + Dunes of Avéiro . . . 476</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg195" title="go to fig. 195">195.</a> + Oporto and the Paiz do Vinho . . . 478</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg196" title="go to fig. 196">196.</a> + São João da Foz and the Mouth of the Dóuro . . . 480</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg197" title="go to fig. 197">197.</a> + <span class="smcap">C<b>OIMBRA</b></span> + . . . 482</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg198" title="go to fig. 198">198.</a> + The Estuary of the Tejo (Tagus) . . . 483</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg199" title="go to fig. 199">199.</a> + Peniche and the Berlingas . . . 485</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg200" title="go to fig. 200">200.</a> + Mouth of the Tejo . . . 486</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg201" title="go to fig. 201">201.</a> + Zones of Vegetation in Portugal . . . 488</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg202" title="go to fig. 202">202.</a> + <span class="smcap">C<b>ASTLE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ENHA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">DE</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>INTRA</b></span> + . . . 489</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg203" title="go to fig. 203">203.</a> + <span class="smcap">M<b>ONASTERY</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">K<b>NIGHTS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>HRIST</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AT</span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>HOMAR</b></span> + . . . 491</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg204" title="go to fig. 204">204.</a> + Estuary of the Sado . . . 492</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg205" title="go to fig. 205">205.</a> + Serra de Monchique and Promontory of Sagres . . . 493</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg206" title="go to fig. 206">206.</a> + Geology of Algarve . . . 494</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg207" title="go to fig. 207">207.</a> + Faro and Tavira . . . 496</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg208" title="go to fig. 208">208.</a> + Geographical Extent of the Portuguese Language . . . 497</li> +<li><a class="atoc" href="#fg209" title="go to fig. 209">209.</a> + Telegraph from Lisbon to Rio de Janeiro + . . . 498</li></ul></li></ul> +</li></ul><!--ulillos--> + +<div class="chapter" id="p001"> +<div class="dctr01"><img src="images/ib001.jpg" width="600" +height="124" alt="" /></div> + +<h2 class="h2herein" title="Introductory Remarks."> +<span class="spblk fsz5">THE EARTH AND ITS INHABITANTS.</span> +<span class="sphr"><img class="ihra" src="images/hr-ia013.png" + width="248" height="27" alt="" /></span> + INTRODUCTORY REMARKS.<a + class="afnanchstar" href="#fn1" id="fnanch1" + title="go to note 1">*</a></h2></div> + +<p class="pfirst"> +<span class="spdropcap"><img class="idropcap" src="images/drop-o.jpg" +width="242" height="259" alt="O" /></span>UR +earth is but as an atom in space, a star amongst stars. Yet, to us +who inhabit it, it is still without bounds, as it was in the time of +our barbarian ancestors. Nor can we foresee the period when the +whole of its surface will be known to us. We have been taught +by astronomers and geodesists that our planet is a sphere flattened +at the poles, and physical geographers and meteorologists have applied their +powers of inductive reasoning to establish theories on the direction of the winds +and ocean currents within the polar regions. But hitherto no explorer has +succeeded in reaching the extremities of our earth, and no one can tell whether +land or sea extends beyond those icy barriers which have frustrated our most +determined efforts. Thanks to the struggles of indomitable seamen, the pride of +our race, the area of the mysterious regions around the north pole has been +reduced to something like the hundredth part of the earth’s surface, but in the +south there still remains an unknown region of such vast extent, that the moon, +were she to drop upon our planet, might disappear within it without coming into +contact with any part of the earth’s surface already known to us.</p> + +<p>And the polar regions, which present so many natural obstacles to our +explorers, are not the only portions of the earth not yet known to men of science. +It may be humiliating to our pride as men, but we feel constrained to admit that +among the countries not yet known to us there are some, accessible enough as +far as natural obstacles are concerned, but closed against us by our fellow-men ! +There are peoples in this world, dwelling in towns, obeying laws, and having +customs comparatively polished, but who choose to live in seclusion, and are as +little known to us as if they were the inhabitants of some other planet. Their +frontiers are closed by war and its horrors, by the practice of slavery, +by religious <span class="xxpn" id="p002">{2}</span> +fanaticism, and even commercial jealousy. We have heard of some of these +peoples by vague report, but there are others concerning whom we absolutely +know nothing. And thus it happens that in this age of steam, of the printing +press, of incessant and feverish activity, we still know nothing, or very little, of +the centre of Africa, of a portion of Australia, of the interior of that fine and +no doubt most fertile island of New Guinea, and of vast table-lands in the centre +of Asia. Nay, even the country which most men of learning love to look upon as +the cradle of our Aryan ancestors is known to us but very imperfectly.</p> + +<p>As regards most countries which have been visited by travellers, and figure +more or less correctly upon our maps, a great amount of further research is +required before our knowledge of their geography can be called complete. Years +will pass ere the erroneous and contradictory statements of our explorers concerning +them have been set right. A prodigious amount of labour must be +performed before their climate, their hydrography, their plants and animals, can +be thoroughly known to us. Minute and systematic researches have to be +conducted to elucidate the slow changes in the aspects and physical phenomena +of many countries. The greatest caution will have to be exercised in distinguishing +between changes due to the spontaneous action of natural causes and those brought +about by the hand of man. And all this knowledge we must acquire before we +can boast that we know the earth, and all about it !</p> + +<p>Nor is this all. By a natural bent of our mind, all our studies are carried +on with reference to Man as the centre of all things. A knowledge of our planet +is, therefore, imperfect as long as it is not joined to a knowledge of the various +races of man which inhabit it. The earth which man treads is but imperfectly +known, man himself even less so. The first origin of races is shrouded in absolute +darkness, and the most learned disagree with reference to the descent, the +amalgamation, the original seats, and migratory stages of most peoples and +tribes. What do men owe to their surroundings? What to the original seats +of their ancestors, to inborn instincts of race, to a blending with alien races, +or to influences and traditions brought to bear upon them from beyond? We +hardly know, and as yet only a few rays of light begin to penetrate this darkness. +Unfortunately our erroneous views on many of these questions are not due solely +to ignorance. Contending passions and instinctive national hatreds too frequently +obscure our judgment, and we see man as he is not. The far-off savages assume +the shape of dim phantoms, and our near neighbours and rivals in the arts of +civilisation appear repulsive and deformed of feature. If we would see them as +they really are, we must get rid of all our prejudices, and of those feelings of +contempt, hatred, and passion which still set nation against nation. Our +forefathers, +in their wisdom, said that the most difficult thing of all was to know +one’s self. Surely a comprehensive study of mankind is more difficult still.</p> + +<p>We are thus not in a position at present to furnish a complete account of the +earth and its inhabitants. The accomplishment of this task we must leave to the +future, when fellow-workers from all quarters of the globe will meet to write +the grand book embodying the sum of human knowledge. For +the present an <span class="xxpn" id="p003">{3}</span> +individual author must rest content with giving a succinct account of the Earth, +in which the space occupied by each country shall be proportionate to its importance, +and to the knowledge we possess with respect to it.</p> + +<p>It is natural, perhaps, that each nation should imagine that in such a +description it ought to be accorded the foremost place. Every barbarous tribe, +however small, imagines itself to occupy the very centre of the earth, and to be the +most perfect representative of the human race. Its language never fails to bear +witness to this naïve illusion, born of the very narrowness of its horizon. The +river which irrigates its fields is called the “Father of Waters,” the mountain +which shelters its camp the “Navel,” or “Centre of the Earth;” and the names +by which primitive races designate their neighbours are terms of contempt, for +they look down upon them as their inferiors. To them they are “mute,” “deaf,” +“unclean,” “imbecile,” “monstrous,” or “demoniac.” The Chinese, one of the +most remarkable peoples in some respects, and certainly the most important of all +as far as mere numbers go, are not content with having bestowed upon their +country the epithet of “Flower of the Centre,” but are so fully convinced of its +superiority as to have fallen into the mistake (very excusable under the circumstances) +of deeming themselves to be the “Sons of Heaven.” As to the nations +thinly scattered around the borders of their “Celestial Empire,” they know them +merely as “dogs,” “swine,” “demons,” and “savages.” Or, more disdainful still, +they designate them by the four cardinal points of the compass, and speak of the +“unclean” tribes of the west, the north, the east, and the south.</p> + +<p>If in our description of the Earth we accord the first place to civilised Europe, +it is not because of a prejudice similar to that of the Chinese. No ! this place +belongs to Europe as a matter of right. Europe as yet is the only continent the +whole of whose surface has been scientifically explored. It possesses a map +approximately correct, and its material resources are almost fully known to us. +Its population is not as dense as that of India or of China, but it nevertheless +contains about one-fourth of the total population of the globe; and its inhabitants, +whatever their failings and vices, or their state of barbarism in some respects, still +impel the rest of mankind as regards material and mental progress. Europe, for +twenty-five centuries, has been the focus whence radiated Arts, Sciences, and +Thought. Nor have those hardy colonists who carried their European languages +and customs beyond the sea succeeded hitherto in giving to the New World an +importance equal to that of “little” Europe, in spite of the virgin soil and vast +area which gave them scope for unlimited expansion.</p> + +<p>Our American rivals may be more active and enterprising than we are—they +certainly are not cumbered to the same extent by the traditions and inheritances +of feudal times—but they are as yet not sufficiently numerous to compete with us +as regards the totality of work done. They have scarcely been able hitherto to +ascertain the material resources of the country in which they have made their +home. “Old Europe,” where every clod of earth has its history, where every man +is the heir of a hundred successive generations, therefore still maintains the first +place, and a comparative study of nations justifies us in the belief +that its moral <span class="xxpn" id="p004">{4}</span> +ascendancy and industrial preponderance will remain with it for many years to come. +At the same time, we must not shut our eyes to the fact that equality will obtain +in the end, not only between America and Europe, but also between these two and +the other quarters of the world. The intermingling of nations, migrations which +have assumed prodigious proportions, and the increasing facilities of intercourse +must in the end lead to an equilibrium of population being established throughout +the world. Then will each country add its proper share to the wealth of mankind, +and what we call civilisation will have “its centre everywhere, its periphery +nowhere.”</p> + +<p>The central geographical position of Europe has undoubtedly exercised a +most favourable influence upon the progress of the nations inhabiting it. The +superiority of the Europeans is certainly not due to the inherent virtues of the +races from which they sprang, as is vainly imagined by some, for in other parts of +the ancient world these same races have exhibited far less creative genius. To +the happy conditions of soil, climate, configuration, and geographical position the +inhabitants of Europe owe the honour of having been the first to obtain a +knowledge of the earth in its entirety, and to have remained for so long a period +at the head of mankind. Historical geographers are, therefore, right when they +insist upon the influence which the configuration of a country exercises upon the +nations who inhabit it. The extent of table-lands, the heights of mountain +ranges, the direction and volume of rivers, the vicinity of the ocean, the indentation +of the coast-line, the temperature of the air, the abundance or rarity of rain, +and the correlations between soil, air, and water—all these are pregnant with +effects, and explain much of the character and mode of life of primitive nations. +They account for most of the contrasts existing between nations subject to +different conditions, and point out the natural highways of the globe which +nations are constrained to follow in their migrations or warlike expeditions.</p> + +<p>At the same time, we must bear in mind that the influence exercised upon +the history of mankind by the general configuration of land and sea, or any +special features of the former, is subject to change, and depends essentially upon +the stage of culture at which nations have arrived. Geography, strictly speaking, +confines itself to a description of the earth’s surface, and exhibits the various +nations in a passive attitude as it were, whilst Historical Geography and statistics +show man engaged in the struggle for existence, and striving to obtain the mastery +over his surroundings. A river, which to an uncultured tribe would constitute an +insurmountable barrier, becomes a commercial high-road to a tribe further advanced +in culture, and in process of time it may be converted into a mere canal of +irrigation, the course of which is regulated by man. A mountain range frequented +by shepherds and huntsmen, and forming a barrier between nations, may attract, +in a more civilised epoch, the miner and the manufacturer, and in course of time +will even cease to be an obstacle, as roads will traverse it in all directions. Many a +creek of the sea, which afforded shelter of yore to the small vessels of our ancestors, +is deserted now, whilst the open bays, which vessels dreaded formerly, have been +protected by enormous breakwaters, and have become the resort of +our largest ships. <span class="xxpn" id="p005a">{5a}</span></p> + +<p>Innumerable changes such as these have been effected by man in all parts of +the world, and they have revolutionised the correlations existing between man and +the land he lives in. The configuration and height of mountains and table-lands, +the indentation of the coasts, the disposition of islands and archipelagos, and the +extent of the ocean—these all lose their relative influence upon the history of +nations in proportion as the latter emancipate themselves and become free +agents. Though subject to the condition of his dwelling-place, man may modify +it to suit his own purpose; he may overcome nature as it were, and convert the +energies of the earth into domesticated forces. As an instance we may point to +the elevated table-lands of Central Asia, which now separate the countries and +peninsulas surrounding them, but which, when they shall have become the seats of +human industry, will convert Asia into a real geographical unit, which at present +it is only in appearance. Massy and ponderous Africa, monotonous Australia, and +Southern America with its forests and waterfalls, will be put on something like an +equality with Europe, whenever roads of commerce shall cross them in all +directions, bridging their rivers, and traversing their deserts and mountain ranges. +The advantages, on the other hand, which Europe derives from its backbone of +mountains, its radiating rivers, the contours of its coasts, and its generally well-balanced +outline are not as great now as they were when man was dependent +exclusively upon the resources furnished by nature.</p> + +<p>This gradual change in the historical importance of the configuration of the +land is a fact of capital importance which must be borne in mind if we would +understand the general geography of Europe. In studying <span class="smmaj">SPACE</span> + we must take +account of another element of equal value—<span class="smmaj">TIME.</span></p> + +<div class="dctr10"><img src="images/ib005.jpg" width="286" +height="386" alt="" /></div> + +<div class="chapter" id="p005"> + +<div class="dctr01"><img src="images/ib005b.jpg" width="600" +height="127" alt="" /></div> + +<h2 class="h2herein" title="Europe.">EUROPE. +<span class="sphr"><img class="ihra" src="images/hr-ia013.png" + width="248" height="27" alt="" /></span></h2> + +<h3 title="I.—Geographical Importance."> + I.—<span class="smcap">G<b>EOGRAPHICAL</b></span> + <span class="smcap">I<b>MPORTANCE.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst"> +<span class="spdropcap"><img class="idropcap" src="images/drop-i.jpg" +width="247" height="256" alt="I" /></span>N +the geography of the world the first place is claimed for Europe, +not because of a prejudice like that of the Chinese, but as a matter +of right. Europe as yet is the only continent the whole of whose +surface has been scientifically explored. +It possesses a map approximately +correct, and its material resources are almost fully known to +us. Its population is not as dense as that of India or of China, but it nevertheless +contains about one-fourth of the total population of the globe; and its inhabitants, +whatever their failings and vices, or their state of barbarism in some respects, still +impel the rest of mankind as regards material and mental progress. Europe, for +twenty-five centuries, has been the focus whence radiated Arts, Sciences, and +Thought. Nor have those hardy colonists who carried their European languages +and customs beyond the sea succeeded hitherto in giving to the New World an +importance equal to that of “little” Europe, in spite of the virgin soil and vast +area which gave them scope for unlimited expansion.</p> + +<p>“Old Europe,” where every clod of earth has its history, where every man +is the heir of a hundred successive generations, therefore still maintains the first +place, and a comparative study of nations justifies us in the belief that its moral +ascendancy and industrial preponderance will remain with it for many years to come. +At the same time, we must not shut our eyes to the fact that equality will obtain +in the end, not only between America and Europe, but also between these two and +the other quarters of the world. The intermingling of nations, migrations which +have assumed prodigious proportions, and the increasing facilities of intercourse, +must in the end lead to an equilibrium of population throughout the world. Then +will each country add its proper share to the wealth of mankind, and what we call +civilisation will have “its centre everywhere, its periphery nowhere.”</p> + +<p>The central geographical position of Europe has undoubtedly exercised a +most favourable influence upon the progress of the nations inhabiting it. The +superiority of the Europeans is certainly not due to the inherent virtues of the +races from which they sprang, as is vainly imagined by some, for +in other parts of <span class="xxpn" id="p006">{6}</span> +the ancient world these same races have exhibited far less creative genius. To +the happy conditions of soil, climate, configuration, and geographical position, the +inhabitants of Europe owe the honour of having been the first to obtain a knowledge +of the earth in its entirety, and to have remained for so long a period at the +head of mankind. Historical geographers are, therefore, right when they insist +upon the influence which the configuration of a country exercises upon the nations +who inhabit it. The extent of table-lands, the heights of mountain ranges, the +direction and volume of rivers, the vicinity of the ocean, the indentation of the +coast-line, the temperature of the air, the abundance or rarity of rain, and the +correlations between soil, air, and water—all these are pregnant with effects, and +explain much of the character and mode of life of primitive nations. They +account for most of the contrasts existing between nations subject to different +conditions, and point out the natural highways of the globe which nations are +constrained to follow in their migrations or warlike expeditions.</p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="II.—Extent and Boundaries."> + II.—<span class="smcap">E<b>XTENT</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>OUNDARIES.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">The +dwellers on the eastern shores of the Mediterranean +Sea must have learnt, in +the course of their first warlike and commercial expeditions, to distinguish between +the great continents; for within the nucleus of the ancient world Africa is +attached to Asia by a narrow band of arid sand, and Europe separated from Asia +Minor by seas and channels difficult to navigate on account of dangerous currents. +The division of the known world into three distinct parts could not fail to impress +itself upon the minds of those infant nations; and when the Greeks had attained +a state of maturity, and historical records took the place of myths and oral traditions, +the name of Europe had probably been transmitted through a long series of +generations. Herodotus naïvely admits that no mortal could ever hope to find +out the true meaning of this name, bequeathed to us by our forefathers; but this +has not deterred our modern men of learning from attempting to explain it. +Some amongst them consider that it was applied at first to Thrace with its “large +plains,” and subsequently extended to the whole of Europe; others derive it from +one of the surnames of Zeus with the “large eyes,” the ancient god of the Sun, +specially charged with the protection of the continent. Some etymologists believe +that Europe was designated thus by the Phœnicians, as being the country of +“white men.” We consider it, however, to be far more probable that its name +originally meant simply “the West,” as contrasted with Asia, “the East,” or +“country of the rising sun.” It is thus that Italy first, and then Spain, bore the +name of Hesperia; that Western Africa received the name of El Maghreb from +the Mohammedans, and the plains beyond the Mississippi became known in our +own times as the “Far West.”</p> + +<p>But, whatever may be the original meaning of its name, Europe, in all the +myths of the ancients, is described as a Daughter of Asia. The Phœnicians were +the first to explore the shores of Europe, and to bring its inhabitants into contact +with those of the East. When the Daughter had become +the superior of her <span class="xxpn" id="p007">{7}</span> +Mother in civilisation, and Greek voyagers were following up the explorations +begun by the mariners of Tyre, all the known countries to the north of the +Mediterranean were looked upon as dependencies of Europe, and that name, which +was originally confined to the Thraco-Hellenic peninsula, was made to include, in +course of time, Italy, Spain, the countries of the Gauls, and the hyperborean +regions beyond the Alps and the Danube. Strabo, to whom were known already +the most varied and fruitful portions of Europe, extends it eastward as far as the +Palus Mæotis and the Tanais.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn2" id="fnanch2">2</a></p> + +<div class="dctr03" id="fg001"> +<div class="dcaption">Fig. 1.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">N<b>ATURAL</b></span> + <span + class="smcap">B<b>OUNDARY</b></span> <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>UROPE.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 21,800,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib007.jpg" width="600" height="746" alt="" /> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib007lg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> +<p>The zone of depression extending from the Black Sea to the + Gulf of Obi is shaded. The darker shading to the north of + the Caspian shows the area depressed below the level of the + Mediterranean.</p></div></div><!--dctr--> + +<div><span class="xxpn" id="p008">{8}</span></div> + +<p>Since that epoch the limits between Europe and Asia have been shifted by +geographers still further to the east. They are, however, more or less conventional, +for Europe, though bounded on three sides by the ocean, is in reality +but a peninsula of Asia. At the same time, the contrasts between these two parts +of the world fully justify scientific men in dividing them into two continental +masses. But where is the true line of separation between them? Map-makers +generally adopt the political boundaries which it has pleased the Russian +Government to draw between its vast European and Asiatic territories, and others +adopt the summits of the Ural Mountains and of the Caucasus as the boundary +between the two continents; and although, at the first glance, this delineation +appears more reasonable than the former, it is in reality no less absurd. The +two slopes of a mountain chain can never be assigned to different formations, and +they are generally inhabited by men of the same race. The true line of separation +between Europe and Asia does not consist of mountains at all, but, on the +contrary, of a series of depressions, in former times covered by a channel of the +sea which united the Mediterranean with the Arctic Ocean. The steppes of +the Manych, between the Black Sea and the Caspian, and to the north of the +Caucasus, are still covered in part with salt swamps. The Caspian itself, as well as +Lake Aral and the other lakes which we meet with in the direction of the Gulf of +Obi, are the remains of this ancient arm of the sea, and the intermediate regions +still bear the traces of having been an ancient sea-bed.</p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg002"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib008lg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> +Fig. 2.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">R<b>ELIEF</b></span> <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>UROPE.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">According to Houzeau, Berghaus, Kiepert, Olsen, + and others.<br />Scale 1 : 60,000,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib008.jpg" width="600" height="464" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>There can be no doubt that vast changes have taken place in +the configuration <span class="xxpn" id="p009">{9}</span> +of Europe, not only during more ancient geological periods, but also within +comparatively recent times. We have already seen that a vast arm of the sea +formerly separated Europe from Asia; it is equally certain that there was a time +when it was joined to Anatolia by an isthmus, which has since been converted into +the Bosphorus of Constantinople; Spain was joined to Africa until the waters of +the Atlantic invaded the Mediterranean; Sicily was probably connected with +Mauritania; and the British Islands once formed a portion of the mainland. The +erosion of the sea, as well as upheavals and subsidences of land, has effected, and +still effect, changes in the contours of our coasts. Numerous soundings in the +seas washing Western Europe have revealed the existence of a submarine plateau, +which, from a geological point of view, must be looked upon as forming an integral +portion of our continent. Bounded by abyssal depths of thousands of fathoms, +and submerged one hundred fathoms at most below the waters of the ocean, this +pedestal of France and the British Islands must be looked upon as the foundation +of an ancient continent, destroyed by the incessant action of the waves. If the +shallow portions of the ocean, as well as those of the Mediterranean Sea, were to be +added to Europe, its area would be increased to the extent of one-fourth, but it +would lose, at the same time, that wealth in peninsulas which has secured to Europe +its historical superiority over the other continents.</p> + +<p>If we supposed Europe to subside to the extent of one hundred fathoms, its +area would be reduced to the compass of one-half. The ocean would again cover her +low plains, most of which are ancient sea-beds, and there would remain above the +waters merely a skeleton of plateaux and mountain ranges, far more extensively +indented by bays and fringed by peninsulas than are the coasts existing at the +present time. The whole of Western and Southern Europe would be converted +into a huge island, separated by a wide arm of the sea from the plains of interior +Russia. From an historical as well as a geological point of view, this huge +island is the true Europe. Russia is not only half Asiatic on account of its +extremes of temperature, and the aspect of its monotonous plains and interminable +steppes, but is likewise intimately linked with Asia as regards its inhabitants and +its historical development. Russia can hardly be said to have belonged to Europe +for more than a hundred years. It was in maritime and mountainous Europe, +with its islands, peninsulas, and valleys, its varied features and unexpected +contrasts, that modern civilisation arose, the result of innumerable local civilisations, +happily united into a single current. And, as the rivers descending from the +mountains cover the plains at their foot with fertile soil, so has the progress +accomplished in this centre of enlightenment gradually spread over the other +continents to the very extremities of the earth.</p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="III.—Natural Divisions and Mountains."> + III.—<span class="smcap">N<b>ATURAL</b></span> + <span class="smcap">D<b>IVISIONS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>OUNTAINS.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">The Europe alluded to includes France, Germany, England, and the three +Mediterranean peninsulas, and constitutes several natural divisions. The British +Islands form one of these. The Iberian peninsula +is separated scarcely less <span class="xxpn" id="p010">{10}</span> +distinctly from the remainder of Europe, for between it and France rises a +most formidable range of mountains, the most difficult to cross in all Europe; and +immediately to the north of it a depression, nowhere exceeding a height of +650 feet, extends from the Mediterranean to the Atlantic Ocean. The +geographical unity of Europe is represented to the full extent only in the system +of the Alps, and in the mountains of France, Germany, Italy, and the Balkan +peninsula which are connected with it. It is there we must seek the framework +of continental Europe.</p> + +<p>The Alps, whose ancient Celtic name probably refers to the whiteness of their +snowy summits, stretch in an immense curve, more than 600 miles in length, +from the shores of the Mediterranean to the plains of the Danube. They consist +in reality of more than thirty mountain masses, representing as many geological +groups, and joined to each other by elevated passes; but their rocks, whether +they be granite, slate, sandstone, or limestone, form one continuous rampart rising +above the plains. In former ages the Alps were higher than they are now. This +is proved by an examination of their detritus and of the strata disintegrated +by natural agencies. But, whatever the extent of detrition, they still rise in +hundreds of summits beyond the line of perennial snow, and vast rivers of ice +descend from them into every upland valley. Looked at from the plains of +Piedmont and Lombardy, these glaciers and snow-fields present the appearance of +sparkling diadems encircling the mountain summits.</p> + +<p>In the eastern portion of the Alpine system—that is to say, between the +Mediterranean and Mont Blanc, the culminating point of Europe—the average +height of the mountain groups gradually increases from 6,500 to more than +13,000 feet. To the east of Mont Blanc the Alps change in direction, and, +beyond the vast citadels represented by Monte Rosa and the Bernese Oberland, +they gradually decrease in height. To the east of Switzerland no summit exceeds +a height of 13,000 feet, but this loss in elevation is fully made up by increase of +breadth. And whilst the general direction of the principal axis of the Alps +remains north-easterly, very considerable mountain chains, far exceeding the +central mass in breadth, are thrown off towards the north, the east, and the +south-east. A line drawn across the true Alps from Vienna has a length of no +less than 250 miles.</p> + +<p>In thus spreading out, the Alps lose their character and aspect. We no longer +meet with grand mountain masses, glaciers, and snow-fields. Towards the north +they gradually sink down into the valley of the Danube; towards the south they +branch out into secondary chains, resting upon the arched plateau of Turkey. +But, in spite of the vast contrasts offered by the true Alps and the mountains of +Montenegro, the Hæmus, the Rhodope, and the Pindus, all these mountain chains +nevertheless belong to the same orographical system. The whole of the Balkan +peninsula must be looked upon as a natural dependency of the Alps; and the same +applies to Italy, for the chain of the Apennines is nothing but a continuation +of the Maritime Alps, and we hardly know where to draw the line of separation +between them. The Carpathians, too, must +be included among the <span class="xxpn" id="p011">{11}</span> +mountain chains forming part of the system of the Alps. They have been +gradually separated from them through the continuous action of water, but there +can be no doubt that, in former times, the semicircle of mountains known as the +Little Carpathians, the Beskids, the Tatra, the Great Carpathians, and the Transylvanian +Alps was joined, on the one hand, to the Austrian Alps, and on the other +to spurs descending from the Balkan. The Danube has forced its way through +these mountain ramparts, but the passages, or “gates,” are narrow; they are strewn +with rocks, and commanded by what remains of the ancient partition ranges.</p> + +<p>The configuration of the Alps, and of the labyrinthine mountain ranges branching +off from them towards the east, could not fail to exercise a most powerful influence +upon the history of Europe and of the entire world. The only high-roads known +to barbarians are those traced out by nature herself, and they were consequently +able to penetrate into Europe only by sea, or through the vast plains of the north. +Having penetrated to the westward of the Black Sea, their progress was first +stopped by the lakes and difficult swamps of the Danubian valley; and, when +they had surmounted these obstacles, they found themselves face to face with a +barrier of high mountains, whose intricate wooded valleys and declivities led up +to the inaccessible regions of eternal snow. The Alps, the Balkan, and all the +other advanced chains of the Alpine system constituted an advanced defensive +barrier for Western Europe, and the conquering nomad tribes who threw themselves +against it did so at the risk of destruction. Accustomed to the boundless +horizon of the steppes, they did not venture to climb these steep hills—they +turned to the northward, where the vast plains of Germania enabled successive +swarms of immigrants to spread over the country with greater ease. And as to the +invaders, whom blind rage of conquest impelled to engage in the defiles of these +mountains, they found themselves caught as in a trap; and this accounts for the +variety of nations, and of fragments of nations, whose presence has converted the +countries of the Danube into a sort of ethnological chaos. And as the débris +carried along by the current is deposited in the eddy of a river, so were these +fragments of nearly every nation of the East accumulated in motley disorder in +this corner of the Continent.</p> + +<p>To the south of this great mountain barrier the migrations between Europe +and Asia could take place only by sea—a high-road open to those nations alone +who were sufficiently advanced in civilisation to have acquired the art of building +ships. Whether pirates, merchants, or warriors, they had raised themselves long +ago above a state of primitive barbarism, and even their voyages of conquest added +something to the stock of human knowledge. Moreover, owing to the difficulties +of navigation, they migrated only in small bodies. At whatever point they settled +they came into contact with populations of a different race from their own, and this +intercourse gave birth to a number of local civilisations, each bearing its own stamp, +and nowhere did their influence preponderate. Every island of the Archipelago, and +every valley of ancient Hellas, differed from its neighbours as regards social condition, +dialect, and customs, but they all remained Greek, in spite of the Phœnician +and other influences to which they had been subjected. It is +thus owing to the <span class="xxpn" id="p012">{12}</span> +configuration of the mountain chains and coast-lines that the civilisation which +developed itself gradually in the Mediterranean countries to the south of the Alps +was, upon the whole, more spontaneous in its nature, and offered more variety +and greater contrasts, than the civilisation of the far less advanced nations of the +north, who were moving from place to place on vast plains.</p> + +<p>The wide range of the Alps and of their advanced chains thus separated two +distinct worlds, in which historical development went on at a different rate. At +the same time, the separation between the two slopes of the Alpine system was by +no means complete. Nowhere in the Alps do we meet with cold and uninhabited +plateaux, as in the Andes and in Tibet, whose enormous extent forms almost +insurmountable barriers. The Alpine masses are cut up everywhere into mountains +and valleys, and the climate of the latter is sufficiently mild to enable man to +exist in them. The mountaineers, who easily maintained their independence, +owing to the protection extended to them by nature, first served as intermediaries +between the peoples inhabiting the opposite lowlands. It was they who effected +the rare exchanges of produce which took place between the North and South, +and who opened the first commercial high-roads between the summits of the mountains. +The direction of the valleys and the deeply cut mountain passes even then +indicated the grand routes by which the Alps would be crossed, at a future period, +for the purposes of commerce or of war. That portion of the Alps which lies +between the mountain masses of Savoy and of the Mediterranean would naturally +cease first to form an obstacle to military expeditions. The Alps there +are of great height, it is true, but they are narrower than anywhere else; besides +which, the climate on the two opposite slopes is similar, and assimilates the mode +of life and the customs of the people dwelling there. Far more formidable, as a +natural barrier, are the Alps to the north-east of Mont Blanc, for they constitute a +climatic boundary.</p> + +<p>The other mountain ranges play but a secondary or local part in the history of +Europe, when we compare them with the Alps. Still, the influence which they +have exercised upon the destiny of nations is no less evident. The table-lands and +snow-fields of the Scandinavian Alps form a wall of separation between Norwegians +and Swedes. The quadrangular mountain fort of Bohemia, in the centre of Europe, +which shelters the Chechians, is almost entirely enclosed by Germans, and resembles +an island fretted by the waves of the ocean. The hills of Wales and of Scotland +have afforded a shelter to the Celtic race against the encroachments of +Anglo-Saxons, Danes, and Normans. The Bretons, in France, are indebted to +their rocks and <i>landes</i> for the fact of their not having yet become wholly French; +whilst the table-land of Limousin, the hills of Auvergne and the Cevennes constitute +the principal cause of the striking contrast which still exists between +the inhabitants of Northern and of Southern France. The Pyrenees, next to +the Alps, constitute the most formidable obstacle to the march of nations in +Europe; they would have remained an insurmountable rampart down to our +own time, were it not easy to pass round them by their extremities abutting upon +the sea. <span class="xxpn" id="p013">{13}</span></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="IV.—The Maritime Regions."> + IV.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>ARITIME</b></span> + <span class="smcap">R<b>EGIONS.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">The valleys which radiate in all directions from the great central masses of the +Alps are admirably adapted for imparting to almost the whole of Europe a +remarkable unity, whilst they offer, at the same time, an extreme variety of aspects +and of physical conditions. The Po, the Rhone, the Rhine, and the Danube +traverse countries having the most diverse climates, and yet they have their +sources in the same mountain region, and the fertilising alluvium which they +deposit in their valleys results from the disintegration of the same rocks. Minor +valleys cut up the slopes of the Alps and of their dependent chains, and carry +towards the sea the waters of the mountains and the triturated fragments of their +rocks. Running waters are visible, wherever we cast our eyes. There are +neither deserts, nor sterile plateaux, nor inland lakes and river basins such as we +meet with in Africa and Asia. The rivers of Europe are not flooded as are those +of certain portions of South America, which deluge half the country with water. +On the contrary, in the scheme of her rivers Europe exhibits a certain degree of +moderation which has favoured the work of the settler, and facilitated the rise of +a local civilisation in each river basin. Moreover, although most rivers are sufficiently +large to have retarded migration, they are not sufficiently so to have +arrested it for any length of time. Even when roads and bridges did not exist, +barbarian immigrants easily made their way from the shores of the Black Sea to +those of the Atlantic.</p> + +<p>But Europe, in addition to the advantages due to its framework of mountains +and the disposition of its river basins, enjoys the still greater advantage of possessing +an indented coast-line. It is mainly the contours of its coasts which impart to +Europe its double character of unity and diversity, which distinguish it amongst +continents. It is “one” because of its great central mass, and “diversified” +because of its numerous peninsulas and dependent islands. It is an organism, if +we may say so, resembling a huge body furnished with limbs. Strabo compared +Europe to a dragon. The geographers of the period of the revival of letters +compared it to a crowned virgin, Spain being the head, France the heart, and +England and Italy the hands, holding the sceptre and the orb. Russia, at that +time hardly known, is made to do duty for the ample folds of the robe.</p> + +<p>The area of Europe is only half that of South America, and one-third of that +of Africa, and yet the development of its coast-lines is superior to that of the two +continents taken together. In proportion to its area the coasts of Europe have +twice the extent of those of South America, Australia, and Africa; and although +they are to a small extent inferior to those of North America, it must be borne +in mind that the arctic coasts of the latter are ice-bound during the greater +portion of the year. A glance at the subjoined diagrams will show that Europe, +as compared with the two other continents washed by the Arctic Ocean, enjoys the +immense advantage of possessing a coast-line almost wholly available for purposes +of navigation, whilst a large portion of the coasts of Asia and America is altogether +useless to man. And not only does the sea penetrate into +the very heart of <span class="xxpn" id="p014">{14}</span> +temperate Europe, cutting it up into elongated peninsulas, but these peninsulas, +too, are fringed with gulfs and miniature inland seas. The coasts of Greece, of +Thessaly, and of Thrace are thus indented by bays and gulfs, penetrating far into +the land; Italy and Spain likewise possess numerous bays and gulfs; and the +peninsulas of Northern Europe, Jutland and Scandinavia, are cut up by the +waters of the ocean into numerous secondary peninsulas.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg003"> +<div class="dcaption">Fig. 3.—<span + class="smcap">D<b>EVELOPMENT</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>OAST-LINES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">RELATIVELY</span> + <span class="smmaj">TO</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>REA.</b></span></div> +<div id="dfg3"><img src="images/ib014.jpg" width="600" height="500" + alt="" /></div> +<div class="dcaption"> +<table class="fsz7 borall" summary=""> +<tr> + <th class="borall"></th> + <th class="borall">Europe.</th> + <th class="borall">Asia.</th> + <th class="borall">Africa.</th> + <th class="borall">N. America.</th> + <th class="borall">S. America.</th> + <th class="borall">Australia.</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft borall">Total area, square miles</td> + <td class="tdright">4,005,100</td> + <td class="tdright">17,308,400</td> + <td class="tdright">11,542,400</td> + <td class="tdright">9,376,850</td> + <td class="tdright">6,803,570</td> + <td class="tdright">3,450,130</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft borall">Mainland area, square miles</td> + <td class="tdright">3,758,300</td> + <td class="tdright">15,966,000</td> + <td class="tdright">11,293,930</td> + <td class="tdright">7,973,700</td> + <td class="tdright">6,731,470</td> + <td class="tdright">2,934,500</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft borall">Development of coast-line, miles</td> + <td class="tdright">18,600</td> + <td class="tdright">34,110</td> + <td class="tdright">16,480</td> + <td class="tdright">30,890</td> + <td class="tdright">16,390</td> + <td class="tdright">10,570</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft borall">Accessible coasts</td> + <td class="tdright">17,610</td> + <td class="tdright">28,200</td> + <td class="tdright">16,480</td> + <td class="tdright">26,510</td> + <td class="tdright">16,390</td> + <td class="tdright">14,400</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft borall">Ratio of the geometrical to the actual contour</td> + <td class="tdright">1 : 2·5</td> + <td class="tdright">1 : 2·5</td> + <td class="tdright">1 : 1·4</td> + <td class="tdright">1 : 3·1</td> + <td class="tdright">1 : 1·8</td> + <td class="tdright">1 : 1·7</td></tr> +</table> +<p>The shaded circles represent the various continents; the outer + circle represents the actual extent of coast-line. The blank space + between the two concentric circles represents graphically the + difference between the smallest possible or geometrical contour of + a country having the area of the respective continents, and the + actual contour as exhibited in the existing coast-lines. Europe, + being in reality only a peninsula of Asia, hardly admits of this + comparison.</p></div></div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The islands of Europe must be looked upon as dependencies of that continent, +for most of them are separated from it only by shallow seas. Candia and the +islands scattered broadcast over the Ægean Sea, the Archipelagos of the Ionian +Sea, and of Dalmatia, Sicily, Corsica and Sardinia, Elba, and the Baleares, are in +reality but prolongations, or maritime out-stations, of neighbouring peninsulas. To +the islands of Sealand and Fyen, at the entrance to +the Baltic, Denmark owes <span class="xxpn" id="p015">{15}</span> +most of her commercial and political importance. Great Britain and Ireland, +which actually formed a portion of the European continent in a past age, cannot +be looked upon otherwise than as dependencies of it, although the isthmus which +once joined them has been destroyed by the waters of the ocean. England has +actually become the grand commercial emporium of Europe, and plays now the +same part in the world’s commerce that Greece once played in that of the more +restricted world of the Mediterranean.</p> + +<p>It is a remarkable fact that each of the European peninsulas should have +enjoyed in turn a period of commercial preponderance. Greece, the “most noble +individuality of the world of the ancients,” came first, and when at the height of +her power governed the Mediterranean, which at that time meant nearly the whole +universe. During the Middle Ages Amalfi, Genoa, and Venice became the commercial +agents between Europe and the Indies. The discovery of a passage round +the Cape and of America diverted the world’s commerce to Cadiz, Seville, and +Lisbon, on the Iberian peninsula. Subsequently the merchants of the small +Dutch Republic seized a portion of the heritage of Spain and Portugal, and the +wealth of the entire world was floated into the harbours of their sea-bound islands +and peninsulas. In our own days Great Britain, thanks to its favourable geographical +position, in the very centre of great continental masses, and the energy +of its people, has become the great mart of the world. London, the most populous +city of the world, is also the great centre of attraction for the treasures of mankind; +but there can be no doubt that sooner or later it will be supplanted, in +consequence of the opening of new commercial high-roads, and changes in the +political preponderance of nations. Perhaps some city of the United States will +take the place of London in a future age, and thus the American belief in the +westward march of civilisation will be verified; or we may possibly return to the +East, and convert Constantinople or Cairo into the world’s emporium and centre of +intercourse.</p> + +<p>But, whatever may happen in the future, the great changes which have taken +place in the relative importance of the peninsulas and islands of Europe in the +short span of twenty centuries, sufficiently prove that geographical features +exercise a varying influence at different epochs. That which at one time was +looked upon as a great natural advantage may become, in course of time, a serious +disadvantage. Thus the numerous inlets and gulfs enclosed by mountain chains, +which favoured the rise of the cities of Greece, and gave to Athens the dominion +of the Mediterranean, now constitute as many obstacles to their connection with +the existing system of European communications. That which in former times +constituted the strength of the country has become its weakness. In primitive +times, before man ventured upon the seas, these bays and gulfs formed insurmountable +obstacles to the migration of nations; at a later date, when the art of +navigation had been acquired, they became commercial high-roads, and were +favourable to the development of civilisation; and at the present time they are +again obstacles in the way of our +road-builders and railway engineers. <span class="xxpn" id="p016">{16}</span></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="V.—Climate.">V.—<span + class="smcap">C<b>LIMATE.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">The +influence exercised by the relief of the land and the configuration of the +coasts varies in different ages, but that of climate is permanent. In this respect +Europe is the most favoured region of the earth, for during a cycle of unknown +length it has enjoyed a climate at once the most temperate, the most equable, and +the most healthy of all continents.</p> + +<p>Owing to the inland seas which penetrate far into the land, the whole of +Europe is exposed to the modifying influence of the ocean. With the exception +of Central Russia, no part of Europe is more than 400 miles from the sea, and, as +most of the mountains slope from the centre of the continent towards its circumference, +the influence of the sea breezes is felt throughout. And thus continental +Europe, in spite of its great extent, enjoys the advantages of an insular climate +throughout, the winds passing over the ocean moderating the heat of summer and +tempering the cold of winter.</p> + +<p>The continuous north-easterly movement of the waters of the Atlantic likewise +has a favourable effect upon the climate of Europe. After having been heated by +a tropical sun in the Gulf of Mexico, the gulf-stream issues through the Strait of +Florida, and, spreading over the Atlantic, takes its course towards the coasts of +Europe. This enormous mass of warm water, equal in volume to twenty million +rivers as large as the Rhone, brings the warmth of southern latitudes to the +western and northern shores of Europe. Its influence is felt not only in the +maritime countries of Western Europe, but to some extent as far as the Caspian +and the Ural Mountains.</p> + +<p>The currents of the air exercise as favourable an influence upon the climate of +Europe as do those of the ocean. The south-westerly winds predominating on the +coasts pass over the warm gulf-stream, and, on reaching Europe, they part with the +heat stored up by them between the tropics. The north-westerly, northerly, and +even north-easterly winds, which blow during a portion of the year, are less cold +than might be expected, for they, too, have to cross the warm waters of the gulf-stream. +And lastly, there is the Sahara, which elevates the temperature of a +portion of Europe.</p> + +<p>The increase in temperature due to the combined influence of winds and +ocean currents amounts to 40° 50°, and even 60°, if we compare Europe with +other parts of the world lying under the same latitudes. Nowhere else, not even +on the western coast of North America, do the isothermals, or lines of equal annual +temperature, ascend so high towards the arctic regions. The inhabitants of +Europe, though they may live 900 to 1,200 miles farther away from the equator, +enjoy as mild a climate as do those of America, and the decrease of temperature +on going northward is far less rapid than in any other part of the globe. This +uniformity of temperature constitutes one of the most characteristic features of +Europe. The whole of it lies within the temperate region bounded by the +isothermal lines of 32° F. and 68° F., whilst in America and Asia that privileged +zone has only half this extent. <span class="xxpn" id="p017">{17}</span></p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg004"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib017lg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> +Fig. 4.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">I<b>SOTHERMAL</b></span> + <span class="smcap">Z<b>ONE</b></span> <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>UROPE.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 60,000,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib017.jpg" width="600" height="471" + alt="" /></div><!--dctr--> + +<p>This remarkable uniformity in the climate of Europe is exhibited not only in +its temperature, but likewise in the distribution of its rains. The seas washing +the shores of Europe supply all parts of it with the necessary amount of moisture. +There is no rainless district, nor, with the exception of a portion of the maritime +region of the Caspian and a small corner of Spain, any district where droughts +occasionally entail the entire loss of the harvest. Rains fall not only regularly +every year, but in most countries they occur in every season, the only exception +being the countries of the Mediterranean, where autumn and winter are the real +rainy seasons. Moreover, in spite of the great diversity in the physical features of +Europe, the amount of rain is scarcely anywhere excessive, whether it descends as +a fine drizzle, as in Ireland, or in heavy showers, as in Provence and on the +southern slope of the Alps. The annual rainfall scarcely ever exceeds thirty-nine +inches, except on the flanks of certain mountain ranges which arrest the passage +of currents charged with moisture. This uniformity and moderation in the rainfall +exercise a regulating influence upon the course of the rivers, for even the +smallest amongst them, at all events those to the north of the Pyrenees, the Alps, +and the Balkan, flow throughout the year. They rise and fall generally within +narrow limits, and inundations on a vast scale are as rare as is want of water for +purposes of irrigation. In consequence of this regularity, Europe is able to derive +a greater advantage from its waters than other continents where the amount of +precipitation is more considerable. The Alps +contribute much towards <span class="xxpn" id="p018">{18}</span> +maintaining a regular flow of the rivers; the excess of humidity which falls to their +share is stored up in the shape of snow and ice, which descend slowly into the +valleys, and melt during the heat of summer. This happens just at a time when +the rivers gain least from rain, and lose most by evaporation, and some amongst +them would dry up if the ice of the mountains did not come to the aid of the +waters descending from the sky. It is thus that a sort of balance is established in +the economy of European rivers.</p> + +<p>The climate of Europe is thus characterized by uniformity as a whole, and by a +compensatory action in its contrasts. Regularity and freedom from excess, such +as are not known in other continents, mark its ocean currents, its winds, its +temperature and rains, and the course of its rivers. These great advantages +have benefited its inhabitants in the past, and will not cease to do so in the +future. Though small in extent, Europe possesses by far the largest area of +acclimation. Man may migrate from Russia to Spain, or from Ireland to Greece, +without exposing himself to any great risk of life. The inhabitants of the +Caucasus and the Ural Mountains were thus able to cross the plains and mountains +of Europe, and to establish themselves on the shores of the Atlantic. Soil and +climate are equally propitious to man, and enable him to preserve his physical and +intellectual powers wherever he goes. A migratory people might found new +homesteads in any part of Europe. Their companions of travel—the dog, the +horse, and the ox—would not desert them on the road, and the seed-corn which +they carry with them would yield a harvest wherever confided to the earth.</p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="VI.—Inhabitants.">VI.—<span + class="smcap">I<b>NHABITANTS.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">A +study of the soil and a patient observation of climatic phenomena enable us +to appreciate the general influence exercised by the nature of the country upon +the development of its inhabitants; but it is more difficult to assign to each race +or nation its due share in the progress of European civilisation. No doubt, in +their struggles for existence, different groups of naked and ignorant savages must +have been acted upon differently, according to their numbers and physical strength, +their inborn intelligence, their tastes and mental tendencies. But who were those +primitive men who first turned to account the natural resources of the country in +which they dwelt? We know not; for, if we go back for a few thousand years, +every fact is shrouded in darkness. We know nothing even as regards the origin +of the leading nations of Europe. Are we the “sons of the soil,” and the “shoots +of oak-trees,” as told in the poetical language of ancient tradition, or are we to +look upon the inhabitants of Asia as the ancestors to whom we are indebted for +our languages, and for the rudiments of our arts and sciences? Or did those +immigrants from a neighbouring continent settle down amongst an indigenous +population? Not many years ago the Asiatic origin of European nations was +accepted as an established fact, and the original seats of our forefathers were +pointed out upon the map of Asia. But now most men of science +are agreed to <span class="xxpn" id="p019">{19}</span> +seek our ancestors upon the very soil which we, their descendants, still occupy. +Caverns, the shores of oceans and lakes, and the alluvial beds of our rivers have +yielded the remains of human industry, and even human skeletons, which clearly +prove that long before these supposed immigrations from Asia there existed in +Europe tribes who had already made some progress in human industry. Even in +the childhood of history there existed tribes who were looked upon as aborigines, and +some of their descendants—as, for instance, the Basks—have nothing in common +with the invaders from the neighbouring continent. Nor is it universally admitted +that the Aryans—that is, the ancestors of the Pelasgians, the Greeks, the Latins, +Celts, Germans, and Slavs—are of Asiatic origin. Similarity of language may +justify our belief in the common origin of the Aryans of Europe, the Persians, and +the Hindoos, but it does not prove that their ancestral home should be looked for +somewhere near the sources of the Oxus. Many men of learning<a class="afnanch" href="#fn3" id="fnanch3">3</a> look upon the +Aryans as aborigines of Europe, but certainty on this point does not exist. No +doubt, in prehistoric times, intermigrations between the two continents were +frequent; but we hardly know what directions they took, and can speak with +certainty only of those migrations of peoples which are related by history. We +thus know that Europe sent forth to other continents Galatians, Macedonians, and +Greeks, and more recently innumerable emigrants of all nationalities, and received +in turn Huns, Avares, Turks, Mongols, Circassians, Jews, Armenians, Moors, +Berbers, and members of many other nations.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="map1"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib018bxxlg.jpg" + title="display larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + ETHNOGRAPHICAL MAP OF EUROPE</div> +<img src="images/ib018b.jpg" width="600" height="491" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Leaving out of consideration the smaller families of nations, as well as the +members of races who have not attained a national existence, Europe may +be described as consisting of three great ethnological divisions, the principal +boundary between which is formed by the Alps, the Carpathians, and the +Balkan.</p> + +<p>The first of these great families of European nations, the members of which +speak Greco-Latin languages, occupies the southern slopes of the Balkan and of the +Alps, the Iberian peninsula, France, and a portion of Belgium, as well as a few +detached territories within the limits of the ancient Roman empire, altogether +surrounded by alien nations. Such are the plains of the Lower Danube and a +portion of Transylvania, which are inhabited by the Rumanians, and a few +secluded Alpine valleys inhabited by “Romans.” On the other hand, fragments +of two ancient nations have maintained their ground in the midst of Latinised +populations, viz. the Celtic inhabitants of Brittany, and the Basks of the Pyrenees. +Generally speaking, however, all the inhabitants of South-western Europe, whether +of Celtic, Iberian, or Ligurian race, speak languages derived from the Latin, and +whatever differences existed originally between these various populations, this +community of language has more or less obliterated them.</p> + +<p>The Teutonic nations form the second great group. They occupy nearly the +whole of Central Europe to the north of the Alps, and extend through Holland and +Flanders to within a short distance of the Straits of Dover. Denmark and the +great Scandinavian peninsula, as well as Iceland, belong +to the same group, and <span class="xxpn" id="p020">{20}</span> +the bulk of the inhabitants of the British Islands are likewise generally included +in it. The latter, however, should rather be described as a mixed race, for the +aboriginal Celtic population of these islands, which now exists pure only in a few +remote districts, has amalgamated with Anglo-Saxon and Danish invaders, and +the language of the latter has become mixed with mediæval French, the +resulting idiom being almost as much Latin as Saxon. The development of +national characteristics has been favoured by the isolation in which the inhabitants +of the British Islands found themselves, and they differ essentially from +continental neighbours—the Scandinavians, Germans, and Celto-Latins—in language +and customs.</p> + +<p>The Slavs, or Slavonians, form the third group of European nations. They are +less numerous than the Greco-Latins, but the territories they occupy are far more +extensive, for they spread over nearly the whole of Russia, over Poland, a large +portion of the Balkan peninsula, and about one-half of the Austro-Hungarian +monarchy. All the great plains to the east of the Carpathians are inhabited by +Slavs, either pure or mixed with Tartars and Mongols. To the west and south +of the mountains the race is split up into numerous small nations, and in the +valley of the Danube these come into contact with Rumanians, as well as with +Turks and Magyars, the two latter being of Asiatic origin, and these separate the +Slavonians of the north from the Slavonians of the south. In the north, Finns, +Livonians, and Lithuanians interpose between the Slavonians and the Germanic +nations.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn4" id="fnanch4">4</a></p> + +<p>Race and language, however, are not always identical. Members of one race +frequently speak the language of another, and race and linguistic boundaries, +therefore, differ frequently. As for the political boundaries, they scarcely ever +follow those natural features which would have been selected had their settlement +been intrusted to the spontaneous action of the different nations. They hardly +ever coincide with the boundaries of races or of languages, except in the case of a +few high mountain ranges or of arms of the sea. On many occasions the countries +of Europe were arbitrarily split up in consequence of wars or diplomatic arrangements. +A few peoples only, protected by the nature of their +country as well as <span class="xxpn" id="p021">{21}</span> +by their valour, have maintained their independence since the age of great migrations, +but many more have been swept away by successive invasions. Many others, +again, have alternately seen their frontiers expand and contract more than once +even during a generation.</p> + +<p>The so-called “balance of European powers,” founded as it is upon the rights +of war and ambitious rivalries between nations, is necessarily unstable. Nations +eminently fit to lead a common political existence are torn asunder on the one +side, whilst the most heterogeneous elements are thrown together on the other. In +these political arrangements the nations themselves are never consulted, but their +wishes and inclinations must nevertheless prevail in the end, and the artificial +edifice raised by warriors and statesmen will come to the ground. A true +“balance of power” will only be established when every nation of the continent +shall have become the arbiter of its own destinies, when every pretended right of +conquest shall have been surrendered, and neighbouring nations shall be at liberty +to combine for the management of the affairs they have in common. Our arbitrary +political divisions, therefore, possess but a transitory value. They cannot altogether +be ignored; but in the following descriptions we shall, as far as possible, adhere +to the great natural divisions as defined by mountains and valleys, and by the +distribution of nations having the same origin and speaking the same language. +But even these natural boundaries lose their importance in countries like +Switzerland, inhabited by nations speaking different languages, but held together +by the strongest of all ties—the common enjoyment of freedom.</p> + +<p>From an historical point of view a description of Europe should commence with +the maritime countries of the Mediterranean. It was Greece which gave birth to +our European civilisation, and which at one time occupied the centre of the known +world. Her poets first sang the praises of venturesome navigators, and her +historians and philosophers collected and classified the information received with +respect to foreign countries. In a subsequent age, Italy, in the very centre of the +Mediterranean, took the place of Greece, and for fifteen centuries maintained +herself therein: Genoa, Venice, and Florence succeeded Rome as the leaders of +the civilised world. During that period the surrounding nations gravitated +towards the Mediterranean and Italy; and it was only when the Italians +themselves enlarged the terrestrial sphere by the discovery of a new world beyond +the ocean that this preponderance passed away from them, to remain for a short +time with the Iberian peninsula. Greece had been the mediator between Europe +and the ancient civilisations of Asia and Africa; Spain and Portugal became the +representatives of Europe in America and the extreme Orient; historical development +in its progress had followed the axis of the Mediterranean from east to west.</p> + +<p>It will be found natural, under these circumstances, when we describe the three +Mediterranean peninsulas in the same volume, particularly as they are peopled +almost exclusively by Greco-Latin nations. France, though likewise Latinised, +nevertheless occupies a distinct position. It is a Mediterranean country only as +respects Provence and Languedoc, the rest of its territory sloping towards the +Atlantic. Its geographical position and history have made +France the great <span class="xxpn" id="p022">{22}</span> +European thoroughfare upon which the nations of the Mediterranean and of the +Atlantic meet to exchange their products and to fight their battles. Ideas are +imported into France from all parts of Europe, and she is called upon to act the +part of an interpreter between the nations of the North and of the South. Next to +France we shall describe the Germanic countries of Europe, the British Islands, +and Scandinavia; and lastly, the immense empire of Russia.</p> + +<div class="dctr10"><img src="images/ib022.jpg" width="275" +height="445" alt="" /></div> + +<div class="chapter" id="p023"> +<div class="dctr01"><img src="images/ib023.jpg" width="600" +height="124" alt="" /></div> + +<h2 class="h2herein" title="The Mediterranean.">THE MEDITERRANEAN. +<span class="sphr"><img class="ihra" src="images/hr-ia013.png" + width="248" height="27" alt="" /></span></h2> + +<h3 title="I.—Hydrology."> + I.—<span class="smcap">H<b>YDROLOGY.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst"> +<span class="spdropcap"><img class="idropcap" src="images/drop-g.jpg" +width="241" height="258" alt="G" /></span>REECE +and its insular satellites prove sufficiently that the unstable +floods of the Mediterranean have exercised a greater influence upon +the march of history than did the solid land upon which man trod. +Western civilisation would never have seen the light had not the +waters of the Mediterranean washed the shores of Egypt, Phœnicia, +Asia Minor, Hellas, Italy, Spain, and Carthage. The western nations would have +remained in their primitive barbarism if it had not been for the Mediterranean, +which joined Europe, Asia, and Africa; facilitated the intercourse between Aryans, +Semites, and Berbers; and rendered more equable the climate of the surrounding +countries, thus facilitating access to them. For ages it appeared almost as if mankind +could prosper only in the neighbourhood of this central sea, for beyond its +basin only decayed nations were to be met with, or tribes not yet awakened to mental +activity. “Like frogs around a swamp, so have we settled down on the shores of +this sea,” said Plato; and the sea he refers to is the Mediterranean. It is therefore +deserving of description quite as much as the inhabited countries which surround +it. Unfortunately many mysteries still remain hidden beneath its waves.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn5" id="fnanch5">5</a></p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg005"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib024lg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 5.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">D<b>EPTH</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>EDITERRANEAN.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">From a Chart by M. Delesse.</div> +<img src="images/ib024.jpg" width="600" height="325" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>From an examination of the coasts, as well as from the traditions of the people +inhabiting them, we learn that the Mediterranean has varied frequently in its +contours and extent. The straits which connect its waters with those of the +ocean have frequently changed their position. At a time when peninsulas like +Greece, and even islands like Malta, formed part of continental masses—and that +they did so in a comparatively recent geological epoch is proved by their fossil +fauna—the waters of the Mediterranean covered large portions of Africa, of +Southern Russia, and even of Asia. The researches of Spratt, Fuchs, and others +have satisfactorily proved that towards the close of the miocene +age a vast <span class="xxpn" id="p024">{24}</span> +fresh-water lake stretched from the banks of the Aral, across Russia, the plains of the +Danube and the Archipelago, as far as Syracuse in Sicily. Then came the briny +waters of the ocean. There was a time when the Black Sea and the Caspian +connected the Archipelago with the Gulf of the Obi. At another epoch the gulfs +of the Syrtes penetrated far inland, and a large portion of what is now the Libyan +and Saharan desert was then covered with water. The Strait of Gibraltar, which +was torn asunder by Hercules according to the traditions of the ancients, is in +reality but of recent origin, and has taken the place of a more ancient strait which +joined the Mediterranean to the Red Sea and Indian Ocean: this strait has been +restored by human hands, and is known now as the Suez Canal. The coast-lines of +the Mediterranean are undergoing perpetual change, owing to the upheaval or +subsidence of the countries surrounding it. The Nile, the Po, the Rhone, and +other rivers incessantly enlarge the alluvial plains at their mouths, and still +further encroach upon the sea. Actually the Mediterranean, with its subordinate +seas from the Strait of Gibraltar to the Sea of Azof, covers an area about thirty +times that of the British Islands. This area is small if we compare it with the +immense development of the coasts and the wealth in peninsulas, which impart an +aspect of life and independence to at least one-third of the ancient world. The +Mediterranean, though it takes precedence of all the oceans, in consequence of the +part it has played in history, nevertheless only covers an area one-seventieth that +of the Pacific.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn6" id="fnanch6">6</a> It is broken up, moreover, into several separate seas, some of them +so small in extent that the navigator hardly ever loses sight +of the land. In the <span class="xxpn" id="p025">{25}</span> +east we have the Black Sea, with its two dependencies, the Seas of Azof and of +Marmara. The Ægean Sea, or Archipelago, with its numerous islands, extends +between the deeply indented coasts of Greece, Asia Minor, and Crete. The +Adriatic stretches towards the north-west, between the Balkan peninsula and +Italy; and the Mediterranean proper is divided into two separate basins, which +might appropriately be called the Phœnician and Carthaginian Seas, or the Greek +and Roman Mediterraneans. Each of these basins is again subdivided, the one by +Crete, the other by the two islands of Sardinia and Corsica. These various +subdivisions of the Mediterranean differ in area, and still more in depth. The Sea +of Azof almost deserves the name of “Swamp,” which was bestowed upon it by +the ancients, for if a ship sinks in it the masts remain visible above the water. +The Black Sea has a maximum depth of over 1,000 fathoms, but the narrow strait +which joins it to the Sea of Marmara is shallower than many a European river. +The cavity filled by the Sea of Marmara is far inferior to that of many an inland +lake; and the Dardanelles, like the Bosphorus, are hardly wider than a river. In +the Archipelago and the eastern basin of the Mediterranean proper the depth +corresponds with the protuberance of the land. Abyssal depths and “pits” of 260 +and even of 540 fathoms are to be found in close proximity to the scarped +mountain islands of the Cyclades, whilst on the low coasts of Egypt the water +deepens only gradually, until in the centre of the Levantine Sea it attains a depth +of 1,750 fathoms. The maximum depth—2,170 fathoms—is attained between +Crete and Malta. If the whole of the waters of the Mediterranean were to be +collected into an aqueous sphere, the latter would have a diameter of 90 miles; +if it fell down upon the earth, it would not even wholly cover a country like +Switzerland.</p> + +<p>The Ionian Sea is separated from the Adriatic by a submarine ridge rising in +the Strait of Otranto, and bounded on the west by a shoal or submarine isthmus, +already referred to by Strabo, which joins Sicily to Tunis. This isthmus forms +the true geological boundary between the western and eastern basins of the +Mediterranean, which are connected here by a narrow breach only, the depth of +which hardly exceeds 100 fathoms. The western of these basins is the smaller and +shallower of the two, but nevertheless it attains a depth of 1,100 fathoms in the +Tyrrhenian, and of 1,360 fathoms and even 1,640 in the Balearic Sea, and is +separated from the waters of the Atlantic by a submarine ridge lying outside the +Strait of Gibraltar, and joining Europe to Africa.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn7" id="fnanch7">7</a></p> + +<p>This subdivision of the Mediterranean into separate basins, divided from each +other by shoals or submarine ridges, by islands and promontories, sufficiently +explains the contrasts between the phenomena of the open ocean and those observed +here. In the Mediterranean, it is well known, the tides are almost everywhere +irregular and uncertain. To the east of the Narrows of Gibraltar, in the sea +extending between Andalusia and Morocco, the tides are hardly +felt at all, and <span class="xxpn" id="p026">{26}</span> +they are, moreover, interfered with to such an extent by currents that it is exceedingly +difficult to determine their amplitude, or the establishment of the various +ports. Nevertheless the rise and fall of the tidal wave are sufficiently marked to +have attracted the attention of Greek and Italian navigators. On the coasts of +Catalonia, France, Liguria, Naples, Asia Minor, Syria, and Egypt the oscillation +is hardly perceptible, but on those of Eastern Sicily and of the Adriatic the tide +sometimes rises three feet, and, if accompanied by storms, may even attain a height +of ten feet in certain localities. The Straits of Messina and of Euripo (Eubœa) have +their regular tides, and in the Gulf of Gabes the waters rise and fall with the same +regularity as in the open ocean. In the Black Sea, however, no tidal movements +whatever have been discovered hitherto. It is nevertheless probable that more +careful observations will lead to the discovery of a feeble tide, for it is believed +that this phenomenon exists even on Lake Michigan, which has only one-fifth the +area of the Black Sea.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg006"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib026lg.jpg" + title="display larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 6.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>TRAIT</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>IBRALTAR.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">According to Robiquet, Randegger, and others. + Scale 1 : 750,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib026.jpg" width="600" height="542" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The Mediterranean differs not only from the open ocean with respect to the +feebleness and irregularity of its tides, but it is likewise without a great +stream-current +keeping in constant circulation the whole body of its waters. The currents +which have been observed in various divisions of the Mediterranean can be ascribed +only to local causes. An Italian geographer of the last +century, Montanari, has <span class="xxpn" id="p027">{27}</span> +advanced an hypothesis of a great circuit current which entered the Mediterranean +through the Strait of Gibraltar, and, after having washed the shores of Africa as +far as Egypt, returned to the west along those of Asia and Europe; but careful +observers have vainly endeavoured to discover its existence. They have met only +with local currents, produced by an indraught of the waters of the Atlantic, by +winds, by the floods of rivers, or by an excess of evaporation. One of these +currents sets along the coasts of Morocco and Algeria from west to east; another +flows along the Italian coast of the Adriatic from north to south; and a third +from the mouth of the Rhone in the direction of Cette and Port Vendres. In +fact, the configuration of the sea-bottom, and particularly the shoal between Sicily +and Tunis, precludes the existence of any but surface currents in the Mediterranean.</p> + +<p>Amongst the local currents the existence of which has been most clearly +established are those which convey the waters of the Sea of Azof into the Black +Sea, and those of the latter into the Archipelago. The Don more than makes up +for the loss by evaporation in the Sea of Azof, and its surplus waters find an exit +through the Strait of Kerch into the Black Sea. Similarly the waters of the +Dniester, the Dnieper, the Rion, and of the rivers of Asia Minor, and, above all, of +the Danube, which by itself conveys a larger volume of water into the Black Sea +than all the others combined, are discharged through the Bosphorus and the +Dardanelles into the Archipelago. On the other hand, the Archipelago returns to +the Black Sea, by means of a submarine counter-current and of lateral surface +currents, a certain quantity of salt water for the fresh water which it receives in +excess. This exchange accounts for the salineness of the waters of the Black +Sea. The volume of fresh water discharged into it by the Danube and other +rivers is so large that in the course of a thousand years its waters would become +perfectly fresh, if there did not exist these compensatory highly saline counter-currents.</p> + +<p>Analogous phenomena take place at the other extremity of the Mediterranean. +Evaporation there is excessive, owing to the neighbourhood of the burning sands +of the deserts, the winds from which blow freely over the sea, absorbing the +vapours and dispersing the clouds. The loss by evaporation amounts to at least +seven feet in the course of a year, and as the annual rainfall is estimated to amount +to twenty inches only, and the volume of water discharged annually by all the +tributary rivers of the Mediterranean, if uniformly spread over its surface, would +hardly exceed ten inches in depth, there exists thus an excess of evaporation +amounting annually to more than four feet; and this excess has to be made good +by an inflow of the waters of the Atlantic, which takes place through the Strait of +Gibraltar, whose volume far exceeds that of the Amazon in a state of flood. This +inflow of the waters of the Atlantic is felt, as a current, as far as the coasts of +Sicily, and, like all other currents, it is bounded by lateral currents flowing in a +direction contrary to that of the main current. During ebb the insetting Atlantic +current takes up the whole of the strait, but when the tide rises the Mediterranean +resists more successfully the pressure of the ocean, and this struggle +gives birth to <span class="xxpn" id="p028">{28}</span> +two counter-currents, one of which skirts the coast of Europe, the other that of +Africa between Ceuta and Cape Spartel; the latter is the larger and more powerful +of the two. In addition to these, there exists a submarine current, which conveys +the highly saline and heavier waters of the Mediterranean out into the Atlantic.</p> + +<p>The quantity of salt held in solution in various parts of the Mediterranean +differs widely, as the submarine ridges and shoals which divide it into separate +basins do not permit its waters to mingle as freely as in the open ocean. Owing +to the excess of evaporation, the quantity of salt is greater on the whole than in the +Atlantic, and this is the case more particularly on the coast of Africa. But in the +Black Sea it is far less, and near the mouths of some of the large rivers which +enter that sea the water is almost fresh.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn8" id="fnanch8">8</a></p> + +<p>The temperature of the Mediterranean is affected by the same causes which +produce its varying salineness, viz. the existence of shoals and banks, which +separate it into distinct sub-basins. In the open ocean the currents convey to all +latitudes large bodies of water, some of them heated by a tropical sun, others cooled +by contact with the ice of the polar regions. But these layers of unequal density +are regularly superimposed one upon the other, owing to the differences in their +temperature: the warm water remains on the surface, whilst the cold water +descends to the bottom. In the Mediterranean an analogous superimposition +exists only to a depth of 110 fathoms, which is the depth of the Atlantic current, +flowing into it through the Strait of Gibraltar. If a thermometer be lowered to a +greater depth it will indicate no further decrease of temperature, and the immense +body of water, remaining almost still at the bottom of the Mediterranean, has an +equable temperature of about 56° F. Observations made at depths varying +between 110 and 1,640 fathoms have always exhibited the same result. Professor +Carpenter believes, however, that the abyssal waters of some of the volcanic regions +have a somewhat higher temperature, which may be due to the presence of lava in +a state of fusion.</p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="II.—Animal Life, Fisheries and Salt Pans."> + II.—<span class="smcap">A<b>NIMAL</b></span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>IFE.</b></span> + <span class="smcap">F<b>ISHERIES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>ALT</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ANS.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">Another remarkable feature of the abyssal waters of the Mediterranean consists +in their poverty of animal life. No doubt there is some life; the dredgings of the +<i>Porcupine</i> and the telegraph cables, which, on being brought to the surface, were +found to be covered with shells and polypes, prove this. But, compared with those of +the ocean, the depths of the Mediterranean are veritable deserts. Edward Forbes, +who explored the waters of the Archipelago, arrived at the conclusion that their +abyssal depths were entirely devoid of life, but he was wrong when he assumed an +exceptional case like this to represent a universal law. Carpenter thinks that +this absence of life in the depths of the Mediterranean is due to the great quantity +of organic remains which is carried into it by the rivers. These remains absorb +the oxygen of the water, and part with their carbonic acid, +which is detrimental to <span class="xxpn" id="p029">{29}</span> +animal life. In numerous instances the water of the Mediterranean contains only +one-fourth the normal quantity of the former gas, but fifty per cent. in excess of +the latter. To the presence of these organic remains the Mediterranean is +probably indebted for its beautiful azure colour, so different from the black waters +of most oceans. This blue, then, which is justly celebrated by poets, would thus be +caused by the impurity of the water. M. Delesse has shown that the bottom of +nearly the whole of the Mediterranean is covered with ooze.</p> + +<p>The regions of the Mediterranean immediately below the surface abound in animal +life, particularly on the coasts of Sicily and Southern Italy; but nearly all species, +whether fish, testacea, or others, are of Atlantic origin. The Mediterranean, in +spite of its vast extent, as far as its fauna is concerned, is nothing but a gulf of the +Lusitanian Ocean. Its longitudinal extension and the similarity of climate in its +various portions have favoured the migration of animals through the Strait of +Gibraltar as far as the coasts of Syria. At the same time, animal life is most +varied near this point of entry, and the species met with in the western basin are +generally of greater size than those which exist in the eastern. A very small proportion +of non-Atlantic species recalls the fact that the Mediterranean formerly +communicated with the Red Sea and the Indian Ocean. But amongst a total of +more than eight hundred molluscs there are only about thirty which have reached +the seas of Greece and Sicily through the ancient straits separating Africa from +Asia, instead of through the Strait of Gibraltar.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn9" id="fnanch9">9</a> The diminution in the number +of species in an easterly direction becomes most striking when we reach the narrow +channel of the Dardanelles and the Bosphorus. The Black Sea, in fact, differs +essentially from the Mediterranean proper as regards temperature. It is refrigerated +by north-easterly winds sweeping over its surface, to the extent even of +portions of it becoming now and then covered with a thin coating of ice, adhering +to the coast. The Sea of Azof has frequently disappeared beneath a thick crust of +ice, and even the whole of the Black Sea has been frozen over in winters of +exceptional severity. The cold surface waters, together with those conveyed into +the Black Sea by large rivers, descend to the bottom, and prove most detrimental +to animal life. Echinodermata and zoophytes are not met with at all in the Black +Sea; certain classes of molluscs, already rare in the Levantine Sea and the +Archipelago, are likewise absent; and the total number of species of molluscs is +only one-tenth of what it is in the Mediterranean. Fish are numerous as far as +individuals go, but their species are few. In fact, the fauna of the Black Sea +appears to resemble that of the Caspian, from which it is cut off, rather than that +of the Greek seas, with which the Sea of Marmara connects it.</p> + +<p>In addition to the species which have found a second home in the Mediterranean, +there are some that must still be looked upon as visitors. Such are the sharks, +which extend their incursions to the seas of Sicily, to the Adriatic, and even to the +coasts of Egypt and Syria. Such, also, are the larger cetacea—whales, rorquals, +and sperm whales—whose visits, however, are confined +now to the Tyrrhenian <span class="xxpn" id="p030">{30}</span> +basin, and become less frequent from century to century. The tunny-fish of the +Mediterranean are also visitors from the coasts of Lusitania. First-rate swimmers, +they enter through the Strait of Gibraltar in spring, ascend the whole of the +Mediterranean, make the tour of the Black Sea, and return in autumn to the +Atlantic, after having accomplished a journey of some 5,600 miles. In the opinion +of the fishermen the tunnies go upon their travels in three immense divisions or +shoals, and it is the central shoal which visits the coasts of the Tyrrhenian Sea, +and consists of the largest and strongest fish. Each of the three divisions appears +to be composed of individuals about the same age. For mutual protection they +swim in troops, for they are preyed upon by enemies innumerable. Dolphins and +other fish of prey follow their track, but their great destroyer is man. In the +summer the tunny fishery, or <i>tonnaro</i>, is carried on in numerous bays of Sicily, +Sardinia, Naples, and of Provence. Enormous structures consisting of nets +enclose these bays, and they are ingeniously arranged so as to close gradually +around the captured fish, which, passing from net to net, find themselves at last in +the “chamber of death,” where they are massacred. Millions of pounds of flesh +are annually obtained from these floating “slaughter-houses,” yet the tunny +appears year after year in multitudes, and on the same coasts. There may have +been a slight decrease in the number, but their closely packed masses still invade +the “Golden Horn” of Byzance and other bays, as they did when first they +attracted the attention of Greek naturalists.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg007"> + <span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib030lg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 7.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>RINCIPAL</b></span> + <span class="smcap">F<b>ISHERIES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>EDITERRANEAN.</b></span> + </div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 38,300,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib030.jpg" width="600" height="335" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Next to the tunny fisheries those of the sardines and anchovies are most +important. Sea-urchins and other products of the sea are eaten by the inhabitants +of the coasts, particularly in Italy, but there is no part of the Mediterranean where +animal life is so abundant and so prodigious in quantity as on the celebrated +banks of Newfoundland, or on the coasts of Portugal or of the Canaries.</p> + +<p>A large number of fishing-boats are engaged, not in the capture of +fish, but in <span class="xxpn" id="p031">{31}</span> +the collection of articles of dress or of the toilet. The purple-shell fisheries on the +coasts of Phœnicia, the Peloponnesus, and Greece are no longer carried on, but +hundreds of boats are employed annually during the fine season in fishing for coral +or sponges.</p> + +<p>Coral is found most abundantly in the western portion of the Mediterranean, +and the Italian fishermen do not confine themselves to their own shores—to Sicily, +Naples, and Sardinia—but also visit the Strait of Bonifacio, the sea off St. Tropez, +the vicinity of Cape Creus in Spain, and the waters of Barbary. Ordinary +sponges are collected in the Gulf of Gabes, and at the other extremity of the +Mediterranean, on the coasts of Syria and Asia Minor, and in the straits winding +between the Cyclades and Sporades. Sponges are usually found at a depth of +from 12 to 150 feet, and can be gathered by divers; whilst coral occurs at far +greater depths, and has to be wrenched off with an iron instrument, which brings +up its fragments, mixed with ooze, seaweeds, and the remains of marine animalculæ. +This industry is still in a state of barbarism: those devoted to it are not as +yet sufficiently acquainted with the sea and its inhabitants to enable them to carry +on the sponge and coral fisheries in a rational manner. Yet this they must aim +at: they must learn how to deprive Proteus, the ever-changing deity, of his +dominion over the inhabitants of the deep.</p> + +<p>Next to the fisheries, the preparation of sea salt constitutes one of the leading +industries of the Mediterranean coast-lands. But this industry, too, is frequently +carried on in a primitive way, and only in the course of the present century have +scientific methods been introduced in connection with it. The Mediterranean is +admirably suited for the production of salt, for its waters have a high temperature, +they hold a very large quantity of salt in solution, the rise and fall of the tides are +inconsiderable, and flat seashores alternate with steep coasts and promontories. +The most productive salt marshes of the Mediterranean are probably those on the +Lagoon, or Étang de Thau, near Cette, and on the littoral of Hyères; but considerable +ones may also be met with on the coasts of Spain, in Italy, in Sardinia, +Sicily, Istria, and even on the “limans” of Bessarabia, bordering upon the Black +Sea. The annual production of salt is estimated at more than a million tons, and +exceeds, therefore, the entire tonnage of the commercial marine of France.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn10" id="fnanch10">10</a> But +this quantity, large as it is, is infinitesimal if we compare it with the saline +contents of the sea, and science will enable us one day to raise a far more abundant +treasure from its sterile depths.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn11" id="fnanch11">11</a></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="III.—Commerce and Navigation."> + III.—<span class="smcap">C<b>OMMERCE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">N<b>AVIGATION.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">Whatever advantages may be yielded by fisheries and salt-works, they shrink +into insignificance if we compare them with the great +gain—material, intellectual, <span class="xxpn" id="p032">{32}</span> +and moral—which mankind has derived from the navigation of this inland sea. +It has repeatedly been pointed out by historians that the disposition of the coasts, +islands, and peninsulas of the Mediterranean of the Phœnicians and Greeks admirably +favoured the first essays in maritime commerce. Many causes have contributed +to make this sea the cradle of European commerce: the faint summits of +distant lands visible even before the port has been quitted; numerous nooks along +the coasts where a safe refuge may be found in case of storms; regular land and +sea breezes; an equability of climate which makes the sailor feel at home wherever +business takes him; and, moreover, a great variety of productions resulting from +the diverse configuration of the Mediterranean coast-lands. And this commerce, +does it not lead to a peaceful intercourse between peoples on neutral ground, and +to mutual enlightenment, brought about by an interchange of ideas? Every +coast-line which facilitates the intercourse between nations is, therefore, of immense +value as a means of developing civilisation.</p> + +<p>Civilisation for many centuries marched from the south-east towards the north-west, +and Phœnicia, Greece, Italy, and France have successively become great +centres of human intelligence. This historical phenomenon is due to the configuration +of the sea, which has been the vehicle of migratory nations. In fact, the axis +of civilisation, if this expression be allowed, has become confounded with that axis +of the Mediterranean which extends from the coast of Syria to the Gulf of Lions, +on the coast of France. But the Mediterranean has ceased to be the only centre of +gravitation of Europe, which sends its merchantmen now to the two Americas and +the farthest East; and civilisation no longer marches in that general line from east +to west, but rather radiates in all directions. Civilising streams depart from +England and Germany towards Northern America, and from the Latinised countries +of Europe towards Southern America. Their direction is still westerly, but they +have been deflected towards the south, to meet the conditions imposed by climate +and the geographical configuration of land and sea.</p> + +<p>It is interesting to trace the changes which have occurred in the historical +importance of the Mediterranean. As long as that sea remained the great highway +between nations, the commercial republics were content to extend this highway +towards the east, by establishing caravan routes to the Gulf of Persia, to India, and +to China. In the Middle Ages Genoese factories dotted the coasts of the Black Sea, +and extended thence through Trans-Caucasia as far as the Caspian. European +travellers, and particularly Italians, at that time crossed Western Asia in all +directions; and many a route hardly known in our days was then frequented almost +daily. But for several centuries direct commercial intercourse with Central Asia +has dwindled down to small proportions.</p> + +<p>The Mediterranean had ceased to be a great ocean highway. Our navigators, +no longer dreading a boundless sea, took their ships into every part of the ocean. +The difficult and perilous land routes were abandoned, the once busy markets of +Central Asia became solitudes, and the Mediterranean itself a veritable blind alley, +as far as the world’s commerce was concerned. This condition of affairs lasted for +many years, but since the middle of this century our relations with +the East have <span class="xxpn" id="p033">{33}</span> +been renewed, and the lost ground is rapidly being recovered. Within the last +year a great commercial revolution has been effected through the opening of one +of the ancient gates of the Mediterranean, and the Suez Canal has become the +great highway of steamers between Western Europe, the Indies, and Australia. +Possibly, at no distant future, a similar canal will enable our merchantmen to +proceed from the Black Sea to the Caspian, and perhaps even to the Amu and the +Syr, in the very heart of the ancient continent.</p> + +<p>It is thus that the great centres of intercommunication, or vital points of our +planet, as we should like to call them, become shifted in the course of time. Port +Said, an improvised town on a desert shore, has thus become a centre of attraction +for travellers and merchandise, whilst the neighbouring cities of Tyre and Sidon +have dwindled down into miserable villages, with nothing to indicate the proud +position they held in the past. Carthage, too, has perished, and Venice decayed. +Many a thriving place on the shores of the Mediterranean has been reduced to +insignificance through the silting up of its harbour, the employment of larger +vessels, the loss of independence, or through political changes of all kinds. But +in nearly every instance some neighbouring town has taken the place of these +decayed harbours, and most of the great routes of commerce have maintained their +original directions, and their terminal points, as well as intermediate stations, have +remained in the same localities.</p> + +<p>There are, moreover, certain places which ships are almost obliged to frequent, +and where towns of importance arise as a matter of course. Such are the Straits of +Gibraltar and of Messina; such, also, are places like Genoa, Trieste, and Saloniki, +which occupy the bottom of gulfs or bays penetrating far into the land. Ports +offering the greatest facilities for embarking merchandise intended for foreign +countries, such as Marseilles and Alexandria, are likewise natural centres of +attraction to merchants. One town there is in the Mediterranean which enjoys at +one and the same time every one of the geographical advantages which we have +pointed out, for it is situated on a strait connecting two seas and separating two +continents. This town is Constantinople, and despite the deplorable maladministration +under which it suffers, its position alone has enabled it to maintain its +place amongst the great cities of the world.</p> + +<p>The ports of the Mediterranean no longer enjoy a monopoly of commerce as +they did for thousands of years, but the number of ships to be met with in that +inland sea is, nevertheless, proportionately far greater than what we meet with on +the open oceans. The commercial marine of the Mediterranean numbers thirty-seven +thousand vessels, of a capacity of two million seven hundred and ninety-six +thousand tons, without counting fishing-boats. This is more than one-fourth of +the entire commercial marine of the world, as respects the number of ships, and +one-sixth of it as regards tonnage. This inferiority of tonnage is due to the small +vessels of ancient types which still maintain their ground in Greece and Italy, and +which possess certain advantages for the coasting trade.</p> + +<p>To this marine of the Mediterranean should be added the vessels belonging to +foreign ports, which visit it for purposes of trade, and amongst +which those of <span class="xxpn" id="p034">{34}</span> +England take the most prominent rank. The Government of Great Britain has +even taken care to secure itself a place amongst the Mediterranean powers. It has +occupied Gibraltar, at the eastern entrance to this basin, and taken possession of +Malta, which commands its centre; and although the western entrance, formed by +the Suez Canal, is not in its possession, its garrisons on Perim and the rock of Aden +are able at any moment to close up the only approach to it which leads from the +Indian Ocean through the Red Sea.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg008"> + <span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib034lg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 8.—<span class="smcap">S<b>TEAMER</b></span> + <span class="smcap">R<b>OUTES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>ELEGRAPHS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">IN</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>EDITERRANEAN.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 45,000,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib034.jpg" width="600" height="316" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The share which England takes in the commerce of the Mediterranean is +considerable, but it is surpassed by far by that of France and Italy. A sovereign +who aspired to the dominion of the world once spoke of the inland sea extending +from the Strait of Gibraltar to Egypt as a “French lake;” but with equal justice +might it be called a Greek, a Dalmatian, or Spanish lake, and with still greater +an Italian lake. The pirates of Barbary were, in reality, the last “masters” of the +Mediterranean: their swift vessels presented themselves unexpectedly before the +coast towns, and carried off their inhabitants. But since their predatory fleets +have been destroyed, the Mediterranean has become the common property of the +world, and the meshes of an international network of maritime highways become +closer from year to year. The merchantmen no longer pursue their voyages in +company as they did in former times, discharging their cargo from port to port, +for a single vessel may venture now into any portion of the Mediterranean in +safety. Still there remain the dangers of reefs and of storms. The art of navigation +has made vast progress; most of the capes, at least on the coasts of Europe, are +lit up by lighthouses; the approaches to the ports are rendered easy by lightships, +buoys, and beacons; but shipwrecks are nevertheless of frequent occurrence. Even +large vessels founder sometimes, without leaving a stray plank behind to indicate +the place of their disappearance.</p> + +<p>Steamers travelling along prescribed routes are now gradually taking the +place of sailing vessels, and where they cross at frequent intervals +they may be <span class="xxpn" id="p035">{35}</span> +likened to ferry-boats crossing a river. The regularity and speed of these steam +ferries; the facilities which they afford for the conveyance of merchandise; the +increasing number of railways which convey the produce of the interior to the +seaports; and lastly, the submarine telegraphs, which have established instantaneous +means of communication between the principal ports, all contribute towards the +growth of Mediterranean commerce. This commerce, including imports and +exports, and the transit through the Suez Canal, actually amounts to about +£353,000,000, a year.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn12" id="fnanch12">12</a> This may not be much for a maritime population of a +hundred millions, but a perceptible increase is taking place from year to year. We +should also bear in mind that, face to face with the busy peninsulas of Europe, there +lies torrid Africa, an inert mass, avoided by the sailors of our own age as much as +it was by those of ancient Greece. Its coasts are hardly ever visited, with the +exception of those portions which extend from Oran to Tunis, and from Alexandria +to Port Said. It is matter of surprise, too, that certain localities which formerly +attracted crowds of vessels, such as Cyrenaica, Cyprus, and beautiful Crete, at the +very entrance to the Archipelago, should still remain outside the ordinary track +of our steamers.</p> + +<div class="dctr10"><img src="images/ib035.jpg" + width="226" height="376" alt="" /></div> + +<div class="chapter" id="p036"> +<div class="dctr01"><img src="images/ib036.jpg" + width="600" height="128" alt="" /></div> + +<h2 class="h2herein" title="Greece.">GREECE. +<span class="sphr"><img class="ihra" src="images/hr-ia013.png" + width="248" height="27" alt="" /></span></h2> + +<h3 title="I.—General Aspects."> + I.—<span class="smcap">G<b>ENERAL</b></span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>SPECTS.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst"> +<span class="spdropcap"><img class="idropcap" src="images/drop-g.jpg" +width="241" height="258" alt="G" /></span>REECE, +within its confined political boundaries, to the south of the +Gulfs of Arta and Volo, is a country of about nineteen thousand +square miles, or at most equal to the ten-millionth part of the earth’s +surface. Within the vast empire of Russia there are many districts +more extensive than the whole of Greece, but there is nothing +which distinguishes these from other districts which surround them, and their names +call forth no idea in our mind. The little country of the Hellenes, however, so +insignificant upon our maps—how many memories does it not awaken ! In no +other part of the world had man attained a degree of civilisation equally harmonious +in all respects, or more favourable to individual development. Even +now, though carried along within an historical cycle far more vast than that of +the Greeks, we should do well to look back frequently in order to contemplate +those small nations, who are still our masters in the arts, and first initiated us into +science. The city which was the “school of Greece” still remains the school of +the entire world; and after twenty centuries of decay, like some of those extinct +stars whose luminous rays yet reach the earth, still continues to enlighten us.</p> + +<p>The considerable part played by the people of Greece during many ages must +undoubtedly be ascribed to the geographical position of their country. Other +tribes having the same origin, but inhabiting countries less happily situated—such, +for instance, as the Pelasgians of Illyria, who are believed to be the ancestors of +the Albanians—have never risen above a state of barbarism, whilst the Hellenes +placed themselves at the head of civilised nations, and opened fresh paths to their +enterprise. If Greece had remained for ever what it was during the tertiary +geological epoch—a vast plain attached to the deserts of Libya, and run over by +lions and the rhinoceros—would it have become the native country of a Phidias, +an Æschylos, or a Demosthenes? Certainly not. It would have shared the fate +of Africa, and, far from taking the initiative in civilisation, would have waited for +an impulse to be given to +it from beyond. <span class="xxpn" id="p037">{37}</span></p> + +<p>Greece, a sub-peninsula of the peninsula of the Balkans, was even more +completely protected by transverse mountain barriers in the north than was +Thracia or Macedonia. Greek culture was thus able to develop itself without fear +of being stifled at its birth by successive invasions of barbarians. Mounts +Olympus, Pelion, and Ossa, towards the north and east of Thessaly, constituted the +first line of formidable obstacles towards Macedonia. A second barrier, the steep +range of the Othrys, runs along what is the present political boundary of Greece. +To the south of the Gulf of Lamia a fresh obstacle awaits us, for the range of the +Œta closes the passage, and there is but the narrow pass of the Thermopylæ +between it and the sea. Having crossed the mountains of the Locri and descended +into the basin of Thebæ, there still remain to be crossed the Parnes or the +spurs of the Cithæron before we reach the plains of Attica. The “isthmus” +beyond these is again defended by transverse barriers, outlying ramparts, as it +were, of the mountain citadel of the Peloponnesus, that acropolis of all Greece. +Hellas has frequently been compared to a series of chambers, the doors of which +were strongly bolted; it was difficult to get in, but more difficult to get out again, +owing to their stout defenders. Michelet likens Greece to a trap having three +compartments. You entered, and found yourself taken first in Macedonia, then in +Thessaly, then between the Thermopylæ and the isthmus. But the difficulties +increase beyond the isthmus, and Lacedæmonia remained impregnable for a long +time.</p> + +<p>At an epoch when the navigation even of a land-locked sea like the Ægean +was attended with danger, Greece found herself sufficiently protected against the +invasions of oriental nations; but, at the same time, no other country held out such +inducements to the pacific expeditions of merchants. Gulfs and harbours facilitated +access to her Ægean coasts, and the numerous outlying islands were available +as stations or as places of refuge. Greece, therefore, was favourably placed for +entering into commercial intercourse with the more highly civilised peoples who +dwelt on the opposite coasts of Asia Minor. The colonists and voyagers of Eastern +Ionia not only supplied their Achæan and Pelasgian kinsmen with foreign commodities +and merchandise, but they also imparted to them the myths, the poetry, +the sciences, and the arts of their native country. Indeed, the geographical +configuration of Greece points towards the east, whence she has received her first +enlightenment. Her peninsulas and outlying islands extend in that direction; the +harbours on her eastern coasts are most commodious, and afford the best shelter; +and the mountain-surrounded plains there offer the best sites for populous cities. +Greece, at the same time, does not share the disadvantage of Turkey, which is +almost cut off from the western world by a mountain region difficult to cross. +The Ionian Sea, to the west of the Peloponnesus, it is true, is, comparatively +speaking, a desert; but farther north the Gulf of Corinth almost cuts in two the +Greek peninsula, and the sight of the distant mountains of Italy, which are visible +from the Ionian Islands, must have incited to an exploration of the western seas. +The Acarnanians, who knew how to build vaults long before the Romans, were +thus brought early into contact with the Italians, to whom +they imparted their <span class="xxpn" id="p038">{38}</span> +knowledge, and at a subsequent period the Greeks became the civilisers of the +whole western world of the Mediterranean.</p> + +<p>The most distinctive feature of Hellas, as far as concerns the relief of the +ground, consists in the large number of small basins, separated one from the other +by rocks or mountain ramparts. The features of the ground thus favoured the +division of the Greek people into a multitude of independent republics. Every +town had its river, its amphitheatre of hills or mountains, its acropolis, its fields, +pastures, and forests, and nearly all of them had, likewise, access to the sea. All +the elements required by a free community were thus to be found within each of +these small districts, and the neighbourhood of other towns, equally favoured, kept +alive perpetual emulation, too frequently degenerating into strife and battle. The +islands of the Ægean Sea, likewise, had constituted themselves into miniature +republics. Local institutions thus developed themselves freely, and even the +smallest island of the Archipelago has its great representatives in history.</p> + +<p>But whilst there thus exists the greatest diversity, owing to the configuration +of the ground and the multitude of islands, the sea acts as a binding element, +washes every coast, and penetrates far inland. These gulfs and numerous harbours +have made the maritime inhabitants of Greece a nation of sailors—amphibiæ, as +Strabo called them. From the most remote times the passion for travel has always +been strong amongst them. When the inhabitants of a town grew too numerous +to support themselves upon the produce of their land, they swarmed out like bees, +explored the coasts of the Mediterranean, and, when they had found a site which +recalled their native home, they built themselves a new city. It was thus Greek +cities arose in hundreds of places, from the Mæotis Palus to beyond the columns of +Hercules—from Tanais and Panticapæum to Gades and Tingis, the modern Tangier. +Thanks to those numerous colonies, some of them more powerful and renowned than +the mother towns which gave birth to them, the veritable Greece, the Greece of +science and art and republican independence, in the end overflowed its ancient +cradle, and sporadically occupied the whole circumference of the Mediterranean. +The Greeks held the same position relatively to the world of the ancients which +is occupied at the present time by the Anglo-Saxons with reference to the entire +earth. There exists, indeed, a remarkable analogy between Greece, with its archipelago, +and the British Islands, at the other extremity of the continent. Similar +geographical advantages have brought about similar results, as far as commerce +is concerned, and between the Ægean and the British seas time and space have +effected a sort of harmony.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>The admiration with which travellers behold Greece is due, above all, to the +memories attaching to every one of its ruins, to the smallest amongst its rivulets, +and the most insignificant rock in its seas. Scenery in Provence or Spain, though +it may surpass in grace or boldness of outline anything to be seen in Greece, is +appreciated only by a few. The mass go past it without emotion, for names like +Marathon, Leuctra, or Platææ are not connected with it, and the rustle of bygone +ages is not heard. But even if glorious memories were not +associated with the <span class="xxpn" id="p039">{39}</span> +coasts of Greece, their beauty would nevertheless entitle them to our admiration. +In the gulfs of Athens or of Argos the artist is charmed not only with the azure +blue of the waters, the transparency of the sky, the ever-changing perspective +along the shores, and the boldness of the promontories, but also with the pure and +graceful profile of the mountains, which consist of layers of limestone or of marble. +We almost fancy we look upon architectural piles; and the temples with which +many a summit is adorned appear to epitomize them.</p> + +<p>It is verdure and the sparkling water of rivulets which we miss most on the +shores of Greece. Nearly all the mountains near the coast have been despoiled of +their large trees. There remain only bushes, mastic, strawberry, and juniper +trees, and evergreen oaks; even the carpet of odoriferous herbs which clothes the +declivities, and upon which the goat browses, has in many instances been reduced +to a few miserable patches. Torrents of rain have carried away the mould, and +the naked rock appears on the surface. From a distance we only see greyish +declivities, dotted here and there with a few wretched shrubs. Even in the days +of Strabo most mountains along the coasts had been robbed of their forests, and one +of our modern authors says that “Greece is a skeleton only of what it used to be !” +By a sort of irony, geographical names derived from trees abound throughout +Hellas and Turkey: Caryæ is the “town of walnut-trees,” Valanidia that of the +Valonia oaks, Kyparissi that of cypresses, Platanos or Plataniki that of plane-trees. +Everywhere we meet with localities whose appellation is justified by +nothing. Forests at the present day are confined almost entirely to the interior +and to the Ionian coast. The Œta Mountains, some of the mountains of Ætolia, +the hills of Acarnania, and Arcadia, Elis, Triphylia, and the slopes of the Taygetus, +in the Peloponnesus, still retain their forests. And it is only in these forest +districts, visited solely by herdsmen, that savage animals, such as the wolf, the fox, +and the jackal, are now met with. The chamois, it is said, still haunts the recesses +of the Pindus and Œta Mountains; but the wild boar of the Erymanthus, which +must have been a distinct species if we are to judge by antique sculptures, exists +no more in Greece, and the lion, still mentioned by Aristotle, has not been seen +for two thousand years. Amongst the smaller animals there is a turtle, common +in some parts of the Peloponnesus, which the natives look upon with the same +aversion as do many western nations upon the toad and the salamander.</p> + +<p>Greece is a small country, but the variety of its climate is nevertheless great. +Striking differences in the climate of different localities are produced by the +contrasts between mountains and plains, woodlands and sterile valleys, coasts +having a northern or southern aspect. But even leaving out of sight these +local differences, it may safely be asserted that the varieties of climate which we +meet with in traversing Greece from north to south are scarcely exceeded in any +other region. The mountains of Ætolia, in the north, whose slopes are covered +with beech-trees, remind us of the temperate zone of Europe, whilst the peninsulas +and islands towards the east and south, with their thickets of fig and olive trees, +their plantations of oranges and lemons, their aloe hedges and rare palm-trees, +belong to the sub-tropical zone. But even +neighbouring districts occasionally <span class="xxpn" id="p040">{40}</span> +differ strikingly as regards climate. In the ancient lake basin of Bœotia the winters +are cold, the summers scorching, whilst the temperature of the eastern shore of +Eubœa is equable, owing to the moderating influence of sea breezes. Within a +narrow compass Greece presents us with the climates of a large portion of the +earth, and there can be no doubt that this diversity of climate, and the contrasts of +every kind springing from it, must have favourably influenced the intellectual +development of the Hellenes. A spirit of inquiry was called forth amongst them +which reacted upon their commercial tastes and industrial proclivities.</p> + +<p>The diversity of the climate of the land, however, is compensated for, in +Greece, by a uniformity in the climate of the maritime districts. As in a mountain +valley, the winds of the Ægean Sea blow alternately in contrary directions. +During nearly the whole of summer the atmospheric currents of Eastern Europe are +attracted towards the African deserts. The winds from the north of the Archipelago +and Macedonia then speed the navigator on his voyage to the south, and on +many occasions the conquering tribes of the northern shores of that sea have +availed themselves of them in their improvised attacks upon the inhabitants of the +more southern districts of Asia Minor and of Greece. These regular northerly +currents, known as etesian or annual winds, cease on the termination of the +hot season, when the sun stands above the southern tropic. They are, moreover, +interrupted every night, when the cool sea air is attracted by the heated surface of +the land. When the sun has set the wind gradually subsides; there is a calm, +lasting a few moments; and then the air begins to move in an inverse direction—“the +land begins to blow,” as the sailors say. Nor is this regular wind without +its counter-current, known as the <i>embates</i>, or propitious south-easterly breeze of +which the poets sing. General winds and breezes, moreover, are deflected from +their original directions in consequence of the configuration of the coast and the +direction of mountain chains. The Gulf of Corinth, for instance, is shut in by +high mountains on the north and the south, and the winds alternately enter it +from the east or west—a phenomenon likened by Strabo to the breathing of an +animal.</p> + +<p>The rains, like the winds, deviate in many places from the average, and whilst +the water pours down into some mountain valleys as into a funnel, elsewhere the +clouds drift past without parting with a drop of their humid burden. Contrasts +in the amount of precipitation are thus added to those resulting from differences +of configuration and variety of climate. As a rule, rain is more abundant on the +western shores of Greece than on the eastern, and this fact accounts for the smiling +aspect of the hills of Elis, as compared with the barren declivities of Argolis and +Attica. Thunder-storms, driven before the winds of the Mediterranean, likewise +recur with greater regularity in the western portion of the peninsula. In Elis and +Acarnania the roll of thunder may be heard in spring daily, for whole weeks, in +the afternoon. No sites more apposite could have been found for temples dedicated +to Jupiter, the god of lightning.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>The ancient inhabitants of the Cyclades, and probably, also, those +of the coasts <span class="xxpn" id="p041">{41}</span> +of Hellas and Asia Minor, had already attained a considerable amount of culture +long before the commencement of our historical records. This has been proved by +excavations made in the volcanic ashes of Santorin and Therasia. At the time +their houses were buried beneath the ashes, the Santoriniotes had begun to pass +from the age of stone into that of copper. They knew how to build arches of +stone and mortar, they manufactured lime, used weights made of blocks of lava, +wove cloth, made pottery, dyed their stuffs, and ornamented their houses with +frescoes; they cultivated barley, peas, and lentils, and had begun to trade with +distant countries.</p> + +<p>We do not know whether these men were of the same race as the Hellenes; +but thus much is certain—that at the earliest dawn of history the islands and +coasts of the Ægean Sea were peopled by various families of Greeks, whilst the +interior of the country and the western shores of the peninsula were inhabited by +Pelasgians. These Pelasgians, moreover, were of the same stock as the Greeks, +and they spoke a language derived from the same source as the dialects of the +Hellenes. Both were Aryans, and, unless natives of the soil, they must have +immigrated into Greece from Asia Minor by crossing the Hellespont, or by way of +the islands of the Archipelago. The Pelasgians, according to tradition, sprang +from Mount Lycæus, in the centre of the Peloponnesus; they boasted of being +“autochthons,” “men of the black soil,” “children of oaks,” or “men born before +the moon.” All around them lived tribes of kindred origin, such as the Æolians +and the Leleges, and these were afterwards joined by Ionians and Achæans. +The Ionians, who, in a subsequent age, exercised so great an influence over the +destinies of the world, only occupied the peninsula of Attica and the neighbouring +Eubœa. The Achæans for a long time enjoyed a preponderance, and in the end +the Greek clans collectively became known by that name. Later on, when the +Dorians had crossed the Gulf of Corinth where it is narrowest, and established +themselves as conquerors in the Peloponnesus, the Amphictyons, or national +councils, sitting alternately at Thermopylæ and Delphi, conferred the name of +Hellenes, which was that of a small tribe in Thessaly and Phthiotis, upon all +the inhabitants of the peninsula and the islands. The name of Greek, which +signifies, perhaps, “mountaineer,” “ancient,” or “son of the soil,” gradually +spread amongst the nation, and in the end became general. The Ionians of Asia +Minor, and the Carians of the Sporades, emulated the Phœnicians by trading from +port to port amongst these half-savage tribes, and, like bees which convey the +fecundating pollen from flower to flower, they carried the civilisation of Egypt and +the East from tribe to tribe.</p> + +<div class="section"> +<div class="dctr02" id="fg009"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 9.—<span class="smcap">M<b>AINOTE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>PARTAN.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib042.jpg" width="528" height="697" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>Phœnician merchants and Roman conquerors scarcely modified the elements +composing the population of Hellas, but during the age of migrations barbarians +in large numbers penetrated into Greece. For more than two centuries did the +Avares maintain themselves in the Peloponnesus. Then came the Slavs, aided, on +more than one occasion, by the plague in depopulating the country. Greece became +a Slavonia, and a Slavonian language, probably Servian, was universally spoken, +as is proved by the majority of geographical names. The +superstitions and legends <span class="xxpn" id="p042">{42}</span> +of the modern Greeks, as has been remarked by many authors, are not simply a +heritage derived from the ancient Hellenes, but have become enriched by phantoms +and vampires of Slav invention. The dress of the Greeks, too, is a legacy of their +northern conquerors. But, in spite of this, the polished language +of the Hellenes <span class="xxpn" id="p043">{43}</span> +has regained by degrees its ancient preponderance, and the race has so thoroughly +amalgamated these foreign immigrants, that it is impossible now to trace any +Servian elements in the population. But hardly had Hellas escaped the danger of +becoming Slav when it was threatened with becoming Albanian. This occurred +during the dominion of Venice. As recently as the commencement of the present +century Albanian was the dominant language of Elis, Argos, Bœotia, and Attica, +and even at the present day a hundred thousand supposed Hellenes still speak +it. The actual population of Greece is, therefore, a very mixed one, but it is +difficult to say in what proportions these Hellenic, Slav, and Albanian elements +have combined. The Mainotes, or Maniotes, of the peninsula terminating in +Cape Matapan, are generally supposed to be the Greeks of the purest blood. +They themselves claim to be the descendants of the ancient Spartans, and amongst +their strongholds they still point out one which belonged to “Signor Lycurgus.” +Their Councils of Elders have preserved from immemorial times, and down to +the war of independence, the title of Senate of Lacedæmonia. Every Mainote +professes to love unto death “Liberty, the highest of all goods, inherited from +our Spartan ancestors.” Nevertheless, a good many localities in Maina bear +names derived from the Servian, and these prove, at all events, that the Slavs +resided in the country for a considerable time. The Mainotes practise the +<i>vendetta</i>, as if they were Montenegrins. But is not this a common custom +amongst all uncivilised nations?</p> + +<p>However this may be, in spite of invasions and intermixture with other +races, the Greeks of to-day agree in most points with the Greeks of the past. +Above all things, they have preserved their language, and it is truly matter +for surprise that the vulgar Greek, though derived from a rural dialect, should +differ so slightly only from the literary language. The differences, analogous +to what may be observed with respect to the languages derived from the Latin, +are restricted almost to two points, viz. the contraction of non-accentuated +syllables and the use of auxiliary verbs. It was, therefore, easy for the modern +Greeks to purify their language from barbarisms and foreign terms, and to +restore it gradually to what it was in the time of Thucydides. Nor has the +race changed much in its physical features, for in most districts of modern +Greece the ancient types may yet be recognised. The Bœotian is still distinguished +by that heavy gait which made him an object of ridicule amongst +the other Greeks; the Athenian youth possesses the suppleness, grace of movement +and bearing which we admire so much in the horsemen sculptured on +the friezes of the Parthenon; the Spartan women have preserved that haughty +and vigorous beauty which constituted the charm of the virgins of Doris. As +regards morals, the descent of the modern Hellenes is equally evident. Like +their ancestors, they are fond of change, and inquisitive; as the descendants +of free citizens, they have preserved a feeling of equality; and, still infatuated +with dialectics, they hold forth at all times as if they were in the ancient +market-place, or Agora. They frequently stoop to flattery: like the ancient +Greeks, too, they are apt to rate intellectual merit above +purity of morals. <span class="xxpn" id="p044">{44}</span> +Like sage Ulysses of the Homeric poem, they well know how to lie and cheat +with grace; and the truthful Acarnanian and the Mainote, who are “slow to +promise, but sure to keep,” are looked upon as rural oddities. Another +trait in the character of the modern and ancient Greeks, and one which +distinguishes them from all other Europeans, is this—that they do not allow +themselves to be carried away by passion, except in the cause of patriotism. +The Greek is a stranger to melancholy: he loves life, and is determined to enjoy +it. In battle he may throw it away, but suicide is a species of death +unknown amongst the modern Greeks, and the more unhappy they are, the +more they cling to existence. They are very seldom afflicted with insanity.</p> + +<div class="section"> +<div class="dctr01" id="fg010"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib044lg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 10.—<span class="smcap">F<b>OREIGN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>LEMENTS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">IN</span> <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>OPULATION</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>REECE.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib044.jpg" width="600" height="450" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>In spite of the diverse elements which compose it, the Greek nationality is +one of the most homogeneous in Europe. The Albanians, of Pelasgian descent +like the Greeks, do not cede to the latter in patriotism; and it was they—the +Suliotes, Hydriotes, Spezziotes—who fought most valiantly for national independence. +The eight hundred families of Rumanian or Kutzo-Wallachian Zinzares +who pasture their herds in the hills of Acarnania and Ætolia, and are known as +Kara-Gunis, or “black cloaks,” speak the two languages, and sometimes marry +Greek girls, though they never give their own daughters in marriage to the +Greeks. Haughty and free, they are not sufficiently numerous to be of any great +importance. To foreigners the Greeks are rather intolerant, and they take no +pains to render their stay amongst them agreeable. The Turks—who were +numerous formerly in certain parts of the Peloponnesus, in Bœotia, +and in the <span class="xxpn" id="p045">{45}</span> +island of Eubœa, and whose presence recalled an unhappy period of servitude—have +fled to a man, and only the fez, the narghile, and the slippers remind us of +their former presence. The Jews, though met with in every town of the East, +whether Slav or Mussulman, dare hardly enter the presence of the Greeks, who +are, moreover, their most redoubtable rivals in matters of finance: they are to be +found only in the Ionian Islands, where they managed to get a footing during +the British Protectorate. In this same Archipelago we likewise meet with the +descendants of the ancient Venetian colonists, and with emigrants from all parts +of Italy. French and Italian families still form a distinct element of the population +of Naxos, Santorin, and Syra. As to the Maltese porters and gardeners +at Athens and Corfu, they continue for the most part in subordinate positions, +and never associate with the Greeks.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>The homogeneous character of the population of Greece does not admit of +that country being divided into ethnological provinces, like Turkey or Austro-Hungary, +but it consists geographically of four distinct portions. These are +(1), continental Hellas, known since the Turkish invasion as Rumelia, in +remembrance of the “Roman” empire of Byzantium; (2), the ancient Peloponnesus, +now called the Morea, perhaps a transposition of the word “Romea,” or +from a Slav word signifying “sea coast,” and applied formerly to Elis; +(3), the islands of the Ægean Sea; (4), the Ionian Islands. In describing the +various portions of Greece we shall make use, in preference, of the ancient names +of mountains, rivers, and towns; for the Hellenes of our own day, proud of the +glories of the past, are endeavouring gradually to get rid of names of Slav or +Italian origin, which still figure upon the maps of their country.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn13" id="fnanch13">13</a></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="II.—Continental Greece.">II.—<span + class="smcap">C<b>ONTINENTAL</b></span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>REECE.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">The +Pindus, which forms the central chain of Southern Turkey, passes over +into Greece, and imparts to it an analogous orographical character. On both +sides of this conventional boundary we meet with the same rocks, the same +vegetation, the same landscape features, and the same races of people. By +dividing the Epirus and handing over Thessaly to the Turks, European diplomacy +has paid no attention to natural features. The eastern portion of the boundary +is made to follow the line of water parting over the range of the lofty Othrys, +commanding the plain of the Sperchius. Westward of the +Pindus the boundary <span class="xxpn" id="p046">{46}</span> +crosses transversely the valley of the Achelous, and the hills which separate it +from the Gulf of Arta.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg011"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 11.—<span class="smcap">M<b>OUNT</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ARNASSUS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">D<b>ELPHI.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib046.jpg" width="600" height="440" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The isolated summit of Mount Tymphrestus, or Velukhi, which rises where +the grand chain of the Othrys branches off from the Pindus, is not the culminating +point of continental Greece, but it is a centre from which the principal +mountain spurs and rivers radiate. Within its spurs lies hidden the charming +valley of Karpenisi, and an elevated ridge joins them, towards the south-east, +to the most important mountain mass of modern Greece, viz. the group surmounted +by the snow-clad pyramids of the Vardusia and Khiona, whose slopes +are covered with dark firs, and to the superb Katavothra, the Œta of the +ancients, on which Hercules built his funeral pile. The mountains of Vardusia +and Khiona are face to face with the fine mountain masses of Northern Morea, +likewise wooded and covered with snow during the greater part of the year.</p> + +<p>The mountains of Ætolia, to the west of the Velukhi and the Vardusia, are +far less elevated, but they are rugged, and form a veritable chaos of rocks, +savage defiles, and thickets, into which only Wallachian herdsmen venture. In +Southern Ætolia, on the shores of the lakes and along the rivers, the country is +more accessible, but mountains rise there likewise, and by tortuous ridges they +are brought into connection with the system of the Pindus. Those on the coast +of Acarnania, opposite to the Ionian Islands, are steep, covered with trees and +shrubs; they are the mountains of the “Black Continent” +mentioned by Ulysses. <span class="xxpn" id="p047">{47}</span> +To the east of the Achelous there is another coast chain, well known to mariners: +this is the Zygos, the southern slopes of which, arid and austere, are seen from +off Missolonghi. Still further to the east another range comes down to the +seashore, and, together with the promontories on the opposite coast of the Morea, +forms the narrow entrance to the Gulf of Corinth. Close to this entrance, on +the Ætolian side, there rises bold Mount Varassova, a huge block of rock. Local +tradition tells us that the Titans endeavoured to throw this rock into the sea, so +that it might form a bridge between the two coasts; but the rock proved too +heavy, and it was dropped where we now see it.</p> + +<p>Towards the Ægean Sea the mountain mass of the Katavothra is continued +by a coast range running in a direction parallel to the mountains of the island of +Eubœa. This range should be described rather as a series of mountain-groups +separated from each other by deep hollows, extensive depressions, and even by +river valleys. These mountains, though low and intersected by numerous roads, +are nevertheless difficult of access, for their slopes are steep, their promontories +abrupt, and their precipices sudden, and in the times of the ancient Greeks a +small number of men repeatedly defended them against large armies. At one +extremity of this range is the passage of Thermopylæ; at the other, on the +eastern foot of the Pentelicus, the famous plain of Marathon.</p> + +<p>The mountain groups on the northern shore of the Gulf of Corinth, and to +the south of Bœotia, may be looked upon as a range running parallel with that +following the channel of Eubœa, but far more beautiful and picturesque. Every +one of its summits recalls the sweet memories of poetry, or conjures up the +image of some ancient deity. To the west we find ourselves in the presence +of “double-headed” Parnassus, to which fled Deucalion and Pyrrha, the +ancestors of the Greeks, and where the Athenians celebrated their torchlight +dances in honour of Bacchus. From the summits of the Parnassus, which rival +in height those of the Khiona, raising its pyramidal head towards the north-west, +nearly the whole of Greece, with its gulfs, islands, and mountains, lies spread out +below us, from the Thessalian Olympus to the Taygetus, at the extremity of the +Peloponnesus; and close by, at our feet, lies the admirable basin of Delphi, the +place of Peace and Concord, where Greeks forgot their animosities. The +mountain group towards the east next to Parnassus is quite equal to it. The +valleys of the Helicon, the seat of Apollo and the Muses, are still the most +verdant and the most smiling in all Greece. The eastern slope of the Helicon is +more especially distinguished for its charming beauty, its woods, its verdant +pastures, gardens, and murmuring springs, which contrast most favourably with the +bare and arid plains of Bœotia. If Mount Parnassus may boast of the Castalian +spring, Mount Helicon possesses that of Hippocrene, which burst forth from the +ground when struck by the hoof of Pegasus. The elongated summit of the +Cithæron, the birthplace of Bacchus, joins the mountains of Southern Bœotia +to those of Attica, whose marble has become famous through the neighbourhood +of the city which they shelter. Mount Parnes rises to the north of Athens; +to the east of it, like the pediment of a temple, rises the Pentelicus, +in which are <span class="xxpn" id="p048">{48}</span> +the quarries of Pikermi, rendered famous through their fossil bones; on the +south appears Mount Hymettus, celebrated for its flowers and its bees. Farther +away, the Laurium, with its rich argentiferous slags, stretches towards the south-east, +and terminates in Cape Sunium, consecrated in other days to Minerva +and Neptune, and still surmounted by fifteen columns of an ancient temple.</p> + +<p>Another isolated mountain group to the south of Attica, and occupying the +entire width of the Isthmus of Megara, served the Athenians as a rampart of +defence against their neighbours of the Peloponnesus. This is the mountain +group of Gerania, the modern Pera Khora.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn14" id="fnanch14">14</a> Having passed beyond it, we find +ourselves upon the Isthmus of Corinth, properly so called, confined between the +Gulfs of Athens and of Corinth. It is a narrow neck of land, scarcely five miles +across, whose arid limestone rocks hardly rise two hundred feet above the sea. This +neutral bit of territory, lying between two distinct geographical regions, naturally +became a place for meetings, festivals, and markets. The remains of a wall +built by the Peloponnesians across the isthmus may still be traced, as may also +the canal commenced by order of Nero.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>The limestone mountains of Greece, as well as those of the Epirus and of +Thessaly, abound in lakes, but all the rivers are swallowed up in “sinks,” or +<i>katavothras</i>, leaving the land dry and arid. Southern Acarnania, a portion of which +is known as Xeromeros, or the “arid country,” on account of the absence of running +water, abounds in lake basins of this kind. To the south of the Gulf of +Arta, which may not inaptly be described as a sort of lake communicating with the +sea through a narrow opening, there are several sheets of water, the remains of an +inland sea, silted up by the alluvial deposits of the Achelous. The largest of these +lakes is known to the natives as Pelagos, or “big sea,” because of its extent and +the agitated state of its waters, which break against its coasts. This is the +Trichonius of the ancient Ætolians. Reputed unfathomable, it is, in truth, very +deep, and its waters are perfectly pure; but they are discharged sluggishly into +another basin far less extensive, and surrounded by pestilential marshes, and +through a turgid stream they even find their way into the Achelous. The hills +surrounding Lake Trichonis are covered with villages and fields, whilst the locality +around the lower lake has been depopulated by fever. The country, nevertheless, +is exceedingly beautiful to look upon. Hardly have we passed through a narrow +gorge, or <i>klisura</i>, of Mount Zygos before we enter upon a bridge over a mile +in length, which a Turkish governor caused to be thrown across the swamps +separating the two lakes. This viaduct has sunk +down more than half its <span class="xxpn" id="p049">{49}</span> +height into the mud, but it is still sufficiently elevated to enable the eye freely +to sweep over the surface of the waters, and to trace the coasts which bound them. +Oaks, planes, and wild olive-trees intermingle beneath us, their branches hung +with festoons of wild vine, and these, with the blue waters of the lake and +the mountains rising beyond it, form a picture of great beauty.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg012"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib049xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 12.—<span class="smcap">L<b>OWER</b></span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>CARNANIA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 800,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib049.jpg" width="600" height="392" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Another lake basin lies to the south of the Zygos, between the alluvial +lands of the Achelous and the Fidari. It is occupied by a swamp filled with fresh, +brackish, or salt water; and since the days of ancient Greece, this swamp, +owing to the apathy of the inhabitants, has continued to increase in extent at +the expense of the cultivated land. Missolonghi the heroic is indebted for its +name to its position near these marshes, for the meaning of it is “centre of +marshes.” A barrier, or <i>ramma</i>, here and there broken through by the floods, +separates the basin of Missolonghi from the Ionian Sea. During the war of independence +every opening in this barrier was protected by redoubts or stockades, +but at present the only obstruction consists of the reed barriers of the fishermen, +which are opened in spring to admit the fish from the sea, and closed in summer +to prevent their escape. Missolonghi, though surrounded by brackish water, is a +healthy place, thanks to the breezes from the sea; whilst a heavy atmosphere +charged with miasmata hangs perpetually over the bustling little town of +Ætoliko (Anatolikon), which lies farther to the north-west in the midst of the +swamps, and is joined to the dry land by two bridges. Between Ætoliko and +the river Achelous may be observed a large number of rocky eminences, rising +like pyramids above the plain. These are no doubt ancient islands, such as +still exist between the mainland and the island of St. Mauro. The mud brought +down by the Achelous has gradually converted the +intervals between these <span class="xxpn" id="p050">{50}</span> +rocks into dry land. In former times the commercial city of Œniadæ occupied +one of these islets. The geological changes already noticed by Herodotus are +thus still going on under our eyes, and the muds of the Achelous, to which it +owes its modern name of Aspro, or “white,” incessantly extend the land at the +expense of the sea.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg013"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib050xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 13.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HERMOPYLÆ.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">From the French Staff Map (1852). + Scale 1 : 330,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib050.jpg" width="600" height="502" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The Achelous, which the ancients likened to a savage bull, owing to its +rapid current and great volume, is by far the most important river of Greece. +One of the great feats ascribed to Hercules consisted in breaking off one of +the horns of this bull; that is to say, he embanked the river, and thus protected +the lands which it used to inundate. The neighbours of the Achelous, the +rapid Fidari (Evenus, on the banks of which Hercules killed the centaur +Nessus, for offering violence to Dejanira) and the Mornos, which rises in the +snows of the Œta, cannot compare with it. Still less is it equalled by the +Oropus, the Cephissus, and the Ilissus, “wet only when it rains,” which flow +eastward into the Ægean Sea. The principal river of Eastern Greece, the +Sperchius, is inferior to the Achelous, but, like it, has extensively changed the +aspect of the plain near its mouth. When Leonidas and his three hundred heroes +guarded the defiles of Thermopylæ against the Persians, the Gulf of Lamia +extended much farther into the land than it does now. But the alluvial deposits +of the river have extended its delta, and several rivulets +which formerly flowed <span class="xxpn" id="p051">{51}</span> +directly into the sea have now to be numbered amongst its tributaries; the sea has +retired from the foot of the Callidromus for a distance of several miles; and the +narrow pass of Thermopylæ has been converted into a plain sufficiently wide +to enable an entire army to manœuvre upon it. The hot springs which gush +from the rocks, by forming deposits of calcareous tufa, may likewise have contributed +towards this change of coast-line; nor are more violent convulsions of +nature precluded in a volcanic region like this, subject to frequent earthquakes. +Sailors still point out a small island in this neighbourhood, formed of scoriæ, +from which the incensed Hercules hurled his companion, Lichas, into the ocean. +Hot springs abound on the opposite coast of Eubœa, and the incrustations +formed by them are so considerable as to assume the appearance of glaciers +when seen from a distance. A bathing establishment exists now near the hot +sulphur springs of Thermopylæ, and strangers are thus enabled to explore this +region, so rich in memories of a great past. The pedestal, however, upon +which reposed the figure of a marble lion, placed there in honour of Leonidas, +has been destroyed by ruthless hands, and utilised in the construction of a +mill !</p> + +<p>The basin of the Cephissus, enclosed by the chains of the Œta and Parnassus, +is one of the most remarkable from an hydrological point of view. The river +first flows through a bottom-land formerly a lake, and then, forcing for itself a +passage through a narrow defile commanded by the spurs of Mount Parnassus, +it winds round the rock upon which stood the ancient city of Orchomenus, and +enters upon a vast plain, where swamps and lakes are embedded amidst cultivated +fields and reed-banks. These swamps are fed, likewise, by numerous +torrents descending from the Helicon and other mountains in its vicinity. +One of these is the torrent of Livadia, into which the bounteous springs +of Memory and Oblivion—Mnemosyne and Lethe—discharge themselves. In +summer a large portion of the plain is dry, and it yields a bountiful harvest +of maize, the stalks of which are sweet like sugar-cane. But after the heavy +rains of autumn and winter the waters rise twenty, and even twenty-five feet, +and the plain is converted into a vast lake, ninety-six square miles in extent. The +myth of the deluge of Ogyges almost leads us to believe that the rising floods +occasionally invaded every valley which debouches into this basin. To the +ancients the shallower part of this lake was known as Cephissus, and its deep +eastern portion as Copais, from Copæ, a town occupying a promontory on its +northern shore, and now called Topolias.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg014"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib052xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 14.—<span class="smcap">L<b>AKE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>OPAIS</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">From the French Staff Map. + Scale 1 : 500,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib052.jpg" width="600" height="405" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The importance of regulating the floods just referred to, and of preventing +the sudden overflow of the waters to the destruction of the cultivated fields, +may readily be imagined. The ancient Greeks made an effort to accomplish this +task. To the east of the large Lake of Copais there is another lake basin, about +one hundred and thirty feet lower, and encompassed by precipitous rocks, incapable +of cultivation. This basin, the Hylice of the Bœotians, appears to be made by +nature for receiving the superabundant waters of the Copais. The remains of a +canal may still be traced in the plain, which was evidently intended +to convey into <span class="xxpn" id="p052">{52}</span> +it the floods of the Copais, but it appears never to have been completed. No +doubt care was taken to keep open the various <i>katavothras</i>, or subterranean +channels, through which the waters of the Copaic lake discharge themselves into +the sea. One of these, on the north-western shore of the lake, and close to +the rock of Orchomenus, swallowed up the river Melas, and conveyed its waters +to the Gulf of Atalanta. Farther to the east other subterranean channels flow +towards Lakes Hylice and Paralimni, but the most important of these channels +are towards the north-east, in the Gulf of Kokkino. In that extreme angle of +the lake, the veritable Copais, the waters of the Cephissus rush against the foot +of Mount Skroponeri, and are swallowed up by the ground so as to form a subterranean +delta. To the south there is a cavernous opening in the rock, but +this is merely a sort of tunnel passing underneath a promontory, and, except +during the rainy season, it may be traversed dry-shod. Beyond this, another +opening swallows up one of the most important branches of the Cephissus, +which makes its reappearance in the shape of bounteous springs pouring their +waters into the sea. Two other branches of the river disappear in the rocks +about a mile farther north. They join soon afterwards, and flow northwards +beneath the bottom of a sinuous valley. The old Greek engineers dug pits in this +valley, which enabled them to descend to the subterranean waters, and to clear away +obstructions interfering with their flow. Sixteen of these pits have been discovered +between the opening of the katavothra and the place where the waters reappear. +Some of these are still thirty to one hundred feet in depth; but most of them have +become choked up with stones and earth. These ancient engineering works, which +Crates vainly endeavoured to restore in the time of +Alexander, may possibly date <span class="xxpn" id="p053">{53}</span> +from the mythical age of King Minyas of Orchomenus,<a class="afnanch" href="#fn15" id="fnanch15">15</a> and the successful draining +of these marshes may account for the well-filled treasury of that king spoken +of by Homer. Thus the ingenuity of the Homeric age had succeeded in accomplishing +a work of the engineering art which baffles our modern men of science !</p> + +<div class="dctr03" id="plt01"> +<img src="images/ib052b.jpg" width="486" height="700" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml"> + PEASANTS FROM THE ENVIRONS OF ATHENS.</div> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<hr class="hr40" /> + +<p>The whole of Western Greece, filled as it is by the mountains of Acarnania, +Ætolia, and Phocis, is condemned by nature to play a very subordinate part to +the eastern provinces. In the time of the ancient Greeks these provinces were +looked upon almost as a portion of the world of the barbarians, and even in our +own days the Ætolians are the least cultivated of all the Greeks. There is no +commerce except at a few privileged places close to the sea, such as Missolonghi, +Ætoliko, Salona, and Galaxidi. The latter, which is situated on a bay, into +which flows the Pleistus, a river at one time consecrated to Neptune, although +quite dry during the greater part of the year, was, up to the war of independence, +the busiest seaport on the Gulf of Corinth. As for Naupactus, or Epakto, +(called Lepanto by the Italians), it was important merely from a strategical point +of view, on account of its position at the entrance of the Gulf of Corinth, which +is sometimes named after it. Many naval engagements were fought to force the +entrance into the gulf, defended by the castles of Rumelia and Morea—the ancient +Rhium and Antirrhium. A curious phenomenon has been observed in connection +with the channel which forms the entrance to the Gulf of Corinth. Nowhere +more than 36 fathoms in depth, it is subject to perpetual changes in its width, +owing to the formation of alluvial deposits by maritime currents. What one +current deposits is carried away by the other. At the epoch of the Peloponnesian +war this channel was 7 stadia, or about 1,200 yards, wide; at the time of +Strabo its width was only 5 stadia; whilst in our own days it is no less than +2,200 yards from promontory to promontory. The entrance of the Gulf of Arta, +between the Turkish Epirus and Greek Acarnania, does not present the same +phenomena, and its present width is about equal to that assigned to it by every +ancient author; that is to say, about 1,000 yards.</p> + +<p>The valleys and lake basins of Eastern Greece, and more especially its position +between the Gulf of Corinth, the Ægean Sea, and the channel of Eubœa, which +almost convert it into a peninsula, sufficiently account for the prosperity of that +country. With its cities of Thebes, Athens, and Megara, it is essentially a +land of historical reminiscences. The contrast between the two most important +districts of this region—Bœotia and Attica—is very striking. The first of these +is an inland basin, the waters of which are collected into lakes, where mists +accumulate, and a rich vegetation springs forth from a fat alluvial soil. Attica, +on the other hand, is arid. A thin layer of mould covers the terraces of its rocky +slopes; its valleys open out into the sea; the summits of its mountains rise into +an azure sky; and the blue waters of the Ægean wash their base. Had the +Greeks been fearful of the sea; had they confined themselves, +as in the earliest <span class="xxpn" id="p054">{54}</span> +ages, to the cultivation of the soil, Bœotia, no doubt, would have retained the +preponderance which it enjoyed in the time of the Minyæ of wealthy Orchomenus. +But the progress of navigation and the allurements of commerce, which proved +irresistible to the Greeks, were bound by degrees to transfer the lead to the +men of Attica. The city of Athens, which arose in the midst of the largest +plain of this peninsula, therefore occupied a position which assured to it a grand +future.</p> + +<div class="section"> +<div class="dctr01" id="fg015"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 15.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>CROPOLIS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>THENS.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib054.jpg" width="600" height="450" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>The choice of Athens as the modern capital of Greece has been much +criticized. Times have changed, no doubt, and the natural centres of commerce +have become shifted, in consequence of the migrations of nations. Corinth, on +the isthmus joining continental Greece to the Peloponnesus, and commanding two +seas, undoubtedly deserved the preference. Its facilities for communicating with +Constantinople and the Greek maritime districts still under the rule of the +Osmanli, on the one hand, and with the western world, from which now proceed +all civilising impulses, on the other, are certainly greater than those of Athens. +If Greece, instead of a small centralised kingdom, had become a federal republic, +which would have been more in accordance with her genius and traditions, there +is no doubt that other towns of Greece, more favourably situated than Athens +for establishing rapid communications with the rest of Europe, would soon have +surpassed that town in population and commercial wealth. Athens, however, +has grown upon its plain, and, by the construction of a railway, it +has become even <span class="xxpn" id="p055">{55}</span> +a maritime city, as in ancient days, when its triple walls joined it to the ports of +the Piræus and Phalerum.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg016"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib055lg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 16.—<span class="smcap">A<b>THENS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> <span class="smmaj">ITS</span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>ONG</b></span> + <span class="smcap">W<b>ALLS.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">According to Kiepert and Schmidt. + Scale 1 : 114,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib055.jpg" width="600" height="447" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>But how great the difference between the monuments of the ancient city and +of the modern ! The Parthenon, though gutted by the shells of the Venetian +Morosini, and robbed since of its finest sculptures, still retains its pure and simple +beauty, which agrees so well with the sobriety of the surrounding landscape—still +remains the finest architectural work of the world. By the side of this +majestic ruin, on the same plateau of the Acropolis, where the mariner in the +Gulf of Ægina saw the gilt spear-head of Athene Promachos glitter in the sun, +there rise other monuments, the Erechtheum and the Propylæa, hardly inferior +to it, and dating likewise from the great period of art. Outside the city, on a +promontory, rises the temple of Theseus, the best-preserved monument of Greek +antiquity. Elsewhere, on the banks of the Ilissus, a group of columns +marks the site of the magnificent temple of Olympian Jupiter, which it took the +Athenians seven hundred years to build, and which their degenerate descendants +made use of as a quarry. Remarkable remains have been discovered in many +other parts of the ancient city, and the least of them are of interest, for they +recall the memory of illustrious men. On such a rock sat the Areopagus which +condemned Socrates; from this stone tribune Demosthenes addressed the multitude; +and here walked Plato with his disciples !</p> + +<p>A similar historical interest attaches to nearly every part of Attica, whether +we visit the city of Eleusis, where the mysteries of Ceres were +celebrated, or the <span class="xxpn" id="p056">{56}</span> +city of Megara, with its double Acropolis, or whether we explore the field of +Marathon and the shores of the island of Salamis. Even beyond Attica the +memories of the past attract the traveller to Platæa, to Leuctra, Chæronea, Thebes +of Œdipus, and Orchomenus of Minyas, though, in comparison with what these +districts were in other times, they are now deserts. In addition to Athens and +Thebes, there are now only two cities in eastern continental Greece which are of +any importance. These are Lamia, in the midst of the low plains of the +Sperchius, and Livadia, in Bœotia, at one time celebrated for the cavern of +Trophonius, which archæologists have not yet succeeded in identifying. The +island of Ægina, which belongs to Attica, offers the same spectacle of decay and +depopulation as the mainland. Anciently it supported more than two hundred +thousand inhabitants; at present it hardly numbers six thousand. But the island +still retains the picturesque ruin of its temple of Minerva, and the prospect which +it affords of the amphitheatre of hills in Argolis and Attica is as magnificent +as ever.</p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg017"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib056lg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 17.—<span class="smcap">A<b>NCIENT</b></span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>THENS.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">According to Kiepert and Schmidt. + Scale 1 : 30,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib056.jpg" width="600" height="463" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="III.—The Morea, or Peloponnesus.">III.—<span + class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>OREA,</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OR</span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ELOPONNESUS.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">Geographically +the Peloponnesus well deserves the name of island, which was +bestowed upon it by the ancients. The low Isthmus of Corinth completely severs +it from the mountainous peninsula of Greece. It is a world in itself, small +enough as far as the mere space is concerned which it occupies upon the map, +but great on account of the part it has played in the +history of humanity. <span class="xxpn" id="p057">{57}</span></p> + +<p>On entering the Peloponnesus from the Isthmus of Corinth, we see rising in +front of us the mountain rampart of Oneium, which defended the entrance of the +peninsula, and upon one of whose promontories was built the nearly impregnable +citadel of Corinth. These mountains form part of the general mountain system of +the whole island, and, sheltered by them, its inhabitants could live in security. +The principal mountain mass, whence all other chains radiate towards the +entrances of the peninsula, is situated in the interior of the country, about +forty miles to the west of Corinth. There Mount Cyllene of the ancient Greeks, +or Zyria, rises into the air, its flanks covered with dark pines; and farther away +still, the Khelmos, or Aroanian Mountain, attains even a more considerable +height, its snows descending into a valley on its northern slope, where they give +rise to the river Styx, the cold waters of which prove fatal to perjurers, and disappear +in a narrow chasm, one of the entrances to Hades. A range of wooded +peaks, to the west of the Khelmos, connects that mountain with the Olonos (Mount +Erymanthus), celebrated as the haunt of the savage boar destroyed by Hercules. +All those mountains, from Corinth as far as Patras, form a rampart running +parallel with the southern shore of the gulf, in the direction of which they throw +off spurs enclosing steep valleys. In one of these—that of Buraikos—we meet +with the grand caverns of Mega-Spileon, which are used as a monastery, and +where the most curious structures may be seen built up on every vantage-ground +offered by the rocks, suggesting a resemblance to the cells of a vast nest of +hornets.</p> + +<p>The table-land of the Peloponnesus is thus bounded towards the north by an +elevated coast range. Another chain of the same kind bounds it on the east. +It likewise starts from Mount Cyllene, and extends southward, its various portions +being known as Gaurias, Malevo (Mount Artemisium), and Parthenion. It is then +broken through by a vast depression, but again rises farther south as the range +of Hagios Petros, or Parnon, to the east of Sparta. Getting lower by degrees, it +terminates in the promontory of Malea, opposite to the island of Cerigo. It was +this cape, tradition tells us, which formed the last refuge of the Centaurs; that +is to say, of the barbarian ancestors of the modern Tsakonians. No promontory +was more dreaded by Greek navigators than this Cape Malea, owing to sudden +gusts of wind, and an ancient proverb says, “When thou hast doubled the cape +forget the name of thy native land.”</p> + +<p>The mountains of Western Morea do not present the regularity of the eastern +chain. They are cut through by rivers, and to the south of the Aroanian Mountains +and the Erymanthus they ramify into a multitude of minor chains, which +now and then combine into mountain groups, and impart the most varied aspect +to that portion of the plateau. Everywhere in the valleys we come unexpectedly +upon landscapes to which an indescribable charm is imparted by a group of trees, +a spring, a flock of sheep, or a shepherd sitting upon a heap of ruins. We are in +beautiful Arcadia, sung by the poets. Though in great part deprived of its woods, +it is still a beautiful country; but more charming still are the eastern slopes of the +plateau, which descend towards the Ionian Sea. There +luxuriant forests and <span class="xxpn" id="p058">{58}</span> +sparkling rivulets add an element of beauty to blue waves, distant islands, and a +transparent sky, which is wanting in nearly every other part of maritime Greece.</p> + +<div class="section"> +<div class="dctr01" id="fg018"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 18.—<span class="smcap">M<b>OUNT</b></span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>AYGETUS.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib058.jpg" width="600" height="541" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>The table-land of Arcadia is commanded on the west by pine-clad Mænalus, +and bounded on the south by several mountain groups which give birth to +separate mountain chains. One of these mountain masses—the Kotylion, or +Palæocastro—thus gives rise to the mountains of Messenia, amongst which rises the +famous Ithome, and to those of Ægaleus, which spread over the peninsula to the +west of the Gulf of Coron, and reappear in the sea as the rocky islets of Sapienza, +Cabrera, and Venetikon. Another mountain mass, the Lycæus, or Diaforti—the +Arcadian Olympus, which the Pelasgians claim for their cradle—and which rises +almost in the centre of the Peloponnesus, is continued westward of Laconia by an +extended mountain chain, the most elevated and most characteristic of all the +Morea. The highest crest of these mountains is the famous Taygetus, known also +as Pentedactylum (five fingers), because of the five peaks which surmount it; or +as St. Elias, in honour, no doubt, of Helios, the Dorian sun-god. A portion of +the lower slopes of this mountain is clothed with forests of +chestnuts and walnuts. <span class="xxpn" id="p059">{59}</span> +interspersed with cypresses and oaks; but its crest is bare, and snow remains +upon it during three-fourths of the year. The snows of Taygetus direct the +distant mariner to the shores of Greece. On approaching the coast, he sees rising +above the blue waters the spurs and outlying ridges of the Kakavuni, or “bad +mountain.” Soon afterwards he comes in sight of the promontory of Tainaron, +with its two capes of Matapan and Grasso—immense blocks of white marble more +than six hundred feet in height, upon which the quails settle in millions after their +fatiguing journey across the sea. Into the caverns at its foot the waters rush +with a dull noise which the ancients mistook for the barking of Cerberus. +Cape Matapan, like Malea, is dreaded amongst mariners as a great “destroyer +of men.”</p> + +<p>The three southern extremities of the Peloponnesus are thus occupied by high +mountains and rocky declivities. The peninsula of Argolis, in the east, is likewise +traversed by mountain ranges, which start from Mount Cyllene, similarly to the +Gaurias and the mountains of Arcadia. The whole of the Peloponnesus is thus +a country of table-lands and mountain ranges. If we except the plains of Elis, +which have been formed by the alluvial deposits carried down by the rivers of +Arcadia, and the lake basins of the interior, which have been filled up in the +course of ages, we meet with nothing but mountains.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn16" id="fnanch16">16</a> The principal mountain +masses—the Cyllene, the Taygetus, and Parnon—are composed of crystalline +schists and metamorphic marbles, as in continental Greece. Strata of the Jurassic +age and beds of cretaceous limestone are here and there met with at the foot +of these more ancient rocks. Near the coast, in Argolis, and on the flanks of +the Taygetus, eruptions of serpentines and porphyries have taken place, whilst +on the north-eastern coast of Argolis, and especially on the small peninsula of +Methone, there exist recent volcanoes—amongst others, the Kaimenipetra, which +M. Fouqué identifies with the fire-vomiting mouths of Strabo, and which had its +last eruption twenty-one centuries ago. These volcanoes are, no doubt, the vents +of a submarine area of disturbance which extends through Milos, Santorin, and +Nisyros, to the south of the Ægean Sea.</p> + +<p>The sulphur springs which abound on the western coast of the Peloponnesus +are, perhaps, likewise evidences of a reaction of the interior of the earth.</p> + +<p>It is the opinion of several geologists that the coasts of Western Greece are +being insensibly upheaved. In many places, and particularly at Corinth, we meet +with ancient caverns and sea beaches at an elevation of several feet above the sea-level. +It is this upheaval, and not merely the alluvial deposits brought down by +rivers, which explains the encroachment of the land upon the sea at the mouth of the +Achelous and on the coast of Elis, where four rocky islets have been joined to the +land. Elsewhere a subsidence of the land has been noticed, +as in the Gulf of <span class="xxpn" id="p060">{60}</span> +Marathonisi and on the eastern coast of Greece, where the ancient peninsula of +Elaphonisi has been converted into an island. But even there the fluvial deposits +have encroached upon the sea. The city of Calamata is twice as distant from the +seashore now as in the days of Strabo, and the traces of the ancient haven of +Helos, on the coast of Laconia, are now far inland.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>The limestone rocks of the interior of the Peloponnesus abound as much in +chasms, which swallow up the rivers, as do Bœotia and the western portion of the +whole of the Balkan peninsula. Some of these katavothras are mere sieves, hidden +beneath herbage and pebbles, but others are wide chasms and caverns, through which +the course of the underground waters may be readily traced. In winter wild birds +post themselves at the entrances of these caverns, in expectation of the prey which +the river is certain to carry towards them; in summer, after the waters have +retired, foxes and jackals again take possession of their accustomed dens. The +water swallowed up by these chasms on the plateau reappears on the other side of +the mountains in the shape of springs, or <i>kephalaria</i> (<i>kephalovrysis</i>). The water +of these springs has been purified by its passage through the earth, and its +temperature is that of the soil. It bursts forth sometimes from a crevice in the +rocks, sometimes in an alluvial plain, and sometimes even from the bottom of the +sea. The subterranean geography of Greece is not yet sufficiently known to +enable us to trace each of these kephalaria to the katavothras which feed them.</p> + +<div class="dctr03" id="fg019"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib060lg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 19.—<span class="smcap">L<b>AKES</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>HENEA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>TYMPHALUS.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">From the French Staff Map. + Scale 1 : 500,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib060.jpg" width="600" height="426" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The ancients were most careful in keeping open these natural funnels, for, by +facilitating the passage of the water, they prevented the formation of swamps. +These precautions, however, were neglected during the centuries of barbarism +which overcame Greece, and the waters were permitted to accumulate in many places +at the expense of the salubrity of the country. The plain of Pheneus, or Phonia, a +vast chasm between the Aroanian Mountains and the Cyllene, has thus repeatedly +been converted into a lake. In the middle of last century the whole +of this basin <span class="xxpn" id="p061">{61}</span> +was filled with water to a depth of more than 300 feet. In 1828, when this sheet of +water had already become considerably reduced, it was still 6 miles long and 150 feet +in depth. At length, a few years afterwards, the subterranean sluices opened, +the waters disappeared, and there remained only two small marshes near the places +of exit. But in 1850 the lake was again 200 feet in depth. Hercules, we are told, +constructed a canal to drain this valley and to cleanse its subterranean outlets, but +the inhabitants content themselves now with placing a grating above the “sink-holes,” +to prevent the admission of trunks of trees and of other large objects +carried along by the floods.</p> + +<p>To the east of the valley of Pheneus, and on the southern foot of Mount Cyllene, +there is another lake basin, celebrated in antiquity because of the man-eating birds +which infested it, until they were exterminated by Hercules. This is the +Stymphalus, alternately lake and cultivated land. During winter the waters +cover about one-third of the basin; but it happens occasionally, after heavy rains, +that the lake resumes its ancient dimensions. There is only one katavothra through +which the waters can escape, and this, instead of being near the shore, as usual, is +at the bottom of the lake. It swallows up not only the water of the lake, but likewise +the vegetable remains carried into it, and the mud formed at its bottom; and +this detritus is conveyed through it to some subterranean cavity, where it putrefies +slowly, as may be judged from the fetid exhalations proceeding from the katavothra. +The water, however, is purified, and when it reappears on the surface, +close to the seashore, it is as clear as crystal.</p> + +<p>There are many other lake basins of the same kind between the mountains of +Arcadia and the chain of the Gaurias. They all have their swamps or temporary +lakes, but the katavothras, in every instance, are sufficiently numerous to prevent +an inundation of the entire valley. The most important of these lake basins is +formed by the famous plain of Mantinea, upon which many a battle was fought. +From an hydrological point of view this is one of the most curious places in the +world; for the waters which collect there are discharged into two opposite seas—the +Gulf of Nauplia on the east, and in the direction of the Alpheus and the Ionian +Sea towards the west. There may exist even some subterranean rivulet which +discharges itself, towards the south, into the Eurotas and the Gulf of Laconia.</p> + +<p>The disappearance of the waters underground has condemned to sterility several +parts of the Peloponnesus, which a little water would convert into the most fertile +regions of the globe. The surface waters quickly suck up and form subterranean +rivers, hidden from sight, which only see the light again, in most instances, near the +seashore, when it is impossible to utilise them. The plain of Argos, though surrounded +by a majestic amphitheatre of well-watered hills, is more sterile and arid +even than are Megara and Attica. Its soil is always dry, and soaks up water like +a sieve, which may have given rise to the fable of the Danaids. But to the south +of that plain, where there is but a narrow cultivable strip of land between the +mountains and the seashore, a great river bursts forth from the rocks. This is the +Erasinus.</p> + +<p>Other springs burst forth at the southern extremity of the plain, close +to the defile <span class="xxpn" id="p062">{62}</span> +of Lerna, which, like that of the Erasinus, are supposed to be fed from Lake Stymphalus. +Close to them is a chasm filled with water, said to be unfathomable. It +abounds in tortoises, and venomous serpents inhabit the adjoining marsh. These +are the <i>kephalaria</i>, or “heads,” of the ancient hydra of Lerna, which Hercules +found it so difficult to seize hold of. Still farther south there is another spring +which rises from the bottom of the sea, more than three hundred yards from the +shore. This spring—the Doinæ of the ancients, and Anavula of modern Greek +mariners—is, in reality, but the mouth of one of the rivers swallowed up by the +katavothras of Mantinea. When the sea is still it throws up a jet rising to a +height of fifty feet.</p> + +<div class="dctr03" id="fg020"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib062xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 20.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>LATEAU</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>ANTINEA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">From the French Staff Map. + Scale 1 : 400,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib062.jpg" width="517" height="800" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Analogous phenomena may be witnessed in the two southern valleys of the +peninsula, those of Sparta and Messenia. The Iri, or Eurotas, is, in reality, but a large +rivulet, which discharges itself into the Gulf of Marathonisi, at the end +of a gorge, <span class="xxpn" id="p063">{63}</span> +through which the waters of the Lake of Sparta forced themselves a passage during +some ancient deluge; but it is only on rare occasions that its volume of water is +sufficient to remove the bar which obstructs its mouth. The Vasili-Potamo (“royal +river”), on the other hand, which bursts forth at the foot of a rock a short distance +from the Eurotas, though its whole course does not exceed five miles, discharges a +considerable volume of water throughout the year, and its mouth is at all times +open. As to the river of Messenia, the ancient Pamisus, now called Pirnatza, it is +the only river of Greece, besides the Alpheus, which forms a harbour at its mouth, +and it can be ascended by small vessels for a distance of eight miles; but this +advantage it owes exclusively to the powerful springs of Hagios Floros, which are +fed by the mountains on the east. These springs, which form a large swamp +where they rise to the surface, are the real river, if volume of water is to be decisive, +and the country watered and fertilised by them was called the “Happy” by the +ancients, on account of its fertility.</p> + +<div class="dctr03" id="fg021"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib063lg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 21.—<span class="smcap">B<b>IFURCATION</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>ASTUNI.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">From the French Staff Map. + Scale 1 : 400,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib063.jpg" width="581" height="700" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The western regions of the Peloponnesus receive more rain, and they are +likewise in the possession of the most considerable river, the Alpheus, now called +Ruphia, from one of its tributaries. The latter, the ancient Ladon, conveys a +larger volume of water towards the sea than the Alpheus. It was as celebrated +amongst the Greeks as was the Peneus of Thessaly, on account of the +transparency of its waters, and the smiling scenery along its banks. It is partly +fed by the snows of Mount Erymanthus, and, like most rivers of the Morea, derives +a portion of its waters from subterranean tributaries rising on the central plateau. +The Ladon thus receives the waters of Lake Phenea, whilst +the Alpheus proper <span class="xxpn" id="p064">{64}</span> +is fed in its upper course from katavothras on the shores of the ancient lakes +of Orchomenus and Mantinea. Having traversed the basin of Megalopolis, anciently +a lake, it passes through a series of picturesque gorges, and reaches its lower +valley. A charming tradition, illustrative of the ties of amity which existed +between Elis and Syracuse, makes this river plunge beneath the sea and reappear +in Sicily, close to the fountain of his beloved Arethusa. The ancient Greeks, +who witnessed the disappearance of so many rivers, would hardly have looked +upon this submarine course of the Alpheus as a thing to wonder at.</p> + +<p>The Alpheus and all other rivers of Elis carry down towards the sea immense +masses of detritus, which they spread over the plains extending from the foot +of the mountains to the seashore. The ruins of Olympia disappeared in this +manner beneath alluvial deposits. They have all frequently changed their beds, +and not one amongst them has done so more frequently than the Peneus, or river of +Gastuni. Anciently it discharged its waters to the north of the rocky promontory +of Chelonatas, whilst in the present day it turns abruptly to the south, and enters +the sea at a distance of fifteen miles from its ancient mouth. Works of irrigation +may partly account for this change, but there can be no doubt that nature unaided +has by degrees much modified the aspect of this portion of Greece. Islands +originally far in the sea have been joined to the land; numerous open bays have +gradually been cut off from the sea by natural embankments, and transformed +into swamps or lagoons. One of the latter extends for several leagues to the +south of the Alpheus, and is divided from the sea by a fine forest of pines. +These majestic forests, in which the Triphylians paid honour to their dead, the +surrounding hills dotted over with clumps of trees, and Mount Lycæus, from +whose flanks are precipitated the cascades dedicated to Neda, the nurse of Jupiter, +render this the most attractive district of all the Morea to a lover of nature.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>The Peloponnesus presents us with one of the most striking instances of the +influence exercised by the nature of the country upon the historical development +of its inhabitants. Held to Greece by a mere thread, and defended at its entrance +by a double bulwark of mountains, this “isle of Pelops” naturally became the +seat of independent tribes at a time when armies still recoiled from natural +obstacles. The isthmus was open as a commercial high-road, but it was closed +against invaders.</p> + +<p>The relief of the peninsula satisfactorily explains the distribution of the +tribes inhabiting it, and the part they played in history. The whole of the interior +basin, which has no visible outlets towards the sea, naturally became the home +of a tribe who, like the Arcadians, held no intercourse with their neighbours, and +hardly any amongst themselves. Corinth, Sicyon, and Achaia occupied the seashore +on the northern slopes of the mountains, but were separated by high transversal +chains. The inhabitants of these isolated valleys long remained strangers +to each other, and when at length they combined to resist the invader, it was +too late. Elis, in the west, with its wide valleys and its insalubrious plains +extending along a coast having no havens, naturally played but +a secondary part <span class="xxpn" id="p065">{65}</span> +in the history of the peninsula. Its inhabitants, exposed to invasions, owing +to their country being without natural defences, would soon have been enslaved, +had they not placed themselves under the protection of all the rest of Greece +by converting their plain of Olympia into a place of meeting, where the Hellenes +of Europe and of Asia, from the continent and from the islands, met for a few +days’ festival to forget their rivalries and animosities. The basin of Argos and +the mountain peninsula of Argolis, on the eastern side of the Peloponnesus, on +the other hand, are districts having natural boundaries, and are easily defended. +Hence the Argolians were able to maintain their autonomy for centuries, and even +in the Homeric age they exercised a sort of hegemony over the remainder of +Greece. The Spartans were their successors. The country in which they +established themselves possessed the double advantage of being secure against +every attack, and of furnishing all they stood in need of. Having firmly +established themselves in the beautiful valley of the Eurotas, they found no +difficulty in extending their power to the seashore, and to the unfortunate Helos. +At a later date they crossed the heights of the Taygetus, and descended into the +plains of Messenia. That portion of Greece likewise formed a natural basin, +protected by elevated mountain ramparts; and the Messenians, who were kinsmen +of the Spartans and their equals in bravery, were thus able to resist for a century. +At length they fell, and all the Southern Peloponnesus acknowledged the supremacy +of Sparta, which was now in a position to assert its authority over the whole of +Greece. Then it was that the mountain-girt plateau on the road from Lacedæmonia +to Corinth, upon which stood the cities of Tegea and Mantinea, and which was +made by nature for a field of Mars, became the scene of strife.</p> + +<p>The Peloponnesus, with its sinuous shores, forms a remarkable contrast to +Attica. Its characteristics are essentially those of a continent, and anciently +the Peloponnesians were mountaineers rather than mariners. Except in Corinth, +where the two seas nearly join, and a few towns of Argolis, which is another +Attica, there were no inducements for the inhabitants to engage in maritime +commerce; and in their mountain valleys and upland plains they were entirely +dependent upon the rearing of cattle and husbandry. Arcadia, in the centre +of the peninsula, was inhabited only by herdsmen and labourers; and its name, +which originally meant “country of bears,” has become the general designation +for an eminently pastoral country. The Laconians also, separated from the +sea by rocky mountains which hem in the valley of the Eurotas at its point of +issue, preserved for a long time the customs of warriors and of cultivators of +the soil, and took to the sea only with reluctance. “When the Spartans placed +Eurotas and Taygetus at the head of their heroes,” says Edgar Quinet, “they +distinctly connected the features of the valley with the destinies of the people +by whom it was occupied.”</p> + +<p>In the very earliest ages the Phœnicians already occupied important factories +on the coasts of the Peloponnesus. They had established themselves at Nauplia, +in the Gulf of Argos; and at Cranaæ, the modern Marathonisi or Gythion, in +Laconia, they purchased the shells which they required to +dye their purple <span class="xxpn" id="p066">{66}</span> +cloths. The Greeks themselves were in possession of a few busy ports, amongst +which was “sandy Pylos,” the capital of Nestor, whose position is now held by +Navarino, on the other side of the gulf. At a subsequent date, when Greece had +become the centre of Mediterranean commerce, Corinth, so favourably situated +between the two seas, rose into importance, not because of its political influence, +its cultivation of the arts, or love of liberty, but through the number and wealth +of its inhabitants. It is said that it had a population of three hundred thousand +souls within its walls. Even after it had been razed by the Romans it again +recovered its ancient pre-eminence. But the exposed position of the town has +caused it to be ravaged so many times that all commerce has fled from it. In 1858, +when an earthquake destroyed Corinth, that once famous city had dwindled down +into a poor village. The city has been rebuilt about five miles from its ancient site, +on the shore of the gulf named after it, but we doubt whether it will ever resume +its ancient importance unless a canal be dug to connect the two seas. The high-roads +from Marseilles and Trieste to Smyrna and Constantinople would then lead +across the Isthmus of Corinth, and this canal might attract an amount of shipping +equal to that which frequents other ocean channels or canals similarly situated. +But for the present the isthmus is almost deserted, and only the passengers who are +conveyed by Greek steamers to the small ports on its opposite shores cross it. +The ancients, who had failed in the construction of a canal, and who made no +further effort after the time of Nero, because they imagined one of the two seas +to be at a higher level than the other, had provided, at all events, a kind of +tramway, by means of which their small vessels could be conveyed from the Gulf +of Corinth to the Ægean Sea.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn17" id="fnanch17">17</a></p> + +<p>After the Crusades, when the powerful Republic of Venice had gained a +footing upon the coasts of Morea, flourishing commercial colonies arose along +them, in Arcadia, on the island of Prodano (Prote), at Navarino, Modon, Coron, +Calamata, Malvoisie, and Nauplia in Argolis. At the call of these Venetian +merchants the Peloponnesus again became a seat of trade, and resumed, to some +extent, that part in maritime enterprise which it had enjoyed in the time +of the Phœnicians. But the advent of the Turk, the impoverishment of the soil, +and the civil wars which resulted therefrom, again forced the inhabitants to break +off all intercourse with the outer world, and to shut themselves up in their island +as in a prison. Tripolis, or Tripolitza, in the very centre of the peninsula, and +called thus, it is said, because it is the representative of three ancient cities—Mantinea, +Tegea, and Pallantium—then became the most populous place. Since +the Greeks have regained their independence life again fluctuates towards the seashore +as by a sort of natural sequence. Patras, close to the entrance of the Gulf of +Corinth, and near the most fertile and best-cultivated plains on the eastern shore, +is by far the most important city at present, and, in anticipation of its future +extension, the streets of a new town have been laid out, in the firm belief that it +will some day rival Smyrna and Trieste in extent. <span class="xxpn" id="p067">{67}</span></p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg022"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib067lg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 22.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>ALLEY</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>UROTAS.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">From the French Staff Map. + Scale 1 : 370,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib067.jpg" width="600" height="563" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The other towns of the peninsula, even those which exhibited the greatest +activity during the dominion of the Venetians, are but of very secondary +importance, if we compare them with this emporium of the Peloponnesus. Ægium, +or Vostitza, on the Gulf of Corinth, is a poor port, less celebrated on account +of its commerce than in consequence of a magnificent plane-tree, more than +fifty feet in girth, the hollow trunk of which was formerly used as a prison. +Pyrgos, close to the Alpheus, has no port at all. The fine roadstead of Navarino, +defended against winds and waves by the rocky islet of Sphacteria, is but little +frequented, and the merchantmen riding at anchor there never outnumber the +Turkish men-of-war at the bottom, where they have lain since the battle fought in +1828. Modon and Coron have likewise fallen off. Calamata, at the mouth of the +fertile valleys of Messenia, has an open roadstead only, and vessels cannot +always ride in safety upon it. The celebrated Malvoisie, now called Monemvasia, +is hardly more than a heap of ruins, and the vineyards in its neighbourhood, +which furnished the exquisite wine named after the town, have long ceased +to exist. Nauplia, which was the capital of the modern kingdom of Greece +during the first few years of its existence, possesses the +advantage of a <span class="xxpn" id="p068">{68}</span> +well-sheltered port; but its walls, its bastions, and its +forts give it the character of a military town rather than +of a commercial one.</p> + +<p>The towns in the interior of the country, whatever glories may attach to them, +are hardly more now than large villages. The most celebrated of all, Sparta, thanks +to the fertility of its environs, promises to become one of the most prosperous +cities of the interior of the Peloponnesus. Sparta—that is, the “scattered city,”—was +named thus because its houses were scattered over the plain, defended only +by the valour of their inhabitants, and not by walls. In the Middle Ages Sparta +was supplanted by the neighbouring Mistra, whose decayed Gothic buildings and +castles occupy a steep hill on the western side of the Eurotas; but it has now recovered +its supremacy amongst the towns of Laconia. Argos, which is more ancient +even than the city of Lacedæmon, has likewise risen anew from its ruins; for the +plain in which it lies, though occasionally dried up, is of great natural fertility.</p> + +<p>Strangers, however, who explore the countries of the Peloponnesus, do not go +in search of these newly risen cities, where a few stones only remind them of +the glories of the past, but are attracted by the ancient monuments of art. +In that respect Argolis is one of the richest provinces of Greece. Near to Argos +the seats of an amphitheatre are cut into the steep flanks of the hill of Larissa. +Between Argos and Nauplia a small rock rises in the middle of the plain, which +is surmounted by the ancient Acropolis of Tiryns, the Cyclopean walls of which +are more than fifty feet in thickness. A few miles to the north of Argos are the +ruins of Mycenæ, the city of Agamemnon, where the celebrated “Gate of Lions,” +coarsely sculptured when Greek art first dawned, and the vast vaults known as +the Treasury of the Atrides, mainly attract the attention of visitors. These +vaults are amongst the oldest and best-preserved antiquities of Greece. They +exhibit most solid workmanship, and one of the stones, which does duty as a lintel +over the entrance-gate, weighs no less than one hundred and sixty-nine tons. At +Epidaurus, in Argolis, on the shores of the Gulf of Ægina, and close to the most +famous temple of Æsculapius, we still meet with a theatre which has suffered +less from time than any other throughout Greece. Shrubs, interspersed with +small trees, surround it; but we can still trace its fifty-four rows of white +marble seats, capable of affording accommodation to twelve thousand spectators. +Amongst other famous ruins of Argolis are the beautiful remains of a temple of +Jupiter at Nemea, and the seven Doric columns of Corinth, said to be the oldest +in all Greece. But the most beautiful edifice of the peninsula must be sought for +near Arcadian Phigalia, in the charming valley of the Neda. This is the temple +of Bassæ, erected by Ictinus in honour of Apollo Epicurius, and its beauty +is enhanced by the oaks and rocks which surround it.</p> + +<p>Citadels, however, are the buildings we most frequently meet with; and many +a fortified place, with its walls and acropolis, yet exists as in the days of +ancient Greece. The walls of Phigalia and Messenia still have their ancient +towers, gates, and redoubts. Other fortifications were utilised by the Crusaders, +Venetians, or Turks, and by them furnished with crenellated walls and keeps, +which add another picturesque feature to the landscape. One +of these ancient <span class="xxpn" id="p069">{69}</span> +fortresses, transformed during the Middle Ages, rises at the very gates of +the Peloponnesus—namely, the citadel of Corinth, the strongest and most commanding +of all.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>Several of the islands of the Ægean Sea must be looked upon as natural dependencies +of the Peloponnesus, to which submarine ledges or shoals attach them.</p> + +<p>The islands along the coast of Argolis, which are inhabited by Albanian +seamen, who were amongst the foremost to fight the Turk during the struggle for +Hellenic independence, have lost much of their former commercial importance. +Poros, a small Albanian town on a volcanic island of the same name, which the +revolted people chose for their capital, is, however, still a bustling place, for +it has an excellent harbour, and the Greek Government has made it the principal +naval station of the kingdom. Hydra, on the other hand, and the small island +of Spezzia, next to it, have lost their former importance. They are both rocky +islands, without arable soil, trees, or water, and yet they formerly supported a +population of fifty thousand souls. About 1730 a colony of Albanians, weary of +the exactions of some Turkish pasha on the mainland, fled to the island of Hydra. +They were left in peace there, for they agreed to pay a trifling tribute. Their +commerce—leavened, to be sure, with a little piracy—assumed large dimensions, +and immediately before the war of independence the Albanians of Hydra owned +nearly 400 vessels of 100 to 200 tons each, and they were able to send over 200 +vessels, armed with 200 guns, against the Turks. By engaging so enthusiastically +in this struggle for liberty, the Hydriotes, without suspecting it, wrought their own +ruin. No sooner was the cause of Greece triumphant than the commerce of Hydra +was transferred to Syra and the Piræus, which are more favourably situated.</p> + +<p>Cythera of Laconia, a far larger island than either of those mentioned, and +better known by the Italian name of Cerigo, formed a member of the Septinsular +Republic, although not situated in the Ionian Sea, and clearly a dependency of +the Peloponnesus. Cythera is no longer the island of Venus, and its voluptuous +groves have disappeared. Seen from the north, it resembles a pile of sterile +rocks. It nevertheless yields abundant harvests, possesses fine plantations of +olive-trees, and populous villages. Cerigo, in former times, enjoyed considerable +importance, owing to its position between the Ionian Sea and the Archipelago; +but Cape Malea has lost its terrors now, and the harbour of refuge on the +island is no longer sought after. Heaps of shells, left there by Phœnician manufacturers +of purple, have been found on the island; and it was the Phœnicians +who introduced the worship of Venus Astarte.</p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="IV.—The Islands of the Ægean Sea.">IV.—<span + class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">I<b>SLANDS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">Æ<b>GEAN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>EA.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">Islands and islets are scattered in seeming disorder over the Ægean Sea, the +name of which may probably mean “sea of goats,” because these islands +appeared at a distance like goats. By a singular misapplication +the modern term <span class="xxpn" id="p070">{70}</span> +Archipelago, instead of sea, is now used to designate these groups of islands. +The Sporades, in the north, form a long range of islands stretching in the +direction of Mount Athos. The island of Scyros, farther south, the birthplace of +Achilles and place of exile of King Theseus, occupies an isolated position; the +large island of Eubœa extends along the coast of the continent; and in the +distance rise the white mountains of the Cyclades, likened by the ancient Greeks +to a circle of Oceanides dancing around a deity.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg023"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib070lg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 23.—<span class="smcap">E<b>URIPUS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>HALCIS.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 220,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib070.jpg" width="600" height="645" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>All these islands are so many fragments of the mainland. This is proved by +their geological structure, or by shoals which attach them to the nearest coast. The +Northern Sporades are a branch of Mount Pelion. Eubœa is traversed by limestone +mountains of considerable height, running parallel to the chains of Attica, +Argolis, Mount Olympus, and Mount Athos. Scyros is a rocky mountain mass, +whose axis runs in the same direction as that of the central chain of Eubœa. +The summits of the Cyclades continue the ranges of Eubœa and Attica towards +the south-east, and the same micaceous and argillaceous schists, limestones, and +crystalline marbles are found in them. They are, indeed, +“mountains of Greece <span class="xxpn" id="p071">{71}</span> +scattered over the sea.” If Athens may boast of the quarries of Mount Pentelicus, +the Cyclades produce the glittering marbles of Naxos, and the still more beautiful +ones of Paros, from which were chiselled the statues of heroes and of gods. +Curious caverns are met with in the limestone of the islands, especially that of +Antiparos, the existence of which was not known to the ancients, and the Cave of +Sillaka, on the island of Cythnos, or Thermia, celebrated for its hot springs. +Granite is found on some of the islands, and particularly in the small island of +Delos, dedicated to the worship of Apollo and Diana. In the south, finally, +the Cyclades are traversed by a chain of volcanic islands, extending from the +peninsula of Methana, in Argolis, to Cos and the shores of Asia Minor.</p> + +<p>Eubœa may be looked upon almost as a portion of the continent, for the strait +which separates it from the mainland resembles a submerged longitudinal valley, +and is nowhere of great depth or width. At its narrowest part it is no more +than two hundred and fourteen feet across, and from the most remote times, +Chalcis, the capital of the island, has been joined to the mainland by a bridge. +The irregular tidal currents flowing through this strait were looked upon as +marvellous by the Greeks, and Aristotle is said to have flung himself into it +because he was unable to explain this phenomenon. The Italian name of the +island, Negroponte, is formed by a series of corruptions from Euripus, by which +name the ancients knew the strait between the island and the mainland. Eubœa +has at all times shared in the vicissitudes of the neighbouring provinces of Attica +and Bœotia. When the cities of Greece were at the height of their glory, those +of Eubœa—Chalcis, Eretria, and Cerinthus—enjoyed likewise a high degree of +prosperity, and dispatched colonies to all parts of the Mediterranean. Later on, +when invaders ravaged Attica, Eubœa shared the same fate, and at present it +participates in every political and social movement of the neighbouring continent.</p> + +<p>In Northern Eubœa there are forests of oaks, pines, elms, and plane-trees; +the villages are embedded in orchards; and the surrounding country resembles +what we have seen in Elis and Arcadia. But in the Cyclades we look in vain for +charming landscapes. Foliage and running water abound only in a very few +spots. Arid rocks, more arid even than those on the coast of Greece, predominate, +and only in a few favoured spots do we meet with a few olive-trees, valonia +oaks, pines, and fig-trees. Everywhere else the hills are naked. And yet these +islands arouse feelings of devotion in us, for their names are great in history. +The highest summits of most of them have been named after the prophet +Elias, the biblical successor of Apollo, the god of the sun; and justly so, for the +sun reigns supreme upon these austere rocks, and his scorching rays destroy every +vestige of vegetation.</p> + +<p>Antimilos, one of the uninhabited islands of this group, still affords an asylum +to the wild goat (<i>Capra Caucasica</i>), which has disappeared from the remainder of +Europe, and is met with only in Crete, and perhaps Rhodes. Wild pigs likewise +haunt the rocks of Antimilos. Rabbits were introduced from the West, and abound +in the caverns of some of the Cyclades, and especially on Myconus and Delos. +The ancient authors never mention these animals. It is a +curious fact that <span class="xxpn" id="p072">{72}</span> +hares and rabbits never inhabit the same island, with the sole exception of +Andros, where the hares occupy the extreme north, whilst the rabbits have their +burrows in the southern portion of the island. As a curiosity, we may also +mention that a large species of lizard, called crocodile by the inhabitants, is found +on the islands, but not on the neighbouring continent, and we may conclude from +this that the Cyclades were separated from the Balkan peninsula at a very remote +period.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>A chain of volcanic islands bounds the Cyclades towards the south, where they +are separated from Crete by an ocean trough of great depth. Milos is the most +important of these islands. It has an irregularly shaped crater, which has been +invaded by the sea, and forms there one of the safest and most capacious harbours +of refuge in the Mediterranean. Milos has had no eruption within historic times, +but the existence of solfataras and of hot springs proves that its volcanic forces are +not yet quite extinct.</p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg024"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib072lg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 24.—<span class="smcap">N<b>EA</b></span> + <span class="smcap">K<b>AMMENI.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">According to Danfalik.</div> +<img src="images/ib072.jpg" width="571" height="700" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The actual centre of volcanic activity has to be looked for in a small group of +islands known as Santorin, and lying midway between Europe and Asia. These +islands consist of marbles and schists, similar to those of the other Cyclades, and +they surround a vast crater no less than twelve hundred and eighty feet in depth. +The crescent-shaped island of Thera, on the east, presents bold cliffs towards the +crater, while its gentle outer slopes are covered with vineyards producing exquisite +wine. Therasia, on the west, rises like an immense wall; and +the islet of <span class="xxpn" id="p073">{73}</span> +Aspronisi, between the two, indicates the existence of a submarine partition wall +which separates the crater from the open sea. The submarine volcano occupies +the centre of this basin. It remains quiescent for long periods, and then +suddenly arousing itself, it ejects immense masses of scoriæ. Nearly twenty-one +centuries ago the first island rose to the surface in the centre of this basin. This +island is known now as Palæa Kammeni, or the “old volcano.” Three years of +eruptions in the sixteenth century gave birth to the smallest of the three islands, +Mikra Kammeni. A third cone of lava, Nea Kammeni, rose in the eighteenth +century; and quite recently, between 1866 and 1870, this new island has more +than doubled its size, overwhelming the small village of Volkario and its port, and +extending to within a very short distance of Mikra Kammeni. No less than half +a million of partial eruptions occurred during those five years, and the ashes were +sometimes thrown to a height of four thousand feet. Even from Crete clouds of +ashes could be seen suspended in the air, black during the day, and lit up by night.</p> + +<p>Thousands of spectators hastened to Santorin from all quarters of the world to +witness these eruptions, and amongst them were several men of science—Fouqué, +Gorceix, Reiss, Stübel, and Schmidt—whose observations have proved of great +service. The crater of Santorin appears to have been produced by a violent +explosion which shattered the centre of the ancient island, and covered its slopes +with enormous masses of tufa.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn18" id="fnanch18">18</a></p> + +<p>Southern Eubœa and the vicinity of Port Gavrion, on the island of Andros, +are inhabited by Albanians, but the population in the remainder of the Archipelago +is Greek. The families of Italian or French descent on Scyros, Syra, +Naxos, and Santorin are not sufficiently numerous to constitute an element of +importance. They claim to be of French descent, and are known in the Archipelago +as Franks, and during the war of independence they claimed the protection +of the French Government. In former times nearly the whole of the +land was held by these Franks, who had taken possession of it during the Middle +Ages, and these large estates are made to account for the sparse population of +Naxos, which supported a hundred thousand inhabitants formerly, but is now +hardly able to support one-seventh that number.</p> + +<p>The Cyclades are farther removed from the coast of Greece than Eubœa, and +they have not always shared in the historical dramas enacted upon the neighbouring +continent. Their position in the centre of the Archipelago naturally +caused them to be visited by all the nations navigating the Mediterranean, and +their inhabitants were thus subjected to the most diverse influences. In ancient +times the mariners of Asia Minor and of Phœnicia called at the Cyclades on their +voyages to Greece; during the Middle Ages the Byzantines, the Crusaders, the +Venetians, the Genoese, the Knights of Rhodes, and the +Osmanli were masters <span class="xxpn" id="p074">{74}</span> +there in turn; and in our own days the nations of Western Europe, with the +Greeks themselves, hold the preponderance in the Archipelago.</p> + +<p>These historical vicissitudes have caused the centre of gravity of the Cyclades +to be shifted from island to island. In the time of the ancient Greeks, Delos, the +island of Apollo, was looked upon as the “holy land,” where merchants congregated +from all quarters, carried on business in the shadow of sanctuaries, and +held slave markets at the side of the temples. The sale of human flesh became +in the end the main feature of the commerce of Delos, and in the time of the +Roman emperors as many as ten thousand slaves were bartered away there in a +single day. But the markets, the temples, and monuments of Delos have vanished, +and its stony soil supports now only a few sheep. During the Middle Ages Naxos +enjoyed the predominance; and at present, Tinos, with its venerated church +of the Panagia and its thousands of pilgrims, is the “holy land” of the Archipelago; +whilst Hermopolis, on Syra, though without trees or water, holds the +position of commercial metropolis of the Cyclades. The latter was a town of no +importance before the war of independence; but it remained neutral during that +struggle, and thus attracted numerous refugees from other islands, and, thanks to +its central position, it has since become the principal mart, dockyard, and naval +station of the Ægean Sea. Whether travellers proceed to Saloniki, Smyrna, +Constantinople, or the Black Sea, they must stop at Hermopolis. The town +formerly occupied the heights only, for fear of pirates, but it has descended now +to the foot of the hill, and its quays and warehouses extend along the seashore.</p> + +<p>Commerce has peopled the naked rocks of Syra, but it has not yet succeeded in +developing the resources of the Archipelago as in ancient times. Eubœa is no +longer “rich in cattle,” as its name implies, and only exports corn, wine, fruit, +and the lignite extracted from the mines near Kumi. The gardens of Naxos +yield oranges, lemons, and citrons; Scopelos, Andros, and Tinos, the latter one of +the best cultivated amongst the islands, export wines, which are excelled, however, +by those of Santorin, the Calliste of the earliest Greeks. The volcanic and other +islands of the Cyclades export millstones, china clay, lavas, and cimolite, this being +used in bleaching. Naxos exports emery, and that is all. The marbles of Paros +even remain untouched, and the excellent harbour of that island only rarely sees a +vessel. The inhabitants of the Cyclades confine themselves to the cultivation of +the soil, and to the breeding of a few silkworms, the surplus population of Tinos, +Siphnos, and others emigrating annually to Constantinople, Smyrna, or Greece, to +work as labourers, cooks, potters, masons, or sculptors. But whilst some of the +islands can boast of a surplus population, there are others which are the abode of +a few herdsmen only. Most of the islands between Naxos and Amorgos are +hardly more than barren rocks. Antimilos, like Delos, is merely a pasture-ground +sown over with rocks. Seriphos and Giura are still dreary solitudes, as in +the time of the Roman emperors, when they were set aside as places of exile. +Seriphos, however, possesses iron of excellent quality, and may, in consequence, +again become of some importance. On Antiparos there +are lead mines. <span class="xxpn" id="p075">{75}</span></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="V.—The Ionian Isles.">V.—<span + class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">I<b>ONIAN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">I<b>SLES.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">The island of Corfu, on the coast of Epirus, and the whole of the Archipelago +to the west of continental and peninsular Greece, down to the island of Cythera, +which divides the waters of the Ionian Sea from those of the Ægean, have +passed through the most singular political vicissitudes in the course of the last +century. Corfu, thanks to the protection extended to it by the Venetian Republic, +is the only dependency of the Balkan peninsula which successfully resisted the +assaults of the Turk. When Venice was handed over to the Austrians by +Bonaparte in 1797, Corfu and the Ionian Islands were occupied by the French. +A few years afterwards the Russians became the virtual masters in these islands, +which they formed into a sort of aristocratic republic under the suzerainty of +the Porte. In 1807 the French once more took possession of them; but the +English captured one after the other until there remained to them only Corfu, +and this, too, had to be given up in 1814. The Ionian Islands were then converted +into a “Septinsular Republic,” governed by the landed aristocracy, supported by +British bayonets. Twice did England alter the constitution of this republic in a +democratic sense, but the patriotism of the islanders refused to submit to British +suzerainty; and, when Great Britain parted with her conquest, the Ionian Islands +annexed themselves to Greece, and they now form the best educated, the +wealthiest, and the most industrious portion of that kingdom. England, no doubt, +consulted her own interests when she set free her Ionian subjects; but her action +is nevertheless deserving of approbation. England exhibited her faith in the +axiom that moral influence is superior to brute force, and yielded with perfect +good grace, not only the commercial ports of the islands, but likewise the citadel +of Corfu, which gave her the command of the Adriatic. This magnanimous +policy has not hitherto met with imitators in other countries, but England herself +has still many opportunities of applying it in other parts of the world.</p> + +<p>Corfu, the ancient Corcyra, has always held the foremost place amongst the +Ionian Islands. It owes this position to the vicinity of Italy, and to the commercial +advantages derived from an excellent port and a vast roadstead almost +resembling an inland lake. The inhabitants are fond of appealing to Thucydides +in order to prove that Corfu is the island of the Phæaces of Ulysses. They even +pretend to have discovered the rivulet in which beauteous Nausicaa washed the +linen of her father, and the shaded walks near the city are known by them as the +gardens of Alcinous. Corfu is the only one of the islands which can boast of a +small perennial stream, the Messongi, which is navigable for a short distance in +barges. The hills, which are placed like a screen in front of the plains of the +Epirus, are exposed to the full force of the south-westerly winds, which bring +much rain; the vegetation, consequently, is rich: orange and lemon trees form +fragrant groves around the city, vines and olive-trees hide the barren ground of +the hills, and waving fields of corn cover the plains. Corfu, unfortunately, is +exposed to the hot sirocco, blowing from the south-east, and this very much +curtails its advantages as a winter +station for invalids. <span class="xxpn" id="p076">{76}</span></p> + +<p>The city occupies a triangular peninsula opposite the coast of the Epirus, +and is the largest, and commercially the most important, of the former republic. +It is strongly fortified, and its successive possessors—Venetians, French, Russians, +and English—have sought to render it impregnable. A beautiful prospect may +be enjoyed from its bastions; but far superior is that from Mount Pantokratoros, +the “commandant,” for it extends across the Strait of Otranto to Italy. The +commercial relations with the latter, as well as the traditions of Venetian +dominion, have converted Corfu into a city almost half Italian, and numerous +families residing in it belong to both nations, the Greek and the Italian, by +descent as well as language. Italian remained the official language of the island +until 1830. Maltese porters and gardeners constitute a prominent element amongst +the cosmopolitan population of the city.</p> + +<div class="section"> +<div class="dctr01" id="fg025"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 25.—<span class="smcap">C<b>ORFU.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib076.jpg" width="600" height="595" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>Corfu formerly owned the town of Butrinto and a few villages on the mainland; +but an English governor thought fit to surrender them to the +terrible Ali Pasha, <span class="xxpn" id="p077">{77}</span> +and the only dependencies of Corfu at present are the small islets near it, viz. +Othonus (Fano), Salmastraci, and Ericusa, in the north; Paxos, with its caverns, +and Antipaxos, the rocks of which exude asphalt, on the south. Paxos is said to +produce the best oil in Western Greece.</p> + +<p>Leucadia, Cephalonia, Ithaca, Zante, and a few smaller islands, form a +crescent-shaped archipelago off the entrance to the Gulf of Patras. They are +the summits of a half-submerged chain of calcareous mountains, alternately +flooded by the rains or scorched by the sun. Their valleys, like those of Corfu, +produce oranges, lemons, currants (“Corinthians”), wine, and oil, which form the +objects of a brisk commerce. The inhabitants very much resemble those of Corfu, +the Italian element being strongly represented, except on Ithaca.</p> + +<div class="dctr03" id="fg026"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib077lg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 26.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>HANNEL</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>ANTA</b></span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>AURA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">From the French Staff Map. + Scale 1 : 200,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib077.jpg" width="600" height="692" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Leucadia, or the “white island,” thus called because of its glittering chalk +cliffs, is evidently a dependency of the continent. The ancients looked upon it as +a peninsula converted into an island by Corinthian colonists, who cut a canal +through the isthmus which joined it to the mainland; but this legend is not +borne out by an examination of the locality. These Corinthians probably merely +dug a navigable channel through the shallow lagoon which separates the island +from the coast, and does not exceed eighteen inches in depth. In fact, if there +were any tides in the Ionian Sea, the island of Leucadia would be converted twice +daily into a peninsula. A bridge, of which there still exist considerable +remains, formerly joined the island to the mainland near the southern extremity +of the lagoon, whilst an island occupied by the citadel of Santa Maura—a name +sometimes applied to the whole of the island—defended its entrance +to the north. <span class="xxpn" id="p078">{78}</span> +Until recently this was the only spot in Western Greece where a grove of date-trees +might be seen. A magnificent aqueduct of two hundred and sixty arches, which +was also used as a viaduct, joined the citadel to Amaxiki, the chief town and harbour +of Leucadia. This monument of Turkish enterprise—it was constructed in the +reign of Bajazet—has sustained much injury from earthquakes. Amaxiki might +be supposed to be haunted by fever, owing to the salt swamps and lagoons which +surround it; but such is not the case: on the contrary, it is a comparatively +healthy town, and its women are noted for freshness of complexion and beauty. +To the south of it rise the wooded mountains which terminate in the promontory +of Leucate (Dukato), opposite to Cephalonia. On the summit of this promontory +stood a temple of Apollo, whence, at the annual festival of the god, a condemned +criminal was hurled as an expiatory victim. It was celebrated, also, as the lover’s +leap, whence lovers leaped into the sea to drown their passion.</p> + +<p>Cephalonia, or rather Cephallenia, is the largest of the Ionian Islands, and its +highest summit—Mount Ænus, or Elato—is the culminating point of the entire +Archipelago. Mariners from the centre of the Ionian Sea can see at one and the +same time Mount Ætna in Sicily and this mountain of Cephalonia. The forests of +conifers, to which the latter is indebted for its Italian name of Montenero, have for +the greater part been destroyed by fire, but there still remain a few clumps of +magnificent firs. On its summit may be seen the remains of a temple of Jupiter. +The island is fertile and populous, but suffers much from want of water. All its +rivers dry up in summer, the calcareous soil sucking up the rain, and most of the +springs rise from the bottom of the sea, far away from the fields thirsting after +water. On the other hand, two considerable streams of sea-water find their way +into the bowels of the island.</p> + +<p>This curious phenomenon occurs a short distance to the north of Argostoli, a +bustling town, having a safe but shallow harbour. The two oceanic rivers are +sufficiently powerful to set in motion the huge wheels of two mills, one of which +has been regularly at work since 1835, and the other since 1859. Their combined +discharge amounts to 35,000,000 gallons daily, and naturalists have not yet +decided whether they form a vast subterranean lake, in which beds of salt are +constantly being deposited, or whether they find their way through numerous +threads, and, by hydrostatic aspiration, into the subterranean rivers of the island, +rendering their water brackish. The latter is the opinion of Wiebel, the geologist, +and thus much we may assume for certain—that these subterranean waters and +caverns are one of the principal causes of the severe earthquakes which visit +Cephalonia so frequently. The island of Asteris, between Cephalonia and Ithaca, +upon which stood the city of Alalkomenæ, exists no longer, and was probably +destroyed by one of those earthquakes.</p> + +<p>Ithaca of “divine Ulysses,” the modern Theaki, is separated from Cephalonia +by the narrow channel of Viscardo, thus named after Robert Guiscard. The +island is small, and all the sites referred to in the Odyssey are still pointed out +there, from the spring of Arethusa to the acropolis of Ulysses; but the black forests +which clothed the slopes of Mount Neritus have disappeared. +The inhabitants are <span class="xxpn" id="p079">{79}</span> +excessively proud of their little island, rendered so famous by the poetry of Homer, +and in every family we meet with a Penelope, a Ulysses, and a Telemachus. But +the present inhabitants have no claim whatever to be the descendants of the crafty +son of Laertes, for during the Middle Ages their ancestors were exterminated by +invaders, and in 1504 the deserted fields were given, by the Senate of Venice, to +colonists drawn from the mainland. Most of those immigrants came from the Epirus, +and the dialect spoken by the islanders is much mixed with Albanian words. At +the present time the island is well cultivated, and Vathy, its chief port, carries on +a brisk commerce in raisins, currants, oil, and wine. Ithaca, as in the days of +Homer, is the “nurse of valiant men.” The inhabitants are tall and strong, and +Dr. Schliemann is enthusiastic about the high standard of virtue and morality prevailing +amongst them. There are neither rich nor poor, but they are great +travellers, and natives of Ithaca are met with in every populous city of the East.</p> + +<div class="dctr03" id="fg027"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib079lg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 27.—<span class="smcap">A<b>RGOSTOLI.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">According to Wiebel. + Scale 1 : 78,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib079.jpg" width="596" height="700" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>“Zante, fior del Levante,” say the Italians. And, indeed, this ancient island, +Zacynthus, is richer in orchards, fields, and villas than any other of this Archipelago. +An extensive plain, bounded by ranges of hills, occupies the centre of this +“golden isle”—a vast garden, abounding in vines, yielding currants of superior +quality. The inhabitants are industrious, and not content with cultivating their +own fields, they assist also in the cultivation of those of Acarnania, receiving +wages or a share of the produce in return. The city of Zante, on the eastern coast +of the island, facing Elis, is the wealthiest and cleanest town +in the Archipelago. <span class="xxpn" id="p080">{80}</span> +Unfortunately it suffers frequently from earthquakes, to which a volcanic origin is +ascribed. Nor is this improbable, for bituminous springs rise near the south-eastern +cape of the island, and though worked since the days of Herodotus, they still yield +about a hundred barrels of pitch annually. Oil springs discharge themselves close +to the shore, and even at the bottom of the sea; and near Cape Skinari, in the +north, a kind of rank grease floats on the surface of the waters.</p> + +<p>The only islets dependent upon Zante are the Strivali, or the Strophades, to +which flew the hideous harpies of ancient mythology.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn19" id="fnanch19">19</a></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="VI.—The Present and the Future of Greece.">VI.—<span + class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>RESENT</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">F<b>UTURE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>REECE.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">The Greeks, although they have not altogether fulfilled the expectations of +Philhellenes, have nevertheless made great strides in advance since they have +thrown off the yoke of the Turks. The deeds of valour performed during the war +of independence recalled the days of Marathon and Platæa; but it was wrong to +expect that a short time would suffice to raise modern Greece to the intellectual +and artistic level of the generation which gave birth to an Aristotle and a +Phidias. Nor can we expect that a nation should throw off, in a single generation, +the evil habits engendered during an age of servitude, and digest at once the +scientific conquests made in the course of twenty centuries. We should likewise +bear in mind that the population of Greece is small, and that it is thinly scattered +over a barren mountain region. The numerous ports, no doubt, offer great facilities +for commerce, nor have their inhabitants failed to avail themselves of them; but +there is hardly a country in Europe which offers equal obstacles to a development +of its agricultural and industrial resources. The construction of roads, owing to +the mountains, meets with difficulties everywhere, whilst the blue sea invites its +beholders to distant climes and commercial expeditions. No immigration from the +neighbouring Turkish provinces has consequently taken place, whilst many +Hellenes, and more especially natives of the Ionian Islands and the Cyclades, +annually seek their fortune in Constantinople, Cairo, and even distant India. Men +of enterprise leave the country, and there remains behind only a horde of intriguers, +who look upon politics as a lucrative business, and an army of government officials, +who depend upon the favour of a minister for future promotion. This state of +affairs explains the singular fact that the most prosperous Greek communities exist +beyond the borders of the kingdom of Greece. These foreign communities are +better and more liberally governed than those at home. In spite of the Pasha, +who enjoys the right of supervision, the administration of +the smallest Greek <span class="xxpn" id="p081">{81}</span> +community in Thracia or Macedonia might serve as a pattern to the independent and +sovereign kingdom of Greece. Every one there takes an interest in the prosperity +of the commonwealth; but in Greece a rapacious bureaucracy takes care only of its +own advancement, the electors are bribed, and the expenses thus illegally incurred +are recovered by illegal exactions and robbery, such as have prevailed for many +years.</p> + +<p>The actual population of Greece may amount to 1,500,000 souls; that is to say, +it includes about two-fifths of all the Greeks residing in Europe and Asia. The +population is less dense than in any other country of Europe, including Turkey. +Greece, at the epoch of its greatest prosperity, is said to have supported 6,000,000 +or 7,000,000 inhabitants. Attica was ten times more populous at that time, and +many islands which now support only a few herdsmen could then boast of +populous towns. Sites of ancient cities abound on the barren plateaux, on the +banks of the smallest rivulet, and crown every promontory throughout the ancient +countries of the Hellenes, from Cyprus to Corfu, and from Thasos to Crete.</p> + +<p>The country, however, is being gradually repeopled. Before the war of independence, +the population, including the Ionian Islands, amounted, perhaps, to +1,000,000; but battles and massacres diminished it considerably, and in 1832 the +number of inhabitants was 950,000 at most. Since that epoch there has been an +annual increase varying between 9,000 and 14,000 souls. This increase, however, +is spread very unequally over the country. The towns increase rapidly, but +several islands, and more especially Andros, Santorin, Hydra, Zante, and Leucadia, +lose more inhabitants by emigration than they gain by an excess of births over +deaths. The swamp fevers prevailing in continental Greece much retard the +increase of population. Naturally the climate is exceedingly salubrious, but the +water, in many localities, has been permitted to collect into pestilential swamps, +and the draining of these and their cultivation would not only add to the wealth +of the country, but would likewise free it from a dire plague.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn20" id="fnanch20">20</a></p> + +<p>Unfortunately agriculture progresses but slowly in Greece, and its produce is +not even sufficient to support the population, still less to supply articles for export. +And yet the cultivable soil of Greece is admirably suited to the growth of vines, +fruits, cotton, tobacco, and madder. Figs and oranges are delicious; the wines of +Santorin and the Cyclades are amongst the finest produced in the Mediterranean; +the oil of Attica is as superior now as when Athene planted +the sacred olive-tree; <span class="xxpn" id="p082">{82}</span> +but, excepting a little cotton grown in Phthiotis, and the raisins known as +currants or Corinthians, which are exported from the Ionian Islands and Patras +to the annual value of about £1,500,000, agriculture contributes but little +towards the exports. One of the principal articles is the valonia, a species of acorn +picked up in the forests, and used by tanners.</p> + +<p>In a country so far behindhand in agriculture manufactures cannot be +expected to flourish. All manufactured articles have consequently to be imported +from abroad, and especially from England. Greece does not even possess tools to +work its famous marble quarries, though they are richer than those of Carrara. +There is only one metallurgical establishment in the whole of the kingdom—that +of Laurion. The ancients had been working argentiferous lead mines in that +part of the country for centuries, and vast masses of unexhausted slag had +accumulated near them. This waste is now being scientifically treated in the +smelting-works of Ergastiria, and nearly ten thousand tons of lead, and a considerable +quantity of silver, are produced there annually. Quite a brisk little town +has arisen near the works, and its harbour is one of the busiest in all Greece. +But the founders of this flourishing concern had to struggle against jealousies, +and the “Laurion question” nearly embroiled the Governments of France and +Italy with Greece.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn21" id="fnanch21">21</a></p> + +<p>The Greeks do not support themselves by agriculture, nor can they boast +of manufactories, and they would be doomed to starvation if they did not maintain +six thousand vessels acting in the lucrative business of ocean carriers throughout +the Mediterranean. This Greek mercantile marine is superior to that of Russia, +almost equal to that of Austria, and six times larger than that of Belgium, and +we should bear in mind that many vessels sailing under Turkish colours are +actually owned by Greeks. The ancient instinct of the race comes out strongly +in this coast navigation. The large fleets of swift ocean steamers belong to the +powerful companies of the West, and the Greeks are content to sail in small +vessels suited to the requirements of the coasting trade, which hardly ever +extend their voyages beyond the limits of the ancient Greek world. None can +compete with them as regards low freight, for every sailor has an interest in the +cargo, and all of them are anxious to increase the profits. One may have +furnished the wood, another the rigging, a third a portion of the cargo, whilst +their fellow-citizens have advanced money for the purchase of merchandise, +without requiring any bond except their word of honour. On many of these +vessels all are partners, all work alike, and share in the proceeds of the venture.</p> + +<p>But, whatever the sobriety and intelligence of these Greek mariners, they +cannot escape the fate which has overtaken the small trader and the handicraftsman +throughout the world. The cheap vessels of the Greeks may be able to contend +for a long time against the steamers of powerful companies, but in the end they +must succumb. The country will lose its place amongst the commercial nations +of the world unless its agricultural and industrial +resources are quickly developed, <span class="xxpn" id="p083">{83}</span> +and railways are constructed to convey the products of the interior to the sea-coast. +Greece, even now, has only a few carriage roads, not so much because the +mountains offer insurmountable obstacles, but because its heedless inhabitants +are content with the facilities for transport offered by the sea. It would be +impossible in our day to travel from the Pylos to Lacedæmon in a chariot, as was +done by Telemachus; for the road connecting these places leads along precipices +and over dangerous goat paths. Greece and Servia are the European states +which remained longest without a railway, and even now the former is content +with a short line connecting Athens with its harbour. It has certainly been +proposed to construct several lines of the utmost importance, but, owing to the +bankrupt condition of the Greek exchequer, these works have not yet been begun. +The public income is not sufficient to meet the expenditure, the debt exceeds +£15,000,000, and the interest on the loans remains unpaid.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn22" id="fnanch22">22</a></p> + +<p>The poverty of the majority of the inhabitants of Greece is equal to that of +the State. The peasants are impoverished by the payment of tithes, and of a +Government impost double or even treble their amount. Though naturally very +temperate, they are hardly able to sustain life; they dwell in unwholesome dens, +and are frequently unable to put by sufficient means for the purchase of clothing +and other necessaries. The young men of the poorest districts of Greece thus +find themselves forced to emigrate in large numbers, either for a season or for +an indefinite period. Arcadia may be likened in this respect to Auvergne, +to Savoy, and to other mountain countries of Central Europe. The Ætolians, +however, exchange their fine savage valleys for foreign cities only very reluctantly, +though they, too, suffer intensely from the weight of taxation. In ancient times, +before their spirit was broken by servitude, they would have resisted the tax-gatherer +with arms in their hands. They now content themselves with sallying +forth from their villages, in order to pile up a heap of stones by the side of the +high-road, as a testimony of the injustice with which they have been treated. +This heap of stones is <i>anathema</i>. Every peasant passing it religiously adds a +stone to this mute monument of execration, and the earth, the common mother of +all, is thus charged with the task of vengeance.</p> + +<p>Ignorance, the usual attendant of poverty, is great in the rural districts of +Greece, and especially in those difficult of access. In Greece, as in Albania and +Montenegro, they believe in perfidious nymphs, who secure the affections of young +men, and then drag them down below the water; they believe in vampyres, in +the evil eye and witchcraft. But the Greeks are an inquiring race, anxious +to learn, in spite of their poverty. The peasant of Ithaca will stop a traveller of +education on the road, in order that he may read to him the poetry of Homer. +Elementary schools have been established in nearly every village, in spite of the +poverty of the Government. If no school buildings can be secured, the classes +meet in the open air. The scholars, far from playing truant, hardly raise their +eyes from the books to notice a passing stranger or the flight of a bird. The +scholars in the superior schools and at the University of +Athens are equally <span class="xxpn" id="p084">{84}</span> +conscientious and assiduous. It may be that some of them merely aspire to become +orators, but they certainly do not resort to a city on the pretence of study, +whilst in reality they yield themselves up to debauchery. Amongst the students +of the University of Athens there are many who work half the night at some +handicraft, others who hire themselves out as servants or coachmen, to enable +them to pursue their studies as lawyers or physicians.</p> + +<p>This love of study cannot fail to secure to the Greek nation an intellectual +influence far greater than could be looked for from the smallness of its +numbers. The Greeks of the East, moreover, look upon Athens as their intellectual +centre, whither they send their sons in pursuit of knowledge. They found +scholarships in connection with the schools of Athens, and largely contribute +towards their support. And it is not only the rich Greek merchants of Trieste, +Saloniki, Smyrna, Marseilles, and London who are thus mindful of the true +interests of their native country, but peasants of Thracia and Macedonia, too, +devote their savings to the promotion of public education. The people themselves +support their schools and museums, and pay their professors. The Academy of +Athens, the Polytechnic School, the University, and the Arsakeion, an excellent +ladies’ college—these all owe their existence to the zeal of Greek citizens, and not +to the Government. It may readily be understood from this how carefully these +institutions are being watched by the entire nation, and how salutary must be the +influence of young men and women returning to their native provinces after they +have been educated at them.</p> + +<p>It is thus a common language, common traditions, and a common hope for the +future that have made a nation of the Greeks in spite of treaties. Greek +patriotism is not confined to the narrow limits laid down by diplomacy. Whether +they reside in Greece proper, in European or Asiatic Turkey, the Greeks feel as +one people, and they lead a common national life independently of the Governments +of Constantinople and Athens. Nay, amongst the Greeks dwelling in +foreign lands this feeling of nationality is, perhaps, most intense, for they are not +exposed to the corrupting influence of a bureaucracy. They have more carefully +guarded the traditions and practices of municipal government, and are practically +in the enjoyment of greater individual liberty. The Greek nation, in its entirety, +numbers close upon 4,000,000 souls. Its power, already considerable, is growing +from day to day, and is sure to exercise a potent influence upon the destinies of +Mediterranean Europe.</p> + +<p>We are told sometimes that community of religion might induce the Greeks +to favour Russian ambition, and to open to that power the road to Constantinople. +Nothing can be further from the truth. The Hellenes will never sacrifice their +own interests to those of the foreigner. Nor do there exist between Greece and +Russia those natural ties which alone give birth to true alliances. Climate, +geographical position, history, commerce, and, above all, a common civilisation, +attach Greece to that group of European nations known as Greco-Latin. In +tripartite Europe the Greeks will never range themselves by the side of the +Slav, but will be found amongst the Latin nations of Italy, +France, and Spain.</p> + +<div class="dctr03" id="map2"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib084bxxlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + TURKEY <span class="smmaj">IN</span> EUROPE and GREECE</div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">By E. G. Ravenstein, F.R.G.S. + Scale 1 : 5,000,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib084b.jpg" width="600" height="764" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div class="section"> +<div><span class="xxpn" id="p085">{85}</span></div> +<h3 title="VII.—Government and Political Divisions.">VII.—<span + class="smcap">G<b>OVERNMENT</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>OLITICAL</b></span> + <span class="smcap">D<b>IVISIONS.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">The protecting powers +have bestowed upon Greece a parliamentary and constitutional +Government, modelled upon West European patterns. Theoretically +the King of the Greeks reigns, but does not govern, and his ministers are +responsible to the Chambers, whose majority changes with the fluctuations of +public opinion. In reality, however, the power of the King is limited only +by diplomacy. Nor do those Western institutions respond to the traditions +and the genius of the Greeks, and although the charter has been modified +three times since the declaration of independence, it has never been strictly +adhered to.</p> + +<p>In accordance with the constitution of 1864, every Greek citizen possessing +any property whatever, or exercising a profession, has a right to vote on attaining +his twenty-fifth year, and becomes eligible as a deputy at thirty. The deputies, +one hundred and eighty-seven in number, are elected for four years, and are paid +for their services. The civil list of the King, inclusive of a subvention granted by +the protecting powers, amounts to £46,000 a year.</p> + +<p>The orthodox Greek Church of Hellas is independent of the Patriarch of +Constantinople. It is governed by a Holy Synod, sitting in the capital, and +presided over by an archbishop as metropolitan. A royal commissioner is present +at the meetings of the Synod, and countersigns every proposition that is carried. +Decisions not bearing this official signature are void. The King, on the other +hand, is permitted to dethrone or remove a bishop only by consent of the Synod, +and in accordance with the canon law. The constitution guarantees religious +liberty, but this official Church nevertheless exercises considerable powers, and +frequently calls upon the civil authorities to give force to its decrees. The +Synod carefully watches over the observance of religious dogmas; it points out to +the authorities heretical or heterodox preachers and writers, and demands their +suppression; exercises a censorship over books and religious pictures; and calls +upon the civil tribunals to punish offenders.</p> + +<p>There are no longer any Mohammedans in Greece, except sailors or travellers, +and the last Turk has quitted Eubœa. The only Church besides +the established one which can boast a considerable number of adherents is +the Roman Catholic. It prevails amongst the middle classes on Naxos, and on +several others of the Cyclades, and is governed by two archbishops and four +bishops.</p> + +<p>Greece is divided into thirteen nomes, or nomarchies, and these, again, +into fifty-nine eparchies. Each eparchy is subdivided into districts, or dimes +(dimarchies), and the latter into parishes, governed by paredres, or assistant +dimarchs. These officials are appointed by the King, and are in receipt of small +emoluments. The number of officials is proportionately greater in Greece than +in any other part of Europe. They form the sixtieth part, or, including their +families, the twelfth part of the population, and although their pay is small, they +swallow up between them more than half +the public income. <span class="xxpn" id="p086">{86}</span></p> + +<p>The thirteen nomes and fifty-nine eparchies of Greece, with their +population in 1870:―</p> + +<div id="idp86table"> +<table class="fsz6" summary=""> +<colgroup><col width="20%;" /><col width="60%;" /> + <col width="20%;" /></colgroup> +<tr> + <th colspan="2">Eparchies.</th> + <th>Population.</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Mantinea</td> + <td class="tdright">46,174</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Kynuria</td> + <td class="tdright">26,733</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Gartynia</td> + <td class="tdright">41,408</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Megalopolis</td> + <td class="tdright">17,425</td></tr> +<tr> + <td></td> + <td class="tdleft">Arkadia</td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">131,740</span></td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft tdpadtop" colspan="2">Lakedæmon</td> + <td class="tdright tdpadtop">46,423</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Gythion</td> + <td class="tdright">13,957</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Itylos (Œtylos)</td> + <td class="tdright">26,540</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Epidauros Limera</td> + <td class="tdright">18,931</td></tr> +<tr> + <td></td> + <td class="tdleft">Lakonia</td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">105,851</span></td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft tdpadtop" colspan="2">Kalamæ</td> + <td class="tdright tdpadtop">25,029</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Messini</td> + <td class="tdright">29,529</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Pylia</td> + <td class="tdright">20,946</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Triphylia</td> + <td class="tdright">29,041</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Olympia</td> + <td class="tdright">25,872</td></tr> +<tr> + <td></td> + <td class="tdleft">Messenia</td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">130,417</span></td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft tdpadtop" colspan="2">Nauplia</td> + <td class="tdright tdpadtop">15,022</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Argos</td> + <td class="tdright">22,138</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Korinthia</td> + <td class="tdright">42,803</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Spetsæ and Hermionis</td> + <td class="tdright">19,919</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Hydra and Trizinia</td> + <td class="tdright">17,301</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Kythyra</td> + <td class="tdright">10,637</td></tr> +<tr> + <td></td> + <td class="tdleft">Argolis and Korinthia</td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">127,820</span></td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft tdpadtop" colspan="2">Syros</td> + <td class="tdright tdpadtop">30,643</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Koa</td> + <td class="tdright">8,687</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Andros</td> + <td class="tdright">19,674</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Tinos</td> + <td class="tdright">11,022</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Naxos</td> + <td class="tdright">20,582</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Thira (Thera, Santorin)</td> + <td class="tdright">21,901</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Milos</td> + <td class="tdright">10,784</td></tr> +<tr> + <td></td> + <td class="tdleft">Kyklades</td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">123,293</span></td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft tdpadtop" colspan="2">Attiki</td> + <td class="tdright tdpadtop">76,919</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Ægina</td> + <td class="tdright">6,103</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Megaris</td> + <td class="tdright">14,949</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Thiva (Thebæ)</td> + <td class="tdright">20,711</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Livadia</td> + <td class="tdright">18,122</td></tr> +<tr> + <td></td> + <td class="tdleft">Attiki and Viotia (Bœotia)</td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">136,804</span></td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft tdpadtop" colspan="2">Khalkis</td> + <td class="tdright tdpadtop">29,013</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Xerochorion</td> + <td class="tdright">11,215</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Karystia</td> + <td class="tdright">33,936</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Skopelos</td> + <td class="tdright">8,377</td></tr> +<tr> + <td></td> + <td class="tdleft">Euvia (Eubœa)</td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">82,541</span></td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft tdpadtop" colspan="2">Phthiotis</td> + <td class="tdright tdpadtop">26,747</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Parnasis</td> + <td class="tdright">20,368</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Lokris</td> + <td class="tdright">20,187</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Doris</td> + <td class="tdright">49,119</td></tr> +<tr> + <td></td> + <td class="tdleft">Phthiotis and Phokis</td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">106,421</span></td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft tdpadtop" colspan="2">Mesolongion (Missolonghi)</td> + <td class="tdright tdpadtop">18,997</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Valtos</td> + <td class="tdright">14,027</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Trichonia</td> + <td class="tdright">14,453</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Evrytania</td> + <td class="tdright">33,018</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Navpaktia</td> + <td class="tdright">22,219</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Vonitza and Xeromeros</td> + <td class="tdright">18,979</td></tr> +<tr> + <td></td> + <td class="tdleft">Akarnania and Ætolia</td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">121,693</span></td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft tdpadtop" colspan="2">Patras</td> + <td class="tdright tdpadtop">46,527</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Ægialia</td> + <td class="tdright">12,764</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Kalavryta</td> + <td class="tdright">39,204</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Ilia (Elis)</td> + <td class="tdright">51,066</td></tr> +<tr> + <td></td> + <td class="tdleft">Achaia and Ilis (Elis)</td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">149,561</span></td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft tdpadtop" colspan="2">Kerkyra (Corfu)</td> + <td class="tdright tdpadtop">25,729</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Mesi</td> + <td class="tdright">21,754</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Oros</td> + <td class="tdright">24,983</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Paxi (Paxos)</td> + <td class="tdright">3,582</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Leucas (Santa Maura)</td> + <td class="tdright">20,892</td></tr> +<tr> + <td></td> + <td class="tdleft">Kerkyra (Corfu)</td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">96,940</span></td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft tdpadtop" colspan="2">Kranæa</td> + <td class="tdright tdpadtop">33,358</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Pali</td> + <td class="tdright">17,377</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Sami</td> + <td class="tdright">16,774</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Itaki</td> + <td class="tdright">9,873</td></tr> +<tr> + <td></td> + <td class="tdleft">Kephallinia</td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">77,382</span></td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft tdpadtop" colspan="2">Zakynthos (Zante)</td> + <td class="tdright tdpadtop">44,557</td></tr> +<tr><td colspan="3" class="tdleft tdpadtop fsz6">The + modern nomenclature has been + adopted in the above table.</td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtblbox--> + +<div class="dctr10"><img src="images/ib086.jpg" + width="268" height="401" alt="" /></div> + +<div class="chapter" id="p087"> +<div class="dctr01"><img src="images/ib087.jpg" + width="600" height="124" alt="" /></div> + +<h2 class="h2herein" title="Turkey in Europe."> + TURKEY IN EUROPE.<a class="afnanchstar" href="#fn23" + id="fnanch23" title="go to note 23">*</a> +<span class="sphr"><img class="ihra" src="images/hr-ia013.png" + width="248" height="27" alt="" /></span></h2> + +<h3 title="I.—General Aspects.">I.—<span + class="smcap">G<b>ENERAL</b></span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>SPECTS.</b></span></h3> +</div><!--chapter--> + +<p class="pfirst"> +<span class="spdropcap"><img class="idropcap" src="images/drop-t.jpg" +width="235" height="254" alt="T" /></span>HE +Balkan peninsula is, perhaps, that amongst the three great +peninsulas of Southern Europe which enjoys the greatest natural +advantages, and occupies the most favourable geographical position. +In its outline it is far less unwieldy than Spain, and even surpasses +Italy in variety of contour. Its coasts are washed by four seas; they +abound in gulfs, harbours, and peninsulas, and are fringed by numerous islands. +Several of its valleys and plains vie in fertility with the banks of the Guadalquivir +and the plains of Lombardy. The floras of two climes intermingle on its soil, and +add their charms to the landscape. The mountains of Turkey do not yield to those +of the two other peninsulas in graceful outline or grandeur, and most of them are +still covered with virgin forests. If they are less accessible than the Apennines of +Italy or the <i>sierras</i> of Spain, that is owing simply to the want of roads; for they +are, as a rule, of moderate elevation, and the plateaux from which they rise are +narrower and more extensively intersected by valleys than is the table-land of +Castile. Both Spain and Italy are closed in the north by mountain barriers +difficult to cross, whilst the Balkan peninsula joins the continental trunk by almost +imperceptible transitions, and nowhere is it separated from it by well-defined +natural boundaries. The Austrian Alps extend without a break into Bosnia, and +the Carpathians cross the Danube in order to effect a junction with the system of +the Balkan. To the east of the “Iron Gate” there are no mountains at all, and +Turkey is bounded there by the broad valley of the Danube. <span class="xxpn" id="p088">{88}</span></p> + +<p>The proximity and parallelism of the coasts of two continents confer upon the +Balkan peninsula an advantage unrivalled, perhaps, throughout the world. It is +separated from Asia only by the narrow channel which joins the Black Sea to the +Ægean Sea: this channel is an ocean highway, and yet forms no serious obstacle +to the migration of nations from continent to continent. If the Black Sea were +larger than it is at present; if it still formed <i>one</i> sea with the Caspian, and extended +far into Asia, as it did in a past age, then Constantinople would necessarily become +the great centre of the ancient world. That proud position was actually held by +it a thousand years ago, and even if it should never recover it, its geographical +position alone insures to it an importance for all time to come. If the city were +to be razed to day, it would arise again to-morrow at some other spot in the neighbourhood. +In the dawn of history powerful Ilion kept watch at the entrance of +the Dardanelles: it survives in the city on the Bosphorus; and had there been no +Byzantium, its mantle would have descended upon some other town in the same +locality.</p> + +<p>We know the part played by ancient Greece in the history of human culture. +Macedonia and Thracia, the two other countries bordering upon the Ægean, have +played their part too. It was those provinces which, after the invasion of the +Persians, gave birth to the movement of reaction which led the armies of Alexander +to the Euphrates and Indus. The power of the Romans survived there for a +thousand years after Rome itself had fallen, and the precious germs of civilisation, +which at a later period regenerated Western Europe, were nurtured there. It is +true, alas ! that the Turk has put a stop to every enterprise of a civilising nature. +These conquerors of Turanian race were carried into the Balkan peninsula in the +course of a general migration of nations towards the west, which went on for +three thousand years, and was attended by perpetual broils. It is now five +hundred years since the Turks obtained a footing in the peninsula, and for more +than four hundred years they have been its masters, and during that long period +the old Roman empire of the East has been severed, as it were, from the rest of +Europe. The normal progress of these highly favoured countries has been interrupted +by incessant wars between Christians and Mohammedans, by the decay of +the nations conquered or enslaved by the Turks, and by the heedless fatalism of the +masters of the country. But the time is approaching when that important portion +of Europe will resume the position due to it amongst the countries of the earth.</p> + +<p>Vast tracts of the Balkan peninsula are hardly better known to us than the +wilds of Africa. Kanitz found rivers, hills, and mountains figuring upon our +maps which have no existence. Another traveller, Lejean, found that a pretended +low pass through the Balkans existed only in the imagination. Russian geodesists +engaged upon the measurement of an arc of a meridian found that Sofia, one of +the largest and best-known cities of Turkey, had been inserted upon the best maps +at a distance of nearly a day’s journey from its true position. The entire chain of +the Balkans had to be shifted considerably to the south, in consequence of explorations +carried on within the last few years. Men of science have hardly ventured +yet to explore the plateaux of Albania or Mount Pindus, and much +remains yet to <span class="xxpn" id="p089">{89}</span> +be done before our knowledge of the topography of the Balkan peninsula can be +called even moderately complete. The voyages and explorations of a host of +travellers<a class="afnanch" href="#fn24" id="fnanch24">24</a> have, however, made known to us its general features and its geological +formations. Their task was by no means an easy one, for the mountain masses and +mountain chains of the peninsula do not constitute a regular, well-defined system. +There is no central range, with spurs running out on both sides, and gradually +decreasing in height as they approach the plains. Nor is the centre of the peninsula +its most elevated portion, for the culminating summits are dispersed over the +country apparently without order. The mountain ranges run in all the directions +of the compass, and we can only say, in a general way, that those of Western Turkey +run parallel with the Adriatic and Ionian coasts, whilst those in the east meet the +coasts of the Black Sea and the Ægean at right angles. The relief of the soil and +the water-sheds make it appear almost as if Turkey turned her back upon continental +Europe. Its highest mountains, its most extensive table-lands, and its most +inaccessible forests lie towards the west and north-west, as if they were intended to +cut it off from the shores of the Adriatic and the plains of Hungary, whilst all its +rivers, whether they run to the north, east, or south, finally find their way into the +Black Sea or the Ægean, whose shores face those of Asia.</p> + +<p>This irregularity in the distribution of the mountains has its analogue in the +distribution of the various races which inhabit the peninsula. The invaders or +peaceful colonists, whether they came across the straits from Asia Minor, or along +the valley of the Danube from Scythia, soon found themselves scattered in +numerous valleys, or stopped by amphitheatres having no outlet. They failed to +find their way in this labyrinth of mountains, and members of the most diverse races +settled down in proximity to each other, and frequently came into conflict. The +most numerous, the most warlike, or the most industrious races gradually extended +their power at the expense of their neighbours; and the latter, defeated in the +struggle for existence, have been scattered into innumerable fragments, between +which there is no longer any cohesion. Hungary has a homogeneous population, +if we compare it with that of Turkey; for in the latter country there are districts +where eight or ten different nationalities live side by side within a radius of a few +miles.</p> + +<p>Time, however, has brought some order into this chaos, and commercial intercourse +has done much to assimilate these various races. Speaking broadly, Turkey +in Europe may now be said to be divided into four great ethnological zones. The +Greeks occupy Crete, the islands of the Archipelago, the shores of the Ægean Sea, +and the eastern slopes of Mounts Pindus and Olympus; the Albanians hold the +country between the Adriatic and Mount Pindus; the Slavs, including Servians, +Croats, Bosnians, Herzegovinians, and Tsernagorans (Montenegrins), occupy the +Illyrian Alps, towards the north-west; whilst the slopes of the Balkan, the +Despoto Dagh, and the plains of Eastern Turkey belong to the Bulgarians, who, +as far as language goes, are Slavs likewise. As to the Turks, +the lords of the land, <span class="xxpn" id="p090">{90}</span> +they are to be met with in most places, and particularly in the large towns and +fortresses; but the only portion of the country which they occupy to the exclusion +of other races is the north-eastern corner of the peninsula, bounded by the Balkans, +the Danube, and the Black Sea.</p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="II.—Crete and the Islands of the Archipelago.">II.—<span + class="smcap">C<b>RETE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">I<b>SLANDS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>RCHIPELAGO.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">Crete, +next to Cyprus, is the largest island inhabited by Greeks. It is a natural +dependency of Greece, but treaties made without consulting the wishes of the people +have handed it over to the Turks. It is Greek in spite of this, not only because +the majority of its inhabitants consider it to be so, but also because of its soil, its +climate, and its geographical position. On all sides it is surrounded by deep seas, +except towards the north-west, where a submarine plateau joins it to Cythera and +the Peloponnesus.</p> + +<p>There are few countries in the world more favoured by nature. Its climate is +mild, though sometimes too dry in summer; its soil fertile in spite of the waters +being swallowed up by the limestone rocks; its harbours spacious and well sheltered; +and its scenery exhibits both grandeur and quiet beauty. The position of Crete, at +the mouth of the Archipelago, between Europe, Asia, and Africa, seems to have +destined that island to become the great commercial emporium of that part of the +world. Aristotle already observed this, and, if tradition can be trusted, Crete +actually held that position for more than three thousand years. During that time +it “ruled the waves;” the Cyclades acknowledged the sway of Minos, its king; +Cretan colonists established themselves in Sicily; and Cretan vessels found their +way to every part of the Mediterranean. But the island unfortunately became +divided into innumerable small republics jealous of each other, and was therefore +unable to maintain this commercial supremacy in the face of Dorian and other +Greeks. At a subsequent period the Romans subjected the island, and it never +recovered its independence. Byzantines, Arabs, Venetians, and Turks have held +it in turn, and by each of them it has been laid waste and impoverished.</p> + +<p>The elongated shape of the island, and the range of mountains which +runs through it from one extremity to the other, enable us to understand how +it was that at a time when most Greeks looked upon the walls of their cities +as synonymous with the limits of their fatherland, Crete became divided into +a multitude of small republics, and how every attempt at federation (“syncretism”) +miserably failed. The inhabitants, in fact, were more effectually separated +from each other than if they had inhabited a number of small islands forming +an archipelago. Most of the coast valleys are enclosed by high mountains, +the only easy access to them being from the sea, and communications between +the towns occupying their centres are possible only by crossing difficult mountain +paths easily defended. In all Crete there exists but one plain deserving the +name, viz. that of Messara, to the south of the central mass of mountains. It +is the granary of the island, and the Ieropotamo, or “holy river,” which traverses +it, has a little water even in the +middle of summer. <span class="xxpn" id="p091">{91}</span></p> + +<p>The contour of Crete corresponds in a remarkable manner with the height +of its mountains. Where these are high, the island is broad; where they sink +down, it is narrow. In the centre of the island rises Mount Ida (Psiloriti), where +Jupiter was educated by the Corybantes, and where his tomb was shown. Its +lofty summit, covered with snow almost throughout the year, its gigantic +buttresses, and the verdant valleys at its base render it one of the most imposing +mountains in the world; but it was still more magnificent in the time of the +ancient Greeks, when forests covered its slopes, and justified its being called Mount +Ida, or “the wooded.” On the summit of this mountain the whole island lies +spread out beneath our feet; the horizon towards the north, from Mount Taygetus +to the shores of Asia, is dotted with islands and peninsulas; and in the south a +wide expanse of water extends beyond the barren and inhospitable island of Gaudo.</p> + +<div class="section"> +<div class="dctr01" id="fg028"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 28.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>ORGE</b></span> <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">H<b>AGIO</b></span> + <span class="smcap">R<b>UMELI.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib091.jpg" width="600" height="602" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>The Leuca-Ori, or “White Mountains,” in the western extremity of the island, +are thus called on account of the snow which covers their +summits, or because <span class="xxpn" id="p092">{92}</span> +of their white limestone cliffs. They are exceedingly steep, and perfectly bare, +hardly any verdure being met with even in the valleys at their foot. They are +known, also, as the Mountains of the Sphakiotes, the descendants of the ancient +Dorians, who have retired into their fastnesses, where they are protected by +nature against every attack. Some of their villages are accessible only by +following the stony bed of mountain torrents leaping down from the heights +in small cascades. During the rains the water rushes down these ravines in +mighty torrents. The “gates are closed” then, as it is said. One of these gates, +or <i>pharynghi</i>, is that of Hagio Rumeli, on the southern slope of the Leuca-Ori. +When rain threatens it is dangerous to enter these gorges, for the waters rush +down and carry everything before them. During the war of independence +the Turks vainly endeavoured to force this “gate” of the strong mountain citadel. +The level pieces of ground on these heights are sufficiently extensive to support +a considerable population, if it were not for the cold. The villages of Askyfo +occupy one of these plains, which is surrounded on all sides by an amphitheatre +of mountains. In former times this cavity was occupied by a lake. This is +proved by ancient beaches and by other evidence. But the waters of the lake +found an outlet through some katavothras (<i>khonos</i>, “sinks”) and discharged +themselves into the sea.</p> + +<p>The remaining mountains of the island are less elevated and far less sterile +than the White Mountains. The most remarkable amongst them are the Lasithi, +and, still farther west, those of Dicte, or Sitia, a sort of pendant to the Mountains of +the Sphakiotes. Raised sea-beaches have been traced along their northern slopes, +covered with shells of living species, and they prove that that portion of the +island has been upheaved more than sixty feet during a recent geological epoch. +The northern coast, between the White Mountains and Mount Dicte, offers a +greater variety of contour than does the south coast. Its capes, or <i>acroteria</i>, +project far into the sea, and thence are gulfs, bays, and secure anchorages. For +these reasons most commercial cities have been built upon that side of the island, +which faces the Archipelago and presents a picture of life, whilst the south coast, +facing Africa, is comparatively deserted. All the modern cities on the northern +coasts have been built upon the sites of ancient ones. Megalokastron, better +known by its Italian name of Candia, is the Heracleum of the ancients, the +famous haven of Cnossus. Retimo, on the western front of Mount Ida, is easily +identified with the ancient Rithymna; whilst Khanea (Canea), whose white +houses are almost confounded with the arid slopes of the White Mountains, +represents the Cydonia of the Greeks, famous for its forests of quince-trees. +Canea is the actual capital, and although not the most populous, it is nevertheless +the most important and the busiest city of the island. It has a +second haven to the east, Azizirge, on Suda Bay, one of the best sheltered on the +island, and promises to become one of the principal maritime stations on the +Mediterranean.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn25" id="fnanch25">25</a> <span class="xxpn" id="p093">{93}</span></p> + +<p>Crete has certainly lost much in population and wealth, and the epithet of +the “isle of a hundred cities,” which it received from the ancient Greeks, no longer +applies to it. Miserable villages occupy the sites of the ancient cities, their +houses built from the materials of a single ruined wall, whilst immense quarries +had to be opened in order to supply the building materials required in former +times. The famous “labyrinth” is one of the most considerable of these ancient +quarries. Crete, in spite of its great fertility, exports merely a few agricultural +products, and nothing now reminds us of the fruitful island upon which Ceres +gave birth to Plutus. The peasants are the reputed owners of the land, but they +take little heed of its cultivation. Their olives yield only an inferior oil, and +though the wine they make is good in spite of them, it is no longer the Malvoisie +so highly prized by the Venetians. The cultivation of cotton, tobacco, and of +fruit of all sorts is neglected. The only progress in agriculture which can be +recorded during the present century consists in the introduction of orange-trees, +whose delicious fruit is highly appreciated throughout the East. M. Georges +Perrot has drawn attention to the singular fact that, with the exception of the +olive-trees and the vine, the cultivated trees of the island are confined to +particular localities. Thus chestnuts are met with only at the western extremity +of the island; vigorous oaks and cypresses are confined to the elevated valleys of +the Sphakiotes; the valonia oaks are met with only in the province of Retimo; +Mount Dicte alone supports stone-pines and carob-trees; and a promontory in +South-eastern Crete, jutting out towards Africa, is surmounted by a grove of +date-trees—the finest throughout the Archipelago.</p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg029"> +<div class="dcaption"> Fig. 29.—<span + class="smcap">C<b>RETE,</b></span> <span class="smmaj">OR</span> <span + class="smcap">C<b>ANDIA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 2 470,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib093.jpg" width="600" height="272" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">The district inhabited by Mohammedans is + shaded vertically.</div></div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The inhabitants of Crete and the neighbouring islets are still Greek, in spite of +successive invasions, and they still speak a Greek dialect, recognised as a corrupted +Dorian. The Slavs, who invaded the island during the Middle Ages, have left +no trace except the names of a few villages. The Arabs and Venetians, too, have +been assimilated by the aboriginal Cretans; but there still +exist a considerable <span class="xxpn" id="p094">{94}</span> +number of Albanians, the descendants of soldiers, who have retained their +language and their customs. As to the Mohammedans or pretended Turks, who +constitute about one-fifth of the total population, they are, for the most part, the +descendants of Cretans who embraced Islamism in order to escape persecution. +They are the only Hellenes throughout the East who have embraced, in a body, +the religion of their conquerors; but since religious persecution has subsided +several of those Mohammedan Greeks have returned to the religion of their +ancestors. The Greeks of Crete are thus not only vastly in the majority, but +they hold the first place also in industry, commerce, and wealth; it is they who +buy up the land, and the Mohammedan gradually retires before them. All +Cretans, with the exception of the Albanians, speak Greek, and only in the capital +and in a portion of Messara, where the Mohammedans live in compact masses, has +the Turkish language made any progress.</p> + +<p>We need not be surprised, therefore, if the Greeks lay claim to a country in +which their preponderance is so marked. But, in spite of their valour, they were +no match against the Turkish and Egyptian armies which were brought +against them.</p> + +<p>The Cretans are said to resemble their ancestors in the eagerness with which +they do business, and in their disregard of truth. They may possibly be “Greeks +amongst Greeks—liars amongst liars;” but they certainly cannot be reproached +with being bad patriots. On the contrary, they have suffered much for the sake +of their fatherland, and during the war of independence their blood was shed in +torrents on many a battle-field. The vast cavern of Melidhoni, on the western +slope of Mount Ida, was the scene of one of the terrible events of this war. +In 1822 more than three hundred Hellenes, most of them women, children, +and old men, had sought refuge in this cavern. The Turks lit a fire at its +mouth, and the smoke, penetrating to its farthest extremity, suffocated the unfortunate +beings who had hoped to find shelter there.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>The profound “Sea of Minos,” to the north of Crete, separates that island +from the Archipelago. All the islands of the latter have been assigned to the +kingdom of Greece—Astypalæa, vulgarly called Astropalæa or Stampalia, alone +excepted, which still belongs to the Turks. The ancients called this island the +“Table of the Gods,” although it is only a barren rock. It clearly belongs to +the eastern chain of the Cyclades, as far as geological formation and the +configuration of the sea-bottom go; but the diplomats allowed its fifteen hundred +inhabitants to remain under the dominion of Turkey.</p> + +<p>Amongst the other islands inhabited by Greeks, but belonging to Turkey, +Thasos is that which lies nearest to the coast of Europe. The strait which +separates it from Macedonia is hardly four miles across, and in its centre there is +an island (Thasopulo), as well as several sand-banks, which interfere much with +navigation. Though a natural dependency of Macedonia, this island is governed +by a mudir of the Viceroy of Egypt, to whom the Porte made a present of it. +When Mohammed II. put an end to the Byzantine empire, +Thasos and the <span class="xxpn" id="p095">{95}</span> +neighbouring islands formed a principality, the property of the Italian family of the +Gateluzzi.</p> + +<div class="dctr03 section" id="fg030"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 30.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">Æ<b>GEAN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>EA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">According to Robiquet. + Scale, 1 : 5,170,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib095.jpg" width="588" height="800" alt="" /> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib095lg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + <p>The map is shaded to express the depth of the sea. The palest tint + indicates a depth of less than 55 fathoms; the next tint a depth of + 55 to 275 fathoms; the next a depth of 275 to 550 fathoms; and the + darkest tint a depth of over 550 fathoms.</p> +</div></div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Thasos is one of those countries of the ancient world the +present condition of which contrasts most unfavourably with +former times. Thasos, an ancient Phœnician colony, was once +the rival, and subsequently the wealthy and powerful ally, +of Athens: its hundred thousand inhabitants worked the gold +and iron mines of <span class="xxpn" id="p096">{96}</span> +the island; they quarried its beautiful white marble; cultivated vineyards yielding +a famous wine; and extended their commercial expeditions to every part of the +Ægean Sea. But now there are neither mines nor quarries, the vines yield only +an inferior product, the agricultural produce hardly suffices for the six thousand +inhabitants of the island, and the ancient haven of Thasos is frequented only by +the tiniest of vessels. The island has recovered very slowly from the blow +inflicted upon it by Mohammed II., who carried nearly the whole of its inhabitants +to Constantinople. Thasos after this became a haunt of pirates, and its inhabitants +sought shelter within the mountains of the interior. They are Hellenes, +but their dialect is very much mixed with Turkish words. Unlike other Hellenes, +they are not anxious to improve their minds. They are degenerate Greeks, and +they know it. “We are sheep and beasts of burden,” they’ repeatedly told the +French traveller, Perrot.</p> + +<p>Thasos, however, is the only island of the Archipelago where wooded mountains +and verdant landscapes survive. Rains are abundant, and its vegetation +luxuriant. Running streams of water murmur in every valley; large trees throw +their shade over the hill-sides; the villages near the foot of the mountain are +hidden by cypresses, walnut, and olive-trees; the valleys which radiate in all +directions from the centre of the island abound in planes, laurels, yoke-elms, and +vigorous oaks; and dark pine forests cover the higher slopes of the hills, the +glittering barren summits of Mount St. Elias and of other high mountains alone +rising above them.</p> + +<p>Samothrace, though smaller than Thasos, is much more elevated. Its mountains +are composed of granite, schists, limestones, and trachyte, and form a sort +of pendant to Mount Athos, on the other side of the Ægean Sea. If we approach +Samothrace from the north or the south, it presents the appearance of a huge +coffin floating upon the waters; from the east or west its profile resembles a +pyramid rising from the waves. From its summit Neptune watched the fight +of the Greeks before Troy. In the dark oak forests of the Black Mountains +were carried on the mysteries of Cybele and her Corybantes, as well as the Cabiric +worship, which was intimately connected with them, and Samothrace was to the +ancient Greeks what Mount Athos is to the moderns—a sacred land. Numerous +ruins and inscriptions remain to bear witness to the zeal of devout travellers +from all parts of the world. But with the downfall of the heathen temples the +pilgrims disappeared. There is only one village on the island now. Its inhabitants +lead a secluded life, and the only strange faces they see are those of the +sponge-fishers who frequent the island during summer. The entire absence of +harbours, and the dangerous current which separates Samothrace from Imbro, +keep off the mariner, and though the valleys are extremely fertile, they have +not hitherto attracted a single immigrant from the neighbouring continent.</p> + +<p>Imbro and Lemnos are separated from Samothrace by a deep sea, and appear +to continue the range of the Thracian Chersonesus. Imbro, which is nearest +to the continent, is the more elevated of the two islands, but its St. Elias does not +attain half the height of the mountains of Samothrace. There +are no forests <span class="xxpn" id="p097">{97}</span> +upon the slopes of this mountain, the valleys are covered with stones, and hardly +an eighth of the surface of the island is capable of cultivation. Still, the position +of Imbro, close to the mouth of the Dardanelles and upon an international ocean +highway, will always secure to it a certain degree of importance. The majority +of the inhabitants live in a small valley in the north-eastern portion of the +island, and though the rivulet which flows through this valley regularly dries +up in summer, it is nevertheless called emphatically the Megalos Potamos, or +“big river.”</p> + +<p>Lemnos, or Limni, is the largest island of Thracia, and at the same time the +least elevated and the most barren. You may walk for hours there without +seeing a tree. Even olive-trees are not met with in the fields, and the village +gardens can boast but of few fruit trees. Timber has to be procured from Thasos +or the continent. Lemnos, in spite of all this, is exceedingly fertile; it produces +barley and other cereals in plenty, and the pastures amongst its hills sustain +40,000 sheep. The island consists of several distinct mountain groups of volcanic +origin, 1,200 to 1,500 feet in height, and separated by low plains covered with +scoriæ, or by gulfs penetrating far inland. In the time of the ancient Greeks +the volcanoes of Lemnos had not yet quenched their fires, for it was in one of +them that Vulcan, when hurled from heaven, established his smithy, and, with +the assistance of the Cyclops, forged his thunderbolts for Jupiter. About the +beginning of our era Mount Mosychlos and the promontory of Chryse were +swallowed up by the sea, and the vast shoals which extend from the eastern part +of the island in the direction of Imbro probably mark their site. Since the disappearance +of Mount Mosychlos, Lemnos has not again suffered from volcanic eruptions +or earthquakes. The majority of the inhabitants are Greeks, and the Turks +who have settled amongst them are being evicted by the conquered race, which is +superior to them in intelligence and industry. Commerce is entirely in the hands +of the Greeks. Its principal seat is at Kastro—the ancient Myrhina—which +occupies a headland between two roadsteads. Sealed earth is one of the articles +exported, and is found in the mountains. In ancient times it was much prized +as an astringent, and is so still throughout the East. It is not considered to possess +its healing qualities unless it has been collected before sunrise on Corpus Christi +day.</p> + +<p>The small island of Stratio (Hagios Eustrathios) depends politically and +commercially upon Lemnos. It, too, is inhabited by Greeks. As to the islands +along the coast of Asia Minor, they form a portion of Turkey in Europe as +far as their political administration is concerned, but geographically they belong +to Asia.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn26" id="fnanch26">26</a> <span class="xxpn" id="p098">{98}</span></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="III.—Turkey of the Greeks (Thracia, + Macedonia, and Thessaly).">III.—<span + class="smcap">T<b>URKEY</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>REEKS</b></span> + <span class="smcap">(T<b>HRACIA,</b></span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>ACEDONIA,</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>HESSALY</b>).</span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">The +whole of the Ægean seaboard of European Turkey is occupied by Greeks, +and this proves the great influence which the sea has exercised upon the migrations +of the Mediterranean nations. Thessaly, Macedonia, Chalcis, and Thrace +are more or less Greek countries, and even Constantinople lies within Greece, +as defined by ethnological boundaries. The geographical distribution of race +there does not, in fact, coincide with the physical features of the country—its +mountains, rivers, and climate. The Turkey of the Greeks is, in reality, no +geographical unit, and the only tie which unites it are the waters of the Archipelago, +which wash all its shores.</p> + +<p>Nowhere else does the Balkan peninsula exhibit such varied features as on the +shores of the Ægean Sea, and of the adjoining basin of the Sea of Marmara. +Bluffs, hills, and mountain masses rise abruptly from the plain; arms of the +sea extend far inland; and ramified peninsulas project into the deep waters of the +ocean. It appears almost as if nature were making an effort to create an archipelago +similar to that in the south.</p> + +<p>The tongue of land upon which Constantinople has been built offers a +remarkable example of the features which characterize the coast lands of this +portion of Europe. Geologically the whole of this peninsula belongs to Asia. +Its hollow hills are separated from the granitic mountains of Europe by a wide +plain covered with recent formations, and the wall of Athanasius, now in ruins, +which was built as a defence to the city, approximately marks the true boundary +between Europe and Asia. The rocks on both sides of the Bosphorus belong +to the Devonian formation. They contain the same fossils, exhibit the same +outward aspects, and date from the same epoch. A patch of volcanic rocks at +the northern entrance to the Bosphorus likewise exhibits the same characteristics +on both sides of the strait, and there cannot be the least doubt that this European +peninsula at a former epoch constituted a portion of Asia Minor, but was severed +from it by an irruption of the waters.</p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr02" id="map3"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib098bxxlg.jpg" + title="display larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + THE CITY OF CONSTANTINOPLE, AND THE THRACIAN BOSPHORUS.</div> +<img src="images/ib098b.jpg" width="600" height="770" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<div class="dctr02" id="plt02"> +<img src="images/ib098d.jpg" width="600" height="418" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">CONSTANTINOPLE AND THE GOLDEN HORN, FROM THE + HEIGHTS OF EYUB.</div></div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Apollo himself, it is said, pointed out the site where to build the city +which is now known as Constantinople, and no better could have been found. +In fact, the city occupies the most favoured spot on the Bosphorus. It stands on +a peninsula of gently undulating hills, bounded by the Sea of Marmara and by +the curved inlet called, from its shape, its beauty, and the valuable cargoes +floating upon its waters, the “Golden Horn.” The swift current of the Bosphorus +penetrates into this inlet, and sweeps it clean of all the refuse of the city. It then +passes into the open sea at the extreme angle of the peninsula, and sailing vessels +are thus able to reach their anchorage without having to struggle against a +contrary current. This haven not only affords a secure anchorage to a multitude +of vessels, but it likewise abounds in fish; for, in spite of the constant agitation +of its waters by the oars of caiques and the paddles or screws of steamers, it +is visited annually by shoals of tunnies and other fish. The haven of Constantinople, +though easy of access to peaceable merchantmen, can readily be <span class="xxpn" id="p099">{99}</span> +closed in case of war. The surrounding heights command every approach to +it, and a chain has more than once been drawn across the narrow entrance to +its roadstead when the city was besieged. The latter, too, can be defended +easily, for it is built upon hills, bounded on the land side by an extensive +plain. An assailant, to insure success, must dispose not only of an army, but +also of a powerful navy. In addition to all these natural advantages of its +site, Constantinople is in the enjoyment of a climate far superior to that of +the cities of the Black Sea, for it is screened by hills from cold northerly +winds.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg031"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib099xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 31.—<span class="smcap">G<b>EOLOGICAL</b></span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>AP</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ENINSULA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>ONSTANTINOPLE.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">According to F. von Hochstetter. + Scale 1 : 1,370,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib099.jpg" width="600" height="508" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>In the dawn of history, when migration and commerce marched only at a +slow pace, a site as favoured as that of Byzantium was capable only of attracting +the dwellers in its immediate neighbourhood. But after commerce had become +developed, the blind alone—so said the oracle of Apollo—could fail to appreciate +the great advantages held out by the Golden Horn. Indeed, Constantinople +lies not only on the ocean highway which connects the world of the Mediterranean +with the Black Sea, but also on the high-road which leads from Asia +into Europe. Geographically it may be described as occupying +a position at <span class="xxpn" id="p100">{100}</span> +the mouths of the Danube, Dniester, Dnieper, Don, Rion, and Kizil Irmak, whose +common outlet is the Bosphorus. When Constantine the Great constituted +it the metropolis of the Roman empire, it grew rapidly in population and wealth; +it soon became the city of cities; and its Turkish appellation, Stamboul, is +nothing but a corruption of the expression <i>es tam polin</i>, used by the inhabitants +to denote their going <i>into the city</i>. Amongst the distant tribes of Asia it represents +Rome. They know it by no other name than that of “Rum,” and the +country of which it is the capital they call “Rumelia.”</p> + +<p>Constantinople is one of the most beautiful cities in the world: it is the +“paradisiacal city” of Eastern nations. It may compare with Naples or Rio de +Janeiro, and many travellers accord it the palm. As we approach the entrance +of the Golden Horn, seated in a caique more graceful than the gondolas of +Venice, the vast and varied panorama around us changes with every stroke +of the oars. Beyond the white walls of the Seraglio and its masses of verdure +rise here, amphitheatrically on the seven hills of the peninsula, the houses of +Stamboul—its towers, the vast domes of its mosques, with their circlets of smaller +domes, and its elegant minarets, with their balconies. On the other side of the +haven, which is crossed by bridges of boats, there are more mosques and towers, +seen through a forest of masts and rigging, and covering the slope of a hill whose +summit is crowned by regularly built houses and the palatial residences of Pera. +On the north vast villa-cities extend along both shores of the Bosphorus. +Towards the east, on a promontory of Asia, there is still another city, cradled +amidst gardens and trees. This is Scutari, the Asiatic suburb of Constantinople, +with its pink houses and vast cemetery shaded by beautiful cypress groves. +Farther in the distance we perceive Kadi-koei, the ancient Chalcedon, and the +small town of Prinkipo, on one of the Princes’ Islands, whose yellow rocks and +verdant groves are reflected in the blue waters of the Sea of Marmara. The sheet +of water connecting these various portions of the huge city is alive with vessels +and boats, whose movements impart animation to the magnificent picture. The +prospect from the heights above the town is still more magnificent. The coasts of +Europe and Asia are beneath our feet, the eye can trace the sinuosities of the +Bosphorus, and far away in the distance looms the snow-capped pyramidal summit +of Mount Olympus, in Bithynia.</p> + +<p>But this enchantment vanishes as soon as we penetrate into the streets of +Constantinople. There are many parts of the town with narrow and filthy streets, +which a stranger hesitates to enter. It is, perhaps, a blessing, from a sanitary +point of view, that conflagrations so frequently lay waste and scour large portions +of the city. Scarcely a night passes without the watchman on the tower of the +Seraskieriate giving the alarm of fire, and thousands of houses are devoured +by that element every year. The city thus renews itself by degrees. It rises +from its ashes purified by the flames. But formerly, before the Turks had built +their city of stone on the heights of Pera, the quarters destroyed by fire were +rebuilt as wretchedly as they were before. It is different now. The use of stone +has become more general; wooden structures are being replaced +by houses built <span class="xxpn" id="p101">{101}</span> +of a fossiliferous white limestone, which is quarried at the very gates of the city; and +free use is made of the blue and grey marbles of Marmara, and of the flesh-coloured +ones of the Gulf of Cyzica, in Asia Minor, in decorating the palaces of the great.</p> + +<p>Nearly every vestige of the monuments of ancient Byzantium has been swept +away by fires or sieges. There only exists now the precious tripod of bronze, with +its three serpents, which the Platæans had placed in the temple of Delphi in +commemoration of their victory over the Persians. The relics of the epoch +of the Byzantine emperors are limited to columns, obelisks, arches of aqueducts, +the breached walls of the city, the remains of the palace of Justinian, only +discovered recently, and the two churches of Santa Sophia, which have been +converted into mosques. The grand church of Santa Sophia, close to the +Seraglio, is no longer the most magnificent edifice in the universe, as it was +in the time of Justinian, for even the neighbouring mosque of Sultan Ahmed +far exceeds it in beauty and elegance. It is a clumsy building, supported by +buttresses added at various times to keep it from falling. The character of the +interior has been changed by the Turks, who have introduced additional pillars, +and the once bright mosaics have been covered over; but the dome never fails to +strike the beholder: it is a marvel of strength and lightness.</p> + +<p>The Seraglio, or Serai, near Garden Point, may boast of fine pavilions and shady +walks, but the dark memories of crime will always cling to it. The spot from +which sacks containing the bodies of living sultanas or odalisks were hurled into +the dark waters of the Bosphorus is still pointed out to the traveller. Far more +attractive than this ancient residence of the sultans are the marvellous structures +in the Arab or Persian style which line the shores of the Bosphorus, and which +impart to the suburbs of Constantinople an aspect of oriental splendour.</p> + +<p>The bazaars are amongst the most curious places in the city, not so much +because of the rich merchandise which is displayed in them, but because they are +frequented by a variety of nations such as cannot be met with in any other city +of the world. The capital of the Ottoman empire is a centre of attraction not only +to the inhabitants of the Balkan peninsula, but also to those of Anatolia, +Syria, Arabia, Egypt, Tunis, and even of the oases. There are “Franks” from +every country of Europe, drawn thither by a desire to share in the profits of the +ever-increasing commerce of the Bosphorus. This mixture of races is rendered +still greater by the surreptitious importation of slaves; for, whatever diplomatists +may assert, there can be no doubt that the “honourable guild of slave-dealers” +still does an excellent business in negresses, Circassians, and white and black +eunuchs. Nor is anything else to be expected amongst a people who look upon +a well-stocked harem as a sign of respectability. Dr. Millingen estimates the +number of slaves at Constantinople at 30,000 souls, most of whom have been +imported from Africa. From an anthropological point of view it is certainly very +remarkable that the negro should not have taken root in Constantinople. In the +course of the last four centuries a million of negroes at least have been imported, +and yet, owing to difficulties of acclimation, ill-usage, and want, they would die +out but for fresh importations. <span class="xxpn" id="p102">{102}</span></p> + +<p>Our statistics do not enable us to classify the 600,000 inhabitants of Constantinople +and its suburbs according to race.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn27" id="fnanch27">27</a> One of the principal sources of error +in estimates of this kind consists in our confounding Mussulmans with Turks. In +the provinces it is generally possible to avoid this error, for Bosnians, Bulgarians, +and Albanians recognise each other as members of the same race, whatever religious +differences may exist between them. But in the turmoil of a great city this +distinction is no longer made, and, in the end, all those who frequent the mosques +are lumped together as if they were members of the same race. Of the supposed +Osmanli of Constantinople a third, perhaps, consists of Turks, whilst the remaining +two-thirds are made up of Arnauts, Bulgarians, Asiatics, and Africans of various +races. Amongst the boatmen there are many Lesghians from the Caucasus. The +Mohammedans, if not in the minority already, will be so very soon, for they lose +ground almost visibly. In old Stamboul, in which a Frank hardly dared to enter +some twenty years ago, they still enjoy a numerical preponderance, but in the +“agglomeration of cities” known as Constantinople, and extending from Prinkipo +to Therapia, they are outnumbered by Greeks, Armenians, and Franks, and +certain quarters of the town have been given up to the Christians altogether.</p> + +<p>The Greeks are the most influential, and perhaps most numerous, element +amongst the rayas. Their head-quarters, like those of the Turks, are at Stamboul, +where they occupy a quarter of the town called Phanar, from an old lighthouse. +The Greek patriarch and the wealthiest Greek families reside there. These +Phanariotes, in former times, almost monopolized the government of the Christian +provinces of Turkey, but they fell into disfavour after the Greek war of liberation. +The religious influence, too, which they exercised until quite recently, has been +destroyed in consequence of the separation of the Servian, Rumanian, and +Bulgarian Churches from the orthodox Greek Church—a separation brought about +almost entirely through the rapacity of the Greek patriarch and his satellites. +If the Greeks would continue to preserve their pre-eminence amongst the races of +Constantinople, they must trust, in the future, to their superior intelligence, their +commercial habits, education, patriotism, and unanimity. To the Turks the +members of the orthodox Church are known as the “Roman nation,” and they +enjoy a certain amount of self-government, exercised through their bishops, +which extends to marriages, schools, hospitals, and a few other matters.</p> + +<p>The “nation” of the Armenians is likewise very strong at Constantinople, and, +like that of the “Romans,” it governs itself through an elective Executive +Council. Much of the commerce of Constantinople passes through the hands of +Armenians, who, though they came to that city almost simultaneously with the +Turks, have down to the present day preserved their peculiar manners. They are +cold and reserved, and full of self-respect, differing widely from their rivals in +trade, the Jews, who slink furtively to their poor suburb of +Balata, at the upper <span class="xxpn" id="p103">{103}</span> +extremity of the Golden Horn. The Armenians are clannish in the extreme, they +readily assist each other, and, like the Parsees of Bombay, delight in acts of +munificence. But, unlike the Greeks, they are not sustained in their undertakings +by an ardent belief in the destinies of their race. Most of them are not even +able to speak their native language freely, and prefer to converse in Turkish or +Greek.</p> + +<p>The Franks are much inferior in number to either of the races named, but +their influence is nevertheless far more decisive. It is through them that Constantinople +is attached to the civilisation of Western Europe, and their institutions are +by degrees getting the better of the fatalism of the East. It is they who built +the manufacturing suburbs to the west of Constantinople and near Scutari, and +who introduced railways. Every civilised nation of the world is represented +amongst them—Italians and French most numerously; and to the Americans is +due the credit of having established the first geological museum in Turkey, +in connection with Robert Colleg.</p> + +<p>Constantinople, owing to the influx of strangers, is steadily increasing in population, +and one by one the villages in its vicinity are being swallowed up by the +city. The whole of the Golden Horn is surrounded by houses now, and they +extend far up the valleys of the Cydaris and Barbyzes, which fall into it. +Industrial establishments extend along the shores of the Sea of Marmara, from the +ancient fort of the Seven Towers far to the west, and from Chalcedon to the +south-east, in the direction of the Gulf of Nicomedia. Both banks of the +Bosphorus are lined with villas, palaces, kiosks, cafés, and hotels. This remarkable +channel extends for nineteen miles between the shores of Europe and of Asia.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn28" id="fnanch28">28</a> +Like a huge mountain valley it winds between steep promontories, now contracting +and then expanding, until it finally opens out into the vast expanse of the +Black Sea. When northern winds hurl the agitated waters of the latter against +the sombre cliffs which guard the entrance to the Bosphorus, the contrast between +this savage sea and the placid waters of the strait and its charming scenery is +striking indeed. At every turn we are arrested by unexpected charms. Rocks, +palaces, woods, vessels of every description, and the curious scaffoldings of +Bulgarian fishermen succeed each other in infinite variety.</p> + +<p>Amongst the innumerable country residences which nestle on the shores of the +Bosphorus, those of Balta-Liman, Therapia, and Buyukdere are the best known, +for they have been the scenes of historical events; but there is no spot throughout +this marine valley which does not excite admiration. These marvels of nature +will, before long, have added to them a marvel of human ingenuity. The width +of the channel between the castles of Rumili and Anadoli is only 600 yards. +It was here Mandroclus of Samos constructed the bridge of boats across which +Darius marched his army of 700,000 men when he made war upon the Scythians, +and on this identical spot it is proposed now to construct a railway bridge which +will join the railways of Europe to those of Asia. A current runs through the +Bosphorus, from the Black Sea to the Sea of Marmara, at a rate of from two to six +miles an hour; and although several geographers conclude from this +that the level <span class="xxpn" id="p104">{104}</span> +of the former is higher than that of the latter, this must by no means be looked +upon as an established fact. We have already noticed the exchange between the +waters of the Mediterranean and of the open Atlantic, which takes place through +the Strait of Gibraltar. A similar exchange is going on here, and the outflowing +surface current is compensated for by an inflowing under-current.</p> + +<p>The outlying houses and villas of Constantinople extend northwards along the +Bosphorus as far as the two Genoese castles of Rumili-kavak and Anadoli-kavak. +This extension coincides with the geological features of the ground, for no sooner +have we turned our backs upon the houses than we find ourselves shut in between +cliffs of dolerite and porphyry, which extend as far as the Black Sea, where they +terminate in the precipices of the Cyaneæ, or Symplegades, the famous rocks which +opened and shut, crushing the vessels that ventured to pass through the strait, +until Minerva fixed them for ever. These volcanic rocks are barren, but the +Devonian strata to the south of them are beautifully wooded. The Turks, unlike +the Spaniards and other Southern nations, love and respect nature; plane-trees, +cypresses, and pines still shade the shores of the Bosphorus; and the vast forest of +Belgrade covers the hills to the east of Constantinople, from which the city draws +its supply of water. Birds, too, are better protected than in many a Christian +land. The plaintive cooing of doves is heard wherever we turn, flights of +swallows and aquatic birds skim over the surface of the Bosphorus, and now and +then we encounter a grave stork perched upon the top of a tree or of a minaret.</p> + +<p>The whole aspect of the place is southerly, yet the climate of Constantinople +has its rigour. The cold winds of the steppes of Russia freely penetrate through +the strait, and the thermometer has been known to fall four degrees below zero in +the winter. The neighbouring sea renders the climate more equable than it would +otherwise be; but as the winds, from whatever direction they blow, meet with no +obstacle, sudden changes of temperature are frequent. The average temperature +varies very considerably in different years. Sometimes it sinks to the level of +that of Pekin or Baltimore, at others it is as high as that of Toulon or of Nice. In +exceptional cases the Bosphorus has become covered with ice, but thaws always set +in rapidly, and then may be witnessed the magnificent spectacle of masses of ice +striking against the walls of the Seraglio, and floating away across the Sea of +Marmara. In <span class="smmaj">A.D.</span> 762 these masses of ice were so stupendous that they became +wedged in the Dardanelles, and the tepid waters of the Ægean Sea then assumed +the aspect of a bay of the Arctic Ocean.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>The geological features of the coast region of the Sea of Marmara differ +essentially from those of the rest of Turkey. Low ranges of hills rise close to the +coast, increasing in height towards the west, until they attain an elevation of +2,930 feet in the Tekir Dagh, or “holy mountains,” the grey slopes of which, +covered here and there with patches of shrubs or pasturage, are visible from afar.</p> + +<p>A narrow neck of land joins the peninsula of +Gallipoli—the Thracian <span class="xxpn" id="p105">{105}</span> +Chersonesus of the ancients—to this coast range. This peninsula is composed of +quaternary rocks, which differ in no respect from those met with on the shore +of Asia opposite. Anciently a huge fresh-water lake covered a portion of Thracia +and more than half the area now occupied by the Ægean Sea. When the land +first emerged above the waters, the Chersonesus formed an integral portion of +Asia. Subsequently the waters of the Black Sea, which had forced themselves a +passage through the Bosphorus, likewise found their way through the Hellespont +into the Ægean Sea. The geological formation of the country and the configuration +of the sea-bottom prove this to have been the case, and this irruption of the +waters was attended, probably, by volcanic eruptions, traces of which still exist on +the islands of the Sea of Marmara and near the mouth of the Maritza, the former +to the east, the latter to the west of the peninsula.</p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg032"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 32.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">H<b>ELLESPONT,</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OR</span> + <span class="smcap">D<b>ARDANELLES,</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>ULF</b></span> <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>AROS.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 1,220,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib105.jpg" width="600" height="491" alt="" /> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib105xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaptionsml"> + The dark shading expresses a depth exceeding 55 + fathoms.</div></div><!--dctr--> + +<p>If the statements of Pliny and Strabo may be relied upon, the Hellespont must +have been much narrower in former times than it is now. At Abydos—the +modern Naghara—the width is said to have amounted to seven stadia, or less than +a mile, anciently, whilst at the present time it is 6,500 feet. It was here Xerxes +constructed his double bridge of boats. The strait is deep at that spot, and its +current strong, but no wooden ship could hope to force a passage if covered by the +guns in the batteries on both coasts. The Hellespont, like the +Bosphorus, has two <span class="xxpn" id="p106">{106}</span> +currents flowing through it. In winter, when the rivers which flow into the +Black Sea are frozen up, and the Sea of Marmara is no longer fed by the waters +of the Bosphorus, a highly saline under-current penetrates from the Ægean Sea +into the Dardanelles, whilst a feebler current of comparatively fresh water flows in +a contrary direction on the surface.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn29" id="fnanch29">29</a></p> + +<p>Gallipoli, the Constantinople of the Hellespont, stands near the western +extremity of the Sea of Marmara. It is the first city which the Turks captured +upon the soil of Europe; but though they settled down there nearly a hundred +years earlier than they did at Constantinople, they are no more in the majority +here than they are in the capital. Gallipoli, like Rodosto and other towns on the +Sea of Marmara, is inhabited by Mohammedans of various races, by Greeks, +Armenians, and Jews, forming separate communities dwelling within the walls of +the same town. The country population consists almost exclusively of Greeks, +who are the proprietors and cultivators of the land; and in sight of the coasts of +Asia, and within that portion of the Balkan peninsula which has been longest +under the rule of the Turk, the Greek is stronger numerically than anywhere else +to the north of Mount Pindus. He does not there confine himself to the coast, +and, if we except a few Bulgarian villages and the larger towns, the whole of +Eastern Thracia belongs to him.</p> + +<p>The lowlands of this region form a vast triangular plain, bounded by the Tekir +Dagh and the coast range on the south, by offshoots from the Rhodope on the west, +and by the granitic mountains of Stranja on the east. This is one of the dreariest +districts of all Turkey. Swampy depressions and untilled land recall the steppes +of Russia; and in summer, when the wind raises clouds of dust, we can imagine +ourselves in the midst of a desert. The dreary monotony of this plain is relieved +only by the pale contours of distant mountains, and by innumerable artificial +mounds of unknown origin. So numerous are these tumuli that they form an +essential feature of the landscape, and no artist could convey a just idea of it +without introducing into his picture one or more of them.</p> + +<p>Near the northern extremity of this unattractive plain, at the confluence of +Maritza and Tunja, lies the city of Adrianople, enveloped in trees, whose sight +delights the eye of the weary traveller. Adrianople, in reality, consists of a +number of villages, separated from each other by orchards, poplars, and cypresses, +above which peep out the minarets of some hundred and fifty mosques. The +sparkling waters of the Maritza and Tunja, of rivulets and of aqueducts, lend +animation to the picture, and render Adrianople one of the most delightful places. +But it is more than this. It is the great centre of population in the interior +of Turkey, and its favourable geographical position has always secured to the city +a certain amount of importance. The ancient city of Orestis, the capital of the +Kings of Thracia, stood on this site, and was succeeded by the Hadrianopolis of the +Romans, which the Turks changed into Edirneh, and made their capital until +Constantinople fell into their power. The old palace of the Sultan, +built in the <span class="xxpn" id="p107">{107}</span> +Persian style towards the close of the fourteenth century, still remains, though in +a dilapidated condition. But here, likewise, the Osmanli are in the minority. +The Greeks are their equals in numbers, and far surpass them in intelligence, +whilst the Bulgarians, too, muster strongly, and, as in other towns of the East, we +meet with a strange mixture of races, from Persian merchants down to gipsy +musicians. The Jews are proportionately more numerous in Adrianople than in +any other town of Turkey, and, strange to relate, they differ from their co-religionists +in every other part of the world by a lack of smartness in business +transactions. A local proverb says that “it requires <i>ten</i> Jews to hold their own +against <i>one</i> Greek;” and not Greeks alone, for Wallachians, and even Bulgarians, +are able to impose upon the poor Israelite at Adrianople.</p> + +<p>The communications between Adrianople and Midea, the ancient Greek colony, +famous for its subterranean temples, and with other cities on the Black Sea, are +difficult. Its natural outlets are towards the south—on the one hand to Rodosto, +on the Sea of Marmara; on the other, down the Maritza valley to the Gulf of Saros. +The railway follows the latter, and the Rumelian Railway Company has constructed +an artificial harbour at Dede Aghach, enabling merchantmen to lie alongside +a pier. The allurements of commerce, however, have not hitherto induced the +inhabitants of Enos to exchange their walled and turreted acropolis for the marshy +tract on the Lower Maritza, with its deadly atmosphere.</p> + +<p>The zone occupied by the Greeks grows narrower as we go west of the Maritza, +where the Rhodope Mountains form a kind of international barrier. Only the +coast is occupied there by Greek mariners and fishermen, whilst the hills in sight +of it are held almost exclusively by Turkish and Bulgarian peasants and herdsmen. +The marshy littoral districts, the small valleys on the southern slopes of the +mountains, and a few isolated hills of volcanic or crystalline formation constitute +a narrow band which connects the Greeks of Thracia with their compatriots of +Chalcidice and Thessaly. The Yuruks, or “Wanderers,” a Turkish tribe which +has retained its nomadic habits down to the present day, sometimes even extend +their excursions to the sea-coast. Their principal seat is in the Pilav Tepe, a +mountain mass to the north-west of Thasos, famous in the time of the Macedonian +kings for its mines of gold and silver. A wide plain extends immediately to the +west of these mountains, watered by the Strymon, or Karasu, and is of marvellous +fertility. Seres, a considerable city, occupies its centre, and hundreds of villages, +surrounded by orchards, rice, and cotton fields are scattered over it. Looked at +from the heights of the Rhodope, this plain assumes the appearance of a huge +garden-city. Unfortunately many parts of it are very insalubrious.</p> + +<p>The triple peninsula of Chalcidice has no connection whatever with the +Rhodope, and is attached to the mainland by an isthmus covered with lakes, +swamps, and alluvial plains. It extends far into the sea like a huge hand spread +out upon the waters. Chalcidice is a Greece in miniature, with coasts of fantastic +contours, deep bays, bold promontories, and mountains rising in the midst of +plains, like islands in an archipelago. One of these mountain masses rises in the +trunk of the peninsula, and culminates in Mount Kortach, whilst each +of its three <span class="xxpn" id="p108">{108}</span> +ramifications possesses its own system of scarped hills. Greek in aspect, this +curious appendage to the continent is Greek, too, in its population; and, a rare +thing in Turkey, all its inhabitants are of the same race, if we except the Turks +in the town of Nisvoro and the Slav monks of Mount Athos.</p> + +<div class="dctr03" id="fg033"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib108lg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 33.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ENINSULA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>OUNT</b></span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>THOS.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 1,020,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib108.jpg" width="600" height="559" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The easternmost of the three tongues of land of Chalcidice, which jut out +far into the waters of the Ægean, is almost entirely detached. Only a low and +narrow neck of land connects it with the mainland, and it was across this +isthmus that Xerxes dug a canal, 3,950 feet in length, either to enable his fleet to +avoid the dangerous promontory of Mount Athos, or to give the awe-struck +inhabitants a proof of his power. This is the peninsula of Hagion Oros, the +Monte Santo of the Italians. At its extremity rises a limestone mountain, one of +the most beautiful in the Eastern Mediterranean. This is the famous Mount +Athos, which an ancient sculptor proposed to convert into a statue of Alexander, +holding a city in one hand and a spring in the other, and which Eastern legends +point out as the “exceeding high mountain” to which the devil took Jesus, to +show him “all the kingdoms of the world.” But whatever old legends may say, +the panorama is not as vast as this, though the shores of Chalcidice, Macedonia, +and Thracia lie spread out beneath our feet, and the eye can range across the blue +waters of the Ægean Sea from Mount Olympus, in Thessaly, to Mount Ida, in +Asia Minor. The bold outlines of the fortified monasteries which appear here and +there, in the midst of chestnuts, oaks, or pines, on the slope of the mountain, +contrast most happily with the faint outline of the coasts on the distant horizon.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn30" id="fnanch30">30</a></p> + +<p>This peninsula, which a traveller has compared to a sphinx +crouching upon the bosom of the sea, is the property of a +republic of monks, who govern <span class="xxpn" id="p109">{109}</span> +themselves according to their own fancy. In return for a tribute, which they pay to +the Porte, they alone have the right to live there, and strangers require their +permission before they are allowed to enter. A company of Christian soldiers is +stationed at the neck of the peninsula to prevent the sacred soil being desecrated +by the footsteps of a woman. Even the Turkish governor cannot gain admittance +without leaving his harem behind him. For fourteen hundred years, we are told +in the chronicles of Mount Athos, no female has set foot upon this sacred soil, and +this prohibition extends to animals as well as to human beings. Even the presence +of poultry would profane the monasteries, and the eggs eaten by the monks are +imported from Lemnos. With the exception of a few purveyors, who reside at +the village of Karyes, the 6,000 inhabitants of the peninsula are monks, or +their servants, and they live in the monasteries, or in the hermitages attached to +the 935 churches and chapels. Nearly all the monks are Greeks, but amongst +the twenty large monasteries there are two which were built by the ancient +sovereigns of Servia, and one which was founded by Russia. Most of these +edifices occupy promontories, and, with their high walls and strong towers, they are +exceedingly picturesque. One amongst them, that of Simopetra, appears to be +almost inaccessible. It is in these retreats the good fathers of the order of St. +Basil spend their lives in contemplative inaction. They are bound to pray eight +hours in the day and two in the night, and during the whole of that time they +are not allowed to sit. They have, therefore, neither time nor strength for study +or manual labour. The books in their libraries are incomprehensible mysteries +to them, and, in spite of their sobriety, they might die of starvation if there were +not lay-brothers to work for them, and numerous farms on the mainland which +are their property. A few shiploads of hazel nuts is all this fertile peninsula +produces.</p> + +<p>The ancient cities of Olynthus and Potidæa, on the neck of the western +peninsula of Chalcidice, have dwindled down into insignificant villages; but the +city of Therma, called afterwards Thessalonica, and now known as Saloniki, still +exists, for its geographical position is most favourable, and after every siege and +every conflagration it again rose from its ashes. Vestiges of every epoch of +history may still be seen there: Cyclopean and Hellenic walls, triumphal arches, +and remains of Roman temples, Byzantine structures, and Venetian castles. Its +harbour is excellent, its roadstead well sheltered; and the high-roads into Upper +Macedonia and Epirus lead from it along the valleys of the Vardar and Inje +Karasu. These favourable circumstances have not been without their influence, +and Saloniki, next to Constantinople and Adrianople, is the most important city +of European Turkey. Its population is mixed, like that of other cities in the East, +and Jews are exceptionally numerous. Most of them are the descendants of +Spanish Jews, expelled by the Inquisition, and they still talk Spanish. Many +have outwardly embraced Mohammedanism to escape persecution, but the true +Mussulman spurns these converts with disdain. They are generally known as +“Mamins.”</p> + +<p>The commerce of Saloniki is important even now, but +greater things are <span class="xxpn" id="p110">{110}</span> +expected of the future. Like Marseilles, Trieste, and Brindisi, Saloniki aspires to +become a connecting link in the trade between England and the East. It actually +lies on the most direct road between the Channel and the Suez Canal, and once +connected by railways with the rest of Europe, it is sure to take a large share +in the world’s commerce. This emporium of Macedonia is interesting, too, from +an ethnological point of view, for, with the exception of Burgaz, on the Black +Sea, it is the only place where the Bulgarians, the most numerous race of +European Turkey, have reached the sea-coast. Everywhere else they are cut off +from it by alien races, but Saloniki brings them into direct contact with the +remainder of Europe. Saloniki, however, not only suffers from bad government, +but also from the marshes which surround it, and in summer many of its inhabitants +flock to the healthier town of Kalameria, to the west. Miasmatic swamps +unfortunately occupy a large portion of the northern coast of the Ægean, and +they separate the interior of Macedonia more effectively from the coast than do its +mountains. There is hardly any commerce except at Saloniki.</p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr01" id="fg034"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 34.—<span class="smcap">M<b>OUNT</b></span> + <span class="smcap">O<b>LYMPUS.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib110.jpg" width="600" height="486" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<hr class="hr40" /> + +<p>On the western shores of the Gulf of Saloniki, beyond the ever-changing +mouths of the Vardar and the briny waters of the Inje Karasu, or Haliacmon, the +land gradually rises. Hills are succeeded by mountains, +until bold precipices <span class="xxpn" id="p111">{111}</span> +approach close to the coast, and summit rises beyond summit, up to the triple peak of +Mount Olympus. Amongst the many mountains which have borne this name, this +is the highest and the most beautiful, and the Greeks placed upon it the court of +Jupiter and the residence of the gods. It was in the plains of Thessaly, in the +shadow of this famous mountain, that the Greeks lived in the springtide of their +history, and their most cherished traditions attach themselves to this beautiful +country. The mountains which had sheltered the cradle of their race remained +to them for ever afterwards the seat of their protecting deities. But Jupiter, +Bacchus, and the other great gods of antiquity have disappeared now, and +monasteries have been built in the woods which witnessed the revels of the +Bacchantes.</p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr01" id="fg035"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib111xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 35.—<span class="smcap">M<b>OUNT</b></span> + <span class="smcap">O<b>LYMPUS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>ALLEY</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>EMPE.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib111.jpg" width="600" height="498" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>Until recently the upper valleys of Mount Olympus were inhabited only by +monks, and by klephtes, or bandits, who sought shelter there from the Arnaut +soldiers sent in their pursuit. The mountain, in fact, constitutes a world apart, +surrounded on all sides by formidable declivities. Forty-two peaks form the +battlements of this mountain citadel, fifty-two springs rise within it, and the +bold klepht is secure within its fastnesses from the abhorred Turk. Magnificent +forests of laurel-trees, planes, and oaks cover its lower maritime slopes, and in +times of trouble they have served as a refuge to entire +populations. But Italian <span class="xxpn" id="p112">{112}</span> +speculators have purchased these forests, and the time is not, perhaps, very distant +when Mount Olympus, deprived of its verdure, will be reduced to a barren mass of +rock, like most of the mountains of the Archipelago. Wild cats abound on the +lower slopes of Olympus, chamois still climb its rugged pinnacles, but bears are no +longer met with: St. Denys, who dwelt upon the mountain, required beasts to ride +upon, and changed them into horses !</p> + +<p>Xenagoras, an ancient geometrician, was the first to measure the height of +Mount Olympus, but his result, 6,200 feet, is far from the truth, for the highest +summit attains an elevation of 9,750 feet.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn31" id="fnanch31">31</a> It may possibly be the culminating +point of the Balkan peninsula. Snow remains in some of its crevices throughout +the year, and no human being hitherto appears to have succeeded in ascending its +highest pinnacle. According to the Greek legend, even Pelion heaped upon Ossa +did not enable the Titans to reach the abode of the gods, and, in reality, the +combined height of these two mountains hardly exceeds that of Olympus. But, +in spite of this inferior height, “pointed” Ossa and “long-stretched” Pelion, +known to us moderns as Kisovo and Zagora, impress the beholder, because of +their savage valleys, their precipitous walls of rock, and cliffy promontories.</p> + +<p>These mountains continue southward through the hook-shaped peninsula of +Magnesia, and terminate opposite the island of Eubœa. They formed a strong +bulwark of defence in the time of ancient Greece. The hordes of the barbarians +stopped in front of this insurmountable barrier. They were compelled to seek a +practicable road to the west of it, through the valley of the Peneus, which is rightly +looked upon as the natural frontier of Hellas. Hence the great strategical importance +of Pharsalus, in Southern Thessaly, which protects the gorges of the Othrys +and the only access to the plains of the Sperchius. The pass of Petra, at the +northern extremity of Olympus, was carefully guarded for similar reasons.</p> + +<p>A large portion of the area bounded by the crystalline rocks of Olympus and +Ossa, and by the cretaceous range of the Pindus, running parallel with the former, +consists of plains originally covered by vast lakes. The Gulf of Volo approaches close +to the shrunken remains of one of these lakes—that of Karla, or Bœbeis—into which +the waters of the swampy plain of Larissa discharge themselves. The dwellers on +the shores of this lake say that a dull rumbling noise may now and then be heard +at its bottom, which they ascribe to the bellowing of some invisible animal, +but which is more probably the gurgling sound of the water penetrating into a +sink-hole. Other lake basins are met with at the foot of Olympus towards the +west and north-west, and some of the valleys of the upper tributaries of the Peneus +are covered with alluvium left behind by the receding waters. Hercules, according +to some—Neptune, according to others—drained all these lakes of Thessaly into +the Ægean, by opening the narrow gorge between Olympus and Ossa, known to +the ancients as the Valley of Tempe. This narrow valley is due, no doubt, to the +slow erosive action of water. To the Hellenes it realised their ideals of refreshing +coolness and beauty, and once every nine years an embassy arrived from Delphi +to pluck the laurel-leaves destined for the victors in the +Pythian games. The <span class="xxpn" id="p113">{113}</span> +Valley of Tempe is indeed most beautiful; the transparent and rapid waters of the +Peneus, the foliage of the planes, the shrubberies of laurel-roses, and the red-hued +cliffs—these combine frequently, and form pictures which delight the senses and +impress the mind. But, taken as a whole, this narrow and sombre valley fairly +deserves its modern name of Lykostomo, or “wolf’s gorge.” Even in Thessaly, +and, above all, in the Pindus, there are localities more smiling and more beautiful +than this famous Valley of Tempe.</p> + +<p>The upper valleys of the Peneus, or Salembria, abound in natural curiosities, +such as defiles, sinks, and caverns. To the north-west of Mount Olympus, the +turbid Titaresius flows through the narrow gorge of Saranta Poros, or of the +Four Fords, which was looked upon in former times as one of the gates of hell.</p> + +<p>To the west, on the Upper Peneus, are the limestone hills of Khassia, rising +to a height of 5,000 feet, and the elevated spurs of Mount Pindus, which have +become celebrated through the “works of the gods,” or <i>theoktista</i>, which surmount +them. These “works” consist of isolated towers, crags, and pillars, the most famous +amongst them being those on the banks of the Peneus, not far from Trikala. +Zealous followers of Simeon the Stylite conceived the idea of building their +monasteries on the tops of some of the larger of these natural columns or pedestals. +Perched on these heights, and condemned never to leave them, they receive their +provisions and visitors in a basket attached to the end of a long rope, and hoisted +aloft by means of a windlass. An aërial voyage of no less than 220 feet has +to be performed in order to reach in this manner the monastery of Barlaam, and +visitors are at liberty to effect this ascent by means of ladders fastened against +the rocky precipices. The religious zeal, however, which led monks to select +these eyries for their habitations is gradually dying out. Out of twenty +monasteries which existed formerly, there remain now but seven, and only one of +these, that of Meteora, is inhabited by as many as twenty monks.</p> + +<p>Of all the Greek countries which still remain under the dominion of the Turks, +there is none which has so frequently sought to regain its independence, none which +is claimed by the Hellenes with equal ardour as a portion of their common fatherland +and the cradle of their race. Thessaly is, in truth, a portion of Greece, as far +as the traditions of the past, a common language, and the general aspects of the +country can make it so. But it is a more fertile country, its vegetation is more +luxuriant, its landscapes are more smiling and delightful. We may not frequently +meet with the deep blue sky which calls forth our admiration in Southern Greece, +for the vapours rising from the Ægean Sea are attracted by Olympus and other +mountains; but this moisture imparts a charm to distant views, and, by protecting +the earth against the scorching rays of the sun in summer, it contributes largely +towards the fertility of the soil.</p> + +<p>The Greek population of Thessaly is strongly mixed with foreign elements, +which it has gradually assimilated. Neither Serbs nor Bulgarians remain now in +the country, although the Upper Titaresius is known as Vurgari, or “river of the +Bulgarians.” The Zinzares, or Macedo-Walakhs, who were so numerous in the +Middle Ages, now only occupy a few villages. Though proud +of their Roman <span class="xxpn" id="p114">{114}</span> +descent, they gradually become Hellenized. Most of the words by which they +designate objects of civilised life are Greek, their priests and schoolmasters preach +or teach in Greek, and they themselves speak Greek in addition to their native +language. They lose ground, moreover, through an excessive emigration. Even +the cultivators of the soil amongst them have not quite given up their nomadic +habits, and the roving life of a herdsman or of a pedlar exercises an irresistible +attraction upon them. The Turks inhabit in compact masses the lowlands around +Larissa, and that town itself is Mussulman to a large extent. The hilly tracts to +the north, between the Inje Karasu and the Lakes of Kastoria and Ostrovo, are +likewise inhabited by Turks, who differ from the Osmanli of the rest of the +empire, and are known as Koniarides. Turks also occupy a portion of Mount +Ossa. It is easy to tell from a distance whether a village is inhabited by Turks +or by Greeks. M. Mézières has observed that “the Turks plant trees for the +sake of shade, the Greeks for the sake of profit.” Near the villages of the former +we find cypresses and plane-trees, near those of the latter orchards and vineyards. +The Koniarides are believed by some authors to have come to Thessaly and +Macedonia as colonists in the eleventh century, by invitation of the Eastern +emperor. They govern themselves through democratic representative bodies, and +are respected by all, because of their probity, their hospitality, and their rustic +virtues.</p> + +<p>The Greeks are morally inferior to the Turkish peasantry, but they surpass +them in intelligence and industry. In the seventeenth century there took place +amongst them even a sort of revival similar to the Renaissance of Western Europe, +and the love of art was developed sufficiently far to give rise to a school of +painters in the villages of Olympus. Faithful to their national traditions and the +instincts of their race, the Greeks of Thessaly have sought to organize themselves +into self-governing commonwealths. In their free towns, or <i>kephalokhori</i>, they are +permitted to elect their town councils, establish schools, and appoint what teachers +they like. They know how to get the Turkish pasha not to meddle in their local +affairs. They pay the taxes demanded by the Turks, as their ancestors paid them +to Athens or some other Greek city, but in every other respect they are free +citizens governing themselves. The contrast between these independent commonwealths +and the <i>chifliks</i> of Mussulman proprietors cultivated by Greek farmers is +most striking. The land of the free proprietors is, as a rule, far less fertile than +that included within these chifliks; yet it produces more, and its cultivators live in +comparative ease.</p> + +<p>The Greeks of Thessaly bestow much care upon the education of growing +generations. Even the most miserable Greek village in the Pindus can boast of +a school, which is visited by the young people up to the age of fifteen. As an +instance of the commercial spirit of the Thessalians we may mention the Weavers’ +Co-operative Association, formed in the last century in the town of Ambelakia, +delightfully situated amongst orchards and vineyards on the southern slopes of the +Valley of Tempe. This powerful association wisely limited its dividends to six +per cent., and expended the surplus profits upon an extension of +its business. For <span class="xxpn" id="p115">{115}</span> +many years it enjoyed the greatest prosperity, but the wars of the empire, which +closed the markets of Germany against it, brought about its ruin. Co-operation +likewise partly accounts for the flourishing cloth manufacture of the twenty-four +wealthy Greek villages on the peninsula of Magnesia, to the north of the Gulf +of Volo. This district, together with that of Verria, to the north of the Inje +Karasu, is probably the most prosperous in all the Greek provinces of Turkey, +and it is at least partly indebted for this prosperity to its happy geographical +position, being far away from great strategical high-roads.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn32" id="fnanch32">32</a></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="IV.—Albania and Epirus.">IV.—<span + class="smcap">A<b>LBANIA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>PIRUS.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">The +name of <span class="smcap">S<b>HKIPERI,</b></span> which the Albanians give to the country they inhabit, is +supposed to mean “land of rocks,” and no designation could be more appropriate. +Stony mountains occupy the whole of the country, from the frontiers of Montenegro +to those of Greece. The only plain of any extent is that of Scutari +(Shkodra), to the south of the Montenegrin plateau, which forms the natural frontier +of Albania towards the north. The bottom of this depression is occupied by +the Lake of Scutari; and the Drin, the only river of the Balkan peninsula which is +navigable for a considerable distance from the sea, debouches upon it. The Drin +is formed by the junction of the White and the Black Drin, and in former times +it only discharged a portion of its waters temporarily into the Boyana River, which +drains the Lake of Scutari. But in 1858 it opened itself a new channel opposite to +the village of Miet, about twenty miles above its mouth, and since that time the +greater volume of its waters flows in the direction of Scutari, frequently inundating +the lower quarters of that town. The marshy tracts on the Lower Drin are +dangerous to cross during the heat of summer, and the fevers of the Boyana are +the most dreaded along the whole of that coast.</p> + +<p>Most of the southern ramifications of the Bosnian Alps are inhabited by +Albanians, but they are separated from their kinsmen in Albania proper by the +deep valley of the Drin, a kind of <i>cañon</i> similar to those of the Rocky Mountains, +enclosed between precipitous walls several thousand feet in height, and hardly ever +trodden by the foot of a wanderer. The mountain systems of Bosnia and Albania +are only indirectly connected by a series of ranges and plateaux stretching from the +mountain of Glieb in a south-easterly direction as far as the Skhar, or Scardus of +the ancients. The crest of this latter runs at right angles to most of the ranges +of Western Turkey, and although its culminating point is inferior in height to +those of Slav Turkey, it is the point of junction +between the Balkan and the <span class="xxpn" id="p116">{116}</span> +mountain systems of Bosnia and Albania. The Skhar is of great importance, +too, in the hydrography of Turkey; for two great rivers, the Bulgarian Morava +and the Vardar, descend from its flanks, one flowing to the Danube, the other +to the Gulf of Saloniki. Chamois and wild goats are still met with in the +Skhar, as in the Pindus and Rhodope, and M. Wiet mentions an animal known +to the Mirdits as a <i>lucerbal</i>, which appears to be a species of leopard.</p> + +<p>A mountain region, hardly 3,000 feet in elevation, but exceedingly difficult of +access, rises to the west of the Skhar, on the other side of the Black Drin: this +is the citadel of Upper Albania, the country of the Mirdits and Dukajins. +Enormous masses of serpentine have erupted there through the chalk, the valleys +are hemmed in by bold precipices, and the torrents rapidly run down the +hollowed-out beds on the exterior slopes. As a rule, the direction of the tortuous +ranges of this mountain country is the same as that of the southern spurs of +the Skhar. They gradually decrease in height, enclosing fine upland valleys, +where the waters are able to accumulate. The Lake of Okhrida, the largest sheet +of water in Upper Albania, has not inaptly been likened to the Lake of Geneva. +Its waters are bluer even than those of its Swiss rival, and more transparent, and +fish may be seen chasing each other at a depth of sixty feet beneath its surface: +hence its ancient Greek name of Lychnidos. The delightful little town of +Okhrida and Mount Pieria, with its old Roman castle, guard its shores, and the +white houses of numerous villages peep out amongst the chestnut forests which +cover the slopes of the surrounding hills. This lake is drained towards the +north through the narrow valley of the Black Drin. If the statements of the +inhabitants may be credited, the waters of the double basin of Lake Presba reach +Lake Okhrida through subterranean channels.</p> + +<p>The isolated peak of Tomor commands this lake region on the west. To the +south of it commences the chain of the Pindus, locally known as Grammos. At +first of moderate height, and crossed by numerous mountain roads affording easy +communication between Albania and Macedonia, these mountains gradually +increase in height as we proceed south, and exactly to the east of Yanina they +form the mountain mass of Metzovo, with which the Pindus, properly so called, +takes its rise. This mountain mass is inferior in altitude to the peaks of Bosnia or +Northern Albania, but it is far more picturesque than either, its slopes being +covered with forests of conifers and beech-trees, and the plains extending along its +foot having a more southern aspect. Mount Zygos, or Lachmon, which rises in the +centre of this mountain mass, does not afford a very extended panorama, but if we +climb the craggy peaks of the Peristera-Vuna, or Smolika, near it, we are able to +look at the same time upon the waters of the Ægean and Ionian Seas, and even +the shore of Greece may be descried beyond the Gulf of Arta.</p> + +<p>A famous lake occupies the bottom of the limestone basin at the western foot +of the mountain mass of Metzovo. This is the Lake of Yanina, and nowhere else +throughout Epirus do we meet with an equal number of natural curiosities as on +the shores of this lake. Its depth is inconsiderable, nowhere exceeding forty feet, +and it is fed only by numerous springs rising at the foot of the rocks. +There is no <span class="xxpn" id="p117">{117}</span> +visible outlet; but Colonel Leake assures us that each of the two basins into which +it is divided is drained by a subterranean channel. The northern lake pours its +waters into a sink, or <i>voinikova</i>, and reappears towards the south-west as a +considerable river, which flows into the Ionian Sea. This is the Thyamis of the +ancients, our modern Kalamas. Farther to the south the ancient Acheron bursts +from the rocks, and having received the nauseous waters of the equally famous +Cocytus, throws itself into the “bay of sweet waters,” thus called on account of +the large volume of water discharged into it by rivers.</p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg036"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib117lg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 36.—<span class="smcap">S<b>OUTHERN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>PIRUS.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">According to Kiepert. + Scale 1 : 1,400,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib117.jpg" width="600" height="515" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>When the waters of the southern and larger basin of Lake Yanina are low, there +is but a single effluent, which plunges down into an abyss, and in doing so turns +the wheels of a mill. The Cyclopean ruins of the Pelasgic city of Hellas command +this huge chasm with its roaring waters. The subterranean river reappears far to +the south, and flows into the Gulf of Arta. But when the level of the lake is high, +four other sinks swallow up its superabundant waters, and convey them into +the main channel, the direction of which is indicated by a few small lakes. The +important part played in the mythology of ancient Greece by these subterranean +effluents, and particularly by the infernal Acheron and the Cocytus, amply proves +the influence exercised by the Pelasgians upon the civilisation of the Hellenes. +The myths of the Hellopians became the common property of +all Greece, and <span class="xxpn" id="p118">{118}</span> +there was no temple in all Hellas more venerated than their sanctuary at Dodona, +where the future might be foretold by listening to the rustling of the leaves of +sacred oaks. This sacred grove existed, probably, near one of the Cyclopean +towns so numerous in the country, if not on the shore of the lake itself. Some, +erroneously no doubt, have looked for it near the castle inhabited in the beginning +of this century by Ali Tepeleni, the terrible Pasha of Epirus, who boasted of being +a “lighted torch, devouring man.”</p> + +<p>The mountains of Suli, to the west of the basin of Yanina, attain an altitude +of 3,500 feet, but the neighbouring hills are of moderate height, though abrupt and +difficult of access, and near the coast they sink down into small rocky promontories, +scantily clothed with shrubs and overrun by jackals. Swamps abound near the +shore, and during summer their miasmatic air spreads over the neighbouring +villages. To the north of the swamps of Butrinto and of the channel of Corfu, +and to the west of the isolated peak of Kundusi, however, the coast rises again, and +the austere chain of the Chimæra Mala, or Acroceraunii, extends along it. It was +dreaded by the ancients on account of its tempests, and the torrents which poured +down its sides. Squalls and changes of wind are frequent near the “Tongue +(Linguetta) of Rocks,” the most advanced promontory of this coast, at the entrance +to the Adriatic Sea. These are the “infamous rocks” referred to by the Roman +poet, upon which many a vessel suffered shipwreck. The channel which separates +Turkey at that place from Italy has a width of only 45 miles; it is less than 100 +fathoms in depth, and at some former period an isthmus may have united the two +countries.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn33" id="fnanch33">33</a></p> + +<p>The Shkipetars, or Albanians, are subdivided into two leading tribes or nations, +the Tosks and the Gheges, both of whom are no doubt descended from the ancient +Pelasgians, but have in many places become mixed with Slavs, Bulgarians, and +Rumanians, and perhaps even with other nations; for whilst in some tribes we +meet with the purest Hellenic types, there are others the members of which are +repulsively ugly. The Gheges are the purest of their race, and they occupy, +under various tribal names, the whole of Northern Albania as far as the river +Shkumbi. The territory of the Tosks extends from that river southward. The +dialects of these two nations differ much, and it is not easy for an Acroceraunian +to understand a Mirdit or other Albanian from the north. Gheges and Tosks +detest each other. In the Turkish army they are kept separated for fear of their +coming to blows, and, when an insurrection has to be suppressed amongst them, +the Turkish Government always avails itself of these tribal jealousies, and is certain +of being served with the zeal and fury which hatred inspires.</p> + +<div class="dctr03" id="plt03"> +<img src="images/ib118a.jpg" width="555" height="800" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">ALBANIANS.</div> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Up to the period of the migration of the barbarians, the whole of Western +Turkey, as far as the Danube, was held by Albanians. But they were then +pushed back, and Albania was entirely occupied by +Servians and Bulgarians. <span class="xxpn" id="p119">{119}</span> +The names of numerous localities throughout the country recall that period of +obscuration, during which the name of an indigenous race was not even mentioned +by the historian. But when the Osmanli had broken the power of the Serb, the +Albanians again raised their heads, and ever since they have kept encroaching +upon their Slav neighbours. In the north they have gradually descended into +the valley of the Bulgarian Morava, and one of their colonies has even penetrated +into independent Servia. Like the waters of a rising ocean, they overwhelm +the detached tracts of territory still occupied by Servians. This progress of the +Albanians is explained, to a great extent, by the voluntary expatriation of the +Servians. Thousands of them, headed by their patriarchs, fled to Hungary, in +order to escape the dominion of the Turks, and the Albanians occupied the wastes +they left behind. The Servians still hold their ground near Acroceraunia, on the +shores of Lake Okhrida, and in the hills looking down upon the fatal plain of +Kosovo, where their ancestors were massacred; but they gradually become +Albanians in language, religion, and customs. They speak of themselves as +Turks, as do the Arnauts, and apply the name of Servian only to the Christians +dwelling beyond the frontier. On the other hand, many of the customs +of the Gheges agree in a remarkable manner with those of their Slav neighbours, +and this proves that there has taken place a thorough blending of the two +races.</p> + +<p>But whilst the Albanians are gaining ground in the north, they are losing it +in the south. A large portion of the inhabitants of Southern Albania, though +undoubtedly of Pelasgic origin, are Greek by language. Arta, Yanina, and Prevesa +are Hellenized towns, and only a few Mohammedan families there still speak +Albanian. Nearly the whole of the tract between the Pindus and the Adriatic +coast ranges has become Greek as far as language goes, and throughout the +mountain region extending westward to the sea the inhabitants are “bilingual;” +that is to say, they speak two languages. The famous Suliotes, for instance, who +talk Tosk within the bosom of their family, make use of Greek in their intercourse +with strangers. Wherever the two races come into contact, it is always the +Albanian who takes the trouble to learn Greek.</p> + +<p>This influence of the Hellenes is all the more powerful as it meets with +support amongst the Zinzares, known also as Macedo-Walakhs, “Limping” +Walakhs, or Southern Rumanians, who are met with throughout the country. +These Zinzares are the kinsmen of the Rumanians of Wallachia and Moldavia, and +live in a compact body only on the two slopes of the Pindus, to the south and east +of the Lake of Yanina. Like the Rumanians of the Danube, they are most +probably Latinised Dacians. They resemble the Walakhs in features, character, +and disposition, and speak a neo-Latin tongue much mixed with Greek. The +Zinzares in the valleys of the Pindus are, for the most part, herdsmen, and wander +away from their villages sometimes for months. Others carry on trades, exhibiting +much manual skill and intelligence. Nearly all the bricklayers of Turkey, +those of the large towns excepted, are Zinzares; and the same individual sometimes +erects an entire house, doing in turn the work of +architect, carpenter, joiner, <span class="xxpn" id="p120">{120}</span> +and locksmith. The Rumanians of the Pindus are likewise esteemed as clever +goldsmiths.</p> + +<p>Their capacity for business is great, and the commerce of the interior of +Turkey is almost entirely in their hands, as is that of the maritime districts in +those of the Greeks. The Walakhs of Metzovo are said to have stood formerly +under the direct protection of the Porte, and every traveller, whether Mussulman +or Christian, was bound to unshoe his horses before he left their territory, for fear +“of his carrying away a clod of earth which did not belong to him.” Commercial +houses conducted by Walakhs of the Pindus are met with in every town of the +Orient, and even at Vienna one of the most influential banks has been founded by +one of them. Abroad they are generally taken for Greeks, and the wealthier +amongst them send their children to Athens to be educated. Surrounded by +Mussulmans, the Zinzares of the Pindus feel the necessity of attaching themselves +to some country through which they might obtain their freedom, and they hope +for a union with Greece. It is only quite recently that they have learnt to look +upon the Rumanians of the North and the Italians as their kinsmen. They do +not, however, set much store upon their nationality, and have no aspirations as +a distinct race. There can be no doubt that in the course of ages many of these +Macedo-Walakhs have become Hellenized. Nearly all Thessaly was inhabited +by Zinzares in the Middle Ages, and Byzantine authors speak of that country as +“Great Wallachia.” Whether these Zinzares have emigrated to Rumania, as +some think, or have become assimilated with the Greeks, the fact remains that at +the present day they are not very numerous on the eastern slopes of the Pindus. +Thousands of Rumanian families have settled in the coast towns, at Avlona, Berat, +and Tirana, embracing Mohammedanism, but still retaining their native idiom.</p> + +<p>If we exclude these Zinzares, the Greeks of Epirus, the Servians, and the few +Osmanli dwelling in the large towns, there remain only the semi-barbarous Gheges +and Tosks, whose social condition has hardly undergone any change in the course +of three thousand years. In their manners and modes of thought these modern +Albanians are the true successors of the ancient Pelasgians, and many a scene that +a traveller may witness amongst them carries him back to the days of the Odyssey. +G. von Hahn, who has most thoroughly studied the Shkipetars, looks upon them +as veritable Dorians, whose ancestors, led by the Heraclidæ, burst forth from the +forests of Epirus to conquer the Peloponnesus. They are as courageous, as warlike, +as fond of dominion, and as clannish as were their ancestors. Their dress, +likewise, is nearly the same, and the white tunic (<i>fustanelle</i>) neatly fastened +round the waist fairly represents the ancient <i>chlamys</i>. The Gheges, like the +Dorians of old, are addicted to that mysterious passion which the historians of +antiquity have confounded, unfortunately, with a nameless vice, and which links +men to children by a pure and ideal love, in which the senses have no part.</p> + +<p>There is no modern people respecting whom more astounding acts of bravery +are recorded than of the Albanians. In the fifteenth century they had their +Scanderbeg, who, though the theatre of his glory was more circumscribed than +that of his namesake of Macedonia, was hardly inferior to him +in genius, and <span class="xxpn" id="p121">{121}</span> +certainly surpassed him in justness and goodness of heart. Or what nation has +ever exceeded in courage the Suliote mountaineers, amongst whom not an aged +man, a woman, or a child was found to beg for mercy from Ali Pasha’s executioners? +The heroism of these Suliote women, who set fire to the ammunition waggons, and +then hand in hand precipitated themselves from the rocks, or sought death in the +mountain torrents, chanting their own funeral song, will at all times stand forth +in history as an astounding fact.</p> + +<p>This valour, unfortunately, is associated amongst many tribes with a fearful +amount of savageness. Human life is held cheap amongst these warlike populations; +blood calls for blood, and victim for victim. They believe in vampires and +phantoms, and occasionally an old man has been burnt alive, on suspicion of his +being able to kill by the breath of his mouth. Slavery does not exist, but woman +is held in a state of servitude; she is looked upon as an inferior being, having no +rights or mind of her own. Custom raises a more formidable barrier between the +sexes than do walls and locked doors elsewhere. A young girl is not permitted to +speak to a young man; such an act is looked upon as a crime, which her father or +brother may feel called upon to punish by a deed of blood. The parents sometimes +consult the wishes of their son when about to marry him, but never those of their +daughter. The latter is frequently affianced in her cradle, and, when twelve years +of age, she is handed over to a young man on his presenting a wedding outfit and +a sum of money fixed by custom, and averaging twenty shillings. From that +moment he becomes the absolute master of his bride, though not without first +going through the farce of an abduction, as is customary amongst nearly all +ancient nations. The poor woman, thus sold like a slave, is bound to work for her +husband. She is his housekeeper as well as his labourer, and the national poets +compare her to the “ever-active shuttle,” whilst the father of the family is +likened to the “majestic ram marching at the head of the flock.” Yet woman, +scorned though she be, and brutalised by heavy work, may traverse the whole +country without fear of being insulted, and the life of an unfortunate who places +himself under her protection is held sacred.</p> + +<p>Family ties are very powerful amongst the Albanians. The father retains the +rights of sovereign lord up to an advanced age, and as long as he lives the +earnings of his children and grandchildren are his own. Frequently this communism +continues after his death, the eldest son taking his place. The loss of a +member of the family, and particularly of a young man, gives rise to fearful +lamentations amongst the women, who frequently swoon away, and even lose their +senses. But the death of persons who have reached the natural limits of human +life is hardly mourned at all. The descendants of the same ancestor never lose +sight of their parentage. They form clans, called <i>phis</i> or <i>pharas</i>, which are +bound firmly together for purposes of defence or attack, or in the pursuit of their +common interests. Brotherhood by election is known amongst the Albanians, as +well as amongst the Servians and other ancient nations, and its ties are as strong +as those of blood. Young men desirous of becoming brothers bind themselves by +solemn vows in the presence of their families, and, having opened +a vein, they <span class="xxpn" id="p122">{122}</span> +drink each other’s blood. The need of these family bonds is felt so strongly in +Albania, that young people brought up together frequently remain united during +the remainder of their lives, forming a regular community, having its days of +meetings, its festivals, and a common purse.</p> + +<p>But in spite of these family associations and clans, in spite of the enthusiastic +love which the Albanian bears his native land, there exists no political cohesion +amongst the various tribes. The physical conditions of the country, no less than +an unhappy passion for war, have scattered their forces, and rendered them +unable, consequently, to maintain their independence. The religious animosities +between Mussulman and Christian, Greek and Roman Catholic, have contributed +to the like result.</p> + +<p>It is generally supposed that the majority of the Albanians are Mohammedans. +When the Turks became masters of the country the most valiant amongst them +fled to Italy, and the greater part of the tribes that remained behind were compelled +to embrace Islamism. Many of the chiefs, moreover, turned Mussulmans, in order +that they might continue their life of brigandage, on pretence of carrying on a +holy war. This accounts for the fact of the aristocracy of the country being for +the most part Mohammedan, and in possession of the land. The Christian peasant +who tills it is nominally a free man, but in reality he is at the mercy of his lord, +who keeps him at the point of starvation. These Albanian Mussulmans, however, +are fanatic warriors rather than religious zealots, and many of their ceremonies, +particularly those connected with their native land, differ in nothing from those +of their Christian compatriots. They have been converted, but not convinced, and +cynically they say of themselves that their “sword is wherever their faith is.”</p> + +<p>In many districts the conversion has been nominal only, and zealous Christians +have continued to conduct their worship in secret. Many Mohammedans of this +class returned to the faith of their fathers as soon as the tolerance of Government +permitted them to do so. As to the warlike mountain clans, the Mirdits, Suliotes, +and Acroceraunians, they had no need to bend to the will of the Turks, and +remained Greek or Roman Christians. The boundary between Gheges and Tosks +coincides approximately with the boundary between these two denominations, +the Roman Catholics living to the north of the Shkumbi, the orthodox Greeks to +the south of the river. The Hellenes and Zinzares in Southern Albania are +orthodox Greeks. The hatred between these two denominations of Christians is +intense, and this is the principal reason why the Albanians have not succeeded in +regaining their independence, as have the Servians.</p> + +<p>Southern Albania and Epirus had feudal institutions up to the close of last +century. The chiefs of the clans and the semi-independent Turkish pashas lived +in strong castles perched upon the rocks, from which they descended from time +to time, followed by bands of servitors. War existed in permanence, and property +changed hands continuously, according to the fortunes of the sword. Ali the +Terrible, of Yanina, put a stop to this state of affairs. He reduced high and +low to the same level of servitude, and the central Government now wields the +power formerly exercised by lords and +heads of families. <span class="xxpn" id="p123">{123}</span></p> + +<p>If we would become acquainted with a social condition recalling the Middle +Ages, we must go amongst the independent tribes of Northern Albania. On +crossing the Matis we at once perceive a change. Every one goes armed; +shepherds and labourers carry a carbine on the shoulder; and even women and +children place a pistol in their belts. Families, clans, and tribes have a military +organization, and at a moment’s notice are ready to take the field. A sheep +missing in a flock, an insult offered in the heat of passion, may lead to war. Not +long since the Montenegrin was the most frequent disturber of the peace, for, shut +up in his sterile mountains, he was often obliged to turn brigand in order to +sustain life, and laid under contribution the fields of his neighbours. The Turks +have at all times nourished this hatred between Albanians and Montenegrins. +They recompense the warlike services of the tribes of the border clans by +exempting them from taxation, and allowing them to govern themselves according +to their own laws. Let these immunities be touched, and they will make common +cause with their hereditary foes of the Black Mountains.</p> + +<p>The Mirdits are typical of the independent tribes of Northern Albania. They +inhabit the high valleys to the south of the gorge of the Drin, and, though +hardly numbering 12,000 souls, they exercise, in consequence of their warlike +valour, a most important influence in all Western Turkey. Their country is +accessible only through three difficult defiles, and they hold command of the roads +which the Turkish troops must follow when operating against the Montenegrins. +The Sublime Porte, well aware how difficult it would be to subdue these redoubtable +mountaineers, has endeavoured to attach them, showering honours upon them, +and granting them the most complete self-government. The Mirdits, on their +side, though Christians, have at all times fought most valiantly in the ranks of the +Turkish army, in Greece and the Morea, as well as against their fellow-Christians +of Montenegro. They are formed into three “banners” of the mountains and +two of the plains, and in time of war are joined by the five banners of Lesh, +or Alessio. The banner of the renowned clan of Orosh takes precedence of all +others.</p> + +<p>The country of the Mirdits is governed by an oligarchy, of which the Prince +or Pasha of Orosh is the hereditary head. His power, however, is merely +nominal, for in reality the country is governed by a council consisting of the +elders (<i>vecchiardi</i>) of the villages, the delegates of the banners, and the heads of +clans. The proceedings of this council are regulated by ancient traditions. +Wives are taken by force from the enemy, for the members of the five banners +look upon each other as relatives, and the Mohammedan girls in the lowland +villages look forward with little fear to their being carried off by Mirdit warriors. +The <i>vendetta</i> is exercised in an inexorable manner, and blood cries for blood. A +violation of hospitality is punished with death. The adulteress is buried beneath +a heap of stones, and her nearest relative is bound to deliver the head of her +accomplice to the injured husband. It need hardly be said that education is at +a very low ebb amongst these savages. There are no schools, and in 1860 hardly +fifty Christians of the Mirdit country and of the district of Lesh +were able to <span class="xxpn" id="p124">{124}</span> +read. Agriculture, nevertheless, is in a relatively advanced state. The valleys of +the sterile mountains are cultivated with a certain amount of care, and they +produce finer crops than do the fertile plains, inhabited by an indolent population.</p> + +<p>By a strange contrast, these direct descendants of the ancient Pelasgians, to +whom we are indebted for the beginning of civilisation in Europe, still number +amongst the most savage populations of our continent. But they, too, must yield +in time to the influence of their surroundings. Until recently the Epirotes and +southern Shkipetars left their country only in order to lead the easy but degrading +life of mercenaries. In the last century the young men of Acroceraunia sold +themselves to the King of Naples, to be embodied in his regiment of “Royal +Macedonians;” and even in our own days not only Mohammedans, but also Christian +Tosks, enter the service of pashas and beys. These men, known as Arnauts, may +be met with in the most remote parts of the empire—in Armenia, at Bagdad, and +in Arabia. On the expiration of their term of service, the majority of these +veterans retire to estates granted them by Government, and this accounts for +the large number of Arnaut villages met with in all parts of the empire.</p> + +<p>But wars are less frequent now, the life of a mercenary offers fewer advantages, +and increasing numbers of Albanians leave their country annually in order to gain +a living abroad by honest labour. Like the Swiss of the canton of Grisons, many +Shkipetars descend from their mountains at the commencement of winter in order +to work for wages in the plains. Most of these return to their mountain homes in +spring, enriched by their earnings; but there are others who remain abroad for +years, or who never return. The advantages of a division of labour appear to be well +understood by these mountaineers of Epirus and Southern Albania, and each mountain +valley is noted for the exercise of some special craft. One valley sends forth +butchers, another bakers, a third gardeners. A village near Argyrokastro supplies +Constantinople with most of its well-sinkers. The district of Zagori, perhaps the +home of the ancient Asclepiads, sends its doctors, or rather “bone-setters,” into +every town of Turkey. Many of these emigrants, when they become wealthy, +return to their native land, where they build themselves fine houses in the midst +of sterile mountains, and these take the places of the old seigneurial towers, which +were erected only for purposes of defence.</p> + +<div class="dctr03" id="plt04"> +<img src="images/ib124a.jpg" width="555" height="800" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">WEALTHY ARNAUTS.</div> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The Albanians are thus being carried along by a general movement of progress, +and if once they enter into the common life of Europe, we may expect them to play +a prominent part, for they possess a penetrating mind and much strength of +character. The Albanians enjoy the advantage of having ready access to the sea, +but hitherto they have derived only small benefit from it, not only owing to the +disturbed state of the country and the absence of roads, but also because of the +alluvial deposits formed by the rivers and the malaria of the marshes. Still, +making every allowance for these disadvantages, they hardly account for the +almost entire absence of maritime enterprise. One would scarcely fancy these +Epirotes and Gheges to be of the same race as those Hydriote corsairs who launched +whole fleets upon the waters of the Archipelago at the time of the war for Hellenic +independence, and who still maintain the foremost place +amongst the mariners of <span class="xxpn" id="p125">{125}</span> +Greece. The ports of Albania—Antivari, Porto Medua (one of the safest on the +Adriatic), Durazzo, Avlona, Parga (lost in a forest of citron-trees), and even strong +Prevesa, surrounded by more than a hundred thousand olive-trees—can boast but +of a trifling commerce, and two-thirds of that are carried on in Austrian vessels +from Trieste. With the exception of the Acroceraunians and the inhabitants of +Dulcigno, which is the port of Scutari, no Mohammedan Albanian ventures upon +the sea, not even as a fisherman. In spite of the fertility of the soil, there are +hardly any articles to export. The mines of the country are unexplored, agriculture +is in a most backward state, and in Epirus hardly any industry is known +except the rearing of sheep and goats.</p> + +<p>At the time of the Romans these countries were equally forsaken. There was +one magnificent city, Nicopolis, built by Augustus on a promontory to the north +of the modern Prevesa to commemorate his victory at Actium. The only other +town of importance was Dyrrhachium, called Durazzo by the Italians. It formed +the terminus of the Via Egnatia, which traversed the whole of the Balkan peninsula +from west to east, and constituted the great highway between Italy and the +Orient. Avlona may aspire one day to take the place of ancient Dyrrhachium. +Its geographical position is superior to that of Durazzo, for it is nearer to Italy, +and its deep and secure harbour enjoys the shelter of the island of Suseno and of +the Linguetta of Acroceraunia.</p> + +<p>In the meantime all the commerce of the country is concentrated in Scutari +and Yanina, and in some other towns of the interior. The most considerable +amongst the latter are Prisrend, at the foot of the Skhar, whose nobles boast of +their magnificent dresses and fine weapons; Ipek (Pech), Prishtina, Jakovitza +(Yakova), in the north-eastern portion of the country, and on roads which lead +from Macedonia into Bosnia. Nearer the coast are Tirana, Berat, and Elbasan, +the ancient Albanon, whose name recalls that of the entire country. Gyorcha +(Koritza), to the south of the Lake of Okhrida, is likewise a place of much trade, +thanks to its position on a road joining the Adriatic to the Ægean Sea. Scutari +and Yanina occupy sites at the foot of the mountains, whose natural advantages +could not fail to attract a numerous population. Yanina, the capital of Epirus, is +the more picturesque of these two cities. It is situated on the shore of a fine +lake, opposite the somewhat heavy masses of the Pindus, but in sight of the +mountains of Greece, which are of a “luminous grey, glittering like a tissue of +silk.” At the time of Ali Pasha, Yanina became the capital of an empire, and its +population then exceeded that of Scutari. But the latter has now regained its +pre-eminence. It is admirably situated, and the roads from the Danube and the +Ægean, from the Lower Drin and the Adriatic, converge upon it. Scutari, or +Shkodra, is the first oriental city which a traveller coming from Italy meets +with, and the first impression made by its numerous gardens enclosed by high +walls, its deserted streets and irregular buildings, is sufficiently curious. Long +after he has entered the town, the traveller will remain uncertain as to its +whereabouts. But let him climb to the summit of the limestone rock surmounted +by the old Venetian castle of Rosapha, and the most +magnificent panorama will <span class="xxpn" id="p126">{126}</span> +unfold itself before his eyes. The domes of Scutari, its twenty minarets, the +emerald verdure of the plain, the surrounding amphitheatre of fantastically shaped +mountains, the winding waters of the Boyana and Drin, and the placid surface of +the lake glittering in the sun—these all combine to produce a spectacle of rare +magnificence. The sea alone is wanting to render this picture perfect, but, though +near, it is not within sight.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn34" id="fnanch34">34</a></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="V.—The Illyrian Alps, Bosnia, and Herzegovina.">V.—<span + class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">I<b>LLYRIAN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>LPS,</b></span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>OSNIA,</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">H<b>ERZEGOVINA.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">Bosnia, in the north-western corner of Turkey, is the Switzerland of the +European Orient, but it is a Switzerland whose mountains do not reach the +zone of perennial snow and ice. In many respects the mountain ranges of Bosnia, +and of its southern province, the Herzegovina, resemble those of the Jura. They, +too, are composed principally of limestone, and rise in parallel ridges, surmounted +here and there by sharp crests. Like the successive ridges of the Jura, they are +of unequal height, and, taken as a whole, assume the appearance of a plateau +traversed by parallel furrows, and gently sloping in one direction. The most +elevated chain of Northern Bosnia is that which separates it from the coast of +Dalmatia, and the less elevated ridges running parallel with it gradually decrease +in height towards the north-east, in the direction of the plains of the Save.</p> + +<p>Rocks not belonging to the Jurassic system, such as crystalline slates, dolomites, +tertiary deposits, and serpentine, are met with in various localities, and +impart some variety to the orographical features of Bosnia. Several crater-shaped +depressions in the east and south-east separate the mountains of Bosnia from the +mountain masses of Servia. The most remarkable amongst these plains is that +of Novibazar, into which numerous torrents discharge themselves, and which +commands roads diverging in various directions. This is the strategical key of +the country, and is destined on this account to become an important railway +junction.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="plt05"> +<img src="images/ib126b.jpg" width="600" height="430" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">TURKISH MULETEERS IN THE HERZEGOVINA.</div> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Nearly all the mountain ranges which pass from Carniola and Austrian Croatia +into Bosnia increase in height as we advance towards the centre of the peninsula. +The bleached pyramid of the Durmitor, close to the northern frontier of +Montenegro, attains an elevation of nearly 8,000 feet, and the plateau surrounding +it is cut up by deep cavities, some of which, like the troughs of the Herzegovina, +open out in one direction, whilst others are completely shut in by declivities. The +Prokletya, or “cursed” mountain, still farther to the south-east, rises to a height +even more considerable, and constitutes one of the most formidable mountain +masses of all Turkey. A huge depression occupies its centre, the bottom of which +is covered by the Lake of Plava. Even in summer patches of snow may be seen +on some of the mountains which surround this +abyss. But Mount Kom, the <span class="xxpn" id="p127">{127}</span> +highest of all, never retains its cap of snow during the whole of the year, for it +melts away before the hot African winds to which it is exposed. Mount Kom +may possibly turn out to be the culminating point of the Balkan peninsula. It is +certainly one of the highest summits, and its double peak, rising above the plateau +of Montenegro, is descried from afar by the mariner navigating the Adriatic. It +has been ascended by several travellers, for its slopes are gentle.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn35" id="fnanch35">35</a></p> + +<p>The rivers of Bosnia, like those of the Jura, flow between parallel mountain +ranges towards the north-east, along the furrows traced out for them by nature. +But these calcareous mountain ramparts of Bosnia, like those of the Jura, are +broken up by narrow gorges, or <i>cluses</i>, through which the pent up waters find +a way from furrow to furrow. Instead of taking a serpentine course, as do most +rivers flowing through a plain, these rivers of Bosnia change from valley to valley +by abrupt bends. Gentle and furious in turns, they gradually reach the lower +regions, and are finally swallowed up by the Save. Only one river, the Narenta, +finds its way into the Adriatic; all others, in accordance with the general slope of +the country, flow in the direction of the Danube. These river valleys, with their +sudden turnings, would be available as natural roads for reaching the plateau, if +most of the gorges were not exceedingly difficult of access; and until regular roads +have been constructed, as in the cluses of the Jura, travellers are obliged to scale +steep heights in order to pass from valley to valley. It is this want of practicable +roads which renders military operations in Bosnia so difficult and perilous.</p> + +<p>Great armies have at all times remained to the east of the mountain masses +referred to, passing from the valley of the Vardar into that of the Morava, whose +springs almost intermingle their waters. In that locality we meet with the +bed of an ancient lake, through which flows the Sitnitza, one of the upper +tributaries of the Servian Morava: this is the plain of Kosovo, the “field of black +birds,” which reminds all southern Slavs of painful events. It was there the +power of the Servians succumbed in 1389, and, if we may credit ancient heroic +songs, more than 100,000 men perished in a single day. Five hundred years have +passed away since this great disaster, but the Slavs have never ceased to hope for +a day of vengeance, and they look forward to the time when on this very field +they may reconquer the independence they have lost.</p> + +<p>The similarity between the mountains of Bosnia and of the Jura is rendered +complete by the existence of grottoes, sink-holes, and subterranean rivers. Sink-holes +from 60 to 100 feet in diameter, and shaped like funnels, are met with +in many localities. Several rivers appear suddenly at the foot of a hill, and, +after flowing on for a few miles, disappear again beneath some portal in the rocks. +The table-land of the Herzegovina especially abounds in phenomena of this kind. +The ground there is pierced by “sinks,” or <i>ponors</i>, which swallow up the water +derived from precipitation. “Blind valleys” and “troughs” present everywhere +the traces of currents of water and of temporary lakes, and after heavy rains the +subterranean basins sometimes rise to the surface, and a river then flows for +a time along the valley. As a rule, however, the +inhabitants are compelled to <span class="xxpn" id="p128">{128}</span> +collect the water they require in cisterns, or to fetch it from long distances. +Elsewhere the hydrography of the country is subject to annual changes. Lakes +which still figure upon our maps are drained through subterranean passages only +recently opened; other lakes are formed in consequence of some passage, which +formerly carried off the surface water, having become choked with alluvium. +No more curious river probably exists in the world than the Trebinishtitza, in the +Western Herzegovina. It appears and disappears many times. One of its branches, +flowing at one time on the surface, at others underground, crosses the plains of +Kotesi, in turns a parched champaign country or a lake abounding in fish, and +enters the Narenta. Other branches pass beneath the mountains, and gush out +near the shores of the Adriatic. One of the most famous of these springs is that +of Ombra, which pours its waters into the Bay of Gravosa, to the north of +Ragusa.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg037"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib128xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 37.—<span class="smcap">S<b>UBTERRANEAN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>EDS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>FFLUENTS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">N<b>ARENTA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 1,925,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib128.jpg" width="600" height="451" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>“Where the rocks finish and the trees appear, there begins Bosnia.” So said +the Dalmatians formerly. But many parts of Bosnia have now lost their clothing +of verdure. The table-lands of the Herzegovina and Montenegro, no less than +Dalmatia, have been despoiled of their forests, but Bosnia proper still remains a +country of woods. Nearly one-half its area is covered with forests. In the +valleys trees have almost disappeared, for the peasant is allowed to +wield his axe <span class="xxpn" id="p129">{129}</span> +without hindrance, but in the virgin forests of the mountains trees still abound. +The principal trees of Europe are met with in these magnificent woods: walnut-trees, +chestnut-trees, limes, maples, oaks, beeches, ash-trees, birches, pines, firs, +and larches. Austrian speculators, unfortunately, avail themselves of the roads +which begin to open up the interior of the country to devastate these forests, +which ought to be preserved with the greatest care. The song of birds is but +rarely heard in these sombre woods, but wild animals abound in them. They +shelter bears, wild boars, and deer, and the number of wolves is so large that their +skins form one of the most important articles of Bosnian commerce. Taken as a +whole, Bosnia ranks among the most fertile countries of Europe, and few regions +surpass it in the beauty of its rural scenery. In some parts of the country, and +particularly near the Save, large herds of hogs, almost wild, roam through the +oak forests. Hence the epithet of “country of hogs” which the Turks have +derisively given to Bosnia.</p> + +<p>With the exception of the Jews, the gipsies, and the few Osmanli officials, +soldiers, and merchants in the principal towns, the entire population of the country +is of Slav race. The inhabitants of Kraina, near the Austrian frontier, call +themselves Croats, but they scarcely differ from the Bosnian Servians and +Raitzes of ancient Rascia, now known as the sandjak of Novibazar. On the +classical soil of Rascia originated most of those cherished <i>piesmas</i>, or popular +songs, in which the Southern Slavs have deposited their national traditions. The +Herzegovinians, in some respects, differ from their Bosnian kinsmen. They are +the descendants of immigrants who came from the banks of the Vistula in the +seventh century. Like their neighbours the Montenegrins, they are more voluble +in their speech than the Servians proper, and make use of numerous peculiar +turns of expression and a few words of Italian which have glided into their +language.</p> + +<p>Although most of the Bosnians are of the same race, they are divided by +religious animosities, and these account for their state of political servitude. At +the first glance it may cause surprise that the Slavs of Bosnia should not have +succeeded in throwing off the Turkish yoke, like their kinsmen of Servia. Their +country is more remote from the capital, and far less accessible than Servia. A +conquering army coming from the south has not only to force numerous defiles, +but has to contend, too, with the climate, which is far more severe than that of +the remainder of the Balkan peninsula. But, in spite of these great natural +advantages from a defensive point of view, every revolt has hitherto failed +lamentably. We need not seek far for the cause of this: Christian and Mohammedan +Bosnians are at enmity, and the Christians themselves are split up into +Greeks, who are led by their <i>popes</i>, and Romans, who follow blindly their +Franciscan priests. In their divided state they fall an easy prey to their +oppressors, and servitude has degraded their character.</p> + +<p>The Mussulmans of Bosnia call themselves Turks, but they are Slavs nevertheless, +like their Christian compatriots, and, like them, speak Servian with a large +admixture of Turkish words. They are the descendants of the +nobles who, in <span class="xxpn" id="p130">{130}</span> +the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, embraced Islamism in order to save their +feudal privileges. They also number amongst their ranks the descendants of +brigands, who changed their religion in order to be able to continue their trade +without fear of punishment. This apostacy gave to the lords even greater power +over their wretched dependants than they had formerly possessed. The hatred of +caste was augmented by religious animosity, and they soon surpassed in fanaticism +the Mohammedan Turks, and reduced the Christian peasantry to a condition of +veritable slavery. A wild pear-tree is still pointed out near one of the gates of +Sarayevo, upon which the notables occasionally suspended some unfortunate raya +for their amusement. Whether beys or spahis, these Mohammedan Bosnians are +the most retrograde element of old Turkey, and on several occasions, as in 1851, +they even rose up in rebellion in order to maintain intact their ancient feudal +privileges. Sarayevo, as a Mussulman city, stood under the special protection of +the Sultan’s mother, and possessed most extravagant privileges, which converted +it into a state in the state more hostile to Christianity than the Sublime Porte +itself.</p> + +<p>Even in our own days the Bosnian Mussulmans possess far more than their +proper share of the land. The country is divided into <i>spahiliks</i>, or Mussulman fiefs, +which are transmitted, in accordance with the custom of the Slavs, indivisibly to +all the members of the family. The latter choose the most aged or most +valorous of their members as their head. The Christian peasants are compelled to +work for these Mussulman communities; and, although no longer serfs, they are +called upon to bear the chief burden of taxation and of other expenses. It is +natural, under these circumstances, that the Christians of Bosnia should shun +agriculture in order to devote themselves to trade, and nearly the whole of the +commerce is in the hands of the Christians of the Herzegovina and of their +co-religionists from Slavonian Austria. The Spanish Jews form communities in +the principal towns, where they carry on their usual commercial pursuits and +money-lending on tangible securities. They still talk Spanish amongst themselves, +and never mention without emotion the name of the country which sent them into +exile.</p> + +<p>The number of Mussulmans hardly exceeds one-third of the total population of +Bosnia, and they are said to remain stationary, or even to diminish, whilst the +more fecund Christians increase in numbers.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn36" id="fnanch36">36</a></p> + +<p>For the rest, the Bosnians, in spite of the differences in their religious belief, +possess the same natural gifts as their Servian kinsmen, and, whatever destinies +may be in store for them, they will in the end rise to the same level of intelligence. +They are frank and hospitable, brave in battle, industrious, thrifty, of a +poetical turn, fast as friends, and true as lovers. The marital +ties are respected, <span class="xxpn" id="p131">{131}</span> +and even the Mussulmans reject the polygamy permitted by the Koran. In the +Herzegovina the women enjoy much liberty, and in many villages there are even +back doors to the houses, in order that they may be able to gossip with their neighbours +without going into the street. In Northern Bosnia, however, the Mussulman +women are wrapped up closely in white linen sheets, and are hardly able to see +a few steps before them. But, in spite of these good qualities, there exists an +amount of barbarity, ignorance, superstition, and fanaticism, amongst Christians +and Mohammedans alike, which is truly astounding. Incessant wars, tyranny on +the one side, and servitude on the other, have brutalised their manners. The want +of roads, the extensive forests, and the precipitous mountains have placed them +beyond the reach of civilising influences. There are hardly any schools, and the few +monasteries which supply their places are of little use, for the monks themselves +are steeped in ignorance, and their pupils at most learn to chant a few hymns. +Besides this, the immense consumption of <i>slibovitza</i> undermines the health of +the people and demoralises them, and it has been estimated that every Bosnian—man, +woman, or child—drinks annually no less than thirty-four pints of this +detestable plum-brandy.</p> + +<p>It may be matter for surprise that bustling towns should exist in so rude a +country, but the natural resources of Bosnia are so great that a certain amount of +local trade was sure to spring up. Isolated as they are, the Bosnians are thrown +upon their own resources. They grind their own flour, manufacture their arms, +stuffs, and iron implements, and the exchange of these commodities has given +rise to commerce in the cities most favourably situated as entrepôts, the +principal amongst which are Sarayevo, or Bosna Serai, and Travnik, the ancient +capital of the country, picturesquely situated at the foot of an ancient castle. +Banyaluka, which is connected with Austria by a railway, has some trade with +Croatia; Tuzla extracts salt from its abundant brine springs; Zvornik, which +guards the frontier of Servia, also carries on some trade with that country; Novibazar +has commercial relations with Albania; Mostar and Trebinye import a few +articles from Dalmatia. The populations of these towns have not, however, been +solely attracted by trade and industry, for the insecurity of the country has also +contributed to that result. There is no part of Europe, the neighbouring Albania +and the polar regions of Scandinavia and Russia excepted, which is so rarely +visited by strangers, and this isolation will only cease when the proposed international +railway shall have joined it to Saloniki and Constantinople.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn37" id="fnanch37">37</a></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="VI.—Bulgaria.">VI.—<span + class="smcap">B<b>ULGARIA.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">The +centre plateau of Turkey is still amongst the least-known countries of +the Balkan peninsula, although it is intersected by the great highways which +connect Thracia with Bosnia, and Macedonia with the Danube. +This plateau, <span class="xxpn" id="p132">{132}</span> +known to the ancients as Upper Mœsia, consists of a vast granitic table-land, rising +to an average height of 2,000 feet. Its surface is diversified by several <i>planinas</i>, +or mountain chains, of small relative height, and by domes of trachyte, the +remains of ancient volcanoes. Its numerous depressions were formerly filled with +water, and the contours of the ancient lakes can still be traced. They have +been gradually filled up by alluvium, or drained by rivers. The most remarkable +amongst these ancient lacustrine basins are now represented by the fertile plains +of Nish, Sofia, and Ikhtiman.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg038"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib132xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 38.—<span class="smcap">M<b>OUNT</b></span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>ITOSH</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> <span class="smmaj">ITS</span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>NVIRONS.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">According to F. von Hochstetter. + Scale 1 : 1,058,000</div> +<img src="images/ib132.jpg" width="600" height="519" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The superb syenitic and porphyritic mountain group of Vitosh forms the +eastern bastion of the Mœsian plateau. Immediately to the east of it the deep +valley of the Isker pierces the whole of the Balkan Mountains, and, crossing the +plain of Sofia, takes its course in the direction of the Danube. The upper valley +of this river and the plain mentioned form the true geographical centre of +European Turkey. From Sofia diverge some of the most important roads of the +peninsula, one leading through the valley of the Isker to the Lower Danube, another +along the Morava valley into Servia, a third by way of the Maritza into Thracia, +and a fourth down the Struma into Macedonia. It is said that Constantine the +Great, struck by these important natural advantages of Sofia, then called Sardica, +thought of making it the capital of his empire. <span class="xxpn" id="p133">{133}</span></p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="plt06"> +<img src="images/ib132b.jpg" width="600" height="421" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">TIRNOVA.</div> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The Turks apply the name of Balkans to all the mountain ranges of the +peninsula, but geographers restrict that term to the Hæmus of the ancients. This +mountain rampart begins to the east of the basin of Sofia. It does not form a +regular chain, but rather an elevated terrace sloping down gently in the direction +of the Danube, whilst towards the south it presents an abrupt slope, it appearing +almost as if the plateau on that side had suddenly sunk to a lower level. The +Balkan consequently presents the appearance of a chain only when looked at +from the south. But its contours even there are only slightly undulating; there +are neither abrupt projections nor rocky pyramids, and the prevailing character is +that of long-stretched mountain ridges. The porphyritic mountain group of +Chatal, which rises to the south of the principal chain, constitutes the only +exception to this gentleness of contour. Though inferior in height to the summits +of the Balkan, its steep precipices, slashed crests, and chaotic rock masses strike +the beholder, and the contrast between this mass of erupted rock and the gentle +slopes of the calcareous hills which surround it is very great.</p> + +<p>The uniformity of the northern slopes of the Balkan is such that, in many +places, a traveller is able to reach the crest without having come in sight of +mountains. When the woods have disappeared from the Balkan, these undulating +slopes will be deprived of their greatest charm; but, as long as the forests ornament +them as now, the country will remain one of the most delightful in Turkey. Running +streams flow through each valley, bordered by pastures as brilliantly green +as are those of the Alps; the villages are built in the shade of beech-trees and +oaks; and nature everywhere wears a smiling aspect. But the plains which extend +to the Danube are barren, and sometimes not a single tree is visible. The +inhabitants, deprived of wood, are dependent upon cow-dung dried in the sun +for their fuel, and they dig for themselves holes in the ground, where they seek +protection from the cold of winter.</p> + +<p>The core of the Balkan, between the basin of Sofia and that of Slivno, consists of +granite, but the terraces which descend towards the Danube present every geological +formation, from the metamorphic to the most recent rocks. The cretaceous formation +occupies the largest area in Bulgaria, and the rivers rising in the mountains, in +traversing it, form picturesque valleys and defiles. Ancient fortresses defend each +of these valleys, and the towns have been built where they debouch upon the +plain. Tirnova, the ancient capital of the tsars of Bulgaria, is the most remarkable +of these old bulwarks of defence. The Yantra, on debouching there from the +mountains, winds about curiously; steep cliffs form an amphitheatre, in the centre +of which rise two precipitous isolated rocks, crowned formerly by walls and towers. +The houses of the town are built on the slopes, and its suburbs extend along the +foot of the cliffs.</p> + +<p>A singular parallelism has been noticed on the northern slopes of Balkan. The +elevated mountain saddles, crests of secondary chains, geological formations, the +faults which give rise to the meandering of the rivers, and even the Danube itself, +all follow the same direction, from west to east. As a consequence, each of the +parallel valleys descending from the Balkans offers +similar features; the <span class="xxpn" id="p134">{134}</span> +population is distributed in the same manner; and the towns occupy analogous positions. +The valley of the Lom offers the only exception to the rule, for its direction is +towards the north-west. It debouches upon the Danube at Rustchuk, and its +green orchards and gardens are hemmed in by dazzling white cliffs of chalk rising +to a height of about 100 feet.</p> + +<p>The symmetry would be almost complete in Northern Turkey if it were not +for the detached arid hills of the Dobruja, which force the Danube to make a wide +détour to the north. Rising in the low and swampy delta of the Danube, these hills +appear to be much higher than they are. In reality they do not exceed 1,650 feet +in height. It is possible that during some very remote geological epoch the +Danube took its course to the south of these hills, through the depression which +has been utilised for the construction of the first Turkish railway. Trajan, who +feared that the Goths might obtain a footing in this remote corner of the Roman +empire, constructed one of those lines of fortifications here which are known +throughout the countries of the Lower Danube as Trajan’s Walls. Remains of +walls, ditches, and forts may still be traced along the banks of the marshes, and on +the heights commanding them. This country of the Dobruja is the “savage +hyperborean region” where Ovid, exiled from Rome, wept for the splendours +of the capital. The port of Tomi, the place of his banishment, is the modern +Kustenje.</p> + +<p>To the north of the Gulf of Burgas, which is the westernmost extremity of the +Black Sea, rise the fine porphyry mountains which terminate in the superb Cape of +Emineh. They are sometimes described as an eastern prolongation of the Balkan, +but erroneously, for the ancient lacustrine basin of Karnabat, now traversed by a +railway, separates them from the system of the Hæmus. The granitic plateaux and +mountains of Tunja and Stranja, which command the wide plain of Thracia on the +north, are likewise separate mountain ranges. The Southern Balkan is, in reality, +without ramifications or spurs, except in the west, where the mountains of +Ikhtiman and of Samakov, so rich in iron ore and thermal springs, and other +transverse chains, connect it with the mountain mass of the Rhodope. The upper +basin of the Maritza River, enclosed between the Balkan and the Rhodope, has the +shape of an elongated triangle, whose apex, directed towards the plain of Sofia, +indicates the point of junction between the two systems. The whole of this +triangular depression, with its lateral ramifications, was formerly occupied by +lakes, now converted into bottom-lands of marvellous fertility. The passes near +the apex of this triangle are naturally points of the highest strategical and commercial +importance. Through one of them, still marked by ancient fortifications, +and known as Trajan’s Gate, passed the old Roman highway, and there, too, the +railway now in course of construction will cross the summit between the two slopes +of the peninsula. This is the true “gateway of Constantinople,” and from +the most remote times nations have fought for its possession. The numerous +tumuli scattered over the neighbouring plains bear witness to many a bloody +struggle.</p> + +<p>The spurs of the Rhodope intermingle with those of the Balkan, +and the lowest <span class="xxpn" id="p135">{135}</span> +pass which separates the two still exceeds 3,000 feet in elevation. The Rilo Dagh, +the most elevated mountain mass of the Rhodope, boldly rises at its northern +extremity, and, to use the expression of Barth, forms the shoulder-blade of junction. +Its height is 9,580 feet. It rises far beyond the region of forests, and its +jagged summits, pyramids, and platforms contrast strikingly with the rounded +outlines of the Balkan. But the lower heights, surrounded by this imposing +amphitheatre of grand summits, are covered with vegetation. Forests of pines, +larches, and beech-trees, the haunts of bears and chamois, alternate with clumps of +trees and cultivated fields, and the villages in the valleys are surrounded by +meadows, vineyards, and oaks. Picturesque cupolas of numerous monasteries +peep out amongst the verdure: to their existence the mountain owes its Turkish +name of Despoto Dagh, <i>i.e.</i> “mountain of the parsons.” The Rilo Dagh, likewise +famous on account of its monasteries, has altogether the aspect of the Swiss Alps. +The moist winds of the Mediterranean convey to it much snow in winter and +spring, but in summer the clouds discharge only torrents of rain, and the snow +rapidly disappears from the flanks of the mountains. These sudden rain-storms +are amongst the most remarkable spectacles to be witnessed. In the forenoon the +mist which hides the tops of the mountains grows dense by degrees, and heavy +copper-coloured clouds collect on the slopes. About three in the afternoon the +rain begins to pour down, the clouds grow visibly smaller, first one, then another +summit is seen through a rent in the watery vapours, until at last the air has +become purified, and the mountains are lit up in the sunset.</p> + +<p>To the south of the Rilo Dagh rises the mountain mass of Perim, hardly +inferior to it in height. This is the Orbelos of the ancient Greeks, and the rings +to which Noah made fast his ark when the waters subsided after the deluge are +still shown there, and even Mussulman pilgrims pay their devotions at this +venerated spot. It is the last high summit of the Rhodope. The mountains to +the south rapidly decrease in elevation, though the granitic formation to which +they belong is spread over a vast extent of country from the plains of Thracia to +Albania. The extent of the hilly region connected with the Rhodope is still +further increased by numerous groups of extinct volcanoes, which have poured +forth vast sheets of trachytic lava. The rivers which flow from the central plateau +of Turkey into the Ægean Sea have cut for themselves deep passages through these +granites and lavas, the most famous amongst which is the “Iron Gate” of the +Vardar, or Demir Kapu, which formerly figured on our maps of Turkey as a large +town.</p> + +<p>The aspect of the crystalline mountain masses to the west of the Vardar is +altogether of an Alpine character, for the peaks not only attain a high elevation, +but snow remains upon them during the greater portion of the year. The +Gornichova, or Nije, to the north of Thessaly, rises to a height of 6,560 feet; and +the Peristeri, whose triple summit and snow-clad shoulders have been likened to +the spread-out wings of a bird, and which rises close to the city of Bitolia, or +Monastir, is more elevated still. The mountains of ancient Dardania enclose +extensive circular or elliptical plains, and the most +remarkable amongst these, <span class="xxpn" id="p136">{136}</span> +namely, that of Monastir, has been compared by Grisebach, the geologist, to one of +those huge crater lakes which the telescope has revealed to us on the surface +of the moon. In most of these plains we meet with swamps or small lakes, +the only remains of the sheets of water which at one time covered them. +The most extensive of these lakes is that of Ostrovo. The Lake of Kastoria +resembles the filled-up crater of a volcano. In its centre rises a limestone +hill joined to the shore by an isthmus, upon which is built a picturesque Greek +town.</p> + +<p>According to Viquesnel and Hochstetter, traces of glaciers do not exist in +any of these ancient lacustrine basins, or on the flanks of the mountains. It is +certainly remarkable that whilst other European mountains—as, for instance, the +Vosges and the mountains of Auvergne—have passed through a glacial epoch, the +far more elevated Peristeri, Rilo Dagh, and Balkan, under about the same latitude +as the Pyrenees, should never have had their valleys filled by moving rivers +of ice.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn38" id="fnanch38">38</a></p> + +<p>All the large rivers of European Turkey belong to the Bulgarian regions of +the Balkan or Hæmus. In Bosnia there are merely small parallel rivers flowing to +the Save; Albania has only turbulent torrents forcing their way through wild +gorges, like the Drin; but the Maritza, the Strymon or Karasu, the Vardar, and +the Inje Karasu, which descend from the southern flanks of the Balkans, or +originate in the crystalline mountain masses of the Rhodope, are large rivers, +which bear comparison with the tranquil streams of Western Europe. As yet we +know but little about their mode of action. The volume of water discharged by +them has never been measured, and they are hardly made use of for purposes of +navigation or irrigation. They all traverse ancient lake basins, which they have +filled up gradually with alluvium, and converted into fertile plains. This work of +filling up still goes on in the lower portions of these fluvial valleys, where +extensive marshes, and even gradually shrinking lakes, abound. One of these +lakes, the Takhino, through which the Strymon flows before it enters the Ægean +Sea, is said to be the Prasias of Herodotus, and its aquatic villages were no doubt +similar to the pile dwellings discovered in nearly all the lakes of Central +Europe.</p> + +<p>The Danube, to the north of the Dobruja, performs an amount of geological +work, in comparison with which that of the Maritza, the Strymon, and Vardar +sinks into insignificance. That mighty river annually conveys to the Black Sea +a volume of water far in excess of that which is carried down the rivers of all +France, and the solids which it holds in suspension are sufficient to cover an area +of ten square miles to a depth of nine feet. This enormous mass of sand and clay +is annually deposited in the swamps and on the banks of the delta, and the slow +but steady growth of the latter is thus sufficiently explained. +Even the ancients <span class="xxpn" id="p137">{137}</span> +anticipated a time when the Black Sea would be converted into a shallow pond +abounding in sand-banks, and it must, therefore, afford some consolation to our +mariners to be told that six million years must pass before the alluvium carried +down the river will fill the whole of the Black Sea.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg039"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib137xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 39.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">D<b>ELTA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">D<b>ANUBE.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 1,500,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib137.jpg" width="600" height="463" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The large triangular plain which the Danube has conquered from the sea has +not yet fully emerged from the waters. Lakes, and the remains of ancient bays, +half-obliterated branches of the Danube, and the ever-changing beds of rivulets, +have converted this delta into a domain, half land, half sea. More elevated tracts, +consolidated by the attack of the waves, rise here and there above the melancholy +mire and reeds, and bear a dense vegetation of oaks, olives, and beeches. Willows +fringe most of the branches of the river which take their winding course through +the delta. Twenty years ago the Danube had six mouths; it has now only +three.</p> + +<p>After the Crimean war the Western powers determined that the Kilia branch, +which conveys to the Black Sea more than half the volume of the Danube, should +thenceforth form the boundary between Rumania and Turkey. The Sultan thus +possesses not only the whole of the delta, which has an area of about 4,000 square +miles, but also the only mouth of the river which makes the possession of that +territory of any value to him. The mouth of the Kilia is closed by a bar of sand, +which does not even permit small vessels +to enter it. <span class="xxpn" id="p138">{138}</span></p> + +<p>The southern mouth, that of Khidrillis, or St. George, is likewise inaccessible. +The centre branch, that of the Sulina, which has served the purposes of commerce +from time immemorial, can alone be entered by vessels. But even this channel +would not be practicable, in the case of large vessels, if our engineers had +not improved its facilities of access. Formerly the depth of water on the bar +hardly exceeded a fathom during April, June, and July; and even at times of +flood was at most two or three fathoms. But by building convergent jetties, +which guide the waters of the river into the deep sea, the depth of water has +been increased to the extent of ten feet, and vessels drawing twenty feet can +enter. Sulina is now one of the most important commercial ports of Europe, and +a highly prized harbour of refuge on the Black Sea, which is so much dreaded by +mariners on account of its squalls. We are indebted for this great public work +to an international commission, which enjoys almost sovereign rights over the +Danube as high up as Isakcha.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn39" id="fnanch39">39</a></p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg040"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 40.—<span class="smcap">C<b>OMPARATIVE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">D<b>ISCHARGE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>OUTHS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">D<b>ANUBE.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib138.jpg" width="600" height="105" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The Bulgarians inhabit the country to the south of the Danube as far as the +slopes of Mount Pindus, excepting only certain detached territories in the occupation +of Turks, Wallachians, Zinzares, or Greeks. In the Middle Ages their +kingdom was even more extensive, for it included the whole of Albania, and had +Okhrida for its capital.</p> + +<p>The origin of the Bulgarians has been a theme of frequent discussion. The +Bulgarians of the Byzantines, who laid waste the plains of Thracia about the +close of the fifth century, and whose name became a term of opprobrium, probably +were a Ugrian race, like the Huns, and spoke a language akin to that of the +Samoyeds. The name of these savage conquerors is sometimes derived from the +Volga, on the banks of which they formerly dwelt; but their manners and +appearance have undergone a singular change, and nothing now indicates their +origin. Originally Turanians, they have been converted into Slavs, like their +neighbours the Servians and Russians.</p> + +<div class="dctr03" id="plt07"> +<img src="images/ib138a.jpg" width="556" height="800" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">BULGARIANS.</div> +<div class="dcaptionsml"><table summary=""> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Christian from Viddin.</td> + <td class="tdleft">Christian Ladies from Skodra.</td> + <td class="tdleft">Mohammedans from Viddin.</td> + <td class="tdleft">A native of Koyutepe.</td></tr> +</table></div></div><!--dctr--> + +<p>This rapid conversion of the Bulgarians into Slavs is one of the most remarkable +ethnological phenomena of the Middle Ages. Even in the ninth century the +Bulgarians had adopted the Servian language, and soon afterwards they ceased +to speak their own. Their idiom is less polished than that of the Servians, and, +possessing no literature, has not become fixed. The purest Bulgarian, it is said, +may be heard in the district of Kalofer, to the south of the Balkan. The gradual +transformation of the Bulgarians into Slavs is +ascribed by some authors to the <span class="xxpn" id="p139">{139}</span> +prodigious facility for imitation possessed by that people; but it is simpler to +assume that, in course of time, the conquering Bulgarians and the conquered +Servians became amalgamated, and that, whilst the former gave a name to the +new nation, the latter contributed their language, their manners, and physical +features. Thus much is certain, that the inhabitants of Bulgaria must now be +looked upon as members of the Slavonian family of nations. Together with the +Servians, Croats, and Herzegovinians, they are the most numerous people of +European Turkey; and, if the succession to the dominion of the Turks is to be +decided by numbers alone, it belongs to the Servo-Bulgarians, and not to the +Greeks.</p> + +<p>The Bulgarians, as a rule, are not so tall as their neighbours the Servians; +they are squat, strongly built, with a large head on broad shoulders. Lejean, +himself a Breton, and others, consider that they bear a striking resemblance to +the peasants of Brittany. In several districts, and notably in the environs of +Philippopoli, they shave the head, a tuft of hair alone excepted, which they +cultivate and dress into a tail as carefully as the Chinese. Greeks and Wallachians +ridicule them, and many proverbial expressions refer to their want of intelligence +and polish. This ridicule, however, they hardly deserve. Less vivacious than +the Wallachian, or less supple than the Greek, the Bulgarian is certainly not +deficient in intelligence. But bondage has borne heavily upon him; and in the +south, where he is oppressed by the Turk and fleeced by the Greek, he looks +unhappy and sad; but in the plains of the north and the secluded mountain +villages, where he has been exposed to less suffering, he is jovial, fond of +pleasure, fluent of speech, and quick at repartee. The inhabitants of the northern +slopes of the Balkan, perhaps owing to a greater infusion of Servian blood, are +better-looking, too, than other Bulgarians, and dress in better taste. A still +finer race of men are the Pomakis, in the high valleys of the Rhodope, to the +south of Philippopoli. Their speech is Bulgarian, but in no other respect do +they resemble their compatriots. They are a fine race of men, with auburn +hair, full of energy, and of a poetical temperament. We almost feel tempted +to look upon them as the lineal descendants of the ancient Thracians, especially +if it should turn out to be true that in their songs they celebrate Orpheus, the +divine musician.</p> + +<p>The Bulgarians, and especially those of the plains, are a peaceable people, +recalling in no respect the fierce hordes who devastated the Byzantine empire. +They are not warlike, like their neighbours the Servians, and do not keep alive +in their national poetry the memory of former struggles. Their songs relate to +the events of every-day life, or to the sufferings of the oppressed; and the “gentle +<i>zaptieh</i>,” as the representative of authority, is one of the characters most +frequently represented in them. The average Bulgarian is a quiet, hard-working +peasant, a good husband and father; he is fond of home comforts, and practises +every domestic virtue. Nearly all the agricultural produce exported from Turkey +results from the labour of Bulgarian husbandmen. It is they who have converted +certain portions of the plain to the south of the Danube into +huge fields of <span class="xxpn" id="p140">{140}</span> +maize and corn, rivalling those of Rumania. It is they, likewise, who, at +Eski-Za’ara, at the south of the Balkan, produce the best silk and the best +wheat in all Turkey, from which latter alone the bread and cakes placed upon the +Sultan’s table are prepared. Other Bulgarians have converted the noble plain +of Kezanlik, at the foot of the Balkan, into the finest agricultural district of +Turkey, the town itself being surrounded by magnificent walnut-trees and by +rosaries, which furnish the famous attar of roses, constituting so important an +article of commerce throughout the East. Amongst the Bulgarians between +Pirot and Turnov (Tirnova), on the northern slope of the Balkan, there exist +flourishing manufactures. Each village there is noted for a particular branch of +industry. Knives are made at one, metal ornaments at another, earthenware at +a third, stuffs or carpets elsewhere; and even common workmen exhibit much +manual dexterity and purity of taste. An equally remarkable spirit of enterprise +is manifested amongst the Bulgarians and Zinzares of the district of Bitolia, or +Monastir. The town itself, as well as Kurshova, Florina, and others in its +vicinity, are manufacturing centres.</p> + +<p>The Bulgarians, peaceable, patient, and industrious as they are, are beginning +to grow tired of the subjection in which they are held. They certainly do not as +yet dream of a national rising, for the isolated revolts which have taken place +amongst them were confined to a few mountaineers, or brought about by young +men whom a residence in Servia or Rumania had imbued with an enthusiasm +for liberty. But though docile subjects still, the Bulgarians begin to raise +their heads. They have learnt to look upon each other as members of the same +nation, and are organizing themselves for the defence of their nationality. The +first step in this direction was taken on a question of religion. When the Turks +conquered the country a certain number amongst them turned Mohammedan to +escape oppression; but though they visit the mosques, they nevertheless still +cling to the faith of their forefathers, venerate the same springs, and put their +trust in the same talismans. A few joined the Roman Church, but a great +majority remained Greek Catholics. Greek monks and priests, not long since, +enjoyed the greatest influence, for during centuries of oppression they had +upheld the ancient faith. Their presence vaguely recalled the times of independence, +and their churches were the only sanctuaries open to the persecuted +peasant. But the Bulgarians, in the end, grew discontented with a priesthood +who did not even take the trouble to acquire the language of its congregations, and +openly sought to subject them to an alien nation like the Greeks. Nothing +was further from their thoughts than a religious schism. They merely desired +to withdraw from the authority of the Patriarch of Constantinople, and to found +a National Church of their own, as had been done by the Servians, and even by +the Greeks of the new Hellenic kingdom. The Vatican of Constantinople +protested, the Turkish Government proved anything but favourable to this +movement of emancipation, but in the end the Greek priests were forced to +retire—precipitately in some instances—and the new National Church was +established. <span class="xxpn" id="p141">{141}</span></p> + +<p>This pacific revolution, though directed against the Greeks, cannot fail to +influence the relations between Bulgarians and Turks. The former have +combined, for the first time since many centuries, for the accomplishment of a +common national object, and this reawakening of a feeling of nationality cannot +but prove detrimental to the rule of the Osmanli. The latter are not very +numerous in the country districts of Western Bulgaria, where they are met +with chiefly in the towns, and particularly in those which are of strategical +importance. Eastern Bulgaria, however, is for the most part peopled by Turks, +or at all events by Bulgarians who have adopted the language, dress, manners, +and modes of thought of their conquerors. No Christian monastery exists in this +stronghold of Turkish power, though there are several Mohammedan places of +pilgrimage held in high repute for their sanctity.</p> + +<p>The Greeks, next to the Turks, are the most important element of the +population of Bulgaria. They are not very numerous to the north of the Balkan, +where their influence hardly exceeds that of the Germans and Armenians established +in the towns. To the south of the Balkan, though not numerous relatively, +they are much more widely distributed. One or two Greeks are met with in +every village, carrying on trade or exercising some handicraft. They make +themselves indispensable to the locality, their advice is sought for by all, and they +impart their own spirit to the whole of the population. Where two or three of +these Greeks meet they at once constitute themselves into a sort of community, +and throughout the country they form a kind of masonic brotherhood. Their +influence is thus far greater than could be expected from their numbers. There +are a few important Greek colonies amongst the Bulgarians, as at Philippopoli and +Bazarjik, and in a valley of the Rhodope they occupy the populous town of +Stanimako, to the exclusion of Turks and Bulgarians. The ruins of ancient +buildings, as well as the dialect of the inhabitants, which contains over two +hundred Greek words not known to modern Greek, prove that Stanimako has +existed as a Greek town for upwards of twenty centuries, and M. Dumont thinks +that it is one of the old colonies of Eubœa.</p> + +<p>The initiatory part played by the Greeks in Southern Bulgaria is played +in the north by the Rumanians. The right bank of the Danube, from Chernavoda +to the Black Sea, is for the most part inhabited by Wallachians, who +are gradually gaining upon the Turks. Other colonists are attracted by +the fertility of the plains at the northern foot of the Balkan. The Bulgarians +are careful cultivators of the soil themselves, but the Rumanians nevertheless +gain a footing amongst them, as they do with the Servians, the +Magyars, and the Germans. They are more active and intelligent than the +Bulgarians, their families are more numerous, and in the course of a generation +they generally succeed in “Rumanising” a village in which they have +settled.</p> + +<p>Bulgarians and Turks, Greeks and Wallachians, isolated colonies of Servians +and Albanians, communities of Armenians and of Spanish Jews, colonies of +Zinzares and wandering tribes of Mohammedan Tsigani, +have converted the <span class="xxpn" id="p142">{142}</span> +countries of the Balkan into a veritable ethnological chaos; but the confusion is +greater still in the small district of Dobruja, between the Lower Danube and the +Black Sea. In addition to the races enumerated, we there meet with Nogai +Tartars, who are of purer blood than their kinsmen the Osmanli, and exhibit the +Asiatic type in greater purity. Although they cultivate the soil, they have not +altogether abandoned their nomad habits, for they wander with their herds over +hill and dale. They are governed by an hereditary khan, as at the time when they +dwelt in tents.</p> + +<p>After the Crimean war several thousand Nogai Tartars, compromised by the +aid which they had rendered the Allies, joined their compatriots in the Dobruja. +On the other hand, about 10,000 Bulgarians, terrified at the approach of +these much-maligned immigrants, fled the Dobruja, and sought an asylum in +Russia, where they were assigned the lands abandoned by the Crimean Tartars. +This exchange proved disastrous to both nations, for sickness and grief carried off +many victims. More deplorable still was the lot of the Circassians and other +Caucasian tribes, who, to the number of 400,000, sought a refuge in Turkey in +1864. It was by no means easy to provide accommodation for so large a host. +The pasha intrusted with the installation of these immigrants sent many of them +to Western Bulgaria, in the vain hope that they would cut off all contact +between Servians and Bulgarians. The rayas were compelled to surrender to +them their best lands, to build houses for them, and to supply them with cattle +and seed-corn. This hospitable reception, compulsory though it was, would have +enabled these immigrants to start in their adopted country with a fair chance of +success, had they but deigned to work. This, however, they declined. Hunger, +sickness, and a climate very different from that of their mountains, caused them +to perish in thousands, and in less than a year about one-third of these refugees +had perished. Young girls and children were sold to procure bread, and this +infamous traffic became a source of wealth to certain pashas. The harems +became filled with young Circassians, who were a drug in the market at that +time, and the human merchandise not saleable at Constantinople was exported +to Syria and Egypt. These Circassians, after thus suffering from sickness and +their own improvident laziness, have now accommodated themselves to the +conditions of their new homes. Though of the same religion as the Osmanli, they +readily assimilate with the Bulgarians amongst whom they dwell, and adopt their +language.</p> + +<p>Other refugees, more kindly treated by fate, have found an asylum in the +Dobruja. They are Russian Cossacks, Ruthenians, and Muscovites of the “Old +Faith,” who left their steppes towards the close of last century in order to escape +persecution. The Padisha, more tolerant than the Christian Empress of Russia, +generously received them, and granted them land in various parts of his +dominions. The Russian colonies in the Dobruja and in the delta of the Danube +have prospered, and one of their settlements on the St. George’s branch of the +river is known as the “Cossacks’ Paradise.” Most of these Russians are +engaged in the sturgeon fishery and the preparation of +caviare. They have <span class="xxpn" id="p143">{143}</span> +proved grateful for the hospitality extended to them, and have always fought +valiantly in defence of their adopted country. They retain their national +dress, their language, and their religion, and do not mix with the surrounding +populations.</p> + +<p>In addition to the above, we meet in the Dobruja with colonies of Germans, +Arabs, and Poles, and, in the new port of the Sulina, with representatives of +many nations of Europe and Asia.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>There are few countries where the great international high-roads are as plainly +traced by nature as in Bulgaria. The first of these roads is formed by the +Danube. The Turkish towns along its banks—Viddin, Shishtova, Rustchuk, and +Silistria—are taking an increasing share in European commerce. This highway +is continued along the shores of the Black Sea, where there are several commercial +harbours, the most important being Burgas, a great grain port. This natural +highway, however, has become too circuitous for purposes of commerce. A railway +has therefore been built across the isthmus of the Dobruja, from Chernavoda to +Kustenje, and a second line connects Rustchuk, on the Danube, with Varna, on the +Black Sea, the latter line crossing the whole of Eastern Bulgaria, and touching +the towns of Razgrad and Shumna. A third line, now in course of construction, +will cross the Balkans by a depression to the south of Shumna, and traversing the +plain in which the towns of Yamboly and Adrianople are built, will connect the +Lower Danube with the Ægean Sea. A third route, still farther to the west, +passes Turnov, or Tirnova—the ancient capital of the tsars of Bulgaria—Kezanlik, +and Eski-Za’ara.</p> + +<p>These railways, already opened for traffic or approaching completion, certainly +shorten the journey between Western Europe and Constantinople; but it is +proposed now to avoid the circuitous navigation of the Lower Danube altogether, +by joining the railway system of Europe to that of Turkey. One of these proposed +railways will pass through Bosnia, and down the valley of the Vardar to +Saloniki; another will follow the ancient Roman road, which connected Pannonia +with Byzantium, and which was paved in the sixteenth century as far as Belgrad. +The principal cities along this great highway are Nish, on a tributary of the +Morava, close to the frontier of Servia; Sofia, the ancient Sardica, on the Isker, +a tributary of the Danube; Bazarjik, or “the market;” and the fine town of +Philippopoli, with its triple mountain commanding the passage of the Maritza. +These towns, on the completion of the railway, cannot fail to become of great commercial +importance. A hideous monument near Nish will, perhaps, be pointed out +to tourists attracted thither on the opening of the railway. It was erected to remind +future generations of a deed of “glory.” This trophy of Kele-kalesi consists of a +tower built of the skulls of Servians, who, rather than fall alive into the hands of +their enemies, blew themselves up together with the redoubt which they defended. +A governor of Nish, more humane than his predecessors, desired to remove this +abominable piece of masonry, which no raya passes without a shudder, but +Mussulman fanaticism forbade it. <span class="xxpn" id="p144">{144}</span></p> + +<p>The influence of commerce cannot fail to modify largely the manners and +customs of a nation as supple and pliable as are the Bulgarians. War has +brutalised the Albanians, and slavery degraded the Bulgarians. In the towns, +more particularly, they have sunk very low. The insults heaped upon them by +Mussulmans, and the contemptuous manner in which they were treated, rendered +them abject and despicable in their own eyes. Demoralised by servitude and +misery, given up to the mercy of their rich compatriots, the <i>chorbajis</i>, or “givers +of soup,” they became shameless and low-minded helots. The Bulgarian women, +in the towns more particularly, presented a spectacle of the most shameful +corruption, and their want of modesty, their coarseness, and ignorance fully +justified the contempt in which they were held by their Mohammedan sisters. +Even as regards education the Turks were in advance of them: not long ago their +schools relatively were more numerous, and the instruction given in them was of a +superior order. Christian villages, moreover, were never so clean or pleasant as +those of the Turks.</p> + +<p>But, whatever may have been the case in the past, things have already begun +to mend. The Turks, as a body, may still be the superiors of the Bulgarians, as +regards probity and a respect for truth, but they work less, and become +impoverished by degrees. In the country the land gradually passes into the +hands of the rayas, in the towns the latter monopolize nearly all the trade. The +Bulgarians, moreover, have learnt to appreciate the importance of education; +they have founded schools and colleges, have set up printing presses, and send +their young men to be educated at the universities of Europe. The young +Bulgarians in the mixed colleges of Constantinople invariably make the most +satisfactory progress in their studies. This revival of learning is a most hopeful +sign of vitality. If persevered in, the Bulgarian race, which has been dead, as it +were, for so many centuries, may again play its part in the world’s history. The +atrocities of which Bulgaria has recently been the scene may retard this regeneration, +but they certainly cannot stop it.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn40" id="fnanch40">40</a> +<span class="xxpn" id="p145">{145}</span></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="VII.—Present Position and Prospects of Turkey.">VII.—<span + class="smcap">P<b>RESENT</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>OSITION</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ROSPECTS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>URKEY.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">The +prophecies respecting the “sick man” have not yet been fulfilled, and his +heritage divided amongst the surrounding powers. To a great extent he is +indebted for this continued existence to the jealousies of the European powers, and +to the fact of Russia having her hands full in Central Asia. Still, Turkey has +recently exhibited a wonderful amount of vitality. Fresh provinces have been +incorporated with the empire in Arabia, at a distance of 1,800 miles from the +capital; and a rebellion in the north-western portion of European Turkey, originating +in the misgovernment of the country, but aided and abetted by Russia, has +been suppressed with a strong hand. The Turkish empire remains not only +intact, but will actually be found to have considerably increased in extent, if we +include within it the territories of the Khedive of Egypt, whose arms have been +carried to the Upper Nile and into Dar Fur.</p> + +<p>We must guard ourselves, at the same time, against the assumption that +Turkey has entered upon a path of normal progress. On the contrary, Turkey is +a mediæval country still, and will have to pass through many intestine revolutions +before it can rank with the civilised states of Europe or America. The country is +in the occupation of hostile races, who would fall upon each other were they not +restrained by force. The Servian would take up arms against the Albanian, the +Bulgarian against the Greek, and all the subject races would combine against the +Turk. National jealousies are augmented by religious animosities. The Catholic +Bosnians hate other Slavs, and the Tosks detest the Gheges, although they speak +the same language. The Osmanli oppress these various populations without compunction, +their art of government consisting in playing them off against each +other.</p> + +<p>Nor can better things be expected in an empire in which caprice reigns +supreme. The Padishah is lord of the souls and bodies of his subjects; he is +commander-in-chief of the army, supreme judge, and sovereign pontiff. In former +times his power was practically limited by semi-independent feudatories, but since +the fall of Ali Pasha and the massacre of the janissaries he is restrained only by +customs, traditions, and the demands of the Governments of Europe. He is the +most despotic sovereign of Europe, and his civil list the heaviest in proportion to +the revenues of the country. The household of the late Sultan and of the +members of his family was exceedingly numerous. There lived in the Seraglio +an army of 6,000 servants and slaves of both sexes, of whom 600 were cooks. +These servants, in turn, were surrounded by an army of hangers-on, who were fed +from the imperial kitchens, to which no less than 1,200 sheep were supplied daily +by the contractors.</p> + +<p>Current expenses were sufficiently heavy, but more considerable still was the +extraordinary expenditure incurred in the construction of palaces and kiosks, the +purchase of articles <i>de luxe</i> and of curiosities, and for all kinds of prodigalities. +The present Sultan, driven thereto by the precarious position of his empire, has +limited his expenditure. But +will this last? <span class="xxpn" id="p146">{146}</span></p> + +<p>Ministers, valis, and other high officials of the empire faithfully follow in the +footsteps of their sovereign, and their expenditure always exceeds their salary, +though the latter is fixed on a most liberal scale. As to the lower officials, their +salaries are small and irregularly paid; but it is understood that they may recoup +themselves at the expense of the ratepayers. Everything can be purchased in +Turkey, and, above all, justice. The state of the finances is most lamentable; +loans are raised at usurious interest; and so badly is the country governed that it +has been seriously proposed to intrust the management of its finances to a syndicate +of the European powers ! <a class="afnanch" href="#fn41" id="fnanch41">41</a></p> + +<p>Agriculture and industry progress but slowly under such misgovernment. +Vast tracts of the most fertile land are allowed to lie fallow; they appear to be +no one’s property, and any one may settle upon and cultivate them. But woe to +him if he conducts his operations with profit to himself; for no sooner is he +observed to become wealthy than his land is laid claim to on behalf of the clergy +or of some pasha, and he may consider himself lucky if he escapes a bastinado. +The peasants, in many districts, are careful not to produce more than they absolutely +require to live upon, for an abundant harvest would impoverish them—would +merely lead to a permanent increase of taxation. The tradesmen in the smaller +towns are equally careful to conceal their wealth, if they possess any.</p> + +<p>Many Mussulman families have ceded to the mosques their proprietary rights. +They thus enjoy merely the usufruct of their lands, but are freed, on the other +hand, from the payment of taxes, and the land remains in the possession of their +families until they become extinct. These lands are known as <i>vakufs</i>, and they +form about one-third of the area of the whole empire. They contribute actually +nothing towards the revenues of the State. In the end they aggrandise the vast +estates of the Mohammedan clergy. Taxation weighs almost exclusively upon the +lands cultivated by the unfortunate Christians; and in proportion as the vakufs +increase, so does the produce of taxation diminish. This must in the end necessarily +lead to a secularisation of the estates of the clergy; and even now, to the +great horror of the old Turks, the Ottoman Government is timidly extending its +hands towards the estates belonging to the mosques of Constantinople.</p> + +<div class="dctr03" id="plt08"> +<img src="images/ib146b.jpg" width="562" height="800" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">MUSSULMAN OF ADRIANOPLE, AND MUSSULMAN +LADY OF PRISREND.</div> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The Servian, Albanian, and Bulgarian peasants actually cultivate their land +in spite of their masters. A single fact will show this. Certain collectors of +tithes, in order to prevent fraud, insist upon the peasants leaving the whole of the +harvest upon the fields until they have withdrawn their tenth part. Maize, rice, +and corn are exposed there to the inclemencies of the weather and other destructive +agencies; and it frequently happens that the harvest has deteriorated to the +extent of one-half in value before the Government impost is levied. Sometimes +the peasants allow their grapes or fruit to rot rather than pay the tithes. But it +is not the tax-gatherer alone of whose conduct the peasant may complain; for he +is exposed likewise to exactions by the middlemen with whom he comes into +contact when selling his produce. “The Bulgarian works, but the Greek holds +the plough.” So says an ancient proverb; and this is still +true at least of the <span class="xxpn" id="p147">{147}</span> +countries to the south of the Balkan, where the Bulgarian peasant is not always +the proprietor of the land he tills. But where he does not directly work for a +Greek or Mussulman proprietor, his harvest, even before it is cut, is frequently +the property of a usurer; but he works on from day to day, a wretched slave, in +the vain hope of becoming one day a free man.</p> + +<p>The fertility of the soil on both slopes of the Balkans, in Macedonia, and in +Thessaly is, however, such that in spite of mosques and tax-collectors, in spite of +usurers and thieves, agriculture supplies commerce with a large quantity of +produce. Maize, or “Turkish corn,” and all cereals are grown in abundance. +The valleys of the Karasu and Vardar produce cotton, tobacco, and dye stuffs; +the coast districts and islands yield wine and oil, whose quality would leave nought +to be desired, were a little more care bestowed upon their cultivation; and forests +of mulberry-trees are met with in certain parts of Thracia and Rumelia, and the +export of cocoons to Italy and France is increasing from year to year. Turkey, +with its fertile soil, is sure to take a prominent part amongst the European states +for the variety and superiority of its products. As to its manufactures, they will +no doubt be gradually displaced on the opening of new roads of commerce. The +manufacturers of arms, stuffs, carpets, and jewellery in the cities of the interior +will suffer considerably from foreign competition, and many amongst them will +succumb to it, unless they pass into the hands of foreigners. The great fairs, +too, which are now held annually at Slivno and other places, and at which +merchants from the whole of the empire meet to transact business—as many as a +hundred thousand strangers being attracted occasionally to a single spot—will +gradually give place to a regular commercial intercourse.</p> + +<p>It is certain that the commerce of Turkey has increased of late years, thanks +to the efforts of Greeks, Armenians, and Franks of all nations. The annual +value of the exports and imports of the whole of the Ottoman empire in Europe +and Asia is estimated at £40,000,000—a very small sum, if we bear in mind the +resources of these countries, their many excellent harbours, and their favourable +geographical position.</p> + +<p>The Turks themselves perform but a very small share of the work that is done +in their empire. Various causes combine to render them less active than the other +races. They are the governing class, and their ambition naturally aspires to the +honours and the luxury of <i>kief</i>; that is to say, of sweet idleness. Despising everything +not Mohammedan, and being, besides, heedless and of a sluggish mind, they +but rarely learn foreign languages, and are thus in a certain measure at the mercy +of the other races, most of whom speak two or more idioms. Moreover, the +fatalism taught in the Koran has deprived the Turk of all enterprise, and once +thrown out of his ordinary routine, he is helpless. Polygamy and slavery are +likewise two causes of demoralisation. It is true that the rich alone can permit +themselves the luxury of a harem, but the poor learn from their superiors to +despise women, they become debased, and take a share in that traffic in human +flesh which is a necessary sequence of polygamy. Yet, in spite of the innumerable +slaves imported in the course of four centuries from all the +regions bordering upon <span class="xxpn" id="p148">{148}</span> +the Turkish empire; in spite of the millions of Circassian, Greek, and other girls +transplanted into the harems, the Osmanli are numerically inferior to the other races +of the peninsula. This dominant race—if the term race be applicable to the product +of so many crossings—hardly numbers ten per cent. of the population of European +Turkey. And this numerical inferiority is on the increase, for, owing to polygamy, +the number of children surviving in Mohammedan families is less than in Christian +families. We are not in possession of precise figures, but there can be no doubt that +the Turks are on the decrease. The conscription, to which they alone are subject, +has contributed towards this result, and becomes more difficult from year to year.</p> + +<p>It has often been repeated since Chateaubriand that the Turks have but camped +in Europe, and expect to return to the steppes whence they came. It would thus +be a feeling of presentiment which induces the Turks of Stambul to seek burial in +the cemetery of Scutari, hoping thus to save their bones from the profanation of +the Giaour’s tread on his return, as master, to Constantinople. In many places the +living follow the examples of the dead, and a feeble current of emigration sets from +the Archipelago and the coast districts of Thracia in the direction of Asia, carrying +along many an old Turk discontented with the stir of European life. This +migration, however, is but of very small importance, and does not affect the +Osmanli of the interior. Nothing is further from the minds of the Turks of +Bulgaria, the Yuruks of Macedonia, or the Koniarides, who have inhabited the mountains +of Rumelia since the eleventh century, than to quit the land which has become +their second home. The Turkish element in the Balkan peninsula can be got rid of +only by exterminating it; that is, by treating the Turks more ferociously than they +treated the native populations at the time of the conquest. We ought not to forget, +at the same time, that the Turks, though far inferior in numbers to the other +races, are nevertheless able to reckon upon the support of millions of Mohammedan +Albanians, Bosnians, Bulgarians, Circassians, and Nogai Tartars. The Mussulmans +constitute more than a third of the population of European Turkey, and, in spite +of differences of race, they hold firmly together. Nor must it be forgotten that +they are backed up by a hundred and fifty millions of co-religionists in other parts +of the world.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn42" id="fnanch42">42</a></p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="map4"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib148bxxlg.jpg" + title="display larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + ETHNOGRAPHICAL MAP OF TURKEY in EUROPE</div> +<img src="images/ib148b.jpg" width="600" height="484" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div><span class="xxpn" id="p149">{149}</span></div> + +<p>Let us hope that the future may not give birth to a struggle of extermination +between the races of the peninsula, but rather to institutions enabling these diverse +and partially hostile elements to develop themselves in peace and liberty. The +Turks themselves begin to see the necessity of such institutions, and, in theory at +least, have abandoned their policy of violence and oppression. All the nationalities +of the empire, without reference to race or religion, are supposed to be +equal before the law, and Christians are admitted to Government offices on the same +terms as Mussulmans. No doubt these fine laws have for the most part hitherto +remained a dead letter, but it would nevertheless be unjust if we denied that much +progress towards an equalisation of the various races has been made.</p> + +<p>Fortunately the despotism of the Turks is not the despotism of learning, based +upon a knowledge of human nature, and directed to its debasement. The Osmanli +ignore the art of “oppressing wisely,” which the Dutch governors of the Sunda +Islands were required to practise in former times, and which is not quite unknown +in other countries. The pashas allow things to take their course as long as they +are able to enrich themselves and their favourites, to sell justice and their favours +at a fair price, and to bastinade now and then some unlucky wight. They do not +inquire into the private concerns of their subjects, and do not call for confidential +reports on families and individuals. Their Government, no doubt, is frequently +violent and oppressive; but all this only touches externals. Such a government +may not be favourable to the development of public spirit, but it does not interfere +with individuals, and powerful national institutions, such as the Greek commune, +the Mirdit tribe, and the Slav community, have been able to survive under it. Self-government +is, in fact, more widely practised in Turkey than in the most advanced +countries of Western Europe. It would have been difficult to force these various +national elements under a uniform discipline, and the lazy Turkish functionaries +generally leave things alone. The Frankish officials in the pay of the Turkish +Government, in fact, more frequently interfere with the prejudices and privileges +of the governed than do the Mussulman pashas of the old school.</p> + +<p>It cannot be doubted for a moment that, in a time not very far distant, the +non-Mohammedan races of Turkey will take the lead in politics, as they do already in +commerce, industry, and education. The Osmanli of the olden school, who still +wear the green turban of their ancestors, look forward towards this inevitable +result with despair. They struggle against every measure calculated to accelerate +the emancipation of the despised raya, and European inventions, in their eyes, are +working a great social transformation to their injury; and, indeed, it is the raya +who profits most from roads, railways, harbours, agricultural and other machines. +Bosnians, Bulgarians, and Servians have learnt to look upon each other as +brothers; Albanians and Rumanians are drawn towards the Greeks; all alike +feel themselves as Europeans; and thus the way is being paved for the Danubian +Confederation of the future.</p> + +<p>The approaching completion of the railway from Vienna to Constantinople +cannot fail to work a commercial revolution as far as the trade of a considerable +portion of Eastern Europe is concerned. It will form a link in +the direct line <span class="xxpn" id="p150">{150}</span> +between England and India, and to travellers and merchandise will afford the +shortest route from the centre of Europe to the Bosporus. On its opening, Constantinople +will be enabled to avail itself to the fullest extent of the highways of +commerce which converge upon it. Still greater must be the political consequences +of opening this line, for it will bring the populations of the Balkan peninsula +into more direct and active contact with those of Austro-Hungary and the +rest of Europe.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg041"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib150xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 41.—<span class="smcap">C<b>OMMERCIAL</b></span> + <span class="smcap">H<b>IGHWAYS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">CONVERGING</span> + <span class="smmaj">UPON</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>ONSTANTINOPLE.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 17,100,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib150.jpg" width="600" height="552" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="VIII.—Government and Administration.">VIII.—<span + class="smcap">G<b>OVERNMENT</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>DMINISTRATION.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">The +Turkish empire occupies a vast area, the greater portion of which is governed +by vassals, almost independent of the Sultan at Stambul. The vast territories of +Egypt and Tunis are in that position. The interior of Arabia is in possession of +the Wahabites; the coast of Hadramaut is inhabited partly by tribes acknowledging +the suzerainty of England; and even between Syria and +the Euphrates there <span class="xxpn" id="p151">{151}</span> +are numerous districts only nominally under the government of Turkish pashas, +but in reality in the possession of predatory Bedwins. The Ottoman empire, +properly so called, includes the European provinces, Asia Minor, Syria, Palestine, +the basins of Tigris and Euphrates, Hejaz and Yemen in Arabia, and Tripoli, with +Fezzan, in Africa. These territories, with their dependent islands, cover an area +of no less than 210,156 square miles; but their population, being far less dense +than that of Western Europe, hardly numbers 47,000,000 souls.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg042"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib151xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 42.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>URKISH</b></span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>MPIRE.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 55,000,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib151.jpg" width="600" height="653" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The area of Turkey in Europe, exclusive of Rumania, Servia, and Montenegro, +is about equal to that of the British Islands. Constantinople, with the surrounding +country, forms a district under the immediate supervision of the Ministry of +Police. The remainder of the country is divided into eight <i>vilayets</i>, or provinces; +the vilayets are subdivided into <i>mutesarifliks</i>, or <i>sanjaks</i>; these latter into <i>kazas</i>, or +cantons; and the kazas into <i>rahiés</i>, or parishes. Lemnos, Imbros, Samothrace, and +Astypalæa, with Rhodes and the islands along the coast of +Anatolia, form a <span class="xxpn" id="p152">{152}</span> +separate vilayet. These political divisions, however, are subject to frequent +changes.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn43" id="fnanch43">43</a></p> + +<p>The Sultan, or <i>Padishah</i>, concentrates all powers within his person. He is <i>Emir +el mumenin</i>, or head of the faithful, and his conduct is guided solely by the prescriptions +of the Koran and the traditions of his ancestors. The two most influential +persons in the empire, next to him, are the <i>Sheik-el-Islam</i>, or Great Mufti, who +superintends public worship and the administration of justice, and the <i>Sadrazam</i>, +or Grand Vizier, who is at the head of the general administration, and is assisted +by a council of ten ministers, or <i>mushirs</i>. The <i>Kislar Agasi</i>, or chief of the black +eunuchs, to whom is confided the management of the imperial harem, is likewise +one of the great dignitaries of the empire, and frequently enjoys the very highest +influence. The legal advisers of the various ministries are known as <i>mufti</i>. +<i>Efendi</i>, <i>bey</i>, and <i>aga</i> are honorary titles bestowed upon certain Government +officials and persons of consideration. The title of <i>pasha</i>, which signifies “grand +chief,” is given to certain high civil or military functionaries. This title is +symbolized by one, two, or three horse-tails attached to the top of a lance, a +usage recalling the time when the nomad Turks roamed over the steppes of +Central Asia.</p> + +<p>The work of the various ministries is done by councils, and there thus exist +a council of state, or <i>shuraï devlet</i>, councils of accounts, of war, of the navy, of +public education, of police, &c. These various councils, in their totality, constitute +the <i>divan</i>, or government chancery. There is also a supreme court of +justice, with sections for civil and criminal cases. The members of these various +official bodies are appointed by Government. Each of the subject “nations” +is represented on the Council of State by two members, carefully selected by the +<i>Sadrazam</i>.</p> + +<p>The vilayet is governed by a <i>vali</i>, the sanjak by a +<i>mutesarif</i>, the kaza by a <span class="xxpn" id="p153">{153}</span> +<i>kaimakan</i>, the parish by a <i>mudir</i>. Each of these is supposed to act by advice of +a council composed of the leading religious and civilian functionaries, Mohammedan +and non-Mohammedan. In reality, however, the vali appoints all these +councils, and they are popularly known as the “Councils of the Ayes.”</p> + +<p>The rules laid down by the supreme Government for its own guidance are +embodied in the <i>hatti-sherif</i> of Gulhane, promulgated in 1839, and in the <i>hatti-humayum</i> +of 1856. These hatts promise equal rights to all the inhabitants of the +empire, but have been carried out hitherto only very partially. A “constitution” +was promulgated in December, 1876, on the assembling of the European Conference +at Constantinople. It provides representative institutions, local self-government, +and various improvements, but is likely to remain a dead letter.</p> + +<p>The religious and judicial organization of the country is jealously watched +over by the Sheik-el-Islam and the priests, and cannot possibly be changed. The +<i>imans</i> are specially charged with the conduct of public worship. They include +<i>sheiks</i>, or preachers; <i>khatibs</i>, who recite the official prayers; and the <i>imans</i> properly +so called, who celebrate marriages and conduct interments. Judges and imans +form a body known as <i>ulemas</i>, at whose head is placed a <i>kazi-asker</i>, or chief judge, +and who are divided hierarchically into <i>mollahs</i>, <i>kazis</i> (kadis), and <i>naibs</i>.</p> + +<p>The Greek Patriarch of Constantinople, as head of the Church in Turkey and +civil director of the Greek communities, wields a considerable influence. He is +elected by a synod of eighteen members, which administers the religious budget, +and whose decisions in matters of faith are final. The heads of the Latin rite +are a patriarch at Constantinople and the two Archbishops of Antivari and +Durazzo. The two Armenian Churches have each a patriarch at Constantinople.</p> + +<div class="section"> +<h4 title="Treaties of San Stefano and Berlin."><span + class="smcap">T<b>REATIES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>AN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>TEFANO</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>ERLIN.</b></span></h4></div> + +<p class="pfirst">It will be noticed that the preceding description of Turkey in Europe, and the +succeeding accounts of Rumania, Servia, and Montenegro, present the conditions +existing immediately prior to the late war with Russia, in which the Turks were +completely overpowered in a few months. The Congress of European powers +sitting at Berlin in the summer of 1878, to consider the preliminary treaty of San +Stefano (March 2) between Russia and Turkey, materially modified its provisions +in the joint treaty signed July 13, disposing of European Turkey in the following +manner: 1. The tributary principality of Bulgaria is created (with less than half +the dimensions assigned to it by the treaty of San Stefano), to be governed by a +prince (who shall not be a member of any ruling dynasty) chosen by the people +within nine months, and confirmed by the Porte and the other powers, and in the +mean time by Russian commissioners assisted by delegated European consuls. 2. +South of the Balkans is formed the autonomous province of Eastern Roumelia, +under a Christian governor-general, appointed for five years by the Porte with the +assent of the powers, which are to determine within three months the administrative +requirements of the province. 3. Bosnia and Herzegovina to +be occupied and <span class="xxpn" id="p154">{154}</span> +administered by Austria-Hungary, excepting Novi-Bazar and a small surrounding +district. This provision, unlimited as to time, practically annexes those provinces +to the Austro-Hungarian Empire, and has already (October, 1878) been executed, +after serious armed resistance by their Moslem inhabitants. 4. Rumania, Servia, +and Montenegro are made independent, with the enlarged boundaries shown by +the annexed map. Rumania receives the Dobruja from Russia, to which it was +ceded by the treaty of San Stefano, with the understanding that it was to be exchanged +for the strip of Bessarabia transferred from Russia to Rumania by the +treaty of Paris of 1856, which has accordingly been restored. The additions to +Montenegro include the port of Antivari, which is closed to war-ships of all +nations; and Montenegro is to have no national flag nor ships of war, its merchant +flag to be protected by Austrian consuls. 5. Austrian Dalmatia receives from +Albania the small port of Spitza. 6. The services of the powers are offered +for the rectification of the northern frontier of Greece. 7. Entire religious liberty +and political equality are provided for in all the territories +affected by the treaty.</p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr01" id="mappg154"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib154xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + <span class="smcap">M<b>AP</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">SHOWING</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>HANGES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">IN</span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>UROPEAN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>URKEY</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>RMENIA,</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AS</span> + <span class="smmaj">PROPOSED</span> + <span class="smmaj">BY</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>REATY</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>AN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>TEFANO,</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> <span class="smmaj">AS</span> + <span class="smmaj">DETERMINED</span> <span class="smmaj">BY</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>REATY</b></span> <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>ERLIN.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib154.jpg" width="600" height="635" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<div class="chapter" id="p155"> +<div class="dctr01"><img src="images/ib155.jpg" + width="600" height="129" alt="" /></div> + +<h2 class="h2herein" title="Rumania.">RUMANIA.<a class="afnanchstar" + href="#fn44" id="fnanch44" title="go to note 44">*</a> + <span class="sphr"><img class="ihra" src="images/hr-ia013.png" + width="248" height="27" alt="" /></span></h2> +</div><!--chapter--> + +<p class="pfirst"><span class="spdropcap"><img class="idropcap" +src="images/drop-t.jpg" width="235" height="254" alt="T" /></span>HE +Rumanians are certainly one of the most curious amongst +European nations. The descendants of the conquerors of the +ancient world, they live detached from, and far to the north-east +of, the other nations of the Greco-Latin family, and not +many years ago they were hardly known by name. The grave +events of which the Lower Danube has been the scene since the middle of this +century have brought these Rumanians prominently to the fore, and we know +now that they differ essentially from their neighbours, be they Slav, Turk, or +Magyar. They constitute, in fact, one of the most important elements amongst +the populations of Eastern Europe, and numerically they are the strongest nation +on the Lower Danube, the Bulgarians alone excepted.</p> + +<p>The ethnological boundaries of Rumania are far wider than are the political +ones, for they embrace not only Wallachia and Moldavia beyond the Carpathians, +but also Russian Bessarabia, a portion of the Bukovina, the greater portion of +Transylvania, as well as extensive tracts in the Banat and Eastern Hungary. +The Rumanians have likewise crossed the Danube, and established themselves in +portions of Servia and Bulgaria; and the settlements of their kinsmen, the Zinzares, +sporadically extend far south to the hills of Thessaly and Greece. Rumania +proper has an area of only 46,709 square miles, but the countries of the Rumanians +occupy at least twice that extent, and their numbers exceed 8,000,000, most +of whom dwell in a compact mass on the Lower Danube and the adjoining +portions of Hungary and Russia.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn45" id="fnanch45">45</a></p> + +<p>The Roman territories on the Lower Danube almost +encircle the mountain <span class="xxpn" id="p156">{156}</span> +masses of the Eastern Carpathians, as will be seen by a glance at our map, but +only about one-half of this territory has been formed into an autonomous state, the +remainder belonging to Hungary and Russia. If the national ambition of the +Rumanians were to be realised, the natural centre of their country would not lie +within the actual limits of the territory, but at Hermannstadt (called Sibiu by the +Wallachians), or elsewhere on the northern slope of the Carpathians. Thrust +beyond the Carpathians, and extending from the Iron Gate to the upper affluents +of the Pruth, the independent Rumanians occupy a country of most irregular +shape, and separated into two distinct portions by the river Sereth and one of its +tributaries, which join the most advanced spur of the Eastern Carpathians to the +great bend of the Lower Danube. To the north of this boundary lies Moldavia, +thus named after a tributary of the Sereth; to the south-west and west is Wallachia, +or the “Plain of the Welsh,” <i>i.e.</i> of the Latins. This plain, the <i>tzara Rumaneasca</i>, +or Roman-land proper, is intersected by numerous parallel water-courses, forming +as many secondary boundaries, and the river Olto separates it into Great +Wallachia to the east, and Little Wallachia to the west. The Danube forms the +political boundary down to its mouth. It is a wide and sinuous river; below the +Iron Gate, lakes, forests, and swamps render access to its banks almost impossible +in many places; and migratory nations and conquerors, instead of crossing it, as +they could easily have done in Austria and Bavaria, rather sought to avoid it by +seeking for a passage through the mountains to the north. The abrupt bend of the +Lower Danube and its extensive swampy delta still further shielded the plains of +Wallachia, and invaders not provided with vessels were thus turned to the north, +in the direction of the Carpathians. The lowlands of Moldavia were protected, +though in a less degree, by the rivers Dnieper, Bug, Dniester, and Pruth running +parallel with each other.</p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr01" id="fg043"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib156lg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 43.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">R<b>UMANIANS.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib156.jpg" width="600" height="385" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<div><span class="xxpn" id="p157">{157}</span></div> + +<p>But, in spite of these natural bulwarks, it remains matter for surprise, and +proves the singular tenacity of the Rumanians, that they preserved their traditions, +their language, and nationality, in spite of the numerous onslaughts from +invaders of every race to which they were exposed. Ever since the retreat of +the Roman legions, the peaceable cultivators of these plains were preyed upon so +frequently by Goths, Huns, and Pecheneges, by Slavs, Bulgars, and Turks, that +their extinction as a race appeared to be inevitable. But they have emerged +from every deluge which threatened to destroy them, thanks, no doubt, to the +superior culture for which they were indebted to their ancestors, and again claim +a place amongst independent nations. They have fully justified their old proverb, +which says, <i>Romun no pere !</i>—“the Roman perishes not.”</p> + +<p>The Transylvanian Alps lie within the territory of the Rumanians, who +occupy both slopes. Their upper valleys, however, are but thinly inhabited, and +we may travel for days without meeting with any habitations excepting the rude +huts of shepherds. The political boundary traced along the crest of the mountains +is merely an imaginary line, passing through the forest solitudes of vast +extent. Excepting near the only high-road, and the paths which join Transylvania +to the plains of Wallachia, these mountains remain in a state of nature. +The chamois is still hunted there, and not long since even bisons were met with. +The Tsigani penetrates these mountains in search of the brown or black bears +which he exhibits in the villages. He places a jar filled with brandy and honey +near the beast’s haunt, and, as soon as the bear and his family have become helplessly +intoxicated, they are seized and placed in chains.</p> + +<p>The physical configuration of Rumania is extremely simple. In Moldavia low +ridges running parallel with the high mountain chain extend from the north-west +to the south-east, being separated from each other by the valleys of the Bistritza, +Moldava, and Sereth, and sinking down gradually into the plains of the Danube. +In Wallachia the southern spurs of the Transylvanian Alps ramify with remarkable +regularity, and the torrents which descend from them all run in the same +direction. The rivers, whether they rise at the foot of the hills or traverse the +entire width of the mountains, such as the Sil, Shil, or Jiul, the Olto or Aluta, +and the Buseo, turn towards the east before their waters mingle with those of the +Danube.</p> + +<p>The slope of the hills is pretty uniform from the crest of the mountains to the +plain of the Danube, and the zones of temperature and vegetation succeed each +other with singular regularity. Summits covered with forests of conifers and +birch, and clad with snow during winter, rise near the frontiers of Transylvania. +These are succeeded by mountains of inferior height, where beeches and chestnuts +predominate, and all the picturesque beauties of European forest scenery are met +with. Lower still we come upon gentle hills, with groves of oaks and maples, +and their sunny sides covered with vines. Finally, we enter the wide plains of the +Danube, with their fruit trees, poplars, and willows. The zone lying between the +high mountains and the plain abounds in localities rendered delightful by picturesque +rocks, luxuriant and varied verdure, and limpid streams. +In this “happy <span class="xxpn" id="p158">{158}</span> +Arcadia” we meet with most of the large monasteries, magnificent castles with +domes and towers, standing in the midst of parks and gardens. As to the plains, +they are no doubt barren and monotonous in many places, but the villagers, +though their habitations are half buried in the ground, enjoy the magnificent +prospect of the blue mountains which bound the horizon. The most characteristic +objects in these lowlands are the huge hay-ricks already figured upon Trajan’s +column at Rome.</p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg044"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib158xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 44.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">R<b>IVERS</b></span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>HIL</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">O<b>LTO.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 1,400,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib158.jpg" width="600" height="783" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div><span class="xxpn" id="p159">{159}</span></div> + +<p>The Rumanian campagna is a second Lombardy, not because of the high state +of its agriculture, but because of the fertility of its soil, the beauty of the sky, and +of the distant views. Unfortunately there are no mountain barriers to protect it +against the cold north-easterly winds which predominate throughout the year. +Extremes of cold and heat have to be encountered.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn46" id="fnanch46">46</a> The vines have to be covered +with earth to protect them against the colds of winter; and in South-eastern +Wallachia, which is most exposed to the violence of the winds, it happens sometimes +that herds of cattle and horses, flying before a snow-storm, precipitate +themselves into the floods of the Danube. Several districts suffer from want of +rain, and are veritable steppes. Amongst these are the plains of the Baragan, +between the Danube and Yalomitza, where bustards abound, and a tree is not met +with for miles.</p> + +<p>Geologically we meet with a regular succession of formations, from the granite +on the mountain summits to the alluvial deposits along the banks of the Danube. +The rocks encountered on these southern slopes of the Carpathians are of the same +kind as those found in Galicia on their northern slopes, and they yield the same +mineral products, such as rock-salt, gypsum, lithographic stones, and petroleum. +Tertiary strata predominate in the plains, but to the east of Ploiesti and Bucharest +only quaternary deposits of clay and pebbles are met with, in which are found +the bones of mammoths, elephants, and mastodons. The muddy rivers which +traverse these plains have excavated themselves sinuous beds, and resemble large +ditches.</p> + +<p>The plain of Rumania, like that of Lombardy, is an ancient gulf of the sea +filled up by the débris washed down from the mountain sides. But though the sea +has retired, the Danube remains, pouring out vast volumes of water, and offering +great advantages to navigation. At the famous defile of the Iron Gate, where +this river enters the plain, its bed has a depth of 155 feet, its surface lies +66 feet above the level of the Black Sea, and its volume exceeds that of the combined +rivers of Western Europe, from the Rhone to the Rhine. The Romans, in +spite of this, had thrown a bridge across the river, immediately below the Iron +Gate, which was justly looked upon as one of the wonders of the world. This work +of architecture, which Apollodorus of Damas had erected in honour of Trajan, was +pulled down by order of the Emperor Hadrian, who was anxious to save the +expenses of the garrison required for its protection. There only remain now the +two abutments, and when the waters are low the foundations of sixteen out of the +twenty piers which supported the bridge may still be seen. A Roman tower, which +has given name to the little town of Turnu Severin, marks the spot where the +Romans first placed their foot upon the soil of Dacia. The passage from Servia +to Rumania is as important as it was of yore, but modern industry has not yet +replaced Trajan’s bridge.</p> + +<p>The Danube, like most rivers of our northern hemisphere, presses upon its +right bank, and this accounts for the difference between its Wallachian and Bulgarian +banks. The latter, gnawed by the floods, rises steeply +into little hills and <span class="xxpn" id="p160">{160}</span> +terraces, whilst the former rises gently, and merges almost imperceptibly in the +plains of Wallachia. Swamps, lakes, creeks, and the remains of ancient river beds +form a riverine network, enclosing numerous islands and sand-banks. These +channels are subject to continual change, and to the south of the Yalomitza +may still be seen a line of swamps and lagoons, which marks the course of an +ancient river no longer existing. The lowlands on the Wallachian side of the +Danube are constantly increasing in extent, whilst Bulgaria continuously suffers +losses of territory. The latter, however, is amply compensated for this by the +salubrity of its soil and the fine sites for commercial emporiums which it offers. +It is said that the beaver, which has been exterminated almost in every +other part of Europe, is still common in these half-drowned lands of Wallachia.</p> + +<p>At a distance of thirty-eight miles from the sea, in a straight line, the Danube +strikes against the granitic heights of the Dobruja, and abruptly turns to the +north, subsequently to spread out into a delta. In the course of this détour it +receives its last tributaries of importance, viz. the Moldavian Sereth and the +Pruth. Thirty miles below the mouth of the latter the Danube bifurcates. Its +main branch, known as that of Kilia, conveys about two-thirds of the entire +volume of its waters to the Black Sea, and forms the frontier between Rumania +and Turkish Bulgaria. The southern branch, or that of Tulcha, flows entirely +through Turkish territory. It separates into two branches, of which that of Sulina +is the main artery of navigation.</p> + +<p>The main branch of the river is of the utmost importance when considering +the changes wrought upon the surface of the earth through aqueous agencies. +Below Ismail it ramifies into a multitude of channels, which change continuously, +new channels being excavated, whilst others become choked with alluvial deposits +carried down by the floods. Twice the waters of the river are reunited into a +single channel before they finally spread out into a secondary delta jutting into +the Black Sea. The exterior development of this new land amounts to about +twelve miles, and supposing the sea to be of a uniform depth of thirty-three feet, it +would advance annually at the rate of 660 feet. Yet, in spite of this rapid increase, +the coast, at the Kilia mouth, juts out far less to the east than it does in the +southern portion of the delta, and we may conclude from this that the ancient +gulf of the sea, now filled up by the alluvial deposits brought down by the Kilia +branch, was far larger and deeper than those to the south.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn47" id="fnanch47">47</a> On examining a map +of the Danubian delta, it will be found that, by prolonging the coast-line of +Bessarabia towards the south, it crosses the delta. This is the ancient coast. It +rises above the half-drowned plains like an embankment, through which the +branches of the river forced themselves a passage to the sea. The alluvium +brought down by the Sulina and St. George’s mouths has been spread over a vast +plain lying outside this embankment, whilst that carried down through what is at +present the main branch forms only a small archipelago +of ill-defined islands <span class="xxpn" id="p161">{161}</span> +beyond it. We may conclude from this that the latter is of more recent origin +than the other arms.</p> + +<p>In the course of its gradual encroachment upon the sea, the river has cut off several +lakes of considerable extent. On the coast between the mouth of the Dniester and +the delta of the Danube there are several lagoons, or <i>limans</i>, of inconsiderable +depth, the water of which evaporates during the heat of summer, depositing a thin +crust of salt. In their general configuration, the nature of the surrounding land, +and parallelism of the rivers which flow into them, these sheets of water are very +much like the lakes met with more to the west, as far as the mouth of the +Pruth. These latter, however, are filled with fresh water, and the sandy barriers at +their lower ends separate them not from the Black Sea, but from the Danube. +There can be no doubt that these lakes were anciently gulfs of the sea, similar in all +respects to the lagoons still existing along the coast. The Danube, by converting +its ancient gulf into a delta, separated them from the sea, and their saline water +was replaced by fresh water carried down by the rivers. The existing saline +lagoons will undergo the same metamorphosis, in proportion as the delta of the +Danube gains upon the sea.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg045"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib161xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 45.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">D<b>ANUBE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">Y<b>ALOMITZA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 1,443,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib161.jpg" width="600" height="463" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The plains of Wallachia were defended formerly by an ancient line of fortifications +passing to the north of these Danubian lakes and lagoons, and known as +“Trajan’s Wall,” like the ditches, walls, and entrenched camps in the Southern +Dobruja. The inhabitants ascribe their construction to Cæsar, although +they are of <span class="xxpn" id="p162">{162}</span> +much later date, having been erected by Trajan as a protection against the Visigoths. +This ancient barrier of defence coincided pretty nearly with the political boundary +between Russian and Rumanian Bessarabia, and extended probably to the west of +the Pruth, across the whole of Moldavia and Wallachia. Vestiges of it still met +with there are known as the “Road of the Avares.” A second wall, still traceable +between Leova and Bender, defended the approaches to the valley of the Danube.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>In spite of the diverse races which have overrun, conquered, or devastated +their territory, the inhabitants of Rumania, more fortunate than their neighbours, +have preserved their unity of race and language. Wallachians and Moldavians +form one people, and not only have they kept intact their national territory, but +they have actually encroached upon the territories of their neighbours. Throughout +Rumania, with the exception of that portion of Bessarabia ceded by the +Western powers after the Crimean war, the inhabitants belonging to alien races +are in the minority.</p> + +<p>The origin of this Latin-speaking nation is still shrouded in mystery. Are +they the descendants of Getæ and Latinised Dacians, or does the blood of Italian +colonists brought thither by Trajan, of legionaries and Roman soldiers, predominate +amongst them? To what extent have they become amalgamated with their +neighbours, the Slavs and Illyrians? What share had the Celts in the formation +of their nationality? Are the “Little” Wallachians, the “men with the eighty +teeth,”—so called on account of their bravery,—the descendants of Celts? We +cannot say with certainty, for men of learning like Shafarik and Miklosich differ +on all these points. The vast plains at present inhabited by the Rumanians +became a wilderness in the third century, when the Emperor Aurelian compelled +their inhabitants to migrate to the right bank of the Danube. If it is true that +the descendants of these emigrants ever returned to the seats of their ancestors, in +the meantime occupied by Slavs, Magyars, and Pecheneges, when did they do so? +Miklosich presumes that they did so towards the close of the fifth century; +Roesler thinks in the fourteenth, although ancient chroniclers of the eleventh +century mention Rumanians as dwelling in the Carpathians. Other authorities +deny that there was any re-immigration; they maintain that the residue of +the Latinised population sufficed for reconstituting the nationality. Thus much +is certain, that this small people has increased wonderfully, and has become now +the preponderating race on the Lower Danube and in Transylvania.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="plt09"> +<img src="images/ib162a.jpg" width="600" height="414" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">WALLACHIANS (VALAKHS).</div> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Even in the seventeenth century the language spoken by the Rumanians +was treated as a rural dialect, and Slavonian was used in churches and courts +of justice. At the present day, on the contrary, Rumanian patriots are anxious +to purge their language of all Servian words, and of Greek and Turkish +expressions introduced during the dominion of the Osmanli. The “Romans” +of the Danube are endeavouring to polish their tongue, so that it may rank +with Italian and French. They have abandoned the Russian characters, +and their vocabulary is being continually enriched by new words derived +from the Latin. The idiom spoken in the towns, +which was the most impure <span class="xxpn" id="p163">{163}</span> +formerly, in consequence of the influx of strangers, has now become more Latin +than that spoken in the country. There are, however, about two hundred +words not traceable to any known tongue, and these are supposed to be a remnant +of the ancient Dacian spoken at the period of the Roman invasion. The Wallachian +differs, moreover, from the Latin tongues of Western Europe by always +placing the article and the demonstrative pronoun after the noun. The same rule +obtains in Albanian and Bulgarian, and Miklosich is probably right when he +looks upon this as a feature of the ancient language of the aborigines.</p> + +<p>These niceties, however, are altogether unnoticed by the mass of the people. +The Rumanian peasant is proud of the ancient conquerors of his country, and +looks upon himself as the descendant of the patricians of Rome. Several of his +customs, at the birth of children, betrothals, or burials, recall those observed by +the Romans, and the dance of the <i>Calushares</i>, it is said, may be traced back to +the earliest Italian settlers. The Wallachian is fond of talking about Father +Trajan, to whom he attributes all those feats which in other countries are +associated with Hercules, Fingal, or Ossian. Many a mountain valley has been +rent asunder by Trajan’s powerful hand; and the avalanches descending from the +hills are spoken of as Trajan’s thunder. The Rumanian completely ignores +Getæ, Dacians, or Goths, though in the hills we still meet with tall men having +blue eyes and long flaxen hair, who are probably descended from the aboriginal +inhabitants of the country.</p> + +<p>The Rumanians have generally fine sunburnt features, fair hair, expressive +eyes, a mouth finely shaped, and beautiful teeth. They allow their hair to grow +long, and sometimes even prefer to expatriate themselves to sacrificing it to the +exigencies of military service. They exhibit grace in all their movements, are +indefatigable on the march, and support the heaviest labour without complaining. +Even the Wallachian herdsman, with his sheepskin cap, or <i>cashula</i>, his wide +leather belt used as a pocket, a sheepskin thrown over his shoulders, and drawers +which recall those of the Dacians sculptured on Trajan’s Column, is noble in his +bearing. In the large towns, where much intermixture has taken place with +Greeks, Southern Russians, and Magyars, the brown complexion predominates. +The Rumanian women are grace itself. They always charm us by taste and +neatness, whether they have adopted a modern dress or still patronise the +national costume, consisting of an embroidered chemisette, a floating vest, a party-coloured +apron, a golden net, and golden sequins placed in the hair. These +external advantages are combined in the Rumanian with quickness of apprehension, +a gay spirit, and the gift of repartee, which entitle them to be called the +Parisians of the Orient.</p> + +<p>In the midst of this homogeneous Rumanian population we meet with +Bulgarian colonists, whose number has increased recently in consequence of +the persecutions of Turks and Greeks. The character of the Bulgarians born in +the country has undergone considerable modifications. They are at present the +most industrious tillers of the soil, and in the vicinity of large towns they occupy +themselves principally with horticulture. Many of these Bulgarians +live in that <span class="xxpn" id="p164">{164}</span> +portion of Bessarabia which was ceded by Russia in 1855. They settled there in +1829, more particularly in the <i>Budzak</i>, or southern “corner” of Bessarabia, and +their fields are better tilled, their roads in better condition, than those of their +Moldavian neighbours. Their villages still bear Tartar names, from the time +when their country was occupied by Nogai Tartars, and they contrast favourably +with the villages of the surrounding peoples. Bolgrad, the capital of this colony, +is a small bustling town, the schools of which enjoy a high reputation. These +Bulgarians, so distinguished for industry, sobriety, and thrift, have more or less +amalgamated with Russians, Greeks, and gipsies, and they talk almost every +language of the East.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg046"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib164xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 46.—<span class="smcap">E<b>THNOLOGICAL</b></span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>AP</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>OLDAVIAN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>ESSARABIA.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib164.jpg" width="600" height="349" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The Russians of Moldavian Bessarabia have their settlements on the banks of +the Danube, to the east of these Bulgarian colonies. They, too, are good +agriculturists. The Russians met with in the towns are generally engaged in +commerce, and enjoy a high reputation for honesty. Most of them belong to the +old sect of the <i>Lipovani</i>, and fled from Russia about a century ago to escape religious +persecution. They nearly all speak Rumanian. Vilkof, a village near the +mouth of the Danube, is almost exclusively occupied by these Lipovani, who are +expert fishermen, and share the produce of their labour in common. Others +amongst the Russians belong to the sect of the <i>Skoptzi</i>, or “mutilated,” which +is said to recruit itself by stealing children. These Skoptzi are recognised by +their portliness and smooth faces, and at Bucharest they are reputed to be excellent +coachmen.</p> + +<p>Magyar Szeklers from Transylvania, known in the country as <i>Changhei</i>, are +the only other foreign element of the population occupying distinct settlements. +These Changhei, who first came into the country when the Kings of Hungary +were masters of the valley of the Sereth, are +gradually becoming Rumanians <span class="xxpn" id="p165">{165}</span> +in dress and language, and would have become so long ago were they not Roman +Catholics, whilst the people among whom they live are Greeks. They are joined +annually by a few compatriots from Transylvania, attracted by the mild climate +and the fertility of the soil. In spring and autumn large bands of Hungarian +reapers and labourers descend into the plains of Moldavia.</p> + +<p>The Hellenic element was strongly represented last century, when the +government of the country was farmed out by the Sultan to Greek merchants +of Constantinople. At the present time the Greeks are not numerous—not +exceeding, perhaps, 10,000 souls, even if we include amongst them Hellenized +Zinzares—but they occupy influential positions as managers of estates or +merchants, and the export of corn is almost exclusively in their hands. Traces +of the ancient government of these Phanariotes still exist in the language of +the country, and in the relationships resulting from intermarriages between +seignorial families. Far more numerous than these Greeks, and of greater +importance, are the members of those homeless nations—the Jews and Tsigani +(or gipsies). A few Spanish Jews are met with in the large towns, but the +majority are “German” Jews, who have come hither from Poland, Little Russia, +Galicia, and Hungary. As publicans and middlemen they come into close +contact with the poor people, and they are universally detested, not on account +of their religion, but because of the wonderful skill with which they manage to +secure the savings of the people. Imaginary crimes of all kinds are attributed +to them, and they have repeatedly been exposed to maltreatment on the +frivolous charge of having eaten little children at their Passover. The Rumanians, +however, can hardly manage without these detested Jews, and their laws, +by preventing the Jews from acquiring land, fortify their commercial monopoly. +The Jews, if certain estimates may be credited, constitute one-fifth of the total +population of Moldavia. The Armenians, the other great commercial people of +the Orient, are represented by a few flourishing colonies, more especially in +Moldavia. These Haikanes are the descendants of immigrants who settled in the +country at various epochs between the eleventh and seventeenth centuries. They +live amongst themselves, and, though not exactly liked by the people, they have +known how to avoid becoming objects of hatred. A few Armenians from Constantinople, +and speaking Turkish, are met with on the Lower Danube.</p> + +<p>The Tsigani, or gipsies, so despised formerly, become merged by degrees in +the rest of the population. Not long ago they were slaves, the property of the +State, of boyards, or monasteries. They led a wandering life—working, trafficking, +or stealing for the benefit of their masters. They were divided into castes, the +principal of which were the <i>lingurari</i>, or spoon-makers; <i>ursari</i>, or bear-leaders; +<i>ferrari</i>, or smiths; <i>aurari</i>, or collectors of gold dust; and <i>lautari</i>, or musicians. +These latter were the most polished of all, and were employed to celebrate the +glory and the virtues of the boyards. They are now the minstrels of the country +and the musicians of the town. Very few in number are the <i>Netotzi</i>, a degraded +caste who live in woods or tents, subsist upon the foulest food, and do not bury +their dead. The Tsigani were assimilated in 1837 with the +peasantry, and since <span class="xxpn" id="p166">{166}</span> +their emancipation nearly all of them lead a settled life, cultivating the soil with +great care, or exercising some handicraft. The fusion between Tsigani and +Rumanians is making rapid progress, for both races have the same religion and +speak the same language. Intermarriages between the two are frequent, and in +a time not far off the Tsigani of Rumania will be a thing of the past. They are +supposed still to number between 100,000 and 300,000 souls.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn48" id="fnanch48">48</a></p> + +<p>The Rumanian nation is still in a state of transition from a feudal to a +modern epoch. The revolution of 1848 shook the ancient system to its foundation, +but did not destroy it. As recently as 1856 the peasants were attached to +the soil. They had no rights, but were at the mercy of the boyards and monasteries +whose soil they were doomed to till, and lived in miserable hovels. The +whole of the country and its inhabitants belonged to five or six thousand boyards, +who were either the descendants of the ancient “braves,” or had purchased their +patents of nobility. Most of these boyards were only small proprietors, and nearly +the whole of the land belonged to seventy feudatories in Wallachia, and three +hundred in Moldavia.</p> + +<p>This state of affairs led to the most frightful demoralisation amongst masters +and serfs, and even the good qualities of the Rumanian—his energy, his generosity, +and friendliness—were turned into evil. The nobles lived far away from +their estates, spending the income forwarded by their Greek bailiffs in debauchery +and gambling. The peasants worked but little, for they had no share in the +produce of the soil; they were mistrustful and full of deceit, as are all slaves; +they were ignorant and superstitious, for they depended for their education upon +illiterate and fanatical priests. Their <i>popes</i> were magicians, and cured maladies +by incantations and holy philtres. As to the monks, some of them were rich +proprietors, as rapacious as the temporal lords; others lived on alms, having +exchanged a life of slavery for mendicity.</p> + +<p>Not long ago the Rumanians, deprived of all education except that supplied +by their <i>doinas</i>, or ancient songs, were lost almost in mediæval darkness. +Even now some of the ancient customs of their ancestors survive in the rural +districts. Funerals are attended by hired weeping women, whose shrieks +accompany the farewell of relatives. Into the coffin they place a stick upon +which to rest when crossing the Jordan, a piece of cloth to serve as a garment, +and a coin as a bribe to St. Peter for opening the gate of heaven. Nor are wine +and bread forgotten for the journey. Red-haired people are suspected of +returning to earth in the guise of a dog, a frog, or a flea, and to penetrate into +houses in order to suck the blood of good-looking young girls. In their case it is +as well to close the coffin-lid tightly, or, still better, to pierce the throat of the +defunct with a stick.</p> + +<p>The peasantry will doubtless no longer be haunted by these +hallucinations, for the <span class="xxpn" id="p167">{167}</span> +moral and intellectual progress of the nation has kept pace with its material prosperity +since the peasant has cultivated his own land. Officially made a freeman +in 1856, but held for several years afterwards in a kind of limited bondage, the +peasant now owns at least a portion of the land. By a law passed in 1862, each +head of a family is entitled to a plot of land from seven to sixty-seven acres in +extent, and ever since that time the peasants have gained immensely in self-respect. +His land, though still cultivated with the ancient Roman plough, and +deprived of manure, produces immense quantities of cereals, the sale of which +brings wealth into the country and encourages progress. Rumania is now one +of the great corn-exporting countries of Europe, and in favourable years, when +the crops are neither eaten up by locusts nor destroyed by frosts, its exports exceed +those of Hungary. In less than ten years the export of wheat, maize, barley, and +oats has doubled, and the sum annually realised varies between £4,000,000 and +£8,000,000 sterling.</p> + +<p>Unfortunately the peasants eat but little of the corn they grow. They are +content with the maize, from which they prepare their <i>mamaligo</i> and the detestable +spirits which cheer their hearts on a hundred and ninety-four annual fête days. The +cultivation of the vine, which was altogether neglected formerly, is likewise making +progress, and the produce of the foot-hills of the Carpathians is justly esteemed. +The time is past now when “Wallachian” and “herdsman” were synonyms +throughout the East. Still, nearly one-fourth of the area of the country remains +uncultivated, and the soil is allowed to lie fallow every third year. Moldavia is +better cultivated, upon the whole, than Wallachia, and this is principally owing +to the fact of the Moldavian boyards residing upon their estates, and taking a pride +in their management. Progress, however, is apparent throughout the country, and +there is hardly a large estate without its steam threshing-machine. Even the +small proprietors are gradually introducing improved methods of cultivation, and +in many villages they have formed co-operative associations for the cultivation of +extensive tracts of country.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn49" id="fnanch49">49</a></p> + +<p>Rumania is essentially an agricultural country. The ores of the Carpathians +are not utilised, for there are no roads which give access to them. The petroleum +wells only supplied 3,810,000 gallons in 1873. Four of the principal salt-works +are carried on by Government, partly with the aid of convict labour, and yield +annually 80,000 tons of salt. The fisheries are of some importance. The inhabitants +on the Lower Danube salt the fish which abound in the river and +the neighbouring lakes, and prepare caviare from sturgeons. There are no +manufactories excepting near the large towns, and the country is noted only for +its carpets, embroidered cloth and leather, and pottery. The housewives are +famed for their confectionery.</p> + +<p>Commerce is annually on the increase.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn50" id="fnanch50">50</a> Its only outlet in +former times was <span class="xxpn" id="p168">{168}</span> +the Danube. Nearly the whole produce of the country was carried to Galatz, +at the bend of the river, upon which the principal routes of the country converge. +For many years to come the Danube will remain the great commercial +highway of the country; the Pruth, too, is navigable for small steamers as far as +Sculeni, to the north of Yassy; whilst the numerous rivers descending from the +Carpathians will always prove useful for the conveyance of timber. New outlets +have been created by the construction of railways. Rumania is now joined to +the railway systems of Austria and Hungary, and the proposed bridge across the +Danube will place it in direct communication with Varna, on the Black Sea. +The level nature of the country facilitates the construction of railways, but its +inhabitants look upon their extension with a feeling of apprehension, for they +fancy that a commercial invasion may bring in its train a military one.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn51" id="fnanch51">51</a></p> + +<p>The Rumanians complain much about the left bank of the Sulina branch of +the Danube not having been ceded to them by the treaty of Paris. In former +times the whole of the delta of the Danube belonged to Moldavia, as is proved +by the ruins of a town built by the Rumanians on the southern bank of the +river, opposite to Kilia. Up to the close of last century the jurisdiction of +the Moldavian governor of Ismail extended to the port of Sulina, and he was +charged with keeping the mouth of the river free from obstructions. The +Western powers, in spite of this, allowed Turkey to occupy the whole of the +delta, whilst they confined the Rumanians to the left bank of the Kilia branch. +The country, consequently, has no direct access to the Black Sea, except by means +of small vessels, for the mouth of the Kilia branch is obstructed by a bar. +M. Desjardins and other engineers who have devoted some attention to the +subject propose to construct a ship canal, about eight miles in length, which will +connect the Danube with the Bay of Sibriani. In the meantime Rumania is at +liberty to make use of the Sulina mouth, which is kept open at the expense +of the Western powers, and a canal, therefore, hardly appears to be called for.</p> + +<p>Bucharest (or Bucuresci, pron. Bukureshti), the capital of Wallachia and of the +whole of Rumania, already numbers amongst the great cities of Europe. Next to +Constantinople and Buda-Pest, it is the most populous town of South-eastern +Europe, and its inhabitants fondly speak of it as the “Paris of the Orient.” +The town not very long since was hardly more than a collection of villages, +very picturesque from a distance on account of numerous towers and glittering +domes rising above the surrounding verdure, but very unpleasant within. But +Bucharest has been transformed rapidly with the increasing wealth of its +inhabitants. It may boast now of wide and clean streets, bounded by fine +houses, of public squares full of animation, and of well-kept parks, and fully +deserves now its sobriquet of the “joyful city.”</p> + +<p>Yassy (Jasi, or Yashi), which became the capital of +Moldavia when Suchova was annexed by Austria, occupies a +position far less central than does Bucharest, but the +fertility of the surrounding country, the proximity of the +navigable <span class="xxpn" id="p169">{169}</span> +Pruth and of Russia, with which it maintains a brisk commerce, and its position +on the high-road joining the Baltic to the Black Sea, have caused it to increase +rapidly in population. It is a flourishing town now, though no longer the seat +of an independent government. Built upon the foot-hills of the Carpathians, +the city presents itself magnificently from afar, and its exterior is not belied by +its finer quarters. Jews, Armenians, Russians, Tsigani, Tartars, and Magyars +are numerously represented amongst its population, which is semi-Oriental in +type. We may almost fancy ourselves standing upon the threshold of Asia. +The church of the Three Saints is distinguished for its originality, and is a masterpiece +of ornamentation in the Moorish style.</p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr01" id="fg047"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 47.—<span class="smcap">V<b>IEW</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>UCHAREST.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib169.jpg" width="600" height="514" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>All the other towns of Rumania are indebted for their importance to their +position on commercial high-roads. Botosani, in Northern Moldavia, lies on the +road to Galicia and Poland, and the same may be said of Falticeni, whose international +fairs are always well attended. Commerce causes the towns on the +Danube to flourish. Vilkof is a great mart for fish and caviare; Kilia, the +ancient Achillea, or city of Achilles; Ismail, where the Russian Lipovani are +numerous; Reni; Galatz, said to be an ancient colony of the +Galatians, now the <span class="xxpn" id="p170">{170}</span> +most important commercial emporium on the Lower Danube, and seat of the +European commissioners for its regulation; Braila, a poor village as long as the +Turks held it, but now important on account of its grain trade, and the literary +centre of the Bulgarians. All these towns, though situated on the banks of the +Danube, may be looked upon almost as ports of the Black Sea, through which the +produce of the country, and especially its grain, finds an outlet to foreign +markets. Giurgiu (Jurjevo) is the port of Bucharest on the Danube; Turnu-Severinu +is the gateway of Wallachia, below the great narrows of the river; +Craiova, Pitesci, Ploiesti, Buzeu, and Focsani form the terminal points of the +roads descending from the high valleys of Transylvania. Alecsandria, a town +recently built in the centre of the plain which extends from Bucharest to the Olto, +has become a depôt for agricultural produce.</p> + +<p>Formerly, when incessant wars rendered a strong strategical position of +greater importance than commercial advantages, the capital of the country was +established in the very heart of the Carpathians. In the thirteenth century it +was at Campu-Lungu, in the midst of the mountains, and subsequently it was +transferred to Curtea d’Argesia, founded by Prince Negoze Bessaraba in the +beginning of the sixteenth century. Of this ancient capital there remain now +only a monastery and a wonderful church: the walls, cornices, and towers are +covered with sculptures, like the work of a jeweller. Targu-Vestea, or Tirgovist, +on the Yalomitza, was the third capital, but of the fine palace built there by the +<i>domni</i> there remain now only blackened walls.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn52" id="fnanch52">52</a></p> + +<p>Rumania includes the two ancient principalities of Wallachia and Moldavia, +and forms a semi-independent state under the protection of the great powers, +and paying an annual tribute of about £40,000 to the Porte. The country +has placed a member of the Hohenzollern family at the head of the State. The +constitution of 1866 confers upon this prince the right of appointing all public +functionaries and the officers of the army, of coining money, and of pardoning. +All laws require his signature before they can be enforced. He enjoys a civil list +of £48,000.</p> + +<p>The legislative powers are vested in two chambers, the members of which are +elected by a process designed to favour the interests of the rich. All Rumanians +above twenty-one years of age, except servants in receipt of wages, are inscribed in +the electoral lists. They are divided into four “colleges,” or classes, having widely +different privileges. The first college includes all those electors of a district +whose income from landed property amounts to £132 a year; electors having an +income of between £44 and £132 form a second +college; merchants and <span class="xxpn" id="p171">{171}</span> +tradesmen of the towns paying a tax of 23<i>s.</i> annually, Government pensioners, +half-pay officers, professors and graduates of universities, form the third college; +and the remainder of the electors belong to the fourth college. The first two +colleges elect a deputy each for their district; the third college elects from +one to six deputies for each town, according to its size; the fourth college elects +delegates by whom the representatives are chosen.</p> + +<p>The Senate represents more especially the large landed proprietors. Senators +must have an income of £352, and are elected by the landed proprietors whose +income amounts to at least £132 a year. The universities of Bucharest and +Yassy are represented by a senator each, elected by the professors, and the crown +prince, the metropolitan, and the diocesan bishops are <i>ex-officio</i> members of the +Senate. Senators are elected for eight, and deputies for four years.</p> + +<p>The Rumanian constitution grants all those rights and privileges usually set +forth in documents of that kind. The right of meeting is guaranteed; there is +liberty of the press; the municipal officers and mayors are elected, but the Prince +may intervene in the case of towns inhabited by more than a thousand families; +the punishment of death is abolished, except in time of war; and education is free +and compulsory “wherever there are schools.” There is liberty of religion, +though there is a State Church, and Christians alone can be naturalised. No +marriage is legal unless it has been consecrated by a priest. The Rumanian +Church, as far as dogmas are concerned, is that of the Greeks, but it is altogether +independent of the Greek patriarch residing at Constantinople, and is governed +by its own Synod. Most of the monasteries have been secularised.</p> + +<p>The country is divided into four judicial districts, each having a court of +appeal, whilst a supreme court sits at Bucharest. The French codes, slightly +modified, were introduced in 1865.</p> + +<p>The army is partly modelled upon that of Prussia. All citizens are called +upon to serve sixteen years, eight of which are passed in the standing army or its +reserve, and eight in the militia. The National Guard includes all men up to +fifty not belonging to either of the other categories. By calling out all its men, +Rumania can easily send an army of 100,000 men into the field. There are likewise +a few gunboats on the Danube.</p> + +<p>The finances of Rumania are in a more satisfactory condition than those of +most other states of Europe. The Government has certainly been living upon +loans, for which eight per cent. has to be paid, and nearly the whole of the annual +income is spent upon the payment of interest, the army, and the revenue services. +The credit of Rumania is, however, good, for the loans are secured upon vast +domains, the property of the secularised monasteries, several thousand acres of +which are sold every year. The sale of salt and the manufacture of tobacco are +Government monopolies.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn53" id="fnanch53">53</a></p> + +<p>Rumania is divided for administrative purposes into 33 departments +and 164 districts, or <i>plasi</i>. There are 62 towns and 3,020 rural +communes.</p> + +<div class="chapter" id="p172"> +<div class="dctr01"><img src="images/ib172.jpg" + width="600" height="132" alt="" /></div> + +<h2 class="h2herein" title="Servia and Montenegro.">SERVIA + AND MONTENEGRO.<a + class="afnanchstar" href="#fn54" id="fnanch54" + title="go to note 54">*</a> +<span class="sphr"><img class="ihra" src="images/hr-ia013.png" + width="248" height="27" alt="" /></span></h2> + +<h3 title="Servia."><span + class="smcap">S<b>ERVIA.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst"> +<span class="spdropcap"><img class="idropcap" src="images/drop-s.jpg" +width="240" height="258" alt="S" /></span>ERVIA, +like Rumania, was until recently a semi-independent state, +paying a tribute of £25,000 a year to the Porte, and submitting to +the presence of a Turkish garrison at Mali-Zvornik, on the Bosnian +frontier. But even these vestiges of ancient oppression irritated +the national pride to an inconceivable degree, and the moment +when a blow might be struck on behalf of Servia and the neighbouring countries +inhabited by Slavs still groaning under the Turkish yoke was looked forward to +with impatience. The blow has been struck, and were it not for the support +extended to it by the great powers, Servia would ere this have ceased to exist as a +semi-independent state.</p> + +<p>Servia, within its actual limits, includes only a small portion of the northern +slope of the mountains rising in the centre of the Balkan peninsula. It is +separated from Austro-Hungary by the Save and the Danube, but no natural +boundary divides it from Turkey; and the valleys of the Morava, the Drina, and +the Timok, the former in the centre, the others on the eastern and western +frontiers of the country, afford easy access to a foreign invader. The difficulties +to be surmounted by the latter would begin only after he had entered the vast +forests, the narrow valleys, and unfathomable <i>klisuras</i> amongst the mountains.</p> + +<p>The only plains of any extent are on the banks of the Save. Everywhere else +the country is hilly, rocky, or mountainous. The most prominent mountain +range is that which extends from the “Iron Gate” and the defile of Kasan, on +the Danube, through Eastern Servia, and forms a marked continuation of the Transylvanian +Alps, with which it agrees in geological structure. In the northern +portion of these Servian Carpathians, in the angle formed by the confluence of the +Danube and Morava, where masses of porphyry have burst through limestones +and schists, we find ourselves in the great mineral +region of Servia. Copper, <span class="xxpn" id="p173">{173}</span> +iron, and lead ores are being worked here, especially at Maidanpek and Kuchaina, +but the old zinc and silver mines have been abandoned. The valley of the +Timok, in the southern portion of this mountain range, is likewise rich in +minerals, and gold dust is collected from the sand of the river. There are few +valleys which can rival that of the Timok in beauty and fertility, and the basin +of Knyashevatz, where the head-streams of the river unite, is more especially +distinguished by its rural beauty, sparkling rivulets flowing through the +meadows, vines covering the hills, and forests the surrounding mountains. A +narrow defile immediately below this basin leads into the valley of Zaichar, near +which, at Gamzigrad, there still exist ruins of a Roman fortress, its walls and +towers of porphyry in a capital state of preservation. Looking northward from +this position we perceive the Stol (3,638 feet), whilst in the south-west there rises +a huge pyramid of chalk, which might almost be mistaken for the work of +human hands. This is the Rtan (4,943 feet), at whose foot burst forth the hot +springs of Banya, the most frequented and efficacious of all Servia.</p> + +<p>The valleys of the Morava and of its main tributary, the Bulgarian Morava, +divide Servia into two parts of unequal extent. The valley of the Morava forms +a natural highway between the Danube and the interior of Turkey, passing +through the frontier town of Alexinatz. A Roman road formerly led along it. +Krushevatz, the ancient capital of the Servian empire, occupies the centre of a +plain in the valley of the Servian Morava, not far above the defile of Stalaj, +where the two Moravas unite at the foot of a promontory crowned with ruins. +The remains of the palace of the Servian tsar are still shown there, and it is stated +that Krushevatz, at the height of Servian power, had a circumference of three +leagues. It is only a poor village now.</p> + +<p>The wildest mountain masses of Servia rise between the two Moravas, their +culminating point being the Kopaonik (6,710 feet), which attains a greater height +than any other summit between the Save and the Balkans. A wide prospect +of incomparable beauty opens from its base and rocky summit, extending southwards +over plains and mountains to the pinnacles of the Skhar and the pyramidal +Dormitor. In itself, however, the Kopaonik is quite devoid of beauty, and where +its slopes have been deprived of the forests which once covered them, the bare +rocks of serpentine present a picture of utter desolation. Its valleys are far from +fertile, their inhabitants are sulky and poor, and many amongst them suffer from +goître.</p> + +<p>The mountains which extend to the north of the Kopaonik, along both banks +of the Ibar, are for the most part still clothed with oaks, beeches, and conifers. +The broad valley of the Servian Morava, rivalling in fertility the plains of +Lombardy, penetrates into these mountain masses. But they rise again to the +north of that river, attaining a height of 3,622 feet in the mountain mass of +Rudnik. Cretaceous rocks predominate, frequently surmounted by granitic +peaks. The valleys are narrow and tortuous. This is the famous Sumadia, or +“forest region” of Servia, which during the rule of the Turks offered a safe +asylum to the persecuted rayas, and in the war of +independence became the <span class="xxpn" id="p174">{174}</span> +citadel of Servian liberty. The little town of Kraguyevatz, in one of its narrow +valleys, was chosen to be the seat of government, and it still retains a gun +foundry, supplied with coal from the basin of Chupriya. A secluded capital like +this may have suited a people constantly engaged in war, but when Servia entered +upon a career of progress the seat of government was removed to Belgrad. +This city—the Beográd, or “white town,” of the Servians, the <i>Singidunum</i> of the +Romans, and the <i>Alba Græca</i> of the Middle Ages—is delightfully situated upon a +hill near the confluence of the Danube and Save, and overlooks the swampy plains +of Syrmia. Belgrad, from its favourable geographical situation, has become a +place of much trade, and is likewise an important strategical position.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg048"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib174xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 48.—<span class="smcap">C<b>ONFLUENCE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">D<b>ANUBE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>AVE.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 1,420,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib174.jpg" width="600" height="381" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>To the west of Belgrad we merely meet with hills, and with the fertile plains +watered by the Kolubara. It is only towards the south-west, on nearing the +Drina, that we again find ourselves in the midst of calcareous mountains, attaining +a height of 3,630 feet, and connected with spurs of the Kopaonik in the south. +This is one of the most picturesque portions of the country. Ruins of houses +and fortresses abound, amongst which those of Ushitza are the most extensive. +These fortresses have, however, failed to protect the country, and no portion of +Servia has more frequently been laid waste by ruthless invaders.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="plt10"> +<img src="images/ib174a.jpg" width="600" height="410" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">BELGRADE.</div> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>In former times Servia could boast of some of the most extensive oak forest +in Europe. “To kill a tree is to kill a Servian,” says an ancient proverb, dating +probably from the time when the forests afforded shelter to the oppressed rayas. +This proverb, unfortunately, is no longer acted upon. In many parts of the +country the forests have disappeared, and the naked rock obtrudes +itself as in <span class="xxpn" id="p175">{175}</span> +Dalmatia and Carniola. A peasant in need of a branch cuts down an entire tree, +and the herdsmen are not content to feed their bivouac fires with dry sticks, but +must needs have an oak. The greatest enemies of the forests, next to herdsmen, +are goats and hogs, the former browsing upon small trees and leaves, the latter +laying bare the roots. An old tree, thrown down by a tempest or sacrificed to +the woodman’s axe, is not replaced. Laws for the protection of the forests have +certainly been passed, but they are not enforced, and the wood required for fuel +has to be imported, in many instances, from Bosnia. The destruction of the +forests has naturally been attended by a deterioration of the climate. Mr. Edward +Brown, who travelled in Servia in the seventeenth century, tells us that the +Morava was then navigable for the greater part of its course; but at the +present time, owing to its irregularities, it is no longer available as a navigable +channel.</p> + +<p>Servia, by despoiling the mountains of great forests, has got rid of the wild +animals which formerly infested them. Wolves, bears, wild boars, previously so +numerous, have almost disappeared, and those still met with occasionally are +supposed to come from the forests of Syrmia, crossing the frozen Save in winter. +The fauna and flora of Servia are gradually losing their original features. The +introduction of the domesticated animals and cultivated plants from Austria has +given to Servia a South German aspect. Nor does the climate much differ from +some parts of Southern Germany. Servia, though under the same latitude as +Tuscany, rejoices by no means in an Italian climate. The Dalmatian or Bosnian +mountain ramparts shut out the vivifying south-westerly winds, whilst the dry +and cold winds from the steppes of Russia have free access over the plains of +Wallachia. Strangers do not readily acclimatise themselves, owing to abrupt +changes of temperature.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn55" id="fnanch55">55</a></p> + +<p>Servia includes within its limits but a small proportion of all the Servians of +Eastern Europe, but its inhabitants are probably not far wrong when they look +upon themselves as the purest representatives of their race. They are, as a rule, +tall, vigorous, with broad shoulders and an erect head. Their features are +marked, the nose straight and often aquiline, and the cheek-bones a trifle +prominent; the hair is abundant and rarely black, the eyes are piercing and +cold, and a well-cultivated moustache imparts a military air to the men. The +women, without being good-looking, have a noble presence, and their semi-oriental +costume is distinguished by an admirable harmony of colours. Even +in the towns, where French fashions carry the day, Servian ladies occasionally +wear the national dress, consisting of a red vest, a belt and chemisette embroidered +with pearls, strings of sequins, and a little fez stuck jauntily upon the +head.</p> + +<p>Unfortunately the custom of the country requires that a Servian woman +should have an abundance of black hair and a dazzling white complexion. Paint, +dyes, and false tresses are universal in town and country. Even in the most +remote villages the peasant women dye their hair and paint +their cheeks, lips, <span class="xxpn" id="p176">{176}</span> +and eyebrows, frequently making use of poisonous substances injurious to health. +Rich country-people are, moreover, in the habit of making an exhibition of +their wealth by means of their clothes, which they overload with gold and silver +ornaments and gewgaws of every kind. In some districts brides and young +women wear a most extraordinary head-dress, consisting of an enormous crescent +of cardboard, to which are attached nosegays, leaves, peacock feathers, and +artificial roses with silver petals. This heavy head-dress may symbolize the +“burdens of matrimony;” it certainly exposes the wearer to great inconvenience.</p> + +<p>The Servians are honourably distinguished amongst the people of the East +by the nobility of their character, their dignified bearing, and, in spite of recent +events, incontestable bravery. For centuries they resisted oppression, and, notwithstanding +their isolation and poverty, they conquered their independence in the +beginning of this century. They are said to be idle and suspicious—qualities +which their former servitude accounts for—but at the same time honest and +truthful. It is difficult to cheat them, but they themselves never cheat. Equals +when under the dominion of the Turks, they are equals still. “There are no +nobles amongst us,” they say, “for we are all nobles.” In their clear and +sonorous language, so well suited to oratory, they fraternally address each other +in the second person singular. Even prisoners are looked upon as brothers, and +it is customary to permit a condemned criminal to visit his family on his giving +his word of honour to return to prison.</p> + +<p>The ties of family and friendship are a great power in Servia. It frequently +happens that young men who have learnt to like each other take an oath of +fraternal friendship, in the manner of the brothers in arms of Scythia, and this +fraternity of heart is more sacred to them than that of blood. It is a remarkable +fact, and one which speaks favourably for the high moral tone of the Servians, +that their deep family affections and friendships do not lead to incessant acts +of retaliation and vengeance, as amongst their neighbours the Albanians. The +Servian is brave; he is always armed, but he is also peaceable, and does not +demand blood for blood. Still, like other men, he is not perfect. As an +agriculturist he follows the more obsolete routine. He is ignorant and superstitious. +The peasants firmly believe in vampires, sorcerers, and magicians, and, +in order to guard against their evil influences, they rub themselves with garlic on +Christmas-eve.</p> + +<p>Land is held by families in common, as amongst the other Slavs of the South. +The ancient <i>zadruga</i>, such as it existed in the Middle Ages, is still preserved, +and has never been interfered with by Roman or German laws, as in Dalmatia or +Slavonia. On the contrary, the law of Servia protects this ancient form of tenure, +and, in cases of a disputed will, relatives by adoption take precedence of those by +blood. Servian patriots are desirous to see these ancient customs respected, and +the members of the <i>Skupshtina</i>, or parliament, have never attacked this common +proprietorship in the soil, for they look upon it as one of the surest safeguards +against pauperism. Servia offers the best opportunity +for studying agricultural <span class="xxpn" id="p177">{177}</span> +communities of this kind. Nowhere else are the features of family life equally +delightful. The heavy day’s work is followed by an evening devoted to pleasure. +The children gather round their parents to listen to the warlike legends of old, +or the young men sing, accompanying themselves upon the <i>guzla</i>. All those +belonging to the association are looked upon as members of the family. The +<i>staryeshina</i>, or head of the community, has charge of the education of the +children, whom he is required to bring up as “good and honest citizens, useful +to their fatherland.” Yet, in spite of all these advantages, the <i>zadrugas</i> decrease +from year to year. The demands of commerce and industry interfere with their +accustomed routine, and they will hardly survive much longer in their present +form.</p> + +<p>A great portion of Eastern Servia has been occupied by Wallachians, who +were invited to the country after the war of independence, when vast districts +had been depopulated. These new settlers, being more prolific than their +neighbours, gradually gain upon the Servians, and already some of their colonies +are met with on the western bank of the Morava. Many Servian villages have +become Wallachian as far as language can make them so. It is a strange fact +that these Rumanian colonists should prosper in Servia, whilst Servian colonists +from Hungary and Slavonia do not.</p> + +<p>Zinzares, or Southern Wallachians, are met with in most towns, where they +work as masons, carpenters, and bricklayers.</p> + +<p>Bulgarians have settled in the valleys of the Timok and Morava, in the south-east. +They are highly esteemed for their industry, and quickly assimilate with +the Servians. Near Alexinatz there is a small colony of Albanians, whilst +Tsigani, or gipsies, are met with in all parts of the country. They profess to +be Christians, and one of their principal occupations is the manufacture of bricks. +The Spanish Jews, so numerous formerly at Belgrad, have most of them retired to +Semlin, their places being filled by German and Hungarian Jews.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn56" id="fnanch56">56</a></p> + +<p>Taken as a whole, Servia was a prosperous country before the recent war. +The population has increased rapidly since the declaration of independence, but +is not nearly as dense yet as in the neighbouring plains of Hungary or Wallachia. +Scarcely one-eighth of the area is under cultivation, and agricultural operations +are for the most part carried on in the rudest manner. Excepting in the most +fertile valleys, such as that of the Lower Timok, the fields are allowed to lie +fallow every second year. The exports of Servia clearly exhibit the rudimentary +condition of its agriculture, for they consist principally of lean pigs, which find +their way in thousands to the markets of Germany, and of cattle. The peasant +of Servia derives most of his revenue from the sale of these animals. Within the +last few years he has also exported some wheat to the markets of Western Europe. If +it were not for the Bulgarian labourers who annually flock to the country in search +of field-work, Servia would not produce sufficient corn +for its own consumption.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn57" id="fnanch57">57</a> <span class="xxpn" id="p178">{178}</span></p> + +<p>Industry throughout the country is still in its infancy. The Servian despises +all manual labour excepting agriculture, and it is for this reason he looks down +upon the German mechanics in the towns. Young men of the least education +aspire to government employment, and the bureaucratic plague, which has +wrought such injury in the neighbouring Austro-Hungarian empire, is thus being +developed. There are, however, others who have studied at foreign universities, +and who devote their energies to the spread of education at home. The progress +made in this respect within the last few years has been enormous. In 1839 the +sovereign of the country could neither read nor write, whilst, at the present time, +Servia, with its numerous schools and colleges, is becoming the intellectual centre +of the Balkan peninsula.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn58" id="fnanch58">58</a></p> + +<p>The Servians have used their best efforts to remove from their country +everything reminding them of the ancient dominion of the Mussulman, and they +have nearly accomplished this. The Belgrad of the Turks has been converted +by them into a Western city, like Vienna or Buda-Pest; palaces in European +style have arisen in the place of mosques and minarets; magnificent boulevards +intersect the old quarters of the town; and the esplanade, where the Turks +exposed the heads of their victims stuck on poles, has been converted into a +park. Shabatz, on the Save, has become a “little Paris;” Semendria +(Smederevo), on the Danube, which gave the signal of rebellion in 1806, has +arisen like a phœnix from its ashes; whilst Posharevatz, known as Passarovitz +in the history of treaties, has likewise been transformed. Progress is slower in +the interior, but good roads now extend to the most remote corners of the +country.</p> + +<p>Servia is an hereditary constitutional monarchy. The Prince, or <i>Kniaz</i>, +governs with the aid of responsible ministers and of a senate; he promulgates +the laws, appoints all public functionaries, commands the army, and signs the +treaties. He rejoices in a civil list of £20,000. His successor, in the case of +there being no male heir, is to be elected by universal suffrage. The <i>Skupshtina</i>, +or national parliament, traces back its origin to the earliest times of a Servian +monarchy. It numbers 134 members, of whom one-fourth are nominated by the +Prince, and the remainder elected by all male taxpayers. This parliament +exercises legislative functions conjointly with the Prince. In addition to it there +exist rural parliaments in each of the 1,063 <i>obshtinas</i>, or parishes, and these enjoy +extended rights of local self-government. The constitution provides for the +election of a <i>Skupshtina</i> of 536 members by universal suffrage, should extraordinary +events make such a meeting desirable. The affairs of the country have +hitherto been managed satisfactorily. A revenue of £554,000 sufficed for the +requirements of the State, and up to the outbreak of the war there existed no +public debt.</p> + +<p>Religious liberty exists, but the Greek Church is declared to be that of the +State. It has been independent of the Patriarch of +Constantinople since 1376, and <span class="xxpn" id="p179">{179}</span> +is governed by a synod consisting of the Archbishop of Belgrad and the Bishops +of Ushitza, Negotin, and Shabatz. The former is appointed by the Prince. The +high dignitaries of the Church are in receipt of salaries, but ordinary priests are +dependent upon fees and gifts. The monasteries have been suppressed by a recent +decision of the <i>Skupshtina</i>, and their revenues are to be devoted to educational +purposes.</p> + +<p>The military forces of the country consist of a standing army of about 4,000 +men, and of a militia including all men capable of bearing arms up to fifty years +of age. The first ban of this militia is called out annually for training, the second +ban only in case of war. Servia is thus able to place an army of 150,000 men in +the field, but the efficiency of these badly trained troops leaves much to be desired, +as has been shown by recent events.</p> + +<p>The country is divided into seventeen <i>okrushias</i>, or districts, viz. Alexinatz, +Belgrad, Chachak, Chupriya, Knyashevatz, Kraguyevatz, Kraina (capital, Negotin), +Krushevatz, Podrinye (Loznitza), Posharevatz, Rudnik (Milanovitz), Shabatz, +Smederevo, Tserna-Reka (Zaichar), Ushitza, Valyevo, and Yagodina. The only +towns of importance are Belgrad (27,000 inhabitants), Posharevatz (7,000 inhabitants), +Shabatz (6,700 inhabitants), and Kraguyevatz (6,000 inhabitants).</p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="Montenegro."><span + class="smcap">M<b>ONTENEGRO.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">The name Montenegro is a translation of the Servian Tsrnagora, or “black +mountains.” It is a curious designation for a country of white or greyish +calcareous mountains, whose colour even strikes the voyager on the Adriatic. +The name, according to some, is to be taken figuratively, and is to be understood +as designating a country of “bad” or “black” men; others are of opinion that +it refers to ancient pine forests which have now disappeared.</p> + +<p>The Turks have never succeeded in subjugating the Montenegrins, who found +safety in their mountain fastnesses. Occasionally the Montenegrins placed +themselves under the protection of a foreign power, such as that of Venice, but +they never acknowledged the Sultan as their sovereign. The mountains, however, +to which they owe their independence, are at the same time their weakness, +for they isolate them from the rest of the world. A high range of mountains, +as well as a strip of Turkish territory, separates them from their Servian kinsmen; +another range, held by the Austrians, cuts them off from the Gulf of Cattaro and +the Adriatic Sea. The small Lake of Scutari (Skodra) is their sea; the Zeta and +Moracha, which feed it, are their national rivers. If the Montenegrins were +permitted to descend into the plains without sacrificing their independence, the +arid plateaux now inhabited by them would soon be deserted by all but +shepherds.</p> + +<p>The eastern portion of Montenegro, which is known as the Berda, and drained +by the Moracha and its tributaries, is comparatively of easy access. The mighty +dolomitic pyramids of the Dormitor (8,550 feet) command its +valleys in the <span class="xxpn" id="p180">{180}</span> +north, whilst the rounded heights of Kom (9,000 feet) bound it on the east. +The Berda differs in no respect from most other mountain countries. It is only +in the western portion of the country, in Montenegro proper, that we meet with +features altogether distinct. We there find ourselves in a labyrinth of cavities, +valleys, and depressions, separated by craggy calcareous ridges, abounding in +narrow fissures, the hiding-places of adders. Only the mountaineers are able to +find their way in this inextricable labyrinth. “When God created the world,” +they tell you laughing, “he held in his hand a sack full of mountains. Right +above Montenegro the sack burst, and hence the fearful chaos of rocks which you +see before you.”</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg049"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib180xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 49.—<span class="smcap">M<b>ONTENEGRO</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>AKE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>KODRA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 1,590,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib180.jpg" width="600" height="526" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Seen from an immense height, Montenegro resembles a vast honeycomb with +thousands of cells, and this appearance is due to aqueous agencies. The water at +one spot has scooped out wide valleys, whilst elsewhere its long-continued action +has merely succeeded in producing narrow <i>rudinas</i>, or sink-holes. After heavy rains +the waters accumulate into lakes, covering fields and pastures, but ordinarily they +run off rapidly through sink-holes concealed by brambles, only to reappear again +near the seashore as abundant springs of bluish water. The Zeta, the principal +river of Montenegro, is fed by rivulets which are swallowed up in +the valley of <span class="xxpn" id="p181">{181}</span> +Niksich to the north, and find their way to it through subterranean channels. +Similar phenomena have already been noticed in connection with Bosnia (p. <a + href="#p127" title="go to p. 127">127</a>). +The capital of Montenegro, Tsetinye (Cetinje), lies in the very midst of the +mountains, in the centre of an ancient lake basin. Formerly it was accessible +only by a most difficult mountain path, for the Montenegrins took care not to +construct roads, which would open their country to the guns of their enemies. +The requirements of commerce, however, have recently induced them to connect +it with Cattaro by means of a carriage road.</p> + +<p>The Montenegrins are the kinsmen of the Servians of the Danube, but their +life of almost incessant warfare, the elevation and sterility of their country, as +well as the vicinity of the Albanians, have developed special features amongst +them. The quiet life of the plains is unknown to the Montenegrin; he is violent, +and ready at all times to take up arms; in his belt he carries a whole arsenal +of pistols and knives, and even when working in the fields he has a carbine by +his side. Until recently the price of blood was still enacted, and a scratch even +had to be paid for. This blood vengeance was transmitted from generation to +generation, until the number of victims was equal on both sides, or a monetary +compensation, usually fixed at ten sequins, had been accepted. Cases of hereditary +vengeance are rare now, but the ancient “custom” could be suppressed only by +a law of terrible severity, which punishes murderers, traitors, rebels, thieves twice +convicted, incendiaries, and scoffers at religion alike with death. Compared with +the Servian of the Danube, the Montenegrin is a barbarian. Nor is his personal +appearance equally prepossessing. The women, however, have regular features, +and, though less dignified in their carriage than their kinswomen of Servia, they +possess, as a rule, more grace and elasticity of movement. They are very +prolific, and if a family increases too rapidly it is customary for a friend to +adopt one or more of the children.</p> + +<p>Up to the invasion of the Osmanli the upper valleys of Montenegro were the +home merely of herdsmen and brigands. But the inhabitants of the lower valleys +were forced to retire to these austere heights in order to escape slavery. They +cultivated the soil, bred cattle and sheep, and sometimes robbed their neighbours. +But the sterile soil yielded only a scanty harvest, and famines were by no means +unfrequent. Bosnian Uskoches, who fled to the mountains in order to escape +Mussulman oppression, only added to the misery by reducing to a minimum the +share of cultivable soil which fell to the lot of each family. The pastures are +still held in common, in accordance with the ancient customs of the Servians. +According to a recent census, Montenegro is said to have a population of nearly +200,000 souls. This may be an exaggeration, but the country is not even able +to support 120,000 inhabitants without drawing supplies from beyond, and the +armed incursions into neighbouring districts might thus be excused as an “economical +necessity.” Death from hunger or on the field of battle was often the only +alternative. The Montenegrin always prefers the latter, for he does not fear +death, and “May you never die in bed !” is a wish universally expressed at the +cradle of a new-born infant. If a man is unfortunate enough to +die of disease, <span class="xxpn" id="p182">{182}</span> +or from old age, his friends excuse him euphemistically by charging the “Old +Murderer” with his death.</p> + +<p>The warlike incursions of former days have ceased now, for the boundaries +of Montenegro have been defined by an international commission, and the +mountaineers have established friendly relations with their neighbours, from +whom they are able now to purchase what they require. In summer they permit +the inhabitants of the coast to take their cattle into the hills, whilst in winter +they themselves descend to the seaboard, where they are sure now of a friendly +reception.</p> + +<p>The Montenegrins have always been anxious to possess a port on the Adriatic, +which would enable them to import freely, and without the intervention of the +merchants of Cattaro, the powder, salt, and other articles they require, and to +export their own produce. Their commerce, even now, is of some importance. +They export smoked mutton, sheep and goats, skins, tallow, salt fish, cheese, +honey, sumach, insect powder, &c., of an estimated value of £40,000 annually.</p> + +<p>The Montenegrins, like their neighbours the Albanians, frequently leave their +country for a time in order to seek work in the great cities of the East. Thousands +of them are to be met in Constantinople, where they manage to live +on friendly terms with the Turks, their “hereditary enemies.” They are even to +be found in Egypt.</p> + +<p>The Tsigani are the only strangers met with in the country. They resemble +the Servians in language, dress, religion, and customs, and only differ from them +by working at a useful trade, that of smiths. Their industry, however, causes +them to be objects of disdain, and they are not permitted to intermarry with +Servians.</p> + +<p>The government of Montenegro is a curious mixture of democratic, feudal, and +despotic institutions. The citizens fancy that they are equals, but they are not, +for certain families exercise a powerful influence. The sovereign, who appropriates +about half the revenue of the country, and receives 8,000 ducats annually +from Russia in addition, appoints the members of the Senate, or <i>Sovyet</i>. The +<i>Skupshtina</i> includes the <i>glavars</i>, or chiefs, of the thirty-nine tribes (<i>plemena</i>), but +has hitherto limited itself to applauding the “speech from the throne.” There +is a body-guard of a hundred men, and the whole of the male population is +bound to take the field under the leadership of Serdars. The country is divided +into eight <i>nahiés</i>, or districts, of which four (Bielopavlichka, Uskochka, Morachka, +and Vasoyevichka, with the country of the Kuchi), constitute the Berda, and +four (Katunska, Liesanska, Riechka, and Tsermnichka) belong to Montenegro +proper. Each of these districts is placed under a <i>kniaz</i>. The families and +associations of families (<i>brastvos</i>) are governed by <i>hospodars</i> and <i>starshinas</i>, +dependent upon the tribal chiefs, or <i>glavars</i>.</p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="map5"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib182bxxlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption">ITALY</div> +<img src="images/ib182b.jpg" width="600" height="772" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div class="chapter" id="p183"> +<div class="dctr01"><img src="images/ib183.jpg" + width="600" height="123" alt="" /></div> + +<h2 class="h2herein" title="Italy.">ITALY.<a + class="afnanchstar" href="#fn59" id="fnanch59" + title="go to note 59">*</a> +<span class="sphr"><img class="ihra" src="images/hr-ia013.png" + width="248" height="27" alt="" /></span></h2> + +<h3 title="I.—General Aspects.">I.—<span + class="smcap">G<b>ENERAL</b></span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>SPECTS.</b></span></h3></div><!--chapter--> + +<p class="pfirst"> +<span class="spdropcap"><img class="idropcap" src="images/drop-t.jpg" +width="235" height="254" alt="T" /></span>HE +limits of the Italian peninsula have been most distinctly traced +by nature. The Alps, which bound it in the north, from the +promontories of Liguria to the mountainous peninsula of Istria, +present themselves like a huge wall, the only breaches in which +are formed by passes situated high up in the zones of pines, +pastures, or eternal snows. Italy, like its two sister peninsulas of Southern +Europe, thus constitutes a world of its own, destined by nature to become the +theatre of a special evolution of humanity. Its delightful climate, beauteous +skies, and fertile fields distinguish it in a marked manner from the countries +lying beyond the Alps; and an inhabitant of the latter who descends the sunny +southern slope of this dividing range cannot fail to perceive that everything +around him has changed, and that he has entered a “new world.”</p> + +<p>The protecting barrier of the Alps and the sea which bounds it have +imparted to Italy a distinct individuality. All its countries, from the plains of +Lombardy to the shores of Sicily, resemble each other in certain respects. There +is a sort of family likeness about them; but still what +delightful contrasts, what <span class="xxpn" id="p184">{184}</span> +picturesque variety, do we not meet with ! Most of these contrasts are due to +the Apennines, which branch off from the southern extremity of the French Alps. +At first they run close to the seashore, like a huge wall supported at intervals +by powerful buttresses; subsequently they traverse the whole of the peninsula. +At times they are reduced to a narrow ridge, at others they spread out into vast +masses, rising in plateaux or ramifying into chains and promontories. River +valleys and plains intersect them in all directions; lakes and filled-up lake basins +are spread out at the foot of their cliffs; and numerous volcanoes, rising above the +general level, contrast, by their regular form, with the rugged declivities of +the Apennines. The sea, following these sinuosities in the relief of the ground, +forms a series of bays, arranged with a certain degree of symmetry. In the +north these bays do not much encroach upon the land, but in the south they +penetrate deeply, and almost form veritable gulfs. There once existed an Italy +of granitic rocks, but it exists no longer, for the rocks of the Apennines and of +the plains teach us that the Italy of the present is of recent origin, and that the +many islands of which it consisted formerly were united into a single peninsula +as recently as the Eocene epoch.</p> + +<p>Italy, compared with Greece, exhibits much sobriety in its configuration. +Its mountains are arranged in more regular ridges, its coasts are less indented, its +small archipelagos bear no comparison with the Cyclades, and its three great +dependent islands, Sicily, Sardinia, and Corsica, are regular in their contours. +Indeed, its contours mark its intermediate position between joyous Greece and +severe Iberia. Thus there exists a correspondence between geographical position +and contours.</p> + +<p>Italy, as a whole, contrasts in a remarkable manner with the Balkan peninsula. +The former faces the Ægean, and looks towards the east, whilst in the +truly peninsular portion of Italy, to the south of the plains of Lombardy, the +westerly slopes offer most life. Secure harbours are most numerous on the shores +of the Tyrrhenian, and the largest and most fertile plains slope down towards +that sea. It results from this that the western slopes of the Apennines have +given birth to the most enterprising and intelligent populations, who have taken +the lead in the political history of their country. The west represents the light, +whilst the east, bounded as it is by the Adriatic, an inland sea almost, a simple +gulf, represents the night. True, the plains of Apulia, though on the east, are +wealthier and more populous than the mountain regions of Calabria, but the +vicinity of Sicily, nevertheless, even there insures the preponderance of the +western littoral. Whilst Greece was in the height of her glory, whilst every +initiative went forth from Athens, the cities of Asia Minor, and the islands of the +Ægean, those republics which looked towards the east, such as Tarentum, Locri, +Sybaris, Syracuse, and Catania, enjoyed a pre-eminence over the cities on the +western littoral. The physical configuration of Italy thus facilitated the march +of civilisation from the south-east to the north-west, from Ionia to Gaul. The +Gulf of Taranto and the eastern coasts of Greater Greece and Sicily were freely +exposed to Hellenic influences, whilst further north the peninsula +faces about to <span class="xxpn" id="p185">{185}</span> +the west as it were. There can be no doubt that these features greatly facilitated +the expansion of ideas in the direction of Western Europe, and that if it had been +otherwise civilisation would have taken another direction.</p> + +<p>For nearly two thousand years, from the fall of Carthage to the discovery +of America, Italy remained the centre of the civilised world. It maintained its +hegemony either by conquest and organization, as in the case of the “Eternal +City,” or by the power of its genius, the relative liberty of its institutions, its +sciences, arts, and commerce, as in the times of Florence, Genoa, and Venice. +Two of the greatest events in history, the political unification of the Mediterranean +world under the laws of Rome, and at a later epoch the regeneration +of the human mind, so appropriately termed “Renaissance,” originated in +Italy. It behoves us, therefore, to inquire into the geographical conditions +which may account for this preponderance during these two ages in the life of +mankind.</p> + +<p>Mommsen and others have pointed out the favourable position of Rome as an +emporium. From the very first that city became the commercial centre of the +neighbouring populations. Built in the centre of a circus of hills, and on the +banks of a navigable river, not far from the sea, it likewise possessed the advantage +of lying on the frontiers of three nations—Latins, Sabines, and Etruscans. +When Rome had conquered the neighbouring territories it undoubtedly rose into +importance as a place of commerce. This local traffic, however, would never have +converted Rome into a great city. Its position is not to be compared with that +of places like Alexandria, Constantinople, or Bombay, upon which the world’s +commerce converges as a matter of course. On the contrary, its situation hardly +favours commerce. The Apennines, which environ the territory of Rome in a +huge semicircle, constituted a formidable obstacle until quite recently, and were +avoided by merchants; the sea near Rome is treacherous, and even the small galleys +of the ancients could not enter the inefficient harbour at Ostia without risk.</p> + +<p>The power of Rome, therefore, depended but in a small measure upon commercial +advantages resulting from geographical position. It is its central +position to which that city is mainly indebted for its greatness, and which +enabled it to weld the whole of the ancient world into a political whole. Three +concentric circles drawn around the city correspond with as many phases in its +development. During their first struggles for existence the Romans enjoyed +the advantage of occupying a basin of limited extent, shielded on all sides by +mountains. When Rome had exterminated the inhabitants of these mountains +the remainder of Italy naturally gravitated towards her. The plains of Cis-and +Transpadana in the north presented no obstacles, whilst the resistance of the +uncivilised tribes of the mountain regions of the south was soon broken, for they +found no support amongst the Greek colonies scattered along an extensive coast. +Nor were the populations of Sicily, Sardinia, and Corsica sufficiently united to +offer an effective resistance to the organized forces of the Romans, who were thus +able to extend their power over all the countries comprehended within the second +concentric circle referred to. <span class="xxpn" id="p186">{186}</span></p> + +<p>It happened that the plains of Northern Italy and Sicily were both rich +granaries, which enabled the Romans to push forward their conquests. The whole +world of the Mediterranean gravitated towards Rome and Italy: Illyria, Greece, +and Egypt in the east, Libya and Mauritania in the south, Iberia in the west, +Gaul in the north-west, and the transalpine countries in the north.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg050"> +<div class="dcaption"> +Fig. 50.—<span class="smcap">R<b>OME</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">R<b>OMAN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>MPIRE.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib186.jpg" width="600" height="453" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Rome maintained her power and influence as long as the Mediterranean +constituted the world; but, in proportion as the borders of the known world were +enlarged, so did Rome lose the advantages which a central position had conferred +upon her. Even during the latter days of the Roman empire Milan and Ravenna +usurped the position once held by Rome, and the latter became the capital of +the Ostrogothic kingdom, and subsequently the seat of the Byzantine exarchs. +Rome, the city of the Cæsars, had fallen for evermore ! True, the emperors were +succeeded by the popes, but the real masters of the “Holy Roman Empire” +resided beyond the Alps, and only came to Italy to have their power consecrated. +Even in Italy itself Rome ceased to be the leading town, its place being taken by +Pavia, Florence, Genoa, Milan, Venice, Bologna, and even Turin.</p> + +<p>The unity of Italy has been realised in the course of this century, and, +excepting a few Alpine valleys, its political boundaries coincide with its natural +ones. It may surprise us that this unity should not have been established long +ago, but the geographical configuration of Italy readily lends +itself to the <span class="xxpn" id="p187">{187}</span> +establishment of small states. Its islands, its mountain-bound plains, and coast +districts, shut off from the interior of the country by abrupt mountains, formed as +many centres where populations of diverse origin were able to lead a life independently +of their neighbours. Now and then the whole of Italy acknowledged +a single master, but it only did so on compulsion. That spirit of nationality +which has given birth to a united Italy only animated very few citizens of the +mediæval republics. They might unite to resist a common danger, but no sooner +was it past than they went their separate ways, or, still worse, fought amongst +themselves about some trifle.</p> + +<p>Cola di Rienzi, the tribune of Rome, appealed to the cities of Italy in the +middle of the fourteenth century; he adjured them to “throw off the yoke of the +tyrant, and to form a holy national brotherhood, whose object should be the +liberation of Rome and the whole of Italy.” His messengers, carrying a silver +wand, went to every city with greetings of amity, and asked that deputies should +be sent to the future parliament of the Eternal City. Rienzi, full of the +memories of the past, declared that Rome had not ceased to be the “mistress of +the world,” and had a natural right to govern all nations. It was his aim to +resuscitate the past, not to evoke a new life, and his work disappeared like a +dream. Florence and Venice, the most active cities of that period, looked upon +him as a visionary. “Siamo Veneziani, poi Cristiani,” said the proud citizens +of Venice in the fifteenth century. They, whose sons fought so valiantly for +Italian independence, never thought of calling themselves Italians. At the same +time we must bear in mind that the impulse which has made Italy one did not +originate with the masses, for there are still millions of Sicilians, Sardinians, +Calabrians, and even Lombards who do not appreciate the vast changes which +have taken place.</p> + +<p>If Italy no longer remains a “geographical expression,” it is owing in a +large measure to frequent foreign invasions. Spaniards, French, and Germans +in turn have seized the fertile plains of Italy, and their hard oppression has +taught the Italians to look upon each other as brothers. The Alps might be +supposed to offer an effective protection against such invasions, but they do not. +They are steepest on the Italian side, whilst their exterior slopes, towards France, +Switzerland, and German Austria, are comparatively gentle. Invaders, tempted +by the delightful climate and the wealth of Italy, were able to reach easily +the Alpine passes, whence they rushed down upon the plains; and thus the +“barrier of the Alps” is a barrier only to the Italians, and has always been +respected by them, excepting during the Roman empire. Nor is there any reason +why they should cross it, for there is no country beyond equal to their own. +French, Swiss, and Germans, on the other hand, have always looked upon Italy +as a sort of paradise. It was the country of their dreams; they yielded frequently +to their desire to possess it, and dyed its coveted plains with blood.</p> + +<p>Italy, exposed as it is to attacks from beyond, and no longer situated in the +centre of the known world, has definitively lost its <i>primato</i>, or foremost place +amongst nations, which some of its sons, carried away by +an exclusive patriotism, <span class="xxpn" id="p188">{188}</span> +would restore to it. But though no longer the most powerful nation, and +eclipsed in industry, commerce, and even literature and science, it still remains +unrivalled in its treasures of art. There is no other country in the world +which can boast of an equal number of cities remarkable on account of their +buildings, statues, paintings, and decorations of every kind. There are provinces +where every village, every group of houses even, delights the eye either by a +fresco painting or a work of the sculptor’s chisel, a bold staircase or picturesque +balcony. The instinct for art has passed into the blood of the people, and we +need not wonder if an Italian peasant builds his house and plants his trees so as +to bring them into harmony with the surrounding landscape. This constitutes the +greatest charm of Italy; everywhere art goes hand in hand with nature. How +many artists are there not in Lombardy, Venetia, or Tuscany who would have +become famous in any other country, but whose names will never be remembered, +in consequence of their overwhelming numbers, or because their lot was +cast in some remote village !</p> + +<p>Italy owes the rank it has held for more than two thousand years not +merely to its monuments and works of art, which attract students from the +extremities of the earth, but also to its historical associations. In a country which +has been inhabited for centuries by a civilised people there cannot be a town +the origin of which is not lost in the darkness of tradition. The modern cities +have replaced the Roman towns, and these latter rose upon the ruins of some +Greek, Etruscan, or Gallic settlement. Every fortress, every country house, +marks the site of some ancient citadel, or of the villa of a Roman patrician; +churches have replaced the ancient temples, and though the religious rites have +changed, the altars of gods and saints arise anew in the spots consecrated of old. +An examination of these relics of all ages is full of interest, and only the most +obtuse can resist the influence of the historical reminiscences which surround him.</p> + +<p>Italy, after a long period of decay and foreign domination, has again taken its +place amongst the foremost modern nations. The aspect of the peninsula has +undergone many changes since it received the name of Vitalia, or Italia, from the +herds of cattle which roamed over it. Its well-cultivated plains, carefully tended +gardens, and busy cities entitle it now to some other appellation. The passes of +the Alps and its central position give Italy the command of all the routes which +converge from France, Germany, and Austria upon the Gulfs of Genoa and +Venice. Its quarries, sulphur and iron mines, its wines and agricultural produce +of every description, and its industry afford ever-growing resources. Its men of +learning and inventors may fairly claim to be on a level with those of other +countries. The population increases rapidly. It is not only more dense than in +France, but also sends a considerable contingent of emigrants to the solitudes of +Southern America.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn60" id="fnanch60">60</a> <span class="xxpn" id="p189">{189}</span></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="II.—The Basin of the Po."> +II.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>ASIN</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>O.</b></span> +<span class="spblk"> + <span class="smcap">P<b>IEMONT,</b></span><a + class="afnanchstar" href="#fn61" id="fnanch61" + title="go to note 61">*</a> + <span class="smcap">L<b>OMBARDY,</b></span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>ENETIA,</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>MILIA.</b></span></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">The +valley of the Po is frequently spoken of as Upper Italy, because it occupies +the northern portion of the peninsula, but might more appropriately be termed +the Italian Netherlands, for its elevation is less than that of any other group of +provinces. It is a river valley now, but during the Pliocene epoch it still formed +a gulf of the sea. This gulf was gradually filled up by the alluvium brought +down by the rivers, and upheaved by subterranean forces above the surface of the +waters, the erosive action of the mountain torrents continuing all the while; +and thus, in the course of ages, the basin of the Po assumed its gentle and +regular slope towards the sea. As long as the waters of the Adriatic penetrated +the valleys between Monte Rosa and Monte Viso, Italy was +attached to the Alps <span class="xxpn" id="p190">{190}</span> +of continental Europe only by a narrow neck of land formed by the Ligurian +Apennines.</p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr01" id="fg051"> +<div class="dcaption"> +Fig. 51.—<span class="smcap">M<b>ONTE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>ISO</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AS</span> + <span class="smmaj">IT</span> + <span class="smmaj">APPEARS</span> + <span class="smmaj">FROM</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>HIAFFREDO.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib189.jpg" width="600" height="598" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>No other region of Europe can rival the valley of the Po as regards the +magnificence of its distant prospects. The Apennines in the south raise their +heads above the region of forests, their rocks, woods, and pasturages contrasting +with the uniform plain spread out along their foot; whilst the snow-clad Alps +rise in all their sublimity from the Col di Tenda in the west to the passes of Istria +in the east. The isolated pyramid of Monte Viso (thus called from the beautiful +prospect which may be obtained from its summit) looks down upon the fields of +Saluzzo, and the small lakes in its pasturing region feed a roaring rivulet which +subsequently assumes the name of Po. Enormous buttresses to the north-west of +Turin support the ice-clad Grand Paradis, near which peeps out the Grivola, +perhaps the most charming, the most gracefully chiselled of all Alpine peaks. +Right in the bend of the Alpine chain rises the dome of Mont Blanc, like an +island above a sea of mountains. Monte Rosa, crowned with a seven-pointed +diadem, pushes its spurs far into Italy. Then come the Splügen, the Ortler, the +Adamello, the Marmolade, and many another summit distinguished for some +special beauty. When from the top of the dome of Milan we behold spread +out around us this magnificent amphitheatre of mountains rising above the +verdant plain, we may well rejoice that we should have lived to contemplate so +grand a scene.</p> + +<p>Geographically the Alps belong to the countries which surround Italy. From +the south we seize at a glance the entire slope of the mountains, from the vineyards +and plantations of mulberry-trees to the forests of beech and larch, the +pastures, the naked rocks, and the dazzling fields of ice. But the cultivator only +ventured into this difficult region when forced by poverty. The features of the +northern slope are quite different. There the land rises gradually, and the valleys +are less fertile, but the inhabitants can easily reach the heads of the passes, +whence they look down upon the inviting plains of Italy. It is this structure of +the Alps which explains the preponderance of the Germanic and Gallic elements +throughout their extent, and whilst Italian is spoken only in a few isolated +localities beyond this mountain barrier, the French and German elements are +largely represented on their inner slopes.</p> + +<p>Italy can only claim a few Alpine mountain masses within the basin of the +Po, the Adige, and the rivers of Venetia. The most important of these, alike on +account of its height, its glaciers, and springs, is the Grand Paradis, which rears +its head to the south of the Dora Baltea, between the masses of Mont Blanc and +the plains of Piemont. An Englishman, Mr. Mathews, may claim to be the first +discoverer of this mountain giant, which even on the Sardinian staff map, +published only recently, is confounded with Mont Iseran, a far less noble summit +twenty-five miles to the west of it.</p> + +<p>None of the other Alpine summits on Italian territory can compare in height +with the Grand Paradis, for though the Italian language extends in numerous +instances to the central chain of the Alps, the political boundaries of +Italy do not. <span class="xxpn" id="p191">{191}</span> +Switzerland holds possession of the valley of the Upper Ticino, whilst Austria still +possesses the Upper Adige. The only rivers rising on the southern slope of the +Alps, and belonging in their entirety, or nearly so, to Italy, are the Tagliamento +and the Piave. In consequence of this violation of the natural frontiers there +are many snow-clad Alpine summits which, though geographically belonging to +Italy, are situated on the frontiers of the present kingdom, or even within +Swiss or Austrian territory. Amongst these are the giant summits of the Ortler, +the Marmolade, and the precipitous Cimon della Pala. The Monte della Disgrazia, +however, to the south of the Bernina, is an Italian mountain; such is also, for the +greater part, the mountain mass of the Camonica, bounded on the north by the +Pass of Tonale, which plays so prominent a part in legendary history, and is +commanded by the Adamo, or Adamello, whose glacier streams creep down to +the Upper Adige. Farther to the east, in the valley of the Piave, the obelisk +surmounting the huge pyramid of the Antelao pierces the line of perennial snow, +and there are other peaks scarcely inferior to it in height.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg052"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib191lg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 52.—<span class="smcap">G<b>RAND</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ARADIS.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">From the Map of the French Alpine Club. + Scale 1 : 228,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib191.jpg" width="600" height="568" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Most of the Alpine groups lying within Italy and between the +main chain and <span class="xxpn" id="p192">{192}</span> +the plains do not exceed the Apennines in height, and only a few amongst them +are covered with perennial snow. But the prospects which may be enjoyed from +them are all the more charming for this reason, for we find ourselves between two +zones, with cultivated valleys, towns, and villages at our feet, and a panorama of +bare and snowy summits bounding the view to the north. Several of these +mountains deservedly attract large numbers of tourists. Favourites amongst +them are the hills rising above the blue lakes of Lombardy, such as the Motterone +on Lago Maggiore, the pyramidal Generoso rising in the midst of verdant fields +on the Lake of Lugano, the superb hills between the two arms of the Lake of +Como and the fertile plains of the Brianza, and Monte Baldo, advancing its +buttresses like lions’ claws into the waters of the Lake of Garda. The mountains +of the Val Tellina, or the Orobia range, to the south of the valley of the Upper +Adda, being remote from towns and customary highways, are less frequently +visited than they deserve. Standing at their foot, we may almost fancy being in +the Pyrenees. As to the dolomites, on the frontiers of Venetia and the Tyrol, +they are unique. Their fantastically shaped rocks, delicately tinted with pink +and other colours, contrast marvellously with the green of beeches and firs, or +the blue waters of the lakes. Richthofen and others look upon these isolated +mountain masses as ancient coral islands, or <i>atolls</i>, upheaved to a height varying +between 6,500 and 10,400 feet; and, whatever their geological origin may be, +they certainly contribute much towards the beauty of the Alpine regions.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg053"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 53.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>LAIN</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">D<b>ÉBRIS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">BETWEEN</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>LPS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>PENNINES.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">According to Zollikofer.</div> +<img src="images/ib192.jpg" width="600" height="329" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>If we descend the Italian slope of the Alps, we pass gradually from the more +ancient to the most recent geological formation, until we finally reach the alluvial +plain. Metamorphic rocks, <i>verrucano</i>, dolomites, and other rocks overlie the +granites, the gneiss, and the schists of the more elevated mountain masses. These +are succeeded by beds of Triassic and Jurassic age. Lower still +we meet with <span class="xxpn" id="p193">{193}</span> +terraces and hills composed of tertiary marls, clays, and conglomerates. Monte +Bolca, so famous amongst geologists on account of its fossils, belongs to this +formation.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn62" id="fnanch62">62</a> The whole of the plain of Lombardy and Piemont, with the +exception of the isolated hillocks rising in it, and a few marine deposits near its +margin, consists of débris brought down by the rivers. The depth of this accumulation +is not yet known, for hitherto no borings have pierced it; but if we +suppose the slopes of the Alps and the Apennines to continue uniformly, it would +amount to no less than 4,130 feet. The two diagrams (Fig. 53) are intended to +illustrate this feature. In the upper of these the heights are exaggerated tenfold; +in the lower both the horizontal and the vertical scales are the same. A +glance at this diagram reveals the astounding fact that the volume of this débris +almost equals that of the existing mountain systems.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg054"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 54.—<span class="smcap">S<b>LOPE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>ALLEY</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>O.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">The vertical scale is ten times + larger than the horizontal.</div> +<img src="images/ib193.jpg" width="600" height="202" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The vast plain stretching from the Adriatic to the foot of the Monte Rosa and +the Viso may boast of its peninsulas, its islands, and even its archipelagos, as if +it were a sea. The tertiary hills of Northern Monferrato, to the east of Turin, +attain a height of 1,600 to 2,000 feet, and the valley of the Tanaro completely +separates them from the Ligurian Alps and the Apennines. Even at the very +foot of the Alps, as at Cavour and elsewhere, isolated granitic or porphyritic +pyramids and domes rise in the midst of the plain sloping down towards the Po.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn63" id="fnanch63">63</a> +The hump-backed Bosco Montello, to the south of the Piave, is another isolated +hill; and on the banks of the Po may be seen a hillock of pebbles and marine +sands, abounding in fossils, which bears the village of San Colombano and its +vineyards. Several volcanic peaks, surrounded by cretaceous formations, rise in +the midst of the plains to the east of the Lake of Garda. The craters of the +Berici, near Vicenza, and of the Euganean Hills, near +Padua, have not vomited <span class="xxpn" id="p194">{194}</span> +flames within the historical epoch, but the hot and the gas springs which issue +from clefts in the trachytic and basaltic rocks prove sufficiently that volcanic +forces are not yet quite extinct in that part of Italy. Earthquakes occur frequently +in the neighbouring Alps, and particularly near Belluno and Bassano.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg055"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib194lg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 55.—<span class="smcap">M<b>UD</b></span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>OLCANOES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> <span class="smcap">H<b>OT</b></span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>PRINGS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">N<b>ORTHERN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>PENNINES.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 1,160,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib194.jpg" width="600" height="411" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>A similar volcanic zone extends along the northern slope of the Apennines, +which bound the valley of the Po on the south. Hydrogen gas escapes from +fissures in the rocks to the south of Modena and Bologna, and is utilised in +several instances in the manufacture of lime, and for other purposes. These gas +springs of Pietra Mala, Porretta, and Barigazzo were known by the ancients and +during the Middle Ages as “fiery springs,” and they illuminated the path of the +traveller overtaken by the night. Lower down the slope, almost on the verge of +the plains, we meet with a line of mud volcanoes, or <i>bombi</i>, the most famous of +which are those of Sassuolo, near Modena. The largest of these, that of Mirano, +has no less than forty craters. The ancient gulf of the sea, now converted into +a plain, is thus skirted by volcanic cones, mud volcanoes, hot springs, and deposits +of sulphur. As high up as Piemont, and notably at Acqui, we meet with hot +springs, attesting that volcanic activity is not yet altogether extinct.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="plt11"> +<div class="dcaptionsml"> +<table class="wthfull" summary=""> +<colgroup> + <col width="13%" /><col width="14%" /> + <col width="13%" /><col width="18%" /> + <col width="18%" /><col width="24%" /></colgroup> +<tr> + <td class="tdctr">La Dent blanche, 14,319 ft.</td> + <td class="tdctr">Château des Dames, 11,998 ft.</td> + <td class="tdctr">Mt. Cervin, 14,705 ft.</td> + <td class="tdctr">Mischabel Hōrner, 14,942 ft.</td> + <td class="tdctr">Breithorn, 13,680 ft.</td> + <td class="tdctr">Monte Rosa (Dufour Spitze, + 15,217 ft.).</td></tr></table></div> +<img src="images/ib194b.jpg" width="600" height="412" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">THE PENNINE ALPS, AS SEEN FROM THE BECCA DI NONA + (PIC CARREL), 10,380 FEET.</div> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The valleys of the Alps and the plains extending along their foot were filled, +in a former geological epoch, with huge glaciers, descending from what was +anciently the immense glacial region of Central Europe. There is not a valley +between that of the Tanaro in the west, and that of the Isonzo descending from the +mountains of Carinthia, but contains accumulations of débris +carried down by the <span class="xxpn" id="p195">{195}</span> +glaciers, and now covered with vegetation. Most of these ancient glaciers +exceeded those of the Monte Rosa and the Finsteraarhorn in extent, and several +of them rivalled the existing glaciers of the Himalaya. If we would gain a +notion of what the Alps were like during this glacial epoch, we must go to Greenland +or to the Antarctic regions.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg056"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib195xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 56.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>NCIENT</b></span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>LACIERS</b></span> <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>LPS.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 4,800,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib195.jpg" width="600" height="401" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>One of the smallest of these ice streams, that which descended from the +mountains of Tenda in the direction of Cuneo, had a length of thirty miles. +That which brought down the ice of Mont Genèvre, Mont Tabor, and Mont Cenis +had twice that length, and its moraines formed a veritable amphitheatre of +hills, locally known as <i>regione alla pietre</i>, or stony region. Farther north the +streams of ice descending from the Pennine Alps between the Grand Paradis and +Mont Blanc united in a single stream eighty miles in length, and spread over the +plain far beyond Ivrea. The alluvial accumulation of this ancient glacier rises +1,100 and even 2,130 feet above the valley through which the Dora Baltea now +flows. One of its lateral moraines, known as the <i>Serra d’Ivrea</i>, forms a regular +rampart to the east of the river, eighteen miles in extent. Its slopes are now +covered with chestnuts. The western ravine (Colle di Brossa) is less prominent, +because it is inferior in height; but the frontal ravine, +forming a complete demicircle, +can still be traced readily. In the débris accumulated at the foot of this +ancient glacier, rocks derived from Mont Blanc are mixed with others brought +down from Mont Cervin. And yet it was but a dwarf when compared with +the ancient twin glacier of the Ticino and the Adda, which extended from the +Simplon to the Stelvio, filled up the cavities now occupied by +the Lago Maggiore <span class="xxpn" id="p196">{196}</span> +and the Lake of Como, sent a lateral branch to the tortuous bed of the Lake of +Lugano, and finally, after a course of from 100 to 120 miles, debouched upon the +plain of Lombardy. The glacier of the Oglio was small in comparison with it, +but it was exceeded by that of the Adige, the most considerable of all on the +southern slope of the Alps. This river of ice, from the mountains of the +Oetzthal, where it originated, to its terminal moraine to the north of Mantua, +had a length of 175 miles. One of its branches descended towards the east, down +the valley of the Drave, as far as where the town of Klagenfurt now stands. Its +main stream filled up the cavity of the Lake of Garda, pushing along a formidable +rampart of elevated moraines.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg057"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib196xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 57.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>ERRA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> <span class="smcap">I<b>VREA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>NCIENT</b></span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>LACIER</b></span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>AKES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">D<b>ORA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">From the Sardinian Staff Map. + Scale 1 : 250,000</div> +<img src="images/ib196.jpg" width="600" height="581" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The hand of man is scarcely able to make an impression +upon the vast accumulations heaped up by the action of the +glaciers. The hills of Solferino, of Cavriana, and Somma +Campagna, so often named in connection with battles, are +nothing but débris brought down from the flanks of the +Alps, and they were much higher formerly than they are now. <span class="xxpn" id="p197">{197}</span></p> + +<p>Some of the erratic blocks were as large as houses, but, being used as quarries, +they are fast disappearing. One of them at Pianezza, at the mouth of the +Susa valley, is 80 feet long, 40 feet broad, and 46 feet high, and a chapel has +been built upon it. The huge erratic blocks in the hills between the two arms of +the Lake of Como have supplied materials for the monolithic columns of the +churches and palaces in the environs. The slopes of the hills of Turin facing the +Alps are likewise covered with erratic blocks.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>When the glaciers retired into the upper valleys of the Alps, the soil which +they covered was left bare, and the depressions now occupied by the beautiful +lakes of Lombardy were revealed. These depressions, whose bottom even now +sinks down below the level of the ocean, were formerly arms of the sea, in +character very much like the fiords of Norway. That such was the case is proved +by the presence, in every one of the Lombard lakes, of a sardine (the <i>agone</i>), +which naturalists consider to be a sea fish. In Garda Lake, moreover, there still +dwell two marine fishes which have adapted themselves to their new condition of +life, as well as a small marine shell-fish.</p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr01" id="fg058"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib197xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 58.—<span class="smcap">A<b>NCIENT</b></span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>AKES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>ERBANO.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib197.jpg" width="600" height="508" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>The number of these Alpine lakes was much larger formerly, and those +which still exist shrink from year to year. In Upper Piemont alluvial deposits +have long ago filled up the lakes, and there now only remain a +few pools of <span class="xxpn" id="p198">{198}</span> +water to indicate their site. The first sheets of water to which the term “lake” +may fairly be applied are met with on both banks of the Dora Baltea (see +Fig. 57). The little basin of Candia and the shallow Lake of Azeglio, to the west +and east of the river, are the only remains of <i>Lacus Clisius</i>, which covered an area +of several hundred square miles until its waters broke through the semicircular +terminal moraine which bounded it on the south. The Dora Baltea formerly +escaped from this lake in the south-east, its present course only dating from the +fourteenth century.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg059"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib198xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 59.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">U<b>PPER</b></span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>XTREMITY</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>AKE</b></span> <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>OMO.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 148,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib198.jpg" width="600" height="560" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Since this reservoir has been drained, the first lake of importance in the west +is that of Verbano, very inappropriately called Lago Maggiore, or the “principal +lake,” as that of Garda exceeds it in extent. Ancient beaches, at an elevation of +1,300 feet above the sea, prove that the waters of the lake have considerably +subsided, and that its area was much larger formerly; and it curiously ramified +with neighbouring lake basins, now merely connected with it by rivers. The +ancient moraine at the foot of this lake, and through which the Ticino has excavated +itself a passage, still rises to a height +of 980 feet. <span class="xxpn" id="p199">{199}</span></p> + +<p>Centuries elapsed before the changes which we now perceive were accomplished. +Still they proceeded at a sufficiently rapid rate. Even now the alluvium +carried down by the Ticino and the Maggia continually encroaches upon +the Lago Maggiore. Seven hundred years ago the village of Gordola stood on +the shore of the lake: it is now nearly a mile away from it. The landing-places +of Magadino, at the mouth of the Ticino, have to be continually shifted, for the +lake retires steadily. Only sixty years ago barges were able to receive their +cargoes at a wharf nearly half a mile higher up than the present one. The Gulf +of Locarno is gradually being separated from the main sheet of water by alluvial +deposits brought down by the Maggia.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg060"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 60.—<span class="smcap">S<b>ECTION</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">N<b>ORTHERN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ORTION</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>AKE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>OMO.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 25,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib199a.jpg" width="600" height="152" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg061"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 61.—<span class="smcap">S<b>ECTION</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>AKE</b></span> <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>ECCO,</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">NEAR</span> <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>IFURCATION.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 25,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib199b.jpg" width="600" height="187" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg062"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 62.—<span class="smcap">L<b>ONGITUDINAL</b></span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>ECTION</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> <span class="smcap">L<b>AKE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>OMO.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Horizontal scale 1 : 50,000. + Vertical scale 1 : 500,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib199c.jpg" width="600" height="152" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The Lario, or Lake of Como, which rivals the Maggiore by its beauty, is +likewise being gradually silted up. In the time of the Romans the navigation +extended as far as Summolacus (lake-head), the modern Samolaco. But the +torrent of Mera gradually converted most of the upper extremity of the lake into +an alluvial plain, whilst the alluvial deposits carried down by the Adda cut off +the remainder from the main body of water. There now remains +only the <i>Lacus</i> <span class="xxpn" id="p200">{200}</span> +<i>Dimidiatus</i>, or Lake of Mezzola, which is shrinking from year to year, and will +finally disappear altogether. The miasmata rising from the swamps at the mouth +of the Adda have frequently depopulated the environs, and the ruined fort of +Fuentes, at the mouth of the river, built to defend the Val Tellina, was hardly +ever more than a hospital for its fever-stricken garrison.</p> + +<p>The south-eastern arm of the lake, that of Lecco, through which the Adda +makes its escape to the south, has likewise been divided into a series of separate +basins. Nature, which would convert these lakes into bottom-lands at no distant +date, is being aided here by the works of man. The barrier which obstructed the +free egress of the Adda has been cleared away, the structures of fishermen have +been removed, and, in consequence of these and other engineering measures, the +once-dreaded rises of the lake have been reduced to a minimum, and the southernmost +of the lake basins, that of Brivio, has been converted into dry land. The +large Lake of Brianza, which extended formerly far to the south-west, has likewise +been partially drained, and there now remain only a few lakelets of small +extent.</p> + +<p>We know sufficient of the bottom of the Lake of Como to enable us to judge +of the manner in which it is becoming gradually filled up with alluvium. The +mud deposited in its northern portion has filled up all the original inequalities of +the soil, and even in the centre of the lake, and in its south-eastern arm, the +bottom is almost a perfect level. In the Como arm, however, which receives no +tributary river of any importance, the bottom is still full of inequalities. These +differences amply prove to us the geological agency of the rivers, which must +terminate in the lake being converted into a bottom-land, with a river flowing +through its centre. The third of our diagrams (Fig. 62) shows that the greatest +depth now hardly exceeds 1,300 feet, whilst, if we may judge from the slopes of +the hills which bound it, the depth in former times cannot have been less than +2,300 feet.</p> + +<p>The Sebino, or Lake of Iseo, and the lakelet of Idro, which are fed by the +glacier streams of the Adamello, exhibit the same features as the lakes farther to +the west. The Benaco, or Lake of Garda, however, the most extensive of these +Alpine lakes, is very stable as regards its outline and the configuration of its +bottom, a fact sufficiently explained by the small size of its tributary streams as +compared with its vast area. The old Alpine lakes of the Venetian Alps have +disappeared long ago, and there remain only a few ponds, filling cavities in the +dolomitic rocks and peat bogs, to indicate their +ancient sites.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn64" id="fnanch64">64</a> <span class="xxpn" id="p201">{201}</span></p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg063"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 63.—<span class="smcap">V<b>ILLA</b></span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>ERBELLONI,</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">ON</span> <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ENINSULA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>ELLAGIO,</b></span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>AKE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>OMO.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib201.jpg" width="600" height="605" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>These lacustrine basins, like all other reservoirs of the same kind, regulate the +outflow of the torrents which empty into them. During the freshets they store +up the superabundant waters, and only part with them in the dry season, and +upon their difference of level in different seasons depend the oscillations of the +emissary rivers which issue from them. In the case of the Lake of Garda, which +drains but a small area in proportion to its size, this difference is small, and +throughout the year the pellucid waters of the Mincio flow tranquilly beneath the +blackened ramparts of Peschiera. Such is not the case as regards either the Lago +Maggiore or the Lake of Como, for the volume of water discharged into them +is so considerable that their level in summer and winter varies to the extent +of several yards, and corresponding differences may be observed in the rivers +issuing from them. Lake Como rises no less than 12 feet, and increases +70 square miles in area, whilst the Lago Maggiore sometimes rises +22 feet, and <span class="xxpn" id="p202">{202}</span> +increases to the extent of one-fifth. The volume of the Ticino, when at its highest, +almost equals the average volume of the Nile, and if it were not for the regulating +influence of the lake from which it issues, it would alternately convert the plains +of Lombardy into a sheet of water and leave them an arid tract of land.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn65" id="fnanch65">65</a></p> + +<p>The Alpine lakes of Italy thus play an important part in the economy of +the country. They render the climate more equable, serve as high-roads of +commerce, and, being the centres of animal life, attract a dense population. But +it is not this which has rendered these lakes famous, which has attracted thousands +of wanderers ever since the time of the Romans, and caused villas and +palaces to rise on their shores: it is their incomparable beauty. And, indeed, +there are few spots in Europe which bear comparison with the delightful Gulf of +Pallanza, over which are scattered the Borromean Islands, or with the peninsula +of Bellagio, which may be likened to a hanging garden suspended within sight +of the snow-clad Alps, and affording a prospect of the rock-bound shores of the +Como Lake, cultivated fields, and numerous villas. Perhaps even more delightful +is the peninsula of Sermione, jutting out into the azure waters of the Garda Lake, +like the tender stalk of a flower developing into a many-coloured petal.</p> + +<p>Most of the lakes in the plain have been drained into the neighbouring rivers. +The Lake of Gerondo, mentioned in mediæval records, has dwindled down into a +small swamp, or <i>mosi</i>, now, and its populous island of Fulcheria has become merged +in the plain of Lombardy. The lakes on the southern bank of the Po, above +Guastalla, have likewise been drained; and if the two shallow lakes of Mantua +still exist, this is entirely due to the embankments raised in the twelfth century. +It would have been much better, and would have saved the city the horrors of +many a siege, if these lakes had been allowed to disappear likewise.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>The lagoons along the Adriatic have decreased in extent in the course of +centuries, and whilst new lagoons are being formed, the old ones are gradually +being converted into dry land. The old maps of the Venetian littoral differ +essentially from our modern ones, and yet all the vast changes they indicate have +been wrought in the course of a few centuries. The swamps of Caorle, between +the Piave and the Gulf of Trieste, have changed to an extent which prevents us +from restoring the ancient topography of the country; and if the lagoons of Venice +and Chioggia exhibit a certain permanence of contour, this is only on account of +the incessant interference of man. The ancient lagoon of Brondolo has been dry +land since the middle of the sixteenth century. The large lagoon of Comacchio, +to the south of the Po, has been cut up into separate portions by alluvial embankments +formed by the agency of rivers and torrents. For the most part it consists +now of <i>valli</i>, or alluvial deposits, but there still remain a few profound cavities, or +<i>chiari</i>, which the rivers have not yet succeeded in filling up. +Formerly these <span class="xxpn" id="p203">{203}</span> +lagoons extended far to the south in the direction of Ravenna, and, according to +Strabo and other ancient writers, +that ancient city once occupied a +site very much like that of Venice +or Chioggia in our own days.</p> + +<div class="section"> +<div class="dright dwth08" id="fg064"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib203xxlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 64.—<span class="smcap">B<b>EECH</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>INE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">W<b>OODS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">R<b>AVENNA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 2,470,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib203.jpg" width="299" height="800" alt="" /> +</div><!--dright--> + +<p>There can be no doubt that these +lagoons were anciently separated +from the Adriatic by a narrow strip +of land over 120 miles in length, +and similar to what we still meet +with on the coasts of Carolina and +of the Brazils. This ancient barrier +still exists in the <i>lidi</i> of Venice and +Comacchio, which are pierced at +intervals, admitting the vivifying +floods of the open sea. Elsewhere +the traces of this ancient beach +must be looked for on the mainland. +The low delta of the Po is traversed +from north to south by a range of +dunes constituting the continuation +of the lidi of Venice, and extending +into the swamps of Comacchio, +where they form a natural embankment +running parallel with the +coast. These dunes, between the +Adige and Cervia, are covered with +sombre pine woods, replaced here +and there by oaks. The underwood +mainly consists of hawthorns and +juniper-trees, and wild boars still +haunt it.</p></div><!--section--> + +<p>No sooner have the lagoons protected +by these barriers been converted +into dry land than the sea +seizes upon the sand, and forms it +into new curvilinear barriers similar +to the former ones. The principal +range of dunes to the east of +Ravenna, which is about 20 miles +in length, and varies in width +between 50 and 3,300 yards, has +thus two other ranges of dunes +running parallel with it, one of them being still in course +of formation. Signor <span class="xxpn" id="p204">{204}</span> +Pareto has estimated the annual advance of the land at 7½ feet, and at much more +near the mouths of rivers.</p> + +<p>The sea thus marks by a series of barriers its successive recoils. Sometimes, +however, the sea gains upon the land in consequence of a gradual subsidence of the +Venetian shore, the cause of which has not yet been elucidated. Thus the gravel +bank of Cortellazzo, opposite the swamps of Caorle, appears to have anciently +been a <i>lido</i> which has sunk nearly 70 feet below the level of the sea. The islands +which fringed the littoral of Aquileja during the Middle Ages have almost wholly +disappeared. In the time of the Romans these islands were populous; there +were forests and fields upon them, and the inhabitants built ships. The chronicles +of the Middle Ages tell us that the Doge of Venice and the Patriarch of Aquileja +hunted stags and wild boars upon them, much to the scandal of the inhabitants. +At the present day the dunes which of yore protected these islands have almost +wholly disappeared, the forests have been supplanted by reeds, and Grado is +the only place on the littoral which may still boast of a certain number of inhabitants. +Piers, walls, mosaic pavements, and even stones bearing inscriptions, +which are found occasionally at the bottom of the sea or of swamps, prove that +the mainland was formerly more extensive there. Farther to the west the +littoral of Venice bears evidence of a similar subsidence. Artesian wells sunk in +the city of the lagoons have led to the discovery of four beds of turf, the deepest +no less than 420 feet below the level of the sea. The subterranean church of +St. Mark has within historical times been converted into a submarine church, and +streets and buildings are gradually sinking beneath the waters of the lagoons. +If it were not for the alluvium brought down by the rivers, the sea would continually +encroach upon the land. Ravenna, too, participates in this subsidence, +which Signor Pareto estimates to amount to 0·60 inch in the course of a century.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>Amongst the geological agents constantly at work to modify the surface of the +earth, the rivers and torrents irrigating the plain lying at the foot of the Alps are +the most active, and no other country of Europe, Holland alone excepted, can +compare in this respect with Northern Italy.</p> + +<p>The torrent of Isonzo offers one of the most striking instances of these geological +revolutions. It is said to have formerly communicated through subterranean +channels with the Istrian Timavo, and that its existence as a separate river +does not date very far back. Ancient writers do not enumerate the Isonzo amongst +the rivers flowing into the Adriatic. It is first mentioned in a document of the +sixth century as a river irrigating some inland valley. On Peutinger’s Table we +meet with a station, Ponte Sonti, far to the east of Aquileja, and near the sources +of the Timavo. The chronicles are silent with respect to the peripatetics of this +river, but a careful examination of the surrounding hills justifies the assumption +that the valley of Tolmein, on the Upper Isonzo, was formerly a lake which overflowed +towards the north-west through the narrows of Caporetto, and that its +pent-up waters found their way through the Natisone into the Adriatic. Subsequently +they opened themselves a passage to the south, and +another lake was <span class="xxpn" id="p205">{205}</span> +formed at the confluence of Isonzo and Wippach. This lake communicated by +subterranean channels with the Timavo, but it has now disappeared, and the Isonzo +flows directly into the sea, its bed wandering continuously towards the east. The +alluvium carried down by this river has formed the peninsula of Sdobba, and +joined several old islands to the mainland.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg065"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib205xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 65.—<span class="smcap">S<b>HINGLE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>EDS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>AGLIAMENTO,</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>EDUNA,</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">Z<b>ELLINE.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">From the Austrian Staff Map. + Scale 1 : 290,000</div> +<img src="images/ib205.jpg" width="600" height="497" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The Tagliamento is even a more active geological agent than its neighbour just +beyond the frontier. The débris deposited at the mouth of the narrow gorge in +which it rises covers many square miles of a once fertile plain. In summer its +waters trickle through these accumulations of shingle, but after heavy rain the +river is converted into a powerful torrent several miles in width, and all the more +formidable as its bed lies higher than many parts of the surrounding country. +The Meduna and Zelline, to the west of the Tagliamento, are equally destructive, +and an extensive tract at their confluence is covered with shingles. Lower down, +in the lagoons, these torrents have thrown up huge embankments of sand on either +side of their ancient beds. The alluvium brought down by these torrents to the +sea is in every instance deposited to the west, a circumstance accounted for by the +direction of the coast current.</p> + +<p>The Piave, the most considerable river to the east of the Adige, is likewise a +most active geological agent, converting fertile fields into sterile shingle tracts, +filling up swamps, and carrying large quantities of matter into the +sea. At its <span class="xxpn" id="p206">{206}</span> +mouth the land gains rapidly upon the sea, and Heraclea of the Veneti, now +known as Cittanova, which was a seaport once, at the present time lies far inland.</p> + +<p>The Piave was formerly supposed to have changed its bed in the same manner +as the Isonzo. Below the Capo di Ponte, a wild defile in the Dolomite Alps, the +Piave flows towards the south-west, past Belluno, and lower down is joined by the +Cordevole. It was, however, supposed that the river originally flowed through the +valley of Rai, immediately to the south of the Capo di Ponte, and that the Meschio +and Livenzo constituted its lower course. Earthquakes or landslips were supposed +to have created a barrier across that valley, and the small lakes still seen there were +looked upon as remains of the ancient river bed. But M. de Mortillet has shown +that this hypothesis is untenable, for the barrier referred to is merely the moraine of +an ancient glacier, and there exist no traces whatever of landslips.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg066"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib206xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 66.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">SUPPOSED</span> + <span class="smcap">O<b>LD</b></span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>ED</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>IAVE.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">From the Austrian Staff Map. + Scale 1 : 550,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib206.jpg" width="600" height="462" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>At the same time it cannot be doubted that extensive changes have taken place +in the basin of the Piave. Thus in 1771 the course of the Cordevole, its most +important tributary, was obstructed for a time by a landslip which carried the +verdant terraces of Pezza down into the valley. Two villages were destroyed, and +two others overwhelmed by the rising floods of the river.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="plt12"> +<img src="images/ib206b.jpg" width="600" height="414" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">VENICE.</div> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg067"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib207xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 67.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>AGOONS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>ENICE.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 394,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib207.jpg" width="600" height="691" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The Brenta, which rises in the beautiful Sugana valley of the Tyrol, has at all +times been a source of anxiety to the Venetians on account of its irregularities. +Formerly it entered the lagoons at Fusina, and its alluvium +filled up the canals <span class="xxpn" id="p207">{207}</span> +and infected the air. The Paduans and other inhabitants of the lowlands were +anxious to divert it by the most direct course into the lagoons, so as to +avoid inundations, whilst the Venetians were solicitous to get rid of a river which +threatened to fill up their lagoons and render them insalubrious. These conflicting +interests gave rise to numerous wars. The possession of the coast became a +question of existence to the Venetians, and no sooner had they obtained it than +they set about “regulating” the Lower Brenta. Hy means of two canals, the +Brenta Nuova, or Brentone, and the Brenta Nuovissima, the river was conducted +right round the lagoons to the port of Brondolo, a few miles to the north of the +Adige. But the river, whose course had thus been considerably lengthened, +gradually filled up the bed in its upper course, and it was +found impossible to <span class="xxpn" id="p208">{208}</span> +confine it within its lateral embankments. They were broken through by the +floods no less than twenty times between 1811 and 1859, and, as the channel of +the river became more and more choked, a more frequent recurrence of such +disasters was naturally expected. It was then resolved to shorten the course of the +river to the extent of ten miles, by diverting it into a portion of the lagoon of +Chioggia. The danger of irruptions has thus been averted for a time, but the +fisheries of Chioggia have been completely destroyed, and fever is a frequent visitor +in the towns of the littoral.</p> + +<p>There can be no doubt that but for the efforts of the Venetian engineers the +lagoons of the Lido, Malamocco, and Chioggia would long ago have been converted +into dry land. Venice has at all times been alive to the necessity of +preserving its precious inland sea. The Venetian engineers were not content with +turning aside the torrents which formerly poured their waters into the lagoons; +they have also, by means of canals, moved the mouths of the Sile and Piave to the +east, thus securing the ports of the Lido from the dreaded alluvium of the rivers. +They even conceived the gigantic project of a huge encircling canal for the +interception of all the Alpine torrents between the Brenta and Isonzo. This project, +however, has never been carried out. The débris carried southward by the coast +current has silted up the port of the Lido, which was abandoned towards the close +of the fifteenth century, when a new military port was constructed eight miles +farther south, at the canal of Malamocco, and it is now protected by a pier +extending 7,200 feet into the sea.</p> + +<p>The torrents which descend from the slopes of the Apennines to the south +of the delta of the Adige and Po are as erratic in their course as those of +Venetia. The Trebbia, the Taro, and other rivers irrigating the districts of +Piacenza and Parma only cross a narrow plain between the mountains and the Po, +and do not much modify the topography of the country. But this cannot be said +of the rivers flowing through the vast plains of Modena, Bologna, Ferrara, and +Imola. They are constantly changing their beds, and the remains of embankments +met with all over the country prove that all efforts to confine them permanently +have proved abortive. Modena itself was once destroyed by the floods of the +Secchia. The Tanaro, the Reno, and other rivers flowing towards the north-west, +either into the canal encircling the lagoons of Comacchio or direct into the +sea, all have a history attached to them; they are blessed for their fertilising +alluvium, cursed on account of their destructive floods. One of them, probably +the Fiumicino, is the famous Rubicon which bounded the Italy of the Romans, +and which was crossed by Cæsar when he pronounced the fatal words, “Alea +jacta est.”</p> + +<p>The Reno is the most erratic, the most dangerous of all these Apennine rivers. +The bed of débris deposited by it in the plain measures 20 miles across from east +to west. Its volume varies between 35 and 49,500 cubic feet a second, according +to the season, and its bed is in places no less than 30 feet above the adjoining +country. The destruction of the forests has augmented the danger of its inundations. +The engineers, puzzled by its irregular floods, have +proposed the most <span class="xxpn" id="p209">{209}</span> +opposite plans for subduing this terrible scourge. The river has been turned +into the Po; then eastward, direct into the sea. Recently it has been proposed to +divert it to the lagoons of Comacchio. But all these diversions are attended +with disadvantages, and whilst the inhabitants of one district congratulate themselves +upon having got rid of so troublesome a neighbour, those of another complain +of its inundations, see their fisheries destroyed, and their navigation interfered +with.</p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg068"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib209xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 68.—<span class="smcap">C<b>OLONIES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">R<b>OMAN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>ETERANS.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 356,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib209.jpg" width="600" height="415" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Lombardini, the famous hydraulic engineer, has shown how we may discover +the places to which the soil of the lowlands of Emilia has been conveyed by the +torrents, and trace the ancient shores of the lagoon of Padua, now converted into +dry land. A traveller following the Emilian causeway from Cesena to Bologna +can hardly help noticing the quadrangular fields on his right, all of them of the +same size. Looked at from the spurs of the Apennines, the plain resembles a huge +draught-board, the squares of which are covered alternately with verdure and +ripening crops. We learn from the topographical maps that these fields are +exactly of the same size, and there can be no doubt that we have here before us the +fields which, according to Livy, were taken from the Gauls and distributed amongst +Roman military settlers. A sinuous line marks, in the direction of the Po, the +shore of an ancient lake. The rectangular fields, laid out by the cadastral surveyors +of ancient Rome, cease there, and we find ourselves again amidst the usual +labyrinth of ditches and tortuous roads. This lake has been filled up long ago by +the débris brought down +by the torrents. <span class="xxpn" id="p210">{210}</span></p> + +<p>The Po, proportionately to the area it drains and its length, has undergone +fewer changes than either the Piave or the Reno, but looking to the populous +cities which line its banks, and to the fertility of its fields, the least of these is of +some importance.</p> + +<p>The torrent fed by the snows of Monte Viso is usually looked upon as the head +stream of Father Po, as the ancient Romans called the river; but the Mastra, +Varaita, and Clusone are quite equal to it in volume, and feed as many canals of +irrigation. Indeed, these canals would quickly drain the Po if it were not for a +bountiful supply of snow-water brought down by the Dora Riparia, the Stura, the +Orca, and the Dora Baltea from the glaciers of the Alps. Lower down, the Po +receives the Sesia from the north, and the Tanaro, which is fed by streams rising +in the Apennines and the Alps. Then comes the Ticino, by far the most important +tributary of the Po, “without which,” as the river fishermen say, “il Po non +sarebbe Po.”</p> + +<p>The Po, after its junction with the Ticino, exhibits no longer the features of a +mountain torrent; the pebbles have been triturated into the finest dust, and no +piled-up masses of débris are met with along its banks. If it were not for its +dykes, or <i>argini</i>, it might spread itself freely over the plain. These artificial +embankments rival those of the Netherlands, and date back to the most remote +ages. Lucian refers to them as if they had existed from time immemorial. +During the great migration of peoples they were allowed to decay, and only in the +course of the ninth century were measures taken to restore them. In 1480 the +great work had been achieved. Its importance may be judged from the fact that +these embankments protect 3,000,000 acres of the most fertile land, yielding +annually more than £8,000,000 sterling’s worth of agricultural produce. Most +of the towns have been built upon artificial platforms or terraces, and up to the +beginning of this century they have never been known to suffer from floods; but +whether owing to the devastation of the forests or to the closing up of all breaches +in the dykes, the floods rise higher now than they did of yore, and it has been +found necessary to throw up embankments around Revere, Sermide, Ostiglia, +Governolo, Borgoforte, and other places.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="map6"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib210bxxlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + DELTA OF THE PO</div> +<img src="images/ib210b.jpg" width="600" height="419" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Continuous embankments begin at Cremona, and they extend not only along +both banks of the Po, but also along the lower course of its tributaries. The main +dykes have a length of nearly 650 miles. In addition to these there are smaller +dykes traversing the space between these <i>froldi</i>, or main dykes, in all directions, +and enclosing willow plantations, fields, and even vineyards. In fact, the river +extends to the foot of the main dykes only in a few localities. It is ordinarily +only 650 to 1,600 feet wide, whilst the dykes are several miles apart, to allow the +river to spread during the inundations. The land thus lying within the dykes has +been divided by the villagers into <i>golene</i>, and is protected by smaller dykes against +ordinary floods. The rules laid down for the construction of embankments have +been drawn up in the general interest, and are sufficiently precise, but they are not +always observed. The old system, embodied in the dreadful proverb, “Vita mia, +morte tua,” is not yet quite extinct. Formerly the +peasants were in the habit of <span class="xxpn" id="p211">{211}</span> +crossing over to the other bank, and deliberately cutting through the embankments +there, thus saving their own crops by ruining their neighbours’.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg069"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib211xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 69.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>O</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">BETWEEN</span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>IACENZA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>REMONA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">From the Austrian Staff Map. + Scale 1 : 325,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib211.jpg" width="600" height="526" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The width of the bed of inundation enclosed between these embankments +grows less in proportion as we descend the river, and in the case of the arms of +the delta does not exceed 900 to 1,600 feet. This is not sufficient to enable the +waters to escape during extraordinary floods, when they sometimes rise 25 and +even 30 feet. Besides, it frequently happens that the villagers fail to keep the +embankments in thorough repair, and sometimes entire districts are ruined because +the mole-tracks were not stopped up. A breach in the embankment, unless +quickly filled up, produces untold misery. The crops are destroyed, the villages +levelled with the ground, the soil is torn up and carried off, and the inhabitants +are swept away by famine and its fearful attendant, typhus fever. These great +floods of the Po and the earthquakes of Calabria are the two plagues of Italy. In +1872 1,200 square miles between the Secchia and the sea were converted into a +lake. Two years afterwards there still remained pools of water.</p> + +<p>In these great disasters the inhabitants are afforded an opportunity of exhibiting +their valour, and it is always the most energetic who succeed in protecting their +property from being washed away by the floods. During the +flood just referred <span class="xxpn" id="p212">{212}</span> +to, the inhabitants of the little town of Ostiglia fought successfully with the +rising waters, whilst many of their neighbours succumbed. The town stands close +to the <i>froldo</i>, and there is no second line of dykes to protect it. The dyke +threatened to give way. The inhabitants at once set about throwing up a second +barrier. All the able-bodied men of the place, 4,000 in number, turned out to +work, headed by their mayor. They worked day and night, and, as the floods +carried away the old dyke, the new one rose in its rear. The victory was won; the +floods retired, and their houses were safe.</p> + +<p>Some of those breaches in the dykes have led to permanent changes in the +course of the river, and these divagations have been most considerable in the delta. +During the time of the Romans, and up to the thirteenth century, the Po di Volano +was the principal branch of the river, whilst now it has dwindled down to an +insignificant ditch which can hardly be traced through the swamps of Comacchio. +Two other branches, farther to the south, are used now as carriage roads. In the +eighth century the Po di Primaro, which enters the sea to the north of Ravenna, +took the place of these old channels. Another bifurcation ensued in 1152, +when the embankment at Ficcarolo was destroyed, it is said, by the people living +above that town, and the main channel of the river, the Maestra, deserted the +walls of Ferrara in the midst of its swamps, and united itself with the channels of +the Adige. Breaches in the embankments usually take place in October or +November, and generally at the same places. The danger is always greatest at +Corbola, where the Po di Maestra bifurcates.</p> + +<p>The Adige is quite as great a wanderer as the Po. Scarcely has that river left +its defile, or <i>chiusa</i>, of calcareous mountains and the fortifications of Verona than it +begins its erratic course over the plain. In the time of the Romans the Adige +flowed much farther to the north, along the foot of the Euganean Hills, and entered +the sea at Brondolo. In 587 the river broke through its embankments, and its main +branch took the direction which it maintains up to the present day, entering the +sea at Fossone. But new channels opened repeatedly towards the south, until the +Adige and Po conjointly formed but one delta. The Polesina of Rovigo, between +the two rivers, and that of Ferrara, are low tracts of alluvial land. The courtyard +of the Castle of Ferrara, which occupies one of the most elevated sites in these plains, +is nine feet lower than the highest level of the Po when flooded.</p> + +<p>The frequent inundations caused by the Po and the numerous changes of its bed, +by spreading the alluvium all over the country, have raised the whole of the plains +to about the same level. But now, when all the arms of the Po are confined within +embankments, most of the alluvium brought down by the floods is deposited on the +coast of the Adriatic. The land, therefore, gains much more rapidly upon the +sea than it did formerly. The series of dunes marking the ancient shore now lies +fifteen miles inland, and the new land formed annually is estimated at 280 acres. +In exceptional years the quantity of solid matter carried by the river into the sea +amounts to 3,531,000,000 cubic feet; on an average it is 1,623,000,000 cubic feet, +sufficient to form an island ten square miles in area in ten feet of water. The Po, +next to the Danube, is the most active geological agent amongst +all the rivers <span class="xxpn" id="p213">{213}</span> +entering the Mediterranean.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn66" id="fnanch66">66</a> The Rhone is inferior to it, and so is the Nile. At +the present rate of progress, the Po, in the course of a thousand years, will throw a +tongue of land six miles wide across the Adriatic, converting the Gulf of Trieste +into an inland sea.</p> + +<p>Northern Italy, in addition to these numerous rivers, possesses one of the most +extensive systems of canals in the world, which has served as a pattern to all the +rest of Europe. Lombardy, portions of Piemont, the Campagna of Turin, the +Lomellina on the Ticino, and the Polesinas of Ferrara and Rovigo possess a +wonderful ramification of irrigation, which carries fertile alluvium to the exhausted +fields. In the Middle Ages, when the remainder of Europe was still shrouded in +darkness, the Lombard republics already practised the art of irrigation on the +vastest scale, and drained their low-lying plains. Milan, after she had thrown off +the yoke of her German oppressors, towards the close of the twelfth century, constructed +the <i>Naviglio Grande</i>, a ship canal derived from the Ticino, thirty miles +distant—probably the first great engineering work of the kind in Europe. In the +beginning of the thirteenth century the superabundant waters of the Adda were +utilised in filling the Muzza Canal. The same river, at a subsequent period, was +made to feed another canal, the Martesana, which was constructed by the great +Leonardo da Vinci. The art of surmounting elevations of the ground by means of +locks had been discovered by Milanese engineers about a century before that time, +and was applied to the construction of secondary canals. Amongst works of more +recent date are the <i>naviglio</i> from Milan to Pavia; the Cavour Canal, fed by the Po, +below Turin; and the Canal of Verona, derived from the Adige.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn67" id="fnanch67">67</a></p> + +<p>Not only the rivers of Northern Italy, but also the springs, or <i>fontanelle</i>, however +small, which burst forth at the foot of the Alps, are utilised for purposes of +irrigation. Virgil alludes to these springs in his Bucolics, where he says, +“Children, stop the water; the meadows have drunk enough.” Lombardy +is indebted to these springs for her fine prairies, or <i>marcite</i>, which sometimes +yield eight crops a year. The great Adriatic plain has indeed undergone vast +changes through the work of man. Originally it was a swamp surrounded by +forests and heaths, but is now one of the best-cultivated countries of Europe. +One of its great features consists in plantations of mulberries, the uniformity of +which is relieved in many districts—and especially in the +Brianza of Como, that <span class="xxpn" id="p214">{214}</span> +garden of Italy—by groups of tall trees, little lakes, and sinuous valleys. There +still remain extensive heaths covering the moraines of ancient glaciers, which +become more and more sterile from year to year; but the engineers are considering +schemes for irrigating them by means of the fertilising waters of the Alpine +lakes.</p> + +<p>The irrigated area in the valley of the Po nearly amounts to 5,000 square +miles, and the water it absorbs every second is estimated at 35,000,000 cubic +feet, equal to about one-third of the volume of the Po. If the proposed works +of irrigation are carried out, the Po, which now plays so important a part in the +economy of the country by its floods and alluvial deposits, will be reduced to +the dimensions of a small river.</p> + +<p>The evaporation from the numerous rivers and canals of the country fills the +air with moisture. Rains are less frequent than on the Atlantic coasts of England +and France, but the clouds, driven by southerly winds against the cool slopes of +the Alps, discharge themselves in torrents. The quantity of rain that falls in the +upper Alpine valleys equals that of the most humid districts of Portugal, the +Hebrides, and Norway, and the rainfall in the plains of Lombardy is equal to that +of Ireland. The annual rainfall in the basin of the Piave is estimated at five feet, +exclusive of what may evaporate or be absorbed by plants. These rains are not +confined to certain seasons, though it has been observed that they are most +abundant in May and October, and least so in February and July.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn68" id="fnanch68">68</a></p> + +<p>As regards the direction of the winds, the great plain bounded by the Apennines +and the Alps resembles an Alpine valley, the winds either blowing up it +from east to west, or in an inverse direction. The winds descending from the +Alps rarely bring rain, for they have deposited their moisture on the western +slopes, but those coming from the Adriatic are generally charged with moisture. +Nevertheless, owing to the great extent of the plains and the numerous breaks in +the mountain chains, this rule is frequently interfered with. In the Alpine valleys +the ascending and descending currents are far more regular, and the navigators on +the lakes fully avail themselves of this circumstance.</p> + +<p>The forty-fifth degree of north latitude intersects the valley of the Po, but the +climate, nevertheless, is not as mild as might be expected from this circumstance, +and the range of temperature is great. In the Val Tellina the temperature sometimes +rises above 90°, and frequently fails below freezing point. In the plain the +climate is less austere, but it is notwithstanding continental in its character; and +Turin, Milan, and Bologna are for this reason the least pleasant cities of Italy to live +in. A few favoured spots on the Alpine lakes, such as the Borromean Islands, are +an exception to this rule, and enjoy an equable climate, thanks to the moderating +influences of a vast expanse of water. In the Gulf of Pallanza the thermometer +never falls below 40° F., and we must go as far as Naples if we would meet with +a climate equally favourable to vegetation. Venice, too, is a privileged spot, +thanks to the vicinity of the Adriatic, and is healthy, too, +in spite of the lagoons <span class="xxpn" id="p215">{215}</span> +which surround it. It is remarkable that these brackish lakes and swamps of +Northern Italy do not give rise to the dreaded malarial fevers. Venice undoubtedly +owes its healthiness to the tides, which are higher there than in the Tyrrhenian +Sea, and perhaps, also, to the cold winds descending from the Alps. Comacchio, too, +is a healthy place, and young natives of the Polesina suffering from consumption +are sent there to recover their health. Wherever the engineers have cut up the +connection between the lagoons and the open sea, marsh fever has made its +appearance. The swamps of Ravenna and Cervia breed malignant fevers, especially +where avaricious landowners have cut down the protecting rows of pines and oaks. +A heavy miasmal air hangs likewise over the environs of Ferrara and Malalbergo, +at the head of the Paduan delta.</p> + +<p>The Alpine valleys are the most unhealthy spots of Northern Italy, for they +are deprived of sunlight. Goître and idiotcy are frequent there, and in the valley +of Aosta nearly all the women are afflicted with the former, owing, perhaps, to the +water which flows over magnesian rocks. The inhabitants of districts traversed +by numerous canals suffer from diseases traceable to miasmal effluvia. The food of +the peasantry is not sufficiently nourishing or varied to counteract these deleterious +influences, and many die of <i>pellagre</i>, an incurable skin disease, only known in countries +where the flour of maize, in the diluted form of <i>polenta</i>, constitutes the principal +article of food. In the province of Cremona one in every twenty-four inhabitants +is afflicted with this malady. The sanitary condition of the people is even +worse in the rice-fields of Milan and the Polesina. The women there frequently +stand for hours in tepid putrefying water, and are obliged from time to time to +pick off the leeches which creep up their legs.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn69" id="fnanch69">69</a></p> + +<p>But in spite of maladies, misery, and famines, always following in the train of +the inundations, the fertile plain of the Po is one of the most densely peopled +portions of Europe. Every plot of ground there has been utilised. The forests, +very much reduced in size, harbour no game, except, perhaps, on the Alpine slopes, +and even small birds are rare. Not only snipes, quails, and thrushes are shot or +trapped, but also nightingales and swallows. Tschudi estimates the number of +singing birds annually killed on the shores of the Lago Maggiore at 60,000; and +at Bergamo, Verona, Chiavenna, and Brescia they are slain by millions, the nets +being spread in the hedges of every hill.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>The population of the valley of the Po is composed of the most diverse +elements. Amongst its ancestors were Ligurians, probably the kinsmen of our +Basks; Etruscans, famous for their works of irrigation; Gallic tribes, whose +peculiar intonation is still traceable in the rural Latin spoken in Northern Italy; +and Celtic Ombrians, the most remote of all, and looked upon by historians as the +aboriginal inhabitants of the country.</p> + +<p>The German invasions during the first centuries of our era +have left a <span class="xxpn" id="p216">{216}</span> +permanent mark upon the population of Northern Italy. The many tall men met with +in the valley of the Po are proofs of this Transalpine influence. The Goths and +Vandals, Herulians and Longobards, or Lombards, soon became merged in the +Latinised masses, but their position as conquerors and feudal lords gave them an +influence which their mere numbers would not have insured them. The ancient +history of Lombardy is a continual struggle between the towns and these feudal +lords, and as soon as the latter had been defeated—that is to say, about the +beginning of the tenth century—German was superseded everywhere by Italian.</p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr01" id="fg070"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib216xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 70.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>ERMAN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>OMMUNES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">N<b>ORTHERN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">I<b>TALY.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 650,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib216.jpg" width="600" height="558" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>Family and topographical names of Lombard origin are very common on the left +bank of the Po, and as far as the foot of the Apeninnes. Marengo, for instance, is +a corruption of the German Mehring.</p> + +<p>This German influence upon manners and language has been most enduring in +the Friuil, or Furlanei, a district bounded by the Adriatic, the Carniolan Alps, and +the plateau of the Karst, or Carso. The Friulians were even looked upon as a +distinct race, though their ancestors, like those of most Italians of the north, were +Latinised Celts. Frequent intermarriages with +their Slovenian neighbours <span class="xxpn" id="p217">{217}</span> +contributed in some measure to produce a type distinct from that of Venice or Treviso. +The number of these Friulians still speaking their own dialect does not now exceed +50,000 souls.</p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr01" id="fg071"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 71.—<span class="smcap">M<b>ONTE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">R<b>OSA,</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AS</span> + <span class="smmaj">SEEN</span> + <span class="smmaj">FROM</span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>ALCORO.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib217.jpg" width="600" height="591" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>Amongst the numerous German colonies of which traces have been found in +the plains of Northern Italy and on the southern slopes of the Alps, the “Thirteen +Communes” to the north of Verona, and the “Seven Communes” in the deep +valleys to the north-west of Bassano, are the most considerable. The <i>homines +Teutonici</i> of these two districts are supposed to be the descendants of the Cimbrians +defeated by Marius, and blue eyes and fair hair still prevail amongst them, but in +all other respects they resemble the Italians of the plains, and only a few old +women amongst them still talk the language of their ancestors, which is said to +resemble the dialect spoken on the Tegern Lake, in Bavaria. Nor were they +the champions of German authority on Italian soil. On the contrary, they were +charged by the Republic of Venice with the defence of the +northern frontier, and <span class="xxpn" id="p218">{218}</span> +have always valiantly acquitted themselves of this duty. In return, they were +granted self-government and exemption from military service. But neither the +Republic of Venice nor Austria was able to protect these German colonies against an +invasion of the “Welsh” or Italian element, and there do not now exist any non-Italian +communities to the east of the great lakes. To the north of Piemont, however, +in the valleys descending from Monte Rosa and in the valley of Pommat, where the +Toce forms one of the most beautiful waterfalls, German colonies still maintain +their ground. They, too, would long ago have lost their language were it not for +the support they receive from the Germans occupying the Swiss valleys on the +northern slopes of the Alps. Alagna, or Olen, one of these German villages, +preserved its ancient customs until quite recently. For centuries there had been +no lawsuit there; contracts, testaments, and other legal documents were unknown; +and everything was regulated by “custom;” that is, by the absolute authority of +the heads of families.</p> + +<p>The French element is far more numerous on the Italian slope of the Alps than +the German. The inhabitants of the valley of Aosta, between the Grand Paradis +and the Monte Rosa, of the upper valleys of the Dora Riparia, Cluson, Pelice, +and Varaita, speak French, and are of the same origin as the Savoyards and +Dauphinois on the western slope of the Alps. The configuration of the ground +has facilitated this pacific invasion of the western Celts, numbering about 120,000 +souls. They descended from the passes, and occupied the whole of the forest and +pastoral region down to the foot of the hills, the last mountain defile, in many +instances, forming their boundary. But the French language is steadily losing +ground, for the official language is Italian, and every village has already two +names, of which the modern Italian one is used by preference. The Vaudois, or +Waldenses, in the valleys of Pelice (Pellis) and Cluson, above Pinerolo (Pignerol), +alone resist this Italianisation with a certain amount of success, for they have a +literature and history, and are held together by strong religious ties. Their sect +was persecuted as early as the thirteenth century, long before the Reformation, and +ever since, until their final emancipation in 1848, they have struggled against +adversity. Many times it was thought they had been exterminated, but they +always rose again, and in history they occupy a rank far out of proportion to their +small numbers.</p> + +<p>The bulk of the population are engaged in agriculture, which need not be +wondered at if we bear in mind the fertility of the soil, the abundant supply of +water, and the improvements effected in bygone ages. The labour invested in +every kind of agricultural improvement, such as canals, embankments, terraces, or +<i>ronchi</i>, built up like steps on the slope of every hill, has been immense, and defies +computation. The mode of cultivation, moreover, entails a vast amount of labour, +for the peasant knows not the iron plough, but tills his field with the spade: he is +a gardener rather than an agriculturist. The agricultural produce is immense; +its annual value is estimated at £80,000,000 sterling, and it furnishes large quantities +for exportation. Cereals, forage, mulberry leaves and cocoons, vegetables +and fruit, and cheese, including the famous Parmesan, are +the principal products. <span class="xxpn" id="p219">{219}</span> +Lombardy and Piemont occupy the first rank in the world for certain kinds of +agricultural produce, and they are almost the only countries in Europe in which +rice, introduced in the beginning of the sixteenth century, is extensively grown. +The vineyards, on the other hand, are not as carefully tended as they might be, +and the wines, with the exception of those of Asti, Monferrato, San Colombano, +and Udine (the <i>picolito</i>), are of small repute.</p> + +<p>The valley of the Po divides itself into several well-marked agricultural +provinces. In the Alpine valleys, between Col di Tenda and Monte Tricorno, the +greater portion of the forests and pastures is held in common, but nearly every +mountaineer is likewise the free proprietor of a bit of meadow or land, which his +labour has converted into a garden. The social condition of these mountaineers +thus resembles that of the French peasantry; for they, likewise, enjoy the advantages +of a minute division of the land amongst freehold proprietors. The hilly tracts +along the foot of the mountains are divided into farms of moderate size. The +peasant no longer owns the land, but, in accordance with old feudal customs, he +shares in its produce. In the plain, where it is necessary to keep up a complicated +system of canals, nearly all the land belongs to rich capitalists, who cut it up into +numerous small farms, and for the most part reside in the towns. These small +farmers have no resources of their own, and are hardly above the rank of agricultural +labourers. Though they cultivate the most fertile region of Northern Italy, +they are miserably fed, frequently decimated by disease, and least alive to the +advantages of education. The contrast between these miserable peasants and the +mountaineers of Vaudois and the Val Tellina is great indeed.</p> + +<p>Periodically many of the mountaineers migrate to the towns and neighbouring +countries in search of work, and a proverb tells us that there is no country in the +world “without sparrows or Bergamosks.” But though the natives of the hills of +Bergamo furnish a numerous contingent of these migrants, they are outnumbered +by Friulians, inhabitants of the shores of the Lago Maggiore, and Piemontese. +The latter cross the passes of the Western Alps in large numbers in search of +work at Marseilles and other towns of Southern France, and, small wages sufficing +for their frugal wants, they are not particularly liked by their French fellow-workmen.</p> + +<p>The metallic wealth of Northern Italy is but small. The only mines of note +are those which formerly supplied the famous armourers of Brescia with iron, and +the gold diggings of Anzasca, at the foot of Monte Rosa, where 5,000 slaves were +kept at work by the Romans, and which are not yet quite exhausted. Marble, +gneiss, granite, potters’ clay, and kaolin are, however, found abundantly. In +former times silks, velvets, carpets, glass, porcelain, metal-work, and other art +productions of the workmen of Venice and Lombardy enjoyed a very high reputation. +These ancient industries decayed with the downfall of the old republics, +but there are signs now of their revival. The want of coal or other fuel for setting +in motion the machinery of modern factories is compensated for, to some extent, +by an abundant water power, and this explains why nearly all the important +manufactories are met with at the debouchures of +the Alpine valleys. <span class="xxpn" id="p220">{220}</span></p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg072"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib220xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 72.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>AGOONS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>OMACCHIO.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 290,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib220.jpg" width="600" height="601" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Amongst the ancient industries of the country not yet extinct, the fisheries of +the lagoons of Comacchio occupy a foremost place. The Canal of Magnavacca, +now hardly navigable, admits the waters of the sea into the Canal Palotta, which +may be described as the great artery of these lagoons. It was constructed in +1631–34, and, by an ingeniously designed system of ramifying canals, carries the +vivifying floods to the most remote parts of the lagoons. The various basins, +or <i>valli</i>, of the lagoons are thus filled with sea-water, and constitute as many +breeding beds, where the fish come from the sea multiply abundantly. A labyrinth +of canals provided with flood-gates cuts off their retreat to the sea, and they are +caught in immense numbers when the fishing season arrives. Spallanzani has seen +60,000 pounds of fish taken in a single bed, or <i>valle</i>, within an hour; but sometimes +the draught is even more considerable, and the fish are actually used as manure. +The fishing population of Comacchio numbers about 5,000 individuals, most of +them distinguished by tall stature, great strength, and suppleness. Coste, the +fish-breeder, mentions it as a curious fact that this secluded +colony of fishermen <span class="xxpn" id="p221">{221}</span> +should have retained these characteristic features for centuries, though sustained +exclusively by fishing, and living upon mullets, eels, and <i>acquadelle</i>. Unfortunately +these fishermen are not the proprietors of the ponds, for they belong to the State +or to rich private individuals. The workmen live in large barracks away from the +town, to which they return only at stated intervals, and even their wives and +relatives are not permitted to visit them in their places of exile.</p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg073"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib221xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 73.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">F<b>ISHERIES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>OMACCHIO.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 78,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib221.jpg" width="600" height="649" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The enormous population of the valley of the Po, which almost equals that of +the remainder of continental Italy, is very unequally distributed; but, except in +the high and cold Alpine valleys, the inhabitants live in towns, dozens of which +may be seen peeping out amidst the verdure if we ascend a high tower. There +are scarcely any villages or hamlets. The farmers alone live in the country, +completely isolated from each other, whilst the numerous landed proprietors throng +the towns, and impart to them an aspect of wealth which similar +places in other <span class="xxpn" id="p222">{222}</span> +parts of Europe cannot boast of. No other country in the world is as densely +populated, and in Lombardy the number of towns is relatively larger than anywhere +else.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn70" id="fnanch70">70</a></p> + +<p>Large towns, too, are numerous, and many of them enjoy a deserved reputation +amongst the cities of the world on account of their monuments, art treasures, and +historical associations. Their number is partly accounted for by the density of the +population, and by the facility with which the inhabitants were able to shift their +abodes, according to the hazards of war or the vicissitudes of events. And this +accounts, too, for the large number of towns which became famous as the capitals +of republics, or as royal and ducal residences.</p> + +<p>Several of the towns at the base of the Alps occupy sites marked out for them +by nature. Such are the towns at the mouth of the valleys or defiles, which were +places of defence as well as staples of commerce. Ariminum, the modern Rimini, +at the southern extremity of the great plain of the Po, was one of these, for during +the reign of the Roman it defended the narrow littoral passage between the +Adriatic and the Apennines. The Flaminian Road there reached the sea, the +Emilian Road thence departed for the north-west, as did also the littoral road of +Ravenna. When Rome had ceased to be the capital of the world, and Italy was +divided into small hostile states, the towns in the southern part of the plain, +or near the passes over the Po, such as Ferrara and Bologna, retained their +strategical importance. Piacenza, which defends the passage of the Po between +Piemont and Emilia, remains a first-rate fortress to the present day; Alessandria, +near the confluence of Tanaro and Bormida, and in a plain famous for many a +bloody battle, was likewise destined to become a formidable fortress, though +derisively called a “city of straw.” Every valley debouching from France or +Austria was locked at its mouth by a strong fort; but most of these places, such as +Vinadio, Pinerolo, Fenestrella, and Susa, have become untenable, owing to the +range of modern artillery.</p> + +<p>The defences of the road over the Brenner, ever since the downfall of the +Roman empire, had to be looked to most carefully, for the plain between the +Mincio and the Adige, to the south of the Lake of Garda, is the least-protected part +of Italy from a military point of view. History has proved this. Well might +the peaceable inhabitants of the plain consecrate this Alpine road to the gods, and +intrust its defence to the neighbouring tribes. But the northern barbarians were +not to be stopped by altars; and many a time they swept down it like an avalanche, +pillaging the towns and massacring the inhabitants. No spot on the earth’s surface +has been so frequently saturated with human blood. Most of the battles for the +possession of Italy, down to our own days, were fought near the mouth of the +upper valley of the Adige. Hardly a town or a village of this +small district but <span class="xxpn" id="p223">{223}</span> +has gained a mournful notoriety in the dark pages of human history. It is there +we must seek for the battle-fields of Castiglione, Lonato, Rivoli, Solferino, and +Custozza. When the Austrians held Lombardy and Venice, they took care to +protect this district by the four fortresses known as the Quadrilateral (Verona, +Peschiera, Mantua, and Legnago) and other works. These constituted the “key +of the house,” of which Italy has now repossessed herself.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg074"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib223xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 74.—<span class="smcap">M<b>OUTH</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>DIGE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>ALLEY.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">From the Austrian Staff Map. + Scale 1 : 397,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib223.jpg" width="600" height="528" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The configuration of the country which rendered these defiles of the Alps +of importance strategically, likewise insured their commercial importance. The +fortresses were placed there to defend the passes, the commercial entrepôts to +intercept the trade. The rank of these places of commerce depends essentially +upon the number and the importance of the roads which converge upon them. +Turin, upon which converge all the Alpine roads from Mont Blanc to the +Apennines, naturally became one of the vital points of European commerce. +Milan, to which lead the seven great Alpine routes of the Simplon, the Gotthard, +the Bernardino, the Splügen, the Julier, the Maloya, and the Stelvio, was marked +out by nature as a commercial emporium. Bologna, too, which was separated by +the swamps of the Po from the Alpine passes, has risen into importance since +railways have joined it to Vienna, Paris, +Marseilles, and Naples. <span class="xxpn" id="p224">{224}</span></p> + +<p>The valley of the Po would never have attained its importance in the history +of Europe unless roads had been constructed for traversing the obstructive mountains +which surround it on all sides except towards the east, where it opens out +upon the Adriatic. No other district of Europe is so completely hemmed +in by natural obstacles as is this, but the construction of carriage roads and railways +has converted Northern Italy into one of the great centres of European commerce. +Venice gives it the command of the Adriatic, the Apennine railways connect it +with Genoa, Savona, the Gulf of Spezia, and the Tyrrhenian, and it thus commands +the two seas which wash the shores of Italy. Other railways cross the Alps, and +put it into communication with France and Germany. This central position, +joined to the natural fertility of the country, has converted Northern Italy into one +of the most flourishing portions of Europe. Human hands have conquered +original geographical disadvantages, and the true centre of Italy is in the ancient +Cisalpine Gaul, and not at Rome. Had the Italians been guided in the choice of +their capital by actual importance, and not by historical tradition, they would +have chosen one of the great cities of their northern plain.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg075"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib224xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 75.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ASSAGES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OVER</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>LPS.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 6,000,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib224.jpg" width="600" height="397" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Turin, though an old town, seeing that it was burnt by Hannibal, is nevertheless +a modern city, if we compare it with other towns of Italy. Its straight and +broad streets almost give it the appearance of a town of the New World. Until +made a ducal residence, Turin was but a small provincial town. During the time of +the Romans, and even during the Middle Ages, the great high-road between Italy +and Gaul led along the coast of the Gulf of Genoa. The passage of the Alps +was looked upon with dread by travellers. Still some traffic went on +even in these <span class="xxpn" id="p225">{225}</span> +early days, and small towns sprang into existence at the foot of each Alpine +pass. Amongst these were Mondovi, the triple town built on three hills; Cuneo, +favourably placed upon a terrace between Stura and Gesso, in which rise +the hot sulphur springs of Valdiera; Saluzzo, on the gentle slope of the foot-hills +of Monte Viso; Pinerolo, with its ancient castle, so often converted into a +prison of state; Susa, the Italian key of Mont Cenis; Aosta, still abounding in +Roman antiquities; Ivrea, built on a site formerly occupied by a glacier +descending from Monte Rosa; and Riella, with its flourishing woollen industry. +The towns lower down in the plain, upon which several of these Alpine roads +converged, likewise attained some local importance. In Upper Piemont there are +Fossano, on a heap of shingle at the junction of the roads of Mondovi and Cuneo; +Savigliano, lower down, where the roads of the Po and Maira valleys join; and +Carmagnola, which commands one of the principal roads over the Apennines. +Novara, the commercial outlet of the Lago Maggiore, and in the midst of one of +the most productive agricultural districts, is the most populous town of Eastern +Piemont. Vercelli, on the Sesia, and below the confluence of the rivulets descending +from Monte Rosa, enjoys natural advantages similar to those of Novara. +Casale, the ancient capital of Monferrato, defends one of the principal passages of +the Po.</p> + +<p>But Turin, owing to its favourable position, has become the great emporium +of the valley of the Upper Po. Its commerce has grown immensely, since the +town no longer enjoys the perilous honour of being the capital of a kingdom, +and the places vacated by the court and Government officials have been filled up +quickly by immigrants carried thither by the railways. Its libraries, a fine +museum, and various learned societies entitle it to rank as one of the intellectual +centres of the peninsula, whilst its manufactures of silks and woollens, of paper +and other articles, are of great importance. The environs of Turin are delightful. +From the hill of the Superga, a few miles to the east of the city, and crowned by +a sumptuous church, may be enjoyed one of the finest panoramas of the Italian +Alps. The numerous small towns in its vicinity, such as Moncalieri, Chieri, and +Carignano, abound in villas and participate in the prosperity of the capital. As +to the towns in the valley of the Tanaro, in the south, they form a group apart, +and are the natural intermediaries between the valley of the Po and the port of +Genoa. Alessandria, a strong fortress of hideous regularity, which has superseded +the old fortresses of Tortona and Novi, is the terminus of eight railways, and one +of the busiest places of Italy. The neighbouring cities of Asti, famous for its +sparkling wines, and Acqui, celebrated from the time of the Romans for its hot +springs, are likewise important for their commerce.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn71" id="fnanch71">71</a></p> + +<p>Milan, the capital of Lombardy, is in every respect one of the leading cities of +Italy. In population it is inferior to Naples, in commerce +it is outstripped only <span class="xxpn" id="p226">{226}</span> +by Genoa, but in industry it is the equal of both. Its scientific and literary life +entitles it, probably, to the first rank amongst the cities between the Alps and Sicily. +In the most remote times Milan was an important town of the Celts, and since +then the advantages of its position have given it the preponderance amongst all +other cities of Northern Italy. Its power during the Middle Ages gained it the +epithet of the “Second Rome.” At the close of the thirteenth century it had +200,000 inhabitants, whilst London had not then a sixth of that number. Milan +stood in want of water, for it was dependent upon the feeble stream of the Olona, +and its citizens created the Naviglio Grande and the Martesana, veritable rivers, +which furnish a quantity of water double that of the Seine at Paris during +summer. They likewise erected magnificent monuments, but most of these have +perished during innumerable wars, and the aspect of Milan is now that of a +modern town of Western Europe. Its most famous building, the “Duomo,” with +its prodigious crowd of statues, its finely chiselled marbles and granites, must be +looked upon as a marvel of architecture, though from an artistic point of view it is +hardly more than an elaborately carved trinket out of all proportion. The stones +for this edifice were quarried on the Lago Maggiore, near the mouth of the Toce.</p> + +<p>The capital of Lombardy, proud of the past and confident of the future, boasts +of never yielding servilely to impulses given from beyond. It has its own opinions, +manners, and fashions, and anything accepted from abroad is moulded in accordance +with local traditions. The other towns of Lombardy likewise maintain their +local character, are proud of their traditions, and glory in the annals of the past. +Como, on the beautiful lake named after it, the ancient rival of Milan, gains +wealth by spinning silk and exporting the agricultural produce of the Brianza. +Monza, surrounded by parks and villas, is the coronation city. Pavia, with its +525 towers, now in ruins, remembers the time when it was the residence of +the Lombard kings, and proudly points to the university, one of the oldest in +Europe, and to the Certosa (Chartreuse), one of the most sumptuous monasteries +of Italy. Vigevano, on the other side of the Ticino, rejoices in a fine castle. Lodi, +in the eleventh century, was the most powerful city of Italy next to Milan, and +carried on a war of extermination with the latter; it is still a busy place. +Cremona, an old republic, boasts of its <i>torrazzo</i>, or tower, 393 feet in height, the +loftiest in Europe until Gothic cathedrals were built. Bergamo, on a hill commanding +the rich plains of Brembo and Serio, produced a larger number of great +men than any other town except Florence; and Brescia, the armourers’ town, +more haughty still, proclaims herself to be the mother of heroes.</p> + +<p>Mantua, on the Mincio, is one of the fortresses of the Quadrilateral, and can +hardly be said to belong to Lombardy, though included within its political boundaries. +It is essentially a military town. It has lost much of its old commerce, +though Jews are more plentiful there than in any other inland city of Italy. Its +swamps, woods, rice-fields, ditches, and fortified canals are productive of a degree +of humidity exceptional even in Lombardy, and the inhabitants consequently +eschew this ancient birthplace of Virgil. Strikingly different is the character of +the towns situated in the heart of the mountains, such as Sondrio, the +capital of the <span class="xxpn" id="p227">{227}</span> +Val Tellina, or delightful Salo, on the Lake of Garda, with its group of villas +scattered amongst groves of orange-trees.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn72" id="fnanch72">72</a></p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg076"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib227xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 76.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>AKES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>ANALS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>ANTUA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">From the Austrian Staff Map. + Scale 1 : 198,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib227.jpg" width="600" height="671" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The physiognomy of the large towns of Emilia, beyond the Po, offers far fewer +peculiarities, for, as most of them are situated along the great Emilian highway, +they have been exposed for ages to the levelling influences of travelling merchants +and soldiers. Piacenza, a sorry place as a fortress, carries on an important commerce. +Parma, an old ducal residence, has a rich library, a museum, and +wonderful frescoes by Correggio in its churches. +Reggio, another important <span class="xxpn" id="p228">{228}</span> +station on the Emilian highway, is famous as the birthplace of Ariosto. Modena +has its museum, and the precious collection of books and manuscripts known as the +<i>Biblioteca Estense</i>. Bologna the “Learned,” which has taken the word “Libertas” +for its motto, still remains one of the most interesting of Italian cities. There are +its Etruscan cemetery, its palaces and mediæval buildings, and its two leaning +towers, which will most certainly come down in the end. Bologna is one of the +great railway centres, carries on much commerce, and increases rapidly in population. +It would have made a far better capital than Rome. Of late years the +environs of the city have been frequently flooded by the Reno, and these disasters +have cost Bologna its ancient epithet of “the Fat.”</p> + +<p>Near this bustling place there are others, now stagnant, which can point only +to buildings in proof that they, too, were once flourishing. Ferrara, the ancient +capital of the Estes, has fallen from its high estate since the Po has deserted it, +but still remains a place of some importance. Ravenna has not been deserted by +the Po, but by the sea, with which it communicates now by a canal seven miles +in length, and navigable for ships drawing thirteen feet of water. The town +became the capital of Honorius and Theoderic the Goth, on account of the protection +offered by the surrounding marshes. To the exarchs it is indebted for its +curious Byzantine edifices, so rich in mosaics. As to the ancient Etruscan city of +Adria, on Venetian soil, to the north of the Po, it could hardly have claimed at +any period during the last two thousand years to give a name to the neighbouring +sea. It lies now at a distance of fourteen miles from it, and even in the time of +the Romans it must have been surrounded by lagoons or swamps, for how else can +we explain its epithet of “Town of the Seven Seas?” Porto, at the foot of the +Euganean Hills, may owe its name to an ancient lake or river.</p> + +<p>Towns famous on account of their history, and still populous, are most crowded +together in the southern angle of the plain, usually known as the Romagna. The +towers and crenellated walls of Imola rise there on the banks of the Santerno. +Lugo, the “town of the beautiful Romagnese,” occupies the centre of the district +of Ravenna, and has much trade. Faenza, on the Emilian Road, is a large village +rather than a town, though it has given its name to a particular kind of porcelain +(faience). Forli is, next to Bologna, the most populous city of Romagna. Cesena +is known for the excellence of the hemp grown in the neighbourhood. Rimini, +where the Emilian Road reaches the sea, still has a few Roman ruins, including a +triumphal arch. The inhabitants of the Romagna are distinguished by great +energy. Their passions are violent, and as frequently lead them into crime as to +deeds of heroism.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn73" id="fnanch73">73</a></p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="plt13"> +<img src="images/ib228a.jpg" width="600" height="413" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">THE PALACE AT FERRARA.</div> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div class="dctr01" id="plt14"> +<img src="images/ib228d.jpg" width="600" height="418" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">VERONA.</div> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>In Venetia there are several provincial towns of importance. Padua abounds +in monuments of art, possesses a university, and was formerly the rival of Venice. +Vicenza is embellished by the palaces erected by Palladio. Treviso and Belluno +are towns of some importance, the one on the Sile, the +other in the upper valley <span class="xxpn" id="p229">{229}</span> +of the Piave. At Udine is pointed out a mound of earth said to have been +thrown up by Attila, from which he contemplated the conflagration of Aquileja. +Palmanova, on the Austrian frontier, is a regularly built fortress. Verona, at the +other extremity of Venetia, has played an important part in the history of Italy, +but its commerce and industry have fallen into decay. It hardly fills up the space +enclosed by walls and bastions, and its present population is quite out of proportion +to the multitude of its public buildings dating from the Middle Ages, and +the dimensions of its Roman amphitheatre, capable of seating 50,000 spectators. +Amongst all the cities of Venetia it is Venice itself, the “Queen of the Adriatic,” +which has suffered least in the course of ages.</p> + +<div class="section"> +<div class="dright dwth08" id="fg077"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 77.—<span class="smcap">P<b>ALMANOVA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 86,400.</div> +<img src="images/ib229.jpg" width="600" height="633" alt="" /> +</div><!--dright--> + +<p>Venice is a very ancient city. The remains of Roman buildings +discovered on the island of San Giorgia, far below the present level +of the sea, and therefore referred to in proof of the slow subsidence +of the Venetian coast, prove to us that the mud islands of the gulf +supported a population long before the invasion of the Barbarians. +These half-drowned lands may have attracted the coast population at +an early age, for they afforded security against attack, and offered +great advantages for carrying on commerce. Nevertheless, the Venice +of our time only dates from the commencement of the ninth century, +when the government of this maritime republic was established upon the +islands separated from the sea by the <i>lidi</i>, and from the mainland +by estuaries and swamps. This unique position rendered Venice almost +impregnable; and whilst the rest of Europe was being desolated by war, +Venice sent forth its commercial and warlike expeditions to every part +of the Mediterranean, established factories, and built fortresses. Not +without arduous struggles, it became the most powerful and wealthiest +of the commercial republics of Italy. It was largely indebted for +this success to its favourable geographical position, almost in the +centre of the mediæval world. Its commerce brought the Venetians into +contact with nearly every nation, and they had no prejudices against +foreigners. The Armenians were admitted to their city, and an alliance +was made even with the Turks. At the time of the Crusades the Venetian +Republic occupied the foremost position amongst the states of Europe, +and its ambassadors enjoyed a vast amount of influence. This influence +was sustained by enormous material forces. Venice had a navy of 300 +vessels, manned by 36,000 sailors, and the riches of the world, whether +obtained by legitimate commerce or by violence, were accumulated in its +2,000 palaces and 200 churches. Even <i>one</i> of the islets upon which +the city is built would have purchased a kingdom of Asia or Africa. +One of the most sumptuous cities of the West had <span class="xxpn" +id="p230">{230}</span> arisen upon banks of mud, inhabited formerly +only by poor fishermen. The larch forests of Dalmatia had been cut +down, and converted into piles upon which to build palaces. More than +400 bridges of marble joined island to island, and superb embankments +of granite defended this marvellous city against the encroachments of +the sea. Great achievements in the arts contributed their share in +making <i>Venezia la Bella</i> a city without its equal.</p> +</div><!--section--> + +<p>But geographical discoveries, in which Venice itself took a leading share, +undermined the power of the Italian Republic. When Africa had been circumnavigated +and the New World discovered, the Mediterranean ceased to be the +great commercial sea of the world. Venice was doomed to die. It no longer +monopolized the road to India, and the increasing power of the Turks crippled its +Eastern trade. Still, so great were its resources, that it maintained its independence +for more than three hundred years after it had lost its factories, and +only fell when shamefully deserted by General Bonaparte, its supposed ally.</p> + +<p>The decadence of Venice was most remarkable during the dominion of Austria. +In 1840 the city had less than 100,000 inhabitants, hundreds of its palaces were +in ruins, the grass grew in its squares, and seaweeds encumbered its landing-places. +Since that time it has been gradually recovering. A bridge of 222 arches +and 2,000 feet in length connects it with the mainland, and its commerce, though +not equal to that of Trieste, is nevertheless of considerable importance.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn74" id="fnanch74">74</a> The +manufacture of looking-glasses, lace, and other articles has imparted fresh life to +Venice, and there, as well as in other towns of the lagoons (Malamocco, Burano, +Murano, and Chioggia), thousands of workmen are busy in the production of +those gay-looking glass beads which find their way into every part of the world, +and which in certain countries of the East and in Central Africa take the place +of coin. But Venice, though less populous and active than of yore, still rejoices +in its delightful climate and its bright skies. Its gaiety and fêtes are not yet +things of the past, and its palaces, built in a style half Italian, half Moorish, still +contain the priceless masterpieces of Titian, Tintoretto, and Paul Veronese.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn75" id="fnanch75">75</a></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="III.—Liguria and the Riviera of Genoa.">III.—<span + class="smcap">L<b>IGURIA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">R<b>IVIERA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>ENOA.</b></span><a + class="afnanchstar" href="#fn76" id="fnanch76" + title="go to note 76">*</a></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">Liguria +is but a narrow slip of land if we compare it with the broad plain of +the Po, but it is one of the most clearly defined districts of Europe, and its inhabitants +have retained many original traits. The contrast between the Podane plains +and the littoral region beyond the barren Apennines is striking, but if we +travel in the direction of Provence or of Tuscany the landscape changes only +by degrees. The rampart of the Apennines surrounds the +whole of the Gulf of <span class="xxpn" id="p231">{231}</span> +Genoa, and there is not a single break in it. These mountains are very different in +character from the Alps, though joined to them as the branch of a tree is united to +its trunk. It is not possible to tell where one chain ends and the other begins. If +the main direction of the mountain is to be the criterion, the Ligurian Apennines +may be said to begin at the frontier of France, near the sources of the Tinea and +Vesubio; but if great height, pastures, and perennial snow are considered sufficient +to constitute an Alpine region, then the Apennines only begin to the east of the +Col di Tenda, for the fine summits of the Clapier, Fenêtre, and Gordalesque, to the +west of that pass, attain a height of 10,000 feet. They are quite Alpine in their +character, and may boast even of small glaciers, the most southerly in the mountains +of Central Europe. Geologists usually draw the line where cretaceous and tertiary +rocks take the place of the crystalline rocks of the Alps. But this, too, is only a +conventional division, for these crystalline rocks, which constitute the crest of the +Alps in the west, extend far to the east, and occasionally they break through the +sedimentary formations which overlie them, and rise into summits similar to those +of the Alps. Thus the granitic summits of the mountains of Spezia remind us of +the mountain mass near the Col di Tenda.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg078"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib231xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 78.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">J<b>UNCTION</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>LPS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>PENNINES.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 1,500,000</div> +<img src="images/ib231.jpg" width="600" height="410" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The chain of the Ligurian Apennines is by no means of uniform height, but, like +that of the Alps, it consists of mountain masses separated by passes. The lowest of +these passes is that to the west of Savona, named indifferently after one of the +neighbouring villages, Altare, Carcara, or Cadibona. This pass is hardly more +than 1,600 feet in height, and is popularly looked upon as constituting the boundary +between the Alps and Apennines. The possession of this pass +during war has <span class="xxpn" id="p232">{232}</span> +always been considered of great importance, for it commands the approaches to +Genoa and the upper valleys of Piemont, and the Tanaro and Bormido, which rise +near it, have often run with blood.</p> + +<p>The Apennines to the east of this pass have an average height of 3,300 feet, and +beyond the Pass of Giovi (1,538 feet), through which the road leads from Genoa to +the northern plains, many summits attain a height of 4,500 feet. Several spurs, +abounding in ravines, extend here to the north. The main chain, at the same time, +retires from the coast, and the Pass of Pontremoli, which separates the Ligurian +from the Tuscan Apennines, and through which leads the road from Parma to +Spezia, is no less than thirty miles from the sea. In this eastern portion of the +Genoese Apennines a spur detaches itself from the main chain, and terminates in the +fine promontory of Porto Venere, a magnificent rock of black marble, surmounted +formerly by a temple of Venus. This spur, which protects the Gulf of Spezia +against westerly winds, has at all times constituted an obstacle to the intercourse +between neighbouring peoples, not so much on account of its height, but because +of its steepness. In some places the crest of the Apennines is hardly more than +four miles from the sea. The slope, in such places, is exceedingly steep, and roads +can ascend it only in numerous windings.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn77" id="fnanch77">77</a></p> + +<p>The small width of the maritime slope of the Ligurian Apennines accounts for +the absence of perennial rivers. The most considerable streams to the east of the +Roya, which runs for the greater part through French territory, such as the Taggia +or the Centa, only assume the appearance of rivers when the snows melt, or after +heavy rains. Ordinarily they are but small streams, closed at the mouth by bars +of pebbles. Between Albenga and Spezia, for a distance of 160 miles, there are +only torrents, and in order to meet again with a real river we must go beyond the +Gulf of Spezia. This river is the Magra, which separates Liguria from Etruria, +and which, up to the epoch of Augustus, formed the boundary of Italy. Its +alluvium has converted an ancient bay of the sea into a lake, and formed a beach, +1,300 yards in width, in front of the ancient Tyrrhenian city of Luni, which +formerly stood on the seashore.</p> + +<p>The want of great rivers in Liguria is compensated for to some extent by subterranean +water-courses. Several springs rise from the bottom of the sea, at some +distance from the shore. The springs of La Polla, in the Gulf of Spezia, are amongst +the most bountiful amongst them. They have been isolated by the Italian Government +from the surrounding salt water, and their water is supplied to ships.</p> + +<p>Owing to the absence of rivers, the sterility of the soil, and the steep escarpments, +this portion of the Mediterranean coast region contrasts strikingly with other parts +of temperate Europe. Having reached the summit of the mountains beyond the +magnificent chestnut forests at the head-streams of the Ellero, the Tanaro, and the +Bormida, we look down upon a scene almost African in its character. Scarcely a +blade of grass is to be seen between Nice and Spezia, and only the grass-plots, kept +up at great expense in some pleasure-gardens, remind us +that Piemont and <span class="xxpn" id="p233">{233}</span> +Lombardy are near at hand. Pines and brambles would have remained the only +verdure in these Ligurian valleys and ravines if it were not for the transformation +wrought by gardeners and agriculturists. Strange to say, trees do not ascend to +the same height on the slopes of the Apennines as in the Alps, though the mean +temperature is far higher, and at an altitude at which the beech still attains noble +proportions in Switzerland we find it here stunted in growth. Larches are hardly +ever seen.</p> + +<p>The sea is as sterile as the land. There are neither shallows, islands, nor seaweeds +affording shelter to fish. The cliffs descend precipitously into the sea, and +the narrow strips of beach, extending from promontory to promontory, consist only +of sand without the admixture of a single shell. The Genoese fishermen, therefore, +resort to distant coasts, those of the “Ponente,” or west, going to Sicily, whilst +those of Camogli, on the Riviera di Levanto, visit the coasts of Tuscany. This +sterility of land and sea accounts for the large number of Genoese met with in +other parts of the world.</p> + +<p>But though an unfruitful country, Liguria is exceedingly picturesque. A +traveller availing himself of the railway between Nice and Genoa, which follows +the sinuosities of the coast and pierces the promontories in numerous tunnels, is +brought within reach of the most varied scenery. At one time the line runs close +to the beach, with the foam of the sea almost touching the track on the one side, +while tamarisks bearing pink blossoms overshadow it from the other. Elsewhere +we creep up the steep slope, and obtain a view of the cultivated terraces raised at +immense labour by the peasantry, whilst the bluish sea is seen afar to the right, +almost hidden by a grove of olive-trees, and stretching away until lost in the direction +of Corsica. Towns, villages, old towers, villas, ship-yards, and other industrial +establishments impart an almost infinite variety to the scenery. One town occupies +the top of a hill, and, seen from below, its old walls and towers stand out boldly +against the sky; another is built amphitheatrically, close to the strand upon which +the fishermen have drawn their boats; a third is hidden in a hollow, and surrounded +by vines, olive, orange, and lemon trees. A date-tree here and there +imparts an oriental aspect to the landscape. Bordighera, a small place close +to the French frontier, is quite surrounded by palm-trees, whose fruit, however, +but rarely ripens.</p> + +<p>The climate of Albenga, Loana, and some other places on the Genoese coast is +far from salubrious, on account of the miasmata exhaled by sheets of stagnant +water left behind by freshets. Even Genoa cannot boast of an agreeable climate, +not because there are marshes near it, but because the southerly winds charged +with moisture are caught there by the semicircle of mountains, and are made to +discharge their superabundant humidity. The number of rainy days at Genoa +averages 121 a year. There are, however, several towns along this coast protected +by the mountains against the north, and yet out of the usual track of the moisture-laden +southerly winds, whose climate is exceptionally delightful.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn78" id="fnanch78">78</a> Bordighera <span class="xxpn" id="p234">{234}</span> +and San Remo, near the French frontier, are the rivals of Mentone as regards +climate; and Nervi, to the east of Genoa, is likewise a favourite place of resort, on +account of its clear sky and pure atmosphere. Villas and castles rise on every +promontory and in every valley of these favoured districts. For a dozen miles +on either side of Genoa the coast is lined by villas. The population of the city +has overflowed the walls which once confined it, and is establishing itself in populous +suburbs. The long street which winds between factories and gardens, scales +promontories, and descends into valleys, will continue to grow in length until it +extends along the whole coast of Liguria, for the charms of the country attract +men of leisure from every quarter of Europe.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg079"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib234xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 79.—<span class="smcap">G<b>ENOA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smmaj">ITS</span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>UBURBS.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">From the Sardinian Staff Map. + Scale 1 : 100,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib234.jpg" width="600" height="458" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The historical development of the ancient Ligurians, who were probably of +Iberian race, was largely influenced by the nature of the country they +inhabited. The cultivable land being only of small extent, the superabundant +population was forced to look to the sea for a livelihood, and engaged in navigation +and commerce. Antium, the modern Genoa, was an “emporium” of the Ligurians +ever since the time of the Romans, and its vessels frequented every corner of +the Tyrrhenian Sea. In the Middle Ages the Genoese flag was carried into every +part of the known world, and it was Genoa that gave birth to Christopher Columbus, +whose name is inscribed upon the first page of modern history as the discoverer of +America. It was a Genoese, too, Giovanni Gabotto, or Cabot, who afresh discovered +the coast of North America five centuries after its original +discovery by the <span class="xxpn" id="p235">{235}</span> +Normans. The hardy mariners of Genoa have thus navigated the seas from the +most remote times. Even now they almost monopolize the navigation of the great +rivers of the Argentine Republic. The Genoese likewise enjoy a high reputation +as gardeners, and are met with in every large town of the Mediterranean.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg080"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 80.—<span class="smcap">V<b>IEW</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>ENOA.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib235.jpg" width="600" height="543" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>As long as the Apennines were not crossed by practicable carriage roads, +Genoa possessed no advantages whatever over the other ports of Liguria, but ever +since it has been placed in easy communication with the fertile plains of +Lombardy and Piemont, the great advantages of its geographical position have +told upon its development. Pisa was the only republic on the western coast of +Italy which contested this superiority of Genoa, but was defeated after a sanguinary +struggle. The Genoese possessed themselves of Corsica, the inhabitants of which +were treated most cruelly; they took Minorca from the Moors, and even captured +several towns in Spain, which they restored only after important commercial +privileges had been granted them. In the Ægean Sea the nobles of Genoa +became the proprietors of Chios, Lesbos, Lemnos, and other islands. At Constantinople +the Genoese merchants were as powerful almost as the +Emperor. Kaffa, in <span class="xxpn" id="p236">{236}</span> +the Crimea, was one of their wealthy colonies. Their factories and towers were +met along every commercial high-road in Asia Minor, and even in the recesses of the +Caucasus. The possession of the Black Sea gave them the command of the trade +with Central Asia. These distant colonies explain the use of a few Arab, +Turkish, and Greek terms by the Genoese, and though the dialect spoken by +them is decidedly Italian, the intonation is French.</p> + +<p>Nevertheless Genoa, though more powerful than Pisa, failed in wresting the +command of the sea from the Venetians, who enjoyed immense advantages +through their connection with Germany. Her political influence has never +equalled that of Venice, nor has she produced as many men eminent in literature +and art as has her Adriatic rival. The Genoese had the reputation in former +times of being violent and false, fond of luxury and power, and indifferent to +everything which did not enrich them. “A sea without fish, mountains without +forests, men without faith, women without modesty—thus is Genoa,” was a +proverb ever in the mouth of the enemies of the Ligurian city. The dissensions +amongst the noble families of Genoa were incessant, but the Bank of St. George +never allowed civil strife to interfere with business. Wealth flowed into the city +without any cessation, and enabled its citizens to construct those palaces, marble +arcades, and hanging gardens which have won for it the epithet of <i>la Superba</i>. In +the end, however, ruin overtook the Bank, and that justly, for it had supplied +princes with money to enable them to wage war, and its bankruptcy in the middle +of the eighteenth century rendered Genoa politically impotent.</p> + +<p>The capital of Liguria, in spite of its small extent, its sinuous streets, its ramparts, +stairs, and dirty narrow quays, may justly boast of palaces equally remarkable for +the splendour and originality of their architecture. Many of these magnificent +buildings appeared to be doomed to ruin during the decay of the town, but, on the +return of more prosperous times, the citizens again devoted themselves to the +embellishment of their city. Genoa is the busiest port of Italy.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn79" id="fnanch79">79</a> Its shipowners +possess nearly half the Italian mercantile marine, and three-fourths of the vessels +annually built in Italy are furnished from its ship-yards. The harbour, though +320 acres in extent, no longer suffices for the hundreds of sailing vessels and +steamers which crowd into it. Nor is it sufficiently sheltered against the winds, +and it has therefore been proposed to construct a vast breakwater far beyond its +present limits. Genoa fancies that its interests are not sufficiently attended to by +the Central Government. A second railway across the Apennines is urgently +demanded, in order to manage the traffic that will be created by the opening of +the direct railway through Switzerland, which will place Genoa in direct communication +with Western Germany.</p> + +<div class="dctr03" id="fg081"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib237xxlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 81.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>ULF</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>PEZIA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">From the Sardinian Staff Map. + Scale 1 : 80,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib237.jpg" width="555" height="800" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>In the meantime Genoa is expanding in all directions. Its factories of macaroni, +paper, silks and velvets, soap, oil, jewellery, metal-work, pottery, ornamental +flowers, and other objects are ever increasing; and <i>ovrar del +Genoes</i>—Genoese <span class="xxpn" id="p237">{237}</span> +industry—is a marvel now, as it was in the Middle Ages. San Pier d’Arena +(Sampierdarena), to the west, has become a veritable manufacturing town. Cornigliano, +Rivarolo, Sestri di Ponente with its large ship-yards, Pegli, and Voltri are +populous towns, having spinning-mills and foundries. Savona, +whose port was <span class="xxpn" id="p238">{238}</span> +filled up by the jealous Genoese, occupies the bottom of a vast bay. It has glass-works +and potteries, and is connected by a railway with Turin. Elsewhere on the +Riviera di Ponente the towns are crowded closely together. Such is the case with +the twin cities of Oneglia and Porto Maurizio, the one built on the beach, the other +on a steep hill close by, and known as the “Fountains of Oil,” because of their +extensive plantations of olives. At San Remo, however, olives are more plentiful +still.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn80" id="fnanch80">80</a></p> + +<p>On the Riviera di Levante town joins town like pearls in a necklace. Albaro, +with its charming mansion, Quarto, whence departed the expedition which took +Sicily from the Bourbons, and Nervi, a health resort for persons suffering from +pulmonary diseases, constitute a long-stretching suburb of Genoa, extending in the +direction of Recco and Camogli, two towns abounding in shipping. The rocky +promontory of Porto Fino, thus named after the dolphins which formerly frequented +it, imposes an insurmountable obstacle to the further extension of Genoa +in this direction. Having traversed the tunnel leading through this promontory, +we reach another group of towns, viz. Rapallo, the industrious; Chiavari, a great +place of trade; Lavagna, with its famous quarries of grey slates; and Sestri di +Levante, a town of fishermen.</p> + +<p>The coast beyond Sestri is but sparsely inhabited, for there bold cliffs approach +the sea; but having doubled the superb cape of Porto Venere, we enter the fine +Gulf of Spezia,<a class="afnanch" href="#fn81" id="fnanch81">81</a> with its numerous forts, ship-yards, arsenals, and other buildings. +The Italian Government has been busy ever since 1861 in converting this +gulf into a first-rate naval arsenal, but no sooner has a portion of the work been +completed than the progress made in the arts of destruction compels the engineers +to remodel it—a very costly task. Whatever future may be in store for +Spezia as a military port, it has none as a commercial one, for though it affords +excellent shelter to vessels, no railway connects it with the fertile countries beyond +the Apennines, and its exports are limited to the produce of the valleys in its +immediate vicinity. Spezia is indebted for its high rank amongst the cities of +Italy to its beautiful gulf, the rival of the Bay of Naples and the roadstead of +Palermo. From the summit of the marble hill above the decayed town of Porto +Venere we look down upon a marvellous succession of bays and promontories, and +far in the distance the mountains of Corsica rise indistinctly above the blue waters. +Looking to the east, we behold the picturesque towns on the opposite side of +the gulf embedded in groves of olive-trees and cypresses, the Apuanic Alps +and the Apennines bounding the horizon. Right opposite is the charming +town of Lerici, and to the south of it the shore upon which Byron reduced to +ashes the body of his friend Shelley: no spot more appropriate for this mournful +holocaust. <span class="xxpn" id="p239">{239}</span></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="IV.—Tuscany.">IV.—<span class="smcap">T<b>USCANY.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">Tuscany, +like Liguria, lies on the southern slope of the Apennines, but is of far +greater width, for that back-bone of Italy retreats there from the Gulf of Genoa, +and stretches right across the broadest part of the peninsula to the Adriatic. +Besides this there are several detached plateaux and mountain ranges to the south +of the valley of the Arno.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn82" id="fnanch82">82</a></p> + +<p>The Apennines of Tuscany are of very unequal height, and they are traversed +by numerous low passes, which could easily be converted into carriage roads. +Speaking generally, they consist of a series of elongated and parallel mountain +masses, separated from each other by valleys, through which flow the head-streams +of the Serchio and the Arno. The first important mountain mass of the main +chain near the frontiers of Liguria, which is commanded by the Orsajo and Succiso, +is thus separated by the valley of the Magra from the parallel range of Lumigiana. +The chain of Garfognana, to the north of the plains of Lucca, has for its pendant +the Alps of Apuana. Monte Cimone, farther east, and the other summits of the +<i>Alpe Apennina</i> to the north of Pistoja and Prato, are attended by the parallel +ridges of the Monti Catini and Monte Albano, on whose slope is the famous grotto +of Monsummano, with a thermal spring. A fourth mountain mass, that which the +direct road from Florence to Bologna crosses in the Pass of Futa, has likewise its +lateral chains, viz. the Monte Mugello, to the south of the Sieve; the Prato Magno, +encircled by the Upper Arno; and the Alps of Catenaja, between the Arno and the +Tiber.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn83" id="fnanch83">83</a></p> + +<p>The Apennines of Tuscany in many places attain a height of 5,000 feet, and are +quite Alpine in their aspect, the upper slopes remaining covered with snow for +more than half the year. They owe much of their grandeur to the precipitous slopes +and fantastic profiles of the calcareous rocks which enter so largely into their composition. +The forests of chestnuts, firs, and beeches which formerly clothed the +whole of the range have not yet been entirely destroyed. The beautiful woods +which cover the slopes of Prato Magno have impressed the mind of many a +poet; and, since Milton sang the delights of Vallombrosa, the “shaded vale” +has become a proverbial name for everything sweet and touching in the poetry of +nature. Farther to the west the monastery of the Campo di Maldulo (Camaldoli) +occupies one of the most beauteous spots in all Italy, the woods and meadows of +which have been celebrated by Ariosto. From the summit above the convent both +the “Tuscan and the Slavonian Sea” can be seen, as that poet tells us.</p> + +<p>The barren escarpments and forests of the Apennines form a charming contrast +to the valleys and rounded hills of Lower Tuscany, where +nearly every height is <span class="xxpn" id="p240">{240}</span> +surmounted by the ruins of a mediæval castle; graceful villas are scattered over the +verdant slopes, farmhouses stand in the midst of vineyards and pointed cypresses, +and every cultivable spot is made to yield a rich harvest. Historical associations, +the taste of its inhabitants, the fertility of the soil, an abundance of running water, +and the sweetness of the climate all combine in making Central Tuscany one +of the most privileged regions of Italy. Protected by the rampart of the Apennines +against cold northerly winds, this region faces the Tyrrhenian Sea, whence +blow warm and humid winds of tropical origin. The rains they bring are not +excessive, thanks to the screen formed by the mountains of Corsica and Sardinia, +and the happy disposition of the detached hills near the coast. The climate of +Tuscany is essentially temperate, and to its equability, no less than to the natural +beauty of their abode, the Tuscans owe, no doubt, much of their gaiety, their good-nature, +fine taste, poetical feeling, and facile imagination.</p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr01" id="fg082"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 82.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>OLFOLINO</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>RNO,</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">NEAR</span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>IGNA.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib240.jpg" width="600" height="551" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>The valley of the Arno completely separates the hills of Southern Tuscany, +usually known as the “Sub-Apennines,” from the principal chain of the mountains. +This valley, with its defiles and ancient lake basins, may be likened +to a moat <span class="xxpn" id="p241">{241}</span> +bounding the wall of the Apennines. The vale of Chiana, originally an arm of the +sea, and then a lake, forms the uppermost portion of the zone which separates the +Apennines from the hills of Southern Tuscany. Then follows the Campagna of +Florence, an ancient lake basin, which it would be easy to flood again by building +a dam across the defile of the Golfolina, through which the river makes its escape, +and which was rent asunder by the “Egyptian Hercules.” Castruccio, the famous +commander of the Luccans, actually proposed to flood the plains of Florence in the +fourteenth century by constructing a dam across this defile; but happily his +engineers pronounced the scheme to be impracticable, for they supposed the +difference of level to amount to 288 feet, whilst in reality it is only fifty.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg083"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib241xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 83.—<span class="smcap">D<b>EFILES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>RNO.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">From the Austrian Staff Map. + Scale 1 : 285,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib241.jpg" width="600" height="210" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The Sub-Apennine hills to the south of the Arno are of rounded contours, of a +gloomy grey colour, and devoid of all verdure. Whilst the Apennines consist exclusively +of Jurassic and cretaceous rocks, the Sub-Apennines are of tertiary formation, +their sandstones, clays, marls, and pudding-stones being pierced here and there by +serpentine. Well-defined ranges can hardly be said to exist. Southern Tuscany, +indeed, may be described as a table-land intersected by rivers in all directions, surmounted +by irregular groups of hills, and pierced by “sinks,” which swallow up +some of the rivers. The cavities of the Ingolla form one of these sinks, in which +several rivulets lose themselves, to reappear lower down as the source of the Elsa +Viva, one of the principal tributaries of the Arno. The most elevated hills of this +Sub-Apennine region form the water-parting between the Arno, the Cecina, and the +Ombrone, and in the Poggio di Montieri, a mountain abounding in copper, they +attain an elevation of 3,323 feet. The Labbro (3,815 feet), Cetona (3,650 feet), and +Monte Amiata (5,450 feet), to the south of the Ombrone valley, rise to a greater +height, but geologically they belong already to Central Italy. The Cetona is a +Jurassic outlier surrounded by recent formations. Monte Amiata, a trachytic cone, +is the most elevated volcano of continental Italy. It no longer vomits lava, but +numerous hot springs and solfataras prove that the volcanic forces are not yet quite +extinct. The Radicofani (2,950 feet) is likewise an extinct volcano, whose lava +resembles petrified froth, and can be cut with a hatchet.</p> + +<p>Subterranean agencies must indeed be very active in +Tuscany, for metalliferous <span class="xxpn" id="p242">{242}</span> +veins ramify in all directions, and the number of mineral springs of every description +is larger than in any other part of Italy. Amongst these springs there are +several of world-wide reputation, as, for instance, those of Monte Catini, of San +Giuliano, and of the Bagni di Lucca. The brine springs of Tuscany are very +productive; but the most curious, and at the same time most useful, springs of all +are the famous <i>lagoni</i>, in a side valley of the Cecina, and at the northern foot of the +Poggio di Montieri. From a distance dense clouds of white vapour are seen rolling +over the plain, and the bubbling noise made by gases escaping through the +ponds, or <i>lagoni</i>, is heard. These ponds contain various salts, silica, and boracic +acid, which is of great value in the manufacture of china and glass, and yields a +considerable revenue to Tuscany. Nowhere else in Europe, except, perhaps, in +the crater of the Eolian Vulcano, is boracic acid met with in sufficient quantities +to repay the labour of extracting it. In Tuscany, however, there are several other +localities where it might be won with advantage, as, for instance, near Massa +Maritima, to the south of the Montieri.</p> + +<p>The subterranean fermentation of which Tuscany is the scene is no doubt due +in a large measure to the changes which have taken place in the relative proportions +of land and sea. Several isolated hills rise near the coast like islands from +the sea, and these have evidently been joined to the mainland by the alluvial +deposits brought down by the rivers. The Monti Serra (3,000 feet), to the east of +Pisa, between the Arno and the Serchio, are almost insulated even now, for they +are surrounded by swamps, and the level of the Lake of Bientina, at their eastern +foot, is scarcely thirty feet above that of the Mediterranean. The heights along +the coast to the south of Leghorn are not quite so isolated, but the lowland which +connects them with the table-land of the interior is only of small elevation. The +promontory, however, whose extremities are occupied by the towns of Populonia +and Piombino (653 feet), is joined to the mainland only by a low plain of sand. +The most perfect type of these ancient islands is presented to us in the superb +Monte Argentaro, at the southern extremity of the Tuscan littoral, which rises +boldly from the sea to a height of 2,085 feet, and is attached to the mainland by +two narrow strips of land covered with pine-trees, enclosing a lake of regular +shape: in the midst of it, on a fragment of the ancient beach, is built +the town of Orbetello. This lake, which looks almost as if it were the work +of a generation of giants, has been converted into an eel-pond, and millions of fish +are caught in it every year. Towards the west of this mountain, in the direction +of Corsica, lie the islands of Giglio and Monte Cristo (2,062 feet) and the rock +of Formica. The island of Elba, farther north, forms a small world of its own.</p> + +<p>The rivers of Tuscany have wrought great changes in the plains through which +they flow, and along the sea-coast. Their labour has been facilitated by the nature +of the soil which they traverse. The least rain converts the barren hill-slopes +into a semi-fluid paste, which is carried by the rivers down to the sea. The +mouth of the Arno has thus been pushed forward to the extent of seven miles in +the course of a few centuries. In former times the Serchio and the Arno united +before they flowed into the sea, but the Pisans diverted the former +river to the <span class="xxpn" id="p243">{243}</span> +north, in order to rid themselves of its unwelcome deposits. Pisa, in the time of +Strabo, stood at a distance of only twenty Olympian stadia from the Tyrrhenian +Sea, and when the <i>cascina</i> of San Rossore was built, towards the close of the eleventh +century, its walls were close to the beach, which is now at a distance of three +miles. Extensive plains intersected by dunes, or <i>tomboli</i>, and partly covered with +forests of pines, have been added to the land in the course of centuries. These +sandy wastes have become the home of large herds of horses and half-wild cattle, +and the camel has been acclimatised there, it is said, since the Crusades. These +changes in the coast-line may not, however, be due exclusively to the agency of +the rivers, for there exists evidence of an upheaval of the land. The building +stone known at Leghorn as <i>panchina</i> is clearly of marine origin, and the shells +which enter into its composition are still met with in the Tyrrhenian Sea.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg084"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib243xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 84.—<span class="smcap">M<b>ONTE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>RGENTARO.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">From the French Chart. + Scale 1 : 168,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib243.jpg" width="600" height="556" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div class="dctr03" id="fg085"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib244xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 85.—<span class="smcap">V<b>AL</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">DI</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>HIANA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">From the Austrian Staff Map. + Scale 1 : 218,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib244.jpg" width="593" height="800" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Amongst the changes effected by human agency in the basin of the Arno +those referring to the Val di Chiana are, perhaps, the most important. This +depression connects the basins of the Arno and Tiber, and may possibly have served +as an outlet to the former river before it had opened itself a +way through the <span class="xxpn" id="p244">{244}</span> +gorge below Florence. Formerly the water-parting between the two rivers was +close to the Arno. A small portion of its drainage was carried to the Tuscan +river, but by far the greater portion of the vale was occupied by stagnant pools, +extending to the south as far as the latitude of Montepulciano, a distance of twenty +miles. The whole of this region was a breeding-place of fever. Dante and other +Italian writers speak of it as an accursed place. The inhabitants made vain +attempts at drainage. The illustrious Galileo, when consulted +on the subject, <span class="xxpn" id="p245">{245}</span> +declared that nothing could be done to mend this evil; and though Torricelli +conceived that it would be possible to drain the valley, he took no steps to put his +theories into practice.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg086"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib245xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 86.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>AKE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>IENTINA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">From the Austrian Staff Map. + Scale 1 : 328,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib245.jpg" width="600" height="430" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>About the middle of the eighteenth century the work of drainage was at +length seriously taken in hand, directed by Fossombroni, the celebrated engineer. +“Warps,” or <i>colmate</i>, were thrown up at the outlet of each lateral ravine between +which the débris carried down from the flanks of the mountains was deposited. +The swamps gradually filled up, and the soil became firm. By constructing +a dam (<i>argine</i>) across the vale at the point chosen for the new water-parting, +an outfall was created, and a line of stagnant swamps was thus converted into +a pure rivulet. The valley, at one time a hotbed of fever, has now become one of +the most salubrious districts of Italy. The newly won lands were at once taken +possession of by agriculturists, and 500 square miles were thus added to the productive +area of Tuscany. Villages, formerly inhabited by fever-stricken wretches, +have become wealthy towns, and the success of this <i>bonification</i>, or reclamation, +has been thorough. The torrents are under control now, and have already +deposited 17,650 million cubic feet of alluvium over an area of 50,000 acres, as if +they were intelligent workmen. The same system of drainage has been successfully +applied in other parts of Italy, and particularly near Grosseto, on the right +bank of the Ombrone.</p> + +<p>Amongst the great drainage works which will evermore contribute to the glory +of Tuscan engineers, the innumerable canals draining the +plains of Fucecchio, <span class="xxpn" id="p246">{246}</span> +Pontedera, Pisa, Lucca, Leghorn, and Viareggio, each of which was formerly +occupied by its lake, deserve to be noticed. One of the most difficult of these +lakes is that of Bientina, or Sesto, to the east of the Pisan hills, which is supposed +to have been formed by an overflow of the Serchio. In former times this lake had +two effluents, one running north to the Serchio, the other south to the Arno. The +outfall left nothing to be desired in ordinary times, but after heavy rains the two +effluents were converted into inflowing rivers, and if the sluices had not been +closed, the Arno and the Serchio would have rejoined each other in this inland sea. +The Bientina, during such freshets, covered six times its ordinary area, and in +order to save the fertile fields of Tuscany it became absolutely necessary to create +a third effluent. The engineers conceived the happy idea of conveying this new +effluent through a tunnel, passing beneath the Arno, three feet in width, into an +ancient bed of that river, now supplanted by the Colombrone.</p> + +<p>In most of these enterprises it was necessary to struggle on in spite of the +miasmatic atmosphere, which hung more particularly over the littoral zone, +where the fresh inland water mingles with the salt water of the Mediterranean. +The blending of the two waters destroyed the fresh-water plants and animals, and +the deleterious gases arising from their decomposition poisoned the atmosphere. +About the middle of last century an engineer, Zendrini, proposed to construct +sluices separating the fresh from the salt water. This was done, and the fevers at +once disappeared. In 1768, the sluices having been allowed to fall out of repair, +the miasmatic scourge immediately reappeared, and it was not until they had +been repaired that the sanitary condition of the villages along the coast was +improved. Twice since neglect to keep the sluices in a proper condition has +been punished with the same results; but from 1821 they have been maintained +in thorough order, and the sanitary condition of the country has ever since been +most satisfactory. Viareggio, in the centre of this malarial district, was up to +1740 hardly more than a hamlet, avoided on account of its insalubrity, but is now +a seaside town, the favourite resort of numbers of visitors.</p> + +<p>Much has been done, no doubt, in draining the land, but there is still room +for many improvements. The Maremma, a track between Piombino and Orbetello, +remains one of the most insalubrious regions of Europe, in spite of what has been +done by sanitary engineers. The inhabitants never reach a high age, and +though they descend to the plain only when it is absolutely required for cultivating +their fields, they frequently carry away with them the germs of disease. +In the two summers of 1840 and 1841 no less than 36,000 persons suffered from +fever amongst a total population of 80,000 souls, most of whom reside in villages +built on hills, and only rarely visit the pestilential plain. In order to escape the +pernicious influence of the poisonous air, it is necessary to reside constantly at an +elevation of 325 feet above the sea, and even that does not always suffice, for +the episcopal city of Sovana is notoriously unhealthy, though built at that +height. Fevers occur frequently at a distance from the swamps, and Salvagnoli +Marchetti is of opinion that they are due to the nature of the soil. The malaria +is said to creep up clayey hills permeated by empyreumatic +substances; it likewise <span class="xxpn" id="p247">{247}</span> +poisons the air of districts abounding in saline springs, and still more that near +deposits of alum. Southerly winds are likewise most pernicious, and fevers +rise highest in the valleys which are exposed to them. Places, on the other +hand, which are fully open to the sea breeze are quite free from malaria, even +if swamps are near, as at Orbetello and Piombino.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg087"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib247xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 87.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>ALARIAL</b></span> + <span class="smcap">R<b>EGIONS.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">From the Austrian Staff Map. + Scale 1 : 2,700,00.</div> +<img src="images/ib247.jpg" width="600" height="642" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>It is generally admitted that the coasts of Etruria did not suffer from malaria +whilst the ancient Tyrrhenian cities were prosperous. The excavations made +recently in connection with the railways have revealed a complete system of +subterranean canals, which formerly drained the whole of the Maremmas. +Populonia and other large cities, of which only a few ruins are found now, could +certainly not have existed if the climate had been as unhealthy as at present. +The ancient Etruscans were famous as hydraulic engineers. They embanked +torrents, drained swamps, and rendered the country cultivable, but their engineering +works were allowed to decay soon after they had been subjected, and the country +returned to its primitive savageness. On the other hand, there +are many towns <span class="xxpn" id="p248">{248}</span> +which were considered healthy during the Middle Ages, but are now desolated by +fever. Massa Maritima, to the south-west of the Moutieri mountain, was rich +and populous as long as it maintained its republican liberties; but no sooner had +it been enslaved by Pisans and Sienese than its drainage works were allowed to +fall into decay, and in the end it found itself reduced to the “shadow of a town.” +Sanitary works carried out recently have brought back some of its ancient prosperity.</p> + +<p>Amongst the causes which have contributed most materially towards a +deterioration of the climate may be mentioned the destruction of the mountain +forests and the rapid increase of alluvial lands resulting from it. The monasteries +of Tuscany, which until quite recently were the owners of the fish-ponds in the +Maremmas, energetically protested against the construction of embankments or +other drainage works, which they conceived would interfere with their cherished +Lenten food. Several of the inland towns rejoiced in the possession of some +unhealthy swampy tract, to which obnoxious persons might be banished with a +certainty of their dying. Even the Kings of Spain established a penal establishment +at one of the most deadly spots on this coast, and banishment to Talamone, +at one time a flourishing port of the Republic of Siena, was tantamount to a +sentence of death.</p> + +<p>Many attempts were made to reclaim these lands. Macchiavelli and other +statesmen of Tuscany thought that the former salubrity of the climate could be +restored by merely repeopling the country. Colonists were sent for from other +parts of Italy, and even from Greece and Germany, but they soon succumbed to +the climate. Since that time considerable progress has been made in rendering +these marshy districts more salubrious. Trees have been planted, and, in combination +with proper drainage, they have rendered many districts habitable which +were not so formerly. Populonia is a case in point. Follonica, where there are +furnaces in which the iron ores of Elba are smelted, is likewise looking up, +though its inhabitants still fly the place on the approach of the fever season.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>The Etruscans, or Tyrrhenians, were the ancestors of the Tuscans, and long +before the dominion of the Romans they were the preponderating race of all +Italy. They occupied not only the whole of the southern slope of the Apennines +as far as the Tiber, but had also founded a confederation of twelve towns in the +Campagna, of which Capua was the head, and as traders and pirates they held +possession of the Tyrrhenian Sea, still named after them. The island of Capri +was one of their most advanced outposts towards the south. The Adriatic was +likewise their own, for Adria, Bologna (called Felsina by them), Ravenna, and +Mantua were Etruscan colonies, and the Rhætians in the Alpine valleys were their +allies, and perhaps kinsmen. But who were the Etruscans? They have been +classed with Aryans, Ugrians, and Semites; with Greeks, Germans, Scythians, +Egyptians, and Turks. The Etruscan inscriptions on ancient monuments, though +very legible, have not hitherto been deciphered satisfactorily. If Corssen’s interpretation +is accepted, their language resembled the Latin +tongues; but this <span class="xxpn" id="p249">{249}</span> +philologist, after all, may not be entitled to be called the “Œdipus of the +Etruscan sphinx.”</p> + +<p>The most common type of the Etruscans, as transmitted to us on cinerary +vases, is that of squat men, often inclining to obesity, with broad shoulders, prominent +face, curved noses, broad retreating forehead, dark complexion, dolichocephalous +skull, and curly hair. This type is neither Hellenic nor Italian. +Amongst their monuments there are none of those curious structures known as +<i>nuraghi</i>, which abound in Malta, Sardinia, and Pantellaria, but dolmens are +numerous. The sepulchral monuments, of which many thousands have already +been brought to light, prove that the arts had attained a high degree of development +in ancient Etruria. The paintings in the interior of the vaults, the bas-reliefs +on the sarcophagi, the vases, candelabra, pottery, and bronzes, resemble similar +work produced by the genius of Greek artists. The arrangement of their dwelling-houses, +though not devoid of originality, proves the intimate connection existing +between the civilisations of the Etruscans and early Greeks. It was the Etruscans +who initiated Rome into the arts. The <i>Cloaca Maxima</i>, the most ancient monument +of the Eternal City, the wall named after Servius Tullius, the Mamertine prison, +and, in fact, all the remains of the Rome of the kings, were their work. It was +they who erected the temples, supplied the statues to deities, built the dwelling-houses, +and furnished them with articles of ornament. Even the she-wolf of +bronze, now in the Capitoline Museum, and a symbol of the Roman people, appears +to be of Etruscan workmanship.</p> + +<p>The Tuscans of our day differ, however, in many respects from their Etruscan +ancestors. These latter, to judge from the paintings in their sepulchral cities, +were an austere race. They appear, likewise, to have been a nation of cooks and +gluttons. Neither of these qualities can be laid to the charge of their descendants. +The modern Tuscan is of an amiable and kindly disposition, he is possessed +of wit and artistic tastes, easy to move, and altogether perhaps a trifle too +pliant of character. The Tuscans of the plain, but not those of the Maremmas, +are the most gentle of Italians; they “live and let live,” and are exceedingly +good-natured. A singular trait distinguishes them from the rest of the Italians: +though brave when carried away by passion, they turn with horror from a dead +body. In this we may trace the persistence of ancient superstitions, for though +the Tyrrhenians concealed their tombs, the worship of the dead was the most +prominent of their religious observances.</p> + +<p>The modern Tuscans, like their ancestors, have known a time when they took +the lead amongst the people of Italy, and even now they stand at the head of the +nation in certain respects. After the decadence of Rome, when civilisation +gravitated towards the north, the valley of the Arno became one of the great +centres of the world’s activity. At that time the passage of the Alps was still +difficult, but communications by sea were established between Tuscany, France, +and Spain. The Apennines not only sheltered the fertile valleys opening upon +the Tyrrhenian against cold northerly winds, but also against the hordes of +barbarian invaders. Tuscany was, indeed, a favoured region, +and its intelligent <span class="xxpn" id="p250">{250}</span> +inhabitants made the most of the natural advantages they possessed. “Work” +was the great law of the Florentines, and all, without exception, were expected to +engage in it. Whilst Pisa disputed the dominion of the sea with Genoa and +Venice, Florence became the head-quarters of commerce, and its bankers extended +their operations to every part of Europe.</p> + +<p>But Tuscany was more than a commercial and industrial country. What +Athens had been to the world two thousand years ago, republican Florence +became during its period of prosperity, and for the second time in the history of +mankind there arose one of those centres of light the reflected rays from which still +illuminate our own times. Arts, letters, sciences, and political economy—everything, +in fact, that is noble in this world was cultivated with an energy to +which nations had been strangers for a long time. The pliant genius of the +Tuscans revelled in every species of work, and amongst the names great in +history Florence may fairly claim some of the greatest. Where are the men that +have exercised a greater influence in the world of art and intellect than Giotto, +Orgagna, Masaccio, Michael Angelo, Leonardo da Vinci, Andrea del Sarto, +Brunelleschi, Savonarola, Galileo, or Macchiavelli? It was a Florentine, too, +Amerigo Vespucci, who gave his name to the New World, and justly so, for it +was Vespucci through whom the discoveries made by the Spaniards first became +known, and who, in 1501, bestowed the name of <i>Novus Mundus</i> upon the newly +discovered countries, whilst Columbus died in the belief that he had reached the +eastern coast of Asia.</p> + +<p>The dialect of Florence has become the polished language of the whole of +Italy, and it is curious that this honour should not have been carried off by Rome. +But whilst Florence cultivated the arts and sciences, and through her great writers +exercised an immense influence, the city of the popes yielded herself up to the +worship of the past, and its literature was written in a dead language, more or less +successfully imitated from that of Cicero. The dialect of Rome never became a +language like that of Florence, but Italian is nevertheless indebted to Rome for +its musical pronunciation, that of the Tuscans being harsh and guttural. Hence +the old proverb, “Lingua Toscana in bocca Romana.” The delicate, pure poetry +breathed in the <i>ritornelli</i> which Tuscan peasants chant in the evening is highly +appreciated by all admirers of Italian, and the influence which the fine dialect of +the Florentines exercised upon the unification of Italy can hardly be overestimated. +The worshippers of Dante are almost justified in saying that Italian +unity dates from the day on which the great poet first expressed himself in the +firm and sonorous language which he had forged out of the various dialects spoken +throughout the peninsula.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>The geographical position of Tuscany accounts for the influence it has exercised +upon Italy and the rest of the world, whilst its topography gives us the key +to the local history of the country. The Apennines and the mountains to the +south of the Arno divide it into a number of separate basins, each of which gave +birth to a small state or republic. At the time of the +Tyrrhenians Etruria formed <span class="xxpn" id="p251">{251}</span> +a confederation of cities, whilst during the Middle Ages it was divided into +numerous small republics, frequently at war with each other. Since that time +many changes have taken place in the relative importance of the various towns, +but even now most of the free cities of the Middle Ages, and even some founded +by the ancient Etruscans, occupy a high rank amongst the provincial towns of +Italy.</p> + +<p>Florence (Firenze) is not one of these ancient cities of the Tyrrhenians; it is +merely a Roman colony of comparatively modern origin. In the time of the +Empire it was of small importance, for Fiesole, on a hill to the north, remained +the leading town of the country until destroyed by the Florentines, who carried +its columns and statues to their own town. The rapid growth of Florence during +the Middle Ages is due to its position on the highway which connects Germany, +Lombardy, and even Bologna with Southern Italy. As long as Rome was the +capital of Italy travellers starting from the valley of the Tiber crossed the Apennines +in the direction of Ancona and Ariminum. But after the fall of Rome, +when barbarian hordes inundated the country from the north, the high-roads +connecting the plains of Lombardy with the valley of the Arno rose into importance. +This great military highway became simultaneously a high-road of commerce, +and it was only natural that a great emporium should spring up on the +site occupied by Florence. The “city of flowers” prospered, and became the +marvel which we still admire. But the wealth of the growing commonwealth +proved its destruction. The rich bankers grasped at political power, the Medici +assumed the title of princes, and though the arts continued to flourish for +awhile, public virtues decayed, the citizens became subjects, and intellectual life +ceased.</p> + +<p>Florence, as in the days of republican liberty, owes much of its wealth to the +industry of its inhabitants. There are manufactories of silks and woollen goods, +of straw hats, mosaics, china, cut stones (<i>pierra dura</i>), and other objects, all of +them requiring workmen possessed of taste and manual dexterity. But neither +these industries nor the commerce carried on by the town would have raised +Florence above the level of other populous Italian cities. The prominent position +it holds is due entirely to the beauty of its monuments, which attract to it the +lovers of art from every quarter of the world. Not even Venice is equally rich in +architectural masterpieces of the Middle Ages and the Renaissance. The museums +of Florence “la Bella”—such as the Uffizi, the Pitti Galleries, and the Academy +of Arts—are amongst the richest in Europe, and contain some of the most +highly prized treasures of art; its libraries abound in curious manuscripts and rare +old books. Nay, the very streets and piazzas of the town, with their palaces, +towers, churches, and statues, may be likened to a huge museum. Brunelleschi’s +Duomo; Giotto’s Campanilla, which was to “surpass in beauty all imagination can +conceive;” the Baptistery, with its incomparable doors of brass; the Piazza della +Signoria; the monastery of San Marco, now a museum; the gloomy palace of the +Strozzi; and numerous other buildings of superior merit make Florence the +delightful place it is. Its charms are enhanced by the beauty +of the surrounding <span class="xxpn" id="p252">{252}</span> +country, and the traveller will always recall with pleasure the walks along the +Arno, the hills of San Miniato and Belle Sguardo, and the picturesque spur upon +which lie the villas and ruins of Etruscan Fiesole. Unfortunately the climate of +Florence leaves much to be desired; the wind changes abruptly, and the heat in +summer is overpowering. <i>Il caldo di Firenze</i> has become proverbial throughout +Italy. Narrow streets, and to some extent the disregard of the laws of hygiene, +cause the mortality to exceed that of nearly every other town on the Continent. +During the Middle Ages pestilence was a frequent visitor, and Boccaccio tells us +that in an single season nearly 100,000 inhabitants, or two-thirds of the entire +population, were swept away by it. Targioni Tozetti contrasts the site of +Empoli, a small town to the west, with that of Florence, and regrets that a +project for removing Florence thither should not have been carried out, as proposed +in 1260.</p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr01" id="fg088"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 88.—<span class="smcap">F<b>LORENCE:</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">D<b>UOMO</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ALAZZO</b></span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>ECCHIO.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib252.jpg" width="600" height="562" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>The only town of any importance in the upper valley of the Arno is Arezzo, +an ancient city of the Etruscans, and at one time the capital of one of the most +prosperous republics of the Middle Ages. The inhabitants ascribe +to the “subtile <span class="xxpn" id="p253">{253}</span> +air they breathe the subtility of their spirits,” and indeed the list of famous men +connected with the town is very long. The present Arezzo, however, is a decayed +place, and lives upon the memories and the monuments of a past age. Cortona, +farther south, near the Lake of Trasimeno, claims to be the most ancient city of +Italy; but all traces of its former greatness have disappeared. Siena, which +formerly governed the whole of the hilly tract between the Arno and Ombrone, +has fallen from her high estate, not without the fault of its own citizens, who were +continually quarrelling amongst themselves. Siena no longer rivals Florence in +population, power, or industry, but may still compare with the city on the Arno +as regards its public buildings—many of them in the Gothic style—its works of +art, its quaint streets and piazzas, and its magnificent position on the slopes of +three hills. Chiusa, one of the most powerful towns of ancient Etruria, is of no +importance now, and only attracts antiquarians in search of its ancient tombs. +The vineyards of Montepulciano, on the same side of the vale of Chiani, produce +the “king of wines.” Volterra is only a small town now, interesting, however, +on account of its cyclopean walls and a museum abounding in Etruscan antiquities. +The environs are dreary in the extreme. Salt-works, yielding from 7,000 to 8,000 +tons a year, quarries of alabaster, copper mines at Monte Catini, sulphur springs, +and the famous <i>lagoni di Monti Cerboli</i> (see p. <a + href="#p242" title="go to p. 242">242</a>), are in the neighbourhood.</p> + +<p>The cities at the foot of the Apennines, on the other side of the Arno, have +retained their importance, for they are favourably situated for commerce. Prato, +where the valley of the Arno is widest, is the centre of a rich agricultural district. +The quarries of serpentine in the neighbourhood have furnished building stones +for many of the most beautiful edifices of Tuscany, including the cathedral of +Prato, celebrated on account of Donatello’s marvellously sculptured pulpit. +Pistoja, where the railway descends from the Apennines, is a busy manufacturing +town. Other towns of some importance are Pescia, Capannori, in the “garden of +Italy,” and Lucca the industrious, with its celebrated pictures by Fra Bartolommeo.</p> + +<p>The basin of the Serchio is of incomparable productiveness since its marsh lands +have been brought under cultivation. From the ramparts of Lucca one of the +most charming views may be enjoyed. On the one hand we have the towers and +cupolas of the town, on the other fertile fields and orchards, with white houses +peeping through the verdure, and distant hills surmounted by old towers. The +impression made by this view is one of perfect peace. In a country so fertile and +beautiful, it would seem, the people ought to be happy, and, if enthusiastic writers +can be believed, such is really the case, and the peasants of Lucca and of Lower +Tuscany in general enjoy advantages denied to their class elsewhere in Italy. +They are farmers for the most part, but hold their land by long leases, and their +share of its produce is regulated by ancient custom. The land, however, does not +suffice for their wants, and they emigrate in thousands in search of work. Many +of these emigrants work as grinders.</p> + +<p>The inhabitants of the Upper Serchio valley, known as the Garfagnana, are as +industrious as those near Lucca, which is the natural outlet for its produce. The +slopes and spurs descending from the Apennines and Apuanic +Alps are cultivated <span class="xxpn" id="p254">{254}</span> +in terraces. Castelnuovo, the chief town of this valley, occupies one of the +most delightful spots of this picturesque district. The common people near it are +said to speak the best Italian, superior even to that of the Sienese.</p> + +<p>The valley of the Magra is far more frequented than that of Garfagnana, for +the high-road from Parma to the Gulf of Spezia leads through it. In its upper +portion, in the heart of the Apennines, stands the small town of Pontremoli. Its +inferior portion, known as the Lunigiana, from the ancient city of Luni, is as +beautiful as the parallel valley of the Serchio. At Sazana it opens upon the +sea, and to the south of that charming town, where the Apuanic Alps approach +close to the sea, leaving only a narrow passage of some note in history, are situated +the towns of Carrara and Massa. Carrara, the “Quarry,” has replaced Luni as +the place from whence the white marbles so highly esteemed by sculptors are +exported, and choice blocks of which sometimes fetch £80 a cubic yard. No less +than 720 quarries perforate the neighbouring hills, and about 300 of these are +being worked now. The town may be likened to an agglomeration of sculptors’ +studios, and its Academy has trained artists of high reputation. Massa enjoys +a better climate than Carrara, but its marbles are less highly esteemed. As to +the marbles of Serravezza, which are quarried in the Altissimo and other mountains +of the Apuanic Alps near the town of Pietra Santa, they are in many +instances as beautiful as those of Carrara. Michael Angelo highly appreciated +them, and had a road constructed to facilitate access to them. The quarries and +mines in the neighbourhood also yield slates, iron, lead, and silver.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn84" id="fnanch84">84</a></p> + +<p>These towns at the foot of the Apuanic Alps were bound to prosper in proportion +as the country increased in wealth, whilst Pisa, the great commercial +republic of mediæval Tuscany, was doomed to decay, owing to the silting up of +its harbour. This Porto Pisano was situated about ten miles to the south of +what was then the mouth of the Arno. In 1442 its depth had been reduced to +five feet, a century later only rowing boats could enter it, and soon after it was +abandoned definitely. There are no traces of it now, and its very site is +disputed. But though Pisa is dead—Pisa <i>morta</i>—the city still possesses admirable +monuments of its past grandeur. It has a wonderful cathedral; an elegant +baptistery; its Campo Santa, with the famous frescoes of Orgagna and Gozzoli; +and a leaning tower commanding a view of the Pisan hills and the alluvial plains +of the Arno and Serchio. Its commerce has dwindled away, but it is still the +capital of a rich agricultural district, and its university is one of the best in +Italy. It possesses, moreover, that which no change in the commercial highways +can deprive it of, a mild climate, and during winter attracts numerous +visitors from the north.</p> + +<p>Leghorn, or Livorno, has inherited the commerce of Pisa. It is the natural +outlet of the fertile districts of Tuscany, and its commerce is far more important +than might be supposed from the unfavourable configuration of the coast, and +is surpassed only by that of Genoa and Naples.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn85" id="fnanch85">85</a> +Thousands of Spanish and <span class="xxpn" id="p255">{255}</span> +Portuguese Jews who found a refuge here have contributed in no small measure +to the development of the resources of the town. From an architectural point of +view, Leghorn is one of the least interesting cities of Italy, but as the outcome of +human labour it is one of the most curious. Before the city could be built, the +swamps which occupied its site had to be drained, and an artificial harbour had +to be excavated for the protection of vessels. Numerous canals intersect the +north-western portion of the town, which is known as New Venice. A huge +breakwater marks the entrance to the harbour, and on a sand-bank in the offing +rises the tower of Meloria, which recalls the naval engagement in which the fleet +of the Pisans was destroyed by the Genoese.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg089"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib255xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 89.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">H<b>ARBOUR</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>EGHORN.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 112,000</div> +<img src="images/ib255.jpg" width="600" height="458" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Insular Tuscany consists of Elba and several smaller islands, which mark the +site of an isthmus that formerly joined the mainland to Corsica, and contribute +greatly towards the beauty of the Tuscan littoral.</p> + +<p>Elba, once the miniature kingdom of Napoleon, is larger than all the other +islands together.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn86" id="fnanch86">86</a> An ancient dependency of the Etruscan city of Populonia, +Elba rises above the blue waters of the Tyrrhenian a picturesque group of +mountains. A narrow and dangerous strait separates its steep coasts from the +promontory of Piombino, where passing vessels were formerly obliged to pay toll.</p> + +<p>The granitic heights of Monte Capanne, the eastern +extremity of the island, <span class="xxpn" id="p256">{256}</span> +attain an elevation of 3,303 feet; the dome-shaped hills of serpentine at the other +extremity are 1,600 feet in height, and the centre of the island is occupied by +hills of various formations, covered with brushwood. The variety of rocks is very +great, taking into account the small extent of the island. Associated with the +granites and serpentine, we meet with beds of kaolin, and with marble similar +to that of Carrara. Remarkable crystals and precious stones abound to such +an extent, that Elba has been likened to a “mineralogical cabinet” on a +vast scale.</p> + +<p>Formerly, when the sea was infested by pirates, the inhabitants retreated +to the recesses of the interior, or to the summits of steep promontories, where the +picturesque ruins of ancient fortifications may still be seen. Several of the old +inland villages continue to be inhabited; amongst others, that of Capoliberi, the +“Mountain of the Free,” which is looked upon as a sort of acropolis. After +the suppression of piracy the islanders came down to the <i>marina</i>, or coast, +and established themselves in the towns of Porto Ferrajo, Porto Longone, +Marciana, and Rio. The resources of the island are considerable, and afford +plenty of occupation to fishermen, salt-makers, wine-growers, and gardeners. The +inhabitants are hospitable, and, though neighbours of the fierce Corsicans, they +possess all the gentleness of Tuscans.</p> + +<p>Elba is not, however, so much noted on account of its fisheries, vineyards, salt-works, +or commerce, as because of its rich deposits of iron ore. The russet-coloured +cliffs of ironstone are visible from the mainland. The huge excavations +made by the miners, many of whom are convicts, resemble the craters of extinct +volcanoes, and the reddish brown, violet, or blackish colour of the rocks helps +the illusion. Of the quantity of ore carried away from here in the course of +twenty-five or thirty centuries we can hardly form a conception. The ironstone +is bedded in layers, differing in colour according to the nature of the earthy +ingredients, and rising into hills 600 and more feet in height, the slopes of +which are covered with brushwood (<i>macchie</i>). Shovels and spades are the only +mining tools required in clearing away these heaps of ore, of which at least +100,000,000 tons remain. By regular mining operations 500,000 tons might +be obtained annually during twenty centuries. The annual produce at present +hardly exceeds 100,000 tons. The ore is more particularly suited to the manufacture +of steel. Loadstones abound near Capo Calamita. The mariners of +the Mediterranean formerly made use of them in the construction of a primitive +ship’s compass, by placing them in a piece of cork, which they allowed to float +in a basin of water.</p> + +<p>The smaller islands of the Tuscan archipelago are—Giglio, with quarries +of granite; Monte Cristo, a pyramidal rock rising 2,130 feet above the sea-level; +Pianosa, with an agricultural penal settlement; Capraja, with a small town +built within an amphitheatre of pink-coloured granite; +and Gorgona (987 feet).<a class="afnanch" href="#fn87" id="fnanch87">87</a> <span class="xxpn" id="p257">{257}</span></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="V.—The Roman Apennines, the Valley + of the Tiber, the Marches, and the Abruzzos.">V.—<span + class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">R<b>OMAN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>PENNINES,</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>ALLEY</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>IBER,</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>ARCHES,</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>BRUZZOS.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">That portion of the Italian peninsula which has Rome for its centre may be +likened to the trunk of the body, for it is there the Apennines attain their greatest +height, and nowhere else to the south of the Po are rivers of equal magnitude met +with.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn88" id="fnanch88">88</a></p> + +<p>The main rampart of the Apennines runs parallel to the coast of the Adriatic. +To the mariner, who sees these mountains rise above the verdure of the littoral +region, they have an appearance of the greatest regularity. Summit rises beyond +summit, one lateral chain succeeds to the other, and every one of the numerous +valleys descends perpendicularly to the coast. The slope throughout is steep, and +the geological strata, whether of Jurassic, cretaceous, or tertiary age, succeed each +other regularly from the snow-clad summits down to the promontories of the +coast. The only irregularity consists in a detached group of hills (1,880 feet) to +the south of Ancona, above which the axis of the Apennines changes its direction. +This region of Italy is the natural counterpart of Liguria. The position of +Ancona corresponds with that of Genoa, and the coast, which extends on the one +hand to Emilia, and on the other towards the peninsula of Monte Gargano, may +fairly be likened to the “Rivieras” of Genoa, with this exception, that its direction +is inverse. The territory between the mountains and the coast is narrow, the +littoral road frequently winds round promontories, and the towns extend up the +hill-sides. Still this portion of Italy is not as strongly protected by nature as +Liguria. Towards the north it expands upon the plain of the Po, whilst the +terraces at the foot of the main range of the Apennines afford easy access from +the west. During the whole of the Middle Ages and down to our own days +neighbouring states have fought for the possession of this territory, which has +become known, from this circumstance, as the “Marches;” that is, the disputed +frontier districts, where every town is a fortress perched on the top of a hill.</p> + +<p>The Apennines forming the boundary between the Marches and Latium, or +Rome, like those of Etruria, are grouped in separate mountain masses. The first +of these commands the valley of the Tiber in the east; it extends in the north to +Monte Comero (3,828 feet) and the Fumajolo, or head-stream of the Tiber, and in +the south to Monte Verone (5,006 feet). Though inferior in height to other parts +of the Apennines, these mountains are known as the +<i>Alpe della Luna</i>. A gap, <span class="xxpn" id="p258">{258}</span> +through which passes the road from Perugia to Fano, separates them from Monte +Catria (5,585 feet). At that point the Apennines bifurcate, and two parallel +ranges can be traced thence for a distance of 120 miles, as far as the transverse +range of the Majella (9,158 feet), which reunites them, and from which radiate +the mountains of Southern Italy. These parallel chains belong to the Jurassic and +cretaceous formations, and neither of them forms a water-parting, for whilst the +Nera and other rivers tributary to the Tiber force themselves a passage through +the western one, that on the east is broken by numerous gorges, through which +rivers and torrents find their way into the Adriatic. The most considerable +of these rivers is the Pescara, which rises on the plateau of the Abruzzos, where it +is known as the Aterno, and traverses the eastern range where it is highest. The +gorge excavated by this river is sufficiently wide to afford space for a railway +joining the Adriatic to the basin of the Tiber.</p> + +<p>The plateau of the Abruzzos, enclosed by these parallel ranges, may be looked +upon as the natural citadel of Central Italy. On its western side rise the double +pyramids of Monte Velino (8,157 feet); in the north Monte Vettore (8,131 feet) +forms the termination of the range of the Sibillini; in the east rises the culminating +point of the Apennines, a mountain covered with snow the greater part of the +year, and appropriately called the “Great Rock of Italy”—“Gran Sasso d’Italia” +(9,518 feet). The fact that this magnificent mountain is the highest in all Italy +has been known from times immemorial. The Romans conceived they had discovered +the “umbilic of Italy” in a small lake near it, upon which floated an island +formed of rank vegetation. The Marsi and their allies, when they took up arms +against their Roman oppressors, chose Corfinium, in its neighbourhood, for the seat +of their empire, and surnamed it Italica; and there, too, the first movements +which led to the resurrection of modern Italy took place. The Gran Sasso, as +seen from the Adriatic, affords a magnificent spectacle. Its calcareous masses +cannot boast of much beauty of profile, but this is compensated for by the fine +Alpine region extending beneath its summit, which remains the haunt of bears and +chamois, and where rare plants in the meadows remind us of Switzerland. Forests +of beeches and pines are still met with in a few places, and are all the more +appreciated as forests no longer exist in the lowland regions. This universal +destruction of the forests is one of the great misfortunes of Italy. In many parts +of the Roman Apennines even the soil has been washed away, and only in a few +crevasses do we meet with brooms and briers.</p> + +<p>The valleys on the western slope of the Apennines are enclosed between +calcareous spurs of the main range, some of which attain a considerable elevation. +The Tiber itself thus passes between two lofty mountains, rising at the lower +extremity of two of these Sub-Apennine spurs, and forming a kind of triumphal +gateway. These are the Soracte (2,270 feet) and Gennaro (4,162 feet). These +fine mountains, with the Sabine Hills and the volcanic groups near them, form +the horizon of the Roman Campagna, and their natural beauties are enhanced by +the memories of art and history which attach to them.</p> + +<div class="dctr03" id="plt15"> +<img src="images/ib258a.jpg" width="551" height="800" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">PEASANTS OF THE ABRUZZOS.</div> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Several ranges of hills and detached mountain groups of +calcareous formation, <span class="xxpn" id="p259">{259}</span> +like the Sub-Apennines, border upon the shore of the Tyrrhenian Sea and the +marshes which extend along it. Such are the hills, rich in alum, which are +grouped around the ancient trachytic cone of the Tolfa. Such, too, are the Monte +Lepini (4,845 feet), the naked crest of which has been likened to an ass’s back—<i>schiena +d’asino</i>—and which bound the Pontine Marshes on the east. In some +of the recesses of these hills there still exist forests of chestnut-trees and beeches, +where the descendants of the ancient Volsci may pasture their hogs; but almost +everywhere else the hill-sides are bare of vegetation, and the scorching rays of +the sun have split the rocks into innumerable angular fragments. To the east of +the marshes rises a summit with ten pinnacles, covered with dense shrub on the +land side, but barren towards the sea, a few stunted palms excepted, which grow +in the fissures of the rock. This isolated hill, a counterpart of the Argentaro of +Tuscany, is the Circello (1,729 feet), famous as the residence of the enchantress +Circe. The grotto where she changed human beings into animals is still pointed +out there to the curious, and the remains of cyclopean walls recall the mythical +age of the Odyssey. The ancient Greeks, who were but imperfectly acquainted +with Italy, looked upon this dreaded promontory of Circe as one of the most +important islands of the Western Cyclades.</p> + +<p>During the glacial period the sea, in which have been deposited the chalk and +other rocks composing the Sub-Apennines, was the scene of volcanic action on a +grand scale. The matter ejected was heaped up in a line of volcanic cones, +running in a direction nearly parallel with the Apennines and the coast of the +Mediterranean. These cones are joined to each other by thick layers of tufa, +which cover the whole of the plain as far as the foot of the calcareous mountains, +and extend for a distance of nearly 120 miles, from Monte Amiata, in Tuscany, to +the mountains of Albano, being interrupted only by the alluvial valley of the +Tiber. Ponzi and other geologists are of opinion that this tufa was ejected from +submarine volcanoes, carried away by the currents, and equally distributed over +the depressions of the sea-bottom. No fossils have been discovered in it hitherto, +which is accounted for by the presence of icebergs, which prevented a development +of animal life.</p> + +<p>This volcanic region is remarkable on account of its numerous lakes. The +largest of these, that of Bolsena, was formerly looked upon as an ancient crater. +This crater would have exceeded by far the largest volcanic vents met with in +the Andes or in Java, for it has a circumference of twenty-five miles, and covers +an area of forty-four square miles. Modern geologists, however, look upon this +crateriform lake as a basin of erosion, and though it occupies the centre of a +plateau formed of ashes, scoriæ, and lava, these do not form a steep edge towards +the lake, as in the case of veritable craters in the same district. One of the most +remarkable of these latter is that of Latera, to the west of the lake, in the centre +of which rises a cone of eruption, the Monte Spignano, which has a diameter +of nearly five miles.</p> + +<p>The district of the Bolsena is likewise remarkable on account of its vertical +precipices of tufa and lava. Its picturesque towns and villages +are perched upon <span class="xxpn" id="p260">{260}</span> +bold promontories looking down on the valleys. The old town of Bagnorea +occupies the extremity of an immense mole, and is joined to the new town by a +giddy path, bounded by steep precipices, which timid travellers do not care to +venture upon. Orvieto stands on an isolated rock resembling a fortress. Pittigliano +is surrounded by precipices: by cutting away a few yards of the narrow isthmus +which joins it to the rest of the plateau, access to it would be impossible to all but +birds. In the Middle Ages, when nobles and towns were continually at war, the +capture of one of these eyries was looked upon as a grand achievement.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg090"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib260xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 90.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>AKE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>OLSENA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 457,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib260.jpg" width="600" height="357" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Lake Bolsena discharges its surplus waters through the Marta into the +Mediterranean. The fine Lake of Bracciano, to the south of it, gives rise to +the Arrone. It, too, appears to be a basin formed by a subsidence of the ground +or erosion, and not a crater. The Lake of Vico, on the other hand, clearly +occupies an ancient volcano, though its rampart has been gutted towards the east. +Close to the lake, and within the encircling rampart, rises Monte Venere, a perfect +cone, the gentle slopes of which are luxuriantly wooded. Formerly the lake +surrounded this cone, but the breach through which its emissary escapes to the +Tiber having gradually been deepened, the waters of the lake subsided. Tradition +says that an ancient city lies at its bottom.</p> + +<p>On crossing the Tiber we reach the beautiful volcanic group of Albano, +within the great crater of which may still be traced the remains of several +secondary craters, some of them occupied by lakes. The principal one of these, +Monte Cavo (2,790 feet), rises in the very centre of the exterior rampart. +Tradition points it out as one of Hannibal’s camps. The exterior slopes of the +mountain consist of pozzuolana, small stones, and ashes, through which the +torrents have dug out furrows in divergent directions. The +diversity of these <span class="xxpn" id="p261">{261}</span> +volcanic products enables us to trace the phases of activity of this Roman +Vesuvius, which was active at a much more recent epoch than the volcanoes +farther north, and sent its streams of lava to the very gates of Rome.</p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg091"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib261xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 91.—<span class="smcap">V<b>OLCANOES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>ATIUM.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">From the Austrian Staff Map. + Scale 1 : 294,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib261.jpg" width="600" height="659" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The Lake of Albano discharges its surplus waters through a tunnel 7,665 feet +in length, which has been in existence for more than twenty-two centuries. The +lake is famous on account of a small crab, large numbers of which are forwarded +to Rome during Lent. It is the only species of this animal hitherto discovered in +fresh water, and zoologists conclude from this that the crater now occupied by the +lake formerly communicated with the sea, but was separated from it by slow +upheavals and the ejection of volcanic products. Flint implements and vases of +baked clay, discovered in the thick layers of volcanic peperino, prove +that at the <span class="xxpn" id="p262">{262}</span> +period of the earliest eruptions the country was already inhabited by a civilised +population. Some of the vases referred to are doubly precious, for they present +us with delineations of the houses of that prehistoric epoch. Roman coins and +clasps of bronze, discovered in the upper layers of lava, prove that these are +comparatively recent. In fact, the most diverse developments of civilisation have +left their traces in these ancient craters. Alba Longa and other towns of the Latins +have been replaced by Roman cities; then came the castles of the popes, and of +other high dignitaries of the Church; and at present these hills are one of the +chief resorts of the crowds of strangers who flock to Rome from every quarter of +the world. On the culminating point of Monte Cavo stood the famous temple of +Jupiter Latialis, where the Latins celebrated their federal Feriæ. The last +remains of this temple were swept away in 1783, to be used in the construction +of a church. From its site the eye embraces a view extending to the hills of +Sardinia.</p> + +<p>The Lake of Nemi no longer reflects in its bluish waters the foliage of +luxuriant trees, or the walls of that dreaded temple of Diana whose priest was +only allowed to assume office after he had killed his predecessor in a duel. It, too, +has its subterranean emissary, like the Lake of Albano. As to the Regillus, +famed for the defeat of the Latins by the Romans, it has dried up, whilst the +incrustating Lake of Tartari and that of the Solfatara, with its floating islands, +are more shallow ponds, which owe their fame almost exclusively to the vicinity +of Tivoli.</p> + +<p>All these volcanic lakes are of considerable depths, whilst the lakes in the +calcareous regions are shallow.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn89" id="fnanch89">89</a> One amongst them, that of Fucino, has been +drained recently, and the same fate is in store for that of Trasimeno. Lake +Fucino originally occupied an area of 104 square miles, and its surplus waters +discharged themselves towards the north-west into the Salto, a tributary of the +Tiber. At an epoch not known to us the dimensions of the lake became less. It +no longer discharged an effluent, but its waters rose and fell according to whether +the seasons were wet or dry. Occasionally they rose as much as 50 feet, and two +cities, Marruvium and Pinna, are said to have been swallowed up during one of +these floods. At other times it was reduced to a swamp. The ancient Romans, +desirous of suppressing a hotbed of fever, and of gaining fertile soil for agriculture, +attempted to drain this lake. Claudius employed 30,000 slaves for eleven years +in cutting a passage through the mountains from it to the Liri. This great work +was carried on under the direction of the greedy Narcissus, but it turned out a +failure, for after a short time the tunnel became choked. In the thirteenth +century an attempt was made to reopen this tunnel, but the drainage of the lake +has only been achieved quite recently, in accordance with plans designed by +M. de Montricher, and carried out at the expense of +Prince Torlonia. Between <span class="xxpn" id="p263">{263}</span> +1855 and 1869 a new tunnel was excavated on the site of the ancient one, and +nearly 150,000,000 cubic yards of water were conveyed through it into the Liri, +and thence to the sea. The whole of the ancient lake bed has been converted into +smiling fields, traversed in all directions by carriage roads; houses have been +erected on spots formerly covered with water; fruit and ornamental trees have +been planted; and the salubrity of the country leaves nothing to be desired +now. Some idea of the progress made in the art of engineering since the time +of the Romans may be formed by comparing this new tunnel with the old one. +The latter was 18,500 feet in length, had an average section of 12 square yards, +and cost (according to M. Rotrou) £9,840,000. The new tunnel has a length of +20,680 feet, a section of 24 square yards, and cost £1,200,000.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg092"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib263xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 92.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>NCIENT</b></span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>AKE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">F<b>UCINO.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 412,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib263.jpg" width="600" height="362" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The Lake of Perugia, better known as the Lake of Trasimeno, on account of +the terrible memories which attach to it, still retains nearly the dimensions which +it had at the dawn of history. If this lake were to rise only a few feet, its +surplus waters would find their way into the Tresa, a tributary of the Tiber; but +its basin is shallow, and evaporation suffices for carrying off the water conveyed +into it by its tributary rivulets. Amongst these is the famous Sanguinetto, on +the banks of which the armies of Hannibal and Flaminius were engaged in battle, +when,</p> + +<div class="dpoem fsz6"><div class="nowrap"> +<p class="pva">“beneath the fray,</p> +<p class="pv0">An earthquake reeled unheededly away.”</p> +</div><!--nowrap--></div> + +<p>The lake, with its islands and charming contours, is beautiful to look upon, +but the low hills surrounding it are sterile, the climate is insalubrious, its waters +harbour but few fish, and the inhabitants on its shores +look impatiently forward <span class="xxpn" id="p264">{264}</span> +to the time when the engineers will fulfil their promise of winning for agriculture +30,000 acres of fertile land now covered by the waters of the lake.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg093"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib264xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 93.—<span class="smcap">L<b>AKE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>RASIMENO.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">From the Austrian Staff Map. + Scale 1 : 250,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib264.jpg" width="600" height="553" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>But far more urgent, on sanitary and economical grounds, are the claims of +the Roman Campagna; that is, of the region lying between the Tolfa of Cività +Vecchia, Monte Soracte, the Sabine Hills, and the volcanoes of Latium. Slavery +and maladministration have converted a fertile region into a desert extending to +the very gates of Rome. Painters are enraptured with this Roman Campagna; +they admire its melancholy aspect, its picturesque ruins hidden beneath brambles, +its solitary pines, its pools reflecting the purple clouds, and visited by thirsty +buffaloes. True, this region, bounded by hills of bold contours, is full of grandeur +and sadness; but the air that hangs over it is deadly, the soil and climate of +this <i>Agro Romano</i> have deteriorated, and fever now reigns there supreme.</p> + +<p>Two thousand years ago the Roman Campagna, which covers an area of +600,000 acres to the north of the Tiber, and extends from the sea to the mountains, +was a fertile and carefully cultivated country. Then its inhabitants were +reduced to the condition of serfs, the Roman patricians appropriated +the land, and <span class="xxpn" id="p265">{265}</span> +covered it with villas and parks. When these magnificent residences were given +up to pillage and to flames, the cultivators of the soil dispersed, and the country +immediately became a desert. Since that epoch most of the Agro is held in +mortmain by ecclesiastical corporations or princely families, and whilst all the +rest of Europe has been making progress, the Campagna has become even more +sterile and insalubrious. Swamps continually invade the lowlands, and an atmosphere +charged with miasmata hangs even above the hills. Malaria has already +knocked at the gates of Rome, and the fevers produced by it decimate the population +of its suburbs.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg094"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 94.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">R<b>OMAN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>AMPAGNA.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib265.jpg" width="600" height="503" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Not a village, not even a hamlet, is met with throughout this afflicted region. +The only buildings are the wretched storehouses of the proprietors, whose wide +domains are roamed over by herds of half-wild grey cattle, said to have been +introduced into Italy by the Huns, and distinguished by immense horns, frequently +suspended in the huts of the peasantry, who fancy that they keep off the +“evil eye.” The soil of these neglected pastures consists of alluvium mixed with +volcanic débris and marls, but only a few patches are cultivated. The farmers and +labourers who engage in this labour carry their lives in their hands, and are +frequently struck down by fever before they are able to regain +their villages in <span class="xxpn" id="p266">{266}</span> +the hills. What can be done to restore to this region its fertility, salubrity, and +population? No doubt it will be necessary to drain the marshes, and to plant +trees capable, like the Eucalyptus, of absorbing the poisonous miasmata; and this +has been done, with a considerable amount of success, since 1870, near the abbey +of Tre Fontane. But, above all, it will be necessary to interest the cultivator +of the soil in its productiveness. Even in the most salubrious districts of the +ancient Papal dominions the population is being decimated by misery and the +maladies following in its train. In the valley of Sacco, to the south-east of Rome, +which abounds in cereals, vines, and fruit trees, the cultivator of the soil is +restricted to a diet of maize, for proprietors and money-lenders eat up the rest of +his produce.</p> + +<p>An uncultivated and insalubrious region extends, likewise, along the sea to the +south of the Tiber. Poisonous vapours arise from the stagnant waters separated +by dunes from the sea, and in order to escape them it is necessary to seek a refuge +in the hills of the interior, or even on jetties built out into the sea, as at Porto +d’Anzio. The palaces which formerly lined the shore from Ostia to Nettuno, and +from the ruins of which have been recovered some of our most highly valued +art treasures, such as the Gladiator and Apollo Belvedere, have been buried +long ago beneath the dunes or in the swamps. The most dreaded of these +malarial districts lies at the foot of the Monti Lepini, and extends from Porto +d’Anzio to Terracina. It is known as the Pontine Marshes, from Pometia, a city +said to have perished before historical times. No less than twenty-three cities +formerly flourished in what is now a deserted and deadly country, but which was +the most prosperous of the districts held by the confederation of the Volsci. The +Roman conquerors created “peace and solitude” at the same time. Four +hundred and forty years after the building of Rome, when Appius constructed +his famous road to Terracina, the country was only a swamp. Various attempts +have been made since to reclaim this region, but it still remains the haunt of +boars, deer, and semi-savage buffaloes, whose ancestors were imported from Africa +in the seventh century. The canals dug during the reign of Augustus appear to +have been of little use; the works undertaken by Theodoric the Goth were more +efficacious; but stagnant waters and malaria in the end regained the mastery. The +engineers employed by Pius VI. towards the close of the eighteenth century +failed likewise, and this district of 290 square miles remains a wilderness to the +present day. If a brigand seeks refuge in it, pursuit is stopped, and he is allowed +to die in peace.</p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg095"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib267xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 95.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ONTINE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>ARSHES.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 280,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib267.jpg" width="600" height="690" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>In order to drain these marshes an accumulation of difficulties will have to be +surmounted. A range of wooded dunes bounds the marshes on the west. Having +crossed these, we enter a second zone of marshes, which are separated from the sea +by a second range of dunes, extending northward from the Monte Circello, and likewise +densely wooded. These two formidable barriers would have to be surmounted +in order to drain the marshes towards the west. Nor are the prospects more promising +in the direction of Terracina, for there, too, every outlet is stopped by dunes. +The streams and canals crossing the marshes are, moreover, choked up +with a dense <span class="xxpn" id="p267">{267}</span> +growth of aquatic plants, which impedes the circulation of the water, feeble though +it be. Herds of buffaloes are sometimes driven into these streams to trample down +the vegetation, but neither this barbarous procedure nor the more regular process +of mowing has availed against its rapid and luxuriant growth, and the water +remains stagnant. Rains are not only heavy in this portion of Italy, but the +superabundant waters of neighbouring river basins actually find their way through +subterranean channels into the depression occupied by the Pontine Marshes. +This happens after heavy rains in the case of the Sacco, a tributary of the +Garigliano, and of the Teverone, a tributary of the Tiber, and +to this circumstance <span class="xxpn" id="p268">{268}</span> +must be ascribed the curious fact first ascertained by M. de Prony, viz. that the +volume of water annually discharged by the Badino, which drains the marshes, +exceeds by one-half the whole of the rain which annually descends upon them. +When this happens the whole of the country is under water. Another danger +arises during dry weather. It happens then occasionally that the parched +vegetation is ignited through the carelessness of herdsmen; the fire communicates +itself to the turfy soil, and the latter smoulders until the subsoil water is reached. +In this manner tracts of land which were looked upon as secure against every +inundation are converted into marsh. During the greater portion of the year +the Pontine Marshes present the appearance of a plain covered with herbage and +flowers, and it is matter for surprise that a country so fertile should be without +inhabitants. The town of Ninfa, which was built in the eleventh century, near +the northern extremity of the plain, has since been abandoned, its walls, houses, +and palaces still remaining, covered with ivy and other creeping plants.</p> + +<p>There can be no doubt that our engineers would be able to reclaim this desolate +region. The system adopted in the case of the valley of the Chiana may not +be practicable, but other, if more costly, means may be devised. Whatever the +outlay, it is sure to be productive, for even now the marshes yield rich harvests of +wheat and maize.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>The Tiber, or Tevere, the great river of the Romans, has defied all attempts +at correction down to our own days, and its sudden floods are said to be even more +formidable now than they were in the days of the Republic. Ever since the time +of Ancus Martius there has been going on a struggle against the alluvium brought +down by the river, and it will need all the skill of the Italian engineers to master +this difficult problem.</p> + +<p>The Tiber is by far the most important river of the peninsular portion of Italy, +and its basin is the most extensive.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn90" id="fnanch90">90</a> It is, too, the only river that is navigable +in its lower course, from Ostia to Fidenæ. The Tiber rises on the western slope +of the Alpe della Luna, in the latitude of Florence. The valley through which +it flows, whilst in the heart of the Apennines, is of surpassing beauty; at one time +it expands into broad and fertile basins, at others it is hemmed in by precipitous +rocks. Below the charming basin of Perugia the Tiber receives the Topino, +formed by the confluence of several streams in the old lacustrine basin of Foligno, +one of the most delightful districts of all Italy, situated at the foot of the Great +Apennines and of the Col Fiorito, which leads across them. The Clituno (Clitumnus) +debouches upon this plain, famous on account of its pellucid waters:―</p> + +<div class="dpoem fsz6"><div class="nowrap"> +<p class="pvb">“The most living crystal that was e’er</p> +<p class="pv0">The haunt of the river nymph, to gaze and lave</p> +<p class="pv0">Her limbs.”</p> +</div></div><!--dpoem--> + +<p class="pcontinue">The +ruins of a beautiful temple still remain near the source of this river, but the +miraculous power of the latter of changing into a brilliant white the wool of the +sheep grazing upon its sacred banks has gone for ever. <span class="xxpn" id="p269">{269}</span></p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg096"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib269xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 96.—<span class="smcap">A<b>NCIENT</b></span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>ACUSTRINE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>ASINS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>IBER</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>OPINO.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 294,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib269.jpg" width="600" height="631" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr03" id="fg097"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 97.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>ASCADES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>ERNI.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib270.jpg" width="558" height="800" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<div class="dctr03" id="fg098"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib271xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 98.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">D<b>ELTA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>IBER.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">According to Darondeau (1861) and Desjardins.</div> +<img src="images/ib271.jpg" width="600" height="735" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The Nera is the most important tributary of the Tiber; “it gives it to drink,” +as the Italian proverb says, and rivals it in volume. It is formed by the junction +of several streams descending from the Sibylline Mountains, Monte Velino, and +the Sabine Hills. About two thousand years ago, it is said, most of these rivulets +did not reach the Tiber; they were intercepted in the plain of Rieti, where they +formed the Lacus Velinus, represented at the present day by a few ponds and +marshes scattered over the fertile fields of the “Garden of Roses.” A breach +effected in the calcareous rocks, and several times enlarged since, allowed the +pent-up waters of the Velino to escape to the Nera, and in doing so they formed +those beautiful cascades of Marmora, above Terni, whose charms have been +celebrated by poets and painters. The river falls down a +perpendicular height of <span class="xxpn" id="p270">{270}</span> +542 feet in a single sheet, and then rushes down, over heaped-up blocks of rock, +until it joins the more placid waters of the Nera. Far less +grand, but perhaps <span class="xxpn" id="p271">{271}</span> +more charming, are the numerous cascatellas of the Anio, or Teverone, the last +affluent of any importance which the Tiber receives above Rome. Standing on the +verdant hill upon which is built the picturesque town of Tivoli, silvery cascades +may be seen to escape in every direction. Some of them glide down the polished +rocks; others shoot forth from gloomy arches, remain suspended an instant in the +air, and then disappear again beneath the foliage; but every one of them, whether +a powerful jet or a mere thread of water, possesses some charm of its own, and, +as a whole, they form one of the most delightful spectacles to be witnessed in +Italy. It is these cascades which have rendered Tivoli famous throughout the +world; and in spite of the popular rhyme—</p> + +<div class="dpoem fsz6"><div class="nowrap"> +<p class="pv0"><span class="spqut">“</span>Tivoli di mal conforto,</p> +<p class="pv0"><span class="spqutspc">O</span> piove, o tira vento, o suona a morto !”—</p> +</div></div><!--dpoem--> + +<div><span class="xxpn" id="p272">{272}</span></div> + +<p class="pcontinue">modern +residences have taken the place of the villas of the ancient Romans, +amongst which that of Hadrian was the most sumptuous. Its ruins, to the west +of Tivoli, cover an area of three square miles. Recently it has +been proposed to <span class="xxpn" id="p273">{273}</span> +utilise the great water power of the Anio far more extensively than has +been done hitherto. The ancients contented themselves with quarrying the +concretionary limestone, or travertin, deposited by the calcareous waters of +the river, sometimes to the depth of a hundred feet. They made use of this +stone for the construction of their public buildings. Travertin, when first +quarried, is white; after a certain time it turns yellow, and subsequently assumes +a beautiful roseate hue, which imparts a character of majesty to the edifices +constructed of it.</p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr03" id="fg099"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 99.—<span class="smcap">P<b>EASANTS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">R<b>OMAN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>AMPAGNA.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib272.jpg" width="560" height="800" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>Below their confluence with the Anio, the yellow waters of the Tiber, +discoloured by the clay brought down from the plains of Umbria, rush beneath +the bridges of Rome. Soon afterwards the river winds round the last hills, +which formerly bounded an ancient gulf of the sea, now silted up. The influence +of the tides makes itself felt. At the head of the Sacred Island, formerly +dedicated to Venus, and famous for its roses, but now a dreary swamp, covered +with reeds and asphodels, it bifurcates. The principal branch, the old Tiber, +passes to the south of this island. Ostia, which was the port of the river during +the early days of Rome, is buried now beneath fields of cereals and thistles, at +a distance of five miles from the sea. Excavations made there since 1855 have +laid bare several temples, tombs, and warehouses. The merchants of Rome were +compelled to abandon that city two thousand years ago, on account of a bar formed +at the mouth of the river.</p> + +<p>The Roman emperors, anxious to have an outlet into the sea, ordered a ship +canal to be excavated to the north of Ostia. This is the Fiumicino, which the +erosive action of the Tiber has converted into a small river. Claudius had huge +docks excavated to the north of this canal, and a new Ostia arose near them. +Trajan opened another port to the south-east of it, which remained for several +centuries the port of Rome. But it, too, has been silted up for about a thousand +years, and the alluvium brought down by the Tiber is continually encroaching +upon the sea, the rate of progress being about three feet annually at the mouth +of the Fiumicino, and ten feet at that of the old Tiber. Extensive ruins of +palaces, baths, and storehouses exist near the ancient port of Trajan, and several +works of art have recently been excavated there.</p> + +<p>The mouth of the Tiber is thus closed by a bar, like that of all other rivers which +flow into the Mediterranean; and the Romans, instead of being able to make use +of their river for communicating with the sea, are obliged to have recourse to more +distant harbours. In former times they kept up this communication with Sicily, +Greece, and the Orient through Antium, Anxur (Terracina), and even Puteoli; +but since the countries of the North have risen into political and commercial +importance, Cività Vecchia has become the great maritime entrepôt of the valley +of the Tiber. It is well known that Garibaldi has conceived the stupendous +project of converting Rome into a great maritime city. The stagnant waters of +the Campagna are to be carried off by means of a huge sanitary canal, the bed of +the Tiber is to be deepened, and an artificial harbour capable of receiving the +largest vessels is to be constructed far out +in the Mediterranean. <span class="xxpn" id="p274">{274}</span></p> + +<p>The execution of this vast scheme is no doubt attended with immense difficulties, +not the least amongst which are the annual floods of the Tiber. Ancient +writers tell us that these inundations were dreaded not only because of the damage +done directly, but also because of the great quantities of animal and vegetable +deposits which remained in the fields after the subsidence of the waters. The nature +of these floods has continued the same down to the present time. At Rome, though +its distance from the sea is only twenty-two miles, the river frequently rises forty or +fifty feet, and in December, 1598, it rose sixty-five feet ! How is this huge volume +of water to be disposed of after it has passed beneath the bridges of Rome? If +the destruction of the forests in the Apennines is one of the principal causes of +these floods, will it be sufficient to replant them? Or would it be preferable +to restore some of those ancient lakes into which numerous rivers discharged +themselves, which now take their course to the sea? The difficulties are great +indeed, for the western slope of the Apennines is exposed to the rain-bearing +westerly and south-westerly winds, and the floods of every one of the numerous +tributaries of the Tiber take place simultaneously, and combine to form one vast +inundation.</p> + +<p>It is by no means difficult to account for the great floods of the Tiber which +take place in winter, but the condition of the river during summer has for a long +time baffled inquiry. The level of the river during the dry season is far higher +than could possibly be accounted for by the small quantity of rain which falls +within its basin. Its volume in summer is never less than half its average +volume, a phenomenon not hitherto observed in the case of any other river. The +Seine has a basin five times larger than that of the Tiber, and its average volume +is almost double; yet, after a continuance of dry weather, its volume is only a +third or fourth of the Italian river. This perennity of the Tiber can only be +accounted for by assuming that it is fed, during the dry season, from subterranean +reservoirs, in which the water is stored up during winter. These reservoirs must +be very numerous, if we are to judge by the numerous “sinks,” or “swallows,” +met with on the calcareous plateaux of the Apennines. One of these sinks, +known as the “Fountain of Italy,” near Alatri, close to the Neapolitan frontier, +has the appearance of a huge pit, 160 feet in depth and 300 feet across. Its +bottom is occupied by a forest, and numerous springs give rise to luxuriant +herbage, upon which sheep lowered by means of ropes feed with avidity. It is +from sinks like this that the rivers of the country, the Tiber and the Sacco, are +fed. It has been computed by Venturoli and Lombardini, the engineers, that +about three-fourths of the liquid mass of the Tiber during winter are derived from +subterranean lakes hidden in the depths of the Apennines. The volume of water +annually supplied from this source to the Tiber would fill a basin having an area +of 100 square miles to a depth of 80 feet ! <a class="afnanch" href="#fn91" id="fnanch91">91</a></p> + +<p>Primitive Rome is to a large extent indebted for her +power to the Tiber, not <span class="xxpn" id="p275">{275}</span> +because that river is navigable, but because it traverses the centre of a vast basin, +of which Rome is the natural capital. Rome, moreover, occupied a central +position with regard to the whole of Italy and the world of the ancients; but, as +has already been pointed out, Rome no longer lies upon any of the great high-roads +of nations. That city certainly occupies not only the centre of Italy, +but of all the countries surrounding the Tyrrhenian Sea; and its climate would +leave little to be desired, if it were not for the insalubrity of the Campagna. Still +Rome, though the residence of two sovereigns, the King of Italy and the Pope, is +not even the principal city of the peninsula, and still less the capital of the +Latin race. It is said that during the Middle Ages, when the popes resided +at Avignon, the population of Rome was reduced to 17,000 souls. Gregorovius, +than whom no one is better acquainted with that epoch in the history of Rome, +doubts this; but there can be no doubt that after the sack ordered by the Constable +of Bourbon its population was reduced to 30,000 souls. More recently +Rome has increased rapidly, but it is still very inferior to Naples, and even to +Milan.</p> + +<p>From the very first the Romans were a mixed race. The myth of Romulus +and Remus, the rape of the Sabine women, and incessant internal conflicts bear +evidence to this fact. The remains of ancient cities, cyclopean walls, burial-grounds, +urns, vases, and ornaments prove that on the right bank of the Tiber +the Etrurians were at least as strong as the Italians. Elsewhere the Gauls +predominated, and from an intermixture of all these various peoples sprang the +primitive Roman.</p> + +<p>When Rome had reached the zenith of her power things wore a different +aspect, and thousands of foreigners became amalgamated with the Latins, Gauls, +Iberians, Mauritanians, Greeks, Syrians, and Orientals of every race and climate; +slaves, freemen, and citizens flocked towards the capital of the world, and +modified the character of its inhabitants. Towards the close of the Empire there +were more strangers within the walls of Rome than Romans, and when the empire +of the West broke to pieces, and the empress-city was pillaged repeatedly by +barbarian hordes, the Italians had already become mixed with the most diverse +elements. This endless mixture between different races, victors and vanquished, +masters and slaves, accounts, perhaps, more satisfactorily for the great changes +which have taken place in the course of two thousand years in the character and +spirit of the Romans. Still the Romans on the right bank of the Tiber, the +so called Trasteverini, have preserved the old Roman type, as transmitted to us +in statues and on medals.</p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr01" id="fg100"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 100.—<span class="smcap">R<b>OME.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib276.jpg" width="600" height="596" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>Rome is great because of its past, and its ruins are more attractive than its +modern buildings; it is a tomb rather than a living city. These monuments, +raised by the former masters of the world, strongly impress the imagination. The +sight of the Coliseum arouses an admiration akin to terror, unless we look upon +this formidable edifice as a mere heap of stones. The thought that this vast arena +was crowded with men who sought to kill each other, that the steps surrounding +it were occupied by 80,000 human beings who delighted in +this butchery and <span class="xxpn" id="p276">{276}</span> +encouraged it by their shouts, calls up an amount of baseness, ferocity, and +frenzy, whose existence could not fail to sap the foundations of Roman civilisation, +and make it an easy prey to the barbarian. The Forum awakens memories of +quite a different nature. Abominations were practised there, too, but its history +as a whole exhibits it as the true centre of the Roman world. It was from this +spot that the first impetus was given to the nations of the West; it was here that +the ideas imported from every quarter of the world bore fruit. The walls, +columns, temples, and churches which surround the Forum relate in mute language +the principal events in the history of Rome; and if we search beneath +existing edifices we meet with structures more ancient, which take us back to a +period still more remote, for edifice has succeeded edifice on this spot, where +pulsated the life of the Roman people. And thus it is throughout Rome. Every +ancient monument, arcade, or broken column, every stone, bears +witness to some <span class="xxpn" id="p277">{277}</span> +historical event, and though it may be difficult sometimes to interpret these +witnesses of the past, the truth is elicited by degrees.</p> + +<p>In spite of pillage and wholesale destruction, there still exist numerous +ancient monuments, of which the Pantheon of Agrippa is one of the most +marvellous. The Vandals, who are usually charged with the work of destruction, +pillaged the city, it is true, but they demolished nothing. The systematical +destruction had begun long before their time, when the materials for building the +first church of St. Peter were taken from the Circus of Caligula, and from other +monuments near it. The same plan was pursued in the construction of innumerable +other churches and buildings of every kind. Statues were broken to pieces +and used for making lime, and in the beginning of the fifteenth century there only +remained six of them in all Rome, five of marble and one of bronze. The invasion +of the Normans in 1084, and the numerous wars of the Middle Ages, which were +frequently attended by pillage and conflagrations, wrought further havoc, but so +large had been the number of public buildings and monuments, that on the revival +of art in the sixteenth century many still remained for study and imitation. Since +that time the architectural collection enclosed by the walls of Rome has been +guarded with the utmost care, and still further enriched by the masterpieces of +Michael Angelo, Bramante, and others.</p> + +<p>On the Palatine Hill the most curious remains of ancient Rome, including the +foundations of the palaces of the Cæsars and of the walls of <i>Roma Quadrata</i>, have +recently been laid open. It was on this hill, so rich in precious relics, that the +first Romans built their city, in order to afford it the protection of steep escarpments, +and of the marshes on the Tiber and Velabro. When Rome grew more +populous it became necessary to descend from this hill. The town spread over +the valley of the Velabro, which had been drained by Tarquin the Etruscan, and +then climbed up the surrounding hills. A small island in the Tiber occupied its +centre. This the Romans looked upon as a sacred spot. They enclosed it by a +masonry embankment, shaped like a ship, erected an obelisk in its centre to +represent a mast, and a temple of Æsculapius upon the poop. This island was +likened to a vessel bearing the fortunes of Rome.</p> + +<p>There is still another Rome, the subterranean one, which is well worth study, +for we learn more from it about early Christianity than from all the books that +have been written. The crypts of the Christian burying-places occupy a zone +around the city a couple of miles in width, and embrace about fifty distinct +catacombs. Signor Rossi estimates the length of the subterranean passages at +360 miles. They are excavated in the tufa, and are, on an average, a yard in width, +but they include chambers which served as oratories, and numerous tiers of niches for +the bodies. The inscriptions, bas-reliefs, and paintings of these cities of the dead +were at all times respected by the pagans, and fortunately the entrances to them +were closed up at the time the Barbarians invaded Rome. This saved their +contents from destruction, and everything was found intact when they were first +reopened towards the close of the sixteenth century. These tombs prove that the +popular belief of the Christians of that time was very different from +what it is <span class="xxpn" id="p278">{278}</span> +represented to have been by contemporaneous writers, who belonged to a different +class of society from that of the majority of the faithful. A serene gaiety reigns +throughout, and lugubrious emblems find no place there. We neither meet with +representations of martyrdoms nor with skeletons or images of Death; even the cross, +which at a later epoch became the great symbol of Christianity, is not seen there. +The most common symbols met with are those of the Good Shepherd carrying a +lamb upon his shoulders, and the vine decked with leaves. In the oldest +catacombs, which date back to the second and third centuries, the figures are +Greek in character, and abound in heathen subjects. One represents the Good +Shepherd surrounded by the Three Graces. There are two Jewish catacombs, +likewise excavated in the tufa, and they enable us to compare the religious notions +which prevailed at that time amongst the followers of the two religions.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg101"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib278xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 101.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">H<b>ILLS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">R<b>OME.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib278.jpg" width="600" height="635" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>By an absurd predilection for mystical numbers, Rome is even now spoken of +as the “City of the Seven Hills,” although it lost all claim to +such a designation <span class="xxpn" id="p279">{279}</span> +after it had outgrown the walls built by Servius Tullius. Independently of Monte +Testaccio, which is merely a heap of potsherds, there are at least nine hills within +the walls of actual Rome, viz. the Aventino, to which the plebeians retired +during their feeble struggles for independence; the Palatino, the ancient seat of +the Cæsars; the Capitolino, surmounted by the temple of Jupiter; Monte Celio +(Cælius); the Esquilino; Viminale; Quirinale; Citorio; and the Pincio, with its +public gardens. Besides these, there are two hills on the opposite bank of the +Tiber, viz. Monte Gianicolo (Janiculum), the highest of all, and the Vatican, +which derives its name from the Latin word <i>vates</i>, a soothsayer, it having once been +the seat of Etruscan divination.</p> + +<p>Faithful to its traditions, the last hill has ever since remained the place of +vaticinations. When the Christian priests left the obscurity of the catacombs they +established themselves upon it, and thence they governed Rome and the Western +world. The Papal palace, abounding in treasures of art, was built upon it, and close +to it stands the resplendent basilica of St. Peter, the centre of Catholic Christendom. +A long arcade connects the palace with the Castle of Sant’ Angelo, the +ancient mausoleum of Hadrian. The guns of this fortress no longer defend the +Vatican, for the temporal power of the pontiffs is a thing of the past; but their +sumptuous church of St. Peter, with its dome rising high into the air, and visible +even from the sea, its statues, marbles, and mosaics, bears witness to the fact that +the riches of all Christendom formerly found their way to Rome. St. Peter’s alone +cost nearly £20,000,000 sterling, and is only one out of the 365 churches +of the city of the popes. At the same time, the admiration which their +sumptuous edifice arouses is not without its alloy. A multiplicity of ornaments +dwarfs the proportions of this colossal building, and, more serious still, instead of +its being the embodiment of an entire epoch of its faith and ideas, it is representative +only of a transitory phase in the local history of Catholicism, of an age of +contradictions, when the paganism of the Renaissance and the Christianity of the +Middle Ages allied themselves in order to give birth to a pompous and sensuous +neo-Catholicism suited to the tastes and caprices of the century. How different is +the impression we derive from this building from that which the sombre nave of +a Gothic cathedral makes upon us ! It is a remarkable fact that the quarter +of Rome in which the church of St. Peter is built is the only portion +of the city which was laid waste by the Mussulmans in 846, who are thus +able to boast of having sacked Papal Rome and taken possession of +Jerusalem, whilst the tomb of Mohammed has ever remained in the hands of the +faithful. As to the Jews, they did not come to Rome as conquerors. Shut up in +their filthy Ghetto near the swampy banks of the Tiber, and not far from that +arch of Titus which reminded them of the destruction of their temple, they have +been the objects of hatred and persecution during nineteen centuries. They have +survived, thanks to the power of their gold, and since their liberation from bondage +they contribute even more to the embellishment of the Italian capital than do +their Christian fellow-citizens.</p> + +<p>Our nineteenth century is not favourable to the creation of edifices +fit to rival <span class="xxpn" id="p280">{280}</span> +the Coliseum or St. Peter’s, but there are works of another nature, not less +deserving of attention, which may distinguish this third era in the history of +Rome. Above all, it will be necessary to protect the city against the floods +of the Tiber, and to improve its sanitary condition. The bed of the river will +have to be deepened, embankments constructed, and a system of drainage +established.</p> + +<p>It is well known that the quantity of water supplied to the Rome of the +ancients was prodigious. In the time of Trajan nine grand aqueducts, having a +total length of 262 miles, supplied about 4,400 gallons of water per second, and +this quantity was augmented to the extent of one-fourth by canals subsequently +constructed. Even now, although most of these ancient aqueducts are in +ruins, the water supply of the capital of Italy is superior to that of most other +cities.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn92" id="fnanch92">92</a> But if the time should ever come when Rome will occupy the whole of +the space enclosed within its walls, if ever the Forum should again become the +centre of the city, then the want of water will be felt there as much as in most of +the other great towns of Europe.</p> + +<p>Irrespective of the insalubrity of the environs, there is another reason why +modern Rome cannot compare with the ancient city. Its streets no longer +radiate from a centre towards all the points of the compass, as they did of +yore. The Appian Road, which on first leaving the city passes through a curious +avenue of tombs, is typical of the old roads, constructed in straight lines, and +shortening distances. It is true that these ancient highways have been superseded +by railways, but they are still few in number, and Rome is not situated +on a trunk line. Elsewhere railways were built from the capital of the country +towards its periphery; in Italy, on the contrary, it was Florence, Bologna, and +Naples which constructed lines converging upon Rome.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>Rome is one of those large cities which are least able to exist upon their own +resources, and having no port, and its immediate vicinity being rendered uninhabitable +by miasmata, it has attached to it outlying places, and occupies a position +similar to that of a spider in the centre of its web. Its gardens, rural retreats, +and industrial establishments are all in the hill towns of Tivoli, Frascati (near +which on a ridge are the ruins of Tusculum), Marino (near which the confederated +nations of Latium held their meetings), Albano (joined by a magnificent viaduct +to Ariccia), Velletri (the old city of the Volsci), and Palestrina (more ancient than +either Alba Longa or Rome, and occupying the site of a famous temple of Fortune, +the pride of ancient Præneste). Its watering-places are Palo, Fiumicino, and +Porto d’Anzio, which adjoins the little town of Nettuno, +so famous because of the <span class="xxpn" id="p281">{281}</span> +haughty beauty of its women. Its only seaport is Cività Vecchia, a dreary town +on the Tyrrhenian Sea, with a magnificent harbour.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn93" id="fnanch93">93</a> The ancient harbours to the +south of the Tiber are very little resorted to in our day. Terracina, hidden amidst +verdure at the foot of white cliffs, is only used by Rome-bound travellers coming by +the coast road from the south.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn94" id="fnanch94">94</a> Nearly every other town of Latium is built on +one or other of the two great roads, of which one leads northward to Florence, whilst +the other penetrates the valley of the Sacco towards the south-east, and finally issues +upon the campagna of Naples. Viterbo, the “city of nice fountains and pretty +girls,” is the principal town in the north. Alatri, on the slope of the Garigliano, +and commanded by a superb necropolis enclosed by cyclopean walls, occupies a +similar position in the south. In the east, in one of the most charming valleys of +Sabina, traversed by the ever-cool waters of the Anio, lies Subiaco, the ancient +Sublaqueum, thus named after the three reservoirs constructed by Nero, who used +to fish trout in them with a golden net. It was in a holy cave (<i>sacro specu</i>) near +Subiaco that St. Benedict established his famous monastery, which preceded the +still more famous monastery of Monte Casino, and conjointly with that of Lérins, +in Provence, became the cradle of monachism in the West.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn95" id="fnanch95">95</a></p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg102"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib281xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 102.—<span class="smcap">C<b>IVITÀ</b></span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>ECCHIA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 8,888.</div> +<img src="images/ib281.jpg" width="600" height="445" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div><span class="xxpn" id="p282">{282}</span></div> + +<p>Perugia, the capital of Umbria, on the road from Rome to Ancona, is one of the +ancient cities of the Etruscans, and excavations carried on in its vicinity have +revealed tombs of the highest interest. After every war and disaster this city +has arisen from its ruins, for its position in the midst of a fertile plain, and at the +point of junction of several natural high-roads, is most favourable. It is both a +Roman and a Tuscan city, and at the period of the Renaissance it gave birth to +one of the great schools of painting. There still remain numerous monuments at +Perugia which date back to that famous epoch, and although no longer one of the +artistic head-quarters of Italy, it is still the seat of a university; its trade, especially +in raw silk, is active; and its clean houses and streets, its pure atmosphere, +and charming inhabitants annually attract to it a large number of the foreigners +who spend the winter at Rome. Perugia has by far outstripped its rival, Foligno, +which was formerly the great commercial mart of Central Italy, and still carries +on a few branches of industry; amongst others, the tanning of leather. As to +Assisi, it is justly famous because of its temple of Minerva, and its gorgeous +monasteries decorated with the frescoes of Cimabue and his successor, Giotto, +the last of the Greek and the first of the Italian painters. Assisi is only a small +place now, but its environs are fertile and densely inhabited. It gave birth to +Francesco d’Assisi, the founder of the order of St. Francis.</p> + +<p>Other towns of Umbria, though not now of much importance, may boast of +having once played a great part in history, or of possessing beautiful monuments. +Spoleto, the gates of which Hannibal sought in vain to force, has a superb basilica, +a Roman viaduct carried across a deep ravine, and mountains clad with pines and +chestnuts. Terni is proud of its famous cascade (see p. <a + href="#p270" title="go to p. 270">270</a>). Orvieto, to the +north of the Tiber, near the frontier of Tuscany, is haughty and dirty, but justly +famous on account of its marvellous cathedral, one of the most costly and tasteful +buildings in the world. Città di Castello, on the Upper Tiber, and Gubbio, in the +very heart of the mountains, are the two principal towns in the Umbrian Apennines. +Both are delightfully situated, and possess efficacious mineral springs. +At Gubbio are shown the famous “Eugubian Tables,” seven plates of bronze +covered with Umbrian characters, and the only relics of that kind known to exist. +The little town of Fratta, now known as Umbertide, half-way between Perugia +and Città di Castello, is only of local importance.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn96" id="fnanch96">96</a></p> + +<p>Ancona is the Adriatic port of the Roman countries. It is an ancient city of +the Dorians, which still retains the name given it by its founders, on account of its +being situated at the “angle” formed by the coast between the Gulf of Venice +and the Southern Adriatic. A fine triumphal arch near the mole attests the +importance which Trajan attached to the possession of this port. Thanks to its +favourable position and the labour bestowed upon the improvement of its harbour, +Ancona is one of the three great places of commerce on the Adriatic; it ranks next +to Venice, and is almost the equal of Brindisi, though not one of the stages on the +road to India. Its commerce is fed by Rome, the +Marches, and Lombardy; and <span class="xxpn" id="p283">{283}</span> +amongst its exports are fruits, oil, asphalt from the Abruzzos, sulphur from the +Apennines, and silk, “the very best in the world,” if the native estimate of its quality +can be accepted.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn97" id="fnanch97">97</a> The other ports along this coast offer but little shelter, and +their commerce is small. Pesaro, the native town of Rossini, is only visited by +vessels of twenty or thirty tons. Fano merely admits barges. The small river port +of Sinigaglia (Senigallia) was formerly much frequented during the fair, at which +commodities valued at £1,000,000 sterling used to change hands, but since its +abolition in 1870 it has been deserted.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg103"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib283xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 103.—<span class="smcap">V<b>ALLEYS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>ROSION</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">ON</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">W<b>ESTERN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>LOPE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>PENNINES.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 403,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib283.jpg" width="600" height="511" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>With the exception of Fabbriano, which occupies a smiling valley of the +Apennines, and of Ascoli-Piceno, on the river Tronto, the inland towns of the +Marches are built upon the summit of hills, but extend through their suburbs to +the cultivable plains. The principal amongst them are Urbino, whose greatest +glory consists in having been the birthplace of Raphael, and which, like its neighbour +Pesaro, formerly produced a kind of faience much valued by connoisseurs; Jesi; +Osimo; Maxerata; Recanati, the native place of Leopardi; and Fermo. One of the +most famous of these hill towns is Loreto, formerly the most-frequented place of +pilgrimage in the Christian world. Before the Reformation, +and at a time when <span class="xxpn" id="p284">{284}</span> +travelling was far more difficult than now, as many as 200,000 devotees visited +the shrines of Loreto every year. They were shown there the veritable house in +which the Virgin Mary was born, and which was carried by angels to the spot +it now occupies, where it is sheltered by a magnificently decorated dome. At +Castelfidardo, close by, was fought the battle which cost the Pope the greater part +of the “patrimony of St. Peter.”</p> + +<p>There are only a few towns in the uplands of the Abruzzos. The principal of +these is Aquila, founded in the thirteenth century by the Emperor Frederick II. +The other towns are difficult of access, and, far from attracting inhabitants from +beyond, they send their vigorous sons to the lowlands, where they are known as +<i>Aquilani</i>, and highly appreciated as terrace gardeners. The most populous places +are met with in the lower valley of the Aterno, or command the road leading to +the coast and the fertile fields of the Adriatic slope. Solmona is embedded in a +huge garden, anciently a lake, and overlooked in the south by the steep scarps of +Monte Majella. Popoli, at the mouth of a defile, where the Aterno assumes the +name of Pescara, is one of the busiest places between the sea and the uplands. +Chieti, lower down on the same river, is said to have been the first town in the old +Neapolitan province to introduce steam into its spinning-mills and other factories. +Teramo and Lanciano are likewise places of some importance, but the only ports +along the coast, Ortona and Vasto, are merely frequented by small coasting vessels.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn98" id="fnanch98">98</a></p> + +<p>A small district in the Marches, joined to the coast by a single road, has +maintained its independence through ages. Monte Titano, which rises in one of +the most beautiful parts of the Apennines, and the base of which has been used as +a quarry since time immemorial, bears upon its summit the old and famous city +of San Marino. From its turreted walls the citizens can see the sun rise above +the Illyrian Alps. San Marino, with some neighbouring hamlets, constitutes a +“most illustrious” republic, and is now the only independent municipality of +Italy. Named after a Dalmatian mason who lived as a hermit on Monte Titano, +San Marino has existed as a sovereign state from the fourth century, its citizens +having at all times known how to turn to advantage the jealousies of their neighbours. +The constitution of this republic, however, is anything but democratic. +The citizens, even though they be landed proprietors, have no votes, and are at +most permitted to remonstrate. The supreme power is vested in a Council of sixty +members, composed of nobles, citizens, and landowners. The title of councillor is +hereditary in the family, and when a family becomes extinct the remaining fifty-nine +choose another. The Council appoints the various officials, including a captain +for the town and one for the country. San Marino has its little army, its budget, +and its monopolies. A portion of its income is derived from the sale of titles and +of decorations, and on the payment of £1,400 it has even created dukes, who take +rank with the highest nobility of the kingdom. Taxation is voluntary. When +the public chest is empty a drummer is sent round +the town to invite <span class="xxpn" id="p285">{285}</span> +contributions. Though perfectly independent, this republic accepts a subsidy from Italy, +and claims the special protection of the King. Its criminals are shut up in an +Italian prison, its public documents are printed in Italy, and an Italian judge +occupies the bench of the republican prætorium. There is no printing-office in the +little state, for the Council is afraid that books objectionable to the surrounding +kingdom might be issued from it.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn99" id="fnanch99">99</a></p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg104"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib285xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 104.—<span class="smcap">R<b>IMINI</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>AN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>ARINO.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 250,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib285.jpg" width="600" height="689" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div class="section"> +<div><span class="xxpn" id="p286">{286}</span></div> +<h3 title="VI.—Southern Italy, Naples.">VI.—<span + class="smcap">S<b>OUTHERN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">I<b>TALY,</b></span> + <span class="smcap">N<b>APLES.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">Amongst +the various states which have been welded into the modern kingdom of +Italy, Naples, though second to others in population and industry, occupies the +largest area.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn100" id="fnanch100">100</a> It embraces the whole southern half of the peninsula, and its coast +has a development of 995 miles. Formerly the country was better known than +any other portion of Italy as Magna Græcia, but now many parts of it are +scarcely known at all.</p> + +<p>The Apennines of Naples can hardly be described as a mountain chain. They +consist rather of distinct mountain groups joined by transverse ranges, or by +elevated saddles. In the first of these groups the serrated crest of the Meta +(7,364 feet) rises above the zone of trees, and is separated from the Abruzzos by +the deep valley of the Sangro, which flows to the Adriatic. Farther to the south, +beyond the valley of Isernia, which gives birth to the Volturno, rise the mountains of +the Matese, culminating in the Miletto (6,717 feet), the last bulwark of the Samnites. +Other summits, less elevated, but equally steep and imposing, rise near Benevento +and Avellino. They abound in savage defiles, in which many a bloody battle has +been fought. The valley of the “Furcæ Caudinæ,” where the Romans humbled +themselves before the Samnites, and made promises which they never meant to +keep, may still be recognised on the road from Naples to Benevento. The memory +of this event lives in the Caudarola Road, and the village of Forchia d’Arpaia. This +mountain region, which might fitly be called after its ancient inhabitants, is connected +in the south with a transversal chain, running east and west, and terminating +in Cape Campanello, to the south of the Bay of Naples. The beautiful +island of Capri, with its white cliffs and caverns flooded by the azure waters of +the Mediterranean, lies off this cape.</p> + +<p>The eastern slope of the cretaceous mountains of Naples is gentle, and gradually +merges in argillaceous <i>tavolieri</i>, or table-lands, deposited during the Pliocene +epoch. The <i>tavoliere de la Puglia</i> is, perhaps, the most sterile and dreary +portion of Italy. It is cut up into terraces by deep ravines, through which +insignificant streams find their way to the Adriatic, and the centres of population +must be looked for at the mouths of valleys or along the high-roads. The country +itself is a vast solitude, deserted by all except nomad herdsmen. There are no +shrubs, and a kind of fennel, which forms the hedges separating the pasturing +grounds, is the largest plant to be seen. Hovels, resembling tombs or heaps of +stone, rise here and there in the midst of these plains. Fortunately the old feudal +customs which prevented the cultivation of these plains, and compelled the mountaineers +to keep open wide paths, or <i>tratturi</i>, through their fields for the passage +of sheep, have been abolished, and the aspect of the tavoliere improves from year +to year.</p> + +<p>These tavolieri completely separate the mountains of the peninsula of Gargano—the +“spur” of the Italian “boot”—from the system of the Apennines. The +northern slopes of these rugged mountains are still clad +with forests of beeches <span class="xxpn" id="p287">{287}</span> +and pines, which supply the best pitch of Italy, and by thickets of carob-trees and +other plants, whose flowers are transformed by the bees into delicious honey; but +the very name of the most elevated summit—Monte Calvo (5,150 feet), or “bald +mountain”—proves that the deplorable destruction of forests has been going on +here as in the rest of the peninsula. In former times the recesses of Monte +Gargano were held by Saracen pirates, and they defied the Christians there for a +long time, in spite of the many sanctuaries which had been substituted for the +ancient heathen temples. The most famous of these was the church on Monte +Sant’ Angelo, at the back of Manfredonia, which was frequently resorted to by the +navigator about to leave the shelter of the bay for the dangerous coasts of Dalmatia +or the open sea.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg105"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib287xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 105.—<span class="smcap">M<b>ONTE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>ARGANO.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 950,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib287.jpg" width="600" height="494" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The Neapolitan Apennines terminate in the south with the ancient volcano of +Monte Vultur (4,356 feet). Farther south the country gradually sinks down +into a table-land intersected by deep ravines, which discharge their waters in three +directions—towards the Bay of Salerno, the Bay of Taranto, and the Adriatic. +The Apennines, far from bifurcating, as shown on old maps, are cut in two by +the low saddle of Potenza, and on the peninsula forming the “heel” of Italy only +low ridges and terraces are met with.</p> + +<p>The peninsula of Calabria, however, is rugged and mountainous. The Apennines, +near Lagonegro, again rise above the zone of forests. Monte Polino +(7,656 feet) is the highest summit in Naples. The group of which +it forms the <span class="xxpn" id="p288">{288}</span> +centre occupies the entire width of the peninsula, and along its western coast it +forms a wall of cliffs even less accessible than those of Liguria. Towards +the south it opens out into wooded valleys, where the inhabitants collect manna, +an esteemed medicinal drug. The deep valley of the Crati separates these +mountains from the Sila (5,863 feet), which is composed of granites and schists, +and still retains its ancient forests, haunted by brigands. The shepherds who +pasture their flocks in the clearings of these woods are said to be the descendants +of the Saracens, who formerly occupied this “Country of Rosin,” by which name +it was known to the Greeks.</p> + +<p>To the south of the isolated Sila the peninsula narrows to a neck of small +elevation, where raised beaches attest the successive retreats of the sea. A +third mountain mass, of crystalline formation, rises to the south of this depression, +its furrowed slopes clad in forests. This is the Aspromonte (6,263 feet), or +“rugged mountain.” One of its spurs forms the palm-clad promontory of Spartivento, +or “parting of the winds.”</p> + +<p>Naples, like Latium, has its volcanic mountains, which form two irregular ranges, +one on the continent, the other in the Tyrrhenian Sea, and are, perhaps, connected +beneath the sea with the volcanic mountains of the Liparic Islands and Mount +Etna. One of these is Mount Vesuvius, the most famous volcano of the world, not +because of its height or the terror of its eruptions, but because its history is that +of an entire population who have made its lavas their home.</p> + +<p>Scarcely have we left the defile of Gaeta and entered upon the paradisiacal +Terra di Lavoro than we come upon the first volcano, the Rocca Monfina (3,300 +feet), which rises between two calcareous mountains, one of which is the Massico, +whose wines have been sung by Horace. No eruption of this volcano is on +record, and a village now occupies its shattered crater. To judge from the +streams of lava which surround its trachytic cone, its eruptions must have +been formidable. The entire Campania is covered to an unascertained depth +with ashes ejected from it, and the marine shells found in them prove that the +whole of this region must have been upheaved at a comparatively recent +epoch.</p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr01" id="map7"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib288bxxlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + THE BAY OF NAPLES</div> +<img src="images/ib288b.jpg" width="600" height="472" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>The hills which rise to the south of the Campania cannot boast of the grandeur +of the Rocca Monfina, but they have been looked upon from the most remote +times as one of the great curiosities of our earth. Standing upon the commanding +height of the Camaldoli (518 feet), the Phlegræan Fields lie at our +feet. Acquainted as we now are with the far more formidable volcanoes of Java +and the Andes, this verdant sea-bound country may not strike us as a region of +horrors. But our Græco-Roman predecessors looked upon it with very different +eyes, and being unable to account for the phenomena they witnessed, they +ascribed them to the gods. The quaking soil, the flames bursting forth from +hidden furnaces, the gaping funnels communicating with unexplored caverns, lakes +which disappeared at irregular intervals, and others exhaling deadly gases—all +these things left their impress upon ancient mythology and poetry. At the time +of Strabo the shores of the Bay of Baiæ had become the +favourite resort of <span class="xxpn" id="p289">{289}</span> +voluptuaries, and sumptuous villas rose upon every promontory; but the terrors +inspired by hidden flames and mysterious caverns had not yet departed. A +dreaded oracle was said to have its seat there, guarded by Cimmerians, to whom +strangers desirous of consulting the gods had to apply. These troglodytæ were +doomed never to behold the sun, and only quitted their caverns during the night. +The Phlegræan Fields were likewise supposed to have been the battle-ground of +giants struggling for the possession of the fertile plains of the Campania. During +the Middle Ages Pozzuoli was looked upon as the spot from which Christ descended +into hell.</p> + +<div class="dctr03" id="fg106"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib289xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 106.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>SHES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>AMPANIA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">According to Carl Vogt. + Scale 1 : 835,400.</div> +<img src="images/ib289.jpg" width="600" height="773" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The number of craters still distinguishable is twenty. If we +were to suppose <span class="xxpn" id="p290">{290}</span> +the country to be deprived of its vegetation, its aspect would resemble that of the +surface of the moon. Even the city of Naples occupies an ancient crater, the +contours of which have become almost obliterated. To the west of it several old +craters can still be traced, one of them occupying a promontory of tufa, surmounted +by what is called the tomb of Virgil. Passing through the famous grotto of +Posilippo, we find ourselves in the Phlegræan Fields. On our left rises the small +conical island of Nisita, its ancient crater invaded by the sea. Farther on we +reach the crater known as the Solfatara, the Forum Vulcani of the ancients. Its +last eruption took place in 1198, but it still exhales sulphuretted hydrogen. The +Park of Astroni lies to the north. The interior slope of its enclosing wall is exceedingly +steep, so as to render impossible the escape of the deer and boars which +are kept within. The only access is through an artificial breach. Another crater, +less regular in shape, is now filled with the bubbling waters of the Lake of +Agnano. Near it is the famous Grotto of Dogs, with its spring of carbonic acid. +Other springs of gas and sulphurous water rise in the neighbourhood, and to +them Pozzuoli is indebted for its name, which is said to mean the “town of +stinks.” The town, in turn, has given its name to the earth known as pozzuolana, +which supplies an excellent material for the manufacture of cement.</p> + +<p>The coast of the bay of Pozzuoli has undergone repeated changes of level, in +proof of which the three columns of the temple of Serapis are usually referred to. +At a time anterior to the Romans this temple, together with the beach upon which +it stands, sank beneath the waters of the sea, and its columns must have been exposed +to their action for many years, perhaps centuries, for up to a height of twenty +feet they are covered with tubes of serpulæ, and perforated by innumerable holes +bored by pholadidæ. In the course of time it rose again slowly above the waters. +This happened, perhaps, in 1538, when the Monte Nuovo sprang into existence. In +the short period of four days this new volcano, 490 feet in height, rose above the +surrounding plain, and buried the village of Tripergola beneath its ashes. A beach +now known as La Starza was formed at the foot of the cliffs, and two sheets of +water to the west of Monte Nuovo were cut off from the sea. One of these, the Lago +Lucrino, is famous for its oysters; the other is the Lago d’Averno, which Virgil, in +conformity with antique legends, described as the entrance to the infernal regions. +It occupies an ancient crater, and its pellucid waters abound in fish. There are no +exhalations of poisonous gases now, and birds fly over the lake with impunity. Still +its vicinity is haunted by the memories of the old pagan mythology. Lake Fusaro +is referred to by the ciceroni as the Acheron; close to it they point out the den of +Cerberus; the sluggish stream of Acqua Morta has been identified with the Cocytus; +Lake Lucrino, or rather a spring near it, with the Styx; and the remains of a subterranean +passage which connected the Averno with the sea are pointed out as the +whilom grotto of the Sibyl. The inhabitants of Cumæ, which was founded by a +colony from Chalcis, and the ruins of which still exist on the Mediterranean coast, +to the east of Pozzuoli, brought with them the myths of Hellas, and Grecian poetry, +which took possession of them, has kept their memory alive.</p> + +<p>It is quite proper that this region of Tartarus should have its +contrast in Elysian <span class="xxpn" id="p291">{291}</span> +Fields, and this name has actually been bestowed upon a portion of the peninsula +of Baiæ, which formed the chief attraction of the voluptuous Romans, and where +Marius, Pompey, Cæsar, Augustus, Tiberius, Claudius, Agrippina, Nero, and +others had their palaces. Many a fearful tragedy has been enacted in these +sumptuous buildings. But hardly a trace of them exists now; nature has +resumed possession of the country, and the hills of tufa and volcanoes are the +only curiosities of the peninsula. Cape Miseno is one of these old volcanoes, and +from its summit may be enjoyed one of the most delightful prospects in the world. +The whole of the Bay of Naples—“a bit of heaven fallen upon our earth”—lies +spread out beneath us, and Ischia the joyous, formidable Capri, the promontory of +Sorrento, Mount Vesuvius, and the houses and villas of Naples fill up the space +bounded by the sea and the distant Apennines.</p> + +<p>The island of Procida joins the Phlegræan Fields to the chain of island volcanoes +lying off the Bay of Gaeta. Ischia is the most important of these, and its volcano, +the Epomeo (2,520 feet), almost rivals Mount Vesuvius in height. One of its +most formidable eruptions occurred in 1302, at a time when Mount Vesuvius +was quiescent, but after the latter resumed its activity Ischia remained in +repose. Similarly, when the Monte Nuovo was ejected from the earth, the huge +volcano went to sleep for no less a period than one hundred and thirty years. +Ischia has known no eruption for five centuries and a half, and the gases escaping +from its thirty or forty hot springs are now the only signs of volcanic activity.</p> + +<p>Ischia has certainly been upheaved during a comparatively recent epoch, for +its trachytic lavas rest in many places upon clays and marls containing marine +shells of living Mediterranean species. Some of these have been found at a height +of nearly 2,000 feet. At the present time the tufa rocks of Ischia, and of the other +volcanic islands to the west of it, are being washed away by the sea. Ventotene, +the ancient Pandataria, to which the Roman princesses were exiled, is hardly +more now than a heap of scoriæ. Ponza, likewise a place of exile of the Romans, +has been separated by the erosive action of the sea into a number of smaller +islands. Its lavas overlie Jurassic rocks, similar in all respects to those of Monte +Circello on the coast nearest to it.</p> + +<p>Mount Vesuvius (4,100 feet), the pride and dread of the Neapolitans, was likewise +an island during prehistoric times. The marine shells found in the tufa of +Monte Somma prove this, and on the east the volcano is still surrounded by plains +but little elevated above the sea. Formerly the mountain was covered with +verdure to its very summit, but the explosion of <span class="smmaj">A.D.</span> +79 shattered its cone, and +the ashes thrown up into the air shrouded the whole of the country in darkness. +Even at Rome the sun was hidden, and an age of darkness was believed to have +set in. When at length the light reappeared, the face of the country was found +to have undergone a marvellous change. The mountain had lost its shape, the +fertile fields were hidden by masses of débris, and entire towns had been buried +beneath ashes.</p> + +<p>Since that terrible event Mount Vesuvius has vomited lavas and ashes on many +occasions. No periodicity has been traced in these outbursts, +and the intervals <span class="xxpn" id="p292">{292}</span> +of repose were generally of sufficient duration to enable vegetation to resume its +sway. But these eruptions have become more frequent since the seventeenth +century, and hardly a decade passes by without one or more of them. Each of them +modifies the contours of the mountain, whose great central vent has undergone +many changes. The crescent-shaped mass of débris which surrounds the old +crater, known as the Atrio del Cavallo, was undoubtedly of loftier height +previously to the great outburst of 79 than it is now. The vicinity of Naples has +facilitated a study of the phenomena attending volcanic eruptions, and an +observatory, permanently occupied, has been built close to the cone of eruption.</p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr01" id="fg107"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 107.—<span class="smcap">E<b>RUPTION</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>OUNT</b></span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>ESUVIUS,</b></span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>PRIL</b></span> + <span class="nowrap">26<span class="smmaj">TH,</span></span> 1872.</div> +<img src="images/ib292.jpg" width="600" height="424" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>The neighbourhood of Mount Vesuvius, like that of all other volcanoes, abounds +in hot and gas springs, but there are no subsidiary craters. The nearest volcano +is Monte Vultur (4,356 feet), a regular cone on the eastern slope of the peninsula. +Its dimensions are larger than those of Vesuvius, but no eruptions are on record, +though a slight escape of carbonic acid is still going on from the two lakes which +occupy the bottom of its vast crater. On a line connecting Ischia, Vesuvius, and +Monte Vultur, and about half-way between the two latter, we meet with the most +abundant carbonic acid spring of Italy. The gas escapes with a hissing noise +from the pond of Ansanto, and the ground around the spring is covered with the +remains of insects, killed in myriads on coming within the influence of the +poisonous air. Near it the Romans erected a temple in honour of Juno the +Mephitic.</p> + +<p>The disasters resulting from volcanic eruptions are great, no +doubt, but they <span class="xxpn" id="p293">{293}</span> +are exceeded by those caused by earthquakes. Some of these are unquestionably +caused by a subterranean displacement of lava, and thus, when Vesuvius +begins to stir, Torre del Greco and other towns at its foot incur the risk +of being buried beneath ashes or destroyed by earthquakes. But the Basilicata +and Calabria—that is to say, the two provinces lying between the volcanic +foci of Vesuvius and Etna—have many times been shaken by earthquakes +whose origin cannot be traced to volcanic agencies. Out of a thousand earthquakes +recorded in Southern Italy during the last three centuries, nearly all +occurred in the provinces named, and they were occasionally attended by the most +disastrous results. The earthquake of 1857 cost the lives of 10,000 persons at +Potenza and its vicinity, but the most disastrous of these events happened in 1785 +in Southern Calabria. The first shock, which proceeded from a focus beneath the +town of Oppido, in the Aspromonte Mountains, only lasted a hundred seconds, but +within that short space of time 109 towns and villages were overthrown, and +32,000 of their inhabitants buried beneath their ruins. Crevasses opened in the +ground; rivers were swallowed up, to reappear again lower down as lakes; liquid +clay flowed down the hill-slopes like lava, converting fertile fields into unproductive +wastes. The commotion of the sea added to these horrors. Many of the inhabitants +of Scilla, afraid to remain on the quaking land, fled to their boats, when an +enormous mass of rock detached itself from a neighbouring mountain, and, +tumbling into the sea, produced a wave which upset the boats and cast their +fragments upon the shore. Want of food brought on famine, and typhus, as +usual, came in its train.</p> + +<p>We are not yet able to predict earthquakes, and can only provide against them +by a suitable construction of our dwellings. There exists, however, another cause +of misery and depopulation which the Neapolitans might successfully combat, +as was done by their ancestors. In the time of the Greeks the swamps along +the coast were certainly less extensive than they are now. War, and a return +towards barbarism, have caused the rivers to be neglected, and to produce a +deterioration in the climate. Baia, a place once famous on account of its healthiness, +has become the home of malaria. Sybaris, the town of luxury and pleasure, +has been supplanted by a fever-plain “which eats more men than it is able to +nourish.” These paludial miasmata, poverty, and ignorance decimate the population +of La Puglia, Basilicata, and Calabria. Even certain Asiatic diseases, such +as elephantiasis and leprosy, ravage the country, which, from its rare fertility +and fine climate, ought to be in the enjoyment of the greatest prosperity.</p> + +<p>Continental Sicily is indeed a favoured region, and its eastern slopes more +especially might be converted into one huge garden, for the rainfall there is +abundant. Naples enjoys a semi-tropical climate, and its winter temperature is +hardly inferior to the annual mean of London. Snow very rarely falls, and only +remains on the tops of the hills for a few weeks.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn101" id="fnanch101">101</a> The vegetation along the coast +is of tropical luxuriance. Oranges and lemons bear excellent fruit; date-palms +uplift their fan-shaped leaves, and sometimes bear fruit; +the American agave <span class="xxpn" id="p294">{294}</span> +stretches forth its candelabra-like branches; sugar-cane, cotton, and other industrial +plants, which elsewhere in Europe are scarcely ever met with outside hothouses, +grow in the fields. In the forests of Calabria the olive-tree affords as much shade +as does the beech with us. Even the bare rocks on the coast yield excellent +grapes and garden fruits. Naples, Sicily, Andalusia, and certain districts of +Greece and Asia Minor realise our beau idéal of the sub-tropical zone, and only +the heaths on the Adriatic slope and the upper valleys of the Apennines remind +us that we are still in Central Europe.</p> + +<p>This delightful country is inhabited by a people having the most diverse +origin. It is now 2,300 years since the Samnites occupied the whole of it +from sea to sea. They were more numerous than the Romans, and might have +conquered the whole of Italy had there been more cohesion amongst them, and +some of that talent for organization which constituted the strength of their +adversaries. But they were split into five tribes, each speaking a different +dialect; and whilst the Samnites of the hills quarrelled with their kinsmen in the +plains, the latter were at enmity with the Hellenized Samnites who lived near +the Greek towns on the coast.</p> + +<p>The whole of the coast of Southern Italy, from Cumæ—founded more than a +thousand years before our era—to Sipuntum, of which some ruins remain near the +modern Manfredonia, was dotted with Greek colonies. In these districts of +Southern Italy the bulk of the population is of very different origin from that +of other parts of the peninsula. To the north of Monte Gargano, Celtic, +Etruscan, and Latin elements preponderate, whilst Hellenes, Pelasgians, and +kindred races dominate in the south. Not only did civilised Greeks found their +colonies there, but the aboriginal population, the Iapygians, spoke a dialect akin +to the Hellenic, and Mommsen may be right when he conjectures that these +Iapygians were of the same origin as the modern Albanians.</p> + +<p>At a subsequent date these southern Italians had to bow down before the +Romans, who founded military colonies amongst them, but never succeeded in +completely Latinising them. When the Roman Empire fell to pieces the Cæsars +of Byzantium still maintained themselves for a long time in Southern Italy, and the +Greek language again preponderated, but gradually Romance dialects gained the +upper hand. The inhabitants returned to a state of barbarism, but they retained +to a great extent their language and customs, and even now there are districts in +the south which are Italian in appearance rather than in reality, and in eight +villages of the Terra d’Otranto the Hellenic dialect of the Peloponnesus is still +spoken. Towns like Naples, Nicastro, Taranto, Gallipoli, Monopoli, and others, +whilst preserving their sonorous Greek names, have also retained many features +which recall the times of Magna Græcia.</p> + +<p>Reggio—that is, the “city of the strait”—appears to have retained the use of +Greek much longer than any other town, and its patricians, who boasted of being +pure Ionians, still spoke the language of their ancestors towards the close of the +thirteenth century. In several remote towns of the interior Greek was formerly +in common use. The old popular songs of Bova, a small town +near the southern <span class="xxpn" id="p295">{295}</span> +extremity of Italy, are in an Ionian dialect more like the language of Xenophon +than is modern Greek. Down to a very recent date the peasants near Roccaforte del +Greco, Condofuri, and Cardeto spoke Greek, and when they appeared before a magistrate +they required an interpreter. At the present day all young people speak +Italian; the old language has been forgotten, but the Greek type remains. The +men and women of Cardeto are famous for their beauty, more especially the latter. +“They are Minervas,” we are told by a local historian. Their principal livelihood +consists in acting as wet nurses to the children of the citizens of Reggio. The +women of Bagnara, between Scilla and Palmi, are likewise of wondrous beauty, +but their features are stern, betraying Arab blood, and they are destitute of the +noble placidity of the Greek.</p> + +<p>It is said that the women of the Hellenic villages of Calabria are still in the +habit of executing a sacred dance, which lasts for hours, and resembles the representations +we meet with on ancient vases, only they dance before the church +instead of the temple, and their ceremonies are blessed by Christian priests. +Funerals are accompanied by weeping women, who collect their tears in lachrymatories. +Elsewhere, as in the environs of Tarento, the children consecrate the +hair of their head to the manes of their ancestors. Old morals, no less than old +customs, have been preserved. Woman is still looked upon as an inferior being, +and even at Reggio the wives of citizens or noblemen who respect ancient +tradition confine themselves to the gynæceum. They do not visit the theatre, go +out but rarely, and when they walk abroad are attended by barefooted servants, +and not by their husbands.</p> + +<p>In addition to Samnites, Iapygians, and Greeks, who form the bulk of the +population of Southern Italy, we meet with Etruscans in the Campania; Saracens +in the peninsula of Gargano, in the Campania, the marina of Reggio, Bagnara, +and other coast towns; Lombards in Benevento, who retained their language down +to the eleventh century; Normans, from whom the shepherds on the hills are +supposed to be descended; and Spaniards in several coast towns, especially at +Barletta, in Apulia. The Albanians have probably furnished the largest contingent +of all the strangers now domiciled in Southern Italy. They are numerous on the +whole of the eastern slope of the peninsula, from the promontory of Gargano to +the southernmost point of Calabria. One of their clans came to Italy in 1440, +but the bulk of them only arrived during the second half of the fifteenth century, +after the heroic resistance made by Scanderbeg had been overcome by the Turks. +The conquered Skipetars were then compelled to expatriate themselves in order to +escape the yoke of the Turks, and they were received with open arms by the Kings +of Naples, who granted them several deserted villages, which are now amongst +the most flourishing of Southern Italy. The descendants of these Skipetars, who +are principally domiciled in the Basilicata and Calabria, rank among the most +useful citizens of the country. They take the lead in the intellectual regeneration +of the old kingdom of Naples, and were the first to join the liberating army +of Garibaldi. Many have become Italianised, but there are still over 80,000 who +have neither forgotten their origin +nor their language. <span class="xxpn" id="p296">{296}</span></p> + +<p>The Neapolitans are undoubtedly one of the finest races of Europe. The +Calabrians, the mountaineers of Molise, and the peasants of the Basilicata are so +well proportioned, erect, supple of limb, and agile, that their low stature, as compared +with the races of the North, can hardly be a subject of reproach; and the +nobility and expression of the faces of Neapolitan women fully compensate for +the irregularity we frequently meet with. The faces of the children, with their +large black eyes and well-formed lips, beam with intelligence, but the wretched +existence to which too many of them are condemned soon degrades their physiognomy. +Supremely ignorant, the Neapolitan is, nevertheless, most admirably gifted +by nature. The country which has produced so many great men since the days +of Pythagoras is in nowise inferior to any other; its philosophers, historians, and +lawyers have exercised a powerful influence upon the march of human thought; +and the number of great musicians which it has produced is proportionately large.</p> + +<p>Still, in many respects, the inhabitants of Southern Italy hold the lowest +rank amongst the nations of Europe. Ever since the annihilation of the Greek +republican cities the country has been subjected to foreign masters, who have either +devastated it or systematically oppressed its inhabitants. With the exception of +Amalfi, no other town was granted the privilege of governing itself for any +length of time. The very position of the country exposed it to dangers. Placed +in the centre of the Mediterranean, it was on the high-road of every pirate or +invader, whether Saracen or Norman, Spaniard or Frenchman, and the absence +of any natural cohesion between its various districts prevented its population from +organizing a united resistance against the attacks of foreign invaders. Southern +Italy has not the river basins of Lombardy, Tuscany, Umbria, or Rome; there +exists no centre of gravity, so to say, and the country is split up into separate +sections having nothing in common.</p> + +<p>The government under which the Neapolitans lived until quite recently was +most humiliating. “I do not require my people to think,” said King Ferdinand +II. of Naples. Ideas which did not commend themselves to the authorities +were punished as crimes, and only mendicity and moral depravity were allowed +to flourish. Science was compelled to live in retirement; history to seek a refuge +in the catacombs of archæology; and literature was corrupt or frivolous. Of the +Neapolitans who did not expatriate themselves only a very small number became +eminent. Schools were hardly known outside the large towns, and where they did +exist they were placed under the supervision of the police. Men able to read and +write were looked at askance, and, to escape being accused of belonging to some secret +society, they were compelled to turn hypocrites. Old superstitions exist in full force, +and the heathen hallucinations of Greeks and Iapygians still survive. The idolatrous +Neapolitan casts himself down before the statue of St. Januarius, but heaps +imprecations upon the head of his saint if his miraculous blood does not quickly +liquefy. Similar superstitions exist in nearly every town of Naples. Every one +of them has its patron saint or deity, who, if he should fail to protect his people, +is treated as a common enemy. As recently as 1858 the villagers of Calabria, +irritated by a drought, put their venerated saints into +prison; and Barletta, <span class="xxpn" id="p297">{297}</span> +about the same period, had the melancholy honour of being the last town in +Europe in which Protestants were burned alive. Such is the fanaticism still met +with in the second half of the nineteenth +century ! <a class="afnanch" href="#fn102" id="fnanch102">102</a></p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr03" id="fg108"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib297xxlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 108.—<span class="smcap">E<b>DUCATIONAL</b></span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>AP</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">I<b>TALY.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib297.jpg" width="562" height="800" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<div><span class="xxpn" id="p298">{298}</span></div> + +<p>One of the great superstitions of the Neapolitans refers to the “evil eye.” +The unfortunate being who happens to have a nose like a battle-axe and large +round eyes is looked upon as <i>jettatore</i>, and is avoided as a fatal being. If by +any evil chance his glance happens to fall upon any unfortunate person, it is considered +necessary to counteract it by the influence of an amulet resembling the +<i>fascinum</i> of the ancients, or by some other means no less potent. Coral amulets +are looked upon as most efficient, and many who pretend not to believe in +their virtues are the first to make use of them. The peasants of Calabria wear +an image of their patron saint upon the chest, and shield their cattle and houses by +means of the images of saints or household gods. At Reggio a cactus may be +seen near the door or on the balcony of every house, which has been placed +there to keep off evil influences, and is universally known as <i>l’albero del mal’ occhio</i> +(the tree of the evil eye).</p> + +<p>Next to superstition, the great scourge of Southern Italy is brigandage. The +very name of Calabria conjures up in our imagination picturesque brigands armed +with carbines. Unfortunately this Calabrian brigand is no myth, invented to serve +the purposes of the stage. He really exists, and neither the severity of the laws +put in motion against him nor political changes have brought about his extermination. +On many occasions, after a successful hunt for brigands had been +carried on, the authorities felicitated themselves upon having rid the country of +this scourge, but it regularly revived.</p> + +<p>In Sardinia and Corsica the peasant takes up arms from a desire for vengeance, +but in Calabria from poverty. Feudalism, though abolished in name, still +flourishes in that country. Nearly the whole of the soil belongs to a few great landowners, +and the peasant, or <i>cafore</i>, is condemned to a life of ill-remunerated toil. +In years of plenty, when the rye, chestnuts, and wine suffice for the wants of his +family, he works without grumbling, but in years of dearth brigandage flourishes. +The brigand, or <i>gualano</i>, looks upon the feudal lord as the common enemy, steals his +cattle, sets fire to his house, and even takes him prisoner, releasing him only on +payment of a heavy ransom. Some of these bandits become veritable wild beasts, +thirsting after blood; but, as long as they confine themselves to avenging wrongs, +they may count upon the complicity of all other peasants. The herdsmen of the +mountains supply them with milk and food, furnish them with information, and +mislead the carabiniers sent in pursuit of them. All the poor are leagued in +their favour, and refuse to bear witness against them. Moreover, most of these +Neapolitan bandits, conscientious in their own way, are extremely pious. They +swear by the Virgin or some patron saint, to whom they promise a portion of their +booty, and religiously place the share promised upon the altar. Not content with +wearing amulets all over the body to turn aside bullets, they are said sometimes +to place a consecrated wafer in an incision they make in their hand, in the belief +that this will render deadly their own bullets.</p> + +<p>The fearful poverty of the South Italian peasantry has led to another practice, +even worse than brigandage. Foreign speculators, Christians as well as Jews, travel +the country, and particularly the Basilicata, in order to +purchase children, whom <span class="xxpn" id="p299">{299}</span> +their poverty-stricken parents are ready to part with for a trifle. The more intelligent +and prettier the child, the greater the likelihood of its passing into the +hands of these dealers in human flesh. The latter are threatened with the +penalties of the law, but custom and ignoble accomplices enable them to evade +them, and to carry their living merchandise to France, England, Germany, and +even America, where the children are converted into acrobats, street musicians, +or simple mendicants. The chances of this shameful commerce have been carefully +calculated, and the losses arising from deaths and the cost of travelling are more +than covered by the earnings of the children. Viggiano, a small town of the +Basilicata, is more especially haunted by these traffickers, for its inhabitants +possess a natural gift for music.</p> + +<p>Voluntary emigration is on the increase, and if it were not for the obstructions +placed in the way of young men liable to the conscription, certain districts would +become rapidly depopulated in favour of South America. Only the poorest peasants +remain behind. This emigration influences in a large measure the customs of the +country, and, conjointly with railways and factories, will no doubt bring about an +assimilation of Southern Italy to the rest of the peninsula. Brigandage and the +traffic in children will doubtless disappear, but the proletarianism of manufacturing +towns is likely to be substituted for them.</p> + +<p>For the present Naples is almost exclusively an agricultural country. The +tavolieri of Puglia, and the hills which command them, remain for the most part +a pastoral country, but the greater portion of the productive area of Naples is +under cultivation. As in the time of the Romans, cereals, with oil and wine, +form the principal produce; but, in addition to these, tobacco, cotton, madder, and +several other plants used in manufactures, are grown. With some care these products +might attain a rare degree of excellence. Even now the oil of the Puglia +competes successfully with that of Nice, and the wines grown on the scoriæ of Mount +Vesuvius enjoy their ancient celebrity, the Falernian of Horace, grown in the +Phlegræan Fields, disputing the pre-eminence with the Lachrymæ Christi of +Vesuvius and the white wine of Capri.</p> + +<p>The agricultural products of Naples are almost exclusively derived from the coast +region, and commerce is principally carried on in coasting vessels. The interior is +sterile to a great extent, and there are no metalliferous veins to attract population.</p> + +<p>Southern Italy has no natural centre, and, as its life has at all times been +eccentric and maritime, it is but natural that all the large towns should have +sprung up on the coast. Two thousand years ago, when Greece was a civilised +country and Western Europe sunk in barbarism, the most important towns lay +on the Ionian Sea facing the east. But, when Rome became the mistress of the +world, Magna Græcia was forced to face about, and Naples became the successor +of Sybaris and Tarentum. This position of vantage it has retained even to the +present day, when Western Europe has become the focus of civilisation. The +wave of history has passed over Tarentum and Sybaris, and whilst the fine port +of the former is now deserted, the latter, at one time the largest city of all Italy, +has entirely disappeared. <span class="xxpn" id="p300">{300}</span></p> + +<p>Naples, the “new town” of the Cumæans, has for centuries been the most +populous town of Italy, and even now the number of its inhabitants is double +that of Rome. In the days of Strabo Naples was a large town. Greeks who +had made money by teaching or otherwise, and who desired to end their days in +peaceful repose, used to retire to that beautiful town, where Greek manners predominated, +and the climate resembled that of their native country. Many Romans +followed their example, and Naples, together with the numerous smaller towns +dotting the shores of its magnificent bay, thus became a place of repose and +pleasure. At the present day it attracts men of leisure from every part of the +world, who revel in its beauties and enjoy the noisy gaiety of its inhabitants—“masters +in the art of shouting,” as Alfieri called them. The prospect from the +heights of Capodimonte and the other hills surrounding the immense city is full +of beauty: promontories jut out into the blue waters, islands of the most varied +colours are scattered over the bay, shining towns stretch along the foot of verdant +hills, and vessels ride upon the waves. Looking inland, we behold the +grey summit of Vesuvius, which, lurid at night, and always threatening, imparts a +modicum of danger to the voluptuous picture.</p> + +<p>The Neapolitans are indeed a happy people, if such a term may be applied to any +fraction of mankind. They know how to enjoy the gifts of nature, and are content, +if need be, with very little. Naturally intelligent, they are equal to any enterprise; +but, as they hate work, they soon give up what they have begun, and make +short of their want of success. Travellers were formerly fond of describing that +curious type, the <i>lazzarone</i>, the idle man of pleasure, who, enveloped in a rag, slept +on the beach or in the porch of a church, and disdained to work after he had +earned the pittance sufficing for his simple wants. There still remain a few representatives +of this type, but the material exigencies of our time have absorbed the +majority of these idle tatterdemalions, and converted them into labourers. Others +have succumbed to disease, for they knew nothing of sanitary laws, and dwelt in +damp cellars, or <i>bassi</i>, beneath the palaces of the wealthy. Naples contributes her +fair share towards the industrial products of the peninsula. The principal articles +manufactured are macaroni and other farinaceous pastes, cloth, silks known as +<i>gros de Naples</i>, glass, china, musical instruments, artificial flowers, ornaments, +and everything entering into the daily consumption of a large city. Its workers +in coral are famous for their skill; and Sorrento, near Naples, supplies the much-prized +workboxes, jewel cases, and other articles carved in palm-wood. The ship-yards +of Castellamare di Stabia are more busy than any others in Italy, those of +Genoa and Spezia alone excepted. The sailors of the bay are equal to the Ligurians +in seamanship, and surpass them as fishermen. The inhabitants of Torre del Greco, +who engage in coral-fishing, are well acquainted with the submarine topography +of the coasts of Sardinia, Sicily, and Barbary, and the least movement of the air +or water reveals phenomena to them which remain hidden to all other eyes. They +own about 400 fishing-boats, which depart in a body, and their return after a successful +season presents a spectacle which even Italy but rarely affords.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn103" id="fnanch103">103</a></p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="plt16"> +<img src="images/ib300a.jpg" width="600" height="416" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">NAPLES.</div> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div><span class="xxpn" id="p301">{301}</span></div> + +<p>Naples, with its magnificent bay, and the fertile tracts of the Campania and +the Terra di Lavoro near it, could hardly fail to become a great commercial city, +and if it holds an inferior rank in that respect to Genoa, this is owing to its not +being placed upon a great high-road of international commerce. The country +depending upon it is of comparatively small extent; only a single line of rails +crosses the Apennines; and travellers who follow the mountain road to Taranto are +not, even now, quite safe from brigands. The foreign commerce of the city is +carried on principally with England and France, and the coasting trade is +comparatively of great importance.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn104" id="fnanch104">104</a></p> + +<div class="dctr03" id="fg109"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib301xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 109.—<span class="smcap">P<b>OMPEII.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">From the Neapolitan Staff Map. + Scale 1 : 35,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib301.jpg" width="600" height="680" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The university is one of the glories of Naples. Founded +in the first half of <span class="xxpn" id="p302">{302}</span> +the thirteenth century, it is one of the oldest of Italy, but has had its periods of +disgraceful decay. Up to a recent period, when archæology and numismatics were +the only sciences not suspected of revolutionary tendencies, it was a place of intellectual +corruption, but its regeneration has been brought about with marvellous +rapidity. The young Neapolitans now study science with a zest sharpened by +abstinence; and, if the rather gushing eloquence of the South could be trusted, +Naples has become the greatest seat of learning in the world. Thus much is +certain, that the 2,000 students of the university will give a great impulse to the +“march of ideas.”</p> + +<p>Naples possesses an admirable museum of antiquities, open to all the world, and, +more precious still, the ruins of Pozzuoli, Baiæ, and Cumæ, and catacombs no less +interesting than are those of Rome; and, above everything else, the Roman city of +Pompeii, which has been excavated from the ashes of Mount Vesuvius, beneath +which it lay buried for seventeen centuries. It is not merely a City of the Dead, +with its streets and tombs, temples, markets, and amphitheatres, which these +excavations have restored to us, but they have likewise given us an insight into +the life of a provincial Roman city. When we gaze upon inscriptions on walls +and waxed tablets, at work interrupted, at mummified corpses in the attitude +of flight, we almost feel as if we had been present at the catastrophe which +overwhelmed the town. No other buried city ever presented us with so striking a +contrast between the tumult of life and the stillness of death. In spite of a hundred +years of excavation, only one-half of the city has yet been revealed to us. Herculaneum +is buried beneath a layer of lava sixty feet in thickness, upon which the +houses of Resina, Portici, and other suburbs of Naples have been built, and but +very few of its mysteries have been revealed to us. Of Stabiæ, which lies hidden +beneath the town of Castellamare, close to the beach, we know hardly anything.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="plt17"> +<img src="images/ib302a.jpg" width="600" height="413" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">CAPRI, SEEN FROM MASSA LUBRENSE.</div> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Numerous populous towns cluster around Naples, rivalling it in beauty. To +the south, on the shores of the bay, are Portici, Resina, Torre del Greco, Torre +dell’ Annunziata, Castellamare, and sweet Sorrento, with its delicious climate, its +delightful villas and olive groves. Off Cape Campanella, facing the volcanic +islands of Ischia and Procida, at the other extremity of the bay, rise the bold cliffs +of Capri, full of the memories of hideous Tiberius, the <i>Timberio</i> of the natives. +Another bay opens to the south of that barren mass of limestone, its entrance +guarded by the islets of the Sirens, who sought in vain to cast their spell over +sage Ulysses. This bay is hardly inferior in beauty to that of Naples; its shores +are equally fertile, but neither of the three cities, Pæstum, Amalfi, and Salerno, +which successively gave a name to it, has retained its importance for any length of +time. Amalfi, the powerful commercial republic of the Middle Ages, whose code +was accepted by all maritime nations, is almost deserted now, and only shelters a +few fishing-smacks within its rocky creek. In a delightful valley near it stands +the old Moorish city of Ravello, almost as rich as Palermo in architectural +monuments. Salerno is much more favourably situated than Amalfi, for the road +of the Campania debouches upon it. The town is said to have been founded by a +son of Noah, and when the Normans occupied the country +in the eleventh century <span class="xxpn" id="p303">{303}</span> +they made it their capital. But its ancient splendours have gone. Its university, +at one time the representative of Arab science, and the most famous in Europe for +its medical faculty, has made no sign for ages, and Salerno has now no claim +whatever to the title of “Hippocratic town.” It aspires, however, to rise into +importance through commerce and industry, and a breakwater and piers might +convert it into a formidable rival of Naples. The inhabitants are fond of repeating +a local proverb―</p> + +<div class="dpoem fsz6"><div class="nowrap"> +<p class="pv0"><span class="spqut">“</span>When + Salerno a port doth obtain</p> +<p class="pv0"><span class="spqutspc">T</span>hat + of Naples will be inane.”</p> +</div></div><!--dpoem--> + +<p>Pæstum, or Posidonia, the ancient mistress of the bay, stood to the south-east +of Salerno. It was founded by the Sybarites on the ruins of a more ancient town +of the Tyrrhenians. The Roman poets sang this “city of roses” on account of +its cool springs, shady walks, and mild climate. It was destroyed by the Saracens +in 915, and its ruins, though amongst the most interesting of all Italy, dating +as they do from a period anterior to that of Rome, were known only to shepherds +and brigands up to the middle of last century. Its three temples, the most +important of which was dedicated to Neptune, or Poseidon, are amongst the most +imposing of continental Italy, their effect being heightened by the solitude which +surrounds them and the waves which wash their foundations. The traveller, +however, cannot afford to remain for any length of time within their vicinity, for +the site of the ruins is surrounded by marshes, the exhalations from which sadly +interfere with the excavations going on.</p> + +<p>Numerous towns and villages are dotted over the champaign country separating +Mount Vesuvius from the foot-hills of the Apennines. Starting from Vietri, a +suburb of Salerno on the banks of a narrow ravine, we ascend to Cara, a favourite +summer retreat, abounding in shade-trees. Near it is a monastery famous +amongst antiquaries on account of its ancient parchments and diplomas. On +descending to the plain of the Sarno we pass Nocera, a country residence of the +ancient Romans; Pagani, still situated within the region of woods; Angri, which +manufactures yarns from cotton grown in its environs; and Scafati, more industrious +still. Near it may be seen the ruins of Pompeii, the town of Torre dell’ +Annunziata, and, on the southern slope of Vesuvius, the houses of Bosco Tre Case +and Bosco Reale. There are savants who believe they can trace in the veins of +the inhabitants of Nocera and the neighbourhood the Arab and Berber blood of +the 20,000 Saracens who were settled here by the Emperor Frederick II.</p> + +<p>The valley of the Sarno, above Nocera, is densely peopled as far as the foot of +the Apennines, and another chain of villages extends northwards to the town of +Avellino, the fields of which are enclosed by hedges of filbert-trees (<i>avellana</i> in +Italian), and which is important on account of its intermediary position between +the mountains and the plain. The population, however, is densest in that portion +of the Campania known as the “Happy” (Felice), which extends between +Vesuvius and Monte Vergine. Sarno, named after the river, though far away +from it, abounds in cereals, vines, fruit, and vegetables, and manufactures cotton +stuffs and raw silk. Palma stands in the midst of fertile +fields; Ottajano, the <span class="xxpn" id="p304">{304}</span> +town of Octavius, on the lower slope of the Somma of Vesuvius, is famous for its +wines; Nola, where Augustus died, and which gave birth to Giordano Bruno, has +fertile fields, but is better known through the fine Greek vases found in its ruins, +and on account of the remains of an amphitheatre built of marble, and of greater +size than that of Capua.</p> + +<p>Famous Capua, the ancient metropolis of the Campania, at one time the rival +of Rome, with half a million inhabitants dwelling within its walls, has been completely +stripped of its former splendours. Its name is applied now to a sullen +fortress on the Volturno, the <i>Casilinum</i> of the Romans; and Santa Maria, which is +the representative of the veritable Capua, offers no “delights” other than those of a +large village. In its environs, however, may still be seen the ruins of a fine amphitheatre, +a triumphal arch, and other remains of a vast city. Caserta, the “town of +pleasure” of the modern Campania, lies farther to the south. It boasts of a large +palace, shady parks, and vast gardens ornamented with statues and fountains, and +was the Versailles of the Neapolitan Bourbons. An aqueduct supplies it with +water from a distance of twenty-five miles, and crosses the valley near Maddaloni +by means of a magnificent bridge, built about the middle of last century by Vanvitelli, +and one of the masterpieces of modern architecture.</p> + +<p>The great Roman highway bifurcates to the north of Capua and the Volturno. +One branch turns towards the coast; the other, along which a railway has been +built, skirts the volcano of Rocca Monfina, follows the valley of the Garigliano +and of its tributary the Sacco as far as the eastern foot of the volcano of Latium, +and then descends into the Campagna of Rome. Historically the coast road is the +more famous of the two. It first passes close to Sessa, the ancient city of the +Aurunci, whose acropolis stood in the crater of the Rocca Monfina. It then turns +towards the coast, and having crossed the Garigliano near its mouth, where it +is bounded by insalubrious marshes, it penetrates the defile of Mola di Gaeta, +officially called Formia, in memory of ancient Formiæ, where Cicero lived and +died. Travellers coming from Rome first look down from this spot upon the +beauties of the Campania, and see stretched out before them the Bay of Gaeta, with +the volcanic islands of Ponza, Ventotene, and Ischia in the distance. Gaeta, a +fortress which guards this gateway to the Neapolitan paradise, is built on the +summit of Monte Orlando, occupying a small peninsula attached to the mainland +by an isthmus only 300 yards in width. The port of Gaeta is well sheltered +against westerly and northerly winds, and is much frequented by coasting vessels +and fishing-smacks; but Gaeta itself is better known as a fortress. It was here +the kingdom of the Two Sicilies was put an end to by the surrender of Francis II. +in 1861.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="plt18"> +<img src="images/ib304a.jpg" width="600" height="415" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">AMALFI.</div> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Towns of some importance are likewise met with on following the eastern road +from Naples to Rome. The most considerable amongst them is San Germano, the +name of which has recently been changed into Casino, in honour of the famous +monastery of that name occupying a terrace to the west of the town, and affording a +glorious prospect of hills and valleys. This monastery was founded in the sixth +century by St. Benedict, or Bennet, and its rules +have been accepted throughout <span class="xxpn" id="p305">{305}</span> +the Eastern Church. No body of men has ever exercised a greater influence upon +the history of Catholicism than these Benedictine monks of Monte Casino. At the +height of its power the order held vast estates throughout Italy, and many popes +and thousands of Church dignitaries have been furnished from its ranks. The +library of Monte Casino is one of the most valuable in Europe, and the services +formerly rendered to science by the Benedictines have saved this monastery from +disestablishment, a favour likewise extended to the monastery of La Cava and the +Certosa of Pavia.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg110"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib305xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 110.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>ARSHES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>ALPI.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 225,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib305.jpg" width="600" height="527" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>There are but few towns of importance in the mountain region of Naples. +Arpino, the ancient Arpinum, the birthplace of Cicero and Marius, with cyclopean +walls built by Saturn, is the most populous place in the upper valley of the Liri, +to the south of the mountains of Mantese. Benevento occupies a central position +on the Calore, the principal tributary of the Volturno, and several roads diverge +from it. The ancient name of this place was <i>Maleventum</i>, but in spite of its change +of name the town has frequently suffered from sieges and earthquakes, and of all +the great edifices of its past there now remains only a fine triumphal arch erected +in honour of Trajan. The city walls, nearly four miles in circumference, have for +the most part been constructed from the fragments of ancient monuments.</p> + +<p>Ariano, to the east of Benevento, and also in the basin of the Volturno, is +built upon three hills commanding a magnificent prospect, +extending from the <span class="xxpn" id="p306">{306}</span> +often snow-clad Matese Mountains to the cone of the Vultur. It lies on the railroad +connecting Naples with Foggia and the Adriatic, and carries on a considerable +trade. Campobasso, the capital of Molise, is likewise an important commercial +intermediary, though still without a railway.</p> + +<p>The commercial towns on the Adriatic slope of the Apennines are of greater +importance than those to the east. Foggia, on the Tavoglieri di Puglia, upon +which converge four railways and several high-roads, is a great mart for provisions, +and in importance and wealth, though not in population, is the second city of +Naples. Several smaller towns surround it like satellites, such as San Severo, +Cerignola, and Lucera, which became wealthy in the thirteenth century, when the +Saracens, exiled from Sicily by Frederick II., settled here. Foggia, however, and +its sister cities, in spite of the proximity of the Bay of Manfredonia, have no direct +outlet to the sea, for the coast for a distance of thirty miles, from Manfredonia to +the mouth of the Otranto, is fringed by insalubrious lagoons and marshes. The +reclamation of these is absolutely necessary to enable Southern Italy to develop +its great natural resources. The largest of these lagoons or marshes, that of +Salpi, has been reduced to the extent of one-half by the alluvium conveyed into it +by the rivers Carapella and Ofanto, but as long as the new land remains uncultivated +deadly miasmata will not cease. At the eastern extremity of this marsh +stood the ancient city of Salapia.</p> + +<p>At the extremity of the peninsula of Gargano, to the north of these marshes, +are the harbours of Manfredonia and Vieste, very favourably situated for sailing +vessels compelled by stress of weather to put into port. The first harbour to the +south of the marshes is Barletta, near which is the “Field of Blood,” recalling the +battle of Cannæ. Barletta exports cereals, wines, oil, and fruit, partly grown on +the old feudal estates near the inland towns of Andria, Corata, and Ruyo. The +latter, the ancient <i>Rubi</i>, has yielded a rich harvest of antiquities of every kind. +The other coast towns to the south-east of Barletta are—Trani, which carried on +a considerable Levant trade towards the close of the Middle Ages; Bisceglia; +Molfetta; Bari, the most populous town on the Adriatic slope of Naples; and +Monopoli, all of which are much frequented by coasting vessels. Tasano, near +Monopoli, occupies the site of the ancient port of Gnatia, and, like Rubi, has +well repaid the search for archæological remains.</p> + +<p>Brindisi, at the northern extremity of the peninsula of Otranto, in the time +of the Romans and during the Crusades, was one of the great stations on the +route from Western Europe to the East, and is likely again to occupy that +position. It lies at the very entrance to the Adriatic. Its roadstead is excellent, +and its harbour one of the best on the Mediterranean. The entrance is narrow, +and was formerly choked up with the remains of wrecks and mud, but is now +practicable for steamers of the largest size. The two arms of the harbour bear +some resemblance to the antlers of a stag, and to this circumstance the town is +indebted for its name, which is of Messapian origin, and means “antler-shaped.” +Brindisi has recently become the European terminus of the overland route to +India, and many new buildings have risen in honour of this +event, which it <span class="xxpn" id="p307">{307}</span> +was expected would convert the town into an emporium of Eastern trade. These +expectations have not been realised. Several thousand hurried travellers pass +that way every year, but Marseilles, Genoa, and Trieste have lost none of their +importance as commercial ports in consequence. Moreover, when the Turkish +railways are completed, the position now held by Brindisi will most likely be +transferred to Saloniki or Constantinople.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn105" id="fnanch105">105</a></p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg111"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib307xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 111.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">H<b>ARBOUR</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>RINDISI</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">IN</span> 1871.</div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 86,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib307.jpg" width="600" height="488" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Taranto, on the gulf of the same name, is making an effort, like its neighbour +Brindisi, to revive its ancient commercial activity. Its harbour, the <i>Piccolo Mare</i>, +or “little sea,” is deep and perfectly sheltered, and its roadstead, or <i>Mare Grande</i>, +is fairly protected by two outlying islands against the surge. As at Spezia, springs +of fresh water, known as Citro and Citrello, rise from the bottom of the harbour +as well as in the roadstead. The geographical position of Taranto enables it successfully +to compete with Bari and the other ports of the Adriatic for the commerce +of inland towns like Matera, Gravina, and Altamura, and it appears to be +destined to become the great emporium for the Ionian trade. No other town of +Italy offers equal facilities for the construction of a port, but the two channels, one +natural and the other artificial, which join the two “seas” have become choked, +and only small craft are now able to reach the harbour. Modern Taranto is a small +town, with narrow streets, built to the east of the Greek +city of Tarentum, on the <span class="xxpn" id="p308">{308}</span> +limestone rock bounded by the two channels. Its commerce has been slowly +increasing since the opening of the railway, its industry being limited to fishing, +oyster-dredging, and the manufacture of bay-salt; and the Tarantese enjoy the +reputation of being the most indolent people in Italy. The heaps of shells on the +beach no longer supply the purple for which the town was formerly famous; but +the inhabitants still make use of the byssus of a bivalve in the manufacture of +very strong gloves.</p> + +<p>The only towns of any importance in the peninsula +stretching southwards from Brindisi and Taranto are Lecco +and Gallipoli, the former surrounded by cotton plantations, +the latter—the Kallipolis, or “beautiful city,” of the +Greeks—picturesquely perched on an islet attached by a +bridge to the mainland. The surrounding country, owing to +the want of moisture, is comparatively barren.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg112"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib308xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 112.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">H<b>ARBOUR</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>ARANTO.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 208,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib308.jpg" width="600" height="393" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The western peninsula of Naples is far better irrigated than that of Otranto, +but this advantage is counterbalanced to a large extent by the mountainous +nature of the country, and by its frequent earthquakes. Potenza, a town at the +very neck of this peninsula, half-way between the Gulf of Taranto and the Bay +of Salerno, most happily situated as a place of commerce, has repeatedly been +destroyed by earthquakes, and its inhabitants have only ventured to rebuild it in +a temporary manner.</p> + +<p>The famous old cities of Calabria, such as Metapontum and Heraclea, have +ceased to exist. Sybaris the powerful, with walls six miles in circumference, and +suburbs extending for eight miles along the Crati, is now covered with alluvium +and shrubs—“its very ruins have perished.” The city of the Locri, to the south +of Gerace, which existed until the tenth century, when it was destroyed by the +Saracens, has at least retained ruins of its walls, temples, +and other buildings. <span class="xxpn" id="p309">{309}</span> +The only one of these old cities still in existence is Cotrone, the ancient Crotona, +the “gateway to the granary of Calabria.” In travelling along the coasts +of Greater Greece we feel astonished at the few ruins of a past which exercised so +powerful an influence upon the history of mankind.</p> + +<p>The existing towns of Calabria cannot compare in importance with those of a +past age. Rossano, near the site of Sybaris, is the small capital of a district, and is +visited only by coasters. Cosenza, in the beautiful valley of the Crati, at the foot +of the wooded Sila, keeps up its communications with Naples and Messina through +the harbour of Paola. Catanzaro exports its oil, silk, and fruit either by way of +the Bay of Squillace, on the shores of which Hannibal once pitched his camp, +or through Pizzo, a small port at the southern extremity of the Bay of Santa +Eufemia. Reggio, nestling in groves of lemon and orange trees at the foot of the +Aspromonte, is the most important town of Calabria. It stands on the narrow +strait separating the mainland from the island of Sicily, and could not fail to +absorb some of the commerce passing through that central gateway of the Mediterranean. +Messina and Reggio mutually complement each other, and the +prosperity of the one must result in that of the sister city.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn106" id="fnanch106">106</a></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="VII.—Sicily.">VII.—<span + class="smcap">S<b>ICILY.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">The Trinacria of the ancients, the island with the “three promontories,” is +clearly a dependency of the Italian peninsula, from which it is separated by a +narrow arm of the sea. The Strait of Messina, where narrowest, is not quite two +miles in width. It can be easily crossed in barges, and, with the resources at our +command, a bridge might easily be thrown across it, similar enterprises having +succeeded elsewhere. It can hardly be doubted that before the close of this +century either a tunnel or a bridge will join Sicily to the mainland, and human +industry will thus restore in some way the isthmus which formerly joined the +Cape of Faro to the Italian Aspromonte. We know nothing about the period when +this rupture took place, but to judge from the ancient name of the strait—Heptastadion—it +must have been much narrower in former times.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn107" id="fnanch107">107</a> <span class="xxpn" id="p310">{310}</span></p> + +<div class="dctr03" id="fg113"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib310xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 113.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>TRAIT</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>ESSINA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 156,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib310.jpg" width="563" height="800" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>From an historical point of view Sicily may still be looked upon as a portion +of the mainland, for the strait can be crossed almost as easily as a wide river. On +the other hand, it enjoys all the advantages of a maritime position. Situate in the +very centre of the Mediterranean, between the Tyrrhenian and the eastern basin, +it commands all the commercial high-roads which lead from the Atlantic to the +East. Its excellent harbours invite navigators to stay on its coasts; +its soil is <span class="xxpn" id="p311">{311}</span> +exceedingly fertile; the most varied natural resources insure the existence of its +inhabitants; and a genial climate promotes the development of life. Hardly a +district of Europe appears to be in a more favourable position for supporting a +dense population in comfort. Sicily, indeed, is more densely populated and +wealthier than the neighbouring island of Sardinia or either of the Neapolitan +provinces, the Campania alone excepted, and rivals in importance the provinces +of Northern Italy.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn108" id="fnanch108">108</a></p> + +<p>Sicily, whenever it has been allowed to rejoice in the possession of peace and +freedom, has always recovered with wonderful rapidity; and it would certainly +now be one of the most prosperous countries if wars had not so frequently devastated +it, and the yoke of foreign oppressors had not weighed so heavily upon it.</p> + +<p>The triangular island of Sicily would possess great regularity of structure +if it were not for the bold mass of Mount Etna, which rises above the shores of the +Ionian Sea at the entrance of the Strait of Messina. From its base to the summit +of its crater, that huge protuberance forms a region apart, differing from the rest +of Sicily not only geologically, but also with respect to its products, cultivation, +and inhabitants.</p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg114"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib311xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 114.—<span class="smcap">P<b>ROFILE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>OUNT</b></span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>TNA.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib311.jpg" width="600" height="102" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Ancient mariners mostly looked upon the Sicilian volcano as the highest +mountain in the world; nor did they err much as respects the world known to +them, for only at the two extremities of the Mediterranean, in Spain and Syria, do +we meet with mountains exceeding this one in height; and Mount Etna is not only +remarkable from its isolated position, but likewise by the beauty of its contours, the +lurid sheen of its incandescent lavas, and the column of smoke rising from its +summit. From whatever side we approach Sicily, its snowy head is seen rising +high above all the surrounding mountains. Its position in the very centre of the +Mediterranean contributed in no small measure to secure to it a pre-eminence +amongst mountains. It was looked upon as the “pillar of the heavens,” and at a +later epoch the Arabs only spoke of it as <i>el Jebel</i>, “<i>the</i> mountain,” which has +been corrupted by the people dwelling near it into “Mongibello.”</p> + +<p>The mean slopes of Mount Etna, prolonged as they are by streams of lava +extending in every direction, are very gentle, and on looking at a profile of this +mountain it will hardly be believed that its aspect is so majestic. It occupies, +in fact, an area of no less than 460 square miles, and its base has a development +of about 80 miles. The whole of this space is bounded by the sea, and by +the valleys of the Alcantara and Simeto. A saddle, only 2,820 feet in height, +connects it in the north-west with the mountain system of the remainder of Italy. +Small cones of eruption are met with beyond the mass of the +volcano to the north <span class="xxpn" id="p312">{312}</span> +of the Alcantara, and streams of lava having filled up the ancient valley of the +Simeto, that river was forced to excavate itself another bed through rocks of +basalt, and now descends to the sea in rapids and cascades.</p> + +<p>An enormous hollow, covering an area of ten square miles, and more than 3,000 +feet in depth, occupies a portion of the western slope of the volcano. This is the +Val di Bove, a vast amphitheatre of explosion, the bottom of which is dotted over +with subsidiary craters, and which rises in gigantic steps, over which, when the +mountain is in a state of eruption, pour fiery cascades of lava. Lyell has shown +that this Val di Bove is the ancient crater of Mount Etna, but that, at some +period not known to us, the existing terminal vent opened a couple of miles farther +west. The steep sides of the Val di Bove enable us to gain a considerable insight +into the history of the volcano, for the various layers of lava may be studied there +at leisure. The cliffs upon which stands the town of Aci Reale afford a similar +opportunity for embracing at one glance a long period of its history. These cliffs, +over 300 feet in height, consist of seven distinct layers of lava, successively poured +forth from the bowels of Mount Etna. Each layer consists nearly throughout +of a compact mass, affording no hold for the roots of plants, but their surfaces +have invariably been converted into tufa, or even mould, owing to atmospheric +agencies which operated for centuries after each eruption. It has likewise been +proved not only that these cliffs increased in height in consequence of successive +eruptions, but that they were also repeatedly upheaved from below. Lines of +erosion resulting from the action of the waves can be distinctly traced at various +elevations above the present level of the Mediterranean. The lavas, too, have +undergone a change of structure since they were poured forth, as is proved by +beautiful caverns enclosed by prismatic columns of basalt, and by the islet of the +Cyclops, near Aci Trezza.</p> + +<p>During the last two thousand years Mount Etna has had more than a +hundred eruptions, some of them continuing for a number of years. Hitherto it +has not been possible to trace any regularity in these eruptions. They appear to +occur at irregular intervals, and the quantity of lava poured forth from the principal +or any subsidiary cone varies exceedingly. The most considerable stream +of lava of which we have any record was that which overwhelmed the city of +Catania in 1669. It first converted the fields of Nicolosi into a fiery lake, then +enveloped a portion of the hill of Monpilieri, which for a time arrested its progress, +and finally divided into three separate streams, the principal of which descended +upon Catania. It swept away a part of that town, filled up its port, and formed a +promontory in its stead. The quantity of lava poured forth on that occasion has +been estimated at 3,532 millions of cubic feet; and nearly 40 square miles of +fertile land, supporting a population of 20,000 souls, were converted into a stony +waste. The double cone of Monti Rossi, with its beautiful crater now grown over +with golden-flowered broom, was formed by the ashes ejected during that great +eruption. More than 700 subsidiary cones, similar to the Monti Rossi, are +scattered over the exterior slopes of Mount Etna, and bear witness to as many +eruptions. The most ancient amongst them have been nearly +obliterated in the <span class="xxpn" id="p313">{313}</span> +course of ages, or buried beneath streams of lava, but the others still retain their +conical shape, and rise to a height of many hundred feet. Several amongst them +are now covered with forests, and the craters of others have been converted into +gardens—delightful cup-shaped hollows, where villas shine like gems set in +verdure.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg115"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib313xmlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 115.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>AVA</b></span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>TREAM</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>ATANIA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 200,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib313.jpg" width="600" height="547" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Most of these subsidiary cones lie at an elevation of between 3,300 and 6,500 +feet above the sea, and it is there the internal forces make themselves most strongly +felt. As a rule the subterranean activity is less violent near the summit, and +during most of the eruptions the great terminal crater merely serves as a vent, +through which the aqueous vapours and gases make their escape. Fumaroles +surrounding it convert the soil into a kind of pap, and the substances which escape +from them streak the scoriæ with brilliant colours—scarlet, yellow, and emerald +green. The internal heat makes itself felt on many parts of the exterior slopes. +It converts loose rocks into a compact mass, far less difficult to climb than are +the loose cinders of Mount Vesuvius. Travellers ascending the mountain need +fear nothing from volcanic bombs. Showers of stone are occasionally ejected from +the principal vent, but this is quite an exceptional occurrence. If it were not so, +the small structure above the precipices of the Val di Bove, which +dates from the <span class="xxpn" id="p314">{314}</span> +time of the Romans, and is known as the “Philosopher’s Tower,” would long ago +have been buried beneath débris. A meteorological observatory might therefore be +established with safety on the summit of this mountain, and no better station could +be found for giving warning of approaching storms.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg116"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib314xmlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 116.—<span class="smcap">S<b>UBSIDIARY</b></span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>ONES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>OUNT</b></span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>TNA.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib314.jpg" width="600" height="415" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The summit of Mount Etna, 10,866 feet in height, does not penetrate the zone +of perennial snow, and the heat emitted from the subterranean focus soon melts +the incipient glaciers which accumulate in hollows. Nevertheless the upper half +of the mountain is covered with a shroud of white during a great part of the year. +It might be imagined that the snow and copious rains would give birth to numerous +rivulets descending from the slopes of the volcano; but the small stones and +cinders which cover the solid beds of lava promptly absorb all moisture, and +springs are met with only in a few favoured spots. They are abundant on +the lower slopes, or in the immediate vicinity of the sea. One of these is the +fountain of Acis, which issues from the chaos of rocks which Polyphemus is +said to have hurled at the ships of sage Ulysses. Another gives birth to the +river Amenano, which rises in the town of Catania, and hastens in silvery cascades +towards its port. When we look at these clear springs in the midst of black sands +and burnt rocks we are able to comprehend the fancy of the ancient Greeks, who +regarded them as divine beings, in whose honour they struck medals and raised +statues.</p> + +<p>Though running streams are scarcely met with on the slopes of Mount Etna, +its cinders retain a sufficient quantity of moisture to support a luxuriant vegetation. +The mountain is clad with verdure except where the surface of the lava is too +compact to be penetrated by the roots of plants. Only the highest regions, which +are covered with snow during the greater part of the year, are +barren. It is <span class="xxpn" id="p315">{315}</span> +a remarkable fact that the flora of the Alps should not be met with on Mount Etna, +although the temperature suits it exactly.</p> + +<p>Formerly the volcano was surrounded by a belt of forests occupying the zone +between the cultivated lands and the region of snow and cinders. Such is the +case no longer. On the southern slope, which is that usually ascended by tourists, +there are no forests at all, and only the trunk of some ancient oak is occasionally +met with. On the other slopes groves of trees are more frequent, particularly in +the north, where there remain a few lofty trees, which impart quite an alpine +character to the scenery. But the wood-cutters prosecute their work of extermination +without mercy, and it is to be feared that the time is not very distant +when even the last vestiges of the ancient forests will have disappeared. The +magnificent chestnuts on the western slopes, amongst which could be admired until +recently the “tree of the hundred horses,” bear witness to the astonishing fertility +of the lava. If the cultivators of the soil only desired it, a few years would +suffice to restore to Mount Etna its ancient covering of foliage.</p> + +<p>The cultivated zone occupying the lower slopes of the mountains presents in +many places the appearance of a beautiful garden. There are groves of olive, +orange, lemon, and other fruit trees, in the midst of which rise clumps of palms, +and villas, churches, and monasteries peep out from this mass of verdure. The +fertility of the soil is so great that it supports a population three or four times more +numerous than that in any other part of Italy. More than 300,000 inhabitants +dwell on the slopes of a mountain which might be supposed to inspire terror, and +which actually bursts at intervals, burying fertile fields beneath a fiery deluge. +Town succeeds town along its base like pearls in a necklace, and when a stream +of lava effects a breach in this chain of human habitations it is closed up again as +soon as the lava has had time to cool. From the rim of the crater the mountain +climber looks down with astonishment upon these human ant-hills. The concentric +zones of houses and verdure contrast curiously with the snows and ashes +occupying the centre of the picture, and with the barren limestone rocks beyond +the Simeto. And this is only a small portion of the vast and marvellous prospect, +embracing a radius of 124 miles. Well may the beholder be enchanted by the +unrivalled spectacle of three seas, of a deeper blue than the skies, washing the +shores of Sicily, of Calabria, and of the Æolian Islands.</p> + +<p>Mount Pelorus, which forms a continuation of the chain of the Aspromonte of +Calabria, is of very inferior height to Mount Etna, but it had existed for ages +when the space now occupied by the volcano was only a bay of the sea. It +was formerly believed that a crater existed on the highest summit of Pelorus +dedicated to Neptune, and now to the “Mother of God,” or <i>Dinna Mare</i> +(3,600 feet), but such is not the case. These mountains consist of primitive and +transition rocks, with beds of limestone and marble on their flanks. They first +follow the coast of the Ionian Sea, where they form numerous steep promontories, +and then, turning abruptly towards the west, run parallel with that of the Æolian +Sea. Their culminating point, near the centre, is known as Madonia (6,336 feet), +and the magnificent forests which still clothe it impart to that part +of the island <span class="xxpn" id="p316">{316}</span> +quite a northern aspect, and we might almost fancy ourselves in the Apennines or +Maritime Alps. Limestone promontories of the most varied profile advance into +the blue waters of the sea, and render this coast one of the most beautiful of the +Mediterranean. We are seized with admiration when we behold the enormous +quadrangular block of Cefalù, the more undulating hill of Termini, the vertical +masses of Coltafano, and above all, near Palermo, the natural fortress of Monte +Pellegrino (1,970 feet), an almost inaccessible rock, upon which Hamilcar Barca +resisted for three years the efforts of a Roman army to dislodge him. Monte San +Giuliano (2,300 feet), an almost isolated limestone summit, terminates this chain +in the west. It is the Eryx of the ancients, who dedicated it to Venus.</p> + +<p>The mountains which branch off from this main chain towards the south gradually +decrease in height as they approach the sea. The principal slopes of the +island descend towards the Ionian and Sicilian Seas, and all its perennial rivers—the +Platani, Salso, and Simeto—flow in these directions. The rivers on the +northern slope are mere <i>fiumare</i>, formidable after heavy rains, but lost in beds of +shingle during the dry season. The lakes and swamps of the island are likewise +confined to the southern slope of the mountains. Amongst them are the <i>pantani</i>, +and the Lake, or <i>biviere</i>, of Lentini, which is the most extensive sheet of water in +Sicily; the Lake of Pergusa, or Enna, formerly surrounded by flowery meadows in +which Proserpine was seized by Pluto; the <i>biviere</i> of Terranova; and several +marshy tracts, the remains of ancient bays of the sea. This southern coast of the +island contrasts most unfavourably with the northern, for, in the place of picturesque +promontories of the most varied outline, we meet with a monotonous sandy +shore, devoid of all shade. Natural harbours are scarce there, and during the +winter storms vessels frequenting it are exposed to much danger.</p> + +<p>The southern slope of Sicily, to the south of the Madonia, consists of tertiary +and more recent rocks, abounding in fossil shells mostly belonging to species still +living in the neighbouring sea. In the hills to the south of Catania these tertiary +rocks alternate with strata of volcanic origin, which are evidently derived from +submarine eruptions. This process is still going on between Girgenti and the +island of Pantellaria, where the submarine volcano of Giulia or Ferdinandea occasionally +rises above the surface of the sea. It was seen in 1801, and thirty years +later it had another eruption, resulting in the formation of an island four miles in +circumference, which was examined by Jussieu and Constant Prévost. In 1863 it +appeared for the third time. But the waves of the sea have always washed away +the ashes and cinders ejected on these occasions, spreading them in regular layers +over the bottom of the sea, and thus producing an alternation of strata similar to +that observed at Catania. In 1840 the summit of this submarine volcano was +covered with only six feet of water, but recently no soundings were obtained at a +depth of fifty fathoms.</p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg117"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib317xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 117.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>ACCALUBAS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>IRGENTI.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 100,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib317.jpg" width="600" height="795" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>This submarine volcano is not the only witness to the activity of subterranean +forces in Southern Italy. We meet there with mineral springs discharging +carbonic acid and other gases, which prove fatal to the smaller animals venturing +within their influence, and with a naphtha lake near Palagonia, +from which escape, <span class="xxpn" id="p317">{317}</span> +likewise, irrespirable gases. A similar phenomenon may be witnessed in +connection with the Lake of Pergusa, which occupies an ancient crater about four +miles in circumference, and usually abounds in tench and eels. From time to +time, however, an escape of poisonous gases appears to take place from the bottom +of the lake, which kills the fish, whose carcasses rise to the surface. Another +of these <i>salses</i> has made its appearance farther west, near +the Palazzo Adriano, <span class="xxpn" id="p318">{318}</span> +and, indeed, the whole of underground Sicily appears to be in a state of chemical +effervescence.</p> + +<p>Next to Mount Etna the great centre of volcanic activity in Sicily appears to +be near Girgenti, at a place known as the <i>Maccalubas</i>. The aspect of this spot +changes with the seasons. In summer bubbles of gas escape from small +craters filled with liquid mud, which occasionally overflows, and runs down the +exterior slopes. The rains of winter almost obliterate these miniature volcanoes, +and the plain is then converted into one mass of mud, from which the gases escape. +At the beginning of this century the soil was occasionally shaken by earthquakes, +and on these occasions jets of mud and stones were ejected to a height of ten or +twenty yards. The Maccalubas appear now to be in a state of quiescence, for +these mud volcanoes also seem to have their regular periods of rest and activity.</p> + +<p>The deposits of sulphur, which constitute one of the riches of Sicily, undoubtedly +owe their existence to these subterranean lakes of seething lava. These +sulphur beds are met with in the tertiary strata extending from Centorbi to +Cattolica, in the province of Girgenti. They date from the epoch of the Upper +Miocene, and are deposited upon layers of fossil infusoria exhaling a bituminous +odour. Geologists are not yet agreed on the origin of these sulphur beds, but it +is most likely that they are derived from sulphate of lime carried to the surface +by hot springs. In the same formation beds of gypsum and of rock-salt are +met with, and the latter may frequently be traced from a saline effervescence +known as <i>occhi di sale</i> (“eyes of salt”).</p> + +<p>Sicily, like Greece, enjoys one of the happiest climates. The heat of summer +is tempered by sea breezes which blow regularly during the hottest part of each +day. The cold of winter would not be felt at all if it were not for the total +absence of every comfort in the houses, for ice is not known, and snow exceedingly +rare. The autumn rains are abundant, but there are many fine days even during +that season. The prevailing winds from the north and west are salubrious, but +the <i>sirocco</i>, which usually blows towards the south-east, is deadly, especially when it +reaches the northern coast. It generally blows for three or four days, and during +that time no one thinks of clarifying wine, salting meat, or painting houses or +furniture. This wind is the great drawback to the climate. In some parts of +Sicily the exhalations from the swamps are dangerous, but this is entirely the fault +of man. It is owing to his neglect that Agosta and Syracuse suffer from fevers, +and that death forbids the stranger to approach the ruins of ancient Himera.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn109" id="fnanch109">109</a></p> + +<p>Temperature and moisture impart to the vegetation of the plains and lower +valleys a semi-tropical aspect. Many plants of Asia and Africa have become +acclimatized in Sicily. Groups of date-palms are seen in the gardens, and the +plains around Sciacca, almost African in their appearance, abound in groves of dwarf +palms, or <i>giummare</i>, to which ancient Selinus was indebted for its epithet of +<i>Palmosa</i>. Cotton grows on the slopes of the hills up to a height of 600 feet above +the sea; bananas, sugar-cane, and bamboos do not require +the shelter of <span class="xxpn" id="p319">{319}</span> +greenhouses; the <i>Victoria regia</i> covers the ponds with its huge leaves and flowers; the +papyrus of the Nile, which is not known anywhere else in Europe, chokes up the +bed of the Anapo, near Syracuse: formerly it grew also in the Oreto, near Palermo, +but it does so no longer. The cactus of Barbary (<i>Cactus opuntia</i>) has become the +most characteristic plant of the coast districts of Sicily, and is rapidly covering the +most unpromising beds of lava. These and other plants flourish most luxuriantly on +the southern slopes of Mount Etna, where the orange-tree bears fruit at a height +of 1,700 feet, and the larch ascends even to 7,400 feet. These slopes facing +the African sun are the hottest spots in Europe, for the volcano shelters them +from the winds of the north, whilst its dark-coloured scoriæ and cinders absorb +the rays of the mid-day sun.</p> + +<p>Those portions of Sicily which are clothed with trees or shrubs are always +green, for orange-trees, olive-trees, carob-trees, laurels, mastic-trees, tamarisks, +cypresses, and pines retain their verdure even in winter, when nature wears a +desolate aspect in our own latitudes. There is no “season,” so to say, for with a +little care all kinds of vegetables can be had throughout the year. The gardens +around Syracuse are famous above all others, because of the striking manner in +which they contrast with the naked rocks surrounding them. The most delightful +amongst them is the <i>Intagliatella</i>, or <i>Latomia de’ Greci</i>, which occupies an old quarry +where Greek slaves dressed the stones used in erecting the palaces of Syracuse. +The vegetation there is most luxuriant; the trunks of the trees rise above masses +of shrubs, their branches are covered with creeping plants, flowers and ripening +fruit cover the paths, and birds without number sing in the foliage. This earthly +paradise is surrounded by precipitous walls of rock covered with ivy, or bare and +white as on the day when Athenian slaves were at work there.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>Sicily lies on the high-road of all the nations who ever disputed the command of +the Mediterranean, and its population consequently consists of a mixture of the +most heterogeneous elements. Irrespectively of Sicani, Siculi, and other aboriginal +nations, whose position amongst the European family is uncertain, but who +probably spoke a language akin to that of the Latins, we know that Phœnicians +and Carthaginians successively settled on its shores, and that the Greeks were +almost as numerous there as in their native country. Twenty-five centuries have +passed since the Greeks founded their first colony, Naxos, at the foot of Mount +Etna. Soon afterwards Syracuse, Leontini, Catania, Megara Hyblæa, Messina, and +other colonies sprang into existence, until the whole of the littoral region was in +the hands of the Greeks, the native populations being pushed back into the interior. +In Sicily the Greek met with the same climate, and with rocks and mountains +similar in aspect to those of his native home. The “Marmorean” port and the +wide bay of Syracuse, the acropolis and Mount Hybla, do they not recall Attica or +the Peloponnesus? The fountain of Arethusa, on the island of Ortygia, which is +supplied through underground channels, reminds us of the fountain of Erasinos and +of many others in Hellas, which find their way through fissures in the limestone +rocks to the seashore. The Syracusans said that the river +Alpheus, enamoured of <span class="xxpn" id="p320">{320}</span> +the nymph Arethusa, did not mingle its waters with those of the Ionian, but found +its way through subterranean channels to the coast of Sicily, where it rose again +at the side of the fountain dedicated to the object of his adoration, bringing +the flowers and fruits of beloved Greece. This legend bears testimony to the +great love which the Greek bore his native land, whose very fountains and +plants were supposed to follow him into his new home.</p> + +<p>If we may judge from the number of inhabitants with which the principal +towns were credited at that time, Sicily must have had a population of several +millions of Greeks. The Carthaginian merchants and soldiers, on the other hand, +though they were the masters of portions of the island for two or three centuries, +never settled upon it, and only a few walls, coins, and inscriptions bear witness now +of their ever having been present. It has been very judiciously remarked by +M. Dennis that the most striking evidence of their reign is presented in the +desolate sites of the cities of Himera and Selinus. At the same time we must not +forget that the Carthaginians, by intermingling with the existing population, +materially affected the ulterior destinies of the island. The Romans, who held +Sicily for nearly seven centuries, did so in a still higher degree. Vandals and +Goths likewise left traces behind them. The Saracens, themselves a mixed race, +imparted their Southern impetuosity to the Sicilians, whilst their conquerors, the +Normans, endowed them with the daring and indomitable courage which at that +period animated these sons of the North. In 1071, when the Normans laid siege +to Palermo, no less than five languages were spoken on the island, viz. Arabic, +Hebrew, Greek, Latin, and vulgar Sicilian. But Arabic was the tongue of the +civilised inhabitants, and even during the dominion of the Normans inscriptions +upon palaces and churches were written in it. It was at the court of King +Roger that Edrisi wrote his “Geography,” one of the great monuments of science. +In 1223 the last Arabs were made to emigrate to Naples, but by that time much +Arab blood already flowed through the veins of the inhabitants.</p> + +<p>Later on, the character of the population was still further modified by French, +Germans, Spaniards, and Aragonese, and all this helped to make them a people +differing in appearance, manners, habits, and feelings from their Italian neighbours. +These islanders look upon every inhabitant of the mainland as a foreigner. +The absence of roads on the island enabled the different groups of its population +to maintain their distinct idioms and character during a very long period. The +Lombards whom the Romans transplanted to Benevento and Palermo spoke their +native dialect long after it had become extinct in Lombardy. Even now there +are about 50,000 Sicilians who speak this ancient Lombard tongue. At San +Fratello, on a steep hill on the northern coast, this idiom is spoken with the +greatest purity. Nor has the Italian wholly supplanted the vulgar Sicilian in the +interior of the island. We meet with many Greek and Arab words. One of the +most curious words is that of <i>val</i>, which is applied to various districts of Sicily, +and is supposed to have been derived from <i>vali</i>, the Arab term for “governor.” +The Sicilian idiom is less sonorous than the Italian. Vowels standing between +consonants are frequently suppressed, and the <i>o</i>, and even the <i>a</i> and +<i>i</i> (<i>ee</i>), are <span class="xxpn" id="p321">{321}</span> +changed into <i>oo</i>, which renders the speech hard and indistinct. The language +lends itself, however, admirably to poetry, and the Sicilian popular songs are quite +equal in natural grace and delicacy to the much-admired <i>rispetti</i> of Tuscany.</p> + +<p>Of all the emigrants who have settled on the island the Albanians alone have +not become merged in the general population. Locally known as Greci, they still +form separate communities, speaking their own language and observing special +religious rites, in several of the towns of the interior, and more especially at +Piana de’ Greci, which occupies a commanding hill to the south of Palermo. +Nor is the fusion amongst the other races as complete as it appears to be at the +first glance. The population around Mount Etna, who are, perhaps, more purely +Greek in blood than the Greeks themselves, are noted for their grace, gaiety, and +sweetness of disposition. They are the most intelligent portion of the population +of Sicily. Those of Trapani and San Giuliani are said to be the best-looking, and +their women delight the stranger by the regularity and beauty of their features. +The Palermitans, on the other hand, in whose veins flows much Arab blood, are +for the most part unprepossessing in their appearance. They open their house but +rarely to strangers, and jealously shut up their women in its most retired part.</p> + +<p>The most ferocious usages of war, piracy, and brigandage have kept their +ground longer at Palermo and its environs than anywhere else. The laws of the +<i>omerta</i>, or “men of heart,” make vengeance a duty. <i>A chi ti toglie il pane, e tu +toglili la vita !</i> (“Take the life of him who has taken your bread !”) is its fundamental +principle; but in practice Palermitan vengeance is far from possessing the +simplicity of the Corsican vendetta, for it is complicated by the most atrocious +cruelties. No less than four or five thousand Palermitans are said to be affiliated +to the secret league of the <i>maffia</i>, whose members subsist upon every kind of +roguery. Up to 1865 the brigands were masters in the environs of that town. +They virtually laid siege to the town, separating it from its more distant suburbs. +Strangers were afraid to leave lest they should be murdered or captured by +bandits; and no farmer could harvest his corn or olives, or shear his sheep, +without paying toll to these highwaymen. More than ten years have passed +since then, but in spite of measures of exceptional severity the maffia still exists.</p> + +<p>The history of this association, which dates its origin back to the time of the +Norman kings, remains yet to be written. It has always flourished most in time +of political troubles, and consequent misery. No doubt things have grown worse +in the course of the last twenty years; taxes have been increased, the conscription +established, and many abrupt changes, such as are inseparable from a new +political regimen, have been introduced. The people, accustomed to put up with +ancient abuses, have not yet learnt to bear the burdens imposed in connection +with the annexation of the island to the kingdom of Italy. Nevertheless the +Sicilians grow more Italian from day to day. Community of language and of +interests attaches the island to the peninsula, and the time is not far distant when +both countries will gravitate in the same orbit. Italy is most highly interested in +establishing feelings of friendship with the inhabitants of the island, and in developing +its resources. The rapid increase of the population, which is +said to have <span class="xxpn" id="p322">{322}</span> +tripled since 1734, bears witness to the great natural riches of the country; and +what might not be achieved if the barbarous processes now in force there were +superseded by the scientific methods of our own time?</p> + +<p>Sicily was the favourite haunt of Ceres, and in the plain of Catania this +beneficent goddess taught man the art of cultivating the soil. The Sicilians have +not forgotten this teaching, for nearly half the area is covered with corn-fields; +but they have not improved their system of cultivation since those fabulous times, +and improvements can hardly be effected as long as the restrictions imposed by +the feudal tenure introduced by the Normans are allowed to exist. The agricultural +implements are of a primitive kind, manure is hardly known, and the +fate of the crops depends entirely upon nature. When travelling through the +country districts of Sicily, we are struck by not meeting with isolated houses. +There are no villages, for all the cultivators of the soil live in towns, and are +content to travel daily to their fields, which are occasionally at a distance of six +miles. Sometimes they pass the night there, in a cavern or a ditch covered +with boughs, and at harvest-time the labourers sleep in improvised sheds. This +absence of human habitations imparts an air of solemn sadness to vast corn-fields +covering valleys and slopes, and we almost fancy we are wandering through a +deserted country, and wonder for whose benefit the crops are ripening.</p> + +<p>Corn-fields cover a greater area than that devoted to the cultivation of all +other objects put together; nevertheless the latter articles represent a higher +pecuniary value. The orchards, vineyards, and gardens near the towns are a +far greater source of wealth than the distant corn-fields. In former times wheat +was the principal article of export; now Sicily is no longer a granary, but promises +to become a vast emporium of fruit. Even now the crop of oranges grown there, +which consists of seven kinds, subdivided into four hundred varieties, represents a +value of £2,000,000 a year. The marvellous gardens which surround Palermo are +steadily increasing at the expense of the ancient plantations of ash, and ascend +the hills to a height of 1,150 feet. Hundreds of millions of oranges are exported +annually to Continental Europe, England, and America, and the inferior sorts are +converted into essential oils, citric acid, or citrate of lime. The last is used in +printing stuffs, and Sicily enjoys a monopoly in its manufacture.</p> + +<p>Sicily likewise occupies a foremost place as a vine-growing country, and +supplies more than a fourth of the wine produced throughout Italy. The cultivation +of the vine, which is carried on to a large extent by foreigners, is much better +understood there than on the neighbouring peninsula, and the wines exported +from Marsala, Syracuse, Alcamo, and Milazzo are justly held in high estimation. +Excellent wine is also grown on the southern and western slopes of Mount Etna, +to which the heat of the sun imparts much fire. England and non-Italian Europe +are the great consumers of the wines of Sicily, as they are of its oils, almonds, +cotton, saffron, sumach, and manna, extracted, like that of the Calabrias, from a +kind of ash. Raw silk, which Sicily was the first to produce in Europe, is likewise +exported in considerable quantities.</p> + +<p>Sulphur is the great mineral product of the island. The beds +vary much in <span class="xxpn" id="p323">{323}</span> +richness, but even where they contain only five or six per cent. a light brought to the +walls of the mine will cause the sulphur to boil like pitch. The blocks extracted +from the mine are piled up in the open air, where they remain exposed to the +destructive action of the atmosphere. The fragments are then heaped up over the +flame of a furnace, which causes the stones to split, the melted sulphur flowing +into moulds placed beneath. By this primitive process only two-thirds of the +sulphur contained in the rock are extracted, but it proves nevertheless most +remunerative. About 200,000 tons of sulphur, or more than two-thirds of the +sulphur required for manufacturing purposes throughout Europe, are annually +exported from Sicily, and the known deposits of the island have been computed +to contain from 40,000,000 to 50,000,000 tons. To the north of Girgenti and +in other parts of Sicily sulphureous plaster has been used in the construction of +the houses, and the atmosphere there is at all times impregnated with an odour +of sulphur.</p> + +<p>Rock-salt is met with in the same formations as the sulphur, and in +quantities almost inexhaustible, but salt is not a rare article, and even the Sicilians +prefer to gather it from the salt swamps extending along the coast, the most +productive of which are near Trapani, at the western extremity of the island. At +the same spot the sea yields the best coral of Sicily. The tunny fishery is carried +on mostly in the great bays between Trapani and Palermo, while most of the swordfish +are captured in the Strait of Messina. The seas of Sicily abound in fish, +and the islanders boast of being the most expert fishermen of the Western +Mediterranean.</p> + +<p>Until recently communications in Sicily were kept up almost exclusively by sea. +In 1866 the only carriage road of the island, which connects Messina with +Palermo, was hardly made use of by travellers, and even now the most important +mines of sulphur and salt communicate with the seashore only by mule-paths; +and the inhabitants are actually opposed to the construction of roads, from fear of +their interfering with the existing modes of transport. The road which connects +the harbour of Terranova with Caltanissetta has been under construction for +twenty years, although it is the only one which joins the interior of the country +to the sea-coast. Railways to some extent supply this deficiency of roads, but are +being built very slowly, hardly more than 250 miles being at present open for +traffic.</p> + +<p>Palermo the “happy,” the capital of Sicily, is one of the great towns of Italy. +At the time of the Arabs it surpassed all towns of the peninsula in population, but +at present, though increasing rapidly, it yields to Naples, Milan, and Rome. No +other town of Europe can boast of an equally delicious climate, nor is any fairer to +look upon from a distance. Bold barren mountains enclose a marvellous garden, +the famous “shell of gold” (<i>conca d’oro</i>), from the midst of which rise towers +and domes, palms with fan-shaped leaves, and pines, commanded in the south by +the huge ecclesiastical edifices of Monreale. Termini is the only city of Sicily +which rivals Palmero in the beauty of its site, and it truly merits its epithet of +<i>splendissime</i>. <span class="xxpn" id="p324">{324}</span></p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg118"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 118.—<span class="smcap">P<b>ALERMO</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>ONTE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ELLEGRINO.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib324.jpg" width="600" height="603" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>But the beauty of the country contrasts most painfully with the misery and +filth reigning in most of the quarters of the capital. Palermo has its sumptuous +edifices. It boasts of a cathedral lavishly decorated; its royal palace and palatine +chapel, covered with mosaics, and harmoniously combining the beauties of +Byzantine, Moorish, and Roman art, are unique of their kind; the church of +Monreale, in one of its suburbs, may challenge Ravenna by the number of its +mosaics. There are Moorish palaces, a few modern monuments, and two broad +streets, which a Spanish governor had made in the shape of a cross. But, besides +these, we only meet with dark and narrow streets and wretched tenements, the +windows of which are stuffed with rags. Down to a recent period Palermo was undeserving +its Greek name of “Port of all Nations.” Enclosed within mountains, and +having no communications with the interior, its commerce was merely local, and +its exports were limited to the produce of its fisheries and of +its gardens. Though <span class="xxpn" id="p325">{325}</span> +far more populous than Genoa, its commerce is only half that of the Ligurian city, +but it is rapidly on the increase.</p> + +<p>Trapani, a colony of the Carthaginians like Palermo, and Marsala, so famous for +its wines, at the western extremity of the island, are proportionately far busier +than the capital. Trapani, built on a sickle-shaped promontory, carries on a lively +trade. The salt marshes near it are amongst the most productive in all Italy;<a class="afnanch" href="#fn110" id="fnanch110">110</a> +tunny, coral, and sponge fishing is carried on; and the artisans of the town are +skilled as weavers, masons, and jewellers. The harbour is one of the best in Italy; +the roadstead is well sheltered by the outlying Ægadian Islands; and the ambition +of the inhabitants, who look forward to a time when Trapani will be the +principal emporium for the trade with Tunis, is likely to be realized on the completion +of a railway to Messina. The harbour of Mazzara, the outlet for the produce +of the inland towns of Castelvetrano and Salemi, lies closer to Tunis, but its shelter +is indifferent. As to Marsala—the “Mars ed Allah,” or God’s haven, of the Arabs—its +port was filled up by Charles V., and has only recently been reconstructed. +It is, however, not of sufficient depth for large vessels, and only salt and wine are +exported from it to France and England. Marsala occupies the site of the ancient +city of Lilybæum, which had a population of 900,000 souls when Diodorus Siculus +wrote his Geography. It has recently become famous in consequence of the +landing there of Garibaldi and his thousand followers in 1860, and its being +the spot from which they entered upon the triumphant march which ended in the +battle of the Volturno and the capture of Gaeta.</p> + +<p>Messina the “noble” is the great commercial centre of Sicily, and the only +port of that island where vessels of all nations meet. Messina is a stage on the +ocean high-roads which join or connect Western Europe and the Levant. Its +roadstead is one of the safest, and vessels in distress are certain to find protection +there. Moreover, vessels coming from the Tyrrhenian, and fearful of encountering +the dangerous currents of the strait during a storm, may easily find shelter at +Milazzo, to the north of it. The port of Messina is formed by a sickle-shaped +tongue of land, making a natural breakwater.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn111" id="fnanch111">111</a> There are few cities in Europe +which are more exposed to the destructive action of earthquakes than Messina, +and the traces of the great shock of 1783, which swamped the vessels in the +harbour, undermined the palaces along the seashore, and caused the death of +more than a thousand persons, have not yet entirely disappeared.</p> + +<p>Catania, the sub-Etnean, as its Greek name implies, is menaced not only by +earthquakes, but also by volcanic eruptions. It, too, enjoys a high amount of +commercial prosperity, and exports the surplus produce of the towns situated at +the foot of the volcano, among which are Acireale, with its orange groves; Giarre, +with its dusty streets; Paterno, abounding in +thermal springs; Aderno, on the <span class="xxpn" id="p326">{326}</span> +summit of a rock of lava; Bronte, at the junction of two streams of scoriæ; and +Randazza, commanded by an ancient Norman castle. Catania also monopolizes +the export of the produce of the inland districts of Eastern Sicily; it is the great +railway centre of the island, and several carriage roads converge upon it. Its port +has grown too small for the business carried on there, and it is proposed to enlarge +it by means of piers and breakwaters.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg119"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib326xmlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 119.—<span class="smcap">T<b>RAPANI</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>ARSALA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 270,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib326.jpg" width="600" height="642" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>It is quite natural that on an island, no locality of which is more than forty miles +from the sea, all great towns should be met with on the coast, where there are +greater facilities for commerce. Still a few centres of population sprang up in the +interior, either in the midst of the most fertile districts or at the crossings of the +most-frequented lines of communication. Nicosia, the Lombard city, is thus a +natural place of passage between Catania and the northern coast of the island. +Corleone occupies a similar position with respect to Palermo and +the African slope <span class="xxpn" id="p327">{327}</span> +of the island. Castro Giovanni, the ancient Enna, likewise occupies a privileged +position, for it stands on an elevated plateau in the very centre of the island: a large +stone near it is said by the inhabitants to be an ancient altar of Ceres. Piazza +Armerina <i>l’opulentissime</i>, and Caltagirone, surnamed <i>la gratissima</i> on account of +the fertility of its fields, are both populous towns, which carry on a considerable +commerce through Terranova, in the building of which the stones of the old temples +of Gela have been utilised. Caltanissetta, farther to the west, and its neighbour +Canicatti, export their produce through the port of Licata.</p> + +<p>In the south-eastern corner of Sicily there are likewise several inland towns of +some importance, amongst which Ragusa and Modica are the most considerable. +Comiso, an industrious place, lies farther to the west, and is surrounded by cotton +plantations. The valley of the Hipparis, sung by Pindar, separates it from +Vittoria, the saline plains of which furnish much of the soda exported to +Marseilles. Noto, like most towns in that part of Sicily, is at some distance from +the coast, but its twin city, Avola, stands upon the shore of the Ionian Sea. Noto +and Avola were both overthrown by the earthquake of 1693, and have been +rebuilt with geometrical regularity near their former sites. The fields of Avola, +though not very fertile by nature, are amongst the best cultivated of the island, +and it is there only that the production of the sugar-cane has attained to any +importance.</p> + +<p>On the northern slope of the hills forming the back-bone of the island there +are several other towns inhabited by the agricultural population. Lentini, the +ancient Leontini, which boasts of being the oldest city in the island, is at present +only a poor place, having been wholly rebuilt since the earthquake of 1693. +Militello has been restored since the same epoch, and Grammicheli was founded in +the eighteenth century to afford a shelter for the inhabitants of Occhiala, which was +destroyed by an earthquake. Vizzini and Licodia di Vizzini are remarkable on +account of the beds of lava near them, which alternate with layers of marine fossils, +and Mineo stands near a small crater of the swamp of Palici. The popular songs +of Mineo are famous throughout Sicily. The marvellous “stone of poetry” is +shown near it, and all those who kiss it are said to become poets.</p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg120"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib328xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 120.—<span class="smcap">S<b>YRACUSE.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 100,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib328.jpg" width="600" height="769" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Southern Sicily is poor in natural ports, and formerly, along the whole of that +part of the coast which faces Africa, there were only open roadsteads and beaches. +On the Ionian coast, however, two excellent harbours are met with, viz. those of +Agosta and Syracuse, which are very much like each other in outline and general +features. Agosta, or Augusta, the successor of the Greek city of Megara Hyblæa, +is now nothing more than a fortress besieged by fever. Syracuse, the ancient +city of the Dorians, and at one time the most populous and wealthy city of +the Mediterranean, has been reduced to a simple provincial capital. That +city, whose inhabitants even during the last century celebrated their great +victory over the Athenians, is now hardly more than a heap of ruins. Its +“marble port,” formerly surrounded by statues, is now frequented only by small +boats, and its great harbour, large enough for contending squadrons, lies +deserted. All that remains of it is contained in the small +island of Ortygia, <span class="xxpn" id="p328">{328}</span> +separated from the mainland by fortifications, a ditch, and the swamps of +Syraca. The vast peninsula of limestone formerly occupied by the city is at present +inhabited only by a few farmers, whose houses stand near the canals of irrigation. +The grand edifices erected by the inhabitants of ancient Syracuse are +now represented by the ruins of columns on the banks of the Anapo rising from +the “azure” fountain of Cyane; by the fortifications of the Epipolæ and Euryelum +erected by Archimedes, and now known as Belvedere; by the remains of baths, an +enormous altar large enough for hecatombs of sacrifices, an amphitheatre, and an +admirable theatre for 25,000 spectators, who were able to see at a +glance from their <span class="xxpn" id="p329">{329}</span> +seats the whole of the ancient city, with its temples and fleets of merchantmen. +Nothing, however, is better calculated to convey an idea of the ancient grandeur +of the city than the vast quarries or <i>lautumiæ</i> and the subterranean catacombs, +more extensive than those of Naples, and not yet wholly explored. In former +times the summit of the island of Ortygia was occupied by an acropolis, in which +stood a temple of Minerva, a rival of the Parthenon of Athens. Sailors, on leaving +the port, were bound to look towards this temple, holding in their hands a vase of +burning charcoal taken from the altar of Juno, which they flung into the sea +when they lost sight of it. Portions of the temple still exist, but its beautiful +columns have been covered with plaster and incorporated in an ugly church.</p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr01" id="fg121"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 121.—<span class="smcap">T<b>EMPLE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>ONCORD</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AT</span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>IRGENTI.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib329.jpg" width="600" height="598" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>There are other Hellenic ruins in Sicily, which, in the eyes of artists, make that +island a worthy rival of Greece itself. Girgenti, the +ancient Acragas, or <span class="xxpn" id="p330">{330}</span> +Agrigentum, which numbered its inhabitants by hundreds of thousands, but is now a +poor place like Syracuse, possesses ruins of at least ten temples or religious edifices, +of which that dedicated to Olympian Jupiter was the largest in all Italy, and +has been made use of in the construction of the present mole. Another, that +dedicated to Concord, is in a better state of preservation than any other Greek +temple outside the limits of Hellas. The modern city occupies merely the site of +the ancient acropolis, and is built upon a layer of shelly sandstone, which descends +in steps towards the sea. The cathedral has been built from materials taken from +a temple of Jupiter Atabyrios, and its baptismal font is an ancient sarcophagus +upon which are represented the loves of Phædra and Hippolytus. In former times +Agrigentum reached to within a couple of miles from the sea. The modern port, +named in honour of one of the most famous sons of the city, lies to the west of the +ancient Hellenic <i>Emporium</i>, at a distance of four miles from the city. It is the +busiest harbour on the southern coast, and large quantities of sulphur are exported +from it (see Fig. <a href="#fg117" title="go to Fig. 117">117</a>, +p. 317).</p> + +<p>Sciacca, another seaside town farther to the west, in one of those localities of +the island most exposed to earthquakes, boasts of being the modern representative +of Selinus, though that Greek city was situated about fourteen miles farther west, +to the south of Castelvetrano. Its seven temples have been overthrown by earthquakes, +but they still present us with remains of the purest Doric style. The +metopes of three of them have been conveyed to Palermo, where they form the +most precious ornaments of the museum.</p> + +<p>Segesta, on the north coast, no longer exists, but there still remain the ruins of +a magnificent temple. Other remains of Greek art abound in all parts of the +island, and there are also monuments erected by the Romans. If we contrast +these ancient edifices with those raised since by Byzantines, Moors, Normans, Spaniards, +and Neapolitans, we are bound to admit that the latter exhibit no progress, +but decadence. Alas ! how very much inferior are the inhabitants of modern +Syracuse in comparison with the fellow-citizens of an Archimedes !</p> + +<p>Sicily offers most striking examples of towns changing their positions in consequence +of political disturbances. When the ancient Greek cities were at the +height of their power they boldly descended to the very coast; but when war and +rapine got the upper hand—when Moorish pirates scoured the sea, and brigandage +reigned in the interior—then it was that most of the cities of Sicily took refuge on +the summits of the hills, abandoning their low-lying suburbs to decay, and +allowing them finally to disappear. Girgenti is a case in point. Some of the +towns occupy sites of much natural strength, and are almost inaccessible. Such +are Centuripe, or Centorbi, which stretches along the edge of a rock to the west of +the Simeto, and San Giuliano, the town of Astarte, which stands on the summit of +a pyramidal rock 1,200 feet in height above Trapani. But, on the return of +peace, the inhabitants abandoned their eyries and came back to the plain or coast. +All along the northern coast, from Palermo to Messina, the towns on the <i>marina</i>, +or beach, kept increasing at the expense of the <i>borgos</i> occupying the summits of the +mountains, and in many instances the latter were deserted +altogether. Cefalù <span class="xxpn" id="p331">{331}</span> +affords a striking illustration of this change. The modern city nestles at the foot +of a bold promontory, upon the summit of which may still be seen the crenellated +walls of the old town, within which nothing now remains excepting a small +cyclopean temple, the most venerable ruin of all Sicily, which has resisted the +ravages of thirty centuries.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn112" id="fnanch112">112</a></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h4 title="The Æolian or Liparic Islands."><span + class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">Æ<b>OLIAN</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OR</span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>IPARIC</b></span> + <span class="smcap">I<b>SLANDS.</b></span></h4></div> + +<p class="pfirst">The Æolian or Liparic Islands, though separated from Sicily by a strait more +than 300 fathoms in depth, may nevertheless be looked upon as a dependency of +the larger island. Some of these volcanic islands, “born in the shadow of Mount +Etna,” lie on a line connecting that volcano with Mount Vesuvius, and they +originated probably during the same convulsion of nature. They all consist of +lavas, cinders, or pumice, ejected from volcanoes. Two amongst them, Vulcano and +Stromboli, are still active volcanoes, and the flames and undulating columns of +smoke rising from them enable mariners and fishermen to foretell changes of +temperature or wind. It is probable that this intelligent interpretation of volcanic +phenomena was the reason why these islands were dedicated to Æolus, the god of +the winds, who there revealed himself to mariners.</p> + +<p>Lipari, the largest and most central of these islands, is at the same time the +most populous. A considerable town, commanded by an ancient castle, rises like +an amphitheatre on its northern shore. A well-cultivated plain, abounding in +olive-trees, orange-trees, and vines, surrounds the town, and the slopes of the hills +are cultivated almost to their very summits. The population, as in Sicily, has +been recruited from the most diverse elements since the time that Greek colonists +from Rhodes, Cnidus, and Selinus entered into an alliance with the aboriginal inhabitants. +This intermixture of races is proceeding now as much as ever, for commerce +continually introduces fresh blood, and many Calabrian brigands have been conveyed +to the island, where they have become peaceable citizens. The population +is now permitted to multiply in peace, for the volcanoes of Lipari have been +quiescent for centuries. The Lipariotes have a legend according to which St. +Calogero chased the devils from the islands, and shut them up in the furnaces of +Vulcano, and we may infer from this that the last volcanic eruption took place soon +after the introduction of Christianity; that is to say, about the sixth century. The +existence of subterranean forces manifests itself now only +in thermal springs and <span class="xxpn" id="p332">{332}</span> +steam jets, which have been visited from the most ancient times for the cure of +diseases. Earthquakes, however, are of frequent occurrence, and that of 1780 so +much frightened the inhabitants that with one accord they dedicated themselves to +the Virgin Mary. Dolomieu, who visited Lipari in the year following, found them +wearing a small chain on the arm, by means of which they desired to show that +they had become the slaves of the “Liberating Virgin.”</p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr02" id="fg122"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib332xmlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 122.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>ENTRAL</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ORTION</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">Æ<b>OLIAN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">I<b>SLANDS.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib332.jpg" width="600" height="482" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>Lipari is a land of promise to the geologist, on account of the great variety of +its lavas. Monte della Castagna is wholly composed of obsidian. Another hill, Monte +Bianco, consists of pumice, and, when seen from a distance, has the appearance of +being covered with snow. The streams of pumice which fill every ravine extend +down to the sea, and the water is covered with this buoyant stone, which drifts +sometimes as far as Corsica. Lipari supplies nearly the whole of Europe with +pumice.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn113" id="fnanch113">113</a></p> + +<p>Vulcano, to the south of Lipari, from which it is separated by a strait less than +a mile across, contrasts strangely with its smiling neighbour. Vulcano, with the +exception of a few olives and vines growing on the southern slopes, consists wholly +of naked scoriæ, and this circumstance probably led to its being dedicated to +Vulcan. Most of its rocks are black or of a reddish hue +like iron, but there are <span class="xxpn" id="p333">{333}</span> +others which are scarlet, yellow, or white. At the northern extremity of the +island rises the Vulcanello, a small cone which appeared above the surface of the +sea nobody knows when, and which an isthmus of reddish cinders united about the +middle of the thirteenth century to the principal volcano of the island. This +central mountain of the island has a crater about 1,800 yards in circumference, +from which steam continually escapes. The atmosphere is charged with sulphurous +vapours difficult to breathe. From hundreds of small orifices jets of +steam make their escape with a throbbing and hissing noise. Some of these +fumaroles have a temperature of 610° F. Jets of a lower temperature are +met with in other parts of the island, and even at the bottom of the bay. Violent +eruptions are rare, and in the eighteenth century only three occurred. The last +eruption took place in 1873, after a repose of a hundred years. Until recently the +only inhabitants of Vulcano were a few convicts, who collected sulphur and +boracic acid, and manufactured a little alum. But an enterprising Scotchman has +now taken possession of this grand chemical laboratory. He has built a large +manufactory near the port, and a few trees planted around his Moorish residence +have somewhat improved the repulsive aspect of the country.</p> + +<p>Stromboli, though smaller than either Lipari or Vulcano, is nevertheless +more celebrated, on account of its frequent eruptions. For ages back scarcely +any mariners have passed this island without seeing its summit in a state of +illumination. At intervals of five minutes, or less, the seething lava filling its +caldron bubbles up, explosions occur, and steam and stones are ejected. These +rhythmical eruptions form a most agreeable sight, for there is no danger about +them, and the olive groves of the Stromboliotes have never been injured by a +stream of lava. The volcano, however, has its moments of exasperation, and +its ashes have frequently been carried to the coast of Calabria, which is more +than thirty miles off.</p> + +<p>Panaria and the surrounding group of islands between Stromboli and Lipari +have undergone many changes, if Dolomieu and Spallanzani are correct in +saying that they originally formed only a single island, which was blown into +fragments by an eruption having its centre near the present island of Dattilo. +A hot spring and an occasional bubbling up of the sea-water prove that the +volcanic forces are not yet quite extinct.</p> + +<p>As regards the small eastern islands of the archipelago, Salina, Felicudi, and +Alicudi, the last of which resembles a tent pitched upon the surface of the +water, history furnishes no records of their ever having been in any other than a +quiescent state. The island of Ustica, about thirty miles to the north of Palermo, +is likewise of volcanic origin, but is not known ever to have had an eruption. It +is one of the most dreaded places of exile in Italy. Near it is the uninhabited +island of Medico, the ancient Osteodes, where the mercenaries deserted by the +Carthaginians were left to +die of starvation. <span class="xxpn" id="p334">{334}</span></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h4 title="The Ægadian Islands."><span + class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">Æ<b>GADIAN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">I<b>SLANDS.</b></span></h4></div> + +<p class="pfirst">Off the western extremity of Sicily lie shallows, sand-banks, and calcareous +islands of the same composition as the adjoining mainland. These are the Ægades, +or Goat Islands, named after the animals which climb their steep escarpments. +Favignana, near which the Romans won the naval victory which terminated the +first Punic war, is the largest of these islands. Its steep cliffs abound in caverns, +in which heaps of shells, gnawed bones, and stone implements have been found, +dating back to the contemporaries of the mammoth and the antediluvian bear. +Conflicts between contrary winds are frequent in this labyrinth of rocks and +shoals, and the power of the waves is much dreaded. The tides are most irregular, +and give rise to dangerous eddies. The sudden ebb, locally known as <i>marubia</i>, or +“tipsy sea” (<i>mare ubbriaco?</i>), has been the cause of many shipwrecks.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg123"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib334xmlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 123.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>EDITERRANEAN</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">TO</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>OUTH</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>ICILY.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 4,000,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib334.jpg" width="600" height="472" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div class="section"> +<h4 title="Pantellaria."><span + class="smcap">P<b>ANTELLARIA.</b></span></h4></div> + +<p class="pfirst">Pantellaria +rises in the very centre of the strait which unites the Western +Mediterranean with the Eastern. The island is of volcanic origin, abounds in +thermal springs, and, above all, in steam jets. Placed on a great line of navigation, +Pantellaria might have become of importance if it had possessed a good harbour +like Malta. To judge from certain ruins, the population +was more considerable <span class="xxpn" id="p335">{335}</span> +formerly than it is now. There exist about a thousand odd edifices, called <i>sesi</i> by +the inhabitants, which are supposed to be ancient dwellings. Like the <i>nuraghi</i> of +Sardinia, they have the shape of hives, and are built of huge blocks of rock +without mortar. Some of them are twenty-five feet high and forty-five feet wide; +and Rossi, the archæologist, thinks that they date back to the stone age, for pieces +of worked obsidian have been found in them.</p> + +<p>From the top of Pantellaria we are able to distinguish the promontories on +the Tunisian coast, but, though it is nearer to Africa than to Europe, the island +nevertheless belongs to the latter continent, as is proved by the configuration of +the sea-bottom. This cannot be said of Linosa, an island with four volcanic peaks +to the west of Malta, and still less of the Pelagian Islands. The latter, consisting +of Lampedusa and a satellite rock called Lampion, owe their name (Lamp-bearer +and Lamp) to the light which, legend tells us, was kept burning by a hermit or +angel for the benefit of mariners. In our own days this legendary lamp has been +superseded by a small lighthouse marking the entrance to the port of Lampedusa, +where vessels of three or four hundred tons find a safe shelter.</p> + +<p>About the close of the eighteenth century the Russians proposed to establish +a military station on Lampedusa to rival that of Malta, but this project was never +carried out, and has not been taken up by the Italian Government. The population +consists of soldiers, political exiles, criminals, and a few settlers, who speak +Maltese.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn114" id="fnanch114">114</a></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h4 title="Malta and Gozzo."><span + class="smcap">M<b>ALTA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>OZZO.</b></span></h4></div> + +<p class="pfirst">Malta, +though a political dependency of Great Britain, belongs geographically to +Italy, for it rises from the same submarine plateau as Sicily. About fifty miles to +the east of the island the depth of the sea exceeds 1,500 fathoms, but in the north, +in the direction of Sicily, it hardly amounts to eighty, and there can be no doubt +that an isthmus formerly united Malta to continental Europe. Geologists are agreed +that the land of which Malta and Gozzo are now the only remains must formerly +have been of great extent, for amongst the fossils of its most recent limestone +rocks have been found the bones of elephants and other animals which only +inhabit continents. Even now the island is slowly wasting away, and its steep +cliffs, pierced by numerous grottoes, locally known as <i>ghar</i>, are gradually crumbling +into dust.</p> + +<p>Placed in the very centre of the Mediterranean, and possessed of an excellent +port, Malta has at all times been a commercial station of much importance. It +has been occupied by all the nations who succeeded each other in the possession +of the Mediterranean—Phœnicians, Carthaginians, Romans, and Greeks. But long +before that time the island must have been inhabited, for we meet with grottoes +excavated in the rocks, and with curious edifices resembling the <i>nuraghi</i> of +Sardinia, and it is just possible that the descendants +of these aborigines still <span class="xxpn" id="p336">{336}</span> +constitute the principal element of the existing population, which, at all events, +is very mixed, and during the domination of the Saracens almost became Arab. +The language spoken is a very corrupt Italian, containing many Arabic words.</p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg124"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib336xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 124.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ORT</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>ALTA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 49,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib336.jpg" width="600" height="773" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div class="dctr01" id="plt19"> +<img src="images/ib336b.jpg" width="600" height="410" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">LA VALETTA, MALTA.</div> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The great military part played by Malta began when the Knights of St. John, +after their expulsion from Rhodes in 1522, installed themselves upon the island, +and converted it into the bulwark of the Christian world. In the beginning of this +century Malta passed into the possession of the English, who may survey thence, +as from a watch-tower, the whole of the Mediterranean, +from Gibraltar to Smyrna <span class="xxpn" id="p337">{337}</span> +and Port Said. The excellent port of La Valetta singularly facilitates the military +and commercial part which Malta is called upon to play in the world of the +Mediterranean. It is sufficiently spacious to shelter two entire fleets, and its +approaches are defended by fortifications rendered impregnable by the successive +work of three centuries. There are, besides, all the facilities required by merchantmen, +including a careening dock larger than any other in the world. The +commerce of the island is rapidly increasing; it is one of the great centres of +steamboat navigation, and submarine telegraphs connect it with all parts of the +world.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn115" id="fnanch115">115</a></p> + +<p>The city of La Valetta has retained all its ancient picturesqueness, in spite +of its straight streets and the walls which surround it. Its high white houses, +ornamented with balconies and conservatories, rise amphitheatre-like on the slope +of a hill; stairs lead from landing-place to landing-place to the summit of this +hill; and from every street we behold the blue sea, with its large merchantmen and +crowds of smaller vessels. Gondolas, having two huge eyes painted upon the prow, +glide noiselessly over the waters, and curious vehicles roll heavily along the +quays. Maltese, English soldiers, and sailors of every nation crowd the streets. +Now and then a woman glides rapidly along the walls. Like all Christian women +of the East, she wears the <i>faldetta</i>, a sort of black silk domino, which hides her +sumptuous dress, and coquettishly conceals her features.</p> + +<p>Malta beyond the walls of the town is but a dreary place of abode. The +country rises gently towards the south, in the direction of Città Vecchia and the +hills of Ben Gemma. Grey rocks abound, a fine dust covers the vegetation, and +the white walls of the village glisten in the sun. There are no trees, except in a +few solitary gardens, where the famous mandarin oranges grow. Nor are there +any rivers. The soil is scorched, and it is matter for astonishment that it should +yield such abundant harvests of cereals, and clover (<i>sulla</i>) growing to the height +of a man. Carnation tints delight the eye during the season of flowers. The +Maltese peasants, small, wiry, and muscular, are wonderfully industrious. They +have brought the whole island under cultivation, the cliffs alone excepted, and, +where vegetable soil is wanting, they produce it artificially by triturating the rocks. +In former times vessels coming from Sicily were bound to bring a certain quantity +of soil as ballast. But in spite of their careful cultivation, the inhabitants of +Malta, Gozzo, and Comino (thus named from cumin, which, with cotton, is the +principal crop of the island), the produce hardly suffices for six months’ consumption, +and the islanders are largely dependent upon Sicily for their food. Navigation +and the fisheries contribute likewise towards the means of subsistence, but +the Maltese would nevertheless perish on their island if the surplus population +did not emigrate to all the coast lands of the Mediterranean, and especially to +Algeria, where the Maltese, as everywhere else, are distinguished for thrift and +industry. <span class="xxpn" id="p338">{338}</span></p> + +<p>In winter this exodus is in some measure compensated for by the arrival of +many English families, who visit the island for the sake of its dry and mild +climate. February is the finest month, and the island is then resplendent with +verdure, but the scorching heat of summer soon dries up the vegetation.</p> + +<p>A governor appointed by the Crown exercises executive functions, and enjoys +the privilege of mercy. He is assisted by a Council of seven members, by whom +all laws are discussed and voted. The lord-lieutenant of each district is chosen +amongst the Maltese nobles, and deputies appointed by the governor manage +the affairs of the villages. Italian is the language used in the courts, with the +exception of the Supreme Court, into which English was introduced in 1823.</p> + +<p>The revenues of the island, about £170,000 annually, are not sufficient to cover +the military expenses, and the deficiency is made up by the imperial treasury.</p> + +<p>Most of the inhabitants are Roman Catholics. The bishop is appointed by the +Pope, and enjoys an income of £4,000.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn116" id="fnanch116">116</a></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="VIII.—Sardinia.">VIII.—<span + class="smcap">S<b>ARDINIA.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">It is a curious fact that an island so fertile as Sardinia, so rich in metals, and so +favourably situated in the centre of the Tyrrhenian Sea, should have lagged +behind in the race of progress as it has. When the Carthaginians held that +island its population was certainly more numerous than it is now, and the fearful +massacres placed on record by the historians of Rome testify to this fact. Its +decadence was sudden and thorough. In part it may be accounted for by the +configuration of the island, which presents steep cliffs towards Italy, whence +emigrants might have arrived, whilst its western coast is bounded by marshes +and insalubrious swamps. But the principal cause of this torpor, which endured +for centuries, is traceable to the actions of man. The conquerors who succeeded +the Romans and Byzantines in the possession of the island, whether Saracens, +Pisans, Genoese, or Aragonese, monopolized its produce solely with a view to +their own profit, and further mischief was wrought by the pirates of Barbary, who +frequently descended upon its coasts. As recently as 1815 the Tunisians landed +upon Sant’ Antioco, massacring the inhabitants, or carrying them into slavery. +The coast districts became depopulated, and the inhabitants retired to the interior, +where, oppressed by their feudal lords, they led a life of isolation from the rest of +Europe. It is hardly a generation since Sardinia began to participate in the +general progress made throughout Italy.</p> + +<div class="dctr03" id="fg125"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib339xxmlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 125.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>EA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">TO</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>OUTH</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>ARDINIA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 2,000,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib339.jpg" width="552" height="800" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Sardinia is nearly as large as Sicily, but has only a fourth of its population.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn117" id="fnanch117">117</a> +Geographically it is more independent of Italy than the southern island, and a +profound sea, more than 1,000 fathoms in depth, divides it from the African +continent. Sardinia with Corsica forms a group of twin islands, which is separated +from the Tuscan archipelago by a narrow strait +only 170 fathoms in depth. <span class="xxpn" id="p339">{339}</span> +The geological structure of the two islands is identical, and there can be no doubt +that the islands and rocks in the Strait of Bonifacio are the remains of an isthmus +destroyed by the sea. On the other hand, we learn from a study of the geology of +Sardinia that at a period not very remote that island must have consisted of +several separate islands. The principal island formed +a southerly continuation <span class="xxpn" id="p340">{340}</span> +of the mountains of Corsica, whilst the smaller ones lay to the west. Alluvial +deposits, volcanic eruptions, and perhaps, also, an upheaval of the soil, have +converted the shallow straits which separated them into dry land.</p> + +<p>The mountains of Sardinia may be said to begin with the islands of Maddalena +and Caprera, in the Strait of Bonifacio, and in the mountain mass of the Gallura +they attain already a considerable height. A depression separates these from the +southern portion of the great back-bone of the island, which stretches along the +whole of the eastern coast, and terminates abruptly at Cape Carbonaro. These +mountains, like those of Corsica, consist of crystalline rocks and schists; but +whilst the slope on the latter island is steepest towards the west, the reverse is the +case on Sardinia, and that island may almost be said to turn its back upon Italy. +The general slope of the island is towards the west, and its occupation by Spain +could therefore be justified by purely geographical arguments.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg126"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib340xmlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 126.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>TRAIT</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>ONIFACIO.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 300,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib340.jpg" width="600" height="443" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The highest summits of the island are found in the central portion of this +crystalline chain, where the Gennargentu, or “silver mountain,” rises to a height of +6,116 feet. A little snow remains in the crevices of this mountain throughout the +summer. The inhabitants of Northern Sardinia formerly imagined that their own +Gigantinu, or “giant,” in the mountains of Limbarra, constituted the culminating +point of the island, but careful measurements have shown that that superb peak +only attains an elevation of 4,297 feet.</p> + +<p>The secondary mountain groups in the western portion of the island are +separated from the main chain by recent geological +formations. The granitic <span class="xxpn" id="p341">{341}</span> +region of La Nurra, to the west of Sassari, almost uninhabited in spite of its +fertile valleys, and the island of Asinara adjoining it, which abounds in turtles, +are amongst these insulated mountain regions. Another, intersected by the +beautiful valley of Domus Novas, occupies the south-western extremity of the +island. Geologists look upon it as the most ancient portion of the island, and +the plain of Campidano, which now occupies the site of an ancient arm of the sea, +is of quaternary formation. The transversal range of Marghine occupies the +centre of the island, and there, too, we meet with vast limestone plateaux pierced +by volcanic rocks. The ancient craters, however, no longer emit lava, nor even +gases, and the villagers have tranquilly built their huts within them. Thermal +springs alone indicate the existence of subterranean forces. Volcanic cones of +recent age are met with in the north-western portion of the island, as well as in +the valley of the Orosei, on the east coast. The trachytic rocks of the islands of +San Pietro and Sant’ Antioco are of greater age. They sometimes present the +appearance of architectural piles, especially at the Cape of Columns, which is, +however, rapidly disappearing, as the stone is being quarried to be converted into +pavement. On Sant’ Antioco, which a bridge joins to the mainland, there are +deep caverns, the haunts of thousands of pigeons, which are caught by spreading +a net before their entrance.</p> + +<p>In addition to the changes wrought by volcanic agencies, Sardinia exhibits +traces of a slow upheaval or subsidence due to the expansion or contraction of the +upper strata of the earth. Raised beaches have been discovered by La Marmora +near Cagliari, at an elevation of 243 and 322 feet above the sea-level, where +shells of living species are found together with potsherds and other articles, +proving that when this upheaval took place the island was already inhabited. +Elsewhere there exist traces of a subsidence, and the old Phœnician cities of Nora, +to the south-west of Cagliari, and Tharros, on the northern peninsula of the +Gulf of Oristano, have become partly submerged.</p> + +<p>Amongst the rivers of the island there is only one which deserves that +name. This is the Tirso, or Fiume d’Oristano, which is fed by the snows of the +Gennargentu and the rains which descend on the western mountain slopes. Other +rivers of equal length are hardly more than torrents, which at one time invade the +fields adjoining them, and at another shrink to a thin thread of water meandering +between thickets of laurel-trees. Most of the river beds are dry during eight +months of the year, and even after rain the water does not find its way into the +sea, but is absorbed by the littoral swamps.</p> + +<p>All these swamps have brackish water. The largest amongst them communicate +freely with the sea, at least during the rainy season, but others are separated from +it by a strip of sand. But these, too, are brackish, for the sea-water percolates +through the soil, and keeps them at the same level. The water of the inland +swamps is likewise saturated with saline substances derived from the surrounding +soil. They generally dry up in summer, but the coating of salt which then appears +is hardly dry enough to repay the labour of collection and refinement. The only +salt marshes actually exploited are those of Cagliari and of +Carlo-Forte, on San <span class="xxpn" id="p342">{342}</span> +Pietro. They have been leased to a French company, and yield annually nearly +120,000 tons of salt.</p> + +<p>Swamps and marshes envelop nearly the whole of the island in a zone of miasmata, +which are carried by the wind into the interior, producing fever even in the +more elevated mountain districts. There are localities on the island the air of +which no stranger can breathe with impunity. The coast districts of Sardinia, +with their stagnant waters, are, in truth, the most unhealthy in Italy, and quite +one-fourth of the area of the island is exposed to the scourge of malaria, which +sufficiently accounts for the small population of the island and the little progress +made.</p> + +<p>Even when Sardinia was at the height of its prosperity, and supplied Rome +with an abundance of corn, cheese, pork, lead, copper, iron, and textile fabrics, +it was noted for its unhealthiness, and the emperors exiled to it those whom they +desired to get rid of. Then, as now, the landed proprietors, about the middle of +June, retired to the towns, the walls of which offered some protection against the +poisonous air. The Italian Government officials are sent to the island as a punishment, +and for the most part look upon themselves as condemned to death. Even +the native villagers are bound to observe the greatest precautions, and wear garments +of skin or leather which are impenetrable to rain, mist, and dew. They +are dressed most warmly during the hottest part of the year as a protection against +the climate, and in their long <i>mastrucas</i> of sheepskin they almost look like Wallachian +herdsmen.</p> + +<p>Ancient geographers, as well as the Sardinians themselves, ascribe the unhealthiness +of the climate to the rarity of north-easterly winds. The mountains of Limbarra, +in the north of the island, are popularly supposed to act as a sort of screen, +which diverts this health-bringing wind, to the great detriment of Lower Sardinia; +and there appears to be much truth in this popular notion. South-westerly +winds, or <i>libeccios</i>, are almost equally rare, and when they blow they do so with +tempestuous violence.</p> + +<p>The regular winds of Sardinia blow from the north-west or south-east. The +former is known as the <i>maestrale</i>, the latter as the <i>levante</i> or <i>sirocco</i>, called <i>maledetto +levante</i> by the inhabitants of Southern Sardinia. It becomes charged with moisture +during its passage across the Mediterranean, and its temperature is in reality much +less than might be supposed from the lassitude produced by it. The maestrale, on +the other hand, is hailed with joy, for it is an invigorating wind. On reaching the +coast it generally parts with its moisture, and when it arrives at Cagliari it is perfectly +dry. The capital of Sardinia is indebted to this wind and to sea breezes +for its low temperature (62·4° F.), which is far lower than that of Genoa.</p> + +<p>Hurricanes are comparatively rare, and hailstorms, which work such damage +elsewhere, are hardly known. Most of the rain falls in autumn; it ceases in +December, when the pleasantest season sets in. These are the “halcyon days” +of ancient poets, when the sea calms down in order that the sacred bird may build +his nest. But these pleasant days are succeeded by a wretched spring. February, +the “double-faced month” of Sardinian mariners, brings capricious +frosts, to which <span class="xxpn" id="p343">{343}</span> +succeed, in March and April, abrupt changes of temperature, winds, and rain. +Vegetation in consequence is far more backward than might be supposed from the +latitude.</p> + +<p>The vegetation of Sardinia resembles that of the other islands of the Mediterranean. +The forest in the highland valleys of the interior and on the trackless +mountain slopes consists of pines, oaks, and holm-oaks, mixed here and there with +yoke-elms and maples. The villages are surrounded by chestnut-trees and groves +of magnificent walnut-trees. The hill-tops, robbed of their forests, are covered +with odoriferous plants and thickets of myrtles, strawberry-trees, and heather. It +is there the bees collect the bitter honey so much despised by Horace. Vast tracts of +uncultivated land near the seashore are covered with wild olive-trees, which only +need grafting to yield excellent fruit. All the fruit trees and useful plants of the +Mediterranean flourish in Sardinia. Almond and orange trees, introduced by +the Moors at the close of the eleventh century, flourish vigorously. The orange +groves of Millis, which are protected by the extinct volcano of Monte Ferru, are, +perhaps, the most productive on the shores of the Mediterranean, and in good +seasons yield 60,000,000 oranges. The gardens of Domus Novas, Ozieri, and +Sassari are of surprising fertility. In the southern part of the island, wherever the +cultivated fields gain upon the lands covered with rock-roses, fennel, and lilies, +they are fenced in with fig-trees. The fan-shaped foliage of the date-palm is seen +near every town, and more especially in the environs of Cagliari. By a curious +contrast the dwarf palm is not met with in the southern lowlands of the island, +though their climate is almost African, but forms dense thickets in the solitudes of +Alghero, in the north of the islands. The inhabitants eat the roots of this tree, as +do also the Moors.</p> + +<p>Although all the plants of neighbouring countries become easily acclimatized in +Sardinia, that island is naturally poorer in species than are continental regions +lying under the same latitude. There is nothing special about its flora, for the +island is probably only a remnant of a larger tract of land which formerly joined +Europe to Africa. As to the famous plant mentioned by ancient writers, which, eaten +by mistake, produced fits of “sardonic laughter,” or even death, it does not +appear to be peculiar to the island. Mimaut thinks, from the descriptions of +Pliny and Pausanias, that the large-leafed water-parsley (<i>Sium latifolium</i>) is +referred to.</p> + +<p>The number of species of animals, like that of plants, is smaller in Sardinia +than on the neighbouring continent. There are neither bears, badgers, polecats, +nor moles. Vipers or venomous serpents of any description do not exist, and the +only animal to be dreaded is the tarentula (<i>arza</i>, or <i>argia</i>), +a sting from which +can be cured only by dancing until completely exhausted, or by immersion in +dung. The ordinary frog, though common in Corsica, does not exist, but European +butterflies are numerous. The <i>moufflon</i>, which is, perhaps, the ancestor of our +domestic sheep, and has been exterminated in nearly all the islands of the +Mediterranean, still lives in the mountains of Corsica and Sardinia. Wild horses +roamed over Sant’ Antioco as recently as the beginning of +this century; myriads <span class="xxpn" id="p344">{344}</span> +of rabbits burrow in the small islands lining the coast; and wild goats with long +horns and yellow teeth inhabit the limestone island of Tavolara, in the Gulf of +Terranova. These goats are descended from domestic animals abandoned at some +former period. Caprera, the residence of Garibaldi, is named after the goats +which formerly inhabited it, and animals of that kind recently introduced there +quickly returned to a state of nature.</p> + +<p>Naturalists have observed that the mammals of Sardinia are smaller than the +same species living on the continent. The goat is the only exception to the rule. +The stag, deer, wild boar, fox, wild cat, hare, rabbit, marten, and weasel are all of +them smaller than the continental varieties. The same rule applies to domesticated +animals, with the exception of the pig, which grows to a great size, especially where +it is allowed to roam through oak forests. There is a variety of this animal +whose hoofs are not cloven, and which ought, therefore, to be classed amongst solipeds. +The horses and asses of Sardinia are dwarfs. But the horse is distinguished +by great sobriety, sureness of foot, vigour, and endurance. If in addition to these +advantages it possessed a more attractive exterior, it would rank among the most +highly appreciated horses of Europe. As to the donkeys, though hardly larger +than a mastiff, they are brave little animals, and frequently share with their +masters the only room of their abode. The old-fashioned mills, resembling in +every respect the Roman bas-reliefs which may be seen in the Vatican, are +propelled by these donkeys, which thus materially contribute towards the support +of their proprietors.</p> + +<p>Sardinia abounds more than any other country of Western Europe in prehistoric +remains. There are megaliths, known as “giants’ stones,” “altars,” or +“long-stones,” as in Brittany, scarcely any of them showing traces of the chisel. +Dolmens, however, are rare, and the genuineness of all is doubted. Amongst +these monuments there are, perhaps, some which were connected with the worship +of some Eastern deity, for Phœnicians and Carthaginians stayed for a considerable +time upon the island, where they founded Caralis, Nora, Tharros, and other towns; +and even during the time of the Romans it was customary to place Punic inscriptions +upon the tombstones. The ruins of Tharros have yielded golden idols and +other articles in large numbers, most of them being of Egyptian origin. But the +principal witnesses to the civilisation of the ancient Sards are the curious +structures known as <i>nuraghi</i>. They generally occupy the hill-tops, and, seen from +a distance, resemble pyramids. The limestone plateau of Giara, near the centre of +the island, is surrounded by masonry structures of this description, which abound +also in other portions of the island, the number still existing being nearly 4,000. +They are most numerous in the basaltic region to the south of Macomer, +and are met with for the most part in fertile districts, far away from the arid +steppes.</p> + +<p>The origin and uses of these nuraghi have been a subject of much discussion, but +archæologists now almost universally adopt the views of Signor Spano, the indefatigable +explorer of Sardinian antiquities. According to him these nuraghi were +dwellings, and their Phœnician name simply means “round +house.” The rudest <span class="xxpn" id="p345">{345}</span> +among them, dating back probably for forty centuries, contain but a single chamber. +They were erected during the age of stone, when man first gave up his cavern +dwellings. The more recent constructions date back to the age of bronze, and even +of iron. More skill is exhibited in their structure, though no mortar has been +used, and they contain two or more chambers, forming as many floors, and accessible +by means of stone stairs. The ground floor of some is large enough for the accommodation +of forty or fifty persons, and is furnished with antechambers and small +semicircular recesses. The nuraghi of Su Domu or S’Orcu, near Domus Novas, +which has recently been demolished, contained ten chambers and four courtyards; +it was a fortress as well as a dwelling-place, capable of accommodating a hundred +persons and standing a siege. The dwellings of the modern Albanians and of the +Swaneti in the Caucasus still resemble these ancient abodes.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg127"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib345xmlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 127—<span class="smcap">L<b>A</b></span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>IARA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 308,640.</div> +<img src="images/ib345.jpg" width="600" height="478" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The rubbish which accumulated in these nuraghi has yielded a multitude of +objects which throw light upon the daily life of the inhabitants, and bear witness to +their relative civilisation. The lower strata only contain hand-made utensils, stone +arms, and pottery, but in the upper and more recent layers many articles of bronze +have been found. Other monuments of cyclopean structure stand near these +ancient dwellings. They are popularly known as “giants’ +tombs,” and Signor <span class="xxpn" id="p346">{346}</span> +Sapi, who has examined a large number of them, has discovered in every instance +the ashes of human beings.</p> + +<p>Though very superstitious, the Sardinians have no legends respecting these +dwellings of the aborigines, and at most attribute them to the devil. This +absence of traditions is no doubt traceable to the almost total annihilation of +the inhabitants by successive conquerors. The Carthaginians showed no mercy +to the aborigines, and during the first centuries of Roman rule massacres and +forcible emigration were the order of the day, and the gaps thus created were filled +up by Italian colonists and exiles.</p> + +<p>The ancient Sards were most likely Iberians. They are of low stature, and +the climate, which has stunted the growth of wild and domesticated animals, +appears to have influenced man likewise; but they are well proportioned and +muscular, have an abundance of black hair and strong beards, and scarcely ever +grow bald. There are minor differences in the Sards of the two provinces. Those +of the north have generally oval features and an aquiline nose, whilst those near +Cagliari, who are probably more mixed, have irregular features and prominent +cheek-bones.</p> + +<p>The inhabitants of the interior of the island are, perhaps, of purer race than any +other Europeans. Their ancestors, no doubt, were of the most diverse origin, but +most invasions which took place after the Roman era stopped short at the coast. +The Vandals paid a visit to Sardinia, but all the other Germanic tribes, who +ravaged nearly every other country of Western Europe, spared that island, and +its inhabitants were thus able to preserve their manners and language. The +Moors, Pisans, Genoese, Catalonians, and Spaniards, who successively invaded the +island, never penetrated beyond the coast. There is only one exception to this +rule, viz. that of the Barbaricini, who inhabit the mountain district of Barbagia, +in the very centre of the island, and who are supposed to be the descendants of +Berbers expelled from Africa by the Vandals. When they came to the island +they were still pagans, and they intermarried with their neighbours, the Ilienses, +an aboriginal tribe, pagans like themselves. They were converted to Christianity +in the seventh century, and the sombre dress worn by their women reminds us of +Barbary.</p> + +<p>Of all the idioms derived from the Latin, that spoken in Sardinia has most +resemblance to the language of the ancient Romans. More than five hundred +words are absolutely identical. There are likewise a few Greek words not met +with in any other Latin idiom, as well as two or three words which have no +affinity with any other European tongue, and which are, perhaps, derived from the +language spoken by the aborigines. The two leading dialects, those of Logoduro, +in the north, and of Cagliari, are directly derived from the Latin, and are, perhaps, +most nearly related to Spanish. At Sassari, and in some of the neighbouring coast +districts, an Italian dialect is spoken which is very much like that of Corsica or +Genoa. At Alghero the descendants of the Catalonian immigrants who settled +there about the middle of the fourteenth century still speak their old Provençal. +The <i>Maurelli</i>, or <i>Maureddus</i>, in the environs of Iglesias, who +are probably Berbers, <span class="xxpn" id="p347">{347}</span> +and can be recognised by their narrow skulls, make use of a few African words. +Maltzan looks upon the inhabitants of the fertile district of Millis as the purest +representatives of African immigrants, and it was they who introduced the cultivation +of the orange into Sardinia.</p> + +<p>The Sardinians of the interior not only retain their ancient language, but likewise +many of their ancient customs. Their dances are still the same as in the +time of Greece. In the north the steps are regulated by the human voice, the +chanters occupying the centre of the ring. In the south a musical instrument, +the <i>launedda</i>, is used, which is nothing but an ancient flute, made of two or three +reeds. The customs observed at christenings, weddings, and funerals are likewise +of remote date. Marriage, as amongst nearly all the ancient inhabitants of +Europe, is preceded by a feigned abduction of the bride. The latter, after she has +entered the house of her husband, must not stir from her place during that day, +nor speak a single word. Mute as a statue, she is no longer a sentient being, +but a “thing,” the property of her husband. She is not permitted to see her +relatives during three days, and in the south many women partly conceal their +features.</p> + +<p>The mountaineers likewise observe the lugubrious ceremony of a wake, called +<i>titio</i> or <i>attito</i>. Women, who are either the friends of the deceased or are engaged +for the purpose, penetrate the mortuary chamber, tear their hair, howl, and +improvise hymns of mourning. These old pagan ceremonies become truly terrific +when the deceased has been the victim of assassination, for in that case the +mourners swear to take the life of the murderer. Up to the beginning of this +century the practice of the vendetta annually cost the lives of hundreds of young +men. At the present day it is confined to the most secluded parts of the island, +and in the mountain districts of Nuoro and La Gallura it is customary at +christenings to place a few bullets in the swaddling-clothes of the infants, +these consecrated bullets being supposed never to miss their mark. Another +custom still more barbarous has ceased to be observed since the beginning of +the last century. Women, called “finishers” (<i>accabadure</i>), were employed to +hasten the end of dying persons, a practice which often led to the most atrocious +deeds.</p> + +<p>The peasant of Sardinia, though not the proprietor of the soil, is nevertheless +permitted to enjoy the result of his labour. The feudal system existed up to 1840, +and many traces of it still survive. The great barons, most of them of Spanish +extraction, were almost the absolute masters of the country, and up to 1836 they +administered the law, had their prisons, and erected gallows as a symbol of their +power. The peasants, however, were not tied to the land, but could migrate at +pleasure, and custom granted them a fair share of the produce of the soil. By +virtue of an <i>ademprivio</i> they were permitted to cut wood in the forests, to pasture +their sheep on the hills, and to bring into cultivation the waste lands of the plains. +Agriculture was carried on in the most primitive fashion, for the great lords of +the land usually resided abroad, and the management of their estates was left to +bailiffs. Government has now become the proprietor of most +of the unenclosed <span class="xxpn" id="p348">{348}</span> +land, 80,000 acres of which have been ceded to the Anglo-Italian Company, which +has undertaken to provide the island with a network of railways.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg128"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib348xmlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 128.—<span class="smcap">D<b>ISTRICT</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">I<b>GLESIAS.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 420,800.</div> +<img src="images/ib348.jpg" width="600" height="527" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>In the more densely populated districts the division of the land is exceedingly +minute, and this subdivision is still progressing at a most disastrous rate. The +nomad herdsmen, on the other hand, possess no land of their own, though, if +inclined, they are at liberty to enclose a plot. But vague proprietary rights like +these render the careful cultivation of the soil impossible. It has been seriously +proposed to expropriate the whole of the land, and to sell it to a few enterprising +capitalists, but this would simply amount to a restoration of the old feudal times, +and poverty, which is great even now, would become greater. There are villages in +the district of Ogliastra where the peasants eat bread made of the acorns of <i>Quercus +ilex</i>, the dough being kneaded with water containing a fatty clay. This is, perhaps, +the only instance of earth-eating in Europe. The Spaniards, too, eat acorn bread, +but they use the fruit of <i>Quercus ballota</i>, which is really edible, and are careful +not to mix its flour with earth.</p> + +<p>The Sardinians, even when they are the owners of pasture-grounds or of fields, +never live in the country. Like the Sicilians, they are concentrated in towns or +large villages, and neither hamlets nor isolated farmhouses are +met with. Even <span class="xxpn" id="p349">{349}</span> +the shepherds in the mountains build their huts in groups called <i>stazzi</i>, and +combine for mutual protection into <i>cussorgie</i>. Members of these associations, when +they lose their cattle from disease or any other cause, may claim one or more +beasts from every one of their comrades living within the same district or canton. +In other parts of the island—as, for instance, near Iglesias—the produce of the +orchards is looked upon as common property. The mountaineers, though poor, +practise the ancient virtue of hospitality, and though the dwellings are rude, they +find means of making a stranger staying amongst them comfortable.</p> + +<p>The products of Sardinia form but a small proportion of those of all Italy. +Most of the peasants only work by fits and starts, and hardly more than a fourth +of the area of the island has been brought under cultivation. It sometimes +happens that the crops are destroyed by the scorching heat of the sun, or eaten up +by locusts, which come in swarms from Africa. Except near Sassari no attempt is +made to improve the produce. The olive-tree alone is cultivated with some care, +for the grower of a certain number of these trees may claim political privileges, +and even the title of “Count,” and thousands of proprietors have converted their +sterile steppes into productive olive groves. The millions of oranges grown in the +gardens of Millis and elsewhere are taken entirely for home consumption. +Commercially these oranges are of less importance than the saline plants collected +in the marshes of the coast districts, and the ashes of which are exported to +Marseilles to be converted into soda.</p> + +<p>The working of granite and marble quarries yields some profit, but the mines, +which were of such importance in the time of the Romans, are hardly touched +now. There is only one iron mine, that of San Leone, where work has been carried +on seriously by a French company since 1822. It yields about 50,000 tons of ore +annually, and the oldest railway of the island connects that mine with Cagliari. The +district of Iglesias, where the Romans founded Plumbea and Metalla, and the +Pisans searched for silver, has recently regained some of its ancient importance on +account of its lead and zinc mines. The waste of the old mines is likewise being +scientifically treated by French, English, and Italian companies, to whom mining +claims have been ceded, and a curious stalactite cavern which traverses the hill +near Domus Novas has been utilised in gaining access to the scoriæ. Iglesias is +rapidly growing into a city of modern aspect, the village of Gonessa is already a +respectable town, and the little harbour of Porto Scuso, until recently almost +deserted, is now crowded with small craft employed in carrying annually 900,000 +tons of lead and zinc ore to the roadstead of Carlo-Forte. Unfortunately the +miners, especially those from abroad, frequently succumb to the climate.</p> + +<p>The fisheries, being for the most part carried on in the bays exposed to the +sea breezes, are not attended by the same dangers. Certain portions of the coast +abound in fish, such as the Bay of Cagliari, and the narrow arms of the sea in the +archipelago of the Maddalena, which the ancients searched for purple shells. +Anchovies and “sardines” periodically visit the coasts, and as many as 50,000 +tunny-fish are sometimes caught in a single season. The swamps or lagoons likewise +yield fish, which are caught in nets spread at the openings +of the channels <span class="xxpn" id="p350">{350}</span> +communicating with the sea. The swamp of Cagliari abounds in shad, that of +Oristano in mullets and eels, and that of Alghero in pike and gold fish. The fisheries +of Sardinia are consequently of much importance, but most of their profits are +reaped by strangers. Corsicans fish near La Maddalena, Genoese around San +Pietro, and Italians monopolize the coral fisheries. These latter, too, collect the +<i>Pinna nobilis</i>, a shell, the silky byssus of which is converted into stuff for garments. +Nor do the Sardinians take to the sea as sailors, and the commerce of the island +is carried on almost exclusively in Genoese and other Italian vessels. Out of +2,400 proverbs collected by Spano, only three refer to the sea ! <a class="afnanch" href="#fn118" id="fnanch118">118</a></p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr01" id="fg129"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 129—<span class="smcap">C<b>AGLIARI,</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AS</span> + <span class="smmaj">SEEN</span> + <span class="smmaj">FROM</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ASS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>ONERIA.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib350.jpg" width="600" height="531" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>The inhabitants of the northern “Cape” of Sassari, or <i>di Sopra</i>, claim to be +more intelligent and civilised than those of the southern “Cape” of Cagliari, or +<i>di Sotto</i>. The former do not call themselves Sardinians at all, but apply that +name, which to them is synonymous with barbarians, +to the inhabitants of the <span class="xxpn" id="p351">{351}</span> +interior and of the south. In former times these two sections of the population +hated each other, and the spirit of the vendetta, which set family against family, +village against village, made its influence felt all over the island. This old +animosity has not yet completely died out; but the people of Sassari can no +longer claim to be the superiors of their southern neighbours. They certainly +are better agriculturists and more industrious, but the southerners possess the +richest mines, their portion of the island is most productive, and it is the seat of +the capital.</p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg130"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib351xmlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 130.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ORT</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>ERRANOVA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 250,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib351.jpg" width="600" height="476" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Cagliari, the ancient <i>Caralis</i>, has remained the great emporium of the island +since the days of Carthage. Only a few idols, sepulchral chambers, the ruins of +an aqueduct, and an amphitheatre excavated in the rock, recall the dominion of +Carthaginians and Romans, but it could not be deprived of its excellent harbour +and magnificent roadstead. The town was only a short time under the rule +of the Moors, but its physiognomy is almost more oriental than that of any city +in Europe, many of its houses being provided with cupolas and balconies overhanging +the streets. Its position as a place of commerce is most favourable, for +it lies on the ocean highway connecting Sicily with the Balearic Islands, and the +coast of Africa is within a day’s sail. It is sure to prosper, especially if a serious +effort is made to drain the marshes and to transform the plain of the Campidano +into a fertile garden. The latter, an ancient arm of the sea, extends to the +south-east towards Oristano, the “town of potters.” During +the Middle Ages <span class="xxpn" id="p352">{352}</span> +the latter was the seat of the most powerful lords of the island, and it was thence +Eleonora promulgated her famous <i>Carta de logu</i>, which became the public law of +the whole island. Oristano has an excellent harbour, sheltered by the peninsula +of Tharros, upon which the Phœnicians had founded one of their settlements; its +fields are fertile, and, to bring about a return of its ancient prosperity, it is only +necessary to drain the marshes which now hem it in. In former times fires were +lighted upon the walls of the town during the season of malaria, to purify the atmosphere; +but the vast forests from which the fuel for these fires was procured have +disappeared, and this portion of Sardinia is no longer entitled to its ancient +epithet of “Arborea.” It is said that in the marshes of Nurachi, to the north-east +of Oristano, may be heard now and then a noise resembling the bellowing +of a bull. This noise is probably produced by the passage of air through some +subterranean cavern, and similar phenomena have been observed on the coast of +Dalmatia.</p> + +<p>Sassari the delightful, the rival of Cagliari, is embosomed amidst olive-trees, +gardens, and country houses. It alone, of all the towns of the island, could boast +of a republican government during the Middle Ages, and the public spirit of its +present inhabitants is, perhaps, traceable to this circumstance. Its geographical +position, however, is far less favourable than that of Cagliari, for a zone of +swamps separates it from the sea. It might export its produce through the port +of Alghero or the excellent harbour of Porto Conto, to the south of the +mountains of La Nurra; but facility of access has dictated its choice of Porto +Torres, a miserable village on the swampy shore of the Gulf of Asinara. Porto +Torres occupies the site of a Roman city, and the arches of a huge aqueduct and +the columns of a Temple of Fortune still rise above the reeds. This old port +certainly offers great facility for the export of the olive oil of Sassari and the +wines of Tempio, as respects France and Genoa; but the intricate navigation of +the Strait of Bonifacio separates it from the nearest Italian coast. Italy has +therefore determined to create an additional port on the east coast of the island, +and the Bay of Terranova has been selected for that purpose. <i>Olbia</i>, which at +the time of the Romans had no less than 150,000 inhabitants, occupied the site +of the present town, which the Italians fondly imagine may become the great +emporium of the island. Its port is certainly well sheltered, and the roadsteads +of the archipelago of La Maddalena near it afford additional accommodation; but +seriously to improve the condition of Sardinia it will be necessary, above all things, +to drain its dreary swamps, and to “transform their poisonous exhalations into +bread.” <a class="afnanch" href="#fn119" id="fnanch119">119</a></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="IX.—The Present and Future of Italy.">IX.—<span + class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>RESENT</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">F<b>UTURE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">I<b>TALY.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">No impartial spectator can deny that Italy, since it has again taken its place +among the nations of Europe, promises great things +for the future. Even its <span class="xxpn" id="p353">{353}</span> +political regeneration has brought to the surface men of the highest intellect, +courage, zeal, and public spirit. There are some amongst them whom posterity +will look upon as a credit to all mankind. Possibly this period of excitement +and nervous activity may be succeeded by a sort of moral collapse, such as +generally takes place after every great crisis in the life of a nation. But this +need not render us anxious for the future, for generations exhausted by the efforts +they have made will be succeeded by others eager to continue the work their predecessors +have begun.</p> + +<p>In sciences and arts the native country of Volta, Cialdi, Secchi, Rossini, Verdi, +and Vela occupies even now a position of equality with the most advanced nations +of Europe. The Italian of the present day is able to refer without shame to the +two great centuries of the Renaissance, for he has entered upon a second period +of regeneration, and the names of contemporaries can be mentioned by the side +of the great names of the past. Italy has its skilful painters and sculptors, +its celebrated architects and unrivalled musicians. The great works achieved by +its engineers are deserving the study of foreigners. Amongst its physicists, +geologists, astronomers, and mathematicians there are some of the brightest +ornaments of the age, and the assiduity with which universities are frequented +insures their having worthy successors. A geographical society only recently +established has successfully taken up the work of exploration so gloriously carried +on by the Genoese and Venetians. It is not just, therefore, to say ironically +that “Italy has been made, but not Italians.” Individually the Italians are +inferior to no other race of Europe, and the reorganization of the country would +have been impossible had there been any deficiency in men of mark.</p> + +<p>Italy is more densely inhabited than any other of the great states of Europe, +in spite of vast extents of almost uninhabitable mountain tracts and swamps. +The population, however, increases less rapidly than in Russia, England, or +Germany. It doubles in about a century, whilst that of Russia doubles in fifty +and that of France in two hundred years. Italy thus occupies an intermediate +position. In Apulia and Calabria, which are amongst the poorest provinces, the +birth rate is highest, whilst in the wealthy Marches and Umbria it is lowest. On +an average the Italian dies when he is thirty-two, and his life is consequently +much shorter than that of the average Frenchman or Englishman.</p> + +<p>Agriculture and the development of the natural resources of the soil and the +sea engage much more attention than industry properly so called. Nearly +fifty per cent. of the total area is under cultivation. The cereals raised do +not suffice for the wants of the inhabitants, but other products are exported in +considerable quantities. In its production of oil Italy holds a foremost rank as +regards quantity, but not always with respect to quality. The amount of fruit +grown, such as figs, grapes, almonds, and oranges, is greater than in any other +country of Europe. The chestnut forests in the Apennines and Alps yield rich +harvests. Its mulberry plantations are four times more extensive than those of +France, and the raw silk produced in favourable years exceeds in quantity that +exported from China. The peninsula is still entitled to its +ancient epithet of <span class="xxpn" id="p354">{354}</span> +Œnotria (wine land), but, apart from certain districts of continental Italy and +Sicily, the quality of wine produced, owing to carelessness on the part of the +growers, is inferior to what it is in France. The cultivation of cotton is comparatively +of small importance. The breeding of animals yields large profits, and +Italy is noted throughout Europe for the quality of some kinds of cheese.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn120" id="fnanch120">120</a></p> + +<p>The working of the iron mines of Elba, the quarrying of marble and granite in +the Alps and Apuanic Alps, the extraction of borax and boracic acid in the +Tuscan Sub-Apennines, the mining for lead and zinc in Sardinia, and for sulphur +in Sicily,<a class="afnanch" href="#fn121" id="fnanch121">121</a> lead up to industrial pursuits properly so called. These latter extend +nearly to everything, from the manufacture of pins to the construction of steam-engines +and ships. Italy, however, is eminent only in the production of certain +<i>articles de luxe</i>, such as straw bonnets, cameos, coral jewellery, glass, and in the +preparation of macaroni and other farinaceous pastes. The manufacture of silk, +however, has taken a rapid development in recent years, and Milan has become a +dangerous rival of Lyons. In the province of Novara, and more especially at +Biella, there are hundreds of woollen factories. The cotton manufacture is not of +much importance, and linen-weaving is for the most part carried on as a domestic +industry. Italy, in fact, cannot yet be called a manufacturing country. The number +of workmen is large, but they mostly labour at home or in small workshops,<a class="afnanch" href="#fn122" id="fnanch122">122</a> and +a division of labour, such as exists in England, France, or Germany, is hardly +known. Manufactories, however, are rapidly increasing, and economical conditions +are gradually becoming what they are already in most other countries of +Europe.</p> + +<p>Italy possesses a powerful mercantile marine, manned by +150,000 seamen; but its foreign commerce is far less than +might have been expected from its tonnage.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn123" id="fnanch123">123</a> Most of +the vessels are engaged in the coasting trade. The first +Italian vessel was seen in the Pacific in 1847, and even +now the Italian flag is very inadequately represented in +the navigation of the great oceans. Italian patriots are +anxious to see the commerce of the country extended to the +most distant regions. For the present Italy enjoys a sort +of monopoly in the Mediterranean, and +any increase of <span class="xxpn" id="p355">{355}</span> +population or wealth in Northern Africa must prove of immediate advantage to it. +But there can be no doubt that the proposed railway from Antwerp or Calais to +Saloniki or Constantinople will seriously affect the transit trade of Italian ports. +Nor are Italian shipowners able to compete with their rivals of Marseilles or Trieste +when it is a question of speed, for the number of their steamers is very small.</p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr02" id="fg131"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib355xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 131.—<span class="smcap">N<b>AVIGATION</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">I<b>TALY.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib355.jpg" width="599" height="800" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>The facilities for carrying on coasting trade have, in some measure, interfered +with the development of the inland trade of the country. The construction of +railways, however, is gradually bringing about a change. Already +five lines of <span class="xxpn" id="p356">{356}</span> +rails cross the Apennines, others are projected, and one of the Italian railways, +namely, that which pierces the Alps in the tunnel of Mont Cenis, and finally +follows the eastern coast to Rimini, has become a portion of the great European +highway to India. Nor must the political importance of these railways be underrated, +for they knit together the most distant provinces of Italy, and make the +country really one.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn124" id="fnanch124">124</a></p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg132"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib356xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 132.—<span class="smcap">R<b>OUTES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>OMMERCE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">I<b>TALY.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 6,000,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib356.jpg" width="600" height="786" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div><span class="xxpn" id="p357">{357}</span></div> + +<p>The commerce of Italy has increased rapidly of late, but it is still inferior not +only to that of England, France, Germany, Austria, and Russia, but likewise to +that of much smaller countries, like Belgium and the Netherlands. In 1875 +the imports, including transit, were estimated at £48,614,280, the exports at +£42,301,800. France participates in this commerce to the extent of 31 per cent., +England is represented by 23, Austria by 20, and all the other countries of the +world share in the remainder. Recently the commerce with North and South +America has assumed considerable proportions, and efforts are being made to obtain +a footing in Eastern Asia.</p> + +<p>The great scourge of Italy consists in the poverty of its peasantry even in +the most fertile provinces, as in Lombardy and the Basilicata. These peasants +live in foul hovels, and the united earnings of a whole family are hardly sufficient +to procure bread. Chestnuts, and a polenta of maize and paste made of damaged +flour, are the principal articles of food, and nothing is left for luxuries, or even +comfortable clothing. Rickets and other diseases brought about by an insufficiency +of food are common, and, in fact, mortality is very great. Emigration is under +these circumstances of immense advantage to the country, for the thousands of +Italians who seek work or found new homes in South America, the United States, +France, Turkey, Egypt, and elsewhere, not only earn their bread, but also render +some assistance to those of their relatives who remain behind. It is said that out +of 500,000 Italians living abroad, no less than 100,000 are engaged in art, either +as painters, sculptors, or musicians, the latter being frequently mere street-singers +or organ-grinders.</p> + +<p>Ignorance, the usual companion of poverty, is still very great throughout the +peninsula. We might err in condemning the Italians because of their ignorance +of the arts of reading and writing, for, as the heirs of an ancient civilisation, +they are more polished in their manners than the educated peasants of the +North. Still this ignorance is most deplorable, for it precludes all progress. +Nearly two-thirds of the population over ten years of age are unable to read, and +fifty-nine men and seventy-eight women out of every hundred are unable to sign +the marriage registers. There are several thousand parishes without elementary +schools, and the number of pupils, instead of amounting to the normal proportion +of one to every six or seven inhabitants, is only one to about eleven.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn125" id="fnanch125">125</a> Education, +however, is making fair progress, but its influence upon the diminution of crimes +of violence has hitherto been small. In 1874 Signor Cantelli, the Home +Secretary, stated that there occurred annually 3,000 homicides, 4,000 cases of +highway robbery, and 30,000 violent assaults.</p> + +<p>The permanent confusion of the finances of Italy, attended as it is by heavy +and vexatious taxes, must be looked upon as one of the principal causes which +retard the development of the country. The national debt may appear a small +matter if we compare it with that of France, but it has been +raised in the course <span class="xxpn" id="p358">{358}</span> +of a single generation, and is augmenting from year to year. The revenue +increases but the expenditure does so likewise, and the additional income +resulting from an increase of taxation and the sales of Church property is not +sufficient to cover the deficiency. The heavy cost of the army, an absence of +sustained efforts in carrying on public works, waste and fraud by public servants, +have hitherto prevented the establishment of a balance between income and +expenditure, and the paper money issued by Government is nowhere accepted at +its nominal value.</p> + +<p>This disorganization of the finances places Italy at the mercy of foreigners, +and the arrangements which have to be made from time to time with foreign +capitalists are not always of a purely financial nature. The inefficiency of her +military and naval organization, moreover, compels her to cultivate foreign alliances +as expediency may direct, and to these alliances Italy is, in a large measure, +indebted for her political unity.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn126" id="fnanch126">126</a></p> + +<p>Nor is this unity even now as perfect as could be desired. The Pope has been +deprived of his temporal power; he resides at the Vatican as a guest; and the +money offered him by the Italian Government, but which has never been accepted, +is not tribute, but a gratuity. But, in spite of this, the Pope is still a real power, +and his very presence interferes substantially with the permanent establishment +of the state. The Catholics of the world have not yet acquiesced in his disestablishment, +and they allow no opportunity for attacking the new order of things +to escape them. Political Europe is consequently much interested in the home +affairs of Italy, and feels tempted frequently to intervene. The most expert +diplomacy may not be able to avert this danger, and if there is a struggle it will +certainly not be confined to the peninsula.</p> + +<p>In the end Italy will no doubt escape from the anomalous position of having +for her capital a city which is the seat of a theocratic government claiming the +allegiance of the Roman Catholics of the entire world. The geographical +conditions of no other country are equally favourable to the development of +national sentiments and the maintenance of a national individuality. At the +same time the well-defined boundaries of the country deprive it of all force of +expansion. Italy will never play a great part beyond the bounds of the Mediterranean, +and though Italian may obtain a certain preponderance in Tunis, Egypt, +and the Levant, the noble language of Dante has no chance, as regards universality, +when opposed to English, French, Spanish, German, or Russian.</p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="X.—Government and Administration.">X.—<span + class="smcap">G<b>OVERNMENT</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>DMINISTRATION.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">The +charter promulgated in March, 1848, declares the old kingdom of +Sardinia to be an hereditary constitutional monarchy. It has +gradually been <span class="xxpn" id="p359">{359}</span> +extended to the other portions of the peninsula. Like most similar documents, it +guarantees equality before the law, personal liberty, and inviolability of the domicile. +The press is free, “subject to a law repressing its abuses;” the right of +meeting is recognised, “but not in the case of places open to the general public;” +and all citizens are promised the enjoyment of equal civil and political rights, +“except in those cases which shall be determined by law.”</p> + +<p>The executive is intrusted to the King, but no law or act of government is +valid unless countersigned by a minister. The King, as such, is commander of +the naval and military forces, he concludes all treaties, and the assent of the +Chambers is only required if they concern cessions of territory, or entail an +expenditure of public money. All Government officials are appointed by the King, +he may dissolve the Chamber of Deputies, justice is administered in his name, +and he possesses the right of pardon. He enjoys the fruits of the Crown lands, +and may dispose of his private property without reference to the general laws of +the country. The civil list of the King and the members of his family annually +exceeds £800,000 !</p> + +<p>Senators are appointed by the King from amongst ecclesiastical, military, and +civil functionaries, persons of wealth, and men who have deserved well of the +country. Their number is not limited, and they must be forty years of age. +Deputies are elected for five years. They must be thirty years of age. Neither +senators nor deputies are in receipt of emoluments, and this may explain the +little zeal they exhibit in the performance of their public duties. A quorum, +consisting of one-half the members of each house <i>plus</i> one, is frequently unattainable +for weeks.</p> + +<p>The franchise is enjoyed by professors of universities and colleges, civil +servants, knights of orders of chivalry, members of the liberal professions, +merchants, persons who have an income of £24 from money invested in Government +securities, and all others twenty-five years of age, able to read and write, +and paying 32s. in taxes. The number of electors is about 400,000, but hardly +one-half of them ever go to the poll.</p> + +<p>Each province occupies the position of a “corporation,” which may hold +property, and enjoys a certain amount of self-government. The “Provincial +Councils” consist of from twenty to sixty members, who are chosen by the +municipal electors for five years. These Councils usually occupy themselves +with the material interests of the province, and, when not sitting, are represented +by a “Deputation” charged with controlling the acts of the prefect.</p> + +<p>The municipal organization is very similar to that of the provinces. The +Councils are elected for five years: all males of twenty-one years of age paying +from 4s. to 20s. in taxes (according to the importance of the municipality), +professors, civil servants, members of liberal professions, and soldiers who +have been decorated are in the enjoyment of the franchise. The Council meets +twice a year, and its sittings are held in public if a majority demands it. It +appoints a municipal <i>giunta</i> of from two to twelve members, charged with the +conduct of current affairs. The mayors, like the +provincial prefects, are <span class="xxpn" id="p360">{360}</span> +appointed by Government, but must be chosen from the members of the Municipal Council.</p> + +<p>The great territorial divisions of the kingdom (see p. <a + href="#p362" title="go to p. 362">362</a>) consist of 69 +provinces and 284 circles (<i>circondarii</i>), or districts. These latter again are subdivided +into 1,779 judicial districts (<i>mandamenti</i>) and 8,360 communes. The +central Government is represented in the provinces by a prefect, in the districts +by a sub-prefect, and in the communes by a mayor, or <i>sindaco</i>. This system of +administration is very much like that existing in modern France.</p> + +<p>The administration of justice was organized in 1865. In each commune there +is a “Conciliator,” appointed for three years by Government, on the presentation +of the Municipal Council. A “Pretor” administers justice at the capital of each of +the judicial districts: he is assisted by one or more Vice-pretors. Next follow 161 +civil and correctional courts, 92 assize courts, 24 courts of appeal, 25 commercial +tribunals, and 4 courts of cassation; the latter at Florence, Naples, Palermo, and +Turin. The Code of Laws is an adaptation of the Code Napoléon, and breathes +the same spirit.</p> + +<p>In military matters Prussia has served as a model. Every Italian, on attaining +his twenty-first year, becomes liable to serve in the army or navy. Men embodied +in the first category of the standing army (<i>esercito permanente</i>) remain from three +to five years under the colours, according to the arm to which they belong, and six to +seven years on furlough. The men of the second category, or reserve of the standing +army, drill fifty days, and are then dismissed to their homes. The “mobilised +militia” includes all men up to forty not belonging to the standing army. A +“levy en masse,” or <i>Milizia stanziole</i>, is provided for by law, but nothing has been +done hitherto to render it a reality. The standing army includes 90 regiments of +infantry, 20 regiments of cavalry, 14 of artillery, and 1 of engineers, and numbers +410,000 men; the reserve amounts to 180,000 men; the mobilised militia (247 +battalions, 24 Alpine companies, 60 batteries, and 10 companies of engineers), +277,000, and 234,000 officers and men are stated to be under the colours. The +four great fortresses of the north are Verona, Mantua, Peschiera, and Legnago. +These form the famous “Quadrilateral.” Venice is likewise a place of great +strength, and made an heroic defence in 1849. Palmanova defends the frontier +between the Julian Alps and the Gulf of Trieste. Rocca d’Anfo, on an isolated +rock to the north of Lake Garda, commands the defiles of the Adige and Chiese. +Pizzighettone, on the Adda, is no longer of much importance, now that Italy has +acquired possession of the Quadrilateral; but Alessandria, at the confluence of the +Tanaro and Bormida, will always retain its rank as the great strategical centre of +Piemont, and one of the strongest places of Europe. Casale may be looked upon +as one of its outworks, and together with Genoa defends the passages of the +Apennines. Piacenza and Ferrara command important passages of the Po. The +other fortresses of Italy are Ancona in the centre; Porto Ferrajo in Elba; Gaeta, +Capua, and Taranto in the south; and Messina in Sicily.</p> + +<p>The navy consists of 21 ironclads (179 guns, engines of 11,310 horse-power, +76,842 tons) and 51 wooden steamers, manned by 20,000 +seamen. The great <span class="xxpn" id="p361">{361}</span> +naval arsenals and stations are at Spezia, Genoa, Naples, Castellamare di Stabbia, +Venice, Ancona, and Taranto.</p> + +<p>The Roman Catholic Church alone is acknowledged by the State, but all other +religions are tolerated. The conflict between Church and State is favourable to the +spread of Protestantism; but, apart from the Waldenses and a few foreigners in the +larger towns, there are no Protestants in Italy. Many of those, however, who are +nominally Catholics have ranged themselves amongst the enemies of their Church, +or are perfectly indifferent.</p> + +<p>Italy occupies quite a special position in the world, owing to its being the seat +of the Papacy. Rome is the seat of two governments, viz. that of the King and +of the Sovereign Pontiff. The latter, though shorn of his temporal power, is +in principle one of the most absolute monarchs. Once elected Vicar of Jesus +Christ by the cardinals met in conclave, he is responsible to no one for his +actions, though it is customary for him to listen to the advice of the Sacred +College of Cardinals before deciding questions of importance. The Pope alone, of +all men, is infallible; he can efface the crimes of others, “bind and unbind,” and +holds the keys of heaven and hell, his power extending thus beyond the span of +man’s natural life.</p> + +<p>The cardinals are the great dignitaries of this spiritual government. They +are created by the Pope. Their number is limited to 70, viz. 6 Cardinal Bishops +(who reside at Rome), 50 Cardinal Priests, and 14 Cardinal Deacons. The Cardinal +<i>Camerlengo</i> represents the temporal authority of the Holy See, and on the death of +a pope he takes charge of the Vatican and of the Fisherman’s Key, which is the +symbol of the power bestowed upon St. Peter and his successors. In special cases +the cardinals of the three orders may be convoked to an Œcumenical Council. +On the death of a pope the cardinals elect his successor, who must be fifty-five +years of age, and obtain two-thirds of the votes. His investment with the +pallium and tiara, however, only takes place after the assent of the Governments +of France, Spain, Austria, and Naples (now represented by Italy) has been +secured.</p> + +<p>In virtue of the formula of “A free Church in a free State,” so frequently +repeated since Cavour, the Pope is permitted to enjoy sovereign rights. He +convokes councils and chapters, appoints all ecclesiastical officers, has his own +post-office and telegraph, his guard of nobles and of Swiss, pays no taxes, and +enjoys in perpetuity the palaces of the Vatican and Lateran, as well as the villa +of Castel-Gandolfo, on the Lake of Albano. In addition to this, he has been voted +by the Italian Parliament an annual “dotation” of £129,000. This grant, however, +he has not touched hitherto, but the “Peter’s pence,” collected by the +faithful in all parts of the world, amount to more than double that sum.</p> + +<p>Italy is divided into 47 archiepiscopal and 206 episcopal sees. There are more +than 100,000 secular priests, and in 1866, when the monasteries and convents were +suppressed, their inmates receiving pensions from Government, there were 32,000 +monks and 44,000 nuns. The ecclesiastical army consequently numbers 176,000 +souls, and is nearly as numerous as the military force on +a peace footing. <span class="xxpn" id="p362">{362}</span></p> + +<div class="section"> +<p>The following table exhibits the area and population (estimated for +1875) of the great territorial divisions of Italy:―</p></div> + +<div class="dtblbox"><div class="nowrap"> +<table class="fsz6" summary=""> +<tr> + <th></th> + <th>Area.<br />Square miles.</th> + <th>Population.</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Piemont</td> + <td class="tdright">11,301</td> + <td class="tdright">2,995,213</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Liguria</td> + <td class="tdright">2,056</td> + <td class="tdright">865,254</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Lombardy</td> + <td class="tdright">9,084</td> + <td class="tdright">3,553,913</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Venetia (Venezia)</td> + <td class="tdright">9,060</td> + <td class="tdright">2,733,406</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Emilia</td> + <td class="tdright">7,921</td> + <td class="tdright">2,153,381</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Umbria</td> + <td class="tdright">3,720</td> + <td class="tdright">563,582</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Marches</td> + <td class="tdright">3,748</td> + <td class="tdright">930,712</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Tuscany</td> + <td class="tdright">9,287</td> + <td class="tdright">2,172,832</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Rome (Latium)</td> + <td class="tdright">4,601</td> + <td class="tdright">839,074</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Abruzzos—Molise</td> + <td class="tdright">6,676</td> + <td class="tdright">1,302,966</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Campania</td> + <td class="tdright">6,941</td> + <td class="tdright">2,807,450</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Apulia (Puglie)</td> + <td class="tdright">8,539</td> + <td class="tdright">1,464,604</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Basilicata</td> + <td class="tdright">4,122</td> + <td class="tdright">517,069</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Calabria</td> + <td class="tdright">6,663</td> + <td class="tdright">1,229,614</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Sicily</td> + <td class="tdright">11,290</td> + <td class="tdright">2,698,672</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Sardinia</td> + <td class="tdright">9,398</td> + <td class="tdright">654,432</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdctr">Total</td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">114,407</span></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">27,482,174</span></td></tr> +</table></div></div><!--dtblbox--> + +<div class="dctr10"><img src="images/ib362.jpg" + width="280" height="374" alt="" /></div> + +<div class="chapter" id="p363"> +<div class="dctr01"><img src="images/ib363.jpg" + width="600" height="126" alt="" /></div> + +<h2 class="h2herein" title="Corsica.">CORSICA.<a + class="afnanchstar" href="#fn127" id="fnanch127" + title="go to note 127">*</a> +<span class="sphr"><img class="ihra" src="images/hr-ia013.png" + width="248" height="27" alt="" /></span></h2></div> + +<p class="pfirst"> +<span class="spdropcap"><img class="idropcap" src="images/drop-c.jpg" +width="248" height="262" alt="C" /></span>ORSICA, +with Sardinia, forms a world apart. At a remote epoch +these two islands were but one, and it is curious to find that +Corsica, which politically now forms part of France, is geographically +as well as historically much more Italian than its sister +island. A glance at a map is sufficient to convince us that Corsica +is a dependency of Italy, for while abyssal depths of more than 500 fathoms +separate it from Provence, it is joined to the coast of Tuscany by a submarine +plateau, the mountains of which rise above the surface of the waters as islands. The +climate and natural productions of the island are those of Italy, and the language +of its inhabitants is Italian. Purchased from the Genoese, then conquered by +main force, Corsica in the end voluntarily united its destinies with those of France. +It has now been connected for more than three generations with the latter, and +there can be no doubt that most of its citizens look upon themselves as Frenchmen.</p> + +<p>Though only half the size of Sardinia, Corsica is nevertheless larger than an +average French department. The fourth island in size of the Mediterranean, it +follows next to Cyprus, but is far more important than that island, and only yields +to Sicily and Sardinia in wealth and population.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn128" id="fnanch128">128</a> It is a country of great natural +beauty. Its mountains, attaining an altitude of over 8,000 feet, remain covered +with snow during half the year, and the view from the summits embraces nearly +the whole of the island, its barren rocks, forests, and cultivated fields. Most of +the valleys abound in running water, and cascades glitter in all directions. Old +Genoese towers, standing upon promontories, formerly defended the entrance to +every bay exposed to incursions of the Saracens, but they are hardly more nowadays +than embellishments of the landscape.</p> + +<p>Monte Cinto, the culminating point of the island, does not +pierce the region of <span class="xxpn" id="p364">{364}</span> +persistent snows. A huge citadel of granite, whose fastnesses afforded a shelter to +the Corsicans during their wars of independence, it rises in the north-western +portion of the island. From its summit we can trace the whole of the coast from +the French Alps to the Apennines of Tuscany. There are other peaks to the +north and south of it which almost rival it in height.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn129" id="fnanch129">129</a> This main chain of the +island consists throughout of crystalline rock. Transverse ridges connect it with +a parallel range of limestone mountains on the east, which extend northward +through the whole of the peninsula of Bastia, and shut in, farther south, the old +lake basin of Corte, now drained by the Golo, Tavignano, and other rivers. The +whole of the interior of Corsica may be described as a labyrinth of mountains, and +in order to pass from village to village it is necessary to climb up steep steps, or +<i>scale</i>, and to ascend from the region of olives to that of pasturage. The high-road +which joins Ajaccio to Bastia has to climb a pass 3,793 feet +in height (Fig. 134), +and even the road following the populous western coast ascends and descends continuously, +in order to avoid the promontories descending steeply into the sea. +These physical obstacles sufficiently explain why railways have not yet been +built.</p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg133"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib364lg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 133.—<span class="smcap">S<b>UBMARINE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>LATEAU</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">BETWEEN</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>ORSICA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>USCANY.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 1,850,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib364.jpg" width="600" height="478" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div class="dctr01" id="map8"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib364bxxlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption">SPAIN AND PORTUGAL</div> +<img src="images/ib364b.jpg" width="600" height="482" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The western coast of the island is indented by numerous gulfs and bays, which +resemble ancient fiords partly filled up by alluvial sediment. +On the eastern coast, <span class="xxpn" id="p365">{365}</span> +which faces Italy, the slopes are more gentle; the rivers are larger and more +tranquil, though not one of them is navigable; and the ground is more level. +This portion of the island is known as <i>Banda di Dentro</i>, or “inner zone,” in distinction +from the <i>Banda di Fuori</i>, or “exterior (western) zone.” The eastern coast +appears to have been upheaved during a comparatively recent epoch, and ancient +gulfs of the sea have been converted into lagoons and swamps, quite as dangerous +from their miasmatic exhalations as those of the sister island. If we add that the +mountains in the west obstruct the passage of the vivifying mistral, that the heat +in summer is great, and droughts frequent, we have said enough to account for +the insalubrity of the climate.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn130" id="fnanch130">130</a> The maritime basin between Corsica and Italy +is almost shut in by mountains, and purifying breezes are rare there. Between +Bastia and Porto-Vecchio not a single town or village is met with on the coast, +and in the beginning of July the peasantry retire to the hills in order to escape +the fever. Only a few guards and the unfortunate convicts shut up in the penitentiary +of Casabianca remain behind. Nothing more melancholy can be imagined +than these fertile fields deserted by their inhabitants. Plantations of eucalyptus +have been made recently with a view to the amelioration of the climate.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg134"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib365lg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 134.—<span class="smcap">P<b>ROFILE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">R<b>OAD</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">FROM</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>JACCIO</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">TO</span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>ASTIA.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib365.jpg" width="600" height="256" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Owing to the great height of the mountains we are able to trace in Corsica +distinct zones of vegetation. Up to a moderate height the character of the +vegetation is sub-tropical, and resembles that of Sicily or Southern Spain. There +are districts which can be numbered amongst the most fertile of the Mediterranean. +One of these is the <i>Campo dell’Oro</i>, or “field of gold,” around Ajaccio, +where hedges of tree-like cacti separate the gardens and orchards; such, also, is +the country to the north of Bastia, with its aromatic flowers and luscious fruits. +Olive forests generally cover the lower hills, their silvery foliage contrasting with +the sombre verdure of the chestnut woods above. Balagna, near Calvi, on the +north-western coast of the island, is famous for its olives, whilst another valley, on +the opposite side of the island, near Bastia, can boast of the most magnificent +chestnut-trees. Chestnuts, in some parts, constitute the +principal article of food, <span class="xxpn" id="p366">{366}</span> +and enable the inhabitants, who are by no means distinguished for their industry, +to dispense with the cultivation of cereals. Some political economists have +actually proposed to fell these trees, in order that the inhabitants may be forced +to work.</p> + +<p>Chestnut-trees grow up to a height of 6,250 feet. The virgin forests which +formerly extended beyond them to the zone of pasturage have for the most part +disappeared. In the upper Balagna valley, Valdoniello, and Aitone, however, +magnificent forests may still be seen, and a larch (<i>Pinus altissimus</i>), the finest +conifer of all Europe, attains there a height of 160 feet. These splendid trees, +unfortunately, are rapidly disappearing. They are being converted into masts, or +sawn into staves and planks.</p> + +<p>The pasturing grounds above these forests are frequented during summer by +herdsmen with their flocks of sheep and goats. The agile moufflon is still met +with there in a few rocky recesses, and the shepherds assert that wild boars, +though very numerous on the island, carefully avoid its haunts. The wolf is +unknown in the island, and the bear has disappeared for more than a century. +Foxes of large size and small deer complete the fauna of the forest region of +Corsica. The <i>malmignata</i> spider, whose bite is sometimes mortal, is probably of +the same species as that of Sardinia and Tuscany; the <i>tarentula</i> is the same as +that of Naples, but the venomous ant known as <i>innafantato</i> appears to be peculiar +to the island.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>We know nothing about the origin of the aboriginal inhabitants of Corsica. +There are neither nuraghi, as in Sardinia, nor other antiquities enabling us to +form an opinion with respect to their manners. But there exist near Sartène and +elsewhere several dolmens, or <i>stazzone</i>, menhirs, or <i>stantare</i>, and even avenues +of stones, which are similar in all respects to those of Brittany and England. We +may assume, therefore, that these countries were formerly inhabited by the same +race.</p> + +<p>The inhabitants of Corte, in the interior of the island, and the mountaineers of +Bastelica, boast of being Corsicans of the purest blood. At Bastia the type is +altogether Italian, but as we travel into the interior we meet men with large +fleshy faces, small noses devoid of character, clear complexion, and eyes of a chestnut +colour rather than black. Phocæans, Romans, and Saracens, who maintained +themselves here until the eleventh century, were succeeded by Italians and French. +Calvi and Bonifacio were Genoese settlements, and at Carghese, near Ajaccio, we +even meet with a colony of Greek Mainotes, who settled there in the seventeenth +century, and whose descendants now speak Greek, Italian, and French. But, in +spite of these foreign immigrations, the Corsicans have in a large measure retained +their homogeneity. Paoli was rather proud of a Genoese proverb, which said +that the “Corsicans deserved to be hanged, but knew how to bear it.” History +bears, indeed, witness to their patriotism, fearlessness, and respect for truth; but it +also tells us of foolish ambitions, jealousies, and a furious spirit of revenge. Even +in the middle of last century the practice of the vendetta cost +a thousand lives <span class="xxpn" id="p367">{367}</span> +annually. Entire villages were depopulated, and in many parts every peasant’s +house was converted into a fortress, where the men were constantly on the alert, +the women, protected by custom against outrage, sallying forth alone to cultivate +the fields. The ceremonies observed when a victim of the vendetta was brought +home were terrible. The women gathered round the corpse, and one amongst +them, in most cases a sister of the deceased, furiously called down vengeance upon +the head of the murderer. The <i>voceri</i> of death are amongst the finest national +songs. Foreign domination is to blame, no doubt, for the frequency of these +assassinations. The judges sent to the country did not enjoy the confidence of the +inhabitants, and these latter returned to the primitive law of retaliation.</p> + +<p>Though Corsica gave a master to France, the spirit of the people is essentially +republican. The Romans barely succeeded in enslaving it, and even in +the tenth century the greater portion of the island formed a confederation of +independent communities known as <i>Terra del Comune</i>. The inhabitants of each +valley formed a <i>pieve</i> (<i>plebs</i>), by whom were elected a <i>podesta</i> and the “fathers of +the commune.” These latter appointed a “corporal,” who was charged with the +defence of popular rights. The podestas in turn elected a Council of twelve, who +stood at the head of the confederation. This constitution survived conquest and +invasion. In the eighteenth century, when fighting heroically against Genoa and +France, Corsica declared all citizens equal. It was institutions like these which +made Rousseau say that “that little island would one day astonish Europe.” +Since that time the Napoleonic era has whetted the ambition of the Corsicans, +and they appear to have forgotten their traditions of freedom.</p> + +<p>Corsica is one of the least-populated departments of France.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn131" id="fnanch131">131</a> The eastern +slope of the island, though more fertile and extensive than the western, and +formerly densely peopled, is now almost a desert. The Roman colony of Mariana +no longer exists, and the Phocæan emporium of Aleria has dwindled down since +the thirteenth century into an isolated homestead standing close to a pestiferous +swamp. At the present time the great centres of population are on the western +coast, which faces France, enjoys a salubrious climate, and possesses magnificent +ports.</p> + +<p>The Corsicans certainly appear to deserve the charge of idleness which is +brought against them, for they have done but little to develop the great resources +of their island. Fishing and cattle-breeding they understand best. In many +parts agricultural operations are carried on almost exclusively with the help of +Italian labourers, known as Lucchesi, because most of them formerly came from +Lucca. Thanks, however, to the impulse given by France, a commencement has +been made in the cultivation of the soil, and olive oil, equal to the best of Provence, +wine, and dried fruits already constitute important articles of export.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn132" id="fnanch132">132</a></p> + +<p>Corsica abounds in ores, but they do not appear to be as +rich as those of Sardinia. Formerly iron mines alone were +worked, the ore being conveyed to the <span class="xxpn" id="p368">{368}</span> +furnaces near Bastia and Porto Vecchio; but of late years copper mines have been +opened at Castifao, near Corte, and argentiferous lead is being procured from a +mine near Argentella, not far from Ile Rousse. Red and blue granite, porphyry, +alabaster, serpentine, and marble are being quarried. There are many mineral +springs, but the only one enjoying a European reputation is that of Orezzo, which +rises in the picturesque district of Castagniccia. Its ferruginous water contains +a considerable quantity of carbonic acid, and is recommended as efficacious in a +host of diseases.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg135"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 135.—<span class="smcap">V<b>IEW</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>ASTIA.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib368.jpg" width="600" height="495" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The most important town of Corsica, though not its capital, is Bastia, thus +named from a Genoese castle built towards the close of the fourteenth century on +the beach of the hill village of Cardo. Bastia stands about a mile to the north of +the two former capitals of the island, viz. Mariana and Biguglia, of which the +former has left no trace, whilst the latter has dwindled down to a miserable +village. The geographical position of Bastia is excellent, for it is within easy +reach of Italy, and frequent communications with that country have exercised a +most happy influence upon its inhabitants, who are the most civilised and industrious +of the whole island. Its harbour is small, and far from safe, but it is much +frequented. The city rises amphitheatrically upon hills, and is surrounded by +delightful gardens and numerous villas. <span class="xxpn" id="p369">{369}</span></p> + +<p>St. Florent, only six miles from Bastia, but on the western coast of the island, +has an excellent harbour, but the atmosphere hanging over its marshes is deadly. +Ile Rousse, farther to the west, is the principal port of the fertile district of +Balagna. It was founded by Paoli in 1758, in order to ruin Calvi, which had +remained faithful to the Genoese. This object has been attained. Ile Rousse +exports large quantities of oil and fruit, whilst the old town of Calvi, on its +whitish rock, is a place without life, frequently visited by malaria. The coast to +the south of Calvi, as far as the Gulf of Sagone, though exceedingly fertile, is +almost a desert, and many parts of it suffer from malaria. Ajaccio, however, at +one time merely a maritime suburb of Castelvecchio, standing a short distance +inland, has risen into great importance. It is the pleasantest and best-built +town of the island, and Napoleon, the most famous of its sons, showered favours +upon it. The inhabitants fish and cultivate their fertile orchards. They also +derive great advantages from a multitude of visitors, who go thither to enjoy a +delicious climate and picturesque scenery.</p> + +<p>The other towns of Corsica are of no importance whatever. Sartène, though +the capital of an arrondissement, is merely a village, and the activity of the district +centres in the little port of Propriano, on the Gulf of Valinco, one of the +trysting-places of Neapolitan fishermen. Corte is famous in the history of the +island as the birthplace of the heroes of the wars of independence. Porto Vecchio, +though in possession of the best harbour of the island, is frequented only by a few +coasting vessels, whilst Bonifacio, an ancient ally of the Genoese, is important only +because of its fortifications. The prospect from the isolated limestone rock upon +which it is built is exceedingly picturesque. The mountains of Limbara stand +out clearly against the sky, and in front we look down upon the granitic islets +dotting the Strait of Bonifacio, so dangerous to navigators. It was here the +frigate <i>La Sémillante</i> foundered in 1855, with nearly a thousand souls on board.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn133" id="fnanch133">133</a></p> + +<div class="dctr10"><img src="images/ib369.jpg" + width="279" height="437" alt="" /></div> + +<div class="chapter" id="p370"> +<div class="dctr01"><img src="images/ib370.jpg" + width="600" height="130" alt="" /></div> + +<h2 class="h2herein" title="Spain.">SPAIN.<a + class="afnanchstar" href="#fn134" id="fnanch134" + title="go to note 134">*</a> +<span class="sphr"><img class="ihra" src="images/hr-ia013.png" + width="248" height="27" alt="" /></span></h2></div> + +<h3 title="I.—General Aspects.">I.—<span + class="smcap">G<b>ENERAL</b></span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>SPECTS.</b></span></h3> + +<p class="pfirst"> +<span class="spdropcap"><img class="idropcap" src="images/drop-t.jpg" +width="235" height="254" alt="T" /></span>HE +Iberian peninsula, Spain and Portugal, must be looked upon +geographically as one. Differences of soil, climate, and language +may have justified its division into two states, but in the organism +of Europe these two constitute but a single member, having +the same geological history, and exhibiting unity in their physical +configuration.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn135" id="fnanch135">135</a></p> + +<p>Compared with the other peninsulas of Southern Europe, viz. Italy and that of +the Balkans, Iberia is most insular in its character. The isthmus which attaches +it to the trunk of Europe is comparatively narrow, and it is defined most distinctly +by the barrier of the Pyrenees. The contour of the peninsula is distinguished +by its massiveness. There are curving bays, but no inlets of the sea penetrating +far inland, as in the case of Greece.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn136" id="fnanch136">136</a></p> + +<p>It was said long ago, and with justice, that Africa begins at the Pyrenees. +Iberia, indeed, bears some resemblance to Africa. Its outline is heavy, there are +hardly any islands along its coasts, and few plains open out upon the sea. But it +is an Africa in miniature, only one-fiftieth the size of the continent upon which it +appears to have been modelled. Moreover, the oceanic slope of the peninsula is +quite European as to climate, vegetation, and abundance +of running water; and <span class="xxpn" id="p371">{371}</span> +certain features of its flora even justify a belief that at some remote epoch it was +joined to the British Islands. African Hispania only begins in reality with the +treeless plateaux of the interior, and more especially with the Mediterranean +coasts. There we meet the zone of transition between the two continents. Its +general aspect, flora, fauna, and even population, mark out that portion of Spain +as an integral part of Barbary; the Sierra Nevada and the Atlas, facing each +other, are sister mountains; and the strait which separates them is a mere accident +in the surface relief of our planet.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg136"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib371xmlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 136.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>ABLE-LANDS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">I<b>BERIAN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ENINSULA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 10,300,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib371.jpg" width="600" height="569" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Spain, though nearly surrounded by the sea, is nevertheless essentially continental +in its character. Nearly the whole of it consists of table-lands, and only +the plains of the Tajo (Tagus) and of Andalusia open out broadly upon the ocean. +The coast, for the most part, rises steeply, and the harbours are consequently difficult +of access to the inhabitants of the interior, a circumstance most detrimental +to the development of a large sea-borne commerce.</p> + +<p>Ever since the discovery of the ocean high-roads to America and the Indies, the +Atlantic coast of the Iberian peninsula has taken the lead +in commercial matters, <span class="xxpn" id="p372">{372}</span> +a fact easily accounted for by the physical features of the country. Spain, like +peninsular Italy, turns her back upon the east. The plateaux slope down gently +towards the west; the principal rivers, the Ebro alone excepted, flow in that direction; +and the water-shed lies close to the Mediterranean shores.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>Spain must either have given birth to an aboriginal people, or was peopled by +way of the Pyrenees and by emigrants crossing the narrow strait at the columns of +Hercules. The Iberian race actually forms the foundation of the populations of +Spain. The Basks, or Basques, now confined to a few mountain valleys, formerly +occupied the greater portion of the peninsula, as is proved by its geographical nomenclature. +Celtic tribes subsequently crossed the Pyrenees, and established themselves +in various parts of the country, mixing in many instances with the Iberians, and +forming the so-called Celtiberians. This mixed race is met with principally in +the two Castiles, whilst Galicia and the larger portion of Portugal appear to be +inhabited by pure Celts. The Iberians had their original seat of civilisation in +the south; they thence moved northward along the coast of the Mediterranean, +penetrating as far as the Alps and the Apennines.</p> + +<p>These original elements of the population were joined by colonists from the +great commercial peoples of the Mediterranean. Cádiz and Málaga were founded +by the Phœnicians, Cartagena by the Carthaginians, Saguntum by immigrants from +Zacynthus, Rosas is a Rhodian colony, and the ruins of Ampurias recall the Emporiæ +of the Massilians. But it was the Romans who modified the character of the +Iberian and Celtic inhabitants of the peninsula, whom they subjected after a +hundred years’ war. Italian culture gradually penetrated into every part of the +country, and the use of Latin became universal, except in the remote valleys +inhabited by the Basques.</p> + +<p>After the downfall of the Roman empire Spain was successively invaded by +Suevi, Alani, Vandals, and Visigoths, but only the latter have exercised an +abiding influence upon the language and manners of the Spaniards, and the +pompous gravity of the Castilian appears to be a portion of their heritage.</p> + +<p>To these northern invasions succeeded an invasion from the neighbouring +continent of Africa. The Arabs and Berbers of Mauritania gained a footing upon +the rock of Gibraltar early in the eighth century, and very soon afterwards nearly +the whole of Spain had fallen a prey to the Mussulman, who maintained himself +here for more than seven centuries. Moors immigrated in large numbers, and they +substantially affected the character of the population, more especially in the south. +The Inquisition expelled, or reduced to a condition of bondage, hundreds of +thousands of these Moors, but its operations only extended to Mussulmans or +doubtful converts, whilst Arab and Berber blood had already found its way into +the veins of the bulk of the population. Castilian bears witness to the great +influence of the Saracens, for it contains many more words of Arabic than +of Visigothic origin, and these words designate objects and ideas evidencing a +state of progressive civilisation, such as existed when the Arabs of Córdova and +Granada inaugurated the modern era of science and +industry in Europe. <span class="xxpn" id="p373">{373}</span></p> + +<p>During the dominion of the Moors the Jews prospered singularly on the soil of +Spain, and their number at the time of the first persecution is said to have been +800,000. Supple, like most of their faith, they managed to get a footing in both +camps, the Christian and Mohammedan, and enriched themselves at the expense of +each. They supplied both sides with money to carry on the war, and, as farmers of +taxes, they oppressed the inhabitants. The Christian faith triumphed in the end; the +kings, to pay the cost of their wars, proclaimed a crusade against the Jews; and the +people threw themselves with fury upon their hated oppressors, sparing neither iron, +fire, tortures, nor the stake. A few Jewish families may have escaped destruction +by embracing Catholicism, but the bulk of that people perished or were driven into +exile.</p> + +<p>Far happier has been the lot of the Gipsies, or <i>Gitanos</i>, who are sufficiently +numerous in Spain to give a special physiognomy to several large towns. These +Gipsies have always conformed outwardly to the national religion, and the Inquisition, +which has sent to the stake so many Jews, Moors, and heretics, has never +interfered with them. The Gipsies, in many instances, have settled down in the +towns, but they all have traditions of a wandering life, and most highly respect +those of their kinsmen who still range the woods and plains. These latter are +proud of their title of <i>viandantes</i>, or wayfarers, and despise the dwellers in towns. +These Spanish Gitanos appear to be the descendants of tribes who sojourned for +several generations in the Balkans, for their lingo contains several hundred words +of Slav and Greek origin.</p> + +<p>M. de Bourgoing has drawn attention to the great diversity existing amongst +the population of Spain. A Galician, for instance, is more like an Auvergnat +than a Catalonian, and an Andalusian reminds us of a Gascon. Most of the +inhabitants, however, have certain general features, derived from a common +national history and ancestry.</p> + +<p>The average Spaniard is of small stature, but strong, muscular, of surprising +agility, an indefatigable walker, and proof against every hardship. The sobriety +of Iberia is proverbial. “Olives, salad, and radishes are fit food for a nobleman.” +The physical stamina of the Spaniard is extraordinary, and amply explains the ease +with which the <i>conquistadores</i> surmounted the fatigues which they were exposed to +in the dreaded climate of the New World. These qualities make the Spaniard the +best soldier of Europe, for he possesses the fiery temperament of the South joined +to the physical strength of the North, without standing in need of abundant +nourishment.</p> + +<p>The moral qualities of the Spaniard are equally remarkable. Though careless +as to every-day matters, he is very resolute, sternly courageous, and of great +tenacity. Any cause he takes up he defends to his last breath. The sons always +embrace the cause of their fathers, and fight for it with the same resolution. +Hence this long series of foreign and civil wars. The recovery of Spain from the +Moors took nearly seven centuries; the conquest of Mexico, Peru, and South +America was one continued fight lasting throughout a century. The war of independence +which freed Spain from the yoke of Napoleon was +an almost unexampled <span class="xxpn" id="p374">{374}</span> +effort of patriotism, and the Spaniards may justly boast that the French did not +find a single spy amongst them. The two Carlist wars, too, would have been +possible nowhere else but in Spain.</p> + +<p>Who need wonder, after this, if even the lowliest Spaniard speaks of himself with +a certain haughtiness, which in any one else would be pronounced presumptuous? +“The Spaniard is a Gascon of a tragic type;” so says a French traveller. With him +deeds always follow words. He is a boaster, but not without reason. He unites +qualities which usually preclude each other, for, though haughty, he is kindly in +his manners; he thinks very highly of himself, but is considerate of the feelings of +others; quick to perceive the shortcomings of his neighbours, he rarely makes +them a subject of reproach. Trifles give rise to a torrent of sonorous language, +but in matters of importance a word or a gesture suffices. The Spaniard combines +a solemn bearing and steadfastness with a considerable amount of cheerfulness. +Nothing disquiets him; he philosophically takes things as they are; poverty has no +terrors for him; and he even ingeniously contrives to extract pleasure and advantage +from it. The life of Gil Blas, in whom the Spaniards recognise their own likeness, +was more chequered than that of any other hero of romance, and yet he was +always full of gaiety, which even the dark shadow of the Inquisition, then resting +upon the country, failed to deprive him of. “To live on the banks of the +Manzanares,” says a Spanish proverb, “is perfect bliss; to be in paradise is the second +degree of happiness, but only on condition of being able to look down upon Madrid +through a skylight in the heavens.”</p> + +<p>These opposites in the character of the Spaniards give rise to an appearance of +fickleness which foreigners are unable to comprehend, and they themselves complacently +describe them as <i>cosas de España</i>. How, indeed, are we to explain so +much weakness associated with so many noble qualities, so many superstitions in +spite of common sense and a keen perception of irony, such ferocity of conduct in men +naturally generous and magnanimous? A Spaniard, in spite of his passions, will +resign himself philosophically to what he looks upon as inevitable. <i>Lo que ha de +ser no puede faltar</i>, “What is to be will be,” he says, and, wrapped up in his cloak, +he allows events to take their course. The great Lord Bacon observed, three hundred +years ago, that the “Spaniards looked wiser than they were;” and, indeed, most +of them are passionately fond of gambling, and their apathetic fatalism accounts +for many of the ills their country suffers. The rapid decay which has taken +place in the course of three centuries has led certain historians to number the +Spaniards amongst fallen nations. The edifices met with in many towns and +villages speak of a grandeur now past, and the <i>despoblados</i> and <i>dehesas</i>, which we +encounter even in the vicinity of the capital, tell of once fertile fields returned +to a state of nature.</p> + +<p>Buckle, in his “History of Civilisation,” traces this decay to the physical +nature of Spain and to a long succession of religious wars. The Visigoths defended +Arianism against the Franks, and when the Spaniards had become good Catholics +their country was invaded by Moors, and for more than twenty generations they +struggled against them. It thus happened that patriotism +became identical with <span class="xxpn" id="p375">{375}</span> +absolute obedience to the behests of the Church, for every one, from the King down +to the meanest archer, was a defender of the faith rather than of his native soil. +The result might have been foretold. The Church not only took possession of most +of the land won from the infidels, but it also exercised a baneful influence upon the +Government, and, through its dreaded tribunals of the Inquisition, over the whole +of society.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg137"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib375xmlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 137.—<span class="smcap">D<b>EHESAS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">IN</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>NVIRONS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>ADRID.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 450,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib375.jpg" width="600" height="301" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>But whilst these long religious struggles tended to the moral and intellectual +abasement of the Spaniards, there were other causes which operated in an inverse +sense, and these Buckle does not appear to have properly appreciated. The kings, +in order to secure the support of the people in their wars against the Mussulmans, +found themselves compelled to grant a large measure of liberty. The towns +governed themselves, and their delegates, as early as the eleventh century, sat with +the nobility and clergy in the Cortes, and voted the supplies. Local government +conferred advantages upon Spain then enjoyed only in few parts of Europe. +Industry and the arts flourished in these prosperous cities, and a stop was even +put to the encroachments of the clergy long before Luther raised his powerful +voice in Germany.</p> + +<p>A struggle between the supporters of local government and of a centralized +monarchy at length became imminent, and no sooner had the infidels been expelled +than civil war began. It terminated in favour of King and Church, for the +<i>comuneros</i> of the Castiles met with little support in the other provinces, and their +towns were ravaged by the bloodthirsty generals of Charles V.</p> + +<p>The discovery of the New World, which happened about this period, proved a +disaster to Spain, for young men of enterprise and daring crossed the Atlantic, +and thus weakened the mother country, which was too small to feed such huge +colonies. The immense amount of treasure (more than £2,000,000,000 between +1500 and 1702) sent home from the colonies contributed still further to the rapid +decay of Spain, for it corrupted the entire nation. Money +being obtainable without <span class="xxpn" id="p376">{376}</span> +work, all honest labour ceased, and when the colonies no longer yielded their +metallic treasures the country saw itself impoverished, for the gold and silver +had found their way to foreign lands, whence Spain had procured her supplies.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg138"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib376xmlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 138.—<span class="smcap">D<b>ENSITY</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>OPULATION</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">I<b>BERIAN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ENINSULA.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib376.jpg" width="600" height="588" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>History affords no other example of so rapid a decadence brought about without +foreign aggression. The workshops were closed, the arts of peace forgotten, +the fields but indifferently cultivated. Young men flocked to the 9,000 monasteries +to enjoy a life of indolence, and “science was a crime, ignorance and +stupidity were the first of virtues.” Population decreased, and the Spaniard even +lost his ancient renown for bravery. If the Bourbon kings placed foreigners in +all high positions of state, they did so because the Spaniards had become incapable +of conducting public business.</p> + +<p>But if we compare the Spain of our own days with the Spain of the Inquisition, +we cannot fail to be struck with the vast progress made. Spain is no longer +a “happy people without a history,” for ever since the beginning of the century +it has been engaged in struggles, and during this period of tumultuous life it +has done more for arts, science, and industry than in the two centuries of peace +which succeeded the dark reign of Philip II. No doubt Spain +might have done <span class="xxpn" id="p377">{377}</span> +even more if the strength of the country had not been wasted in internal struggles. +Unfortunately the geographical configuration of the peninsula is unfavourable to +the consolidation of the nation. The littoral regions combine every advantage of +climate, soil, and accessibility, whilst the resources of the inland plateaux are +comparatively few. The former naturally attract population; they abound in +large and bustling cities, and are more densely populated than the interior of the +country. Madrid, which occupies a commanding position almost in the geometrical +centre of the country, has become a focus of life, but its environs are very +thinly inhabited.</p> + +<p>This unequal distribution of the population could not fail to exercise a powerful +influence upon the history of the country. Each of the maritime provinces felt +sufficiently strong to lead a separate existence. During the struggles with the +Moors common interests induced the independent kingdoms of Iberia to co-operate, +and facilitated the establishment of a central monarchy; but, to maintain this unity +afterwards, it became necessary to have recourse to a system of terrorism and +oppression. Portugal, being situated on the open Atlantic, shook off the detested +yoke of Castile after less than a century’s submission. In the rest of the +peninsula political consolidation is making progress, thanks to the facilities of +intercommunication and the substitution of Castilian for the provincial dialects; +but it would be an error to suppose that Andalusians and Galicians, Basques and +Catalans, Aragonese and Madrileños, have been welded into one nation. Indeed, +the federal constitution advocated by Spanish republicans appears to be best suited +to the geographical configuration of the country and the genius of its population. +The desire to establish provincial autonomy has led to most of the civil wars of +Spain, whether raised by <i>Carlists</i> or <i>Intransigentes</i>. It is therefore meet that, in +our description of Spain, we should respect the limits traced by nature, bearing +in mind the fact that the political boundaries of the province do not always +coincide with water-sheds or linguistic boundaries.</p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="II.—The Castiles, Leon, and Estremadura.">II.—<span + class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>ASTILES,</b></span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>EON,</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>STREMADURA.</b></span><a + class="afnanchstar" href="#fn137" id="fnanch137" + title="go to note 137">*</a></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">The +great central plateau of the peninsula is bounded on the north, east, and +south by ranges of mountains extending from the Cantabrian Pyrenees to the +Sierra Morena, and slopes down in the west towards Portugal and the Atlantic. +The uplands through which the Upper Duero, the Tajo (Tagus), and the Guadiana +take their course are thus a region apart, and if the waters of the ocean were to +rise 2,000 feet, they would be converted into a peninsula attached by the narrow +isthmus of the Basque provinces to the French Pyrenees. The vast extent of +these plateaux—they constitute nearly half the area of the whole country—accounts +for the part they played in history, and their commanding position enabled the +Castilians to gain possession of the adjacent territories. <span class="xxpn" id="p378">{378}</span></p> + +<p>The Castiles can hardly be called beautiful, or rather their solemn beauty does +not commend them to the majority of travellers. Vast districts, such as the Tierra +de Campos, to the north of Valladolid, are ancient lake beds of great fertility, but +exceedingly monotonous, owing to the absence of forests. Others are covered with +small stony hillocks; others, again, may be described as mountainous. Mountain +ranges covered with meagre herbage bound the horizon, and sombre gorges, +enclosed between precipitous walls of rock, lead into them. Elsewhere, as in the +Lower Estremadura, we meet with vast pasture-lands, stretching as far as the eye +can reach to the foot of the mountains, and, as in certain parts of the American +prairies, not a tree arrests the attention. Looking to the fearful nakedness of +these plains, one would hardly imagine that a law was promulgated in the middle +of last century which enjoins each inhabitant to plant at least five trees. Trees, +indeed, have been cut down more rapidly than they were planted. The peasants +have a prejudice against them; their leaves, they say, give shelter to birds, which +prey upon the corn-fields. Small birds, nightingales alone excepted, are pursued +without mercy, and a proverb says that “swallows crossing the Castiles must +carry provisions with them.” Trees are met with only in the most remote +localities. The hovels of the peasantry, built of mud or pebbles, are of the same +colour as the soil, the walled towns are easily confounded with the rock near them, +and even in the midst of cultivated fields we may imagine ourselves in a desert. +Many districts suffer from want of water, and villages which rejoice in the possession +of a spring proclaim the fact aloud as one of their attributes. Huge bridges +span the ravines, though for more than half the year not a drop of water passes +over their pebbly beds.</p> + +<p>The Sierra de Guadarrama and its western continuation, the Sierra de Gredos, +separate this central plateau of Spain into two portions, lying at different +elevations. Old Castile and Leon, which lie to the north, in the basin of the +Duero, slope down from east to west from 5,600 to 2,300 feet; whilst New Castile +and La Mancha, in the twin basins of the Tajo and the Guadiana, have an average +elevation of only 2,000 feet. In the tertiary age these two plateaux were covered +with huge lakes. One of them, the contours of which are indicated by the débris +carried down from the surrounding hills, originally discharged its waters in the +direction of the valley of the Ebro, but subsequently opened itself a passage +through the crystalline mountains of Portugal, now represented by the gorges of +the Lower Duero. At another epoch this Lake Superior communicated with the +lake which overspread what are now the plains of New Castile and La Mancha. +The area covered by these two lakes amounted to 30,000 square miles, and Spain +was then a mere skeleton of crystalline mountains, joined together by saddles of +triassic, Jurassic, and cretaceous age, enclosing these two fresh-water lakes, and +bounded exteriorly by the ocean. This geological period must have been of very +long duration, for the lacustrine deposits are sometimes nearly a thousand feet in +thickness. The miocene strata which form the superficial deposits of these two lake +basins of the Castiles are geologically of the same age, for fossil bones of the +same great animals—megatheria, mammoths, and hipparions—are +found in both. <span class="xxpn" id="p379">{379}</span></p> + +<p>The Cantabrian Mountains bound Leon and Old Castile towards the north-west +and north, but broad mountain ranges run out from these immediately to the east +of the Peña Labra, and form the water-shed between the basin of the Duero and +the head-stream of the Ebro. These ranges are known by various names. They +form first the <i>Páramos</i> of Lora (3,542 feet), which slope gently towards the south, +but sink down abruptly to the Ebro, which flows here in a gorge many hundred +feet in depth. The water-shed to the east of these continues to the mountain +pass of the Brujula, across which leads the road (3,215 feet) connecting Burgos +with the sea. Beyond this pass the so-called <i>Montes</i> of Oca gradually increase in +height, and join the crystalline Sierra de Demanda, culminating in the Pico de +San Lorenzo (7,554 feet). Another mountain mass lies farther to the south-east. +It rises in the Pico de Urbion to a height of 7,367 feet, and gives birth to the +river Duero. The water-shed farther on is formed by the Sierra Cebollera +(7,039 feet), which subsides by degrees, its ramifications extending into the basins +of the Ebro and Duero. The Sierra de la Moncayo (7,905 feet), a crystalline +mountain mass similar to the San Lorenzo, but exceeding it in height, terminates +this portion of the enceinte of the central plateau. The broad ranges beyond +offer no obstacles to the construction of roads, but there are several rugged ridges +to the south of the Cebollera and Moncayo, which force the Duero to take a +devious course through the defile of Soria. Numantia, the heroic defence of +which has since been imitated by many other towns of the peninsula, stood near +that gorge.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg139"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib379lg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 139.—<span class="smcap">P<b>ROFILE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">R<b>AILWAY</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">FROM</span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>AYONNE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">TO</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>ADIZ.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">(Altitudes in feet.)</div> +<img src="images/ib379.jpg" width="600" height="281" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The average height of the mountains separating the basin of the Duero from +that of the Tajo is more than that of those in the north-east of Old Castile. The +mountains gradually increase in height towards the west and south-west, until +they form the famous Sierra de Guadarrama, the granitic rocks of which bound the +horizon of Madrid in the north. It constitutes a veritable wall +between the two <span class="xxpn" id="p380">{380}</span> +Castiles, and the construction of the roads which lead in zigzag over its passes of +Somosierra (4,680 feet), Navacerrada (5,834 feet), and Guadarrama (5,030 feet) +was attended with difficulties so considerable that Ferdinand VI., proud of the +achievement, placed the statue of a lion upon one of the highest summits, and thus +recorded that the “King had conquered the mountains.” This sierra forms a +natural rampart to the north of the plains of Madrid, and many sanguinary +battles have been fought to secure a passage through them. The railway to +Madrid avoids them, but the depression of Ávila, through which it passes, is +nevertheless more elevated than the summit of the Mont Cenis Railway.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg140"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib380xmlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 140.—<span class="smcap">S<b>IERRAS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">DE</span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>REDOS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smmaj">DE</span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>ATA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 800,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib380.jpg" width="600" height="478" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The mountains to the south-west of the Peak of Peñalara (7,870 feet), which +is the culminating point of the sierra, sink down rapidly, and at the Alto de la +Cierva (6,027 feet) the chain divides into two branches, of which the northern +forms the water-shed between the Duero and the Tajo, whilst the more elevated +southern chain joins the Sierra de Guadarrama to the Sierra de Gredos, but is cut +in two by the defile excavated by the river Alberche, which rises to the north +of it.</p> + +<p>The Sierra de Gredos is, next to the Pyrenees and the Sierra Nevada of +Granada, the most elevated mountain chain of Spain, for in the Plaza del Moro +Almanzor it attains a height of 8,680 feet, and thus reaches far beyond the zone +of trees. Its naked summits of crystalline rocks remain covered with snow +during more than half the year. The country extending along +the southern slope <span class="xxpn" id="p381">{381}</span> +of these mountains is one of the most delightful districts of all Spain. It +abounds in streams of sparkling water; groups of trees are dotted over the hill-slopes +and shield the villages; and Charles V., when he selected the monastery of +St. Yuste as the spot where he proposed to pass the remainder of his days, exhibited +no mean taste. In former times the foot of the sierra was much more +frequented, for the Roman road known as <i>Via Lata</i> (now called <i>Camino de la Plata</i>) +crossed immediately to the west of it, by the Puerto de Baños, and thus joined the +valley of the Duero to that of the Tajo.</p> + +<p>The Sierra de Gata, which lies beyond this old road, has a course parallel with +that of the Sierra de Gredos, and this parallelism is observable likewise with respect +to the minor chains and the principal river beds of that portion of Spain. The +Sierra de Gata rises to a height of 5,690 feet in the Peña de Francia, thus named +after a chapel built by a Frankish knight. Within its recesses are the secluded +valleys of Las Batuecas and Las Hurdes.</p> + +<p>In the eastern portion of New Castile the country is for the most part undulating +rather than mountainous, and, if the deep gorges excavated by the rivers +were to be filled up, would present almost the appearance of plains. The most +elevated point of this portion of the country is the Muela de San Juan (5,900 feet), +in the Montes Universales, thus called, perhaps, because the Tajo, the Júcar, the +Guadalaviar, and other rivers flowing in opposite directions take their rise there.</p> + +<p>The Sierra del Tremendal, in the district of Albarracin, farther north, is said +to be frequently shaken by earthquakes, and sulphurous gases escape there where +oolitic rocks are in contact with black porphyry and basalt. Several triassic +hills in the vicinity of Cuenca are remarkable on account of their rock-salt, the +principal mines of which are those of Minglanilla.</p> + +<p>Farther south the height of land which separates the rivers flowing to the +Mediterranean from those tributary to the Tajo and Guadiana is undulating, but +not mountainous. We only again meet with real mountains on reaching the +head-waters +of the Guadiana, Segura, and Guadalimar, where the Sierra Morena, forming +for 250 miles the natural boundary between La Mancha and Andalusia, takes +its rise. Seen from the plateau, this sierra has the appearance of hills of moderate +height, but travellers facing it from the south see before them a veritable mountain +range of bold profile, and abounding in valleys and wild gorges. Geographically +this sierra belongs to Andalusia rather than to the plateau of the Castiles.</p> + +<p>In the west, judging from the courses of the Tajo and the Guadiana, the country +would appear to subside by degrees into the plains of Portugal; but such is not the +case. The greater portion of Estremadura is occupied by a mountain mass consisting +of granite and other crystalline rocks. The sedimentary strata of the +region bounded in the north by the Sierras of Gredos and Gata, and in the south +by the Sierra de Aroche, are but of small thickness. In former times these +granitic mountains of Estremadura retained pent-up waters of the lakes which then +covered the interior plateaux, until the incessant action of water forced a passage +through them. Their highest summits form a range between the rivers Guadiana +and Tajo known as the Sierra of Toledo, and attain a height of +5,115 feet in <span class="xxpn" id="p382">{382}</span> +the Sierra de Guadalupe, famous in other days on account of the image of a +miracle-working Virgin Mary, an object of veneration to Estremeños and Christianized +American Indians.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg141"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 141.—<span class="smcap">D<b>EFILE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>AJO</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">IN</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ROVINCE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>UADALAJARA.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib382.jpg" width="600" height="585" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Geologically the series of volcanic hills known as Campo de Calatrava (2,270 +feet) constitute a distinct group. They occupy both banks of the Guadiana, and the +ancient inland lake now converted into the plain of La Mancha washed their foot. +From their craters were ejected trachytic and basaltic lavas, as well as ashes, or +<i>negrizales</i>, but acidulous thermal springs are at present the only evidence of subterranean +activity.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>The rivers of the Castiles are of less importance than might be supposed from +a look at a map, for, owing to a paucity of rain, they are not navigable. The +moisture carried eastward by the winds is for the most part +precipitated upon the <span class="xxpn" id="p383">{383}</span> +exterior slopes of the mountains, only a small proportion reaching the Castilian +plateaux. Evaporation, moreover, proceeds there very rapidly, and if it were not +for springs supplied by the rains of winter there would not be a single perennial +river.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn138" id="fnanch138">138</a></p> + +<p>Of the three parallel rivers, the Duero, the Tajo, and the Guadiana, the latter +two are the most feeble, for the supplementary ranges of the Sierras of Gredos and +Guadarrama shut off their basins from the moisture-laden winds of the Atlantic. Yet, +in spite of their small volume, the geological work performed by them in past +ages was stupendous. Both find their way through tortuous gorges of immense depth +from the edge of the plateaux down to the plains of Lusitania. The gorge of the +Duero forms an appropriate natural boundary between Spain and Portugal, for it +offers almost insurmountable obstacles to intercommunication. The more considerable +tributaries of the Duero—such as the Tormes, fed by the snows of the +Sierra de Gredos; the Yéltes; and the Agueda—likewise take their course through +wild defiles, which may be likened to the <i>cañons</i> of the New World. The Tajo +presents similar features, and below its confluence with the Alberche it enters a +deep defile, hemmed in by precipitous walls of granite.</p> + +<p>The Guadiana passes through a similar gorge, but only after it has reached +the soil of Portugal. The hydrography of its head-streams, the Giguela and +Záncara, which rise in the Serranio of Cuenca, offers curious features; but, as +they are for the most part dry during summer, the bountiful springs known as +the <i>ojos</i>, or “eyes,” of the Guadiana are looked upon by the inhabitants as the +true source of the river. They are three in number, and yield about four cubic +yards of water a second. These springs are popularly believed to be fed by the +Ruidera, which, after having traversed a chain of picturesque lakelets, disappears +beneath a bed of pebbles; but Coello has shown that after heavy rains this head-stream +of the Guadiana actually reaches the Záncara.</p> + +<p>The climate of the Castilian plateaux is quite continental in its character. +The prevailing winds of Spain are the same as in the rest of Western Europe, but +the seasons and sudden changes of temperature in the upper basins of the Duero, the +Tajo, and the Guadiana recall the deserts of Africa and Asia. The cold in winter is +most severe, the heat of summer scorching, and the predominating winds aggravate +these features. In winter, the <i>norte</i>, which passes across the snow-covered Pyrenees +and other mountain ranges, sweeps the plains and penetrates through every +crevice in the wretched hovels of the peasants. In summer a contrary wind, the +<i>solano</i>, penetrates through breaks in the Sierra Nevada and Sierra Morena, +scorches the vegetation, and irritates man and animals. The climate of Madrid<a class="afnanch" href="#fn139" id="fnanch139">139</a> +is typical of that of most of the towns of Castile. The air, though pure, is exceedingly +dry and penetrating, and persons affected with diseases of the throat run +considerable risk during their period of acclimation. “The air of Madrid does +not put out a candle, but kills a man,” says a proverb, and the climate of that +city is described as “three months of winter and nine of hell.” +True, in the <span class="xxpn" id="p384">{384}</span> +time of Charles V., Madrid enjoyed the reputation of having an excellent climate, +and it is just possible that its deterioration may be ascribable to the destruction of +the forests.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg142"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib384xmlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 142.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>TEPPES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">N<b>EW</b></span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>ASTILE.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">According to Willkomm. + Scale 1 : 1,500,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib384.jpg" width="600" height="627" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The greatest variety of plants is met with if we ascend from the plains to the +summits of the mountains, but taken as a whole the vegetation is singularly +monotonous, for the number of plants capable of supporting such extremes of +temperature is naturally limited. Herbs and shrubs predominate. The thickets +in the upper basin of the Duero and on the plateaux to the east of the Tajo and the +Guadiana consist of thyme, lavender, rosemary, hyssop, and other aromatic plants; +on the southern slopes of the Cantabrian Mountains heaths with small pink flowers +predominate; vast areas in the mountains of Cuenca are covered with Spanish +broom, or esparto; and saline plants abound in the environs of Albacete. These +regions are generally described as the “Steppes of +Castile,” though “deserts” <span class="xxpn" id="p385">{385}</span> +would, perhaps, be a more appropriate term. For miles around the village of San +Clemente not a rivulet, a spring, or a tree is met with, and the aspect of the +country throughout is exceedingly dreary. The interminable plains of La Mancha—the +“dried-up country” of the Arabs—adjoin these steppes in the west, and +there corn-fields, vineyards, and pasture-grounds alternate with stretches of thistles, +and the monotony is partly relieved by the windmills, with their huge sweeps slowly +revolving overhead. Estremadura and the slopes of the Sierra Morena are principally +covered with rock-roses, and from the summit of some hills a carpet of <i>jarales</i>, +bluish green or brown, according to the season, extends as far as the eye reaches, +and in spring is covered with an abundance of white flowers resembling newly +fallen snow.</p> + +<p>Woods are met with only on the slopes of the mountains. Oaks of various +species and chestnut-trees occupy the lower zone, and conifers extend beyond them +to the extreme limit of trees. These latter likewise cover the vast tracts of shifting +sands which extend along the northern foot of the Sierra de Guadarrama, and are +the analogue of the French <i>landes</i>.</p> + +<p>The remains of the ancient forests still shelter wild animals. In the beginning +of this century bears were numerous on the southern slopes of the Cantabrian +Mountains; the thickets of Guadarrama, Gredos, and Gata still harbour wolves, +lynxes, wild cats, foxes, and even wild goats. Deer, hares, and other game abound. +The oak forests are haunted by wild boars of immense size and strength. Before +the downfall of Islam it was thought meritorious to keep large herds of pigs, and +a traveller who visits the remote villages of Leon, Valladolid, and Upper Estremadura +will find that this ancient custom still survives. The black hogs of Trujillo +and Montanchez are famous throughout Spain for their excellent hams.</p> + +<p>The country offers great facilities for the breeding of sheep and cattle; there +are, however, several districts which are admirably suited to the production of cereals. +The Tierra de Campos, in the basin of the Duero, is one of them. It owes its +fertility to a subterranean reservoir of water, as do also the <i>mesa</i> of Ocaña and +other districts in the upper basins of the Tajo and the Guadiana, which are arid only +in appearance. The vine flourishes on stony soil, and yields excellent wine, and +the same may be said of the olive-tree, which constitutes the wealth of the +Campo de Calatrava. Agricultural pursuits would thus appear to offer great +advantages; and if thousands of acres are still allowed to lie fallow, if nomad +habits still predominate, this is owing to sloth, force of habit, the existence of +feudal customs, and sometimes, perhaps, to discouragement produced by seasons +of drought.</p> + +<p>Most of the herds of <i>merinos</i> are obliged to traverse nearly half Spain in +search of the food they require. Each herd of about 10,000 sheep is placed +in charge of a <i>mayoral</i>, assisted by <i>rabadanes</i> in charge of detachments of from +1,000 to 1,200 animals. The shepherds and sheep of Balia, in Leon, are reputed +to be the best. In the beginning of April the merinos leave their pasture-grounds +in Andalusia, La Mancha, and Estremadura for the north, where they pass the +summer, returning in September to the south. It may readily +be imagined that <span class="xxpn" id="p386">{386}</span> +these wandering herds do much damage to the fields through which they pass, +even though the privileges of the sheep-breeders were abrogated in a large measure +in 1836. Spain, however, in spite of every advantage offered by nature, is obliged +now to import sheep from abroad to improve its flocks. Mules, too, which are +almost indispensable in so stony a country, are imported from France. Camels, +llamas, and kangaroos have been introduced, but their number has never been +large, and the fauna as well as the flora of the Castiles bears the stamp of monotony.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>As is the land, so are its inhabitants. The men of Leon and the Castiles are +grave, curt of speech, majestic in their gait, and of even temper. Even in their +amusements they carry themselves with dignity, and those amongst them who +respect the traditions of the good old time regulate every movement in accordance +with a most irksome etiquette. The Castilian is haughty in the extreme, and <i>Yo +soy Castellano !</i> cuts short every further explanation. He recognises no superiors, +but treats his fellows on a footing of perfect equality. A foreigner who mixes +for the first time in a crowd at Madrid or elsewhere in the Castiles cannot fail +of being struck by the natural freedom with which rich and poor converse with +each other.</p> + +<p>The Castilian, thanks to his tenacious courage and the central position he +occupies, has become the master of Spain, but he can hardly be said to be the +master in his own capital. Madrid is the great centre of attraction of the entire +peninsula, and its streets are crowded with provincials from every part of +Spain. This invasion of the capital, and of the Castiles generally, is explained by +the sparseness of the population of the plateaux, a sparseness not so much due to +the natural sterility of the country as to political and social causes. There can +be no doubt that the Castiles formerly supported a much denser population than +they do now, but the towns of the valleys of the Tajo and the Guadiana have shrunk +into villages, and the river, which was formerly navigable as far as Toledo, is so +no longer, either because its volume is less now than it used to be, or because its +floods are no longer regulated. Estremadura, at present one of the poorest +provinces of Spain, supported a dense population in the time of the Romans, +who founded there the Colonia Augusta Emerita (Mérida), which became the +largest town of Iberia. During the dominion of the Moors, too, Estremadura +yielded bounteous harvests, but the old cities have disappeared, and the fields are +now covered with furze, broom, and rock-roses.</p> + +<p>The expulsion of the Moors no doubt contributed towards the decay of these +once fertile regions, but the principal cause must be looked for in the growth of +feudal, military and ecclesiastical institutions, which robbed the cultivator of the +fruits of his labours. Subsequently, when Cortes, Pizarro, and other <i>conquistadores</i> +performed their prodigious exploits in the New World, they attracted the enterprising +youth of the province. The peaceable cultivation of the soil was held in +contempt, fields remained untilled, and 40,000 nomadic shepherds took possession +of the country. It is thus the <i>Estremeños</i> became what they are, the “Indians” +of the nation. <span class="xxpn" id="p387">{387}</span></p> + +<p>This decrease of population was unfortunately attended by a return towards +barbarism. Three hundred years ago the region on the southern slopes of the +Sierra de Guadarrama was famous for its industry. The linen and cloth of Ávila, +Medina del Campo, and Segovia were known throughout Europe; Burgos and +Aranda del Duero were the seats of commerce and industry; and Medina de +Rio Seco was known as “Little India,” on account of the wealth displayed at its +fairs. But misgovernment led to the downfall of these industries, the country +became depopulated, and its ancient culture dwindled to a thing of the past. At the +famous university of Salamanca the great discoveries of Newton and Harvey were +still ignored at the close of last century as being “contrary to revealed religion,” +and the lower classes grovelled in the most beastly superstitions.</p> + +<p>In this very province of Salamanca, close to the Peña de Francia, exist the +“barbarous” Batuecas, who are charged with not being able to distinguish +the seasons. Nor are the inhabitants of other remote mountain districts of +the Castiles what we should call civilised. Amongst these may be noticed the +<i>charros</i> of Salamanca and the famous <i>maragatos</i> of Astorga, most of them +muleteers. They only intermarry amongst themselves, and are looked upon as +the lineal descendants of some ancient tribe of Iberia. The suggestion that +they are a mixed race of Visigoths and Moors is not deserving of attention, +for neither in their dress nor in their manners do they remind us of Mussulmans. +They wear loose trousers, cloth gaiters fastened below the knee, a short and +close-fitting coat, a leather belt, a frill round the neck, and a felt hat with a +broad brim. They are tall and strong, but wiry and angular. Their taciturnity +is extreme, and they neither laugh nor sing when driving before them +their beasts of burden. It is difficult to excite their passion, but, once roused, +they become ferocious. Their honesty is above suspicion, and they may be safely +trusted with the most valuable goods, which they will defend against every +attack, for they are brave, and skilled in the use of arms. Whilst the men +traverse the whole of Spain as carriers of merchandise, the women till the soil, +which, being arid and rocky, yields but a poor harvest.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>The vicissitudes of history explain the existence of numerous towns in the +Castiles which can boast of having been the capital of the country at one time or +other. Numantia, the most ancient of all those cities, exists no longer, and the +learned are not yet agreed whether the ruins discovered near the decayed town of +Soria are the remains of the walls demolished by Scipio Æmilianus. But there are +several cities of great antiquity which possess some importance even at the present +day. Leon is one of these. It was the head-quarters of a Roman legion +(<i>septima gemina</i>), and its name, in reality a corruption of <i>legio</i>, is supposed to be +symbolized by the lions placed in its coat of arms. Leon was one of the first +places of importance taken from the Moors. Its old walls are in ruins now, and +the beautiful cathedral has been transformed into a clumsy cube. Astorga, the +“magnificent city” of Asturica Augusta, has fallen even lower than Leon, whilst +Palencia (the ancient Pallantia) still enjoys a certain measure +of prosperity, owing <span class="xxpn" id="p388">{388}</span> +to its favourable geographical position at the Pisuerga, which has caused it to +be selected as one of the great railway centres of the peninsula.</p> + +<p>Burgos, the former capital of Old Castile, points proudly to its graceful cathedral +and other ancient buildings, but its streets are nearly deserted, and the crowds +which congregate occasionally in the churches, hotels, or at the railway station +are composed, for the most part, of beggars. In the cathedral are preserved +numerous relics, and the Cid, whose legendary birthplace, Bivar, is near, lies buried +in it.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg143"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib388xmlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 143.—<span class="smcap">S<b>ALAMANCA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smmaj">ITS</span> + <span class="smcap">D<b>ESPOBLADOS.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 200,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib388.jpg" width="600" height="410" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Valladolid, the Belad Walid of the Moors, at one time the capital of all Spain, +enjoys a more favourable geographical position than Burgos. It lies on the Lower +Pisuerga, where that river enters the broad plain of the Duero, at an elevation +of less than 600 feet above the sea. There are numerous factories, conducted +by Catalans, and the city boasts, like Burgos, of many curious buildings and +historical reminiscences. The houses in which Columbus died and Cervantes was +born are still shown, as is the beautiful monastery of San Pablo, in which resided +Torquemada, the monk, who condemned 8,000 heretics to die at the stake. The +castle of Simancas, where the precious archives of Spain are kept, is near this +city.</p> + +<p>Descending the Duero, we pass Toro, and then reach Zamora, the “goodly +walls” of which proved such an obstacle to the Moors. Zamora, though on the +direct line between Oporto and continental Europe, is an +out-of-the-way place at <span class="xxpn" id="p389">{389}</span> +present, and the same may be said of the famous city of Salamanca, on the +Tormes, to the south of it.</p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr01" id="fg144"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 144.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>LCÁZAR</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>EGOVIA.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib389.jpg" width="600" height="589" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>Salamanca, the Salmantica of the Romans, succeeded to Palencia as the seat of +a university, and during the epoch of the Renaissance was described as the “mother +of virtues, sciences, and arts,” and the “Rome of the Castiles.” It still deserves +the latter epithet, because of its magnificent bridge built by Trajan, and the beautiful +edifices dating back to the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. Its intellectual +superiority, however, is a thing of the past.</p> + +<p>Arevalo, and the famous town of Medina del Campo, to the north-east of Salamanca, +carry on a considerable trade with corn. Ávila occupies an isolated hillock +on the banks of the Adaja, to the north of the Sierra de Gredos. Ávila still preserves +its turreted walls of the fifteenth century, and its fortress-like cathedral is a marvel +of architecture. There are also curious sculptures of animals, +which are ascribed <span class="xxpn" id="p390">{390}</span> +to the aboriginal inhabitants of the country. Similar works of rude art in the +vicinity are known as the “bulls of Guisando,” from a village in the Sierra de +Gredos.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg145"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 145.—<span class="smcap">T<b>OLEDO.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib390.jpg" width="600" height="595" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Segovia the “circumspect” is situated on an affluent of the Duero, like +Ávila, and in the immediate vicinity of the Sierra de Guadarrama. Its turreted +walls rise on a scarped rock, supposed to resemble a ship. On the poop of this +fancied ship, high above the confluence of the Clamores and Eresma, rise the +ruins of the Moorish Alcázar, whilst the cathedral, in the centre of the city, is +supposed to represent the mainmast. A beautiful aqueduct supplies Segovia with +the clear waters of the Guadarrama. It is the finest Roman work of this class in +Iberia, and far superior to the royal palace of San Ildefonso or of La Granja, in +the neighbourhood of the city.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="plt20"> +<img src="images/ib390a.jpg" width="600" height="407" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">PEASANTS OF TOLEDO, CASTILE.</div> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div class="dctr01" id="plt21"> +<img src="images/ib390d.jpg" width="600" height="418" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">ROMAN BRIDGE AT ALCANTARA.</div> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Toledo is the most famous city to the south of the great +rampart formed by the <span class="xxpn" id="p391">{391}</span> +Sierras of Guadarrama, Gredos, and Gata. This is the <i>Ciudad Imperial</i>, the +“mother of cities,” the coronet of Spain and the light of the world, as it was +called by Juan de Padilla, the most famous of its sons. Tradition tells us that it +existed long before Hercules founded Segovia, and, like Rome, it stands upon seven +hills. Toledo, with its gates, towers, Moorish and mediæval buildings, is indeed a +beautiful city, and its cathedral is of dazzling richness. But, for all this, Toledo is +a decayed place, and its famous armourers’ shops have been swamped by a +Government manufactory.</p> + +<p>Talavera de la Reyna, below Toledo, on the Tajo, still possesses some of its +ancient manufactures of silk and faience. Puente del Arzobispo and the other +towns on the Tajo are hardly more now than large villages. The bridge of Almaraz +crosses the river far away from any populous town, and the old Roman bridge +of Alconétar exists no longer. Alcántara,—that is, <i>the</i> bridge,—near the Portuguese +frontier, still remains a monument of the architectural skill of the +Romans. It was completed in the year 105, in the reign of Trajan, and its +architect, Lacer, appears to have been a Spaniard. Its centre is at an elevation +of 160 feet above the mean level of the Tajo, the floods of which rise occasionally +to the extent of a hundred feet.</p> + +<p>All the great towns of Estremadura lie at some distance from the Tajo, and +its great volume of water has hitherto hardly been utilised for purposes of +irrigation or navigation. On a fertile hill nearly twenty miles to the north of +this river, the old town of Plasencia may be seen bounded in the distance by +mountains frequently covered with snow. Cáceres is about the same distance +to the south, as is also Trujillo, which received such vast wealth from the conquerors +of Peru, but is now dependent upon its pigs and herds of cattle.</p> + +<p>The position of those towns of Estremadura which lie on the banks of the +Guadiuna is more favourable. Badajoz, close to the Spanish frontier, has lost its +ancient importance as a fortress since it became a place of commerce on the only +railway which as yet joins Spain to Portugal. Mérida, on the same railway, is +richer in Roman monuments than any other town of Spain, for there are a +triumphal arch, the remains of an aqueduct, an amphitheatre, a naumachy, baths, +and an admirable bridge of eighty granite arches, 2,600 feet in length; but in +population it is far inferior to Don Benito, a town hardly mentioned in history, +higher up the Guadiana, at the edge of the vast plain of La Serena. It was founded +in the beginning of the sixteenth century, and together with its neighbour, +Villanueva de la Serena, derives its wealth from the fertility of the surrounding +country. Its fruits, and particularly its water-melons, are much esteemed. The +plains on the right bank of the Guadiana abound in phosphate of lime, which is +exported to France and England.</p> + +<p>The towns of La Mancha are of no historical note, and the province owes +its celebrity almost exclusively to Cervantes’ creation, the incomparable “Don +Quixote.” Ciudad Real, an industrious place formerly; Almagro, known for its +point-lace; Daimiel, near which stood the principal castle of the military order of +Calatrava; Manzanares; and other towns are important principally +because of their <span class="xxpn" id="p392">{392}</span> +trade in corn and wine. Almaden,—that is, “the mine,”—in a valley on the +northern slope of the Sierra Morena, has become famous through its cinnabar +mines, which for more than three centuries supplied the New World with +mercury, and still yield about 1,200 tons annually.</p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg146"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib392xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 146.—<span class="smcap">M<b>ADRID</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smmaj">ITS</span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>NVIRONS.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 200,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib392.jpg" width="600" height="726" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Eastern Castile, being at a considerable elevation above the sea-level, and +having a rugged surface, cannot support a population more dense than either La +Mancha or Estremadura. There are but few towns of note, and even the capital, +Cuenca, is hardly more than a third-rate provincial +city. Picturesquely perched <span class="xxpn" id="p393">{393}</span> +upon a steep rock overhanging the deep gorges of the Huecar and Júcar, it merely +lives in the past. The only other towns of note in that part of the country are +Guadalajara, with a Roman acqueduct, and Alcalá, the native place of Cervantes +and seat of an ancient university, which at one time saw 10,000 students within its +walls. Both these towns are situated on the Henares, a tributary of the Tajo, +and either would have been fit to become the capital of the kingdom.</p> + +<p>Indeed, at the first glance, it almost appears as if Madrid owed its existence to +the caprice of a king. It has no river, for the Manzanares is merely a torrent, its +climate is abominable, and its environs present fewer advantages than those of +Toledo, the ancient capital of the Romans and Visigoths. But once having been +selected as the capital, Madrid could not fail to rise in importance, for it occupies a +central position with respect to all other towns outside the basin of the Upper Tajo. +Pinto (<i>Punctum</i>), a short distance to the south of Madrid, is popularly supposed to +be the mathematical centre of the peninsula; and thus much is certain, that the plain +bounded in the north by the Sierra de Guadarrama forms the natural nucleus of +the country, and is traversed by its great natural highways.</p> + +<p>Toledo occupies a position almost equally central. It was the capital of the +country during the reign of the Romans, and subsequently became the capital of +the ecclesiastical authorities and of the kings of the Visigoths, and retained that +position until it fell into the power of the Moors. During the struggles between +Moors and Christians the latter shifted their capital from place to place, according +to the varying fortunes of the war, but no sooner had the former been expelled +from Córdova than the Christian kings again established themselves in the plain +to the south of the Sierra de Guadarrama. They had then to choose between Toledo +and Madrid. Toledo no doubt offered superior advantages, but its citizens having +joined the insurrection of the <i>comuneros</i> against Charles V., the Emperor-king decided +in favour of Madrid. Philip III. endeavoured to remove the capital to Valladolid, +but the natural attractions of Madrid proved too strong for him, and the schools, +museums, public buildings, and manufactories which have arisen in the latter since +then must for ever insure it a preponderating position. The railways, which now +join Madrid to the extremities of the peninsula, countervail the disadvantages +of its immediate neighbourhood; and although the purest Castilian is spoken at +Toledo, it is Madrid which, through its press, has insured the preponderance of that +idiom throughout Spain. Madrid has long been in advance of all other cities of the +peninsula as regards political activity, industry, and commerce, but its growth +having taken place during a period devoid of art, it is inferior to other towns with +respect to the character of its public buildings. The museums, however, are +amongst the richest in Europe, and make it a second Florence. Immediately +outside the public promenades of the Prado and Buen Retiro we find ourselves +in a desolate country covered with flints, and this must be crossed by +a traveller desirous of visiting the delightful gardens of Aranjuez, the huge +Escorial built by Philip II., or the villas in the wooded valleys of the Sierra de +Guadarrama. These latter supply Madrid with water, as the neighbouring mountains +do with ice. Formerly one of the most secluded of +these valleys became <span class="xxpn" id="p394">{394}</span> +the seat of a mock-kingdom, nominally independent of the Kings of Castile. +During the Moorish invasion the inhabitants of the plain of Jarama had sought +shelter in the mountains, and the rest of the world forgot all about them. They +called themselves Patones, and elected an hereditary king. About the middle of +the seventeenth century the last of the line, by trade a carrier, surrendered his +wand of authority into the hands of a royal officer, and the valley was placed +under the jurisdiction of the authorities at Uceda.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn140" id="fnanch140">140</a></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="III.—Andalusia.">III.—<span + class="smcap">A<b>NDALUSIA.</b></span><a + class="afnanchstar" href="#fn141" id="fnanch141" + title="go to note 141">*</a></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">Andalusia +embraces the whole of the basin of the Guadalquivir, +together with some adjoining districts. It is bounded in the north by +the Sierra Morena, which in the direction of Portugal becomes a rugged +mountain district of crystalline formation intersected by tortuous +ravines, and rising in the Sierra de Aracena, north of the mining +region of the Rio Tinto, to a height of 5,500 feet. Farther east the +Sierra Morena ascends in terraces above the valley of the Guadalquivir, +and on its reverse slope we meet with districts, such as that of Los +Pedroches (1,650 feet), hardly less monotonous of aspect than the +plains of La Mancha. The <span class="xxpn" id="p395">{395}</span> +Punta de Almenara (5,920 feet), in the Sierra de Alcaraz, in the +extreme east, may be looked upon as the culminating point of this +sierra, which is indebted for its name of “Black Mountain” to the +sombre pines which clothe its slopes.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg147"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib394xmlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 147.—<span class="smcap">A<b>RANJUEZ.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 75,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib394.jpg" width="600" height="381" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The line of water-parting does not pass through the highest summits of +this range. Most of the rivers rise on the plateau, and take their course, by +picturesque gorges, right through the heart of the mountains. The most famous +of these gorges is that of Despeñaperros (2,444 feet), leading from the dreary +plains of La Mancha to the smiling valley of Andalusia. This pass has played a +great part in every war. At its foot was fought in 1212 the fearful battle of +Navas de Tolosa, in which more than 200,000 Mussulmans are said to have been +slaughtered.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg148"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib395xmlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 148.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>ASINS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>UADIANA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>UADALQUIVIR.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 3,000,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib395.jpg" width="600" height="481" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The mountains which shut in the basin of Andalusia on the east are cut up +by deep river gorges into several distinct masses or chains, of which the Calar +del Mundo (5,437 feet), Yelmo de Segura (5,925 feet), and Sierra Sagra (7,675 +feet) are the principal. The southern mountain ranges uniformly extend from east +to west. From north to south we cross in succession the Sierras de María (6,690 +feet), de las Estancias, and de los Filabres (6,283 feet), so famous for its marbles. +In the west the latter two ranges join the Sierra de Baza (6,236 feet), itself attached +to the great culminating range of Iberia, the Sierra Nevada, by a saddle of inconsiderable +height (2,950 feet). <span class="xxpn" id="p396">{396}</span></p> + +<p>The Sierra Nevada consists mainly of schists, through which eruptions of +serpentine and porphyry have taken place. The area it occupies is small, but +from whatever side we approach it rises precipitously, and the eye can trace the +succeeding zones of vegetation up to that of perennial snows pierced by the peaks +of Mulahacen (11,661 feet), Picacho de la Veleta (11,386 feet), and Alcazaba +(7,590 feet). Vines and olive-trees clothe the foot-hills; to these succeed walnut-trees, +then oaks, and finally a pale carpet of turf hidden beneath snow for six +months. Masses of snow accumulate in sheltered hollows, and these <i>ventisqueros</i>, +<i>ventiscas</i>, or snow-drifts, supply Granada with ice. In the <i>Corral de la Veleta</i> there +even exists a true glacier, which gives birth to the river Genil, and is the most +southerly in all Europe. The more extensive glaciers of a former age have +disappeared long ago. To the purling streams fed by the snows of the sierra the +Vega of Granada owes its rich verdure, its flowers, and its excellent fruits, and the +delightful valley of Lecrin its epithet of “Paradise +of the Alpujarras.”</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg149"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 149.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ASS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">D<b>ESPEÑAPERROS.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib396.jpg" width="600" height="586" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div><span class="xxpn" id="p397">{397}</span></div> + +<p>No other district of Spain so forcibly reminds us of the dominion of the Moors. +The principal summit is named after a Moorish prince. On the Picacho they lit a +beacon on the approach of a Christian army, and in the Alpujarras, on the +southern slope, they pastured their sheep. The Galician and Asturian peasants, +who now occupy this district, are superior in no respect to the converted Moors +who were permitted to remain at Ujijar, the capital of Alpujarras, when their +compatriots were driven forth. The natural riches of the mountains remain +undeveloped, and they are surrounded by a belt of <i>despoblados</i>.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg150"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 150.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>IERRA</b></span> + <span class="smcap">N<b>EVADA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AS</span> + <span class="smmaj">SEEN</span> + <span class="smmaj">FROM</span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>AZA.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib397.jpg" width="600" height="579" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>From the Pass of Alhedin (3,300 feet), between Granada and Alpujarra, we look +down upon one of the most charming panoramas of the world. It was here that +Boabdil, the fugitive Moorish king, beheld for the last time the smiling plains of +his kingdom, and hence the spot is known as the “Last Sigh of the Moor,” or the +“Hill of Tears.” From the highest summits of the sierra, however, the prospect +is exceedingly grand. Standing upon the Picacho de la Veleta, +we see Southern <span class="xxpn" id="p398">{398}</span> +Spain spread out beneath our feet, with its fertile valleys, rugged rocks, and +russet-coloured wilds. Looking south, across the blue waters of the Mediterranean, +the mountains of Barbary loom out in the distance, and sometimes we are even able +to hear the murmuring of the waves as they beat against the coast.</p> + +<p>The mountains around these giants of Granada are very inferior to them in +height. The country in the north, which is bounded by the valleys of the Genil, +Guadiana Menor, and Guadalquivir, is occupied by an upland intersected by deep +ravines, and rising now and then into distinct mountain chains, such as the Sierra +Magina (7,047 feet) and Sierra de Jabalcuz, near Jaen (1,800 feet); the chain +Alta Coloma, farther south, with its wild pass, Puerto de Arenas, between Jaen +and Granada; and the Sierra Susana, close to Granada, which extends westward +to the mountain mass of the Parapanda, the great prophet of the husbandmen of +the Vega:―</p> + +<div class="dpoem fsz6"><div class="nowrap"> +<p class="pv0"><span class="spqut">“</span>Cuando + Parapanda se pone la montera,</p> +<p class="pv0"><span class="spqutspc">L</span>lueve, + aunque Dios no lo quisiera.”</p></div> + +<div class="padtopc fsz7">(“When Parapanda puts on his cap it rains, + though God may not wish it.”)</div> +</div><!--dpoem--> + +<p>The mountains extending along the coast are cut up by transverse valleys into +several distinct masses. The Sierra de Gata, in the south-east, is a detached +mountain mass, pierced by several extinct volcanoes. Farther west rises the +Sierra Alhamilla, the torrents of which are so rich in garnets that the huntsmen +use them instead of shot. Crossing a rivulet, we reach the superb Sierra de Gádor +(7,620 feet), consisting of schists.</p> + +<p>The Contraviesa (6,218 feet), which separates the Alpujarras from the Mediterranean, +rises so steeply from the coast that even sheep can hardly climb it. The +Sierra de Almijara, beyond the narrow valley of the Guadalfeo, and its western +continuation, the Sierra de Alhama (7,003 feet), present similar features. The +mountains on the other side of the Pass of Alfarnate or de los Alazores (2,723 +feet) constitute the exterior rampart of an ancient lake bed, bounded in the north +by an irregular swelling of ground known as Sierra de Yeguas. The road from +Málaga to Antequera crosses that rampart in the famous Pass of El Torcal (4,213 +feet), the fantastically shaped rocks of which bear some resemblance to the ruins +of an extensive city. Archæologists have discovered there some of the most curious +prehistoric remains of Iberia.</p> + +<p>To the west of the basin of Málaga, drained by the Guadalhorce, the emissary +of the ancient lake referred to above, the mountains again increase in height, and +in the Sierra de Tolox attain an elevation of 6,430 feet. Snows remain here +throughout the winter. From the Tolox mountain chains ramify in all directions. +The Sierra Bermeja (4,756 feet) extends to the south-west, its steep promontories +being washed by the waves of the sea; the wild “Serrania” de Ronda (5,085 feet) +extends westward, and is continued in the mountain mass of San Cristóbal +(5,627 feet), which sends branches southward as far as the Capes of Trafalgar and +Tarifa. The rock of Gibraltar (1,408 feet), which rises so proudly at the entrance +of the Mediterranean, is a geological outlier attached to the mainland by a strip of +sand thrown up by the waves of the ocean.</p> + +<div class="dctr03" id="plt22"> +<img src="images/ib398a.jpg" width="548" height="800" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">GORGE DE LOS GAITANES, + DEFILE OF GUADALHORCE.</div></div><!--dctr--> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg151"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib399xmlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 151.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>OUTH</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>UADALQUIVIR.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 200,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib399.jpg" width="600" height="554" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div><span class="xxpn" id="p399">{399}</span></div> + +<p>Erosion has powerfully affected the mountains occupying the country between +the basin of the Guadalquivir and the coast. Amongst the numerous river gorges, +that of the Gaytanos, through which the Guadalhorce flows from the plateau of +Antequera to the orange groves of Alora, is one of the wildest and most magnificent +in all Spain. Only torrents enter the Mediterranean, and even of the rivers +discharging their waters into the Atlantic there is but one which is of some +importance, on account of its great volume and the facilities it offers for navigation. +This is the Guadalquivir, which rises in the Sierra Sagra, at an elevation of 5,900 +feet above the sea-level. Having received the Guadalimar, its current becomes +gentle, and it flows through a wide and open valley, thus differing essentially +from the rivers of the Castiles, which, on their way to the sea, traverse narrow +gorges. Its volume fairly entitles it to its Arab name of Wad-el-Kebir, or “large +river.” The geological work performed by this river and its tributaries has been +enormous. Mountain ramparts have been broken through, lakes drained, and +immense quantities of soil spread over the valley. Nowhere can this work be +traced more advantageously than in the valley of the Genil of Granada, for the +fertile district of La Vega was covered by a lake, the pent-up waters of which +opened themselves a +passage near Loja. <span class="xxpn" id="p400">{400}</span></p> + +<p>The estuary of the river has been gradually filled up by sediment. The tide +ascends nearly as far as Seville, where the river is about 250 yards wide. Below +that city it passes through an alluvial tract known as the <i>marismas</i>, ordinarily a +dusty plain roamed over by half-wild cattle, but converted by the least rain into a +quagmire. Neither villages nor homesteads are met with here, but the sands +farther back are covered with dwarf palms, and lower down a few hills of tertiary +formation approach close to the river, their vine-clad slopes affording a pleasing +contrast to the surrounding solitude.</p> + +<p>A contraction of the alluvial valley marks the exterior limit of the ancient +estuary silted up by the Guadalquivir. Sanlúcar de Barrameda, a town of +oriental aspect, stands on the left bank, whilst a range of dunes intervenes +between the sea and the flat country on the right bank. The mouth of the river +is closed by a bar, so that only vessels of small draught can enter it. These +<i>Arenas Gordas</i>, or “great sands,” are for the most part covered with pines, and, +except on their exterior face, they have remained stable since the historical epoch.</p> + +<p>The Guadalquivir is the only river of Spain which is navigable for a considerable +distance above its mouth. Vessels of 200 tons ascend it as far as Seville, a +distance of sixty miles. Sanlúcar was formerly the great port of Spain, and its +coasting trade is still considerable. None of the other rivers of Andalusia are +navigable. The Guadalete, which enters the Bay of Cádiz, is a shallow, sluggish +stream; the Odiel and the Rio Tinto are rapid torrents, and their estuary, below +Huelva, has been choked up by the sediment brought down by them; while Palos, +so famous as the port from which Columbus started upon his great voyage of discovery, +has dwindled down to a poor fishing village.</p> + +<p>But what are these changes compared with the great revolution which joined +the Mediterranean to the Atlantic? There can be no doubt that a barrier of +mountains separated the two seas. The destructive action of the Atlantic appears +to have been facilitated not only by the cavernous nature of the rocks on +both sides of the strait, but also by the fact of the level of the Mediterranean +having been much lower at that time than that of the Atlantic. Even now the +waters of the latter sometimes rush through the strait with astounding velocity +(see Fig. <a href="#fg006" title="go to Fig. 6">6</a>, p. 26). +We cannot tell whether the strait has increased in width during +historical times, for ancient geographers are not very precise in their measurements. +Thus much, however, is certain, that the general features of the strait have not +changed, and the two pillars of Hercules, Calpe and Abyla, may still be recognised +in modern Gibraltar and Ceuta.</p> + +<p>The rock of Gibraltar does not form the southernmost promontory of Iberia, but, +being the most striking object along the strait, it has given its name to it. Mariners +look upon it as the true boundary between the Mediterranean and the Atlantic, +and it has been likened, not inaptly, to a crouching lion guarding the gateway +between the two seas. It rises almost perpendicularly on the east, and the town, +with most of the batteries, has been constructed on the western slope, which is +more accessible. The famous rock, though a natural dependency of Spain, has +become, by right of conquest, one of the great strongholds of +England, and its <span class="xxpn" id="p401">{401}</span> +importance as a fortress as well as a place of commerce is indisputable. In its +caverns have been discovered stone implements and the skeletons of dolichocephalous +men.</p> + +<p>The frequent intercourse between Andalusia and the Berber countries on the +other side of the strait is explained by vicinity as well as by similarity of climate. +Algarve, Huelva, and the lower valley of the Guadalquivir, as far as Seville and +Écija, that “stewing-pan” or “furnace” of Spain, form one of the hottest districts +of Europe, and the coast, from Algeciras and Gibraltar to Cartagena, Alicante, and +the Cabo de la Nao, is hardly inferior to it. The country around the Bay of +Cádiz and the hilly districts in the extreme south, which are freely exposed to the +<i>virazon</i>, or sea breeze, enjoy a more temperate climate. In the two torrid coast +regions delineated above frosts are hardly known, and the mean temperature of +the coolest month reaches 54° F. The heat is greatest around the bays exposed +to the full influence of the hot African winds, and least on the Atlantic seaboard, +where westerly breezes moderate it. Contrary atmospheric currents naturally +meet in the Strait of Gibraltar, where the wind is generally high, and tempests +are frequent in winter. Westerly winds prevail during winter, easterly winds +in summer. The two promontories of Europe and Africa are looked upon by +mariners as trustworthy signallers of the weather: when they are wrapped in +clouds or mists rain and easterly winds may be looked for, but when their profiles +stand out clearly against the blue sky it is a sure sign of fine weather and +westerly winds.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn142" id="fnanch142">142</a></p> + +<p>The dry and semi-tropical climate of Lower Andalusia frequently exercises a most +depressing influence upon Northern Europeans. In the plain and along the coast +it hardly ever rains during summer, and the heat is sometimes stifling, for the +trade winds of the tropics are unknown. At Cadiz the land wind blowing from +the direction of Medina Sidonia, and hence known as <i>medina</i>, is suffocating, and +quarrels and even murders are said to occur most frequently whilst it lasts. But +the most dreaded wind is the <i>solano</i> or <i>levante</i>, which is hot as the blast from a +furnace. A curious vapour, known as <i>calina</i>, then appears on the southern +horizon, the air is filled with dust, leaves wither, and sometimes birds drop in +their flight as if suffocated.</p> + +<p>In the temperate regions of Europe summer is the season of flowers and foliage, +but in Andalusia it is that of aridity and death. Except in gardens and irrigated +fields all vegetation shrivels up and assumes a greyish tint like that of the soil. +But when the equinoctial autumn rains fall in the lowlands, and snows in the +mountains, the plants recover rapidly, and a second spring begins. In February +vegetation is most luxuriant, but after March heat and dryness again become the +order of the day. Indeed, Andalusia suffers from a want of moisture. There are +steppes without water, trees, or human habitations, the most +extensive being on <span class="xxpn" id="p402">{402}</span> +the Lower Genil, where the depressions are occupied by salt lakes, as in Algeria +or Persia, and cultivation is impossible. Another steppe of some extent stretches +to the east of Jaen, and is known as that of Mancha Real. The barren tracts on +the Mediterranean slopes are relatively even of greater extent than those in the +basin of the Guadalquivir. The volcanic region of the Sierra de Gata is a complete +desert, where castles and towers erected for purposes of defence are the only +buildings. Elsewhere the coast is occupied by saline plains, which support a vegetation +mainly consisting of salsolaceæ, plumbagineæ, and cruciferæ, five per cent. +of the species of which are African. Barilla, the ashes of which are used in the +manufacture of soda, grows plentifully there.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg152"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib402xmlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 152.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>TEPPES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>CIJA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 750,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib402.jpg" width="600" height="623" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>In the popular mind, however, Andalusia has at all times been associated with +fertility. Its name recalls the oranges of Seville, the luxuriant vegetation of the +Vega of Granada, the “Elysian Fields,” and the “Garden of the Hesperides,” +which the ancients identified with the valley of the Bætis. The indigenous flora +entitles Andalusia to its epithet of the “Indies of Spain,” and, +in addition to <span class="xxpn" id="p403">{403}</span> +the tropical plants from Asia and Africa which grow there spontaneously, we meet +with others which have been successfully acclimatized. Dates, bananas, and bamboos +grow side by side with caoutchouc-trees, dragon’s-blood trees, magnolias, +chirimoyas, erythrinas, azedarachs; ricinus and stramonium shoot up into +veritable trees; the cochineal cactus of the Canaries and the ground-nut of the +Senegal do well; sweet potatoes, cotton, and coffee are cultivated with success; +and the sugar-cane succeeds in sheltered places. The coast between Motril and +Málaga is supposed to yield annually £20,000 worth of sugar.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg153"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib403xmlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 153.—<span class="smcap">Z<b>ONES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>EGETATION</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">ON</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>OAST</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>NDALUSIA.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib403.jpg" width="600" height="294" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The fauna of Andalusia presents, also, some African features. The molluscs +met with in Morocco exist likewise in Andalusia; the ichneumon may be seen on +the right bank of the Lower Guadalquivir and elsewhere; the chameleon is plentiful; +and a species of wild goat is said to be common to the mountains of Morocco +and the Sierra Nevada. Nor should we forget to state that an African monkey +(<i>Inuus sylvanus)</i> still lives on the rock of Gibraltar, but whether he has been +imported has not yet been determined.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>In the dawn of European history Andalusia was probably inhabited by an +Iberian race akin to that of the Basques. The Bastulæ, Bastarnæ, and Bastesæ, +in the hills facing the Mediterranean, and the Turdetani and Turduli of the valley +of the Bætis, bore Euskarian names, as did many of their towns. But even thus +early they must have been a mixed race. Celtic tribes held the hills extending +to the north-west of the Bætis, in the direction of Lusitania; the Turdetani, +who were relatively civilised, for they possessed written laws, permitted Phœnicians, +Carthaginians, and Greeks to settle amongst them, and in the end became +thoroughly Latinised. Municipal charters discovered at Málaga, and more recently +at Osuna (<i>Colonia Julia Genitiva</i>), prove that the cities of this province enjoyed a +considerable degree of self-government.</p> + +<p>When the Roman world broke down, Southern Spain was +invaded by Vandals, <span class="xxpn" id="p404">{404}</span> +Byzantines, and Visigoths, to whom succeeded Arabs, Berbers, and Jews. The +influence exercised upon the country by the Moors—that is, by a mixed race +of Arabs and Berbers—has been more abiding than that of their Teutonic +predecessors. They maintained themselves for more than seven centuries, were +numerous in the towns, and cultivated the fields conjointly with the ancient +inhabitants of the country. When the order of exile went forth against their +whole race, Moorish blood circulated in the veins of those who were charged with +the execution of this harsh measure. In certain portions of Andalusia, and more +especially in the Alpujarras, where the Moors maintained their independence until +the end of the sixteenth century, the mixture between the two races had made +such progress that religious profession, and not the colour of the skin, decided +nationality. Numerous Arabic words and phrases have found their way into the +Andalusian dialect, and the geographical nomenclature of many districts is Arabic +rather than Iberian or Latin. Most of the large buildings in the towns are <i>alcázars</i>, +or mosques, and even the style of modern structures is Arabic, modified to some +extent by Roman influences. The houses, instead of looking upon the street, face +an interior court, or <i>patio</i>, where the members of the family meet by the side of +a cool fountain. No further ethnical element has been added to the population +since the epoch of the Arabs, for the few German colonists who settled at Carolina, +Carlota, and elsewhere did not prosper, and either returned to their native country +or became merged in the general population.</p> + +<p>The Andalusians have frequently been called the Gascons of Spain. They are +generally of graceful and supple build, of seductive manners, and full of eloquence, +but the latter is too frequently wasted upon trifles. Though not devoid of bravery, +the Andalusian is a great boaster, and his vanity often causes him to pass the +bounds of truth. At the same time he is of a contented mind, and does not allow +poverty to affect his spirit. The mountaineers differ in some respects from the +dwellers in the plains. They are more reserved in their manners, and the +<i>Jaetanos</i>, or mountaineers of Jaen, are known as the Galicians of Andalusia. +The beauty of the highland women is of a more severe type, and, compared with +the charming Gaditanes and the fascinating <i>majas</i> of Seville, the women of +Granada, Guadix, and Baza are remarkable for an air of haughty nobleness.</p> + +<p>No doubt there are men in Bætica who work, but as a rule love of labour is not +amongst the virtues of the Andalusian. The country might become the great +tropical storehouse of Europe, but its immense resources remain undeveloped. To +some extent this is explained by the fact that nearly the whole country is owned +by great landlords. Many estates, which formerly were carefully cultivated, have +been converted into sheep-walks, and for miles we meet neither houses nor human +beings. The highlands, too, belong to large proprietors, but are leased to small +farmers, who pay one-third of their product in lieu of rent.</p> + +<p>The magnificent orange groves of Seville, Sanlúcar, and other towns, the olive +groves, vineyards, and orchards of Málaga, supply the world with vast quantities +of fruit; its productive corn-fields have made Andalusia one of the great granaries +of the world; but it is mainly its wines which enable it to take +a share in <span class="xxpn" id="p405">{405}</span> +international commerce. Immense quantities of the wine known as sherry are grown in +the vineyards of Jerez, to the east of Cádiz. Many of the vineyards belong to +Englishmen, and merchants of that nation are busily occupied in blending and +other operations peculiar to their trade. Several wines, however, maintain their +superior character to the present time. Such are the sweet <i>tintilla</i> of Rota, +<i>manzanilla</i>, and <i>pajarate</i>, made from dried grapes. In spite of many malpractices, +this branch of industry has exercised a most beneficial influence upon the character +of the population. Santa María, on the Bay of Cádiz, is one of the great wine +ports of the world, and Spain has become a formidable rival of its northern +neighbour.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn143" id="fnanch143">143</a></p> + +<p>The ancient manufacturing industry of the country can hardly be said to exist +any longer, but mining is still carried on. Strabo exaggerates the mineral +wealth of the country, which is nevertheless very great. Nearly all the productive +mining districts of Southern Spain are in the hills. The Sierra de +Gádor is said to contain “more metal than rock.” Hundreds of argentiferous +lead, copper, and iron mines have been opened there, and in the sierras of +Guadix, Baza, and Almería. Near Linares, on the Upper Guadalquivir, there are +lead mines yielding about 210,000 tons annually. The silver mines of Constantina +and Guadalcanal, in the Sierra Morena, are being worked only at intervals. The +coal basins of Bélmez and Espiel, to the north of Córdova, promise to become of +great importance, although the output at present hardly exceeds 200,000 tons a +year. Deposits of iron and copper exist near them.</p> + +<p>But of all the mines of Spain those situated in the province of Huelva are +the most productive. The Silurian rocks there are wonderfully rich in pyrites of +copper. The mines of Rio Tinto strike the beholder by their stupendous extent; +and the existence of ancient galleries, buildings, and inscriptions proves that they +have been worked since the most remote time. The invasion of the Vandals +temporarily put a stop to the work, which was only resumed in 1730. The two +principal deposits have been computed to contain no less than 300,000,000 tons +of ore. The deposits at Tharsis are much less extensive, but within easier reach +of Huelva. They contain 14,000,000 tons of iron and copper pyrites, and are +worked like an open quarry. The deposit is no less than 450 feet in thickness, +and some of the ores yield twenty per cent. of copper. Immense heaps of scoriæ +have accumulated near the mine, where they are bedded in regular strata dating +back to the time of the Carthaginians. The sulphurous vapours rising from +hundreds of furnaces poison the air and destroy the vegetation. The rivers Odiel +and Rio Tinto run with ferruginous water which kills the fish; yellow ochre +is thrown up along their banks; and in their estuary is precipitated a blackish +mud consisting of the metal mixed with the sulphur of decomposed marine +animals.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn144" id="fnanch144">144</a> <span class="xxpn" id="p406">{406}</span></p> + +<p>Andalusia, though a desert in comparison with what it might be, rivals Italy +in the fame and beauty of its cities. The names of Granada, Córdova, Seville, +and Cádiz awaken in our mind the most pleasing memories, for these old Moorish +towns have become identified with a great advance in arts and science.</p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg154"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib406xlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 154.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>INES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">H<b>UELVA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 487,300.</div> +<img src="images/ib406.jpg" width="600" height="752" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div class="dctr01" id="plt23"> +<img src="images/ib406a.jpg" width="600" height="408" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">PEASANTS OF CORDOVA, ANDALUSIA.</div> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Their advantageous geographical position accounts for their prosperity, past +and present. Córdova and Seville command the fertile plain of the Guadalquivir, +and the roads crossing the gaps of the neighbouring mountains converge upon +them; Granada has its plentiful supply of water and rich +fields; Huelva, Cádiz, <span class="xxpn" id="p407">{407}</span> +Málaga, and Almería are considerable seaports; and Gibraltar occupies a commanding +position between two seas. There are other towns less populous, but of +great strategical importance, as they command the roads joining the valleys of the +Genil and Guadalquivir to the sea.</p> + +<p>Amongst the smaller towns which have played a part in history are several to +the east of Granada, such as Velez Rubio and Velez Blanco, on the Mediterranean +slope; Cullar de Baza, with its subterranean houses excavated in the gypsum, on +the western slope of the <i>Vertientes</i>, or “the water-shed;” Huescar, the heir of an +old Carthaginian city; and Baza, environed by a fertile plain known as <i>Hoya</i>, +or “the hollow.”</p> + +<p>Granada, though it celebrates the anniversary of the entrance of Ferdinand +and Isabella, is a very inferior place to what it was as the capital of a Moorish +kingdom, when it had 60,000 houses and 400,000 inhabitants, and was the busiest +and wealthiest town of the peninsula. It is still the sixth city of Spain, but +thousands of its ragged inhabitants live in hideous dens, and close to the picturesque +suburb of Albaicin a mob largely composed of gipsies has settled down in nauseous +caverns. Remains of Moorish buildings are met with only in the suburb named, but +at some distance from the city there still exist edifices which bear witness to the +glorious reign of its ancient masters. The <i>Torres Vermejas</i>, or “red towers,” +occupy a hill to the south; the <i>Generalife</i>, with its delightful gardens, crowns +another hill farther east; and between them rise the bastions and towers of the +<i>Alhambra</i>, or “red palace,” even in its present dilapidated condition one of +the masterpieces of architecture, which has served as a pattern to generations +of artists. From the towers of this magnificent building we enjoy a prospect +which indelibly impresses itself upon the memory. Granada, with its towers, +parks, and villas, lies beneath. The course of the two rivers, Genil and Darro, +can be traced amidst the foliage, whilst naked hills bound the verdant plain +of La Vega, which has been likened to an “emerald enchased in a sapphire.” +The contrast between these savage mountains and the fertile plain, between the +beautiful city and precipitous rocks, struck the Moors with admiration, for they +saw reflected in them their own nature—an outward impassiveness and a hidden +fire. Granada, to them, was the “Queen of Cities,” the “Damascus of the West.” +Nor are the modern Spaniards behind them in their admiration of Granada and +its vicinity.</p> + +<p>There are other beautiful towns in the basin of the Genil, but none can compare +with Granada, not even Loja, a “flower in the midst of thorns,” an oasis +surrounded by rugged rocks and savage defiles. Jaen, however, almost rivals +Granada. It, too, was the seat of a powerful Moorish king, the hills surrounding +it are still crowned with the ruins of fortifications buried beneath luxuriant +foliage, and the aspect of the town remains oriental to this day.</p> + +<p>The upper valley of the Guadalquivir abounds in cities. Baeza had more than +150,000 inhabitants in the time of the Moors, but wars depopulated it, many of +the people removing to Granada. Close by is Ubeda, another Moorish town. +Higher up in the hills is the mining town of Linares, hardly +large enough to <span class="xxpn" id="p408">{408}</span> +shelter 8,000 residents, but actually inhabited by 40,000. In descending the +river we pass Andújar, famous on account of its <i>alcarrazas</i>, and about twenty miles +below the town of Montoro we reach the marble bridge of Alcolea, celebrated +for the many battles which have been fought for its possession.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg155"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 155.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>LHAMBRA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml"></div> +<img src="images/ib408.jpg" width="600" height="520" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Córdova dates back to the dawn of civilisation. It has been famous and +powerful at all times, and the Spanish noblemen are proud of tracing their +origin back to this fountain-head of the “blue blood” (<i>sangre azul</i>) which is supposed +to flow in the veins of Spanish nobles. It was under the Moors that +Córdova reached the apogee of its grandeur; from the ninth century to the close +of the twelfth it had nearly a million of inhabitants; and its twenty-four suburbs +spread far and wide over the plain and along the lateral valleys. The wealth of +its mosques, palaces, and private houses was prodigious; but, more glorious still, +Córdova could boast of being the “nursery of science,” for it was the greatest +university of the world, abounding in schools and libraries. Civil wars, foreign +invasions, and religious fanaticism led to the dispersion of its libraries, and +Córdova can no longer boast of being the first city of Andalusia. Most of the old +monuments have perished, but there still exists the marvellous <i>mezquita</i>, or mosque, +built at the close of the eighth century by Abderrahman and +his son. The <span class="xxpn" id="p409">{409}</span> +interior was fitted up in the most lavish manner, the floors being paved with silver, +and the walls covered with gold, precious stones, ivory, and ebony, but a considerable +portion of the building has been pulled down to make room for a Spanish +cathedral.</p> + +<p>The more fertile districts of the province of Córdova are at some distance from +the Guadalquivir, in the hills to the south. Montilla, one of the towns there, is +noted for its wines, as are Aguilar, Baena, Cabra, and Lucena, the latter boasting +likewise of some manufactures. Between Córdova and Seville, a distance of over +ninety miles, following the sinuosities of the river, we do not meet with a single +town of note, for even Palma del Rio, at the mouth of the Genil, is only a small +place, though of some importance as the outlet of Ecija, a large town higher up the +Genil.</p> + +<p>Seville, the reigning queen of Andalusia, boasts of a few remarkable buildings, +including the alcazar, a gorgeous cathedral, and the palace known as “Pilate’s +House,” in which the Renaissance is admirably wedded with the Moorish style. +But more famous than either of these is <i>Giralda’s Tower</i>, with the saint’s revolving +statue on the top, like a weathercock. But neither these buildings nor Murillo’s +fine paintings have won Seville its epithet of “Enchantress.” For this it is +indebted to its gaiety and to a succession of fêtes, amongst which bull-fights figure +prominently. Seville became Spanish about the middle of the thirteenth century. +Its citizens valiantly defended their municipal liberties against the King of Castile, +but they were defeated, and most of its inhabitants then fled to Barbary. The +town was repeopled by Christian emigrants. Triana, however, a suburb with +which an iron bridge connects it, is inhabited by gipsies, whose secret tribunal +has its seat there. A short distance to the north of Triana are the ruins of the +amphitheatre of Italica, the old rival of Seville, and the native town of Silius +Italicus, and of the Emperors Trajan, Hadrian, and Theodosius. Coria, another +Roman city, which had its own mint during the Middle Ages, lies below Seville.</p> + +<p>Seville has numerous potteries, but its silks and stuffs interwoven with gold +and silver have ceased to command the markets of the world. The largest manufactory +of the place, that of tobacco and cigars, is carried on by Government, and +employs several thousand workmen.</p> + +<p>Alcalá de Guadaira, to the south-east of Seville, supplies the latter with bread, +and its delicious springs feed the aqueduct known as Arcos de Carmona, thus +called because it runs parallel with the old Roman road leading to Carmona +(Carmo).</p> + +<p>The towns to the south of Seville are no longer of importance. Utrera, the +most considerable amongst them, is a great railway centre, where the line to +the marble quarries of Moron, and that passing through the fertile districts of +Marchena and Osuna, branch off from the Andalusian main line. The town is +well known to <i>aficionados</i>, or sportsmen, on account of the wild bulls which pasture +in the neighbouring <i>marismas</i>. Lebrija, with its fine tower imitated from that of +Giralda, is still nearer to these marshes, which extend almost to the mouth of the +Guadalquivir. <span class="xxpn" id="p410">{410}</span></p> + +<p>Sanlúcar de Barrameda, at the mouth of the Guadalquivir, with its white and +pink houses shaded by palms, is not now the great port it was in the time of the +Arabs. It may justly boast of having sent forth, in 1519, the first vessel which +circumnavigated the globe, but it is now rather a pleasure resort than a place of +commerce. Jerez de la Frontera, in the basin of the Guadalete, is the busiest +town between Seville and Cádiz. It is a neat and showy place, surrounded by +immense <i>bodegas</i>, or wine vaults, in which are stored the wines grown in the fertile +valley of Guadalete, and known as sherry. Near Arcos de la Frontera, in the +upper part of the valley, is pointed out the site upon which was fought the famous +battle which delivered Spain to the Mussulmans.</p> + +<p>The Bay of Cádiz, so well sheltered against winds and waves by the tongue of +land which begins at the island of Leon, is surrounded by numerous towns, +forming, as it were, but a single city. Rota, on the northern coast of the bay, is +encircled by walls of cyclopean aspect. It is the resort of fishermen, and its +vintners, though reputed Bœotians, produce one of the best wines of Spain. +Farther south, at the mouth of the Guadalete, is the Puerto de Santa María, with +its wine stores, at all times a bustling place. Puerto Real, the <i>Portus Gaditanus</i>, +lies in a labyrinth of brackish channels, and is now merely a landing-place. The +neighbouring dockyard, known as <i>Trocadero</i>, and the arsenal of Carraca, are frequently +inhabited only by galley-slaves and their gaolers. The salt-pans near that +place are most productive.</p> + +<p>San Fernando is the most important town on the island of Leon, to the south +of Cádiz. The initial meridian of Spanish mariners is drawn through its observatory. +Looking across the navigable channel of San Pedro, which separates the +island from the main, we perceive the villas of Chiclana, famous as the training-place +of the <i>toreros</i>, or bull-fighters, of Andalusia. Turning to the north, we reach +the narrow ridge of the Arrecife, which may be likened to a stalk with Cádiz as +its expanded flower. Boatmen point out the supposed ruins of a temple of +Hercules, now covered by the sea; and thus much is certain, that the land is at +present subsiding, though this subsidence must have been preceded by an upheaval, +as the peninsula upon which Cádiz has been built rests upon a foundation of shells, +oysters, and molluscs.</p> + +<div class="dctr04" id="fg156"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib411dlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 156.—<span class="smcap">C<b>ADIZ</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smmaj">ITS</span> + <span class="smcap">R<b>OADSTEAD.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib411.jpg" width="471" height="800" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>We pass several forts, cross the ramparts of the Cortadura, erected in 1811, +and at length find ourselves in the famous city of Cádiz, the heir of the Gadir of +the Phœnicians, called Gadira by the Greeks, and Gades by the Romans. Cádiz +was the leading city of Iberia when that country first became known. Like other +cities, it has known periods of decay, but its great geographical advantages have +always enabled it to recover quickly. It is the natural outlet of an extensive and +fertile region, and its position near the extremity of the continent enables it successfully +to compete with Lisbon for the trade of the New World. Palos may +boast of having sent forth the <i>caravelas</i> which discovered the West Indies, but it +was Cádiz which reaped all the advantages of this discovery, more especially +since the Tribunal of the Indies was transferred to it from Seville (1720). In +1792 Cádiz exported merchandise valued at £2,500,000 +sterling to America, +<span class="xxpn" id="p412">{412}</span> and received precious metals and other articles of a value of £7,000,000 in +return. Soon afterwards Spain paid for a commercial monopoly maintained +during three centuries by the sudden loss of her colonies, and Cádiz found itself +dependent upon its fisheries and salt-pans. But recently fortune has again smiled +upon the city, and its harbours are crowded with merchantmen.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn145" id="fnanch145">145</a> Cádiz, with the +towns surrounding its bay, has a population of 200,000 souls. The site of the city +proper is limited by nature, and its houses have been built to a height of five and +six stories. The inhabitants are fond of pleasure, vivacious, and quick at repartee. +They have at all times shown themselves to be good patriots, and it was on the +island of Leon that the Cortes met to protest against the occupation of the country +by the French.</p> + +<p>Almería, on the Mediterranean coast of Andalusia, rivalled Cádiz in importance +as long as it remained in the possession of the Moors, but prosperity fled the place +immediately the Spaniards occupied it. Subsequently the town suffered greatly +from the pirates of Barbary, as is proved by the fortress-like cathedral built in the +sixteenth century. The aspect of the place, with its narrow streets and old <i>kasba</i>, +is quite oriental.</p> + +<p>The towns to the west of Almería have a tropical climate and tropical productions. +Dailas, said to be the first permanent settlement of the Arabs, is famous for +its raisins; to it succeed Adra, at the mouth of the Rio Grande of Alpujarra, +Motril, Vélez Málaga, and Málaga, embosomed in gardens watered by the +Guadalmedina.</p> + +<p>Málaga, like most of the ports on that coast, is of Phœnician origin, and the +most populous town of Andalusia. Less rich than Granada, Córdova, and +Seville in Moorish monuments, or than Cádiz in historical traditions, it is indebted +to its port and to the fertile country surrounding it for its commercial pre-eminence. +Its exports, consisting of raisins (<i>pasas</i>), almonds, figs, lemons, oranges, +wine, olive oil, &c., are the product of the immediate vicinity. There are foundries, +sugar refineries, and factories. Seen from the sea, the cathedral appears to be +almost as large as the rest of the town, but in the latter must be included not +only the houses standing at the foot of the citadel of Gibralfaro, but also the +numerous villas dotting the surrounding hills. Nay, even the picturesque towns +and watering-places in the neighbouring mountains, such as Alora, Alhaurin, +Carratraca, and Alhama, may be looked upon as dependencies of the city, for +scarcely any but <i>Malagueños</i> resort to them.</p> + +<div class="dctr03" id="fg157"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib413blg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 157.—<span class="smcap">G<b>IBRALTAR.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 150,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib413.jpg" width="592" height="800" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Antequera and Ronda, in the interior of the country, belong to the basin of +the Mediterranean, for the one stands on the Guadalhorce, which enters the sea +near Málaga, whilst the other occupies a position in the upper basin of the +Guadiaro, which washes the foot of the hills of San Roque, to the north of +Gibraltar. Antequera is one of the most ancient towns of Spain, and acts as an +intermediary between Málaga and the valley of the Guadalquivir. On a hill near +it stands a curious dolmen, twenty feet in height, known +as <i>Cueva del Mengal</i>. <span class="xxpn" id="p413">{413}</span> +The picturesque Moorish town of Ronda is surrounded on three sides by a gorge +600 feet in depth, 120 to 300 feet wide, and spanned by three bridges, one Roman, +one Arab, and the last (built 1740–88) Spanish. Ronda still possesses some +strategical importance, for it defends the road leading from the valley of the Genil +to that of the Guadiaro. The <i>Rondeños</i> are noted for the skill with which they +train horses for mountain travel. They are notorious smugglers, as +are also many <span class="xxpn" id="p414">{414}</span> +of the inhabitants of the small seaport towns of Marbella, Estepona, and Algeciras, +near Gibraltar.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn146" id="fnanch146">146</a></p> + +<p>The rock of Gibraltar, of which the English obtained possession in 1704, has +not only been converted into a first-rate fortress, but is likewise a busy place of commerce. +Gibraltar produces nothing except a little fruit, and most of its provisions, +including meat and corn, are imported from Tangiers, in Morocco. The inhabitants +of the town are dependent for their support upon passing vessels, the English +garrison, and a brisk contraband trade with Spain. Gibraltar affords very indifferent +shelter, and only one-fourth of the vessels passing through the strait call +there, and even these generally confine themselves to replenishing their stock of +coal. Nor is a residence on this picturesque rock very pleasurable, for fevers +prevail, and the military character of the place entails numerous restrictions. +During the heat of summer many of the English residents—facetiously called +“lizards of the rock”—seek refuge at San Roque, a village to the north of the +bay, the neighbourhood of which affords excellent sport.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn147" id="fnanch147">147</a></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="IV.—Mediterranean Slope of the Great + Plateau. Murcia and Valencia.">IV.—<span + class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>EDITERRANEAN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>LOPE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>REAT</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>LATEAU.</b></span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>URCIA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>ALENCIA.</b></span><a + class="afnanchstar" href="#fn148" id="fnanch148" + title="go to note 148">*</a></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">In a few hours we are able to travel from the +inhospitable plateaux to the hot valleys and plains of Murcia and +Valencia debouching upon the Mediterranean.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="plt24"> +<img src="images/ib414a.jpg" width="600" height="411" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">GIBRALTAR, AS SEEN FROM THE “LINES.”</div> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The spurs from the Sierra Nevada, which approach the coast to the north of +the Cabo de Gata, are separated by <i>ramblas</i>, or torrent beds, and gradually decrease +in height as we proceed north. The torrent of Almanzora separates the Sierra de +los Filabros from its northern continuation, the Sierra de Almenara, which for a +considerable distance runs parallel with the coast. It sends out a spur in the +direction of Cartagena, which terminates in Cabo de Palos. The inland ranges +run almost parallel with this coast range, and are separated by longitudinal valleys +opening out into the great transverse one of the Segura. These ranges are the +Sierra de María, “el Gigante” (4,918 feet), with the Sierra de Espuña (5,190 feet), +the Sierra de Taibilla, the Calar del Mundo (5,440 feet), and +the Sierra de Alcaraz <span class="xxpn" id="p415">{415}</span> +(5,910 feet). The ranges to the north and east of the Segura must be looked upon +as continuations of those mentioned. They attain their greatest altitude in the +Moncabrer (4,543 feet), and their spurs form several notable promontories, amongst +which are the volcanic Peñon de Ifach and the Cabos de la Nao and San António. +Near the latter rises the Mongo (2,337 feet), which has become known as a crucial +trigonometrical station.</p> + +<p>The mountains which dominate the valley of the Júcar present the feature of +a denuded plateau, above which rise a few isolated summits. The aspect of the +basin of the Guadalaviar is far more mountainous. On the west it is bounded +by the sierras having their nucleus in the Muela de San Juan (5,280 feet), and to +the east rise the imposing mountain masses of the Javalambre (6,569 feet) and +Peña Golosa (5,942 feet). The summits of the range which extends from the +latter to the great bend of the Lower Ebro, such as the Muela de Ares (4,332 feet), +the Tosal de Encanades (4,565 feet), and Bosch de la Espina (3,868 feet), bear +Catalan names. A range of inferior heights runs parallel with it along the coast, +the interval between the two forming a strath, or vale. This coast range terminates +abruptly in the Sierra de Montsia (2,500 feet), close to the delta of the Ebro, +and before the pent-up waters of the river had excavated themselves a path to the +sea it extended right to the Pyrenees.</p> + +<p>All these mountains are for the most part naked, and shrubs appear like black +patches upon their whitish slopes. They stand out clearly against the blue and +limpid sky, whose transparency has won Murcia the title of the “most serene +kingdom.” The climate in the valley of the Segura is even more African in its +character than that of Andalusia. There are only two seasons, summer and +winter, the latter lasting from October to January, but the temperature throughout +the year is equable, owing to the mistral which blows from the cool plateau +and the sea breezes.</p> + +<p>The flora, especially along the coast of Murcia, is a mixture of tropical and +temperate plants. There are trees which shed their leaves in winter, others which +retain their foliage throughout the year, and by the side of wheat, rice, maize, +olives, oranges, and grapes are grown cotton, sugar-cane, sweet potatoes, nopals, +agaves, and dates. Tropical diseases have found a congenial soil in this country. +Yellow fever has been imported occasionally from America. The putrefying +substances left upon the fields after floods poison the air, and the brackish waters +of the lagoons, or <i>albuferas</i>, are the breeding-places of fever. The salt lakes to the +south of the Segura, however, exercise no deleterious influence upon the climate.</p> + +<p>Nowhere else in Spain is the rainfall so inconsiderable. Between Almería and +Cartagena only eight inches fall during the year; in the environs of Alicante and +Elche the rains are, perhaps, a trifle more copious; and at Murcia and Valencia, +which lie at the foot of mountains that intercept the moisture-laden winds, they +are more abundant still, though even there they do not exceed eighteen inches. +Moreover, most of the rain is immediately absorbed by the thirsty air, and only a +very small quantity finds its way through <i>ramblas</i> to the sea. The quantity is altogether +insufficient for agricultural purposes, and if it were not for +the rivers the <span class="xxpn" id="p416">{416}</span> +country would be a desert. Cultivation is carried on only along the rivers and in a +few other favoured spots. Veritable steppes extend on both banks of the Segura. +The <i>campos</i> between Almería and Villajoyosa, for a distance of 300 miles, are sterile +and bare. The brine and magnesia springs, which rise at the foot of the +saliferous triassic rocks, fill small lakes, which dry up in summer, and in August +the lagoons near Orihuela become covered with a +thick crust of salt.</p> + +<div class="section"> +<div class="dctr03" id="fg158"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib416cmlg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 158.—<span class="smcap">S<b>TEPPES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>URCIA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 992,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib416.jpg" width="580" height="800" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<div><span class="xxpn" id="p417">{417}</span></div> + +<p>The beneficent rivers, whose waters are drunk by the <i>huertas</i>, or gardens, near +their banks, are the Segura, Vinalapo, Júcar, Guadalaviar (known as Turia in its +lower course), Mijaros, and several others. They all resemble each other as +regards the ruggedness of their upper valleys and the savageness of the gorges +through which they pass. The Segura forces itself a passage through several +mountain defiles before it reaches the plain of Murcia. The Júcar and Guadalaviar +(Wad-el-Abiad, or “white river”) have fewer obstacles to overcome, but some of +the gorges through which they pass are nevertheless of surpassing beauty.</p> + +<p>The volume of these rivers is comparatively small, and the husbandmen dwelling +along their banks economize the water as far as possible. Reservoirs, or +<i>pantanos</i>, have been constructed at the outlet of each valley, whence the water is +distributed over the fields by means of innumerable canals of irrigation. The +irrigated huertas contrast most favourably with the cultivated campos in their +neighbourhood. Irrigation has probably been practised at Valencia since the time +of the Romans, but the Moors appear to have been the first to construct a regular +system of canals. Eight of these, ramifying into innumerable <i>acequias</i>, have +converted the environs of Valencia into an Eden. Carefully manured as they +are, these fields are never allowed to lie fallow. Stalks of maize fifteen and even +twenty-five feet in height may be seen in the gardens, the mulberry-tree yields +three or four harvests annually, four or five crops are obtained from the same +field, whilst the grass is mown as many as nine or ten times. This luxuriant +vegetation, however, is said to be watery, and hence the proverb, “In Valencia +meat is grass, grass is water, men are women, and women nought.”</p> + +<p>The huertas of the Júcar, though less famous than those of Valencia, are even +more productive. Orange-trees predominate, and around Alcira and Carcagente +alone 20,000,000 oranges are picked annually, and exported to Marseilles.</p> + +<p>The oases in the great steppe which extends from Alcoy to Almería are less +fertile than those on the Júcar and Guadalaviar. That of Alicante is fertilised by +the Castalla, the waters of which are collected in the reservoir of Tibi. The huerta +of Elche, on the Vinalapo, is chiefly occupied by a forest of palm-trees, the +principal wealth of the inhabitants, who export the dates to France, and the leaves +to Italy and the interior of Spain.</p> + +<p>The huerta around Orihuela, on the Lower Segura, cannot boast of a palm forest +like that of Elche, but is more productive. The inhabitants of Murcia, higher up on +the same river, though they enjoy similar advantages, have failed to profit by them +to the same extent. Their huerta, which contains a third of the total population +of the province, is fertile, but cannot compare with that of their neighbours. Nor do +the fields of Lorca equal them. They have not yet recovered from the bursting of a +reservoir, the freed waters of which carried destruction as far as Murcia and Orihuela.</p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>The moral and physical character of the inhabitants of a country exhibiting +such great contrasts could hardly fail to present corresponding differences, and, +indeed, we find that the inhabitants of the fertile gardens and those of the barren +steppes and mountains differ essentially, in spite of +their common origin. <span class="xxpn" id="p418">{418}</span></p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg159"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 159.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ALM</b></span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>ROVE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>LCHE.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib418.jpg" width="600" height="601" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div class="section"> +<div class="dctr03" id="plt25"> +<img src="images/ib418b.jpg" width="548" height="800" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">PEASANTS OF LA HUERTA, AND + CIGARRERA OF VALENCIA.</div></div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>The people of Murcia cannot be said to have issued victoriously from the struggle +against barren rocks, desiccating winds, and a dry atmosphere. They abandon +themselves to a fatalism quite oriental, and make hardly any effort at improvement. +Lazily inclined, they take their siesta in and out of time, and even when awake +preserve an aspect of impassiveness as if they pursued a reverie. They are not +much given to gaiety, and, though neighbours of Andalusia and La Mancha, do +not dance. They are full of rancour and savage hatred when offended, and have +exercised but small influence upon the destinies of Spain. They cannot compare in +industry with Catalans, Navarrese, and Galicians, nor in intelligence with natives +of any other part of Spain. The Valencians, on the other hand, are an industrious +race. They not only cultivate their plains, but scale the barren slopes of the rocks +with their terraced gardens. They are a gay people, famous for their dances. +Ferocious instincts are asserted to underlie this outward gaiety, and a proverb says +that “the paradise of La Huerta is inhabited by demons.” Human +life is held very <span class="xxpn" id="p419">{419}</span> +cheaply in Valencia. Formerly that town supplied the courtiers of Madrid with +hired assassins, and the numerous crosses in and around it are evidence of so many +murders committed in the heat of passion. In Valencia, however, the use of the +knife is a tradition of chivalry, as are duels in some other parts of Europe. The +conscience of the murderer is perfectly at ease; he wipes the blood-stained knife +upon his girdle, and immediately afterwards cuts his bread with it. The dress of +the Valencians consists of loose drawers confined round the waist by a red or violet +scarf, velvet waistcoats with pieces of silver, white linen gaiters leaving the knees +and ankles bare, a bright kerchief wrapped round the shaved head, and a low hat +with brim turned up and ornamented with ribbons. A many-coloured cloak with +a broad fringe completes this costume, and, draped in it, even the meanest beggar +possesses an air of distinction. In their customs and modes of thought the +Valencians differ equally from their neighbours. They speak a Provençal dialect, +mixed with many Arabic words, but more closely related to the language of the +troubadours than the dialect of the Catalans.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg160"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib419alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 160.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ALM</b></span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>ROVE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>LCHE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">H<b>UERTAS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">O<b>RIHUELA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 400,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib419.jpg" width="600" height="500" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Agriculture is the leading pursuit of Valencia and Murcia, and a few branches +of industry are carried on. Many hands are occupied in making the white wines +of Alicante and the red ones of Vinaroz and Benicarló; the grapes of the vineyards +of Denia, Javea, and Gandia, to the north of Cabo de la +Nao, are converted <span class="xxpn" id="p420">{420}</span> +by a complicated process into raisins; and the <i>esparto grass</i> growing abundantly on +the sunny slopes of Albacete and Murcia is employed in the manufacture of mats, +baskets, sandals, and a variety of other objects.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn149" id="fnanch149">149</a> There are hundreds of metalliferous +lodes, but only the lead mines in the hills of Herrerías, to the east of +Cartagena, are being worked on a large scale, and that by foreigners. Zinc has +been worked since 1861, and mines of copper, lead, silver, mercury, and rock-salt +abound at some distance from the coast; but, from want of means of communication, +their exploitation would not pay.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg161"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 161.—<span class="smcap">R<b>UINS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">D<b>YKE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">R<b>ESERVOIR</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">ABOVE</span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>ORCA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml"></div> +<img src="images/ib420.jpg" width="600" height="599" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Valencia is the more industrial province of the two. Albacete manufactures +the dreaded <i>navajas</i>, or long knives; Murcia has silk-mills; Cartagena rope-walks +and other establishments connected with shipping; Játiva has a few paper-mills; +but Valencia and Alcoy are now the great centres of industry. +The former <span class="xxpn" id="p421">{421}</span> +manufactures the plaids worn by the peasantry, silks and linens, earthenware and +glazed tiles. Alcoy supplies most of the paper for making +Spanish cigarettes.</p> + +<div class="section dctr03" id="fg162"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 162.—<span class="smcap">P<b>EASANTS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>URCIA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml"></div> +<img src="images/ib421.jpg" width="552" height="800" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div><span class="xxpn" id="p422">{422}</span></div> + +<p>The towns of Albacete and Almansa are important, as lying on the great high-road +which connects the plateau of La Mancha with the Mediterranean seaboard. +But they cannot vie in wealth and population with the towns situated on the coast, +or within twenty-five miles of it. Lorca, the southernmost of these towns, lies +picturesquely on the slopes and at the foot of a hill crowned by a Moorish citadel. +The old town, with narrow tortuous streets and the remains of Arab palaces, has +been given up to Gitanos, and a new town with wide and straight streets built +in the fertile plain irrigated by the Guadalentin. A fine road joins Lorca to the +small harbour of Aguilas, twenty miles to the south.</p> + +<p>In descending the valley of the Guadalentin we pass Totana, the head-quarters +of the Gitanos of the country, and Alhama, well known on account of its hot +springs, and finally enter the mulberry and orange groves which surround the +capital of the province. Murcia, though an extensive city, hardly looks like it, for +its streets are deserted, its houses without beauty, and the only objects of interest +are the cathedral, the shady walks along the banks of the Segura, and the canals +irrigating the terrace gardens. Far more interesting is the neighbouring Cartagena, +which was destined by its Punic founders to become a second Carthage +in truth, and its magnificent harbour certainly affords great advantages for commercial +and military purposes. The discovery of the rich lead and silver mines +near the town contributed much towards its prosperity. Successive Spanish +Governments have attempted to restore to Cartagena its ancient strategical importance. +They have constructed docks and arsenals, and erected impregnable +fortifications, but, in spite of this, the population of the town is hardly a third of +what it was in the middle of the eighteenth century. The character of its +commerce is almost local, notwithstanding its excellent port, and esparto grass, +mats, fruits, and ore constitute the leading articles of export.</p> + +<p>Alicante, though far less favoured by nature, is a much busier place, thanks to +the fertility of the huertas of Elche, Orihuela, and Alcoy, and the railway which +connects it with Madrid. Only small vessels can approach the quays and piers of +the town, nestling at the foot of a steep rock crowned by a dismantled citadel. +Larger vessels are compelled to anchor in an open roadstead. Other coast towns +of Valencia, such as Denia and Cullera, offer still less shelter, but are nevertheless +much frequented by coasting vessels. Formerly vessels which entered the Bay +of Valencia during winter were bound to exercise the greatest caution, owing to +violent easterly and north-north-easterly winds and fogs, for there existed not +a single port of refuge. This want has now been supplied by the construction +of a port at the mouth of the Guadalaviar, known as El Grao (strand) de Valencia.</p> + +<p>Valencia, the fourth city of Spain in population, is the natural centre of the +most fertile huertas. The “City of the Cid” still preserves its crenellated walls, +turrets, gates, narrow and tortuous streets, balconied houses, the windows of which +are shaded by blinds, and awnings spread over the streets to protect passers-by +from the rays of the sun. Amongst its numerous buildings there is but one which +is really curious: this is the <i>Lonja de Seda</i>, or silk exchange, a graceful structure +of the fifteenth century. Gardens constitute the real delight +of Valencia, and <span class="xxpn" id="p423">{423}</span> +the Alameda, which extends along the banks of the Guadalaviar, is, perhaps, the +finest city promenade in Europe. The commerce of Valencia rivals that of Cádiz.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn150" id="fnanch150">150</a></p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg163"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib423alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 163.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">H<b>ARBOUR</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>ARTAGENA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 54,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib423.jpg" width="600" height="609" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>To the north of Valencia the cultivable country along the coast is narrow, and +incapable of supporting large towns. Castellon de la Plana, at the mouth of the +Mijaros, has attained a certain importance, but farther north we only meet with +small places inhabited by fishermen and vine-growers. Formerly the coast road +was defended by castles, chief among which was Saguntum, famous for its glorious +defence against Hannibal. Its site is occupied by the modern town of Murviedro, +<i>i.e.</i> “old walls,” and its ruins are not very imposing.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn151" id="fnanch151">151</a></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="V.—The Balearic Islands.">V.—<span + class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>ALEARIC</b></span> + <span class="smcap">I<b>SLANDS.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">The +Balearic Islands are attached to the mainland of Spain +by a submarine <span class="xxpn" id="p424">{424}</span> +plateau, and are geographically as well as historically a dependency of Valencia +and Catalonia. The ranges of hills traversing these islands have the same direction +as those of Murcia and Valencia. On the other hand, the peninsula of La Baña, +at the mouth of the Ebro, extends beneath the sea in the direction of Ibiza, and +from this submarine tongue of land rises a group of volcanic rocks. These are the +Columbretes, from the Latin <i>colubraria</i>, signifying “serpents’ islets.”</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg164"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib424alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 164.—<span class="smcap">E<b>L</b></span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>RAO</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">DE</span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>ALENCIA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 18,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib424.jpg" width="600" height="498" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The Baleares are small in area, but favoured by climate, productiveness, and +natural beauty. They are the “Happy Islands” of the ancients, and, compared +with many of the coast lands, are indeed a favoured region. War and pestilence +have been no strangers to them, but continual troubles have not interfered with +their development.</p> + +<p>The islands consist of two groups, the Pityuses and the Baleares proper. The +name of the latter is said to refer to the expertness of the natives as slingers; and, +when Q. Metellus prepared to land upon them, he took care to shelter his men +beneath an awning of hides. The climate is moister and more equable than that +of neighbouring Spain. Violent storms occur frequently.</p> + +<div class="section"> +<div class="dctr03" id="plt26"> +<img src="images/ib424b.jpg" width="549" height="800" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">WOMEN OF IBIZA, BALEARIC ISLES.</div> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>The structures called <i>talayots</i> (watch-towers) prove that the islands were +inhabited before the historic epoch. These were built probably by the same race +to whom the nuraghi of Sardinia owe their existence; but the present population is +a very mixed one, for every nation of antiquity has +successively invaded the island. <span class="xxpn" id="p425">{425}</span> +The language spoken is a Catalan dialect resembling that of Limousin. The +Majorcans are generally small of stature, but well proportioned, and the women of +some of the districts are famed for their beauty and expressive features. The +peasantry are suspicious and thrifty, but honest and hospitable; and their dress, +consisting of loose breeches, a belt, a bright-coloured vest, and a goatskin cloak, is +picturesque. Dancing to the music of a guitar or flute is their favourite amusement.</p> + +<p><span class="smcap">I<b>BIZA</b></span> (<span class="smcap">I<b>VIZA</b></span>), the largest island of the Pityuses, is hardly more than fifty miles +from Cabo de la Nao. Its surface is hilly and intersected by numerous torrent beds. +Puerto Magno (Pormany, or Grand Port) lies on the west side, and a similar bay, +the trysting-place of numerous fishing-smacks, on the south side. On its shore +stands the capital of the island, an ancient Carthaginian colony. A chain of islets +and rocks, similar to the Adam’s Bridge of Ceylon, joins the southernmost cape of +Ibiza to Formentera Island. The climate is said to be so salubrious that neither +serpents nor other noxious reptiles can bear it. The population is small, in spite of +the fertility of the island. Watch-towers and castles of refuge near every village +recall the time when the inhabitants suffered from Moorish pirates. The islanders +are happy, for the central Government leaves them pretty much to themselves.</p> + +<p><span class="smcap">M<b>ALLORCA,</b></span> or <span class="smcap">M<b>AJORCA,</b></span> the largest of the group, is the only one which can +boast of a regular range of mountains, rising precipitously along the north-western +coast, and culminating in the twin peaks of Silla de Torrella (4,940 feet) and +Puig Mayor (4,920 feet). These mountains are amongst the most picturesque in +all Europe, and from their summits may be enjoyed a magnificent prospect. The +moufflon is said still to haunt their pine woods and recesses. The greater portion +of the island consists of a plain lying at an elevation of 150 feet above the sea-level, +and dotted over with isolated <i>puigs</i>, or conical peaks, surmounted in many +instances by an old church or castle. The eastern extremity of the island is hilly, +and the Bec de Farruch (1,863 feet) still bears its old Arabic name. Near it are +the wonderful stalactite caverns of Arta, which extend beneath the sea. The +extremities of the most depressed portion of the island open out towards two great +bays, one in the north-east, the other in the south-west. Palma, the capital of the +island, lies on the former of these, though the other, known as Puerto de Alcudia, +would offer greater advantages were it not for the pestilential swamps which +surround it. On the iron-bound northern coast there are no harbours, but coasting +vessels frequent the creek of Soller, whence they export oranges.</p> + +<p>The peasants, or <i>pageses</i>, of Majorca have the reputation of being good agriculturists, +but much of the progress made is due to Catalan immigrants. The island +produces delicious wines (Benisalem), olive oil, oranges, vegetables, and pigs, all +of which find a market at Barcelona or in France. The corn grown is not, +however, sufficient for the support of the population, and Majorcans as well as +“Mahonian” gardeners are met with in every town of the Mediterranean. Bay-salt +is made at Cape Salinas. Shoes, cottons, linens, baskets, and porous vases are +produced; but the manufacture of <i>majolica</i> has ceased. Palma is a busy place of +40,000 inhabitants, and its bastioned walls, castle, cathedral, and amphitheatrically +built houses present a fine appearance from the sea. The inhabitants +are proud of <span class="xxpn" id="p426">{426}</span> +their public buildings, and assert that their <i>lonja</i> is superior to that of Valencia. +The <i>Chuctas</i>, or converted Jews, are a curious element of the population. They +occupy a separate quarter, marry amongst themselves, and have preserved their +race distinctions and mercantile genius. A large portion of the landed property +of the island has passed into their hands. A railway traversing the rich districts +of Santa María and Benisalem, to the south of the populous towns of Manacor +and Felanitx, connects Palma with Alcudia.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn152" id="fnanch152">152</a></p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg165"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib426alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 165.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>ALEARIC</b></span> + <span class="smcap">I<b>SLANDS.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 3,700,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib426.jpg" width="600" height="529" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p><span class="smcap">M<b>ENORCA,</b></span> or <span class="smcap">M<b>INORCA,</b></span> twenty-four miles to the east of Majorca, is generally +level, its culminating point, Monte Toro, in the centre of the island, only attaining +a height of 1,171 feet. The strong northerly winds which sweep over its plains +cause the trees to turn their branches in the direction of Africa, and orange-trees +find shelter only in the <i>barrancas</i>, or ravines, which intersect them. The climate is +less pleasant than that of the neighbouring island, and the soil less fertile, for, +consisting for the most part of limestone, it rapidly absorbs the rain. There are +two ports and two cities, one at each extremity of the island, +which from time <span class="xxpn" id="p427">{427}</span> +immemorial have claimed precedence. Ciudadela (7,500 inhabitants) enjoys the +advantage of closer proximity to Majorca, but its harbour is bad. Port Mahon +(15,000 inhabitants), on the other hand, possesses an admirable port, and Andreas +Doria says with reference to it that “June, July, and Mahon are the best ports +of the Mediterranean.” The English made Mahon a wealthy city, but its trade +fell off immediately when they abandoned it in 1802.</p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr01" id="fg166"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 166.—<span class="smcap">V<b>IEW</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">I<b>BIZA.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib427.jpg" width="600" height="601" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="VI.—The Valley of the Ebro. Aragon and Catalonia.">VI.—<span + class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>ALLEY</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>BRO.</b></span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>RAGON</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>ATALONIA</b></span>.</h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">The +central portion of the valley of the Ebro is as distinctly separated from the +remainder of Spain as is that of the Guadalquivir. It forms a vast depression, +bounded by the midland plateau of Spain and the Pyrenees, and if the waters of +the Mediterranean were to rise 1,000 feet, this ancient lake, which existed until +its pent-up waters had forced themselves a passage through +the mountains of <span class="xxpn" id="p428">{428}</span> +Catalonia, would be converted into a gulf of the sea. The Pyrenees in the north, +the barren slopes of the plateaux to the south and south-west, form well-defined +boundaries, but in the north-west the plain of the Ebro extends beyond Aragon, +into a country inhabited by men of a different race.</p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg167"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib428blg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 167.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ITYUSES.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 400,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib428.jpg" width="600" height="734" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Historically and geographically, Aragon and Catalonia form one of the great +natural divisions of Spain, less extensive than the Castiles, but hardly less important, +and far more densely populated.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn153" id="fnanch153">153</a> The political destinies of Aragon and +Catalonia have been the same for more than seven centuries, +but, in spite of this, <span class="xxpn" id="p429">{429}</span> +there exist great contrasts, which have not been without their influence upon the +character of the population. Aragon, a country of plains surrounded by mountains, +is an inland province, and its inhabitants have remained for the most part +herdsmen, agriculturists, and soldiers. Catalonia, on the other hand, possesses an +admirable seaboard. Its natural wealth, joined to favourable geographical position, +has developed commerce with neighbouring countries, and more especially with +Roussillon and Languedoc. Indeed, seven or eight centuries ago, the Catalans +were Provençals rather than Spaniards, and in their language and customs they +were closely related to the people to the north of the Pyrenees.</p> + +<p>In the course of the great political revolution, the most terrible feature of +which was the war of the Albigenses, Catalonia became a prey to the Castilians. +As long as the Provençal world maintained its natural centre between Arles and +Toulouse, the populations of the Mediterranean coasts, as far as the Ebro, Valencia, +and the Baleares, were attracted towards it as to their common focus. Those +Christian populations who found themselves placed between Provence on the one +hand and the Arab kingdoms on the other, naturally gravitated towards the +former, with whom they possessed community of race, religion, and language. +Hence the wide range of the idiom known as Limousin, and its flourishing +literature. But when an implacable war had converted several towns of the +Albigenses into deserts; when the barbarians of the North had destroyed the +civilisation of the South, and the southern slopes of the Cévennes had been reduced +by violence to the position of a political dependency of the valley of the Seine, +Catalonia was forced to look elsewhere for natural allies. The centre of gravity +was shifted from the north to the south, from Southern France to the peninsula of +the Pyrenees, and Castile secured what Provence had lost.</p> + +<p>The plateau to the south of the Ebro has been cut up, through the erosive +action of rivers, into elongated sierras and isolated <i>muelas</i> (molars), and its edge is +marked by numerous notches, through which these rivers debouch upon the plain. +The Sierra de San Just (4,967 feet), now separated from that of Gúdar by the +upper valley of the Guadalupe, is a remnant of this ancient plateau, as are the +Sierras de Cucalon (4,284 feet), de Vicor, and de la Virgen, which join it to +the superb mass of the Moncayo, in the north-west; and the same applies to the +Sierra de Almenara (4,687 feet), which rises to the west of them.</p> + +<p>The granitic mountain mass of the Moncayo (7,705 feet) has offered greater +resistance to the erosive action of the waters than have the cretaceous rocks of the +plateau to the east of it. The Moncayo is the storm-breeder of the plains of +Aragon, and from its summit the Castilian can look down upon the wide valley of +the Ebro. To the Aragonese the plateau is accessible only through the valleys of the +Guadalupe, Martin, and Jiloca, and it is these which have enabled them to obtain +possession of the upland of Teruel, which is of such strategical importance, from +its commanding position between the basins of the Guadalaviar, Júcar, and Tajo.</p> + +<p>To the north of the Ebro rises the snow-clad range of the Pyrenees, which +separates Spain from the rest of Europe. Several spurs descend from this master +range into Aragon. But there are also independent ranges, one of +which, that of <span class="xxpn" id="p430">{430}</span> +the Bardenas, rises immediately to the north of the Ebro, right opposite to the +gigantic Moncayo. The parallel ridges of the Castellar and of the “district of the +Five Towns” form a continuation of these hillocks to the east of the Arba, and +then, crossing the valley of the Gallego, we reach the barren terraces of the +Monegros, upon which rises the insular Sierra de Alcubierra, in the very centre +of the ancient lake of Aragon. A saddle, elevated only 1,247 feet above the +sea-level, connects the latter with the mountains of Huesca in the north.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg168"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib430alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 168.—<span class="smcap">P<b>ORT</b></span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>AHON.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 50,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib430.jpg" width="600" height="486" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Several mountain masses of considerable height occupy the centre of the +country, and separate these riverine hills from the main range of the Pyrenees. +They consist for the most part of chalk, through which the bounteous rivers +descending from the Pyrenees have excavated their beds. These channels, with +their precipices, defiles, and cascades, form one of the most picturesque mountain +districts of Spain. The most famous of these Pyrenean foot-hills is the Sierra de +la Peña, which is separated from the Pyrenees by the deep valley of the Aragon. +At the eastern extremity of this chain, high above the ancient city of Jaca, rises +the pyramidal sandstone mass of the Peña de Oroel (5,804 feet), from which we +are able to embrace an immense horizon, extending from the Pyrenees to the +Moncayo. The wild district which occupies the centre of this magnificent panorama +is the famous country of Sobrarbe, held in high veneration by patriotic +Spaniards, for it was there they commenced their +struggles against the Moors.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="plt27"> +<img src="images/ib430b.jpg" width="600" height="416" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">MONSERRAT, CATALONIA.</div> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div><span class="xxpn" id="p431">{431}</span></div> + +<p>An elevated saddle connects the Sierra de la Peña with the irregular mountain +mass of the Sierra de Santo Domingo, to the south of it, whose spurs descend in +terraces into the rugged plain of the Five Towns. It is separated by a narrow +cleft, through which passes the Gallego from the Sierra de Guara, which extends +to the river Cinca in the east, and several minor chains run parallel with it. This +parallelism in the mountain ranges may be traced, likewise, as far as the river Segre.</p> + +<p>The Monsech, thus called from its arid calcareous ravines, presents the appearance +of an unbroken rampart from the south, but is intersected at right angles by +the gorges of two Nogueras—the Ribagorzana and Pallaresa. The Peña de San +Gervas and the Sierra de Boumort, which rise to the north of it, are much less +regular in their contours, but exceed it in height.</p> + +<p>The Pyrenees terminate with the gigantic mountains surrounding the valley of +Andorra, and with the Peak of Carlitte (9,583 feet). The Sierra del Cadi (8,322 +feet) belongs to a detached chain hardly inferior to them in height, and culminating +on French soil in the superb pyramid of the Canigou (9,140 feet). Numerous +spurs extend from this sierra towards the sea.</p> + +<p>In this rugged mountain region we meet with geological formations of every +age, from the Silurian to the cretaceous. Iron, copper, and even gold abound, +and might be worked with great profit if roads and railways penetrated into the +upper valleys. A coal-field on the Upper Ter, near San Juan de las Abadesas, +is being worked very sluggishly, and others on the western slope of the Cadi +have not even been touched. The famous rocks of salt at Solsona and Cardona lie +at the foot of the Sierra del Cadi, and that of Cardona alone, though it has been +worked for centuries, is estimated to contain nearly 400,000,000 cubic yards.</p> + +<p>The abundance of mineral veins is due, perhaps, to the existence of subterranean +lava lakes. The only volcanic hills in the north of Spain are those near +Olot and Santa Pau, in the upper basin of the Fluvia. Immense sheets of basaltic +lava have been ejected there during the tertiary age from fourteen craters, one of +them, upon which stands the old town of Castelfollit, forming a huge rampart of +picturesque aspect. Jets of steam issue even now from many fissures in the +rocks.</p> + +<p>The mountains along the coast of Catalonia resemble in every respect those of +Valencia, from which they are separated by the gorge of the Ebro. Near the +mouths of that river the rugged and mountainous region extends about thirty miles +inland, as far as the Llanos del Urgel; but farther north it widens, until it finally +merges in the spurs descending from the Pyrenees. The principal summits are +the Mont Sant (3,513 feet), the Puig de Montagut (2,756 feet), the Monserrat +(4,057 feet), and Monseny (5,276 feet). The best-known passes are at the head +of the Francoli, through which runs the railway from Tarragona to Lérida, the +pass at the head of the Noya, and the Pass of Calaf.</p> + +<p>Of the last-named mountains that of Monserrat is the most famous, for +suspended upon one of its flanks hang the remains of the celebrated monastery +in which Loyola deposited his sword. Monserrat has lost its prestige as a holy +place, but still remains one of the most interesting subjects for +the study of <span class="xxpn" id="p432">{432}</span> +geologists. It consists of conglomerate, and has been worn by atmospheric +agencies into innumerable pillars, pinnacles, and earth pyramids surmounted by +huge boulders. Hermitages and the ruins of castles abound, and the prospect +from the highest summit extends from the Pyrenees to the Balearic Isles.</p> + +<p>Crossing the valleys of the Llobregat and Ter, we reach the swampy plain of +Ampurdan, an old gulf of the sea, and with it the north-eastern extremity of +Spain, separated from France by the Albères Mountains. The surrounding hills +abound in the remains of ecclesiastical buildings. One of these, near Cabo de +Creus, the easternmost promontory of Spain, and the Aphrodision of the ancients, +marks the site of a temple of Venus.</p> + +<p>The basin of the Ebro forms a huge triangle, the mountains of Catalonia being +the base, whilst its apex lies in the hills of Cantabria, close to the Atlantic. The +surrounding hills differ much in height, but the nucleus of all consists of granite, +upon which have been deposited sedimentary strata, the silent witnesses of the +gradual filling up of the old inland lake. The river itself traverses the very centre +of this triangle, at right angles to the Mediterranean, and only when it reaches the +mountain barrier separating it from the sea does it wind about in search of an outlet.</p> + +<p>The Fontibre, or “fountain of the Ebro,” gives birth at once to a considerable +stream, which, fed by the snows of the Peña Labra, rushes with great impetuosity +past Reinosa (2,687 feet), then passes through a succession of defiles, and finally, +having received the Ega and Aragon with the Argo from the north, emerges from +Navarra a great river. Below Tudela (800 feet) it is large enough to feed two +canals, viz. that of Tauste, which carries fertility into the once-sterile tracts at +the foot of Bardenas, and the navigable Imperial Canal, which follows the valley +down to Zaragoza. The ordinary volume of the latter amounts to no less than 494 +cubic feet per second, but much of this water is sucked up by the calcareous soil.</p> + +<p>The tributary rivers which enter the Ebro in the plains of Aragon compensate +for the loss sustained through canals of irrigation. The Jalon, Huerva, Martin, +and Guadalupe join on the right; the Arba, Gallego, and Segre on the left. This +last is the most important of all, for it drains the whole of the Pyrenean slope +from Mont Perdu to the Carlitte.</p> + +<p>The Ebro, after its junction with the Segre, immediately plunges into the +coast ranges of Catalonia, and though the fall thence to the sea amounts to +183 feet in 95 miles, no rapids or cataracts are met with. The suspended matter +brought down by the river has been deposited in the shape of a delta which juts +out fifteen miles into the Mediterranean, covers an area of 150 square miles, and +abounds in salt marshes, lagoons, and dead river arms. A canal, twenty-two miles +in length, connects the harbour of refuge at Alfaques with the Ebro, but is not +available for ships of great draught, owing to the bar which closes its mouth. +The other embouchures of the river are likewise closed by bars.</p> + +<p>The volume of the Ebro<a class="afnanch" href="#fn154" id="fnanch154">154</a> decreases annually, on +account of the increasing <span class="xxpn" id="p433">{433}</span> +quantities of water which it is called upon to furnish for purposes of irrigation, +and sooner or later it will be reduced to the condition of the rivers of Valencia.</p> + +<p>The productiveness of the irrigated fields of Aragon and Catalonia bears +witness to the fertility of the soil. Even saline tracts have been converted into +gardens. Tropical plants, agaves, cacti, and a few feathery palms on the coast to +the south of Barcelona recall the beautiful landscapes of Southern Spain. The +valley of the Ebro holds an intermediate position between Murcia and Valencia +and the bleak plateau and mountains of the interior; but water, except in the +immediate neighbourhood of the rivers, is nowhere abundant. On some of the +hill-tops may be seen houses the walls of which are dyed red, because it was found +more economical to mix the mortar with wine than to convey thither water for that +purpose. This deficiency of moisture is a great drawback to certain districts in +the lower valley of the Ebro. The greater portion of Bárdenas, the Monegros, and +the terraces of Calanda are treeless steppes. Cold and heat alternate abruptly, +without reference to seasons, and the climate, in spite of the proximity of the sea, is +quite continental in its character. The hot winds, so much dreaded on the coast +of Catalonia, do not blow from Africa, but from the parched plains of Aragon.</p> + +<p>The climate of Catalonia, owing to the breezes blowing from the Mediterranean, +is far more equable than that of Aragon, and to this circumstance, no less than to +differences of race and greater facilities for commerce, this province is indebted +for its distinct individuality.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn155" id="fnanch155">155</a></p> + +<p>Catalonia, being open to invasions from the sea as well as by land, has a much +more mixed population than its neighbour Aragon. On the other hand, a conqueror +once in possession of the latter had but little to fear expulsion at the +hands of new-comers, and the Moors maintained themselves in Aragon three +hundred years after they had been expelled from Barcelona.</p> + +<p>The inhabitants of the valley of the Ebro are offensively haughty, of sluggish +minds, given to old customs and superstitions, but they are at the same time +singularly persistent, and their bravery does credit to their Celtiberian ancestors. +These fine broad-shouldered men, who follow their donkeys along the high-roads, +the head enveloped in a silken kerchief, and the waist confined by a violet-coloured +belt, are at all times ready for a fight. Up to the close of last century it was +customary to get up fights between villages in mere wantonness, and the <i>rondallas</i>, +a term now employed for open-air concerts, scarcely ever terminated without +bloodshed. In trifles the Aragonese are as stubborn as in matters of importance, +and they are said to “drive in nails with their head.” For several centuries the +Aragonese struggled with the Moors, and the kings, dependent as they were upon +the support of the people, felt constrained to submit to a considerable limitation +of their power. It was Philip II. of Castile who suppressed these ancient provincial +privileges, and condemned Aragon to lead a life of intellectual stagnation.</p> + +<p>The Catalans are as self-opinionated as their neighbours the Aragonese; noisy +quarrels frequently take place amongst them; but they +rarely come to blows. They <span class="xxpn" id="p434">{434}</span> +are said to be less firm of character than the Aragonese, yet they succeeded in +maintaining their provincial independence much longer. Few towns have stood +more sieges than Barcelona, and fewer still have offered a more valiant defence. +The Catalans are undoubtedly industrious. They have not only converted the +irrigable valleys facing the sea into gardens, but have likewise attacked the arid +mountains, and, by triturating the rocks and carrying thither soil from the plain, +have made them produce grapes, olives, and corn. Hence the proverb, “A +Catalan can turn stones into bread.” Agriculture, however, does not wholly +supply the wants of so dense a population, and Barcelona with its suburbs has +become a huge manufacturing centre, where cottons, woollens, and other textile +fabrics, hardware, chemical preparations, glass, paper, and various articles are produced. +The province of Barcelona is the chief seat of the cotton industry in Spain, +and fully deserves to be called the Spanish Lancashire.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn156" id="fnanch156">156</a> The Catalans are a +migratory race. They are met with not only in every other province of Spain, but +in all the Spanish colonies. Everywhere they are reputed for their thrift, and in +Cuba are hated as rivals or masters by creoles and blacks.</p> + +<p>The towns of Aragon and Catalonia present the same contrasts as do the inhabitants +of the two provinces. Those of the former are of solemn and even gloomy +aspect, whilst the picturesque cities of the maritime province are full of bustle +and mirth. The former represent the Middle Age, the latter our modern era.</p> + +<p>Zaragoza (Saragossa) is most favourably situated in the very centre of the plain +of Aragon. It has its Moorish alcázar (the Aljaferia), now used as a barrack; +a curious leaning tower similar to that of Pisa; and fine promenades, including +the Coso and shaded walks. But prouder than of all these attractions are the +inhabitants of the epithet “heroic,” which was bestowed upon their city in consequence +of the valiant resistance it offered in 1808 and 1809, when they not +only defended their homes, but also their patron saint, the Virgen del Pilar.</p> + +<p>At Zaragoza a few wide avenues have been cut through the labyrinth of tortuous +streets, but the other towns of the province have preserved their physiognomy +of former days. Jaca, in the upper valley of the Aragon, between the Pyrenees +and the Sierra de la Peña, with its grey houses, still retains its turreted walls and +ancient citadel. It is the old capital of the kingdom of Sobrarbe, but would hardly +be mentioned now if it were not for its position at the foot of the Pass of Canfranc, +and the neighbouring monastery of La Peña. Huesca, at the base of the hills, the +Osca of the Romans, recalls the dominion of the Ausks, or Euskarians. Standing in +the midst of an irrigated plain, it still enjoys a certain importance. It boasts of a +richly decorated cathedral, deserted monasteries, an old royal palace now occupied +by the university, and the remains of a turreted wall. Barbastro, near the river +Cinca, occupies a position similar to that of Huesca. The carriage road over the +Somport connects it with France.</p> + +<p>The Arab city of Calatayud, on the river Jalon, is commercially the second +city of Aragon, and replaces Bilbilis of the Iberians, +which stood on a hill near it. <span class="xxpn" id="p435">{435}</span> +One of its most nauseous suburbs is wholly inhabited by mendicants. Teruel, on +the Guadalaviar, the chief town of the Maeztrazgo, with its crenellated walls and +turrets, resembles a mediæval fortress. The Arab tower of its church is one of the +curiosities of “untrodden” Spain, and its aqueduct, which crosses a valley on 140 +arches, is a remarkable work of the sixteenth century.</p> + +<p>Several towns of the interior of Catalonia are equally venerable in their aspect. +“Proud” Puigcerda (Puycerda), close to the French frontier, on the Upper Segre, +is hardly more than a collection of hovels surrounded by a rampart. Seo de +Urgel, in a fertile portion of the same valley, is no doubt of some importance as a +fortress, but its streets are dirty, its houses mean, and its mud walls dilapidated.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg169"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib435alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 169.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">D<b>ELTA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>BRO.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 375,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib435.jpg" width="600" height="565" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Still lower down the Segre we meet with the ancient city of Lérida, whose +origin dates back to prehistoric times, and which, owing to its strategical position, +has at all times played a prominent part in military history. The gardens of +Lérida supply much produce for exportation, but the place cannot rise into importance +until the Franco-Spanish coast railway shall have been completed.</p> + +<p>Tortosa, a picturesque city just above the delta of the Ebro, and formerly +the capital of an Arab kingdom, commands one of the passages +over the Ebro, <span class="xxpn" id="p436">{436}</span> +and its commerce would increase if the river offered greater facilities for navigation.</p> + +<p>Tarragona in the time of the Romans was the great maritime outlet of the +valley of the Ebro. The city was then nearly forty miles in circumference, with +arenas, amphitheatres, palaces, temples, and aqueducts, and a population of hundreds +of thousands. The ruins of this ancient Tarraco have been made use of in +the construction of the modern city, with its clumsy cathedral, towers, decayed +ramparts, and Roman aqueduct intersecting the suburban orange groves. The +manufacturing town of Reus may almost be looked upon as a suburb of it, and is +rapidly increasing in population. Near it is the monastery of Poblet, in which +are deposited the remains of the Kings of Aragon.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg170"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib436alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 170.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>TEPPES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>RAGON.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">According to Willkomm. + Scale 1 : 2,000,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib436.jpg" width="600" height="460" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div class="dctr01" id="plt28"> +<img src="images/ib436b.jpg" width="600" height="416" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">BARCELONA, SEEN FROM THE + CASTLE OF MONJUL.</div></div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The country between Tarragona and Barcelona is densely populated. We pass +through the fertile district of El Panadés, the equally fertile valley irrigated by +the reddish waters of the Llobregat, with towns and villages in rapid succession, +until we reach the suburbs of Barcelona. The city proper lies on the sea, at the +foot of the fortifications crowning the steep heights of Monjuich. There is +another citadel of immense size to the east of the city, yet this latter reposes gaily +beneath its batteries, which could easily reduce it to ashes. Barcelona boasts of +being the great pleasure town of Spain. Its population is less than that of +Madrid, but there are more theatres and concert halls. The dramatic performances +are of a superior class, and the taste of the people is more refined. The public +promenades, such as the Rambla, occupying the bed of an +ancient torrent, the <span class="xxpn" id="p437">{437}</span> +sea-walls, and the avenues of trees which separate Barcelona from the citadel and +the suburb of Barceloneta, are crowded on fine evenings. Barcelona is no doubt +the “unique city” of Cervantes, and perhaps “the home of courtesy and of valiant +men;” but we doubt its being the “common centre of all sincere friendships.” +Barcelona exceeds all other towns of Spain by its commerce.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn157" id="fnanch157">157</a> The harbour is +exposed to southerly winds, and somewhat difficult of access. Barcelona is ever +renewing itself. There are broad streets of uniformly built houses, and some +quarters, as that of Barceloneta, on a tongue of land to the east of the port, are +laid out with all the regularity of an American city. The only architectural +monuments of note are a Gothic cathedral and the old palace of the Inquisition. +But all around the town, beyond the suburbs with their factories and workmen’s +dwellings, we meet with numerous villas, occupying delightful nooks in verdant +valleys or the steep hill-slopes. No more charming district exists in Spain than +that to the north of Barcelona and Badalona, extending as far as Masnou, Mataró, +and the river Tordera. Promontories covered with vines, pines, and cork-oaks, +and sometimes crowned by the ruins of a castle, project into the sea; the valleys +are laid out in gardens enclosed with aloe hedges; towns and villages follow in +rapid succession; and the boats and nets of fishermen are seen on the beaches.</p> + +<p>Most towns of the province of Barcelona emulate the manufacturing industry +of the capital. Igualada, at the foot of the Monserrat; Sabadell, in a valley, +full of factories; Tarrasa, the old Roman city, near which are the famous baths +of La Puda; Manresa, on the Cardoner rivulet; Vich, the old primatial city of +Catalonia; and Mataró, on the coast, are all distinguished for the manufacture +of cloth, linens, silks, cotton stuffs, ribbons, lace, leather, hats, faience, glass, or +paper. Manufacturing industry has likewise spread into the neighbouring province +of Gerona, and notably to the city of Olot; but the vicinity of the French frontier, +the practice of smuggling, and the presence of large garrisons in the fortresses +of Gerona and Figueras have hindered its development. Gerona has sustained +many a siege, and Figueras, in spite of its huge citadel, has been repeatedly captured. +The walls of Rosas are crumbling to pieces, and every vestige of the Greek city +of Emporion has been buried beneath the alluvium brought down by the river +Fluvia, but it still lives in the name of the surrounding district of Ampurdan.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn158" id="fnanch158">158</a></p> + +<hr class="hrblk" /> + +<p>The crest of the Pyrenees constitutes for the most part the political boundary +between France and Spain, but there are exceptions to this rule. At the western +extremity of the chain Spain enjoys the advantage, for the valley of the Bidassoa, +on the French slopes, belongs to it; but France is compensated in the east by the +possession of Mount Canigou and the valley of the Upper Segre. As a rule, +however, Spain has the best of the bargain, and this is only natural, as the Pyrenees +are most accessible from the south, and the population +there is more dense. The <span class="xxpn" id="p438">{438}</span> +herdsmen of Aragon and the Basque provinces never missed an opportunity of +taking possession of pastures on the northern slopes of the mountains, and these +encroachments were subsequently ratified by international treaties.</p> + +<p>The valley of Aran, in the very heart of the Pyrenees, is one of these bloodless +conquests of Spain. The French Garonne rises in that valley, but the defile +through which it leaves it is very narrow and easily obstructed. Up to the +eighteenth century the Aranese enjoyed virtual independence; and as they are shut +off from the rest of the world by mountains covered with snow during the greater +part of the year, these 21,000 mountaineers would appear to possess more claim to +constitute themselves an independent republic than any other people in Europe.</p> + +<p>Farther east there is another mountain valley which, nominally at least, forms +an independent republic. This is Andorra, a territory of 230 square miles, with +6,000 inhabitants. A few pastures on the French slope excepted, the whole of +this valley is drained by the beautiful stream of Embalira, or Valira, which joins +the Segre in the smiling plain of Seo de Urgel. Most of the mountains of +Andorra have been robbed of their trees, and the destruction of the few remaining +forests is still going on. The vegetable soil is being rapidly washed away, and +the moraines of ancient glaciers gradually slide down the mountain slopes.</p> + +<p>The republic of Andorra is said to owe its existence to a defeat of the Saracens +by Charlemagne or Louis le Débonnaire, but in reality up to the French Revolution +the valley enjoyed no sovereign rights whatever. It was a barony of the +Counts of Urgel and of Aragon. In 1278 it was decided that Andorra should be +held jointly by the Bishops of Urgel and the Counts of Foix. In 1793 the French +republic declined to receive the customary tribute, and in 1810 the Spanish +Cortes abolished the feudal régime. Andorra thus became an independent state. +The inhabitants, however, continue to govern themselves in accordance with old +feudal customs, which are not at all reconcilable with the principles of modern +republics. The land belongs to a few families. There is a law of entail, and +younger brothers become the servants of the head of the family, whose hospitality +they enjoy only on condition of their working for him. The tithes were only +abolished in 1842. The “liberty” of these mountaineers consists merely in exemption +from the Spanish conscription and impunity in smuggling; and, to increase +their revenues, they have recently established a gambling-table. Their legitimate +business consists in cattle-breeding, and there are a few forges and a woollen factory.</p> + +<p>The republic of Andorra recognises two suzerains, viz. the Bishop of Urgel, +who receives an annual tribute of £25, and the French Government, to whom +double that sum is paid. Spain and France are represented by two provosts, the +commandant of Seo de Urgel exercising the functions of viceroy. The provosts +command the militia and appoint the bailiffs, or judges. They, together with a +judge of appeal, alternately appointed by France and Spain, and two <i>rahonadores</i>, +or defenders of Andorran privileges, form the Cortes. Each parish is governed by +a consul, a vice-consul, and twelve councillors elected by the heads of families. A +General Council, of which the consuls and delegates of the parishes are members, +meets at the village of Andorra. But in spite of these fictions +Andorra is an <span class="xxpn" id="p439">{439}</span> +integral part of Spain, and the carabineers never hesitate to cross the frontiers of +this sham republic. By language, manners, and customs the Andorrans are +Catalans. Exemption from war has enabled them to grow comparatively rich. +They are intelligent and cunning, and well know how to assume an air of astonishment +when their interests are at stake. Acting the fool, in order to take some +one in or avoid being ensnared, is called by their neighbours “playing the +Andorran.” Andorra, a neat village, is the capital of the territory, but San Julia +de Loria is the most important place, and the head-quarters of the smugglers.</p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="VII.—Basque Provences, Navarra, and Logroño.">VII.—<span + class="smcap">B<b>ASQUE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ROVINCES,</b></span> + <span class="smcap">N<b>AVARRA,</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>OGROÑO.</b></span><a + class="afnanchstar" href="#fn159" id="fnanch159" + title="go to note 159">*</a></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">The +Basque provinces (Vascongadas) and the ancient kingdom of Navarra, though +scarcely a thirtieth part of Spain, constitute a separate region, not only on account +of geographical position, but also because they are inhabited for the most part by +a distinct race, having its own language, manners, and political institutions.</p> + +<p>Looked at from a commanding position, the hills connecting the Pyrenees +with the Castilian plateau resemble a sea lashed by contrary winds, for there are no +prominent mountain ranges. Even the Pyrenees have sunk down to a mean height +of 3,000 feet, and the Lohihulz (3,973 feet), where they cease to form the frontier, +scarcely deserves to be called a mountain. They extend thence to the Pass of +Azpiroz (1,860 feet), where they terminate. The vague range beyond is known as +Sierra de Aralar (4,330 feet), and still farther west by a variety of local names. +These mountains are traversed by several low passes, facilitating communication +with the valley of the Ebro, the most important of which is the Pass of Orduña +(2,134 feet), which is crossed by the railway from Bilbao to Miranda, and dominated +by the Peña Gorbea (5,042 feet) and the Sierra Salvada (4,120 feet).</p> + +<p>The spurs which descend from these mountains towards the Bay of Biscay are +likewise very irregular in their features. Most of them are connected by transversal +chains, through which the rivers have only with difficulty forced for themselves +an outlet towards the sea. The Bidassoa, for instance, sweeps far to the +south, through the valley of Bastan, before it takes its course to the northward, in +the direction of its estuary at Fuenterrabia. Within its huge bend it encloses a +detached portion of the Pyrenees, the principal summit of which is the famous +Mont La Rhune (2,954 feet), on the French frontier. Equally isolated is the +Jaizquibel (1,912 feet), which rises from the plains of Irun, close to the mouth of +the Bidassoa, and from whose summit there is a view of incomparable beauty. +It terminates in Cape Higuer, or Figuer, the northernmost point of Cantabria.</p> + +<p>The maritime slope of the Basque countries presents a great variety of geological +formations, including Jurassic limestones and chalk, granites and porphyries. +The mineral resources are immense; copper and lead abound, but the great wealth +consists in iron. The mines of Mondragon, in Guipúzcoa, have long been famous, +but the most productive mining district is Somorrostro, +to the west of Bilbao. <span class="xxpn" id="p440">{440}</span></p> + +<div class="section dctr02" id="fg171"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib440blg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 171.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>NVIRONS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>ARCELONA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 100,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib440.jpg" width="600" height="786" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div class="dctr01" id="plt29"> +<img src="images/ib440a.jpg" width="600" height="422" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">GORGES OF PANCORBO.</div> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The sierras of Aragon running parallel with the Pyrenees extend also +into Navarra and the Vascongadas, and are frequently connected with the +main range by lateral branches. To the west of Pamplona they spread +out into a rugged plateau, surmounted by the Sierra de Andía (4,769 +feet), the labyrinthine ramifications of which occupy the district of +Amezcuas, a region offering great advantages to partisan warfare. The +southern chain, not so well defined, bounds the Carrascal, or “country +of evergreen oaks,” in the south. This region, too, has frequently been +the scene of civil war. Farther west the famous defile of Pancorbo +leads through the Montes <span class="xxpn" id="p441">{441}</span> +Obarenes (4,150 feet) to the plateau of Castile. The saddle of +Alsásua (1,955 feet), over which passes the railway from Vitoria (1,684 +feet) to Pamplona (1,378 feet), connects the Pyrenees with the Sierra +de Andía, whilst as to the mountains of the province of Logroño, they +are spurs of the mountain masses forming the northern edge of that +plateau, viz. the Sierra de la Demanda in the west, and the Sierra +de Cebollera in the east, the latter giving birth to the Sierras de +Camero.</p> + +<p>Several of the mountain districts are quite Castilian in their +asperity and nakedness, for the forests have been cut down to feed the +iron furnaces. In Southern Navarra we meet with veritable deserts. +But in the Basque countries and Western Navarra, where it rains +copiously, the hills are clad with forests, the valleys with turf, and +rivulets wind amongst groves of elder-trees. Naked precipices of sand +or limestone contrast well with this verdure, from which peep out the +small white houses of villages embosomed in orchards, and scattered in +the valleys and hill-sides.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg172"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib441lg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 172.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>AND-BANKS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>ATARÓ.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 125,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib441.jpg" width="600" height="527" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Moist north-westerly winds are frequent in the Bay of Biscay, and account for +the equable temperature of the country. It rains abundantly, and in all seasons. +The climate resembles that of Ireland, and, though damp, it is healthy and most +conducive to the growth of vegetation. The country is rich in corn, wine, oil, +and cattle; the northern slopes are covered with fruit trees of every kind, and +<i>zagardua</i>, or cider, is a favourite drink; and in the more remote valleys of the +Pyrenees we meet with some of the most magnificent forests in Spain. That of Val +Cárlos (valley of Charlemagne), near the famous Pass of Roncevaux, or Roncesvalles, +though none of the largest, is reputed for its beauty +and legendary associations. <span class="xxpn" id="p442">{442}</span></p> + +<p>Who are the Basques, whose bravery is traditional? What is their origin? +What their relationship to the other peoples of Europe? All these questions it is +impossible to answer. The Basques are a mysterious race, and can claim kinship +with no other nation. It is not even certain whether all those who pass by that +name are of the same race. There is no typical Basque. No doubt most of the +inhabitants of the country are distinguished by finely chiselled features, bright +and firm eyes, and well-poised bodies, but the differences in stature, form of skull, +and features are very considerable. Between Basque and Basque the differences +are as great as between Spaniards, Frenchmen, and Italians. There are tall men +and short, brown and fair, long skulls and broad, and almost every district has its +distinct type. The solution of this problem is daily becoming more difficult, for, +owing to a continual intermixture with their neighbours, the original type, if there +really existed one, is gradually being obliterated. It is possible that at some remote +time the remnants of various races occupied this country, and adopted the language +of the most civilised among them. Instances of this kind abound in every people.</p> + +<p>Leaving out of sight the differences existing between the Basques of Spain and +those of French Navarra, the Basques may be described as having broad foreheads, +straight noses, finely shaped mouths and chins, and well-proportioned figures. +Their features are exceedingly mobile, and every sentiment is reflected upon them +by a lighting up of the eyes, a movement of the eyebrows, or a trembling of the +lips. The women especially are distinguished by the purity of their features; their +large eyes, smiling lips, and small waists are universally admired. Even in the +towns, where the race is least pure, most of them are strikingly beautiful and full +of grace. There are districts where obesity is a veritable phenomenon. Men and +women carry themselves nobly; they are polite to strangers, but always dignified.</p> + +<p>The Basques call themselves Euskaldunac, or Euskarians, and their language +Euskara, or Eskuara. The exact meaning of these terms is not known, but in all +probability it is “speech.” This speech of the Basques differs in its words and +structure from every other language of the world; but many words have been +borrowed from neighbouring languages. Everything with which they became +acquainted through foreigners, all ideas imported since prehistoric times, are +designated by words not forming part of the original stock of the language. Even +the names of domestic animals and metals are of foreign origin. The language +may, perhaps, be classed with the polysynthetic languages of the American +Indians, or with the agglutinant idioms of the Altai, and belongs, consequently, to +the most remote period of human history. As to the Basques themselves, they +declare their speech to be superior to every other, and according to some it was +in Euskara that man first saluted the sun.</p> + +<p>For the present we are compelled to look upon the Basques as the last +remnant of an ancient race. There are not wanting proofs that the Euskaldunac +formerly occupied a far wider territory. No monuments, no inscriptions, nor even +legends give a clue to this; but we find it, after thousands of years, in the names of +mountains, rivers, and towns. Euskarian names abound in the Pyrenean valleys +of Aran, Bastan, Andorra, and Querol, and in the plain to the +north of them. <span class="xxpn" id="p443">{443}</span></p> + +<div class="dctr03" id="fg173"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib443clg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 173.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>ALLEY</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>NDORRA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 375,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib443.jpg" width="565" height="800" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Most writers on Spain identify these Euskarians with the Iberians of the +ancients, and they have been credited with being the authors of various inscriptions +upon coins written in unknown characters which have been discovered in Spain +and Southern France, and which M. Boudard has shown to be really in Euskarian. +They must thus have occupied the whole of the peninsula and Southern France, +and even in Africa traces of their presence +have been discovered. <span class="xxpn" id="p444">{444}</span></p> + +<p>The extent of territory occupied by Basque-speaking populations in the time +of the Romans is not known, but probably it was not any greater than it is +now, for the Euskarians have ever since maintained their independence, and +nothing compelled them to adopt the language of their despised neighbours. +Bilbao has almost become Spanish, as have also the towns in the plain of Álava. +Pampeluna, the Irun of the Iberians, is Euskarian merely by historical tradition, +whilst farther east Basque is only spoken in the upper valleys of Roncevaux, +Orbaiceta, Ochagavia, and Roncal. The Peak of Anie marks the extreme limit of +Basque on both slopes of the Pyrenees. Out of four Euskarian provinces there is +only one—viz. Guipúzcoa—where Basque predominates; but even in that province +the inhabitants of the cities of St. Sebastian and Irun speak Castilian. In the south +of Navarra and of the so-called Basque provinces the inhabitants have spoken a Latin +dialect from time immemorial. Spanish and French are slowly but surely superseding +the Basque, and the time when it will be a thing of the past is not very distant.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn160" id="fnanch160">160</a></p> + +<p>Strabo speaks of the Cantabrians, the direct ancestors of the Basques, with an +admiration akin to horror. Their bravery, love of freedom, and contempt of life he +looked upon as superhuman qualities. In their wars against the Romans they killed +each other to escape captivity, mothers strangled their children to spare them the +indignities of slavery, and prisoners nailed to the cross burst into a chant of victory. +The Basques have never been wanting in courage. History shows that they were +superior to the surrounding nations in uprightness, generosity, love of independence, +and respect for personal liberty. The serfs of the neighbouring provinces looked +upon them as nobles, for in their abject condition they fancied that personal liberty +was a privilege of nobility. This equality, however, existed only in Guipúzcoa and +Biscay, whilst in Álava and Navarra, where the Moors gained a footing, and Castilian +influences made themselves felt later on, there originated a feudal nobility, with +its usual train of vassals and serfs. However, all the provinces have jealously +watched over their local privileges. At a period when European history was +one continual series of wars, the Basques lived in peace. Their small commonwealths +were united into a fraternal confederation, and enabled to resist invaders. +They were bound to sacrifice life and property in the defence of their common +fatherland, and their standards were emblazoned with three hands joined, and +the motto, <i>Irurak bat</i>, <i>i.e.</i> “The three (provinces) are but one.”</p> + +<p>Nothing exhibits more strikingly the comparative civilisation of these Euskarians +than their respect for personal liberty. The house of a Basque was +inviolable, and he could not be deprived of his horse or his arms. At their +national meetings all voted, and in some of the valleys even the women were +permitted to take part in the discussions. It was not, however, customary for the +women to sit down at the same table with the <i>etcheco-jauna</i>, or master of the +house, and his sons; they took their meals separately by the side of the hearth. +This old custom is still observed in country districts; and so strong is the force +of tradition, that the wife would almost consider it a disgrace +to be seen sitting by <span class="xxpn" id="p445">{445}</span> +the side of her husband on any other occasion than her wedding-day. On fête-days +the women keep apart; they dance amongst themselves, allowing the men +to engage in ruder sports. If a nation may be judged from its pastimes, the +Basques deserve to rank high in our estimation. They are fond of athletic sports, +and mysteries and pastoral pieces are still performed in the open air.</p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg174"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib445blg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 174.—<span class="smcap">J<b>AIZQUIBEL.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 200,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib445.jpg" width="600" height="762" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>But the Basques have their faults. Anxious to retain their ancient privileges, +or <i>fueros</i>, they have become the champions of despotism. These fueros date from +1332, when deputies from the provinces went to Burgos, and offered the title of +Lord to Alfonso the Judge, King of Castile. In accordance with +the treaty then <span class="xxpn" id="p446">{446}</span> +concluded, the sovereign is prohibited from possessing any fortress, village, or +even house within the territory of the Euskarians. The Basques are exempt from +the conscription, and their militiamen, or <i>miqueletes</i>, remain within the provinces +except in time of war. The taxes can only be levied with the consent of the provincial +juntas, and must be expended within the provinces, except what may be +granted as a “gift.” Commerce is not subjected to the same restrictions as in the +rest of Spain, and there are no monopolies. The municipalities enjoy absolute self-government, +carried on by an alcalde, an <i>ayuntamiento</i>, or town council, and <i>parientes +mayores</i>, or elders. In appearance this organization is quite democratic, but in +reality there exist many feudal usages. In some places the town councils are self-elected; +in others they are elected by persons paying a specified amount in taxes, +or by nobles of a certain category; in others, again, they are appointed by the lord +of the manor. The provincial juntas are elected in most diverse ways. The +franchise, far from being universal, is a privilege, and its exercise is attended with +puerile formalities. The laws of precedence are rigidly adhered to.</p> + +<p>It is quite clear that the exceptional position of the Basque provinces cannot +be maintained. Navarra was assimilated with the rest of Spain in 1839, and this +process is progressing irresistibly in the other provinces. If the descendants of the +Euskarians decline to share free institutions with the rest of Spain, they can never +maintain them on their own behalf. Twice already have they been defeated on an +appeal to arms; but more powerful than war is the influence exercised by industry, +commerce, and increased facilities for intercommunication. This fusion is being +hastened by emigration and migration, for the Basques not only seek work during +winter in the more hospitable lowland districts, but they also emigrate in thousands. +They are very clannish, and at Madrid and elsewhere have founded “Patriotic +Societies,” but in spite of these they soon become merged with the rest of the +population. The few towns are principally inhabited by strangers, for the Basques +prefer a country life. Their homesteads are scattered over hill-slopes and through +the valleys, and beneath the oaks in front of them the inmates meet after the +day’s labour to pass their time in music and dancing.</p> + +<p>Bilbao, the largest town of the Basque provinces, has at all times proved a +rival of Valencia, Santander, and Cádiz. Its exports consist principally of iron +ores from neighbouring mines. Most of its inhabitants are Spaniards, and during +the Carlist wars the environs of the town were frequently stained with blood. It +was under its walls that Zumalacarreguy, the Carlist leader, received his deadly +wound. The river Nervion connects Bilbao with its harbour at Portugalete.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="plt30"> +<img src="images/ib446b.jpg" width="600" height="416" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">LOS PASAGES.</div> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>St. Sebastian, the largest city of Guipúzcoa, is likewise Spanish. A seaport +and fortress defended by a Castilian garrison, it resembles in aspect and language +the towns of the interior of the peninsula. Monte Orgullo (475 feet), crowned by +the Castle de la Mota, and bristling with fortifications; the beautiful Bay of La +Concha, to the west of the town, with its fine beach; the river Urumea, which +flows to the east of the citadel, and struggles at its mouth with the foam of the +sea; shady walks and an amphitheatre of verdant hills dotted with villages, render +St. Sebastian a delightful spot, the favourite resort +of worn-out and idle <span class="xxpn" id="p447">{447}</span> +cosmopolitans. The town itself is devoid of interest, for since its destruction by the +English in 1813 it has been rebuilt with monotonous regularity. Its harbour, +though frequented by coasting vessels, is shallow and insecure. The magnificent +Bay of Pasages, to the east of the town, might have been converted into a splendid +harbour, but its great advantages have never been appreciated, and its mouth +is now closed by a bar of alluvium brought down by the Oyarzun.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg175"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib447alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 175.—<span class="smcap">A<b>ZCOITIA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>ZPEITIA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 50,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib447.jpg" width="600" height="335" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Delightful Fuenterrabia (Fontarabie), with its escutcheoned houses, is likewise +shut off from the sea by a bar, and is indebted for such importance as it possesses +to its sea baths and the vicinity of France, which is visible from its battered +walls. Irun, the terminal station of the Spanish railways, close to the French +frontier, is an important strategical position; and Tolosa, with its factories, is the +capital of Guipúzcoa. Zarauz, Guetaria (on the neck of a peninsula), and Lequeitio +are seaside resorts. Zumaya, at the mouth of the Urola valley, has quarries of +gypsum, which furnish excellent cement. Near Vergara are ferruginous springs, +and a famous college founded in 1776 by the Basque Society. The convention +which put a stop to the first Carlist war in 1839 was signed here. Durango, likewise, +has frequently been mentioned in connection with the civil wars carried on +in the north of Spain. Guernica, in Biscay, boasts of a palace of justice and an +old oak beneath which the legislature is in the habit of meeting; but, like all +other Basque towns, it is hardly more than a village.</p> + +<p>The centres of population are not more numerous on the southern slope of the +Pyrenees. Vitoria, the capital of Álava, on the railway connecting Madrid with +Paris, is a commercial and manufacturing town. Pamplona, or Pampeluna, recalls +the name of Pompey, who rebuilt it. It is a fortress, often besieged and captured. +Its cathedral is one of the finest in Spain. Tafalla, <i>la flor de Navarra</i>, the ancient +capital of the kingdom, has the ruins of a palace, which Carlos +the Noble, who <span class="xxpn" id="p448">{448}</span> +built it, desired to unite by means of a covered gallery with the palace of Olite, +three miles lower down in the same valley. Puente la Reina is celebrated for its +wines. Estella, one of the most charming towns of Navarra, commands several roads +leading to Castile and Aragon, and its strategical importance is consequently considerable. +The Carlists, during the late war, transformed it into a formidable fortress.</p> + +<p>Tudela, abounding in wines, Calahorra, and Logroño, all in +the adjoining province of Logroño, are likewise of some +value from a military point of view, for they command the +passages over the Ebro. Calahorra, with its proud motto, +“I have prevailed over Carthage and Rome,” was the great +bulwark of defence when Sertorius fought Pompey, but was +made to pay dearly for its heroism. Besieged by the Romans, +its defenders, constrained by hunger, fed upon their women +and children, and most of them perished. Though situated in +the fertile district of Rioja, beyond the frontiers of the +Euskarian language, the history of Calahorra is intimately +connected with that of the Basque provinces, for upon its +ancient laws were modelled the fueros of Álava.<a +class="afnanch" href="#fn161" id="fnanch161">161</a></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="VIII.—Santander, the Asturias, and Galicia.">VIII.—<span + class="smcap">S<b>ANTANDER,</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>STURIAS,</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>ALICIA.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">The +Atlantic slope of the Cantabrian Pyrenees is a region completely distinct from +the rest of Spain. Mountains, hills, valleys, and running waters succeed each other +in infinite variety, and the coast throughout is steep, with bold promontories and +deep inlets, into which flow rapid torrents. The climate is moist and salubrious. +The Celto-Iberian inhabitants of the country have in most instances escaped the +commotions which devastated the other provinces of the peninsula, and the population, +in proportion to the cultivable area, is more dense than elsewhere. This +region, being very narrow compared with its length, has been split up into several +political divisions, in spite of similarity of physical features. The old kingdom +of Galicia occupies the west, the Asturias the centre, and Santander the east.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn162" id="fnanch162">162</a></p> + +<p>The mountain region of Santander begins immediately to the east of the +Sierra Salvada and the depression known as Valle de Mena. The Cantabrian +Mountains slope down steeply there towards the Bay of Biscay, whilst their +height above the upland, through which the Ebro has excavated its bed, is but +trifling. The Puerto del Escudo attains an elevation of 3,241 feet above Santander, +its southern descent to the valley of the Virga hardly exceeding 500 feet. The Pass +of Reinosa (2,778 feet), farther west, through which runs the railway from Madrid +to Santander, is even more characteristic. An almost imperceptible height of +land there separates the plateau from the steep declivity which leads down to the +coast, and by means of a canal sixty feet deep, and a mile in length, the waters +of the Ebro might be diverted into the river Besaya, which enters the Atlantic +at San Martin de Suances. This height of land forms +the natural outlet of <span class="xxpn" id="p449">{449}</span> +the Castiles to the sea, and its possession is as important to the inhabitants of the +plateau as is that of the mouth of a river to a people dwelling on its upper course.</p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg176"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib449blg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 176.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>NVIRONS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>ILBAO.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 200,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib449.jpg" width="600" height="720" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Immediately to the east of this pass the aspect of the mountains changes. They +rise to a great height, piercing the zone of perennial snow, and their southern +escarpments are of great steepness. The Peña Labra (8,295 feet) dominates the +first of these mountain masses. Rivers descend from it in all directions: the Ebro +in the east, the Pisuerga in the south, and the Nansa, or Tinamenor, in the north-west. +Farther west the Peña Prieta rises to a height of 8,295 feet, its snows +feeding the Carrion and Esla. It is joined in the north to a mountain mass even +more considerable, which bears the curious name of Peñas de +Europa, or “rocks <span class="xxpn" id="p450">{450}</span> +of Europe,” and culminates in the Torre de Cerredo (8,784 feet), covered with +snow throughout the year, and boasting even of a few glaciers, due to the excessive +amount of precipitation.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg177"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib450alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 177.—<span class="smcap">S<b>T.</b></span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>EBASTIAN.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 30,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib450.jpg" width="600" height="449" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The valley of La Liébana, at the eastern foot of the Peñas de Europa, resembles +a vast caldron of extraordinary depth. Shut in on the west, south, and east by +huge precipices rising to a height of 6,500 feet, it is closed in on the north by a +transversal chain, through which the waters of the Liébana have excavated for +themselves a narrow passage. The village of Potes, in the centre of this valley, +lies at an elevation of only 981 feet above the level of the sea. In Santander and +the Asturias, even more frequently than in the Basque country, we meet with +secondary chains running parallel with the coast. These are composed of triassic, +Jurassic, and cretaceous rocks, and rise like advanced walls of defence in front of +the main range of the mountains, which consist of Silurian slates upheaved by +granite. It results from this that the course of the rivers is most erratic. On +leaving their upper valleys, where they frequently form cascades, their farther +progress is arrested by these parallel ranges, and they twist about to the east and +west until they find an outlet through which they may escape.</p> + +<p>The two funnel-shaped valleys of Valdeon (1,529 feet) and Sajambre +are enclosed between spurs of the Peñas de Europa. Their torrents drain +into the Bay of Biscay, but they are most readily accessible from the +plateau. Farther west the mountains decrease in height, and their main +crest gradually recedes from the coast. They are crossed here by the +Pass of Pajares (4,471 feet), which connects Leon with Oviedo. <span +class="xxpn" id="p451">{451}</span></p> + +<p>The Asturian Mountains are objects of veneration to every patriotic Spaniard. +Beautiful as they are, their lower slopes being covered with chestnut-trees, walnut-trees, +and oaks, whilst higher up forests of beeches and hazel alternate with +meadows, their beauty is enhanced by the fact of their having afforded a refuge to +the Christians whilst the Moors held the rest of the country. Mount Ansena +sheltered St. Pelagius and his flock, and at Covadonga he built himself an abbey. +These “illustrious mountains” do not, however, merely boast of historical associations, +delightful villages, herds, and pastures; they hide within their bowels a rich +store of coal, one of the principal sources of wealth to the Asturias.</p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr01" id="fg178"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 178.—<span class="smcap">S<b>T.</b></span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>EBASTIAN.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib451.jpg" width="600" height="563" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>Galicia is separated from the Castilian plateau by a continuation of the Cantabrian +Pyrenees, which here swerve to the south, and through which the Sil has +excavated its bed. To the north of that river they culminate in the Pico de +Miravalles (6,362 feet), and are crossed by the Pass of Predrafita (3,600 feet), +through which runs the main road from Leon to Galicia.</p> + +<div class="dctr03" id="fg179"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib452clg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 179.—<span class="smcap">G<b>UETARIA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 8,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib452.jpg" width="554" height="800" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>In Galicia the hills rarely form well-defined chains, and +mostly consist of <span class="xxpn" id="p452">{452}</span> +primitive rocks or small table-lands, with peaks or summits rising a few hundred +feet above the general level of the country. The disposition of the small ranges +generally corresponds with that of the coast. The Sierra de Rañadoiro (3,612 feet), +a spur of the Cantabrian Mountains, forms the natural +boundary between the <span class="xxpn" id="p453">{453}</span> +Asturias and Galicia. West of it, the Sierra de Meira (2,982 feet) runs in the same +direction, but the chains which terminate in Capes Estaca de Vares and Ortegal +(<i>i.e.</i> Nortegal, “north cape”) run from east to west, and are dominated by the +pyramid of Monte Cuadramon (3,342 feet). The hills to the west of the river Miño +(Minho) terminate in the famous promontories of Toriñana and Finisterre, or +“land’s-end.” This latter, a steep cliff rising boldly above the waters to the west +of the wide Bay of Corcubion, formerly bore a temple of the ancient gods, since +replaced by a church dedicated to the Virgin.</p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg180"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib453blg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 180.—<span class="smcap">G<b>UERNICA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 100,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib453.jpg" width="600" height="758" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div><span class="xxpn" id="p454">{454}</span></div> + +<p>The coast of the Asturias abounds in small bays, or <i>rias</i>, bounded by steep cliffs. +In Galicia these rias assume vast proportions, and are of great depth. They may +fitly be likened to the fiords of Northern Europe, and their origin appears to be +the same. The marine fauna of these Galician rias is Britannic rather than Lusitanian, +for amongst two hundred species of testacea collected by Mr. MacAndrew +there are only twenty-five which were not also found on the coasts of Britain. +Moreover, the flora of the Asturian Mountains is very much like that of Ireland; +and these facts go far in support of the hypothesis, started by Forbes, that the +Azores, Ireland, and Galicia, anterior to the glacial epoch, were connected by land.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg181"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib454alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 181.—<span class="smcap">P<b>ASS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">R<b>EINOSA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 300,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib454.jpg" width="600" height="605" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The climate, too, resembles that of Great Britain. The rainfall on the exterior +slopes of the mountains is abundant, whilst to the south of them, in the arid plains +of Leon and Castile, it hardly rains at all. There are localities in the Asturias +where the rainfall amounts to more than six feet annually, a quantity only again +met with on the western mountain slopes of Scotland and Norway, and on the +southern declivities of the Swiss Alps. There is no season +without rain, and <span class="xxpn" id="p455">{455}</span> +droughts are exceedingly rare. Equinoctial storms are frequent in autumn, and +render the Bay of Biscay dangerous to mariners. The temperature is equable, +and fogs, locally known as <i>bretimas</i>, are as frequent as in the British Islands. +These fogs exercise a strong influence upon the superstitious minds of the Galicians, +who fancy they see magicians, or <i>nuveiros</i>, ride upon the clouds, expand into mists, +and shrink back into cloudlets. They also believe that the bodies of the dead are +conveyed by the mists from cemetery to cemetery, these fearful nocturnal processions +being known to them as <i>estadeas</i>, or <i>estadhinas</i>.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn163" id="fnanch163">163</a></p> + +<p>In spite of an abundance of running water, the Cantabrian provinces cannot +boast of a single navigable river. In the Asturias the littoral zone is too narrow, +and the slope too considerable, to admit of torrents becoming tranquil rivers. Nor +are the Tambre and Ulla, in Galicia, of any importance; and the only true river of +the country is the Miño, called Minho by the Portuguese on its lower course, where +it forms the boundary between the two states of Iberia. The Miño is fed from +both slopes of the Cantabrian Mountains, the Miño proper rising on the western +slope, whilst the Sil comes from the interior of the country. The latter is the +main branch. “The Miño has the reputation,” say the Spaniards, “but the Sil +has the water.” The Sil, before leaving the province of Leon, passes through the +ancient lake basin of the Vierzo, now shrunk to a small sheet of water known as +the Lago de Carrocedo. It then passes in succession through a wild gorge, a +second lake basin, the tunnel of Monte Furado (“pierced mountains”), excavated by +the Romans to facilitate their mining operations, and finally rushes through a +gorge intersecting the Cantabrian Mountains, and one of the wildest in all Spain, +with precipitous walls more than 1,000 feet in height. Immediately below the +confluence with the Miño a second gorge has to be passed, but then the waters of +the river expand, and flow into the sea through a wide estuary. Below Tuy, for a +distance of about twenty miles, the river is navigable. But though of small service +to navigation, the Miño is nevertheless one of the eight great rivers of the Iberian +peninsula, and proportionately to the extent of its basin it is the most copious.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn164" id="fnanch164">164</a></p> + +<p>The water of this and other rivers is not needed for agricultural purposes, for it +rains abundantly in Galicia and the Asturias, and the emerald meadows of these +provinces are as famous as those of England. The flora, +however, is upon the <span class="xxpn" id="p456">{456}</span> +whole more southerly in its features than that of the countries to the north of the +Bay of Biscay. The orchards produce not only apples, chestnuts, and walnuts, +but also oranges, and in a garden at Oviedo dates ripen in the open air. The +great moisture, however, prevents certain plants from attaining the commercial +importance they would otherwise possess. The mulberry flourishes, but the culture +of silk-worms has only yielded indifferent results, and even the grapes, except in +a few favoured localities, yield but sour wine of disagreeable flavour. Cider, on +the other hand, enjoys a high reputation, and is even exported to America.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg182"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib456alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 182.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>EÑAS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">DE</span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>UROPA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 660,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib456.jpg" width="600" height="590" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The Asturian boasts of having never submitted to the yoke of Mussulmans. +Some of the mountain districts preserved their independence throughout, and +nowhere could the Arabs maintain themselves for any length of time. Oviedo +was called the “city of bishops,” from the great number of prelates who found a +refuge there. The Galicians were equally successful in their resistance to the +Moors, and the blood of the Celtic inhabitants of these remote provinces is thus +purer than anywhere else in Spain.</p> + +<p>In some districts the customs are said to have +remained unchanged since <span class="xxpn" id="p457">{457}</span> +the time of the Romans. The herdsmen, or <i>vaqueros</i>, of Leitariegos, on the Upper +Narcea, form almost a distinct tribe. They keep apart from the rest of the Asturians, +and always marry amongst themselves. Old dialects maintain their ground. +The peasants on the coast of Cantabria talk their <i>bable</i>, and in Galicia the dialects +differ even from village to village. The <i>gallego</i>, especially as spoken near the +Miño, is Portuguese rather than Spanish, but a Lusitanian is nevertheless unable +to understand a Galician, owing to the curious sing-song intonation of the latter.</p> + +<p>The country supports a dense population, but there are few towns. Many of +these consist merely of a church, a town-hall, and an inn. The homesteads are +scattered over the whole country. This may be due to an innate love of nature, +or perhaps, as in the Basque provinces, to the security which the country has +enjoyed during centuries. Foreign and civil wars have scarcely ever affected these +outlying provinces of Spain. The manners are gentle, and the bloodthirsty bull-fights +of the Castilians unknown. The isolation and peace in which the Cantabrians +were permitted to exist did not, however, prove of advantage in all respects. +Elsewhere in Europe, nobles, priests, citizens, and the peasantry, when threatened +by danger, felt constrained to make concessions to each other. Not so in the +Asturias, where the peasants were reduced to the condition of serfs, and sold with +the land. At the commencement of this century nearly the whole of the land in +the two Asturias was in the hands of twenty-four proprietors, and in the neighbouring +Galicia the conditions were not much more favourable. Matters have changed +since then. The lords have grown poor, the monasteries have been suppressed, +and the industrious Asturians and Galicians have invested their hard-earned savings +in land. Formerly the feudal lords leased the land to the cultivators, who rendered +homage and paid a quit-rent, the lease remaining in force during the reign of two or +three kings, for a hundred years, or even for three hundred and twenty-nine years, +according to the custom of different districts. These leases, however, frequently +led to disputes; the leaseholders, on the expiration of their leases, often refused to +surrender possession, and in numerous instances the law courts sustained them +in this refusal.</p> + +<p>The Galicians on the coast divide their time between the cultivation of the +land and fishing. During the season no less than 20,000 men, with 3,000 or 4,000 +boats, spread their nets in the Bays of La Coruña, Arosa, Pontevedra, and Vigo, +where tunny-fish and sardines abound. The local consumption of sardines is enormous, +and La Coruña alone exports about 17,000 tons annually to America. These +pursuits, however, are not capable of supporting an increasing population, and +thousands of Galicians emigrate annually. Thrifty and clannish, they usually +succeed in amassing a small competency, and those among them who return exercise +a civilising influence upon their less-cultivated countrymen. Ignorance and poverty, +with all their attendant evils, are great in Galicia, and leprosy and elephantiasis +are common diseases.</p> + +<p>One great hindrance to the development of the resources of the country consists +in the paucity of roads and railways. A beginning has been made, but, looking +to the financial condition of Spain, progress will +hardly be rapid. <span class="xxpn" id="p458">{458}</span></p> + +<p>Most of the towns of the Asturias are close to the coast. Castro-Urdiales, +Laredo, and Santoña, immediately to the west of the Basque provinces, have +frequently served as naval stations. The roadstead of Santoña is one of the most +commodious and best sheltered of the peninsula, and when Napoleon gave Spain +to his brother Joseph he retained possession of that place, and began fortifications +which would have converted it into a French Gibraltar.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg183"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib458alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 183.—<span class="smcap">R<b>IAS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>A</b></span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>ORUÑA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">F<b>ERROL.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 210,400.</div> +<img src="images/ib458.jpg" width="600" height="493" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The great commercial port of the country is Santander, with its excellent +harbour, quays, docks, and warehouses, built upon land won from the sea. Santander +is the natural outlet of the Castiles, and exports the flour of Valladolid and +Palencia, as well as the woollen stuffs known as <i>sorianas</i> and <i>leonesas</i> from the +places where they are manufactured. It supplies the interior with the colonial +produce of Cuba and Puerto Rico, and its merchants keep up regular intercourse +with France, England, Hamburg, and Scandinavia.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn165" id="fnanch165">165</a> The ship-building yards +at the head of the bay have lost their former importance, and the manufacture of +cigars is now the great industry of the country. Sardinero, a bathing-place +to the north of the town, and the hot springs of Alcedo, Ontaneda, Las Caldas +de Besaya, in the hills to the south, are favourite places of resort.</p> + +<p>Along the coast to the west of Santander, as far as Gijon, +we only meet with <span class="xxpn" id="p459">{459}</span> +villages, such as San Martin de la Arena (the port of the decayed town of Santillana), +San Vicente de la Barquera, Llanes, Rivadesella, and Lástres. Nor is Gijon, with +its huge tobacco factory, a place of importance, though formerly it was the capital +of all Asturias. It exports, however, the coal brought by rail from Sarna (Langres), +and with Aviles, on the other side of the elevated Cabo de Peñas, enjoys the +advantage of being the port of Oviedo, situated in a tributary valley of the Nalon, +fifteen miles in the interior. Oviedo has flourishing iron-works, a university, and a +fine Gothic cathedral, said to be richer in relics than any other church in the +world. The mountain of Naronca shelters the town against northerly winds, and +its climate is delicious. The environs abound in delightful spots. At Cangas de +Onis, which was the first capital of the kingdom, founded by St. Pelagius, but +now merely a village in a charming valley, are the caverns of Covadonga, in which +the ashes of the saint have found a last resting-place, and which are consequently +objects of the highest veneration to patriotic Spaniards. Trubia, the Government +gun and small-arms factory, lies seven miles to the west of Oviedo.</p> + +<p>Cudillero, Luarca, Navia (a place said to have been founded by Ham, the +son of Noah), Castropol, and Galician Rivadeo are mere fishing villages, and only +when we reach the magnificent rias opening out into the Atlantic do we again +meet with real towns. The first of these is Ferrol, which was only a village +up to the middle of last century, but has since been converted into a great naval +station and fortress, bristling with guns, and containing dockyards and arsenals.</p> + +<p>La Coruña, the Groyne of English sailors, depends rather upon commerce, manufactures, +and fishing than upon its military establishments and fortifications. It +is one of the most picturesque towns of Spain, and its favourable geographical +position will enable it, on the completion of the railway now building, considerably +to extend its commerce, which at present is almost confined to England.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn166" id="fnanch166">166</a> +On a small island near it stands the Tower of Hercules, the foundations of +which date back to the Romans, if not Phœnicians. It was from the ria of Coruña +that the “Invincible Armada” set out upon its disastrous expedition.</p> + +<p>Each of the rias of Southern Galicia has its port or ports. That of Corcubion +is sheltered by the Cape of Finisterre; on the ria of Noya are the small towns of +Noya and Muros; that of Arosa is frequented by vessels which convey emigrants +from the ports of Padron and Carril to La Plata; the ria of Pontevedra extends +to the town after which it is named; and farther south still, the towns of Vigo +and Bayona rise on the shore of a magnificent bay, protected by a group of +islands known to the ancients as “Isles of the Gods.” Vigo, with its excellent +harbour, has become the great commercial port of the country,<a class="afnanch" href="#fn167" id="fnanch167">167</a> but is, perhaps, +better known on account of the galleons sunk by Dutch and English privateers.</p> + +<p>Three of the principal inland towns of Galicia—viz. Lugo, +Orense, and Tuy—rise on the banks of the Miño. The old +Roman city of Lugo (Lucus Augusti) is enclosed within +mediæval walls, and has warm sulphur springs. Orense, with +its superb old bridge, is likewise celebrated for its hot +springs, or <i>burgas</i>, which are <span class="xxpn" id="p460">{460}</span> +said to raise sensibly the temperature of the plain in winter, and supply the whole +town with water for domestic purposes. Tuy, opposite the Portuguese town of +Valença do Minho, is important only as a frontier fortress. Santiago de Compostela, +the famous old capital of Galicia, on a hill near the winding banks of the +Saria, is the most populous town of North-western Spain. It was here the grave of +St. James the apostle was discovered in the ninth century. The attraction which +it formerly exercised upon pilgrims was immense.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn168" id="fnanch168">168</a></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="IX.—The Present and Future of Spain.">IX.—<span + class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>RESENT</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">F<b>UTURE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>PAIN.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">Contemporaneous Spain is full of disorder. The political, financial, and social +machinery is out of joint, and civil war, active or latent, is carried on almost in +every province. The ruin wrought by these incessant domestic wars is incalculable.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg184"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib460alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 184.—<span class="smcap">S<b>ANTOÑA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>ANTANDER.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 360,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib460.jpg" width="600" height="400" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Successive Governments have had recourse to miserable expedients without being +able to disguise the bankrupt condition of the country. The creditors of the State, +no less than the Government officials, remained unpaid, and even schools had to +be closed because the pittance due to the schoolmaster was not forthcoming.</p> + +<p>But in spite of this apparent ruin real progress has been made. In order to +fairly judge Spain we must remember that the period when the Inquisition was +permitted to commit its judicial murders is not very remote. In 1780 a woman +of Seville was burnt at the stake for “sorcery and witchcraft.” At that time the +greater part of Spain was held in mortmain, and the +cultivation of the remainder <span class="xxpn" id="p461">{461}</span> +was very indifferently attended to. Ignorance was universal, more especially at +the universities, where science was held in derision.</p> + +<p>The great events in the beginning of the nineteenth century have roused the +Spaniards from their torpor, and the country, in spite of temporary checks, has +increased in population and wealth. Labour is more highly respected now than it +was formerly, and whilst monasteries and convents have been emptied, the factories +are crowded with workmen. For much of this progress Spain is indebted to +foreigners. Millions have been invested by them, and, though the expected profits +have scarcely ever been realised, the country at large has permanently profited from +this inflow of capital. The English have given an immense impetus to agriculture +by buying the wines of Andalusia, the corn and flour of the Castilians, and the +cattle of the Galicians. They have likewise developed the mining industry of +Huelva, Linares, Cartagena, and Somorrostro. The French have vastly aided +the manufacturing industry. Foreign capitalists and engineers have established +steamboat lines and railways. The small towns of the interior are awakening +from their lethargy, and modern life is beginning to pulsate through their veins.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn169" id="fnanch169">169</a></p> + +<p>In intellectual matters Spain has made even greater progress. Ignorance is +still a great power, especially in the Castiles, where schoolmasters are little +respected, populous towns are without libraries, and catechisms and almanacs are +the only literature of the peasantry. But the position which Spain now holds in +literature and the arts sufficiently proves that the country of Cervantes and +Velasquez is about to resume its place amongst the other countries of Europe. In +science, however, Spain lags far behind, and Michael Servetus is the only Christian +Spaniard whose works mark an epoch in the progress of human knowledge. +But the spirit of inquiry at one time alive amongst the Moors of Andalusia may +possibly revive amongst their descendants.</p> + +<p>It is very much to be desired that intellectual progress should mollify the +manners of the people.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn170" id="fnanch170">170</a> It is a scandal that the “noble science of bull-baiting” +should still meet with so large a measure of support in Spain. These bull-fights, as +well as the cock-fights so popular in Andalusia, are sports unworthy a great nation, +and should be put down, just as <i>autos da fé</i> have been put down.</p> + +<div class="dctr03" id="fg185"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib462clg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 185.—<span class="smcap">O<b>VIEDO</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">G<b>IJON.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 300,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib462.jpg" width="536" height="800" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr03" id="fg186"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 186.—<span class="smcap">T<b>OWER</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">H<b>ERCULES</b></span> + (<span class="smcap">L<b>IGHTHOUSE</b></span>), + <span class="smcap">C<b>ORUÑA.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib463.jpg" width="589" height="800" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>Since a generation or two Spain has got rid of most of her +colonies, which only <span class="xxpn" id="p462">{462}</span> +hindered her moral and material progress. The metropolis is no longer called +upon to uphold slavery, the Inquisition, commercial monopolies, and similar +institutions, “devised to insure the happy government of +these colonies.” These <span class="xxpn" id="p463">{463}</span> +latter certainly have had their revolutions and counter-revolutions, but they have +made some progress in population and wealth. Unfortunately the entire colonial +empire was not lost. Cuba and the Philippine Islands +are frequently represented <span class="xxpn" id="p464">{464}</span> +as adding to the wealth of Spain, and large sums have certainly been paid by +them into the treasury. But these results have been achieved at the cost of +fearful suffering and demoralisation to governors and governed, and unless Spain +adopts the colonial system of England, by granting self-government to colonies, it +will to a certainty lose the last shreds of its colonial empire, after having exhausted +its strength in vain efforts to maintain it.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg187"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib464alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 187.—<span class="smcap">R<b>IA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">DE</span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>IGO.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 280,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib464.jpg" width="600" height="559" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>But though the colonies be lost, the influence of Spain upon the rest of the +world will endure for centuries. Spain has impressed her genius upon every +country subjected at one time or other to her power. Sicily, Naples, Sardinia, +and even Lombardy still exhibit traces of Spanish influence in their architecture +and customs. In Spanish America we find towns inhabited by Indians which +are quite Spanish in their aspect, and almost resemble detached portions of Badajoz +and Valladolid. The Indians themselves have adopted the Castilian tongue, and +with it Castilian manners and modes of thought. A vast territory, twice the size +of Europe, and capable of supporting millions of inhabitants, is occupied now by +Spanish-speaking peoples. <span class="xxpn" id="p465">{465}</span></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="X.—Government and Administration.">X.—<span + class="smcap">G<b>OVERNMENT</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>DMINISTRATION.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">Since September, 1868, when a revolution upset the Government of Isabella II., +Spain has passed through a series of revolutions and convulsions, terminating in +December, 1874, in the accession of Alfonso XII., a son of Isabella. Soon afterwards +the revolt in the Basque provinces raised by Don Carlos, the “legitimate” +king of the country, was suppressed, and the work of internal organization could +begin. The legislative power is vested in the King and the Cortes. These latter +include a Senate and a House of Deputies. The Senate consists of hereditary +members (such as royal princes and grandees), of life members chosen by the +King, and of senators elected by corporations. The members of the House of +Deputies are elected for five years. The President and Vice-President of the Senate +are appointed by the King, who enjoys the right of dissolving the Cortes on condition +of fresh elections being ordered within three months.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg188"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib465alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 188.—<span class="smcap">R<b>AILROADS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">I<b>BERIAN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ENINSULA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 10,300,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib465.jpg" width="600" height="525" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>These governmental revolutions scarcely affected the administration of the +country. The treasury is always empty, the annual receipts do not suffice to pay +the interest upon the national debt, taxes have increased, the conscription demands +more men than ever, and the schools diminish in numbers.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn171" id="fnanch171">171</a> <span class="xxpn" id="p466">{466}</span></p> + +<p>The political and administrative divisions of the country have remained the +same since 1841. Spain is divided into forty-nine provinces, including the +Canaries. Each province is subdivided into districts, and has its civil governor. +The communes are governed by an <i>alcalde</i>, or mayor, assisted by an <i>ayuntamiento</i>, or +municipal council, of from four to twenty-eight members. The judicial administration +is modelled on that of France. There are 9,400 justices of the peace (one +for each commune), about 500 inferior courts, 15 courts of appeal, and a supreme +court sitting at Madrid.</p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr01" id="fg189"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib466alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 189.—<span class="smcap">F<b>OREIGN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>OMMERCE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">I<b>BERIAN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ENINSULA.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib466.jpg" width="600" height="542" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>For military purposes continental Spain is divided into twelve districts, each +under a captain-general. These are New Castile, Catalonia, Aragon, Andalusia, +Valencia with Múrcia, Galicia, Granada, Old Castile, Estremadura, Burgos, +Navarra, and the Basque provinces. The Balearic Isles, the Canaries, Cuba, +Puerto Rico, and the Philippines constitute five additional districts. Military +service is compulsory, but substitutes are admitted on payment of a heavy ransom. +The annual levy varies exceedingly, and as many as 80,000 men are officially stated +to have been levied in a single year, though 60,000 would appear to be the utmost +the population can supply. The term of service is seven years in the cavalry and +artillery, eight years in the infantry, of which three are passed in the “provincial +militia.” About 100,000 men are supposed to be actually under +arms in the <span class="xxpn" id="p467">{467}</span> +peninsula, 130,000 are on furlough, and 70,000 men are stationed in the colonies, +mostly in Cuba, where about one-fourth of the total strength perish annually.</p> + +<p>The principal fortresses are St. Sebastian, Santoña, and Santander, on the Bay +of Biscay; Ferrol, La Coruña, and Vigo, on the rias of Galicia; Ciudad Rodrigo, +on the Portuguese frontier; Cádiz and Tarifa, at the entrance of the Strait of +Gibraltar; Málaga, Cartagena, Alicante, and Barcelona, on the Mediterranean; +Figueras, Pamplona, and Zaragoza, at the foot of the Pyrenees.</p> + +<p>The navy consists of 123 steamers, propelled by engines of 24,694 horse-power, +armed with 755 guns, and manned by 14,000 sailors and 5,500 marines. Six +of these vessels are ironclad frigates. The number of superior officers is exceedingly +large, and their salaries weigh heavily upon the treasury.</p> + +<div class="dctr04" id="fg190"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 190.—<span class="smcap">D<b>IAGRAM</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">EXHIBITING</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>XTENT</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>ASTILIAN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>ANGUAGE.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 36,000,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib467.jpg" width="600" height="600" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Officially the privileges of the nobility have been abrogated. The number of +“noblemen” is, perhaps, larger in Spain than anywhere else in Europe, for the +population of entire provinces, such as the Vascongadas and the Asturias, claims +to have “blue blood” in its veins. In 1787 no less than 480,000 “gentlemen” +were enumerated, not including minors, and if the proportion is the same now, +there must exist at the least 3,000,000 Spaniards who claim to be <i>hidalgos</i>, or +“sons of somebody.” About 1,500 grandees are privileged by custom to remain +covered in the presence of the King, and about 200 of these belong to the highest +rank. All of these do not, however, owe their rank to birth, for many plebeians, +taking advantage of the financial miseries of the country, have succeeded in getting +themselves ennobled. The order of the Golden Fleece, founded in 1431 by Philip +the Good, is one of the distinctions most coveted by +princes and diplomatists. <span class="xxpn" id="p468">{468}</span></p> + +<p>The Roman Catholic religion is that of the State, and its prelates enjoy great +privileges, but all other confessions are supposed to be tolerated. The schools, +unfortunately, still remain in the hands of ecclesiastics, who likewise exercise a +censorship with respect to pieces to be produced on the stage. Formerly Spain +was the most priest-ridden country in Europe. At the close of last century there +were 144,000 priests, 71,000 monks, and 35,000 nuns, but only 34,000 merchants. +War and revolutions played havoc with the conventual institutions, but as recently +as 1835 they still harboured 50,000 inmates. Subsequently the whole of them +were suppressed, and in 1869 the last Spanish monk retired from the Carthusian +monastery of Granada to find a refuge in Belgium. Since then, however, the +laws of the land have again been relaxed in favor of monks and priests. There +are 9 archbishops and 54 bishops.</p> + +<div class="section dtblbox"> +<table class="borall" summary=""> +<tr> + <th class="borall" colspan="5"><h4 + title="Area and Population of Spain and its + Colonies."><span class="smcap">A<b>REA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>OPULATION</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>PAIN</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smmaj">ITS</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>OLONIES.</b></span></h4></th></tr> +<tr> + <th class="borall" colspan="2"></th> + <th class="borall">Area. Sq. m.</th> + <th class="borall">Population (1870).</th> + <th class="borall">Density.</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">N<b>EW</b></span> <span class="smcap">C<b>ASTILE</b></span> (Castilla):―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Madrid</td> + <td class="tdright">2,997</td> + <td class="tdright">487,482</td> + <td class="tdright">162</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Toledo</td> + <td class="tdright">5,586</td> + <td class="tdright">342,272</td> + <td class="tdright">61</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Guadalajara</td> + <td class="tdright">4,870</td> + <td class="tdright">208,638</td> + <td class="tdright">41</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Cuenca</td> + <td class="tdright">6,725</td> + <td class="tdright">238,731</td> + <td class="tdright">35</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Cuidad Real</td> + <td class="tdright">7,840</td> + <td class="tdright">264,649</td> + <td class="tdright">34</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">O<b>LD</b></span> <span class="smcap">C<b>ASTILE</b></span>:―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Santander</td> + <td class="tdright">2,113</td> + <td class="tdright">241,581</td> + <td class="tdright">114</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Burgos</td> + <td class="tdright">5,650</td> + <td class="tdright">353,560</td> + <td class="tdright">62</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Logroño</td> + <td class="tdright">1,945</td> + <td class="tdright">182,941</td> + <td class="tdright">94</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Ávila</td> + <td class="tdright">2,981</td> + <td class="tdright">175,219</td> + <td class="tdright">60</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Segovia</td> + <td class="tdright">2,714</td> + <td class="tdright">150,812</td> + <td class="tdright">53</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Soria</td> + <td class="tdright">3,836</td> + <td class="tdright">158,699</td> + <td class="tdright">41</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Palencia</td> + <td class="tdright">3,126</td> + <td class="tdright">184,668</td> + <td class="tdright">59</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Valladolid</td> + <td class="tdright">3,043</td> + <td class="tdright">242,384</td> + <td class="tdright">80</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">L<b>EON</b></span>:―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Salamanca</td> + <td class="tdright">4,940</td> + <td class="tdright">280,870</td> + <td class="tdright">57</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Zamora</td> + <td class="tdright">4,135</td> + <td class="tdright">250,968</td> + <td class="tdright">61</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Leon</td> + <td class="tdright">6,167</td> + <td class="tdright">350,992</td> + <td class="tdright">56</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">E<b>STREMADURA</b></span>:―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Cáceres</td> + <td class="tdright">8,013</td> + <td class="tdright">302,455</td> + <td class="tdright">34</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Badajoz</td> + <td class="tdright">8,687</td> + <td class="tdright">431,922</td> + <td class="tdright">49</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">A<b>NDALUSIA</b></span>:―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Almería</td> + <td class="tdright">3,302</td> + <td class="tdright">361,553</td> + <td class="tdright">110</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Cádiz</td> + <td class="tdright">2,809</td> + <td class="tdright">426,499</td> + <td class="tdright">152</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Córdova</td> + <td class="tdright">5,190</td> + <td class="tdright">382,652</td> + <td class="tdright">73</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Granada</td> + <td class="tdright">4,937</td> + <td class="tdright">485,346</td> + <td class="tdright">98</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Huelva</td> + <td class="tdright">4,122</td> + <td class="tdright">196,469</td> + <td class="tdright">48</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Jaen</td> + <td class="tdright">5,184</td> + <td class="tdright">392,100</td> + <td class="tdright">75</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Málaga</td> + <td class="tdright">2,824</td> + <td class="tdright">505,010</td> + <td class="tdright">180</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Seville</td> + <td class="tdright">5,295</td> + <td class="tdright">515,011</td> + <td class="tdright">97</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">V<b>ALENCIA</b></span>:―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Castellon de la Plana</td> + <td class="tdright">2,446</td> + <td class="tdright">296,222</td> + <td class="tdright">121</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Valencia</td> + <td class="tdright">4,352</td> + <td class="tdright">665,141</td> + <td class="tdright">153</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Alicante</td> + <td class="tdright">2,098</td> + <td class="tdright">440,470</td> + <td class="tdright">210</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">M<b>URCIA</b></span>:―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Albacete</td> + <td class="tdright">5,972</td> + <td class="tdright">220,973</td> + <td class="tdright">37</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Murcia</td> + <td class="tdright">4,478</td> + <td class="tdright">439,067</td> + <td class="tdright">98</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">B<b>ALEARIC</b></span> <span class="smcap">I<b>SLES</b></span>:―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Baleares</td> + <td class="tdright">1,860</td> + <td class="tdright">289,225</td> + <td class="tdright">155</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">C<b>ATALONIA</b></span> (Cataluña):―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Lérida</td> + <td class="tdright">4,775</td> + <td class="tdright">330,348</td> + <td class="tdright">69</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Gerona</td> + <td class="tdright">2,272</td> + <td class="tdright">325,110</td> + <td class="tdright">143</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Barcelona</td> + <td class="tdright">2,985</td> + <td class="tdright">762,555</td> + <td class="tdright">256</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Tarragona</td> + <td class="tdright">2,451</td> + <td class="tdright">350,395</td> + <td class="tdright">143</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">A<b>RAGON</b></span>:―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Huesca</td> + <td class="tdright">5,878</td> + <td class="tdright">274,623</td> + <td class="tdright">47</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Zaragoza (Saragossa)</td> + <td class="tdright">6,607</td> + <td class="tdright">401,894</td> + <td class="tdright">61</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Teruel</td> + <td class="tdright">5,491</td> + <td class="tdright">252,201</td> + <td class="tdright">46</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">N<b>AVARRA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>ASQUE</b></span><br /> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ROVINCES</b></span> + (Vascongadas):―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Navarra</td> + <td class="tdright">4,046</td> + <td class="tdright">318,687</td> + <td class="tdright">80</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Vizcaya (Biscay)</td> + <td class="tdright">849</td> + <td class="tdright">187,926</td> + <td class="tdright">221</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Guipúzcoa</td> + <td class="tdright">728</td> + <td class="tdright">180,743</td> + <td class="tdright">248</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Alava</td> + <td class="tdright">1,205</td> + <td class="tdright">103,320</td> + <td class="tdright">86</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">A<b>STURIAS</b></span>:―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Oviedo</td> + <td class="tdright">4,091</td> + <td class="tdright">610,883</td> + <td class="tdright">152</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2"><span class="smcap">G<b>ALICIA</b></span>:―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Orense</td> + <td class="tdright">2,739</td> + <td class="tdright">402,796</td> + <td class="tdright">147</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Pontevedra</td> + <td class="tdright">1,739</td> + <td class="tdright">480,145</td> + <td class="tdright">282</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">La Coruña</td> + <td class="tdright">3,079</td> + <td class="tdright">630,504</td> + <td class="tdright">210</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Lugo</td> + <td class="tdright">3,787</td> + <td class="tdright">475,836</td> + <td class="tdright">126</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2"><span + class="smcap">T<b>OTAL</b></span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>PAIN</b></span></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">192,959</span></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">16,835,506</span></td> + <td class="tdright">87</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2"><span + class="smcap">A<b>FRICA</b></span>:―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Canaries</td> + <td class="tdright">2,808</td> + <td class="tdright">283,859</td> + <td class="tdright">101</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">West Coast</td> + <td class="tdright">850</td> + <td class="tdright">35,000</td> + <td class="tdright">41</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2"><span + class="smcap">A<b>MERICA</b></span>:―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Cuba</td> + <td class="tdright">45,983</td> + <td class="tdright">1,400,000</td> + <td class="tdright">30</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Puerto Rico</td> + <td class="tdright">3,596</td> + <td class="tdright">625,000</td> + <td class="tdright">173</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2"><span + class="smcap">O<b>CEANIA</b></span>:―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Philippines</td> + <td class="tdright">65,870</td> + <td class="tdright">6,000,000</td> + <td class="tdright">91</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Carolines</td> + <td class="tdright">534</td> + <td class="tdright">18,800</td> + <td class="tdright">35</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Pelew Islands</td> + <td class="tdright">345</td> + <td class="tdright">10,000</td> + <td class="tdright">29</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Marianas</td> + <td class="tdright">417</td> + <td class="tdright">8,000</td> + <td class="tdright">19</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2"><span + class="smcap">T<b>OTAL</b></span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>OLONIES</b></span></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">120,403</span></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">8,380,659</span></td> + <td class="tdright">70</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2"><span + class="smcap">S<b>PAIN</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>OLONIES</b></span></td> + <td class="tdright">313,362</td> + <td class="tdright">25,216,165</td> + <td class="tdright">80</td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtblbox--> + +<div class="chapter" id="p469"> + +<div class="dctr01"><img src="images/ib469.jpg" + width="600" height="111" alt="" /></div> + +<h2 class="h2herein" title="Portugal.">PORTUGAL.<a + class="afnanchstar" href="#fn172" id="fnanch172" + title="go to note 172">*</a> +<span class="sphr"><img class="ihra" src="images/hr-ia013.png" + width="248" height="27" alt="" /></span></h2> + +<h3 title="I.—General Aspects.">I.—<span + class="smcap">G<b>ENERAL</b></span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>SPECTS.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst"> +<span class="spdropcap"><img class="idropcap" src="images/drop-p.jpg" +width="238" height="264" alt="P" /></span>ORTUGAL, one of the smallest +states of Europe, was nevertheless during a short epoch one of the most +powerful.</p> + +<p>It +might appear at the first glance that Portugal ought to be a +member of a state including the whole of the Iberian peninsula; +but it is neither to chance nor to events purely historical that +Portugal owes its separate existence. The country is one by its climate, fauna, and +vegetation, and the inhabitants dwelling within it naturally adopted the same sort +of life, nourished the same ideas, and joined in the same body politic. It was by +advancing along the coast, from river to river, from the Douro to the Minho and +Tejo, from the Tejo to the Guadiana, that Portugal constituted itself an independent +state.</p> + +<p>Soil and climate mark off Portugal very distinctly from the rest of the Iberian +peninsula. Speaking generally, that country embraces the Atlantic slopes of the +plateau of Spain, and the limit of the heavy rains brought by westerly winds +coincides very nearly with the political boundary between the two countries. On +one side of the line we have a humid atmosphere, frequent rains, and luxuriant +forests; on the other a brazen sky, a parched soil, naked rocks, and treeless plains. +These abundant rains convert the feeble streams flowing from the plateau into great +rivers. The natural obstacles, such as rapids, which obstruct the principal amongst +them, are met with near the political frontier of the country. The harbour of +Lisbon was the kernel, as it were, around which the rest of the country has become +crystallized. Its power of attraction proved equal to that which caused the rest of +the peninsula to gravitate towards Madrid and Toledo.</p> + +<p>As frequently happens where neighbouring nations obey different laws and +are made to fight each other at the caprice of their sovereigns, there is no love +lost between Spaniards and Portuguese. The former, being the stronger, sneer at +“Portugueses pocos y locos” (small and crack-brained). The Portuguese are far +more demonstrative in giving expression to their aversion. +Formerly “Murderer <span class="xxpn" id="p470">{470}</span> +of the Castilians” was a favourite sign-board of houses of entertainment, and the +national poetry breathes passionate hatred of the Spaniard. This animosity must +interfere with the Iberian union, advocated only by a handful of people.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg191"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib470alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 191.—<span class="smcap">R<b>AINFALL</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">I<b>BERIAN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ENINSULA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">According to Jelinek and Hann. + Scale 1 : 10,300,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib470.jpg" width="600" height="596" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Ancient Lusitania was inhabited by Celtic and Iberian tribes, who resisted for +a considerable time the conquering arms of Rome. Those dwelling near the coast +had been subjected to the influence of Greek, Phœnician, and Carthaginian +colonists; but the influence exercised by the Romans, who forced their language +and form of government upon the people, was far more durable. Suevi and +Visigoths have left but few traces of their presence. The Mohammedans of +various races have largely modified the blood and manners of the inhabitants, +especially in Algarve, where they maintained themselves to the middle of the +thirteenth century. The numerous ruins of fortresses existing throughout the +country bear witness to the severe struggles which took place between these races +before uniformity of government and religion was established.</p> + +<p>The Kings of Portugal, taking the advice of the Inquisition, expelled all heretics. +The persecution of the Moors was pitiless, but the Jews were occasionally granted +a respite. The Spanish Jews settled near the frontier, +having outwardly embraced <span class="xxpn" id="p471">{471}</span> +the Christian religion, were permitted to remain; but the more conscientious +Jews kept true to their faith, and carried the knowledge they possessed to other +countries of Europe and to the East. At the time of their exile they were +engaged in literature, medicine, and law, as well as in commerce; at Lisbon they +had founded an academy of high repute; it was a Jew who introduced the art of +printing into Portugal; and Spinoza, that noble and powerful thinker, was a Jew +of Portuguese extraction.</p> + +<p>But the Portuguese have not only the blood of Arabs, Berbers, and Jews in +their veins, they are likewise much mixed with negroes, more particularly in the +south and along the coast. The slave trade existed long before the negroes of +Guinea were exported to the plantations of America. Damianus a Goes estimated +the number of blacks imported into Lisbon alone during the sixteenth century at +10,000 or 12,000 per annum. If contemporary eye-witnesses can be trusted, +the number of blacks met with in the streets of Lisbon equalled that of the +whites. Not a house but had its negro servants, and the wealthy owned entire +gangs of them. The immunity of Portuguese immigrants who face the deadly +climates of the tropics is sometimes ascribed to this infusion of negro blood, but +erroneously as we think. Most of these immigrants come from the mountains of +the north, where the race is almost pure; and if the Portuguese become acclimatized +more rapidly than individuals of other nations, they owe it to their sobriety.</p> + +<p>At the present day it is the Galicians who exercise most influence upon the +population of Lusitania. They immigrate in large numbers to Lisbon and other +towns, where they gain their living as bakers, porters, doorkeepers, and domestic +servants. Being ridiculed on account of their uncouth language and rustic +manners, they mix but little with the rest of the population. Their numbers, +however, are ever increasing, and their thrift and industry soon place them in a +position of ease.</p> + +<p>The mixture of these diverse elements has not produced a handsome race. The +Portuguese possess but rarely the noble mien of the Spaniard. Their features, +as a rule, are irregular, the nose is turned up, and the lips are thick. Cripples +are rare amongst them, but so are tall men. Squat and short, they are inclined to +corpulency. The women cannot boast the fiery beauty of the Spaniards, but have +brilliant eyes, an abundance of hair, animated features, and amiable manners.</p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr03" id="fg192"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 192.—<span class="smcap">P<b>ORTUGUESE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>YPES:</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>EASANT</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">O<b>VAR;</b></span> + <span class="smcap">W<b>OMAN</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>EÇA;</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>EASANT</b></span> + <span class="smcap">W<b>OMAN</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>FFIFE.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib472.jpg" width="553" height="800" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>Travellers speak highly of the manners, civility, and kindness of the peasantry +not yet contaminated by commerce. The cruelties committed by Portuguese +conquerors in the Indies and the New World have given the nation a bad reputation, +though, as a rule, the Portuguese has compassion for all sorts of suffering. +He is a gambler, but never quarrels; he is fond of bull-fights, but takes care to +wrap up the bull’s horns in cork, in order that the animal may be saved for future +contests; and he is exceedingly kind to domestic animals. In their intercourse the +Portuguese are good-tempered, obliging, and polished. To tell a Lusitanian that +he has been “brought up badly” is to offend him most seriously. Their oratory +is elegant, though ceremonious. Even the peasants express themselves with a +facility and command of words remarkable in a people so +badly educated. Oaths <span class="xxpn" id="p472">{472}</span> +and indecent expressions scarcely ever pass their mouth, and, though great talkers, +and even boasters, they are most guarded in their +conversation. Portugal has <span class="xxpn" id="p473">{473}</span> +produced great orators, and one of her poets, Camões, is amongst the most illustrious +the world has ever seen. On the other hand, Portugal has given birth +to no great artist, for Gran Vasco is a mythical personage. Camões himself avows +this when he says, “Our nation is the first because of its great qualities. Our +men are more heroic than other men; our women better-looking than other women; +and we excel in all the arts of peace and war, excepting in the art of painting.”</p> + +<p>Portuguese is very much like Castilian as far as root-words and general +construction are concerned, but is far less voluminous and sonorous. Nasal and +hissing sounds, which a foreigner finds it difficult to pronounce, abound, but there +are no gutturals. Arab words are less numerous in Portuguese than in Castilian, +but the Lusitanians, as well as the Spaniards, still swear by the god of the +Mohammedans—<i>Oxala</i> (<i>Ojalà</i>); that is, “If Allah wills it.”</p> + +<p>The Portuguese cannot compare in numbers with the other nations of Europe, +and their influence upon the destinies of the world is consequently small. At one +time of their history, however, they surpassed all other nations by their maritime +enterprise. The Spaniards certainly shared in the great discoveries of the fifteenth +century, but it was the Portuguese who made them possible by first venturing to +navigate the open ocean. It was a Portuguese, Magalhães, who undertook the +first voyage round the world, terminated only after his death. A similar pre-eminence +amongst nations will never be met with again, for the increased facilities +of communication exercise a levelling influence upon all. Portugal, therefore, can +never again hope to resume the national status which she held formerly, but her +great natural resources and favourable geographical position at the extremity of +the continent must always insure her an honourable place amongst them.</p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="II.—Northern Portugal. The Valleys +of the Minho, Douro, and Mondego.">II.—<span + class="smcap">N<b>ORTHERN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ORTUGAL.</b></span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>ALLEYS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>INHO,</b></span> + <span class="smcap">D<b>OURO,</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>ONDEGO.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">The mountains of Lusitania are a portion of the great orographical system of +the whole peninsula; but they are not mere spurs, gradually sinking down towards +the sea, for they rise into independent ranges; and the individuality of Portugal +is manifested in the relief of its soil quite as much as in the history of its +inhabitants.</p> + +<p>The mountains rising in the north-eastern corner of Portugal, to the south of +the Minho, may be looked upon as the outer barrier of an ancient lake, which +formerly covered the whole of the plains of Old Castile. From the Pyrenees to +the Sierra de Gata this barrier was continuous, and the breaches now existing date +only from a comparatively recent epoch, and are due to the erosive action of +torrents. The most considerable of these breaches, that of the Douro, could have +been effected only by overcoming most formidable obstacles.</p> + +<p>The most northern mountain mass of Portugal, that of the Peneda of Gavieiro +(4,727 feet), rises abruptly beyond the region of forest, and commands the Sierra +Peñagache (4,065 feet) on the Spanish frontier to the east, as well as the hills of +Santa Luzia (1,814 feet) and others near the coast. Another +mountain mass rises <span class="xxpn" id="p474">{474}</span> +immediately to the south of the gorge through which the Limia passes after leaving +Spain. This is the Serra do Gerez (4,815 feet), a range of twisted, grotesquely +shaped mountains, the only counterpart of which in the peninsula is the famous +Serranía de Ronda. This range, together with the Larouco (5,184 feet), to the +east of it, must be looked upon as the western extremity of the Cantabrian Pyrenees, +and like them it consists of granitic rocks.</p> + +<p>The flora of these northern frontier mountains of Portugal much resembles that +of Galicia, and on their slopes the botanist meets with a curious intermingling of +the vegetation of France, and even Germany, with that of the Pyrenees, Biscay, and +the Portuguese lowlands. On the southern summits, however, and more especially +on the Serra de Marão (4,665 feet), which forms a bold promontory between the +Douro and its important tributary the Tamega, and shelters the wine districts +of Oporto from north-westerly winds, the opportunities for examining into the +arborescent flora are but few, for the forests which once clad them have disappeared. +The schistose plateaux to the east of them and to the north of the Douro +have likewise been robbed of their forests to make room for vineyards. Most +wild animals have disappeared with the forests, but wolves are still numerous, and +are much dreaded by the herdsmen. The mountain goat (<i>Capra ægagrus</i>), which +existed until towards the close of last century in the Serra do Gerez, has become +extinct. The Serra da Cabreira (4,196 feet), to the east of Braga, is probably +indebted for its name to these wild goats.</p> + +<p>If the Serra do Gerez may be looked upon as the western extremity of the +Pyrenean system, the magnificent Serra da Estrella (6,540 feet), which rises between +the Douro and Tejo, is undoubtedly a western prolongation of the great +central range of Spain which separates the plateaux of the two Castiles. These +“Star Mountains” are attached to the mountains of Spain by a rugged table-land, +or <i>mesa</i>, of comparatively small height. The great granitic Serra da +Estrella rises gently above the broken ground which gives birth to the Mondego. +It can easily be ascended from that side, and is hence known as the <i>Serra Mansa</i>, +“the tame mountain.” On the south, however, above the valley of the Zezere, +the slopes are abrupt and difficult of access, and are known for that reason as <i>Serra +Brava</i>; that is, “wild mountain.” Delightful lakelets, similar to those of the +Pyrenees and Carpathians, are met with near the highest summit of the range, +the Malhão de Serra. The tops of the Serra da Estrella remain covered with snow +during four months of the year, and supply the inhabitants of Lisbon with the +ice required for the preparation of their favourite sherbet. The orographical +system of the Estrella ends with the Serra de Lousão (3,940 feet), for the hills +of Estremadura, which terminate in the Cabo da Roca, a landmark well known to +mariners, belong to another geological formation, and consist for the most part of +Jurassic strata overlying the cretaceous formation.</p> + +<p>The mountains of Beira and Entre Douro e Minho are exposed to the full +influence of the moisture-laden south-westerly winds, and the rainfall is considerable. +The rain does not descend in torrents, as in tropical countries, but pours +down steadily. It is more abundant in winter and spring, but not +a month passes <span class="xxpn" id="p475">{475}</span> +without it. Fogs are frequent at the mouths of valleys and along the coast as far +south as the latitude of Coimbra. At that place as much as sixteen feet of rain +has fallen in a single year, an amount only to be equalled within the tropics.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg193"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib475alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 193.—<span class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>ALLEY</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>IMIA,</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OR</span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>IMA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 300,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib475.jpg" width="600" height="567" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The humidity of the air accounts for the great equability of the climate of +Northern Portugal. At Coimbra the difference between the coldest and warmest +month amounts to but 20° F. Frosts are severe only on the plateaux exposed to +the north-easterly winds, and the heat becomes unbearable in deep valleys alone, +where the air cannot circulate freely.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn173" id="fnanch173">173</a> At Penafiel, where the rays of the sun are +thrown back by the rocky precipices, the heat is almost that of a furnace. This, +however, is an exception, and the climate generally can be described as temperate.</p> + +<p>Running water is abundant. Camões has sung the beauties of the fields of +Coimbra watered by the Mondego, the charms of cascades sparkling amidst foliage, +and the purity of the springs bursting forth from rocks clad with verdure. The +Vouga, the affluents of the Douro, the Ave, Cavado, and Lima, +likewise take their <span class="xxpn" id="p476">{476}</span> +devious courses through smiling landscapes whose beauties are set off by rocks and +mountains. The Lima, whose delights might well cause Roman soldiers to forget +the rivers of their own country, is the only river of the peninsula still in a state +of geological transition. All others have drained the lakes which gave birth to +them, but in the case of the Lima that old lake basin is still occupied by a swamp, +known as Laguna Beon, or Antela, the +only remains of a mountain-girt inland +lake as large as that of Geneva.</p> + +<div class="section"> +<div class="dright dwth07" id="fg194"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib476alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 194.—<span class="smcap">D<b>UNES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>VEIRO.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 400,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib476.jpg" width="331" height="800" alt="" /> +</div><!--dright--> + +<p>The current of the rivers of Northern +Portugal is too great to permit of their +being utilised as high-roads of commerce. +They have ports at their mouths, but the +Douro, which drains nearly a sixth of the +Iberian peninsula, is the only one amongst +them which facilitates access to an inland +district. Mariners dread to approach the +coast when the wind blows on shore. +Between the Minho and Cabo Carvoeiro, a +distance of 200 miles, the coast presents +features very much like those of the +French landes. Its original indentations +and irregularities have been obliterated +by barriers of sand. The lower valley of +the Vouga was formerly an inlet of the +sea extending far inland. The basin of +Aveiro resembles geologically that of +Arcachon. Its waters abound in fish, but +the Douro is the southernmost river of +Europe visited by salmon. The abundance +of life in certain localities of it is +figuratively expressed by a Spanish proverb, +which says, “The water of the +Douro is not water, but broth.”</p> +</div><!--section--> + +<p>The rectilinear beach of Beira-mar is lined for the most part +with dunes, the old gulfs behind which are gradually being converted +into insalubrious swamps, fringed by heath, ferns, strawberry-trees, +and broom, whilst the neighbouring forests consist of oaks and +pines. Formerly these dunes invaded the cultivated portions of the +country, as they still do in France, where like geological causes have +produced like results. But long before a similar plan was thought of +in France these Portuguese dunes were planted with pines, and as early +as the reign of King Diniz “the Labourer,” at the beginning of the +fourteenth century, they had ceased to “march.” <span class="xxpn" +id="p477">{477}</span></p> + +<p>The population of the cultivable portions of the basins of the Minho and Douro +is very dense, and in order to maintain themselves the inhabitants are forced to +work zealously. Their country is the most carefully cultivated of the peninsula. +In a large measure this industry is due to the fact of the peasantry being the +owners of the land they cultivate, or at least <i>affarádos</i>—that is, copyholders—who +only pay a few shillings annually to the lords of the manors. Many of +the peasants are wealthy, and the women are fond of loading themselves with +jewellery, amongst which necklaces made in the Moorish taste are most prominent. +The cultivation of the fields is attended to with scrupulous care; and +the most ingenious methods are employed for the irrigation of the upper slopes +of the hills, which are frequently cut up into terraces, or <i>geios</i>. These Northern +Portuguese are as distinguished for moral excellence as they are for industry. +Their sweetness of disposition, gaiety and kindliness are the theme of universal +praise, and as regards their love of dancing and music they are veritable Theocritan +shepherds. Challenges in improvised verses form one of the amusements +of young men. Nor is the population devoid of physical beauty. The women +of Aveiro, though often enfeebled by malaria, have the reputation of being the +prettiest in all Portugal.</p> + +<p>The cultivation of the vine and the making of port wine constitute the principal +branch of industry of the country. The chief vine-growing district, ordinarily +known as <i>Paiz do Vinho</i>, lies to the north of the Douro, between the Serra de +Marão and the Tua, and is exposed to the full force of the rays of the summer sun. +In the middle of the seventeenth century the cultivation of this district had hardly +begun. The English had not then learnt to appreciate these growths, and were +content with the various Portuguese wines shipped from Lisbon. It was only +after the treaty concluded by Lord Methuen in 1702 that the cultivation of the +vine assumed certain dimensions in the district of the Douro, and ever since the +reputation of port has been on the increase. The Marquis of Pombal founded a +company for the production of wine, and the small town of Pezo da Regoa, on the +Corgo, then became famous for its wine fairs, at which fortunes were lost and won, +and a town of wine cellars and stores sprang up opposite the town of Porto, or +Oporto, near the mouth of the Douro. For more than a hundred years port and +sherry have kept their place on the tables of English gentlemen, and nearly all the +wine produced on the banks of the Dóuro finds its way to England or to British +colonies. Indeed, up to 1852 the best quality, known as “factory wine,” could +be exported to England alone. Next to the English the Brazilians are the best +customers of Oporto: they receive nearly 1,000,000 gallons of wine annually.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn174" id="fnanch174">174</a></p> + +<p>The breeding of mules and fattening of Spanish cattle +for the London market yield considerable profit. Early +vegetables are forwarded not only to London but also to Rio +de Janeiro. Manufactures were already of some importance in +the <span class="xxpn" id="p478">{478}</span> +Middle Ages, and have recently been much developed by enterprising English +capitalists. Oporto has cotton, linen, silk, and woollen mills, foundries and sugar +refineries, and its jewellers and glove-makers enjoy a good repute. But agriculture, +industry and legitimate commerce, and even the smuggling carried on in +the frontier district of Bragança, do not suffice to support the ever-increasing +population, and thousands emigrate annually to Lisbon and Brazil.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg195"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib478alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 195.—<span class="smcap">O<b>PORTO</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>AIZ</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">DO</span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>INHO.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 1,000,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib478.jpg" width="600" height="368" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Northern Portugal may be described as the cradle of the existing kingdom, +and it was Porto Cale, on the site of Villanova de Gaia, the southern suburb +of Oporto, which gave a name to all Lusitania. At Lamego, to the south of +the Douro, the Cortes met, according to tradition, in 1143, and constituted the +new kingdom of which Oporto became the capital. When the country recovered +its independence after the short dominion of Spain, the Dukes of Bragança were +invested with the regal power. Though Lisbon occupies a more central position +than Oporto, the latter frequently takes the initiative in political movements, and +the success of any revolution is said to depend upon the side taken by the energetic +population of the north. If we may accept the estimate of the <i>Portuenses</i>, they are +morally and physically the superiors of the <i>Lisbonenses</i>. They alone are the true +sons of the great people whose vessels ploughed the ocean during the age of discoveries, +and there can be no doubt that their gait is more determined, their +speech and their glance more open, than those of the inhabitants of the capital. +In vulgar parlance, people of Oporto and Lisbon are known as <i>tripeiros</i> and +<i>alfasinhos</i>; that is, tripe and lettuce eaters.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="plt31"> +<img src="images/ib478a.jpg" width="600" height="412" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">OPORTO.</div> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Porto, or O Porto, the “Port” <i>par excellence</i>, is the +natural capital of Northern Lusitania, the second city of +Portugal on account of its population and commerce, the +first in manufactures. As seen from the banks of the Douro, +here hardly <span class="xxpn" id="p479">{479}</span> +more than 200 yards in width, and spanned by a magnificent railway bridge, it +rises like a double amphitheatre, whose summits are crowned by the cathedral +and the belfry <i>dos Clerigos</i>, and the narrow valley separating them covered with +houses. The lower town has broad streets, intersecting each other at right angles, +but the streets climbing the hills are narrow and tortuous, and even stairs have +frequently to be ascended in order to reach the more elevated quarters of the town. +Cleanliness is attended to throughout, and the citizens are most anxious in that +respect to insure the praises of their numerous English visitors. Gaia, a long +suburb, occupies the opposite side of the river. It abounds in factories and storehouses, +and its vast cellars are stated on an average to contain 80,000 pipes of wine. +Beautiful walks extend along the river bank and its terraces, and the long reaches +of the stream are covered with shipping, and fringed with gardens and villas. The +hills in the distance are crowned with ancient convents, fortifications, and villages +half hidden amongst verdure. Avintes, famous for the beauty of its women, who +supply the town daily with <i>broa</i>, or maize bread, is one of them. Suburbs extend +along both banks of the river in the direction of the sea. The river at its mouth +is only two fathoms in depth during low water, and dangerous of access when the +wind blows from the west. Even at Oporto vessels of 400 or 500 tons are exposed +to danger from sudden floods of the river, which cause them to drag their anchors. +The port of the Douro has therefore to contend with great difficulties in its rivalry +with Lisbon.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn175" id="fnanch175">175</a></p> + +<p>The small town of São João da Foz, at the mouth of the Douro, has a lighthouse, +but carries on no commerce. Near it are Mattozinhos and Leça, the latter +of which boasts of an ancient monastery resembling a fortress, and is much frequented +on account of its fine beach and refreshing sea breezes. Espinho, to the south of +the Douro, is another favourite seaside resort, in spite of the all-pervading smell of +sardines. The small ports to the north of the Douro are frequented only by coasting +vessels or by seaside visitors. The entrance to the Minho is defended by the castle +of Insua, on a small island, as its name implies, and by the insignificant fortress of +Caminha. The river is accessible only to vessels drawing less than six feet. The +mouth of the Lima, though even more difficult of access, is nevertheless occupied by +a town of some importance—coquettish Vianna do Castello, beautifully ensconced +amidst the verdure of its fertile plain. Other towns are Espozende, at the mouth +of the Cávado, and Villa do Conde, at that of the Ave. Formerly most of the vessels +engaged in the slave trade and those employed in the great maritime enterprises +of the Portuguese were built here, and it still boasts of a few ship-yards.</p> + +<p>Amongst the inland towns of Entre Douro e Minho are Ponte +de Lima, famous for the beauty of the surrounding country; +Barcellos, overhanging the shady banks of the Cávado; and +Amarante, celebrated for its wines and peaches, and proud +of a fine bridge spanning the Tamega. But the only towns +important on account of their population are Braga and +Guimarães, both placed on commanding heights overlooking a +most fertile country. Braga (Bracara Augusta), an ancient +Roman colony, the capital of the Galicians, then of the +Suevi, and later on the residence of <span class="xxpn" id="p480">{480}</span> +the Kings of Portugal, became the primatial city of the whole of the peninsula when +the two kingdoms were temporarily united under the same sovereign. But Braga +is not only a town of the past, it is even now a bustling place, where hats, linens, +arms, and beautiful filigree are manufactured for exportation to the rest of Portugal +and the Portuguese colonies. Guimarães is equally as interesting as Braga on +account of its monuments and mediæval legends. Visitors are still shown the +sacred olive-tree which sprang from a seed placed in the soil by King Wamba, +when still a common labourer; and Affonso, the founder of the Portuguese +monarchy, was born in the old castle. Guimarães is a busy manufacturing town; +it produces cutlery, hardware, and table-linen, and English visitors never fail to +purchase there a curiously ornamented box of prunes. Near it are much-frequented +sulphur springs, known to the Romans as <i>Aquæ Levæ</i>. But the +most famous mineral springs of modern Portugal are the Caldas do Gerez, in a +tributary valley of the Upper Cávado.</p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr01" id="fg196"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib480alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 196.—<span class="smcap">S<b>ÃO</b></span> + <span class="smcap">J<b>OÃO</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">DA</span> + <span class="smcap">F<b>OZ</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>OUTH</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">D<b>OURO.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib480.jpg" width="600" height="585" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>The towns of Traz os Montes and Beira Alta are too far removed from highways +to have attracted a considerable population. Villa Real, on the Corgo, is the +busiest place of Traz os Montes, owing to the vineyards +in its neighbourhood. <span class="xxpn" id="p481">{481}</span> +Chaves, an old fortress near the Spanish frontier, boasts of one of those Roman +bridges which have rendered the century of Trajan famous: it was formerly noted +for its mineral springs (<i>Aquæ Flaviæ</i>). Bragança, the old provincial capital, has a +commanding citadel, and, owing to its geographical position, is an important place +for smugglers, the legitimate exports fluctuating regularly with the customs tariff. +It is the most important place in Portugal for the production of raw silk. Lamego, +a picturesque town to the south of the Douro, opposite the Paiz do Vinho, enjoys +a great reputation for its hams; Almeida, which keeps in check the garrison of +Spanish Ciudad Rodrigo, was anciently one of the strongest fortresses of Portugal; +and Vizeu is an important station between the Douro and the Mondego. Its fairs +are more frequented than any others in Portugal, and in its cathedral may be seen +the famous masterpiece painted by the mythical Gran Vasco. The herdsmen +around Vizéu are noted for their strength and beauty. Their uncovered heads +and bare legs give them an appearance of savagery, but their manners are as +polished and dignified as those of the rest of their countrymen.</p> + +<p>Coimbra (<i>Æminium</i>), in Beira-mar, is the most populous town between Oporto +and Lisbon. It is known more especially for its university, whose professors and +students impart to it the aspect of a mediæval seat of learning. The purest Portuguese +is spoken there. The environs are delightful, and in the botanical garden +the plants of the tropics mingle with those of the temperate zones. From the banks +of the Mondego, upon which the city is built, visitors frequently ascend to the <i>Quinta +das Lagrimos</i> (“house of tears”), the scene of the murder of the beauteous Inez +de Castro, whose death was so cruelly revenged by her husband, Peter the Judge.</p> + +<p>Few countries in the world can rival the beautiful valley of the Mondego, that +“river of the Muses” held dear by all the Lusitanians, because it is the only one +which belongs to them exclusively. Condeixa, a town near Coimbra, fully +deserves to be called the “Basket of Fruit,” for its gardens produce most +exquisite oranges. In the north the ruins of the monastery of Bussaco occupy a +mountain terrace covered with a dense forest of cypresses, cedars, oaks, elms, and +exotic trees. This delightful place and the hot springs of Luso, near it, are a +favourite summer residence of the citizens of Lisbon and Coimbra.</p> + +<p>Figueira da Foz, the port of Coimbra, is well sheltered, +but, like most other ports of Northern Portugal, is +obstructed by a bar of sand. It is nevertheless much +frequented by coasting vessels, and amongst its exports are +the wines of Barraida. Ovar and Aveiro, in the “Portuguese +Netherlands,” on the banks of a lagoon separated by a +series of dunes from the high sea, are the two other ports +of this part of the coast. They were important places +during the Middle Ages, but the shifting bars, which +render access to them difficult, have put a stop to their +prosperity. The seamen of these two places have a high +reputation for daring. They engage in sardine-fishing, +oyster-dredging, and the manufacture of bay-salt.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn176" id="fnanch176">176</a> <span class="xxpn" id="p482">{482}</span></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="III.—The Valley of the Tejo (Tagus).">III.—<span + class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>ALLEY</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>EJO</b></span> + (<span class="smcap">T<b>AGUS</b></span>).</h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">The +lower course of the Tejo, called Tajo in Spain, separates Portugal into two +portions differing much in their general aspect, climate, and soil. The valley +itself is a sort of intermediary between the north and south, and the vast estuary +into which the river discharges itself.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg197"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 197.—<span class="smcap">C<b>OIMBRA.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib482.jpg" width="600" height="535" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Where the Tejo enters Portugal, below the magnificent bridge of Alcántara, it +is still hemmed in between precipitous banks, and is neither navigable nor available +for purposes of irrigation. Having traversed the defile of Villa Velha do Rodão, +its valley gradually widens, and after having received its most considerable +tributary, the Zezere, it becomes a tranquil stream, abounding in islands and sand-banks, +and is navigable during the whole of the year. Below Salvaterra the +river bifurcates, its two branches enclosing the marshy island of Lezirias. The +vast estuary which begins below this island is an arm of the sea rather than a +river; its waters are saline, and between Sacavem and +Alhandra there are <span class="xxpn" id="p483">{483}</span> +salt-pans. The Tejo affords one of the most striking instances of a river encroaching +upon its western bank, which is steep and hilly, whilst the left bank is low.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg198"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib483alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 198.—<span class="smcap">E<b>STUARY</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>EJO</b></span> + (<span class="smcap">T<b>AGUS</b></span>).</div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 580,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib483.jpg" width="600" height="522" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The irregular range of hills which forms the back-bone of the peninsula +enclosed by the Lower Tejo and the ocean is attached to the mountain of Estrella +by a ravined plateau of trifling elevation, crossed by the railway connecting Coimbra +with Santarem. From the summit of the Serra do Aire (“wind mountain,” 2,222 +feet) we look down upon the verdant valley of the Tejo and the reddish-hued +plains of Alemtejo beyond it. Monte Junto (2,185 feet), farther south, is another +commanding summit. The rocky promontory of Carvoeiro is joined to the mainland +by a sandy beach. Upon it stands the little fortress of Peniche, whose +inhabitants lead a life of seclusion, and are engaged in the manufacture of lace. +A submarine plateau connects this promontory with Berlinga Island, with an old +castle now used as a prison, and with the Farilhãos, dreaded by mariners.</p> + +<p>The hills on the narrow peninsula to the north of Lisbon are of small height, +but, owing to their rugged character, they present great obstacles to intercommunication. +It was here Wellington constructed the famous lines of Torres +Vedras, which converted the environs of Lisbon into a vast entrenched camp. To +the south of these rise the beautiful heights of Cintra, celebrated for their palaces, +shady valleys, delightful climate, and historical associations. +Sheets of basalt, <span class="xxpn" id="p484">{484}</span> +ejected from some ancient volcano, cover the hills between Lisbon and Sacavem, +and the great earthquakes of 1531 and 1755 prove that subterranean forces were +then not quite extinct. The second of these earthquakes was probably the most +violent ever witnessed in Europe. The very first shock destroyed 3,850 houses in +Lisbon, burying 15,000 human beings beneath the ruins; a minute afterwards an +immense wave, nearly forty feet in height, swept off the fugitives who crowded +the quay. Only one quarter of the town, that anciently inhabited by the Moors, +escaped destruction. The Marquis de Pombal erected a gallows in the midst of the +ruins to deter plunderers. From the focus of vibration the oscillations of the soil +were propagated over an immense area, estimated at no less than 1,000,000 square +miles. Oporto was destroyed in part, the harbour of Alvor in Algarve was silted +up, and it is said that nearly all the large towns of Morocco tumbled into ruins.</p> + +<p>The gully which connects the open ocean with the inland sea of Lisbon, and +through which the Tejo discharges its waters, separates the cretaceous hills of +Cintra from the isolated Serra da Arabida (1,537 feet), to the west of Setúbal, +which belong to the same geological formation. These two groups of hills were +probably portions of one range at a time when the Tejo still took its course across +what are now the tertiary plains of Alemtejo, and reached the sea much farther to +the south, through the estuary of the Sado.</p> + +<p>Lisbon (Lisbõa), though the number of its inhabitants is less than half what it +was in the sixteenth century, exhibits no trace of the havoc wrought in 1755. Even +the central portions of the town have risen from the ruins, and huge blocks of +houses, imposing by their size, if not by their architecture, have taken the places +of the older structures. The present city extends four miles along the Tejo, but +including its suburbs, between Poco do Bispo and the Tower of Belem, its extent +is nine miles. The city stretches inland a distance of two or three miles, and, +like Rome, is said to be built upon seven hills. A beautiful promenade connects +it with Belem. As seen from the Tejo, or from the hills opposite, Lisbon, with +its towers, cupolas, and public walks, certainly presents a magnificent spectacle, +and there is some truth in the proverb which says―</p> + +<div class="dpoem fsz6"><div class="nowrap"> +<p class="pv0">“Que não tem visto Lisbõa, + Não tem visto cosa bõa !”</p> +<div class="pv0 fsz7 padtopc">(“Who has not seen Lisbon has not + seen a thing of beauty.”)</div> +</div></div><!--dpoem--> + +<p>Unfortunately the interior of the superb metropolis does not correspond with +the imposing beauty of its exterior. Lisbon has a noble square, called Largo do +Comercio; it has all the various buildings which one expects to meet with in the +capital of a kingdom and an important maritime town; but, with the exception of +the chapel of São João Baptista, not one amongst them is remarkable for its +architecture. The only important structure outside the city is the famous +aqueduct Os Arcos das Agoas, which was built by João V., the <i>Rei Edificador</i>, +in the beginning of the eighteenth century, and sustained no injury during the +earthquake of 1755. On approaching the city it crosses a valley on a superb +marble bridge of thirty-five arches, the highest of which is 246 feet in height.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="plt32"> +<img src="images/ib484a.jpg" width="600" height="416" alt="" /> +<div class="dcaptionsml">LISBON.</div> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Lisbon is relatively poor in interesting monuments, but few +towns can rival it in natural advantages of soil, climate, +and geographical position. Its situation is <span class="xxpn" id="p485">{485}</span> +most central; its harbour, at the mouth of a navigable river, is one of the most +excellent in the world; and its entrance can be easily defended, the principal works +erected for that purpose being Fort São Julião and the Tower of Bugio.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg199"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib485alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 199.—<span class="smcap">P<b>ENICHE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">B<b>ERLINGAS.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 142,860.</div> +<img src="images/ib485.jpg" width="600" height="561" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Lisbon is important not only as regards Portugal, but also, on account of +its position, with reference to the rest of Europe—nay, of the entire world. +As long as the Mediterranean was the theatre of human history it remained in +obscurity, but no sooner had mariners ventured beyond the columns of Hercules +than the beautiful harbour at the mouth of the Tejo became one of the principal +points of departure for vessels starting upon voyages of discovery. Lisbon became +the most advanced outpost of Europe on the Atlantic, for it offered greater facilities +than any other port for voyages directed to the Azores, Madeira, the Canaries, and +the western coasts of Africa. The achievements of Portuguese mariners have passed +into history. Vast territories in every quarter of the globe became tributary to +little Portugal, and it needed the epic force of a Camões to celebrate these wonderful +conquests.</p> + +<p>That age of glory lasted but a short time, for proud Lisbon, which had become +known to Eastern nations as the “City of the Franks,” as if it were the capital of +Europe, lost its pre-eminent position towards the close of +the sixteenth century. <span class="xxpn" id="p486">{486}</span> +Portugal capsized suddenly, like a small barge overcrowded with sails. Crushed +by the terrible reign of Philip II., enervated by luxury, and grown disdainful of +honest labour, as slaveholders always will, Lisbon was constrained to see much of +its commerce and most of its valued colonies pass into the hands of Spaniards and +Dutchmen. But, in spite of these disasters, Lisbon is still a commercial port of +great importance, although as yet no direct line of railway connects it with Madrid +and the rest of Europe. England occupies the foremost position amongst the +customers of the town, and the Brazilians, whose severance from the mother +country was at first looked upon as an irremediable disaster, follow next.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn177" id="fnanch177">177</a> Spain, +though it borders upon Portugal for several hundred miles, scarcely enters into +commercial relations with it. Civil wars have, however, driven many Spanish +exiles to Lisbon, and these have already exercised a considerable influence upon +manners. Formerly only men were to be seen in the streets of Lisbon, the women +being confined almost with the same rigour as in a Mohammedan city, but the +example set by Spanish ladies has found many imitators amongst their Portuguese +sisters. The towns in the immediate vicinity of Lisbon are celebrated for their +picturesque beauties.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg200"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib486alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 200.—<span class="smcap">M<b>OUTH</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OR</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>EJO</b></span> + (<span class="smcap">T<b>AGUS</b></span>).</div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 162,400.</div> +<img src="images/ib486.jpg" width="600" height="415" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Portuguese Estremadura, which neither suffers from northern +frosts nor from fogs and aridity, can boast of a climate +approaching that of the fabled Islands of the Happy. At +Lisbon snow, or “white rain,” as it is called, falls <span class="xxpn" id="p487">{487}</span> +rarely, but it may be seen glittering on the summits of the Serras da Estrella +and de Lousão. Its fall near the sea-coast is looked upon as an evil omen, and +a heavy snow-storm, as recently as last century, frightened the inhabitants of +Lisbon to such an extent that they fancied the day of judgment had come, and +rushed into the churches.</p> + +<p>The regular alternation between land and sea breezes is likewise an advantage +possessed by the neighbourhood of Lisbon. From the beginning of May throughout +the fine season the wind blows from the land in the morning, by noon it has +shifted to the south, in the evening it blows from the west and north-west, and +during the night from the north. Hence its name of <i>viento roteiro</i>; that is, “rotary +wind.” As to the winds forming part of the regular system of atmospheric +circulation, they blow with far less regularity. The polar winds, stopped by the +transversal mountain ranges of the country, either follow the direction of the +coast or are diverted to the plateaux of Spain, and make their appearance in +Portugal as easterly winds. It is these latter which render the summer oppressively +hot. At Lisbon the thermometer rises occasionally to 100° F., and in 1798 +even 104° were observed. Experience has taught us that although the heat at +Rio de Janeiro is in excess of that of Lisbon, the dog-days at the latter place are +more unbearable.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn178" id="fnanch178">178</a></p> + +<p>The vegetation of the happy district where the climate of North and South +intermingle is twofold in its aspect. The date-palm makes its appearance in the +gardens of Lower Estremadura; the dwarf palm grows in the open air along the +coast; the agave raises its candelabra-like branches as on the coast of Mexico; +the camellias are more beautiful than anywhere else in Europe; and the hedges are +composed of prickly cacti (<i>Nopal</i>), as in Sicily and Algeria. The fruits of the +Mediterranean ripen to perfection; and even the mango of the Antilles, only +recently introduced, has found a congenial climate. Oranges are known as <i>portogalli</i> +in several countries as far as Egypt, as if the inhabitants of Portugal +had been the first to whom these golden apples were known; and even the word +<i>chintarah</i>, or <i>chantarah</i>, by which the orange is known in some parts of India, is +supposed to be a corruption of the name of the Portuguese town of Cintra.</p> + +<p>Belem (Bethlehem) is the nearest of the suburban towns of Lisbon, being +separated from it merely by a rivulet named Alcántara, after an old Moorish +bridge. It is the first place beheld by a mariner approaching Lisbon, and its +square tower, built by King John the Perfect, is seen from afar. It was hence +Vasco da Gama started upon the memorable expedition which taught the Portuguese +the road to India, and a magnificent monastery, now converted into an +educational institution, was built in commemoration of this glorious event.</p> + +<p>Oeiras, at the mouth of a small rivulet coming down from the heights of +Cintra, defends the entrance to the Tejo by means of Fort São Julião; Carcavellos, +noted for its wines, lies farther on; and Cascães, with a small harbour defended by +a citadel, brings us to the open ocean. The coast beyond +this is protected by <span class="xxpn" id="p488">{488}</span> +towers, but there are no inhabitants. The hills of Cintra, however are one of +the most populous districts of the country, and they are much frequented by +foreigners. Whether we follow the carriage road or the tramroad from Lisbon, +we pass the castles and villas of Bomfica, the royal palace of Queluz, and +the country seats of Bellas, the fountain of which supplies the capital with water. +Cintra itself is surrounded by hotels and gardens. On a hill to the south +of it stands the sumptuous Castle de la Penha, whose eccentricities of architecture +are softened down by luxuriant masses of vegetation. Strangers likewise +visit the ruins of an old Moorish castle and the caverns of the “Monastery of +Cork,” thus named because its walls are covered with cork as a protection against +damp. The prospect from all the surrounding heights is magnificent, and most +so from the cliffs terminating in the famous Cabo da Roca, the westernmost point +of continental Europe.</p> + +<div class="dctr01" id="fg201"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib488alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 201.—<span class="smcap">Z<b>ONES</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">V<b>EGETATION</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">IN</span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ORTUGAL.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 6,000,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib488.jpg" width="600" height="518" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The city of Mafra occupies a sterile plateau not far from the seaside resort of +Ericeira. Like Cintra, it boasts of an immense palace, the Escorial of the kings of +the house of Bragança, now used as a military school. João V., who erected this +structure, with its numerous churches, chapels, and cells, expended for that +purpose all the coin he could command, and when he died there was not enough +money left in the treasury to pay for a mass for the repose of his +soul. Far more <span class="xxpn" id="p489">{489}</span> +curious than this immense barrack, with its 5,200 windows, is the forsaken +monastery of Alcobaça, about sixty miles farther north, which was built in the +twelfth century to commemorate the victories over the Moors. Near it stands +the monastery of Batalha, which recalls the defeat of the Castilians in the plain of +Aljubarrota in 1385. The portals, cloisters, chapel, and chapter-room abound +in sculptures of marvellous finish, though of doubtful taste.</p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr01" id="fg202"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 202.—<span class="smcap">C<b>ASTLE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">DE</span> + <span class="smmaj">LA</span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ENHA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">DE</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>INTRA.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib489.jpg" width="600" height="606" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>Leiria, the town nearest to Batalha, occupies a fine site at the confluence of the +rivers Liz and Lena, and is commanded by a Moorish castle, the old residence of +King Diniz the “Labourer,” who planted the <i>pinhal</i> of Leiria, the finest forest +in Portugal. After a long period of decadence this portion of the country has +entered upon a new epoch of activity. At Marinha Grande, near it, there are large +glass-works, which communicate by rail with the circular harbour of Concha +(shell) de São Martinho.</p> + +<p>Thomar, formerly famous on account of its monastery, stands +on the eastern <span class="xxpn" id="p490">{490}</span> +slope of the hills commanding the plains of Batalha and Alcobaça. It is the +capital of the Knights of Christ, to whom was conceded the privilege of conquering +the Indies and the New World. They performed great deeds, but in the end +their rapacity led to the decadence of their native country. Thomar is a town of +cotton-mills now, but commerce is more active in the places on the Tejo, and +notably at Santarem, which, from its “marvellous” hill, looks down upon the +verdant isles of the river and the plains of Alemtejo. Santarem and the neighbouring +fortress of Abrantes supply Lisbon with vegetables and fruit, and the +country around them is a veritable forest of olive-trees.</p> + +<p>The sandy soil and shallow rivers bounded by marshes of the country to the +south of the Tejo oppose serious obstacles to the establishment of important towns, +and if it were not for the vicinity of Lisbon it would probably be uninhabited. +Almada, opposite Lisbon, Seixal, Barreiro, Aldea Gallega, and Alcochete are mere +suburbs of the capital, and share in its prosperity or adversity. Setúbal, or +St. Ives, however, which lies farther to the south, on the estuary of the Sado, and +which has an excellent harbour, suffers from too great a proximity to Lisbon, for +Portugal is not rich enough to feed two ports so close to each other. Cezimbra, +on the steep coast which terminates in Cape Espichel, to the west of Setúbal, is +likewise a decayed place, and Troja, which preceded Setúbal as the emporium of +the Sado, now lies buried beneath the dunes. Excavations recently made on its +site have led to the discovery of Roman mosaics and of a street laid out, perhaps, +by the Phœnicians; and Link, the botanist, who visited the spot at the end of last +century, still found there the ruined courts of Moorish houses.</p> + +<p>Setúbal, though its commercial activity is very much inferior to that of Lisbon, +still exports muscat wines, delicious oranges, and salt procured from the ponds in +its vicinity.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn179" id="fnanch179">179</a> The sea near Setúbal and Cezimbra abounds in fish and other +marine animals, and in comparison with it the Mediterranean and Bay of Biscay +may almost be described as deserts. Long before scientific men explored the bottom +of the sea the fishermen of Setúbal hauled up from a depth of 300 fathoms +immense sharks. Ordinary fish are caught in myriads, and the inhabitants of +Cezimbra feed their pigs upon sardines. When Portugal was at the height of +its commercial prosperity it supplied a considerable portion of Europe with fish, +and almost enjoyed a monopoly in cod, which was exported even to Norway.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn180" id="fnanch180">180</a></p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="IV.—Southern Portugal. Alemtejo + and Algarve.">IV.—<span class="smcap">S<b>OUTHERN</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ORTUGAL.</b></span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>LEMTEJO</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>LGARVE.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">The +mountains beyond the Tejo rarely assume the aspect of chains. For the +most part they rise but little above the surrounding plateau. This region is +the least attractive of all Portugal, and between the Tejo and the mountains +of Algarve there are only plains, monotonous hills, woods, and naked landes. +Human habitations are few and far between. The +lowlands along the Tejo and <span class="xxpn" id="p491">{491}</span> +the coast are covered with a thick layer of fine sand resting upon clay, and they +still exhibit clumps of maritime pines and holm-oaks, the remains of the ancient +forests which formerly covered the whole of the country. Farther inland we +reach the great landes, or <i>charnecas</i>, covered with an infinite variety of plants. +There are heaths growing sometimes to a height of six feet, rock-roses, juniper-trees, +rosemary, and creeping oaks. But the general aspect of the country is dreary, +in spite of the white and yellow flowers which cover it until the middle of winter, +for there are hardly any cultivated fields. The hills consist for the most part of +micaceous schists, and are covered with a monotonous growth of labdanum-yielding +rock-roses. This is a western extension of the zone of <i>jarales</i>, which covers so many +hundred square miles of the Sierra Morena and other mountain regions of Spain.</p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr01" id="fg203"> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 203.—<span class="smcap">M<b>ONASTERY</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">K<b>NIGHTS</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">C<b>HRIST</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AT</span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>HOMAR.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib491.jpg" width="600" height="599" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>The Serra de São Mamede (3,363 feet), on the confines of Portugal, between +the valleys of the Tejo and Guadiana, is the highest mountain mass of Southern +Portugal; but its granitic ridges, enclosing narrow valleys +between them, hardly <span class="xxpn" id="p492">{492}</span> +rise 1,500 feet above the general level of the plateau. A second granitic mountain +mass rises to the south of the depression crossed by the railway from Lisbon +to Badajoz. This is the Serra de Ossa (2,130 feet). An undulating tract of +country joins it to other serras, forming steep escarpments towards the valleys of +the Guadiana and Sadão, and the monotonous plain known as Campo de Beja +(870 feet). The famous Campo de Ourique (700 feet), upon which 200,000 +Moors, commanded by five kings, were defeated by the Portuguese in the middle +of the twelfth century, forms a southern continuation of that plain. This battle, +and the massacres which succeeded it, converted the plains to the south of the +Tejo into deserts.</p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg204"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib492alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 204—<span class="smcap">E<b>STUARY</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>ADO.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 350,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib492.jpg" width="600" height="389" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The hills of that portion of Alemtejo which lies to the east of the Guadiana +belong to the system of the Sierra Morena of Spain. The river, which separates +them from the hills and plateaux of the west, is confined in a deep and narrow +gorge. At the <i>Pulo do Lobo</i> (“wolf’s leap”) it still descends in cataracts, and +becomes navigable only at Mertola, thirty-seven miles above its mouth.</p> + +<p>The hills of Southern Alemtejo and Algarve, to the west of the Guadiana, are +at first mere swellings of the ground known as <i>cumeadas</i>, or “heights of land,” but +in the Serra do Malhão (1,886 feet) and the Serra da Mezquita they attain some +height. A plateau, traversed by the upper affluents of the Mira, joins the range +last mentioned to the Serra Caldeirão (1,272 feet), supposed to be named after some +ancient crater, or “caldron,” which terminates, to the north of Cape Sines, with +the Atalaya, or Sentinel (1,010 feet). The principal range continues towards the +west, and in the Serra de Monchique (2,963 feet), a mountain mass +filling up the <span class="xxpn" id="p493">{493}</span> +south-western corner of Portugal, it attains its culminating point. A steep ridge, +known as Espinhaço de Cão (“dog’s back”), extends from the latter in the direction +of the Capes of St. Vincent and Sagres.</p> + +<p>The latter was selected by Henry the Navigator as the seat of the naval school +founded by him, and from its heights he watched for the return of the vessels +which he dispatched on exploratory expeditions. Associations such as these are +far more pleasurable than those connected with the neighbouring Cape St. Vincent, +where Admiral Jervis, in 1797, destroyed a Spanish fleet.</p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg205"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib493alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 205.—<span class="smcap">S<b>ERRA</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">DE</span> + <span class="smcap">M<b>ONCHIQUE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ROMONTORY</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">S<b>AGRES.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 500,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib493.jpg" width="600" height="525" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>The hills of Sagres are of volcanic origin, and the subsidence of portions of +the coast of Algarve appears to prove that subterranean forces are still active. +Wherever this subsidence has been observed the coast is fringed by sand-banks, +thrown up by the waves of the sea, the channel separating them from the mainland +being navigable for small vessels.</p> + +<p>If a traveller ascend one of the culminating points of the mountains of Algarve, +he cannot fail to be struck with the remarkable contrast existing between the districts +to the north and south of him. On the one side he looks down upon vast solitudes +resembling deserts; on the other he perceives forests of chestnut-trees, +numerous villages, towns bordering the seashore, and fleets of fishing-boats rocking +upon the blue waves. The contrasts between the inhabitants of +these two districts <span class="xxpn" id="p494">{494}</span> +are scarcely less striking. The inhabitants of Alemtejo are the most solemn of +Portuguese, and even object to dancing. Very thinly scattered over the landes +which they inhabit, they either engage in agriculture or follow their herds of pigs +and sheep into the forests of holm-oaks and thickets of rock-roses. In summer +they cross the Tejo with their pigs, and pasture them in the mountains of Beira. +The population of Algarve, on the other hand, is thrice as dense as that of Alemtejo, +and not only are fields, vineyards, and orchards carefully tended, but the sea +likewise is made to yield a portion of its food. The contrast between the two +provinces is partly accounted for by the fact that most of the great battles were +fought on the undulating plains of Alemtejo. When the Romans held the country +Alemtejo supported a numerous population, as is proved by the large number of +inscriptions found.</p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg206"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib494alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 206.—<span class="smcap">G<b>EOLOGY</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>LGARVE.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 1,500,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib494.jpg" width="600" height="320" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<p>Differences of altitude and geographical position sufficiently account for the +differences of climate existing between the two provinces. Alemtejo, with its +monotonous plains and stunted vegetation, is almost African in its aspect, whilst +Algarve, with its forests of olive-trees, groves of date-palms, agaves, and prickly +cacti, presents us with tropical features. The mean temperature near the coast is +probably no less than 68° F. The Serra de Monchique bars the cool winds of the +north, whilst the sandy islands fringing a portion of the coast keep off refreshing +sea breezes. The hottest wind of all is that which blows from the east. It is +often laden with fever-breeding miasmata, and a proverb says, <i>De Espanha nem bom +vento nem bom casamento</i>: “Neither good winds nor good weddings are bred in +Spain.”</p> + +<p>Villanova de Portimão, to the south of the Serra de Monchique, has long been +looked upon as the hottest place in Europe; there are, however, several localities +in Spain which rival it in that respect. Thus much is certain, +that Algarve, with <span class="xxpn" id="p495">{495}</span> +the lower valley of the Guadalquivir and the southern coasts of Andalusia and +Murcia, constitutes the most torrid portion of Europe. The Arabs were quite right +when they designated Southern Lusitania and the opposite shore of Morocco by the +same name of “el Gharb;” that is, the two Algarves, or “eastern districts.” +Portuguese Algarve, in spite of the conversion of its inhabitants to Christianity, +has retained its ancient Moorish name; and the Berber and Semitic blood is very +conspicuous there.</p> + +<p>In Upper Alemtejo there are but few towns, and these would be altogether +insignificant if it were not for the overland commerce carried on with Spain. +Crato, which is the most considerable station on the railway which joins the Tejo +to the Guadiana, and its neighbour Portalegre, were formerly important stages on +the great overland route. Elvas, farther to the south, is surrounded by orchards, +and defended by forts which were looked upon in the last century as masterpieces +of military architecture. It faces the Spanish fortress of Badajoz, as well as +Olivença, which was assigned to Portugal by the treaty of Vienna, but never +surrendered by Spain. Estremoz, on a spur of the Serra de Ossa, is famous +throughout Portugal for its <i>búcaros</i>—elegantly modelled earthen jars which +diffuse a sweet odour. Montemor looks down from its hill upon vast landes and +monotonous woods. Evora, likewise built on a hill, commands an extensive plain. +It was a populous place during the dominion of the Romans, and in the Middle +Ages became the second residence of the Kings of Portugal. There exist now only +a Roman aqueduct, the ruins of a temple of Venus, Corinthian columns, and the +remains of mediæval castles to remind us of its ancient splendours.</p> + +<p>Beja, the ancient <i>Pax Julia</i> or <i>Colonia Pacensis</i> of the Romans, has likewise +lost its former importance, but Minas de São Domingos, on the peninsula formed +by the confluence of the Guadiana and the Chanza, is rapidly increasing, thanks to +its mines of pyrites of copper and other minerals, which are being worked by an +English company. The ore is conveyed by rail to Pomarão, on the Guadiana, and +thence on barges to Villa Real de Santo Antonio, at its mouth, formerly a mere +fishing village, but now a busy port. Castro Marim, where the expeditions against +the Moors used to be fitted out, is close to it.</p> + +<p>Silves, the ancient Moorish capital of Algarve, lies in the interior of the country, +far removed from the present highways of commerce. Faro, the modern capital, +has the advantage of lying on the seashore, and of possessing a secure harbour, +whence small coasters are able to export fruit, tunny-fish, sardines, and oysters. +Tavira possesses the same advantages, and exports the same articles: it is said +to be the prettiest town of Algarve. Loulé, in a delightful inland valley, is a +pretty place, and, when invalids have learnt the road to Algarve, may obtain +some importance as a winter resort. The Caldas (warm baths) de Monchique (600 +feet) enjoy a world-wide reputation even now, not only because of their efficacy, but +also on account of the delicious climate and charming environs. This district is said +to produce the best oranges in Portugal.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn181" id="fnanch181">181</a> <span class="xxpn" id="p496">{496}</span></p> + +<div class="dctr02" id="fg207"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib496alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 207.—<span class="smcap">F<b>ARO</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">T<b>AVIRA.</b></span></div> +<div class="dcaptionsml">Scale 1 : 500,000.</div> +<img src="images/ib496.jpg" width="600" height="471" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="V.—The Present and Future of Portugal.">V.—<span + class="smcap">T<b>HE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>RESENT</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">F<b>UTURE</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ORTUGAL.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">Little +Portugal no longer shares with her neighbour, Spain, in the dominion of +the world, as in the fifteenth century. The secrecy observed with a view to the +retention of the monopoly of trade with countries newly discovered proved in the end +most injurious to Portugal. Other nations appeared upon the stage which the +Portuguese had dreamt of occupying for ever, and though the latter still hold +colonies vastly superior in area to the mother country, this is nothing in comparison +with what has been irretrievably lost. Vasco da Gama discovered the ocean high-road +to India, but the few settlements which Portugal still holds there she owes to +the favour of England. In the Malay Archipelago Portugal has been supplanted +almost completely by the Dutch, and Macao, at the entrance of the Canton River, +was hardly more than a slave market until quite recently, from which Chinese +“emigrants” were exported to Peru. In Africa Portugal holds vast possessions, +if we are to believe in official documents and maps, but in reality only a very +small tract of territory is under the dominion of the Portuguese, and most of +the commerce is carried on through Dutch and other foreign houses. As to Brazil, +it now surpasses the mother country in population and wealth. +Madeira and the <span class="xxpn" id="p497">{497}</span> +Azores, the first conquests made by Lisbon navigators, are looked upon as integral +portions of Portugal; they enjoy the same rights, and are quite equal to it in +wealth.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn182" id="fnanch182">182</a></p> + +<div class="pgbkbalws"> +<div class="dctr01" id="fg208"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib497alg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 208.—<span class="smcap">G<b>EOGRAPHICAL</b></span> + <span class="smcap">E<b>XTENT</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">OF</span> + <span class="smmaj">THE</span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>ORTUGUESE</b></span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>ANGUAGE.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib497.jpg" width="600" height="431" alt="" /> +</div><!--dctr--></div> + +<p>When Brazil was lost to Portugal that small country found itself in a position +of lamentable prostration. Exhausted by foreign and internecine wars, its finances +utterly ruined, and without roads to enable it to export its produce, it might have +disappeared from our maps without any interests, except those of a few English +vine-growers and Spanish smugglers, being affected. Even in 1851 there only +existed a single carriage road in the country, namely, that which connected Lisbon +with the royal palace at Cintra. No attention whatever was paid to education, +and about a generation ago a girl able to read was a phenomenon. At the same +time we must not forget that these illiterate Portuguese knew how to discuss a +subject without quarrelling, had great command of their language, and were +able even to improvise verses of great poetical merit, in all of which respects they +contrasted favourably with the peasantry of Northern Europe.</p> + +<p>In the course of the last generation education has made much progress in +Portugal;<a class="afnanch" href="#fn183" id="fnanch183">183</a> and in other respects, too, the country has gradually assimilated with the +rest of Europe. Roads and railways have been constructed,<a class="afnanch" href="#fn184" id="fnanch184">184</a> and the latter connect +Lisbon not only with the leading provincial towns, but also with Spain. The commerce +with the latter country increases regularly with the occurrence of civil war, +when Portugal profits at the expense of the Spanish +ports of the Mediterranean. <span class="xxpn" id="p498">{498}</span> +Much of the ordinary commerce with Spain never appears in the customs registries, +for it is carried on by smugglers, who glory in evading the vigilance of the frontier +police.</p> + +<div class="section"> +<div class="dright dwth06" id="fg209"> +<span class="splnklg"><a href="images/ib498lg.jpg" title="display + larger image">Μ</a></span> +<div class="dcaption"> + Fig. 209.—<span class="smcap">T<b>ELEGRAPH</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">FROM</span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>ISBON</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">TO</span> + <span class="smcap">R<b>IO</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">DE</span> + <span class="smcap">J<b>ANEIRO.</b></span></div> +<img src="images/ib498.jpg" width="551" height="800" alt="" /> +</div><!--dright--> + +<p>The commerce of Portugal has increased very much in the course of +the last thirty years. More than half of it falls to the share of Great +Britain, a circumstance not to be wondered at when we bear in mind +the relative geographical position of the two countries, for Portugal +lies upon the direct route followed by English steamers proceeding to +the Mediterranean, Western Africa, or Brazil. The assistance which +England rendered Portugal during the peninsular war has cemented these +commercial bonds.</p> +</div><!--section--> + +<p>The commercial relations with Brazil, now joined to Lisbon by a +submarine cable, are likewise the natural result of the relative +positions of the two countries and of the common origin of their +populations. Portugal, in fact, participates in every progress made by +its old colony, and its commerce will assume immense proportions when +slavery is abolished in Brazil, when the solitudes of the Amazonas +resound with the stir of industrious populations, and the coasts of the +Pacific are joined to the Atlantic by means of railways crossing the +Andes.<a class="afnanch" href="#fn185" id="fnanch185">185</a></p> + +<p>But, after all, it will be Spain with +which the most intimate commercial +relations must finally be established, in spite of national prejudices and dynastic +interests. The two nations will in the end become one, as the Aragonese and +Castilians, the Andalusians and Manchegos, have become one. It is merely a +question of time; but who can doubt that community of industrial and social relations +will lead to a political union. We only trust that this union may be brought +about without a resort to brute force, and with due regard to special interests.</p> + +<div class="section"> +<h3 title="VI.—Government and Administration.">VI.—<span + class="smcap">G<b>OVERNMENT</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>DMINISTRATION.</b></span></h3></div> + +<p class="pfirst">Portugal +is an hereditary and constitutional monarchy. In accordance with the +Carta de Ley of 1826, as revised in 1852, the King is +charged with the executive, <span class="xxpn" id="p499">{499}</span> +and shares the power of making laws with two chambers. He receives a civil list of +£144,000, enjoys the income from certain Crown lands, and possesses magnificent +Crown jewels, amongst which the “diamond of Bragança” is the most famous. +In default of male heirs the crown descends in the female line. “His most faithful +Majesty” still claims to be “King of the two Algarves, Lord of Guinea and of +the Conquests.” The seven ministers of the Crown are responsible for the King’s +actions; they may be impeached by the Chamber of Deputies, and are judged by +the Chamber of Peers. A Privy Council of an indefinite number of members, +appointed for life, advises the King in all questions of administration. The heir +presumptive takes part in its deliberations on attaining his eighteenth year.</p> + +<p>The Chamber of Peers consists of about a hundred members, some of them +hereditary and others appointed by the King. Its meetings are presided over by +the Patriarch of Lisbon. The Chamber of Deputies is elective, and the discussion +of the budget and granting of supplies are specially reserved to it. All +males more than twenty-five years of age are entitled to the franchise if they pay +4s. 6d. in direct taxes, or 22s. from real estate. Graduates of universities, certified +teachers, officers, and priests are not required to possess any property qualification, +and they, as well as all married men, become enfranchised on completing their +twenty-first year. All electors are eligible as deputies if they pay 18s. in direct +taxes, or 90s. from real estate. Every 25,000 inhabitants are represented by a +deputy. The President of the Chamber is selected by the King from five +candidates presented by the deputies. The latter are entitled to remuneration.</p> + +<p>For judicial purposes the country is divided into twenty-six districts, or +<i>comarcas</i>, with eighty-five courts. There are courts of appeal at Lisbon and +Oporto, and a supreme court at Lisbon. Parish judges (<i>juiz eleito</i>), elected by the +people, exercise the inferior jurisdiction. Juries give their verdict on questions of +fact in civil as well as in criminal cases. The principal codes still in force are the +“Codigo Alfonsino” of the fifteenth century, the “Codigo Manoelino” (1513), +and the “Codigo Filippino,” introduced by Philip IV. of Spain. A Commercial +Code was published in 1833.</p> + +<p>The Roman Catholic religion is that of the State, but Protestant places of +ship are suffered to exist in the seaports. The hierarchy includes a patriarch +residing at Lisbon, two archbishops at Braga and Evora, and fourteen bishops. +The Inquisition was abolished in 1821, and the monasteries, 750 in number, as well +as most of the convents, were suppressed in 1834, and their revenues confiscated +for the benefit of the State.</p> + +<p>The army numbers 1,650 officers and 38,000 men, of whom about two-thirds +are under colours during peace. On a war footing it is to be raised to 2,418 +officers and 70,687 men. All men are obliged to serve either in the army or in +the reserve, and exemption can no longer be purchased. The fortresses are +numerous, but only a few of them are capable of being defended against modern +artillery. The most important are Elvas, Abrantes, and Valença, near the Spanish +frontier, the fort of São Julião and the citadel of Peniche on the coast. The navy +no longer numbers a thousand vessels, as it did when King +Sebastian started for <span class="xxpn" id="p500">{500}</span> +the invasion of Morocco. It consists now of twenty-seven steamers, including an +ironclad corvette, and eleven sailing vessels, manned by 3,000 men and armed +with 171 guns.</p> + +<p>The public revenue approaches £6,000,000 sterling, and ever since 1834 there +has been annually a deficit, which has resulted in a national debt of more than +£80,000,000, a burden almost too heavy for a small country like Portugal. The +revenue is, however, increasing, a balance between income and expenditure has +been established within the last year or two, and the wretched expedient of +deducting from 5 to 30 per cent. of the salaries of Government officials could be +dispensed with for the first time in 1875.</p> + +<div class="dtblbox"> +<table class="fsz6 borall" summary=""> +<caption><span class="smcap">P<b>OLITICAL</b></span> + <span class="smcap">D<b>IVISIONS,</b></span> + <span class="smcap">A<b>REA,</b></span> + <span class="smmaj">AND</span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>OPULATION.</b></span></caption> +<tr> + <th class="borall">Provinces.</th> + <th class="borall">Districts.</th> + <th class="borall">Area, Sq. Miles.</th> + <th class="borall">Population, 1874.</th> + <th class="borall">Density.</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft borall" rowspan="3">Entre Douro e Minho</td> + <td class="tdright">Vianna</td> + <td class="tdright">864</td> + <td class="tdright">221,049</td> + <td class="tdright">256</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright">Braga</td> + <td class="tdright">1,054</td> + <td class="tdright">346,429</td> + <td class="tdright">329</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright">Porto</td> + <td class="tdright">903</td> + <td class="tdright">451,212</td> + <td class="tdright">500</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft borall" rowspan="2">Traz os Montes</td> + <td class="tdright">Villa Real</td> + <td class="tdright">1,718</td> + <td class="tdright">239,591</td> + <td class="tdright">140</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright">Bragança</td> + <td class="tdright">2,573</td> + <td class="tdright">177,170</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft borall" rowspan="3">Beira Alta</td> + <td class="tdright">Aveiro</td> + <td class="tdright">1,216</td> + <td class="tdright">272,763</td> + <td class="tdright">69</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright">Vizeu</td> + <td class="tdright">1,922</td> + <td class="tdright">398,477</td> + <td class="tdright">207</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright">Coimbra</td> + <td class="tdright">1,500</td> + <td class="tdright">305,237</td> + <td class="tdright">203</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft borall" rowspan="2">Beira Baixa</td> + <td class="tdright">Guarda</td> + <td class="tdright">2,148</td> + <td class="tdright">234,912</td> + <td class="tdright">109</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright">Castello Branco</td> + <td class="tdright">2,559</td> + <td class="tdright">178,703</td> + <td class="tdright">69</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft borall" rowspan="3">Estremadura</td> + <td class="tdright">Leiria</td> + <td class="tdright">1,348</td> + <td class="tdright">194,944</td> + <td class="tdright">145</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright">Santarem</td> + <td class="tdright">2,651</td> + <td class="tdright">217,316</td> + <td class="tdright">82</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright">Lisbon</td> + <td class="tdright">2,936</td> + <td class="tdright">491,205</td> + <td class="tdright">168</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft borall" rowspan="3">Alemtejo</td> + <td class="tdright">Portalegre</td> + <td class="tdright">2,497</td> + <td class="tdright">109,192</td> + <td class="tdright">44</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright">Évora</td> + <td class="tdright">2,740</td> + <td class="tdright">112,477</td> + <td class="tdright">41</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright">Beja</td> + <td class="tdright">4,198</td> + <td class="tdright">154,327</td> + <td class="tdright">37</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft borall">Algarve</td> + <td class="tdright">Faro</td> + <td class="tdright">1,875</td> + <td class="tdright">193,877</td> + <td class="tdright">104</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright borall" colspan="2">Continental Europe</td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">34,702</span></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">4,298,881</span></td> + <td class="tdright">124</td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtblbox--> + +<div class="dtblbox section"> +<table class="borall fsz6" summary=""> +<caption><span class="smcap">C<b>OLONIAL</b></span> + <span class="smcap">P<b>OSSESSIONS.</b></span></caption> +<tr> + <th colspan="2" class="borall"></th> + <th class="borall">Area, Sq. Miles.</th> + <th class="borall">Population.</th> + <th class="borall">Density.</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Azores</td> + <td class="tdright">921</td> + <td class="tdright">60,072</td> + <td class="tdright">65</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2"><span + class="smcap">A<b>FRICA</b></span>:―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdspc"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Madeira</td> + <td class="tdright">310</td> + <td class="tdright">118,609</td> + <td class="tdright">383</td></tr> +<tr> + <td></td> + <td class="tdleft">Cape Verde Island</td> + <td class="tdright">1,487</td> + <td class="tdright">90,704</td> + <td class="tdright">61</td></tr> +<tr> + <td></td> + <td class="tdleft">Senegambia</td> + <td class="tdright">27</td> + <td class="tdright">9,282</td> + <td class="tdright">344</td></tr> +<tr> + <td></td> + <td class="tdleft">St. Thome and Principe</td> + <td class="tdright">417</td> + <td class="tdright">31,692</td> + <td class="tdright">75</td></tr> +<tr> + <td></td> + <td class="tdleft">Fort Ajuda</td> + <td class="tdright">13</td> + <td class="tdright">700</td> + <td class="tdright">54</td></tr> +<tr> + <td></td> + <td class="tdleft">Angola, Benguela, and Mossamedes</td> + <td class="tdright">312,000</td> + <td class="tdright">2,000,000</td> + <td class="tdright">6</td></tr> +<tr> + <td></td> + <td class="tdleft">Moçambique and Sofala</td> + <td class="tdright">40,000</td> + <td class="tdright">300,000</td> + <td class="tdright">8</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2"><span + class="smcap">A<b>SIA</b></span>:―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td></td> + <td class="tdleft">Goa, &c.</td> + <td class="tdright">1,395</td> + <td class="tdright">474,234</td> + <td class="tdright">339</td></tr> +<tr> + <td></td> + <td class="tdleft">Damão</td> + <td class="tdright">30</td> + <td class="tdright">40,980</td> + <td class="tdright">1336</td></tr> +<tr> + <td></td> + <td class="tdleft">Diu</td> + <td class="tdright">12</td> + <td class="tdright">12,303</td> + <td class="tdright">1025</td></tr> +<tr> + <td></td> + <td class="tdleft">Timor and Kambing</td> + <td class="tdright">5,527</td> + <td class="tdright">250,000</td> + <td class="tdright">45</td></tr> +<tr> + <td></td> + <td class="tdleft">Macao</td> + <td class="tdright">1½</td> + <td class="tdright">71,834</td> + <td class="tdright">47·223</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright" colspan="2">Colonies</td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">362,140</span></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">3,460,410</span></td> + <td class="tdright">10</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright" colspan="2">Total, Portugal and Colonies</td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">396,842</span></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">7,759,291</span></td> + <td class="tdright">20</td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtblbox--> + +<div class="dctr10"><img src="images/ib500.jpg" + width="223" height="359" alt="" /></div> + +<div class="chapter"> +<h2 class="h2herein" title="Notes.">NOTES.</h2></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch1" id="fn1">1</a> +Houzeau, “Histoire du Sol de l’Europe.”—Carl +Ritter, “Europa.”—Kohl, “Die Geographische Lage der +Haupstadte Europa’s.”</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch2" id="fn2">2</a> +Modern Sea of Azof and River Don.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch3" id="fn3">3</a> +Latham, Benfey, Cuno, Spiegel, and others.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt" id="n1p020"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch4" id="fn4">4</a> +Population of Europe, about 305,000,000:―</p> + +<div class="dtbl10"> +<table summary=""> +<tr> + <th colspan="2">Greco-Latin.</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Greeks</td> + <td class="tdright">2,600,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Albanians</td> + <td class="tdright">1,250,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Italians</td> + <td class="tdright">27,700,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">French</td> + <td class="tdright">39,700,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Spaniards and Portuguese</td> + <td class="tdright">20,210,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Rumanians</td> + <td class="tdright">8,400,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Rhætians (“Romans”)</td> + <td class="tdright">42,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">99,902,000</span></td></tr> +<tr> + <th colspan="2">Germanic.</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Germans</td> + <td class="tdright">53,400,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Dutch and Flemish</td> + <td class="tdright">6,720,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Scandinavians</td> + <td class="tdright">5,640,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Anglo-Saxons</td> + <td class="tdright">30,600,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">96,360,000</span></td></tr> +<tr> + <th colspan="2">Slavonic.</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Russians</td> + <td class="tdright">59,000,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Poles</td> + <td class="tdright">11,800,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Chechians, &c.</td> + <td class="tdright">6,750,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Servians</td> + <td class="tdright">5,750,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Slovenes</td> + <td class="tdright">1,200,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Bulgarians</td> + <td class="tdright">3,100,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">87,600,000</span></td></tr> +<tr> + <th colspan="2">other</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Finns</td> + <td class="tdright">4,700,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Osmanli</td> + <td class="tdright">1,300,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Magyars</td> + <td class="tdright">5,770,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Tartars</td> + <td class="tdright">2,500,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Calmucks</td> + <td class="tdright">100,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Celts</td> + <td class="tdright">1,600,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Basks</td> + <td class="tdright">700,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Letts, &c.</td> + <td class="tdright">2,900,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Armenians</td> + <td class="tdright">280,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Gipsies</td> + <td class="tdright">590,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Circassians</td> + <td class="tdright">400,000</td></tr> +</table></div><!--dl10--> + +<div>Included above are 4,500,000 +Jews.</div></div><!--dftnt--> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch5" id="fn5">5</a> +W. H. Smith, “The Mediterranean.”—Dureau de +la Malle, “Géographie Physique de la Mer Noire et de la +Mediterranée.”—Böttger, “Das Mittelmeer.”</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch6" id="fn6">6</a> +Area of the Mediterranean basin:―</p> + +<div class="dtbl10"><table summary=""> +<tr> + <th>Drainage of</th> + <th>square<br />miles</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Europe</td> + <td class="tdright">683,500</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Asia</td> + <td class="tdright">232,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Africa</td> + <td class="tdright">1,737,500</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Mediterranean Sea</td> + <td class="tdright">1,153,300</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">3,806,300</span></td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtbl10--></div> + +<div class="dftnt" id="n1p025"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch7" id="fn7">7</a></p> +<div class="dtblbox"> +<table class="fsz6 borall" summary=""> +<tr> + <th class="borall"></th> + <th class="borall">Western basin.</th> + <th class="borall">Eastern basin.</th> + <th class="borall">Adriatic.</th> + <th class="borall">Archipelago.</th> + <th class="borall">Black Sea.</th> + <th class="borall">Mediterranean.</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Area</td> + <td class="tdright">355,200</td> + <td class="tdright">502,000</td> + <td class="tdright">50,200</td> + <td class="tdright">60,600</td> + <td class="tdright">185,300</td> + <td class="tdright">1,153,300</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Greatest depth, fathoms</td> + <td class="tdright">1,640</td> + <td class="tdright">2,170</td> + <td class="tdright">565</td> + <td class="tdright">540</td> + <td class="tdright">1,070</td> + <td class="tdright">2,170</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Average depth, fathoms</td> + <td class="tdright">640</td> + <td class="tdright">960</td> + <td class="tdright">110</td> + <td class="tdright">320</td> + <td class="tdright">320</td> + <td class="tdright">640</td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtblbox--></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch8" id="fn8">8</a> +Quantity of salt held in solution in the +Atlantic, 36 parts in 1,000; in the Mediterranean (mean), +38 parts; in the Black Sea, 16 parts.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch9" id="fn9">9</a> +There are found in the Mediterranean 444 +species of fish (Goodwin Austen), 850 species of molluscs +(Jeffreys), and about 200 species of foraminiferæ.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch10" id="fn10">10</a> +The production of salt on the coasts of the Mediterranean is thus distributed among its coast-lands:—Spain, +200,000 tons; France, 250,000 tons; Italy, 300,000 tons; Austria, 70,000 tons; Russia, +120,000; other countries, 200,000 tons. Total, 1,140,000 tons, valued at £480,000.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch11" id="fn11">11</a> +The annual produce of the fisheries has been estimated at £3,000,000, of the coral fisheries at +£640,000, of the sponge fisheries at +£40,000. Total, £3,680,000.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt" id="n1p035"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch12" id="fn12">12</a> +Shipping and commerce of the Mediterranean (estimated):―</p> + +<div class="dtblbox"> +<table class="fsz6 borall" summary=""> +<tr> + <th class="borall" rowspan="2"></th> + <th class="borall fsz6" colspan="3">COMMERCIAL MARINE.</th> + <th class="borall fsz6">ENTERED AND CLEARED.</th> + <th class="borall fsz6">VALUE OF EXPORTS AND IMPORTS.</th></tr> +<tr> + <th class="borall">Sail-vessels.</th> + <th class="borall">Steamers.</th> + <th class="borall">Tonnage.</th> + <th class="borall">Tons.</th> + <th class="borall">£</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Spain (Mediterranean)</td> + <td class="tdright">2,500</td> + <td class="tdright">100</td> + <td class="tdright">250,000</td> + <td class="tdright">5,000,000</td> + <td class="tdright">24,000,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">France (Mediterranean)</td> + <td class="tdright">4,000</td> + <td class="tdright">230</td> + <td class="tdright">300,000</td> + <td class="tdright">6,000,000</td> + <td class="tdright">80,000,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Italy</td> + <td class="tdright">18,800</td> + <td class="tdright">140</td> + <td class="tdright">1,030,000</td> + <td class="tdright">21,000,000</td> + <td class="tdright">104,000,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Austria</td> + <td class="tdright">3,000</td> + <td class="tdright">92</td> + <td class="tdright">380,000</td> + <td class="tdright">8,000,000</td> + <td class="tdright">18,000,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Greece</td> + <td class="tdright">5,400</td> + <td class="tdright">20</td> + <td class="tdright">502,000</td> + <td class="tdright">8,500,000</td> + <td class="tdright">8,000,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Turkey in Europe and Asia</td> + <td class="tdright">2,200</td> + <td class="tdright">10</td> + <td class="tdright">210,000</td> + <td class="tdright">25,000,000</td> + <td class="tdright">24,000,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Rumania</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">1,300,000</td> + <td class="tdright">8,000,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Russia (Mediterranean)</td> + <td class="tdright">500</td> + <td class="tdright">50</td> + <td class="tdright">50,000</td> + <td class="tdright">2,000,000</td> + <td class="tdright">24,000,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Egypt (Mediterranean)</td> + <td class="tdright">100</td> + <td class="tdright">25</td> + <td class="tdright">15,000</td> + <td class="tdright">4,000,000</td> + <td class="tdright">20,000,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Malta and Gibraltar</td> + <td class="tdright">200</td> + <td class="tdright">13</td> + <td class="tdright">39,000</td> + <td class="tdright">12,000,000</td> + <td class="tdright">23,000,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Algeria</td> + <td class="tdright">170</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">10,000</td> + <td class="tdright">2,000,000</td> + <td class="tdright">16,000,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Tunis, Tripoli, &c.</td> + <td class="tdright">500</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">10,000</td> + <td class="tdright">500,000</td> + <td class="tdright">4,000,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">37,370</span></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">680</span></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">2,796,000</span></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">95,300,000</span></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">353,000,000</span></td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtblbox--></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch13" id="fn13">13</a> +Greece within its political limits:―</p> + +<div class="dtbl10"> +<table class="borall fsz6" summary=""> +<tr> + <th class="borall"></th> + <th class="borall">Area. Sq. m.</th> + <th class="borall">Population<br />(1870).</th> + <th class="borall">Density.</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Continental Greece</td> + <td class="tdright">7,558</td> + <td class="tdright">466,918</td> + <td class="tdright">62</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Peloponnesus</td> + <td class="tdright">8,288</td> + <td class="tdright">545,389</td> + <td class="tdright">66</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Ægean Islands</td> + <td class="tdright">2,500</td> + <td class="tdright">205,840</td> + <td class="tdright">82</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Ionian Islands</td> + <td class="tdright">1,007</td> + <td class="tdright">218,879</td> + <td class="tdright">217</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Army, navy, and sailors</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">20,868</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright">Total</td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">19,353</span></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">1,457,894</span></td> + <td class="tdright">75</td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtbl10--></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch14" id="fn14">14</a> +Altitudes of mountains in continental Greece (in feet):―</p> + +<div class="dtbl10"> +<table summary=""> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Gerakavuni (Othrys)</td> + <td class="tdright">5,673</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Velukhi (Tymphrestus)</td> + <td class="tdright">7,610</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Khonia</td> + <td class="tdright">8,186</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Vardusia</td> + <td class="tdright">8,242</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Katavothra (Œta)</td> + <td class="tdright">6,560</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Mountains of Acarnania</td> + <td class="tdright">5,216</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Varassova</td> + <td class="tdright">3,010</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Liakura (Parnassus)</td> + <td class="tdright">8,068</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Palæovouni (Helicon)</td> + <td class="tdright">5,738</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Elatea (Cithæron)</td> + <td class="tdright">4,630</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Parnes</td> + <td class="tdright">4,645</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Pentelicus</td> + <td class="tdright">3,693</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Hymetius</td> + <td class="tdright">3,400</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Gerania (Pera Khora)</td> + <td class="tdright">4,482</td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtbl10--></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch15" id="fn15">15</a> +Orchomenus, a town on the Cephissus, the +capital of Northern Bœotia, destroyed by the Thebans +371 <span class="smmaj">B.C.</span></p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch16" id="fn16">16</a> +Heights of the principal mountains in the Peloponnesus +(in English feet):―</p> + +<div class="dtbl10"> +<table summary=""> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Cyllene (Zyria)</td> + <td class="tdright">8,940</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Aroanian Mountain (Khelmos)</td> + <td class="tdright">7,726</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Erymanthus (Olonos)</td> + <td class="tdright">7,297</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Artemisium (Malevo)</td> + <td class="tdright">5,814</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Parnon (Hagios Petros)</td> + <td class="tdright">6,355</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Lycæus (Diaforti)</td> + <td class="tdright">4,660</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Ithome</td> + <td class="tdright">2,630</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Taygetus</td> + <td class="tdright">7,904</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Arachnæus (Argolis)</td> + <td class="tdright">3,935</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Mean height of peninsula</td> + <td class="tdright">2,000</td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtbl10--></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch17" id="fn17">17</a> +The isthmus is 6,496 yards wide, and rises to +a height of 250 feet where it is narrowest, its mean height +being 130 feet.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt" id="n1p73"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch18" id="fn18">18</a> +Principal altitudes of the islands of Greece:―</p> + +<div class="dtbl10"> +<table summary=""> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <th>Feet.</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Mount Delphi, on Eubœa</td> + <td class="tdright">5,730</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Mount St. Elias, on Eubœa</td> + <td class="tdright">4,840</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Mount Kokhilas, on Scyros</td> + <td class="tdright">2,565</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Mount Kovari, on Andros</td> + <td class="tdright">3,200</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Mount Oxia, on Naxos</td> + <td class="tdright">3,290</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Mount St. Elias, on Siphnos</td> + <td class="tdright">2,280</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Mount St. Elias, on Nios</td> + <td class="tdright">2,410</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Mount St. Elias, on Santorin</td> + <td class="tdright">1,887</td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtbl10--></div><!--dftnt--> + +<div class="dftnt" id="n1p080"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch19" id="fn19">19</a> +Ionian Islands:―</p> + +<div class="dtbl10"> +<table class="fsz6 borall" summary=""> +<tr> + <th class="borall"></th> + <th class="borall">Area.<br />Sq. m.</th> + <th class="borall">Highest<br />Mountains.</th> + <th class="borall">Feet.</th> + <th class="borall">Inhabitants.<br />(1870.)</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Corfu</td> + <td class="tdright">224</td> + <td class="tdleft">Pantokratoros</td> + <td class="tdright">3,280</td> + <td class="tdright">72,450</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Paxos and Antipaxos</td> + <td class="tdright">27</td> + <td class="tdright"></td> + <td class="tdright"></td> + <td class="tdright">3,600</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Leucadia</td> + <td class="tdright">183</td> + <td class="tdleft">Nomali</td> + <td class="tdright">3,870</td> + <td class="tdright">21,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Cephalonia</td> + <td class="tdright">292</td> + <td class="tdleft">Elato</td> + <td class="tdright">5,310</td> + <td class="tdright">67,500</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Ithaca</td> + <td class="tdright">42</td> + <td class="tdleft">Neriton</td> + <td class="tdright">2,640</td> + <td class="tdright">10,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Zante</td> + <td class="tdright">162</td> + <td class="tdleft">Skopos</td> + <td class="tdright">1,300</td> + <td class="tdright">44,500</td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtbl10--></div><!--dftnt--> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch20" id="fn20">20</a> +Population of the principal towns of Greece (1870):―</p> + +<div class="dtbl10"> +<table summary=""> +<tr> + <th>Towns.</th> + <th>Population.</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Athens and Piræus</td> + <td class="tdright">59,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Patras</td> + <td class="tdright">26,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Corfu</td> + <td class="tdright">24,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Hermopolis, or Syra</td> + <td class="tdright">21,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Zante</td> + <td class="tdright">20,500</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Lixuri (Cephalonia)</td> + <td class="tdright">14,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Pyrgos, or Letrini</td> + <td class="tdright">13,600</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Tripolis, or Tripolitza</td> + <td class="tdright">11,500</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Chalcis, in Eubœa</td> + <td class="tdright">11,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Sparta</td> + <td class="tdright">10,700</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Argos</td> + <td class="tdright">10,600</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Argostoli (Cephalonia)</td> + <td class="tdright">9,500</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Calamata</td> + <td class="tdright">9,400</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Histiæa, in Eubœa</td> + <td class="tdright">8,900</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Karystos, in Eubœa</td> + <td class="tdright">8,800</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Ægion, or Vostitza</td> + <td class="tdright">8,800</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Nauplia</td> + <td class="tdright">8,500</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Spezzia</td> + <td class="tdright">8,400</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Kranidhi, in Argolis</td> + <td class="tdright">8,400</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Lamia</td> + <td class="tdright">8,300</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Missolonghi</td> + <td class="tdright">7,500</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Andros</td> + <td class="tdright">9,300</td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtbl10--></div><!--dftnt--> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch21" id="fn21">21</a> +Commerce of Greece (1873):—Mercantile marine: +6,135 vessels of 419,350 tons; entered, 112,814 vessels of +6,336,487 tons; imports, £4,166,239; exports, £2,721,877.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch22" id="fn22">22</a> +Public income (1875), £1,404,053; expenditure, +£1,409,288; debt, £15,232,202.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch23" id="fn23">23</a> +Authorities:—R. Pashley, “Travels in Crete;” +Raulin, “Description Physique de l’Ile de Crète;” G. +Perrot, “L’Ile de Crète;” Viquesnel, “Voyage dans la +Turquie d’Europe;” Ami Boué, “La Turquie d’Europe;” A. +Dumont, “Le Balkan et l’Adriatique;” Lejean, “Ethnographie +de la Turquie d’Europe;” Von Hammer, “Konstantinopel und +der Bosporus;” P. de Tchihatchef, “Le Bosphore;” Heuzey, +“Voyage archéologique en Macédoine;” Fanshawe Tozer, +“Researches in the Highlands of Turkey;” Barth, “Reisen in +der europäischen Türkei;” Von Hahn, “Albanesische Studien;” +Hecquard, “Histoire et Description de la Haute-Albanie;” +Dora d’Istria, “Nationalité albanaise;” F. Maurer, “Reise +durch Bosnien;” F. de Sainte-Marie, “L’Herzégovine;” +Kanitz, “Donau-Bulgarien und der Balkan;” H. Kiepert, Map +of Turkey in Europe.</p> + +<p>For changes made by the Berlin treaty, see page <a + href="#p153" title="go to p. 153">153.</a></p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch24" id="fn24">24</a> +We mention Palma, Vaudoncourt, Lapic, Boué, +Viquesnel, Lejean, Kanitz, Barth, Hochstetter, and Abdullah +Bey.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch25" id="fn25">25</a> +Heights of principal mountains:—Aspra Vuna +(White Mountain of Leuca-Ori), 8,100 feet; Psiloriti, +or Ida, 8,000 feet; Lasithi, or Dicte, 7,100 feet. +Towns:—Canea, 12,000 inhabitants; Megalokastron, 12,000; +Retimo, 9,000. Total population of the island, 210,000.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch26" id="fn26">26</a> +The islands of Thracia:―</p> + +<div class="dtbl10"><table class="fsz6" summary=""> +<tr> + <th class="borall"></th> + <th class="borall">Sq. m.</th> + <th class="borall">Inhabitants.</th> + <th class="borall">Highest Mountains.</th> + <th class="borall">Feet.</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Thasos</td> + <td class="tdright">74</td> + <td class="tdright">10,000</td> + <td class="tdctr">Mount Ipsario</td> + <td class="tdright">3,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Samothrace</td> + <td class="tdright">66</td> + <td class="tdright">200</td> + <td class="tdctr">Mount Phengari</td> + <td class="tdright">5,240</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Imbro</td> + <td class="tdright">85</td> + <td class="tdright">4,000</td> + <td class="tdctr">Mount St. Elias</td> + <td class="tdright">1,950</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Lemnos</td> + <td class="tdright">170</td> + <td class="tdright">22,000</td> + <td class="tdctr">Mount Skopia</td> + <td class="tdright">1,410</td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtbl10--></div><!--dftnt--> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch27" id="fn27">27</a> +Consul Sax (1873) estimates the population +as follows:—Stamboul, 210,000; Pera, 130,000; European +suburbs, 150,000; Asiatic suburbs, 110,000; total, 600,000 +souls, including 200,000 Mohammedans. Dr. Yakshity, on the +other hand, estimates the population of Constantinople +(exclusive of its Asiatic suburbs) at 358,000 souls, of +whom 193,540 are Mohammedans, 144,210 oriental Christians, +and 30,000 Franks.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch28" id="fn28">28</a> +Length of the Bosphorus, 98,500 feet, or 18·6 +miles; average width, 5,250 feet; average depth, 90 feet; +greatest depth, 170 feet.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch29" id="fn29">29</a> +Dimensions of the Dardanelles:—Length, 42·3 +miles; average width, 2·7 miles, or 13,100 feet; minimum +width, 6,400 feet; average depth, 180 feet; greatest depth, +320 feet.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch30" id="fn30">30</a> +Altitudes:—Mount Pilav Tepe, 6,183 feet; +Kortach, 3,893 feet; Athos, 6,786 feet.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch31" id="fn31">31</a> +Mount Olympus, 9,750 feet; Mount Ossa, 5,250 +feet; Mount Pelion, 5,130 feet.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch32" id="fn32">32</a> +The following are the principal towns of the +Greek provinces of Turkey, together with the number of +their inhabitants:―</p> + +<div class="dtbl10"><table summary=""> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Adrianople (Edirneh)</td> + <td class="tdright">110,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Saloniki (Salonica)</td> + <td class="tdright">80,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Seres</td> + <td class="tdright">30,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Larissa</td> + <td class="tdright">25,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Rodosto</td> + <td class="tdright">20,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Gallipoli (Geliboli)</td> + <td class="tdright">20,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Trikala (Tirhala)</td> + <td class="tdright">11,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Demotika</td> + <td class="tdright">10,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Verria</td> + <td class="tdright">10,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Enos</td> + <td class="tdright">7,000</td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtbl10--></div><!--dftnt--> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch33" id="fn33">33</a> +Altitudes in Albania:―</p> + +<div class="dtbl10"><table summary=""> +<tr> + <th></th> + <th>Feet.</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Skhar</td> + <td class="tdright">8,200</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Tomor</td> + <td class="tdright">5,413</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Zygos (Lachmon)</td> + <td class="tdright">5,500</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Smolika</td> + <td class="tdright">5,970</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Kundusi</td> + <td class="tdright">6,270</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Acroceraunian Mountain</td> + <td class="tdright">6,700</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Lake Okhrida</td> + <td class="tdright">2,270</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Lake of Yanina</td> + <td class="tdright">1,700</td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtbl10--></div><!--dftnt--> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch34" id="fn34">34</a> +Population of the principal cities of +Albania:—Prisrend, 35,000; Soutari (Shkodra), 35,000; +Yanina, 25,000; Jakovitza (Yakova), 17,000; Ipek (Pech), +16,000; Elbasan, 12,000; Berat, 11,000; Prishtina, 11,000; +Tirana, 10,000; Koritza, 10,000; Argyrokastro, 8,000; +Prevesa, 7,000 Dulcigno, 7,000; Durazzo, 5,000.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch35" id="fn35">35</a> +Altitudes:—Mount Kom, 9,350 feet; Mount Durmitor, 8,860 feet; +Glieb, 5,775 feet.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch36" id="fn36">36</a> +According to Blau (1872), Bosnia, including +the Herzegovina and Rascia, has 1,150,000 inhabitants, +comprising 590,000 Greek Catholics, 164,000 Roman +Catholics, 378,000 Mussulmans, 12,300 gipsies, and 5,700 +Jews. The same author states the population for 1855 +to have amounted to 893,384 souls, including 286,000 +Mussulmans. According to an English Consular Report (1873), +the population is 1,084,162, including 461,048 Mussulmans; +and according to Professor Yakshity, 1,357,984 souls, +including 474,000 Mussulmans.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch37" id="fn37">37</a> +Principal towns of Bosnia:—Sarayevo, 50,000 +inhabitants; Banyaluka, 18,000 inhabitants; Zvornik, 14,000 +inhabitants; Travnik, 12,000 inhabitants; Novibazar, 9,000 +inhabitants; Trebinye, 9,000 inhabitants; Mostar, 9,000 +inhabitants; Tuzla, 7,000 inhabitants.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch38" id="fn38">38</a> +Altitudes in Bulgaria, according to +Hochstetter, Viquesnel, Boué, Barth, and others:—Vitosh, +8,080 feet; Balkan, mean height, 5,600 feet; Chatal, 3,600 +feet; hills of the Dobruja, 1,650 feet; Trajan’s Gate, +2,625 feet; Pass of Dubnitza, 3,560 feet; Rilo Dagh, 9,500 +feet; Perim Dagh, 7,875 feet; Gornichova, or Nije, 6,560 +feet; Peristeri, 7,700 feet; basin of Sofia, 1,710 feet; +basin of Monastir, 1,820 feet; Lake of Ostrovo, 1,680 feet; +Lake of Kastoria, 2,050 feet.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch39" id="fn39">39</a> +Cleared from Sulina (1873), 1,870 vessels of +532,000 tons. Value of cereals exported, £6,000,000.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch40" id="fn40">40</a> +The following are the principal towns of +Bulgaria, with the number of their inhabitants:―</p> + +<div class="dtbl10"><table summary=""> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Shumna (Shumla)</td> + <td class="tdright">50,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Rustchuk</td> + <td class="tdright">50,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Philippopoli (Felibe)</td> + <td class="tdright">40,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Bitolia (Monastir)</td> + <td class="tdright">40,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Skoplie (Uskub)</td> + <td class="tdright">28,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Kalkandelen</td> + <td class="tdright">22,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Sofia</td> + <td class="tdright">20,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Vidin</td> + <td class="tdright">20,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Silistria</td> + <td class="tdright">20,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Shishtova</td> + <td class="tdright">20,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Varna</td> + <td class="tdright">20,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Eski-Za’ara</td> + <td class="tdright">18,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Bazarjik</td> + <td class="tdright">18,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Nish</td> + <td class="tdright">16,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Veleze (Koprili)</td> + <td class="tdright">15,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Razgrad</td> + <td class="tdright">15,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Turnov (Tirnova)</td> + <td class="tdright">12,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Sliven (Slivno)</td> + <td class="tdright">12,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Prilip</td> + <td class="tdright">12,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Kezanlik</td> + <td class="tdright">10,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Stanimako</td> + <td class="tdright">10,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Florina</td> + <td class="tdright">10,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Kurshova</td> + <td class="tdright">9,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Sulina</td> + <td class="tdright">5,000</td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtbl10--></div><!--dftnt--> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch41" id="fn41">41</a> +Receipts for 1874, £20,400,000; debts in 1875, £220,000,000.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch42" id="fn42">42</a> +Races and religions of Turkey in Europe (Servia, +Montenegro, and Rumania excluded):―</p> + +<div class="dtblbox borall"><table class="fsz6" summary=""> +<tr> + <th class="borall" colspan="2"></th> + <th class="borall">Total.</th> + <th class="borall">Mussulmans.</th> + <th class="borall">Greek Catholics.</th> + <th class="borall">Roman Catholics.</th> + <th class="borall">Other Christians.</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Slavs</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdspc"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Servians</td> + <td class="tdright">1,114,000</td> + <td class="tdright">442,000</td> + <td class="tdright">492,000</td> + <td class="tdright">180,000</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdspc"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Bulgarians</td> + <td class="tdright">2,861,000</td> + <td class="tdright">790,000</td> + <td class="tdright">2,051,000</td> + <td class="tdright">20,000</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdspc"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Russians, &c.</td> + <td class="tdright">10,000</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">2,000</td> + <td class="tdright">8,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdspc"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Greeks</td> + <td class="tdright">1,176,000</td> + <td class="tdright">38,000</td> + <td class="tdright">1,138,000</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Greco-Latins</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdspc"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Rumanians</td> + <td class="tdright">50,000</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">50,000</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdspc"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Zinzares</td> + <td class="tdright">150,000</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">150,000</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Albanians</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdspc"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Gheges</td> + <td class="tdright borall" rowspan="2">1,031,000</td> + <td class="tdright borall" rowspan="2">773,000</td> + <td class="tdright borall" rowspan="2">178,000</td> + <td class="tdright borall" rowspan="2">80,000</td> + <td class="tdright borall" rowspan="2">―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdspc"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Tosks</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Turks</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdspc"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Osmanli</td> + <td class="tdright">1,352,000</td> + <td class="tdright">1,352,000</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdspc"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Tartars</td> + <td class="tdright">40,000</td> + <td class="tdright">40,000</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Semites</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdspc"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Arabs</td> + <td class="tdright">3,000</td> + <td class="tdright">3,000</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdspc"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Jews</td> + <td class="tdright">72,000</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Armenians</td> + <td class="tdright">100,000</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">10,000</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Circassians</td> + <td class="tdright">144,000</td> + <td class="tdright">144,000</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Tsiganes (Gipsies)</td> + <td class="tdright">104,000</td> + <td class="tdright">52,000</td> + <td class="tdright">52,000</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Franks</td> + <td class="tdright">60,000</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">50,000</td> + <td class="tdright">10,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Total</td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">8,267,000</span></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">3,584,000</span></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">4,111,000</span></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">342,000</span></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">108,000</span></td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtblbox--></div><!--dftnt--> + +<div class="section"> +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch43" id="fn43">43</a> +Area and population of the Turkish Empire:―</p> + +<div class="dtblbox"><table class="fsz6 borall" summary=""> +<colgroup> + <col width="2%;" /> + <col width="44%;" /> + <col width="19%;" /> + <col width="19%;" /> + <col width="16%;" /></colgroup> +<tr> + <th class="borall" colspan="2"></th> + <th class="borall">Area, Square Miles.</th> + <th class="borall">Population.</th> + <th class="borall">Mohammedans per cent.</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Constantinople + (including Army, &c.)</td> + <td class="tdright">1,040</td> + <td class="tdright">531,000</td> + <td class="tdright">55</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2"><i>Vilayets</i>:―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdspc"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Edirneh, or Adrianople (Thracia)</td> + <td class="tdright">26,160</td> + <td class="tdright">1,307,000</td> + <td class="tdright">39</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Tuna (Danube), or Bulgaria</td> + <td class="tdright">34,120</td> + <td class="tdright">2,303,000</td> + <td class="tdright">40</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Saloniki (Macedonia)</td> + <td class="tdright">12,950</td> + <td class="tdright">499,000</td> + <td class="tdright">50</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Prisrend (Upper Macedonia)</td> + <td class="tdright">18,320</td> + <td class="tdright">1,392,000</td> + <td class="tdright">57</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Shkodra, or Scutari (Upper Albania)</td> + <td class="tdright">5,310</td> + <td class="tdright">171,000</td> + <td class="tdright">48</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Bosna Serai, or Serayevo (Bosnia)</td> + <td class="tdright">17,900</td> + <td class="tdright">940,000</td> + <td class="tdright">42</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Herzegovina</td> + <td class="tdright">5,720</td> + <td class="tdright">144,000</td> + <td class="tdright">41</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Yanina (Epirus and Thessaly)</td> + <td class="tdright">18,320</td> + <td class="tdright">711,000</td> + <td class="tdright">35</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Crete, or Candia</td> + <td class="tdright">3,326</td> + <td class="tdright">210,000</td> + <td class="tdright">18</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">European Islands</td> + <td class="tdright">400</td> + <td class="tdright">60,000</td> + <td class="tdright">7</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright" colspan="2">Turkey in Europe</td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsubsum">143,566</span></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsubsum">8,267,000</span></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsubsum">44</span></td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Turkey in Asia</td> + <td class="tdright">745,000</td> + <td class="tdright">13,176,000</td> + <td class="tdright">86</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Tripoli, &c.</td> + <td class="tdright">344,000</td> + <td class="tdright">1,150,000</td> + <td class="tdright">99</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright" colspan="2">Total Ottoman Empire</td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsubsum">1,231,566</span></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsubsum">22,593,000</span></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsubsum">71</span></td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft" colspan="2">Tributary States.</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Rumania</td> + <td class="tdright">46,710</td> + <td class="tdright">5,180,000</td> + <td class="tdleft">―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Servia</td> + <td class="tdright">16,820</td> + <td class="tdright">1,377,000</td> + <td class="tdleft">―</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Egypt</td> + <td class="tdright">869,360</td> + <td class="tdright">17,000,000</td> + <td class="tdright">70</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft"></td> + <td class="tdleft">Tunis</td> + <td class="tdright">45,700</td> + <td class="tdright">2,000,000</td> + <td class="tdright">99</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright" colspan="2">Total Turkish Empire</td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">2,210,156</span></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">48,150,000</span></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">63</span></td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtblbox--></div><!--dftnt--></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch44" id="fn44">44</a> +Officially called Romania, and frequently +spelt Roumania: in French it is Roumanie.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch45" id="fn45">45</a></p> + +<div class="dtbl10"><table summary=""> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Wallachia and Moldavia</td> + <td class="tdright">4,460,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Austro-Hungary</td> + <td class="tdright">2,896,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Bessarabia and other parts of Russia</td> + <td class="tdright">600,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Servia</td> + <td class="tdright">155,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Turkey</td> + <td class="tdright">200,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Greece</td> + <td class="tdright">4,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright">Total</td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">8,315,000</span></td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtbl10--></div><!--dftnt--> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch46" id="fn46">46</a> +Mean temperature at Bucharest, 46° F.; +maximum, 113° F.; minimum, −22° F.; difference, 135° F.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch47" id="fn47">47</a> +Mean volume of the Danube (according to C. +Hartley), 2,000,000 gallons per second; maximum volume, +6,160,000 gallons; mean volume of Kilia mouth, 1,276,000 +gallons; mean of St. George’s mouth, 572,000 gallons; mean +of Sulina mouth, 176,000 gallons per second. Mean alluvial +deposits of Danube, 2,119 cubic feet per annum.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch48" id="fn48">48</a> +Approximate population of Rumania in 1875, +5,232,500 souls, of whom 3,260,000 were in Wallachia, and +1,972,500 in Moldavia. There were 4,460,000 Rumanians, +90,000 Bulgarians, 40,000 Russians and other Slavs, 50,000 +Magyars, 130,000 Tsigani, 400,000 Jews, 10,000 Armenians, +and 52,500 foreigners +(30,000 Austrians, 10,000 Greeks, 5,000 +Germans, 1,500 French).</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch49" id="fn49">49</a> +Of the total area of Rumania 6,000,000 acres +are corn-lands, 600,000 acres produce wine, tobacco, &c., +5,000,000 consist of forests, 9,000,000 of pastures and +meadows, and 8,000,000 are uncultivated. In 1874 there +were 600,000 horses, 2,900,000 head of cattle, 100,000 +buffaloes, 5,000,000 sheep, 1,200,000 pigs, and 500,000 +goats.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch50" id="fn50">50</a> +Exports, average of 1865–75, £6,700,000; +imports, £4,300,000.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch51" id="fn51">51</a> +Railroads, 1,800 miles; high-roads, 2,650 +miles; telegraphs, 2,500 miles; steamers on the Danube, 29, +of 7,620 tons burden.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch52" id="fn52">52</a> +Number of inhabitants of the principal towns +of Rumania (official spelling; vulgar or phonetic spelling +in parenthesis):―</p> + +<p><i>Wallachia.</i>—Bucuresci (Bucharest), 221,800; Ploiesti +(Ploeshti), 33,000; Braila, 28,270; Craiova, 22,764; +Giurgiu (Jurjevo, or Giurgevo), 20,866; Buzeu (Busau), +11,100; Alecsandria, 11,000; Campulung, 9,900; Pitesci +(Piteshti), 8,500; Caracalu, 8,600.</p> + +<p><i>Moldavia.</i>—Jasi (Yassy), 90,000; Galati (Galatz), +80,000; Botosani, 39,900; Barladu (Byrlat), 26,600; Smeilu +(Ismail), 21,000; Focsani, 20,300; Peatra, 20,000; Husi, +18,500; Roman, 16,900; Falticeni, 15,000; Bacau, 13,000; +Dorohoi, 10,000; Bolgradu, 9,600; Chilie (Kilia), 8,900; +Reni, 7,600.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch53" id="fn53">53</a> +Average annual expenditure, 1871–76, +£3,650,000; public debt, £19,500,000, including £13,000,000 +expended upon railways; estimated value of the domains, +£20,000,000.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch54" id="fn54">54</a> +Authorities:—Kanitz, “Serbien;” Ubicini, +“Les Serbes de Turquie;” Cyprien Robert, “Les Slaves de +Turquie;” Louis Léger, “Le Monde Slave;” Lejean, “Visite au +Montenegro.”</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch55" id="fn55">55</a> +Mean temperature at Belgrad, 48° F.; extremes, 106° and 3°; +range, 103° F.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch56" id="fn56">56</a> +The population of Servia in 1875 was +1,377,068, of whom about 1,110,000 were Servians, 160,000 +Wallachians, 20,000 Zinzares, 50,000 Bulgarians, 30,000 +gipsies, &c.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch57" id="fn57">57</a> +The exports in 1874 were valued at £1,400,000, +and included 34,104 head of cattle, 271,219 pigs 1,172,571 +sheep and goat skins, wheat, raki, &c.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch58" id="fn58">58</a> +There are a university, a military academy, a +seminary, an agricultural school, 11 superior schools, and +377 elementary schools, with 567 teachers, and about 20,000 +pupils.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch59" id="fn59">59</a> +Authorities:—Zuccagni Orlandini, “Corografia +fisica, storica e statistica dell’ Italia e delle sue +Isole;” Marmocchi, “Descrizione d’Italia;” Amato Amati, +“L’Italia sotto l’aspetto fisico, storico, artistico e +statistico;” Taine, “Voyage en Italie;” Gregorovius, +“Wanderjahre in Italien,” “Geschichte der Stadt Rom;” Ann. +di Saluzzo, “Le Alpi che cingono l’Italia;” Cattaneo e +Lombardini, “Notizie naturali e civili su la Lombardia;” +Lombardini, “Pianura subapennina,” “Condizione idraulica +del Po;” Martins, Gastaldi, “Terrains superficiels de la +vallée du Pô;” De Mortillet, “Anciens glaciers du versant +méridional des Alpes,” “Mémoires divers;” Bertolotti, +“Liguria maritima;” Targioni Tozzetti, “Voyage en Toscane;” +Salvagnoli Marchetti, “Maremme Toscane;” Noël des Vergers, +“L’Étrurie et les Étrusques;” Beulé, “Fouilles et +découvertes;” Giordano, “Roma e suo territorio;” Ponzi, +“Histoire naturelle du Latium;” De Prony, “Marais Pontins;” +Works of D’Ampère and Stendhal, &c.; Davies, “Pilgrimage +of the Tiber;” Francis Wey, “Rome;” Spallanzani, “Voyage +dans les Deux-Siciles;” Smyth, “Sicily and its Islands;” +Dolomieu, “Voyage aux îles de Lipari;” De Quatrefages, +“Souvenirs d’un naturaliste;” La Marmora, “Voyage en +Sardaigne, Description statistique, physique et politique +de l’île;” Mantegazza, “Profili e paesaggi della +Sardegna;” Von Maltzan, “Reise auf der Insel Sardinien;” +Spano, “Itinerario della Sardegna;” Correnti e Maestri, +“Statistica dell’ Italia.”</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch60" id="fn60">60</a> +Area of the kingdom of Italy, 114,413 square +miles; population in 1875, 27,482,174.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch61" id="fn61">61</a> +Pié di Monte, Piedmont, or +Piemonte, <i>i.e.</i> mountain-foot.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch62" id="fn62">62</a> +Principal Alpine summits of Italy:—Monte +Viso, 12,585 feet; Grand Paradis, 13,271 feet; Monte della +Disgrazia, 11,840 feet; Adamello, 11,677 feet; Antelao, +10,680 feet; Brunone (Orobia range), 10,370 feet; Generoso, +5,670 feet; Monte Baldo, 7,310 feet; Monte Bolca, 3,143 +feet.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch63" id="fn63">63</a> +Altitudes:—Source of the Po, 6,400 feet; +Saluzzo, 1,200 feet; Turin, 755 feet; Pavia (mouth of +Ticino), 330 feet; Piacenza, 217 feet; Cremona, 150 feet; +Mantua, 89 feet; Ferrara, 20 feet.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch64" id="fn64">64</a> +Italian Alpine lakes having an area of more than five square miles:―</p> + +<div class="dtblbox"> +<table class="fsz6 borall" summary=""> +<tr> + <th class="borall" rowspan="2">Name.</th> + <th class="borall" rowspan="2">Average Area.<br />Sq. Miles.</th> + <th class="borall" rowspan="2">Average Altitude.<br />Feet.</th> + <th class="borall" colspan="2">Depth, Feet.</th> + <th class="borall" rowspan="2">Capacity.<br />Millions + of Galls.</th></tr> +<tr> + <th class="borall">Max.</th> + <th class="borall">Average.</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Lake of Orta</td> + <td class="tdright">5·4</td> + <td class="tdright">1,122</td> + <td class="tdright">820(?)</td> + <td class="tdright">490(?)</td> + <td class="tdright">462,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Verbano, or Lago Maggiore</td> + <td class="tdright">81·4</td> + <td class="tdright">646</td> + <td class="tdright">1,230</td> + <td class="tdright">690</td> + <td class="tdright">9,680,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Lake of Varese</td> + <td class="tdright">6·2</td> + <td class="tdright">771</td> + <td class="tdright">85</td> + <td class="tdright">33</td> + <td class="tdright">35,200</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Ceresio, or Lake of Lugano</td> + <td class="tdright">19·3</td> + <td class="tdright">889</td> + <td class="tdright">950</td> + <td class="tdright">490</td> + <td class="tdright">1,584,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Lario, or Lake of Como</td> + <td class="tdright">60·2</td> + <td class="tdright">663</td> + <td class="tdright">1,352</td> + <td class="tdright">810</td> + <td class="tdright">7,700,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Sebino, or Lake of Iseo</td> + <td class="tdright">23·0</td> + <td class="tdright">646</td> + <td class="tdright">980</td> + <td class="tdright">490</td> + <td class="tdright">1,980,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Lake of Idro</td> + <td class="tdright">5·4</td> + <td class="tdright">1,240</td> + <td class="tdright">400(?)</td> + <td class="tdright">(?)</td> + <td class="tdright">(?)</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Benaco, or Lake of Garda</td> + <td class="tdright">115·8</td> + <td class="tdright">226</td> + <td class="tdright">960(?)</td> + <td class="tdright">490</td> + <td class="tdright">9,900,000</td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtblbox--></div><!--dftnt--> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch65" id="fn65">65</a> +Volume of Adda and Ticino at their point of +egress from the Alpine lakes, according to Lombardini:―</p> + +<p><i>Adda.</i>—Average 6,600, minimum 567, maximum 29,000 cubic +feet per second. <i>Ticino.</i>—Average 11,400, minimum 1,770, +maximum 77,400 cubic feet per second.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch66" id="fn66">66</a> +Principal rivers of Northern Italy:―</p> + +<div class="dtblbox"> +<table class="fsz6 borall" summary=""> +<tr> + <th class="borall" rowspan="2"></th> + <th class="borall" rowspan="2">Length. Miles.</th> + <th class="borall" rowspan="2">Area of Basin. Sq. Miles.</th> + <th class="borall" colspan="3">Volume + in Cubic Feet per Second.</th></tr> +<tr> + <th class="borall">Maximum.</th> + <th class="borall">Minimum.</th> + <th class="borall">Average.</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Isonzo</td> + <td class="tdright">80</td> + <td class="tdright">1,235</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">4,240?</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Tagliamento</td> + <td class="tdright">105</td> + <td class="tdright">800</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">5,300?</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Livenza</td> + <td class="tdright">72</td> + <td class="tdright">795</td> + <td class="tdright">25,400</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">1,400?</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Piave</td> + <td class="tdright">134</td> + <td class="tdright">2,010</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">11,300</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Sile</td> + <td class="tdright">37</td> + <td class="tdright">540</td> + <td class="tdright">1,550</td> + <td class="tdright">350</td> + <td class="tdright">700?</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Brenta</td> + <td class="tdright">105</td> + <td class="tdright">1,510</td> + <td class="tdright">30,000</td> + <td class="tdright">137</td> + <td class="tdright">1,930</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Bacchiglione</td> + <td class="tdright">74</td> + <td class="tdright">187</td> + <td class="tdright">320</td> + <td class="tdright">―</td> + <td class="tdright">1,270</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Adige</td> + <td class="tdright">246</td> + <td class="tdright">8,648</td> + <td class="tdright">85,000</td> + <td class="tdright">70</td> + <td class="tdright">16,950</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Po</td> + <td class="tdright">416</td> + <td class="tdright">26,799</td> + <td class="tdright">182,500</td> + <td class="tdright">550</td> + <td class="tdright">60,700</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Reno</td> + <td class="tdright">112</td> + <td class="tdright">1,930</td> + <td class="tdright">53,500</td> + <td class="tdright">35</td> + <td class="tdright">8,300</td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtblbox--></div><!--dftnt--> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch67" id="fn67">67</a> +Average volume of the canals of the valley of +the Po (cubic feet per second):—Muzza, 2,153; Naviglio +Grande, 1,800; Canal Cavour, 1,482; Martesana, 918 cubic +feet.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch68" id="fn68">68</a> +Humidity of the air at Milan, 74·5 per cent.; +annual rainfall at Milan, 38·8 in.; at Turin, 31·8 in.; at +Tolmezza, on the Upper Tagliamento, 82·3 in.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch69" id="fn69">69</a> +Mean annual temperature of Turin, 53·10° F.; +hottest month (April), 73·13°; coldest month (January), +33·10°. Milan: mean, 14·04°; July, 74·84°; January, 23·26°. +Venice: mean, 55·52° F.; July, 25·06°; January, 35·28°.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch70" id="fn70">70</a></p> + +<div class="dtbl10"> +<table class="borall" summary=""> +<tr> + <th class="borall"></th> + <th class="borall">Area,<br />Square Miles.<br />Dec. 31st, 1875.</th> + <th class="borall">Population.</th> + <th class="borall">Density.</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Piemont</td> + <td class="tdright">11,308</td> + <td class="tdright">2,995,213</td> + <td class="tdright">265</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Lombardy</td> + <td class="tdright">9,084</td> + <td class="tdright">3,553,913</td> + <td class="tdright">391</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Venice</td> + <td class="tdright">9,060</td> + <td class="tdright">2,733,406</td> + <td class="tdright">302</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Emilia</td> + <td class="tdright">7,921</td> + <td class="tdright">2,153,381</td> + <td class="tdright">272</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright">Total</td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">37,373</span></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">11,435,913</span></td> + <td class="tdright">306</td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtbl10--></div><!--dftnt--> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch71" id="fn71">71</a> +Population of the principal towns of Piemont +(1871):—Turin, 192,442; Alessandria, 29,102; Novarra, +24,185; Vercelli, 20,626; Casale Monferrato, 20,436; Asti, +19,466; Novi Ligure, 12,162; Mondovi, 11,958; Cuneo, +11,859; Pinerolo, 11,832; Biella, 11,814; Saluzzo, 9,796; +Savigliano, 9,544; Bra, 9,196; Alba, 9,147; Chieri, 8,986; +Tortona, 8,620; Acqui, 8,332; Fossano, 7,272; Carmagnola, +3,830.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch72" id="fn72">72</a> +Population of the towns of Lombardy +(1871):—Milan (Milano), 261,985; Brescia, 38,906; Bergamo, +34,555; Cremona, 30,919; Pavia, 29,618; Mantua (Mantova), +26,687; Como, 24,350; Lodi, 19,088; Monza, 17,431; +Vigevano, 14,096; Busto Arsizio, 12,909; Varese, 12,605; +Voghera, 11,903; Treviglio, 11,883.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch73" id="fn73">73</a> +Population of the principal towns of Emilia +(1871):—Bologna, 89,104; Parma, 41,915; Piacenza, 34,908; +Ferrara, 33,327; Modena, 30,854; Faenza, 23,752; Ravenna, +21,774; Reggio, 19,131; Imola, 18,189; Cesena, 17,594; +Forli, 15,324; Rimini, 9,747; Lugo, 8,664; Comacchio, +7,007.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch74" id="fn74">74</a> +Tonnage of vessels which entered and +cleared (including the coasting trade):—588,095 tons in +1865; 1,070,600 tons in 1875. Value of imports by sea +(1874):—£5,960,200; of exports, £2,848,040.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch75" id="fn75">75</a> +Population of the principal towns of Venetia +(1871):—Venice (Venezia), 128,901; Verona, 65,876; Padua +(Padova), 52,011; Vicenza, 26,994; Udine, 22,692; Chioggia, +19,841; Treviso 18,547; Cavarzere, 12,336; Vittoria +(formerly called Ceneda), 10,533; Adria, 9,834; Rovigo, +7,974; Feltre, 6,570; Belluno, 5,770; Este, 5,743.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch76" id="fn76">76</a> +Area, 2,153 square miles; population (1871), +843,250; density, 391.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch77" id="fn77">77</a> +Principal altitudes in Liguria:—Clapier de +Pagarin, 10,073 feet; Col di Tenda, 6,146 feet; Monte +Carsino, 8,794 feet; Col d’Altare, 1,600 feet; Col di +Giovi, 1,538 feet; Monte Penna, 5,709 feet.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch78" id="fn78">78</a> +Average temperature of Genoa, 60·8° F.; days +with rain, 121; rainfall, 45 inches. Average temperature of +San Remo, 62·6; days with rain, 45; rainfall, 3·15 in.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch79" id="fn79">79</a> +Tonnage of vessels which entered and cleared +(including coasting vessels):—1861, 1,936,764; 1867, +2,330,000; 1875, 3,109,796 tons. In the last-named year +3,144 sailing vessels and 970 steamers entered in the coast +trade, 1,462 sailing vessels and 860 steamers from abroad.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch80" id="fn80">80</a> +Annual produce of olive oil in the province of +Porto Maurizio, which includes San Remo, 778,500 gallons.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch81" id="fn81">81</a> +Population of the principal towns of Liguria +(1871):—Genoa (Genova), 132,521; Savona, 24,851; +Spezia, 15,636; San Pier d’Arena, 15,568; Sestri Ponente, +9,605; San Remo, 9,017; Chiavari, 8,414; +Oneglia, 7,944.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch82" id="fn82">82</a> +Area of Tuscany, 9,287 square miles; +population (1871), 1,983,810; density, 214.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch83" id="fn83">83</a> +Altitudes (in English feet):―</p> + +<p><i>Apennines.</i>—Alps of Succiso, 6,625; Alps of Camporaghena +(Garfagnana), 6,565; Monte Cimone, 7,111; Monte Falterone, +or Falterona, 5,407.</p> + +<p><i>Passes.</i>—Pass of Pontremoli, or La Cisa (Sarzana to +Parma), 3,410; Pass of Fiumalbo (Lucca to Modena), 3,940; +Pass of Futa, or Pietramala (Florence to Bologna), 3,002; +Pass of Camaldoli, 3,290.</p> + +<p><i>Anti-Apennines.</i>—Pisanino (Alpe Apuana), 6,608; Pietra +Marina (Monte Albano), 1,886; Prato Magno, 5,183; Alpe di +Catenaja, 4,595 feet.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch84" id="fn84">84</a> +134,000 tons of marble were quarried in 1873, +valued at nearly £500,000 sterling.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch85" id="fn85">85</a> +In 1873 5,466 vessels of 920,626 tons entered: +5,314 vessels of 901,533 tons cleared, inclusive of +coasting vessels.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch86" id="fn86">86</a> +Area, 85 square miles; population, 21,722 souls.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch87" id="fn87">87</a> +Population of the principal towns of Tuscany +(in 1871):—Florence (Firenze), 167,093; Leghorn (Livorno), +89,462; Pisa, 41,796; Siena, 22,965; Lucca, 21,286; Prato, +15,924; Carrara, 10,848; Pistoja, 12,966; Arezzo, 11,151; +Viareggio, 9,983; Pontedera, 7,991; San Casciano, 6,862; +Fojano della Chiana, 6,127; Empoli, 5,949; Volterra, 5,796; +Massa Maritima, 5,766; Porto Ferrajo, 5,779; Fucecchio, +5,755; Figline Valdarno, 5,673; Montalcino, 5,186; +Pontassieve, 5,141; Pontelungo, 5,039; Buti, 5,029; Massa, +4,786; Orbetello, 4,674; Pontremoli, 4,473.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch88" id="fn88">88</a></p> + +<div class="dtbl10"> +<table class="fsz6 borall" summary=""> +<tr> + <th class="borall"></th> + <th class="borall">Area,<br />Square Miles.</th> + <th class="borall">Population<br />(1871).</th> + <th class="borall">Density.</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright">Rome</td> + <td class="tdright">4,552</td> + <td class="tdright">836,700</td> + <td class="tdright">184</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright">Umbria</td> + <td class="tdright">3,720</td> + <td class="tdright">549,600</td> + <td class="tdright">148</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright">Marches</td> + <td class="tdright">3,751</td> + <td class="tdright">915,420</td> + <td class="tdright">244</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright">Abruzzos</td> + <td class="tdright">4,898</td> + <td class="tdright">918,770</td> + <td class="tdright">188</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright"></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">16,921</span></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">3,220,490</span></td> + <td class="tdright">190</td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtbl10--></div><!--dftnt--> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch89" id="fn89">89</a> +<span class="smcap">V<b>OLCANIC</b></span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>AKES</b></span>:—<i>Bolsena</i>: area, 42 sq. m.; +height, 995 ft.; depth, 460 ft. <i>Bracciano</i>: area, 22 sq. +m.; height, 495 ft.; depth, 820 ft. <i>Albano</i>: area, 2·3 +sq. m.; height, 1,000 ft.; depth, 466 ft. <i>Nemi</i>: area, +0·8 sq. m.; height, 1,108 ft.; depth, 164 ft. <span class="smcap">S<b>HALLOW</b></span> + <span class="smcap">L<b>AKES</b></span>:—<i>Trasimeno</i>: area, 46 sq. m.; height, 843 ft.; +depth, 21 ft. <i>Fucino</i> (in 1860): area, 61 sq. m.; height, +2,300 ft.; depth, 92 ft.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch90" id="fn90">90</a> +Basin, 6,475 square miles; length, 260 miles, of which +60 are navigable.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch91" id="fn91">91</a> +Annual rainfall at Rome, 30·7 inches; at the +foot of the Apennines, 43·3 in.; on the summits, 94·5 in. +Volume of the Tiber: average 10,180 cubic ft.; maximum, +60,400 cubic ft.; minimum, 4,650 cubic ft., a second.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch92" id="fn92">92</a> +Water supply of some leading cities (in gallons):―</p> + +<div class="dtbl10"> +<table class="borall fsz6" summary=""> +<tr> + <th class="borall"></th> + <th class="borall">Per Second.</th> + <th class="borall">Per Day.</th> + <th class="borall">Per Inhabitant.</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Rome (1869)</td> + <td class="tdright">481</td> + <td class="tdright">41,580,000</td> + <td class="tdright">208  </td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Paris (1875)</td> + <td class="tdright">904</td> + <td class="tdright">78,100,000</td> + <td class="tdright">44  </td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">London (1874)</td> + <td class="tdright">1,262</td> + <td class="tdright">110,000,000</td> + <td class="tdright">27·5</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Glasgow (1874)</td> + <td class="tdright">373</td> + <td class="tdright">32,482,500</td> + <td class="tdright">52  </td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Washington (1870)</td> + <td class="tdright">741</td> + <td class="tdright">66,000,000</td> + <td class="tdright">660  </td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtbl10--></div><!--dftnt--> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch93" id="fn93">93</a> +Value of exports and imports, 1863, +£1,348,000; 1868, £999,660.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch94" id="fn94">94</a> +Tonnage of vessels which entered and cleared +at the ports of Latium in 1873:—Cività Vecchia, 520,000 +(1875, 600,351); Fiumicino, 63,000; Porto d’Anzio, 30,900; +Terracina, 335,000 tons.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch95" id="fn95">95</a> +Towns of Latium (1871):—Rome, 229,356 +(1876, 264,280); Viterbo, 16,326; Velletri, 14,798; +Cività Vecchia, 10,484; Ferentino, 8,360; Tivoli, 7,730; +Frosinone, 7,714; Subiaco, 6,990; Sezze, 6,659; Alatri, +6,393 inhabitants.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch96" id="fn96">96</a> +Population of the principal towns of Umbria +(1871):—Perugia, 16,708; Rieti, 12,905; Terni, 12,419; +Foligno, 8,471; Spoleto, 7,490; Orvieto, 7,423; Città di +Castello, 6,588; Assisi, 6,225; Gubbio, 5,343.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch97" id="fn97">97</a> +Tonnage of vessels which entered and cleared +from Ancona in the coast and foreign +trade; 258,292 tons in 1858, 372,877 tons in 1867, 751,689 +tons in 1875.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch98" id="fn98">98</a> +Towns of the Marches having over 10,000 +inhabitants:—Ancona, 35,111; Jesi, 13,472; Sinigaglia, +11,173; Ascoli-Piceno, 11,373; Fermo, 15,862; Macerata, +11,194; Pesaro, 12,375; Urbino, 10,194.</p> + +<p><i>Abruzzos</i>:—Lanciano, 15,432; Chieti, 14,321; Aquila, +13,513; Campobusso, 13,345; Solmona, 12,583; Vasto, +10,093.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch99" id="fn99">99</a> +Area of San Marino, 24 square miles; +population (1874), 7,816.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch100" id="fn100">100</a> +Area, exclusive of the Abruzzos, 28,002 square +miles; population, 6,251,750.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch101" id="fn101">101</a> +Mean annual temperature of Naples, 62° F.; +extremes, 23° and 104°; rainfall, 37 inches.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch102" id="fn102">102</a> +In 1868 69 per cent. of the men and 88 per +cent. of the women married in the Campania, the most +educated province of Naples, were not able to sign their +names. In the Basilicata the proportions were 85 and 96 per +cent. !</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch103" id="fn103">103</a> +In 1873 there were 363 fishing-boats, and +90,000 lbs. of coral, valued at £92,000, were obtained.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch104" id="fn104">104</a> +In 1864 10,694 vessels, of 1,496,500 tons +burden, entered and cleared the port of Naples; in 1875 +11,288 vessels, of 2,923,922 tons.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch105" id="fn105">105</a> +In 1862 1,100 vessels, of 75,000 tons, entered +and cleared at Brindisi; in 1875, 1,342 vessels, inclusive +of 396 steamers, of 771,096 tons, in the foreign trade.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch106" id="fn106">106</a> +Towns of Naples having over 10,000 inhabitants (in 1870):—Naples (Napoli), 421,803; Bari, +49,423; Foggia, 34,181; Andria, 32,678; Reggio, 29,854; Barletta, 27,444; Molfetta, 26,516; Corato, +26,018; Trani, 24,026; Bitonto, 23,087; Taranto, 22,858; Castellamare di Stabia, 22,037; Cerignola, +21,739; Lecce, 21,081; Salerno, 20,611; Aversa, 19,734; Bisceglia, 19,007; Torre del Greco, 18,950; +Catanzaro, 18,781; Potenza, 18,513; Gaeta, 18,385; Avellino, 18,260; Gerlizzi, 18,175; Maddaloni, +17,578; Afragola, 17,541; Francavilla Fontana, 17,457; Benevento, 17,370; Altamura, 17,004; Santa +Maria di Capua Vetere, 16,785; San Severo, 16,545; Torre dell’ Annunziata, 15,321; Ruvo di Puglia, +15,055; Monte Sant’ Angelo, 14,902; Rossano, 14,818; San Marco in Lamis, 14,540; Cosenza, 14,522; +Caserta, 14,578; Canosa di Puglia, 14,458; Ostuni, 14,422; Ariano di Puglia, 14,347; Matera, 14,262; +Monopoli, 13,800; Minervino Murge, 13,630; Martina Franca, 13,440; Campobasso, 13,345; Brindisi, +13,194; Lucera, 13,064; Acerra, 12,858; Ceglia Messacapio, 12,582; Gioja del Colla, 12,442; Pagani, +12,208; Fasano, 12,190; Capua, 12,174; Cittanova, 12,137; Palo di Colla, 11,887; Mola di Bari, 11,775; +Pozzuoli, 11,751; Rionera in Voltara, 11,520; Amalfi, 11,225; Resina, 11,132; Sarno, 10,933; San Giovanni +del Teduccio, 10,898; Nola, 10,771; Giugliano in Campania, 10,751; Lauria, 10,609; Frattamaggiore, +10,486; Corigliano Calabro, 10,481; Nicastro, 10,418; Cairano, 10,081; Montecorvo, 10,020; Conversano, +10,012.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch107" id="fn107">107</a> +Minimum width of the Strait of Messina, 10,330 feet; maximum depth, 1,090 feet; average depth, +246 feet.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch108" id="fn108">108</a> +Area of Sicily, 11,290 square miles; population in 1870, 2,565,300 +souls; density, 227.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch109" id="fn109">109</a> +Mean annual temperature at Palermo and +Messina, 64° F.; at Catania and Girgenti, 68° F.; rainfall +at Palermo, 26 inches.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch110" id="fn110">110</a> +The salt marshes of the province of Trapani +cover an area of 2,100 acres, and yielded, in 1865, 55,000 +tons of salt, valued at £24,200.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch111" id="fn111">111</a> +In 1862 27,596 vessels, of 1,825,232 tons +burden, entered and cleared from Sicilian ports; in 1869 +34,989 vessels, of 2,869,327 tons; in 1873 70,974 vessels, +of 5,942,700 tons. In 1875 the number of vessels and +tonnage which entered and cleared was—at Messina, 9,213 +vessels, of 2,335,144 tons; at Palermo, 11,692 vessels, of +1,812,195 tons; at Catania, 5,137 vessels, of 529,539 tons; +and at Trapani, 5,407 vessels, of 288,475 tons.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch112" id="fn112">112</a> +Towns of Sicily having more than 10,000 inhabitants (in 1871):—Palermo, 186,406; Messina, 71,921; +Catania, 84,397; Marsala, 34,202; Modica, 33,169; Trapani, 28,052; Acireale, 26,692; Caltagirone, +25,978; Ragusa Superiore, 21,494; Caltanissetta, 21,464; Canicatti, 20,908; Alcamo, 20,890; Castelvetrano, +20,420; Partinico, 20,098; Syracuse (Siracusa), 20,035; Termini Imerese, 19,646; Girgenti, +19,603; Sciacca, 18,896; Piazza Armerina, 18,252; Vittoria, 17,528; Giarre, 17,414; Comiso, 16,694; +Corleone, 16,150; Licata, 15,966; Favara, 15,233; Vizzini, 14,942; Terranova di Sicilia, 14,911; +Paterno, 14,790; Noto, 14,767; Aderno, 14,673; Bronte, 14,589; Nicosia, 14,544; Castrogiovanni, +14,511; Barcellona or Pozzo di Gotto, 14,471; Salemi, 14,096; Palma di Montechiaro, 13,497; Monreale, +13,496; Gangi, 13,057; San Cataldo, 12,899; Biancavilla, 12,631; Partana, 12,467; Mazzara del Valle, +12,155; Leonforte, 12,010; Mazzarino, 11,951; Avola, 11,912; Agira, 11,876; Bagheria, 11,651; Riesi, +11,548; Agosta, 11,382; Castellamare del Golfo, 11,280; Mistretta, 11,218; Racalmuto, 11,012; +Niscemi, 10,750; Sciecli, 10,724; Lentini, 10,578; Cefalù, 10,194; Froina, 10,193; Grammicheli, 10,192; +Pietraperzia, 10,149; +Palazzolo Acreide, 10,132.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch113" id="fn113">113</a> +Area and population of the Liparic Islands:—Lipari, 12·4 square miles, 14,000 inhabitants; Vulcano, +9·7 square miles, 100 inhabitants; Panaria and neighbouring islets, 7·7 square miles, 200 inhabitants; +Stromboli, 7·7 square miles, 500 inhabitants; Salina, 10·8 square miles, 4,500 inhabitants; Felicudi, +5·9 square miles, 800 inhabitants; Alicudi, 3 square miles, 300 inhabitants. Total, 57·2 square miles, +18,400 inhabitants.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch114" id="fn114">114</a> +Pantellaria, 39·7 square miles, 6,000 +inhabitants; Linosa, 4·6 square miles, 900 inhabitants; +Lampedusa, 3 square miles, 600 inhabitants.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch115" id="fn115">115</a> +The tonnage of vessels which enter and clear annually from foreign ports amounts to 4,300,000 +tons; the value of dutiable articles imported is nearly £9,000,000 sterling, and the value of the exports +about the same.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch116" id="fn116">116</a> +Area of Malta, Gozzo, and Comino, 146 square +miles; population 149,084, inclusive of 7,309 military and +their families.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch117" id="fn117">117</a> +Area, 9,440 square miles; population (1871), +636,500.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch118" id="fn118">118</a> +In 1873 11,256 vessels, of 1,080,000 tons, +entered and cleared the five ports of the island. In 1875 +2,516 vessels, of 504,756 tons, entered and cleared at +Cagliari alone, the increase since 1861 having been nearly +100 per cent.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch119" id="fn119">119</a> +Population of the principal towns of Sardinia +(1871):—Cagliari, 31,9 5; Sassari, 30,542; Alghero, 8,769; +Ozieri, 7,965; Iglesias, 7,191; Oristano, 6,963; Terranova, +1,976.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch120" id="fn120">120</a> +Agricultural statistics of Italy, 1869 +(according to Maestri):—<i>Distribution of Area</i>:—Fields, +vineyards, and orchards, 27,267,360 acres; olive +plantations, 1,371,400 acres; chestnut plantations, +1,445,000 acres; forests, 10,240,400 acres; meadows, +2,900,000 acres; pastures, 13,337,000 acres. <i>Annual +Produce</i>:—Cereals, 206,300,000 bushels (value +£84,000,000); potatoes, 27,500,000 bushels (£2,000,000); +wines, 880,000,000 gallons (£44,000,000); raw silk, +6,889,437 lbs. in 1873, 6,305,214 lbs. in 1874; tobacco, +7,235,000 lbs.; oil, 3,747,850 lbs. (£8,800,000); +chestnuts, 14,860,000 bushels. <i>Domesticated Animals</i> +(1868):—1,196,128 horses, 3,489,125 heads of cattle, +8,674,527 sheep and goats, 1,553,582 pigs.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch121" id="fn121">121</a> +Annual mineral produce of Italy (in +tons):—Iron, 85,000; copper, 13,000; lead, 32,250; zinc, +30,000; coal, 110,750; sulphur, 285,611; salt, 388,000; +besides small quantities of silver, nickel, mercury, &c.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch122" id="fn122">122</a> +<i>Occupations</i>:—Amongst every 1,000 +inhabitants there are 342 agriculturists; 163 miners and +artisans; 29 commercial men; 23 artists and scientific men; +7 priests; 6 officials; 1 soldier; 31 “proprietors;” 21 +domestic servants; 13 paupers; and 382 without occupation.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch123" id="fn123">123</a> +In 1874 there were 10,929 vessels (including +138 steamers), of a burden of 1,031,889 tons; 37,560 +vessels, of 7,580,317 tons, entered from or cleared for +foreign ports; 197,896 vessels, of 16,500,000 tons, entered +and cleared in the home trade. Of every 1,000 tons engaged +in the foreign commerce, 368 sailed under the Italian, +266 under the English, and 173 under the French flag. The +commerce with France engaged 1,779,672 tons; that with +England 1,388,300 tons; and that with Austria 998,740 +tons.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch124" id="fn124">124</a> +In 1876 4,791 miles of railway had been opened for traffic, and 460 miles were building. There +were also 1,858 miles of canals and navigable rivers, and 77,140 miles +of public roads.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch125" id="fn125">125</a> +<i>Public Schools</i> (1872):—58,322 elementary +and evening schools, 2,274,999 pupils; 1,082 superior +schools, 64,044 pupils; 21 universities, 10,000 students; +651 professional, technical, and art schools, 33,311 +students. Total, 60,076 schools, &c., with 2,382,354 pupils +and students.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch126" id="fn126">126</a></p> + +<div class="dtbl10"> +<table class="fsz6 borall" summary=""> +<tr> + <th class="borall"></th> + <th class="borall">1861.</th> + <th class="borall">1873.</th> + <th class="borall">1875.</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Expenditure</td> + <td class="tdright">£24,206,920</td> + <td class="tdright">£61,704,000</td> + <td class="tdright">£56,618,600</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Revenue</td> + <td class="tdright">£18,332,880</td> + <td class="tdright">£52,384,000</td> + <td class="tdright">£55,499,800</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Deficit</td> + <td class="tdright">£<span class="spsubsum">5,874,040</span></td> + <td class="tdright">£<span class="spsubsum">9,340,000</span></td> + <td class="tdright">£<span class="spsubsum">1,118,800</span></td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">National Debt</td> + <td class="tdright">£100,000,000</td> + <td class="tdright">£402,400,000</td> + <td class="tdright">£460,000,000</td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtbl10--></div><!--dftnt--> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch127" id="fn127">127</a> +<i>Authorities</i>:—Marmocchi, “Géographie de la +Corse;” Gregorovius, “Corsica;” Pr. Mérimée, “Voyage en +Corse.”</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch128" id="fn128">128</a> +Area of Corsica, 3,378 square miles; +length from north to south, 114 miles; width, 52 miles; +development of coast-line, 300 miles.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch129" id="fn129">129</a> +From north to south:—Monte Padro, 7,846 +feet; Monte Cinto, 8,878 feet; Paglia Orba, 8,283 feet; +Rotondo, 8,607 feet; +Monte d’Oro, 7,890 feet; Incudine, 6,746 feet.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch130" id="fn130">130</a> +Mean annual temperature at Bastia, 66·7° F.; +rainfall, 23 inches.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch131" id="fn131">131</a> +Area, 3,378 square miles; population in 1740, +120,380; in 1872, 259,861.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch132" id="fn132">132</a> +<i>Average annual produce</i>:—Cereals, 2,613,000 +bushels; oil, 3,300,000 gallons; wine, 6,600,000 gallons.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch133" id="fn133">133</a> +Towns of Corsica (1872):—Bastia, 17,950; Ajaccio, 16,550; Corte, 5,450; Sartène, 4,150; Bonifacio, +3,600; Bastelica, 2,950; Calenzana, 2,600; Calvi, 2,175 inhabitants.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch134" id="fn134">134</a> +Authorities:—Coello, F. de Luxan y A. +Pascual, “Reseñas Geográfica, Geológica y Agrícola de +España;” Baron Davillier et Gust. Doré, “Voyage en +Espagne;” De Laborde, “Itinéraire Descriptif de l’Espagne;” +Bory de Saint-Vincent, “Résumé Géographique de la Péninsule +Ibérique;” De Verneuil et Collomb, “Mémoires Géologiques +sur l’Espagne;” Ford, “Handbook for Travellers in Spain;” +Fern. Garrido, “L’Espagne Contemporaine;” Cherbuliez, +“L’Espagne Politique;” Ed. Quinet, “Mes Vacances en +Espagne;” Th. Gautier, “Tras los Montes,” “Voyage en +Espagne;” M. Willkomm, “Die Pyrenäische Halbinsel,” +“Strand- und Steppengebiete der iberischen Halbinsel;” +George Sand, “Un Hiver à Majorque;” Ludw. Salvator, +“Balearen in Wort und Bild;” Bladé, “Études Géographiques +sur la Vallée d’Andorre;” W. von Humboldt, “Urbewohner +Spaniens;” Eug. Cordier, “Organisation de la Famille chez +les Basques;” Paul Broca, “Mémoires d’Anthropologie.”</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch135" id="fn135">135</a> +Area of the Iberian peninsula, exclusive of +the Balearic Islands, 225,605 square miles; area of Spain, +191,104 square miles; of Portugal (without the Azores), +34,501 square miles. Average height, according to Leipoldt, +2,300 feet.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch136" id="fn136">136</a> +Contour of peninsula, 2,015 miles, of which +1,301 are on the Atlantic, and 714 on the Mediterranean. +Width of the isthmus of the Pyrenees, 260 miles.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch137" id="fn137">137</a></p> + +<div class="dtblbox"> +<table class="fsz6 borall" summary=""> +<tr> + <th class="borall"></th> + <th class="borall">Area.</th> + <th class="borall">Population<br />(1870).</th> + <th class="borall">Density.</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Basin of the Duero (Leon and + Old Castile, exclusive of Logroño and Santander)</td> + <td class="tdright">36,593 sq. m.</td> + <td class="tdright">2,550,000</td> + <td class="tdright">69</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Basins of the Tajo and the Guadiana</td> + <td class="tdright">44,719 sq. m.</td> + <td class="tdright">2,276,000</td> + <td class="tdright">51</td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtblbox--></div><!--dftnt--> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch138" id="fn138">138</a> +Average rainfall at Madrid, 10·7 inches; evaporation, 72·6 inches.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch139" id="fn139">139</a> +Mean annual temperature, 57·9°; extremes, 104° and 14° F.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch140" id="fn140">140</a> +Population of the principal towns of the +Castiles (1870):—<i>Old Castile</i>: Valladolid, 60,000; +Burgos, 14,000; Salamanca, 13,500; Palencia, 13,000; +Zamora, 9,000; Segovia, 7,000; Leon, 7,000; Ávila, 6,000. +<i>New Castile</i>: Madrid, 332,000; Toledo, 17,500; Almagro, +14,000; Daimiel, 13,000; Ciudad Real, 12,000; Val de +Peñas, 11,000; Almaden, 9,000; Manzanares, 9,000; Cuenca, +7,000; Talavera de la Reyna, 7,500; Guadalajara, 6,000. +<i>Estremadura</i>: Badajoz, 22,000; Don Benito, 15,000; +Cáceres, 12,000; Villanueva de la Serena, 8,000; Plasencia, +6,000; Mérida, 6,000.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch141" id="fn141">141</a> +Area of the basin of the Guadalquivir, 21,000 +square miles; area of Andalusia, 28,370 square miles; +population (1870), 2,749,629; density, 91.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch142" id="fn142">142</a></p> + +<div class="dtbl10"> +<table class="fsz6 borall" summary=""> +<tr> + <th class="borall"></th> + <th class="borall">Mean Annual<br />Temp.,<br />°F.</th> + <th class="borall">Rainfall.<br />Year,<br />in.</th> + <th class="borall">Rainfall.<br />Oct.–March,<br />in.</th> + <th class="borall">Rainfall.<br />April–Sept.,<br />in.</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Granada</td> + <td class="tdright">66</td> + <td class="tdright">48·5</td> + <td class="tdright">40·3</td> + <td class="tdright">8·2</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Seville</td> + <td class="tdright">68</td> + <td class="tdright">26·1</td> + <td class="tdright">23·1</td> + <td class="tdright">3·0</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Gibraltar</td> + <td class="tdright">70</td> + <td class="tdright">28·9</td> + <td class="tdright">20·3</td> + <td class="tdright">8·6</td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtbl10--></div><!--dftnt--> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch143" id="fn143">143</a> +Export of wine from Cádiz and Santa +María:—1858, 3,597,000 gallons; 1862, 5,115,000 gallons; +1873, 10,446,480 gallons, valued at £2,937,000.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch144" id="fn144">144</a> +In 1873 600,000 tons of pyrites were exported +from the district of Huelva, of which 340,000 tons came +from the mine of Tharsis.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch145" id="fn145">145</a> +In 1874 3,639 vessels, of 616,060 tons burden, +entered; the imports had a value of £633,700, the exports +(consisting for the most part of wine) of £3,116,000.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch146" id="fn146">146</a> +Approximate population of the principal towns of Andalusia:―</p> + +<p>Cádiz, 62,000; Jerez, 35,000; Chiclana, 22,000; Puerto de Santa María, 18,000; San Fernando, +18,000; Sanlúcar de Barrameda, 17,000; Puerto Real, 14,000; Arcos de la Frontera, 12,000; Algeciras, +18,000; Medina Sidonia, 10,500.</p> + +<p>Huelva, 10,000.</p> + +<p>Seville (Sevilla), 80,000; Ecija, 24,000; Carmona, 18,000; Osuna, 16,000; Utrera, 14,000; Lebrija, +12,000; Marchena, 12,000.</p> + +<p>Córdova, 45,000; Lucena, 16,000; Montilla, 15,500; Montoro, 12,000; Aguilar, 12,000; Baena, +14,500; Cabra, 11,500.</p> + +<p>Jaen, 18,000; Linares, 40,000; Ubeda, 15,000; Baeza, 15,000; Alcalá la Real, 11,500; Andújar, +9,500.</p> + +<p>Granada, 65,000; Loja, 15,000; Motril, 13,500; Baza, 13,500.</p> + +<p>Málaga, 92,000; Antequera, 30,000; Velez Málaga, 15,000; Ronda, 14,000.</p> + +<p>Almería, 27,000; Velez Rúbio, 13,000.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch147" id="fn147">147</a> +Gibraltar in 1871 had 16,454 inhabitants, +exclusive of the military: its annual revenue +exceeds £40,000, and the burden of the vessels which enter +and clear annually amounts to 3,500,000 tons.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch148" id="fn148">148</a></p> + +<div class="dtbl10"> +<table class="fsz6" summary=""> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Murcia</td> + <td class="tdright">10,450</td> + <td class="tdleft">square miles.</td> + <td class="tdright">660,040</td> + <td class="tdleft">inhabitants, or</td> + <td class="tdright">63 to a sq. m.</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Valencia</td> + <td class="tdright">8,896</td> + <td class="tdleft">square miles.</td> + <td class="tdright">1,401,833</td> + <td class="tdleft">inhabitants, or</td> + <td class="tdright">158 to a sq. m.</td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtbl10--></div><!--dftnt--> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch149" id="fn149">149</a> +82,000 tons of esparto grass are estimated +to have been collected in 1873, of which 67,000 tons were +exported to England.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch150" id="fn150">150</a> +Value of exports and imports in 1867, +£2,707,000.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch151" id="fn151">151</a> +Population of the principal towns of +the Mediterranean slope between Cabo de Gata and the +Ebro:—Valencia, 108,000; Murcia, 55,000; Lorca, 40,000; +Alicante, 31,000; Cartagena, 25,000; Orihuela, 21,000; +Castellon de la Plana, 20,000; Alcoy, 16,000; Albacete, +15,000; Játiva, 13,000; Alcira, 13,000; Almansa, 9,000.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch152" id="fn152">152</a> +Towns of Majorca:—Palma, 40,000; Manacor, +15,000; Felanitx, 10,500; Lluchmayor, 8,800; Pollenza, +8,000; Inca, 8,000; Soller, 8,000; Santañia, 8,000.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch153" id="fn153">153</a> +Catalonia, 12,483 square miles, 1,778,408 inhabitants; Aragon, 17,676 square miles, 928,718 +inhabitants.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch154" id="fn154">154</a> +Area of the basin of the Ebro, 25,100 square +miles; discharge during floods, 175,000 cubic feet, +average, 7,100 cubic feet; during summer, 1,750 cubic feet; +annual rainfall, 18 inches; surface drainage, 1·4 inches; +proportion between the two, 13 : 1.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch155" id="fn155">155</a> +<i>Zaragoza</i>:—Mean temperature, 61°; extremes, 106° and 21°; difference, 85°; rainfall, 13·6 inches. +<i>Barcelona</i>:—Mean temperature, 63°; extremes, 88° and 32°; difference, 56°; +rainfall, 15·7 inches.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch156" id="fn156">156</a> +In 1873 there were 700 cotton-mills, with +104,000 hands and 1,400,000 spindles, consuming 67,200,000 +lbs. of cotton.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch157" id="fn157">157</a> +Value of exports and imports in 1867, £10,691,000.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch158" id="fn158">158</a> +Population of the principal towns:—<i>Aragon</i>: Zaragoza, 56,000; Calatayud, 12,000; Huesca, 10,000; +Teruel, 7,000. <i>Catalonia</i> (Cataluña): Barcelona, 180,000; Reus, 25,000; Tortosa, 22,000; Mataró, 17,000; +Sabadell, 15,000; Manresa, 14,000; Tarragona, 13,000; Lérida, 12,000; Vich, 12,000; Badalona, 11,000; +Igualada, 10,500; Olot, 10,000; Tarrasa, 9,000; Gerona, +8,000; Figueras, 8,000.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch159" id="fn159">159</a> +Navarra and Basque provinces, 6,828 square +miles, 790,676 inhabitants; Logroño, 1,945 square miles, +182,941 inhabitants.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch160" id="fn160">160</a> +In 1875 Basque was spoken by 556,000 +individuals, viz. by 116,000 in France, by 340,000 in +the three Basque provinces of Spain, and by 100,000 in +Navarra.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch161" id="fn161">161</a> +Population of principal towns +(approximately):—Biscay (Vizcaya): Bilbao, 30,000. +<i>Guipúzcoa</i> St. +Sebastian, 15,000; Tolosa, 8,000. <i>Alava</i>: +Vitoria, 12,500. <i>Navarra</i>: Pamplona, 22,000; Estella, +6,000. <i>Logroño</i>: Logroño, 12,000; Calahorra, 7,000.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch162" id="fn162">162</a></p> + +<div class="dtbl10"> +<table class="fsz6" summary=""> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Santander</td> + <td class="tdright">2,113</td> + <td class="tdleft">sq. m.</td> + <td class="tdright">241,581</td> + <td class="tdleft">inhabitants</td> + <td class="tdright">114</td> + <td class="tdleft">to a sq. m.</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Asturias</td> + <td class="tdright">4,091</td> + <td class="tdleft">sq. m.</td> + <td class="tdright">610,883</td> + <td class="tdleft">inhabitants</td> + <td class="tdright">152</td> + <td class="tdleft">to a sq. m.</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Galicia</td> + <td class="tdright">11,344</td> + <td class="tdleft">sq. m.</td> + <td class="tdright">1,989,281</td> + <td class="tdleft">inhabitants</td> + <td class="tdright">176</td> + <td class="tdleft">to a sq. m.</td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtbl10--></div><!--dftnt--> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch163" id="fn163">163</a> +Climate in 1858:—<i>Oviedo</i>: 750 feet above the sea-level, mean temperature, 49·46° F.; extremes, 23·9° +and 82°; rainfall, 81·3 inches. <i>Santiago</i>: 720 feet above sea-level, mean temperature, 59·07°; extremes, 28° +and 95°; rainfall, 42·7 inches.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch164" id="fn164">164</a></p> + +<div class="dtblbox"> +<table class="fsz6 borall" summary=""> +<tr> + <th class="borall"></th> + <th class="borall">Area of<br />Catchment Basin.<br /> + Sq. m. per sec.</th> + <th class="borall">Length of<br />Main Branch.<br /> + Miles.</th> + <th class="borall">Average<br />Rainfall.<br /> + Inches.</th> + <th class="borall">Average<br />Discharge.<br /> + Cub. ft.</th> + <th class="borall">Surface Drainage<br />in Proportion + to Rainfall.<br />Per cent.</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Miño (and Sil)</td> + <td class="tdright">9,650</td> + <td class="tdright">190</td> + <td class="tdright">47</td> + <td class="tdright">17,700</td> + <td class="tdright">50</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Duero</td> + <td class="tdright">38,610</td> + <td class="tdright">507</td> + <td class="tdright">20</td> + <td class="tdright">22,950</td> + <td class="tdright">40</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Tajo (Tagus)</td> + <td class="tdright">28,960</td> + <td class="tdright">556</td> + <td class="tdright">16</td> + <td class="tdright">11,600</td> + <td class="tdright">33</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Guadiana (and Záncara)</td> + <td class="tdright">23,170</td> + <td class="tdright">553</td> + <td class="tdright">14</td> + <td class="tdright">5,680</td> + <td class="tdright">25</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Guadalquivir</td> + <td class="tdright">21,240</td> + <td class="tdright">348</td> + <td class="tdright">19</td> + <td class="tdright">9,220</td> + <td class="tdright">30</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Segura</td> + <td class="tdright">8,500</td> + <td class="tdright">217</td> + <td class="tdright">12</td> + <td class="tdright">710</td> + <td class="tdright">10</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Júcar</td> + <td class="tdright">5,800</td> + <td class="tdright">318</td> + <td class="tdright">13</td> + <td class="tdright">880</td> + <td class="tdright">15</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdleft">Ebro</td> + <td class="tdright">25,100</td> + <td class="tdright">466</td> + <td class="tdright">18</td> + <td class="tdright">7,100</td> + <td class="tdright">20</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright">Total</td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">161,030</span></td> + <td class="tdright"></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">16</span></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">75,810</span></td> + <td class="tdright"><span class="spsum">33</span></td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtblbox--></div><!--dftnt--> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch165" id="fn165">165</a> +Imports (1873), +£2,348,720; exports, £2,341,360.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch166" id="fn166">166</a> +Imports (1873), £310,227; exports, £210,532.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch167" id="fn167">167</a> +Imports (1873), £873,286; exports, £381,636.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch168" id="fn168">168</a> +Population of towns:—Santander, 21,000; +Oviedo, 9,000; Gijon, 6,000; Santiago de Compostela, +29,000; La Coruña, 20,000; Ferrol, 17,000; Lugo, 8,000; +Vigo, 6,000; Orense, 5,000; Pontevedra, 4,200.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch169" id="fn169">169</a> +Of the total area 26·1 per cent. consists of +arable land, 2·8 of vineyards, 1·7 of olive plantation, +13·7 of meadows and pasture, 16·3 per cent. of woods: 39·4 +per cent. are uncultivated. The total value of agricultural +produce is estimated at £80,000,000.</p> + +<p>The produce of the mines in 1871 represented a value of +£6,271,000.</p> + +<p>In 1865 there were enumerated 680,373 horses, 1,020,512 +mules, 1,298,334 asses, 2,967,303 heads of horned cattle, +22,468,969 sheep, 4,531,736 goats, 4,531,228 pigs, and +3,104 camels.</p> + +<p>The products of manufactures are estimated by Garrido +at £63,480,000. Imports (1871), £22,780,000, (1874) +£15,280,000; exports (1871), £17,688,000, (1874) +£16,120,000.</p> + +<p>Commercial marine (1874), 2,836 sea-going vessels +(inclusive of 212 steamers), of 625,184 tons, besides 6,498 +lighters (26,000 tons) and 12,000 fishing-boats.</p> + +<p>Railways, 3,602 miles in 1876.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch170" id="fn170">170</a> +Educational statistics (1870):―</p> + +<div class="dtbl10"> +<table class="fsz6 borall" summary=""> +<tr> + <th class="borall"></th> + <th class="borall">Men.</th> + <th class="borall">Women.</th> + <th class="borall">Total.</th></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright">Able to read and write</td> + <td class="tdright">2,414,000</td> + <td class="tdright">716,000</td> + <td class="tdright">3,130,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright">Able to read only</td> + <td class="tdright">317,000</td> + <td class="tdright">389,000</td> + <td class="tdright">706,000</td></tr> +<tr> + <td class="tdright">Illiterate</td> + <td class="tdright">5,035,000</td> + <td class="tdright">6,803,000</td> + <td class="tdright">11,838,000</td></tr> +</table></div><!--dtbl10--></div><!--dftnt--> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch171" id="fn171">171</a> +Revenue (1876–7), £26,300,069; estimated +expenditure, £26,251,518, of which more than half is for +army and navy; national debt, £420,322,000.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch172" id="fn172">172</a> +Link und Hoffmannsegg, “Voyage en Portugal;” +Minutoli, “Portugal und seine Kolonien;” Vogel, “Le +Portugal et ses Colonies;” Lady Jackson, “Fair Lusitania;” +Latouche, “Travels in Portugal.”</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch173" id="fn173">173</a> +Temperature of Coimbra (according to +Coello):—Year, 61·1°; winter, 52·2; spring, 63; summer, +68·9, autumn, 62·3; coldest month (January), 50·2; hottest +month (July), 69·4; difference, 19·2 F. Temperature of +Oporto (according to De Luiz, mean of eight years):—Year, +60·2; winter, 51·1; spring, 58·6; summer, 69·8; autumn, +61·2; coldest month (January), 50·2; hottest month +(August), 70·3; difference, 20·1 F.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch174" id="fn174">174</a> +Production of wine in Portugal before the +appearance of oidium, in 1853, 105,600,000 gallons. Average +annual produce of the vineyards of Alto-Douro (Oporto) in +1848, 11,726,000; in 1870, 11,374,000 gallons. Exports to +England, 3,718,000 gallons; Brazil, 994,000 gallons. In +1874 Oporto alone exported 6,623,000 gallons, or more than +ever before.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch175" id="fn175">175</a> +Imports and exports about £4,000,000.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch176" id="fn176">176</a> +Towns of over 5,000 inhabitants in Northern +Portugal (1864):—<i>Entre Douro e Minho</i>: Oporto, 86,257; +Braga, 19,512; Pavoa de Varzim, 10,110; Guimarães, 7,865; +Villanova de Gaia, 7,517; Vianna do Castello, 6,049; +Mattozinhos, 5,089. <i>Traz os Montes</i>: Chaves, 6,382; +Bragança, 5,111; Villa Real, 5,097. +<i>Beira</i>: Coimbra, 18,147; Ovar, 10,374; Covilhã, 9,022; Lamego, 8,638; Ilhavo, 8,215; +Murtoza, 7,666; Vizeu, 6,815; Castello Branco, 6,583; Avéiro, 6,557; Mira, 6,014; Soure, 5,855; Lavos, +5,837; Miranda do Corvo, +5,261; Paião, 5,097.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch177" id="fn177">177</a> +In 1874 Lisbon exported 5,900 tons of +potatoes, 447,450 gallons of olive oil, 4,400,000 gallons +of wine, 157,200 bushels of salt, 200,000 tons of copper +ore, figs, almonds, oranges, &c.: 4,092 vessels entered the +harbour.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch178" id="fn178">178</a> +Mean temperature of July, 90·6° F.; extremes +of temperature, 27·5° and 102° F.; cloudless days, +150.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch179" id="fn179">179</a> +In 1870 Portugal produced 320,000 tons of +salt, of which 184,000 tons were from Setúbal.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch180" id="fn180">180</a> +Towns of Estremadura having over 5,000 +inhabitants (1864):—Lisbon, 224,063; Setúbal, 13,134; +Santarem, 7,820; Torres Novas, 6,878; Caparica, 6,311; +Palmella, 6,260; Cezimbra, 5,797; Abrantes, 5,590; Cartaxo, +5,218; Louriçal, 5,182.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch181" id="fn181">181</a> +Towns of Southern Portugal having over 5,000 +inhabitants (1864):—<i>Alemtejo</i>: Evora, 11,965; Elvas, +11,086; Estremoz, 7,274; Beja, 7,060; Portalegre, 6,731; +Serpa, 5,595; Móura, 5,489; Castello +de Vido, 5,285; Campo Maior, 5,277. <i>Algarve</i>: Loulé, 12,156; Tavira, 10,903; Faro, 8,361; Lagos, +7,771; Olhão, 7,025; Alportel, 6,043; Villanova de Portimão, 5,531; São Bartholomeu de Messires, +5,318; Monchique, 5,251; Silves, 5,103.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch182" id="fn182">182</a> +For a list of Portuguese colonies see p. <a +href="#p500" title="go to p. 500">500.</a></p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch183" id="fn183">183</a> +In 1874 there were 2,649 elementary and +middle-class schools, attended by 122,004 pupils, besides a +university and nine special schools, with 4,300 students.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch184" id="fn184">184</a> +In 1875, 2,237 miles of royal high-roads, 600 +miles of railroads.</p></div> + +<div class="dftnt"><p class="pfirst"> +<a class="afnlabel" href="#fnanch185" id="fn185">185</a> +Value of exports and imports in 1840, +£4,016,320; in 1856, £8,127,400; 1875, £12,916,020. +The commercial marine consisted in 1875 of 433 vessels +(inclusive of 23 steamers), measuring 111,260 tons.</p></div> + +<div class="chapter" id="p501"> +<div class="dctr01"><img src="images/ib501.jpg" + width="600" height="109" alt="" /></div> + +<h2 class="h2herein" title="Index.">INDEX.</h2></div> +<div class="dp501"> +<p class="pndx">Abrántes, <a + href="#p490" title="go to p. 490">490</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Abruzzos, <a + href="#p258" title="go to p. 258">258</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Achelous, <a + href="#p048" title="go to p. 48">48</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Adrianople, <a href="#p106" title="go to p. 106">106</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ægadian Islands, <a + href="#p334" title="go to p. 334">334</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ægean Sea, <a + href="#p069" title="go to p. 69">69</a>, <a + href="#p095" title="go to p. 95">95</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ægina, <a + href="#p056" title="go to p. 56">56</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ægium, <a + href="#p067" title="go to p. 67">67</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Æolian Islands, <a + href="#p331" title="go to p. 331">331</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ætolia, <a + href="#p053" title="go to p. 53">53</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ætoliko, <a + href="#p049" title="go to p. 49">49</a>, <a + href="#p053" title="go to p. 53">53</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Aitone, <a + href="#p366" title="go to p. 366">366</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ajaccio, <a + href="#p365" title="go to p. 365">365</a>, <a + href="#p369" title="go to p. 369">369</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Albacete, <a + href="#p420" title="go to p. 420">420</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Albania, <a + href="#p115" title="go to p. 115">115</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Albanians, <a + href="#p044" title="go to p. 44">44</a>, <a + href="#p119" title="go to p. 119">119</a>, <a + href="#p120" title="go to p. 120">120</a>; in Italy, <a + href="#p295" title="go to p. 295">295</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Albano, <a + href="#p260" title="go to p. 260">260</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Alcalá, <a + href="#p393" title="go to p. 393">393</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Alcántara, <a + href="#p391" title="go to p. 391">391</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Alcóy, <a + href="#p420" title="go to p. 420">420</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Alecsandria, <a + href="#p170" title="go to p. 170">170</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Alemtejo, <a + href="#p490" title="go to p. 490">490</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Algarve, <a + href="#p490" title="go to p. 490">490</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Alhama, <a + href="#p422" title="go to p. 422">422</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Alhambra, <a + href="#p407" title="go to p. 407">407</a>, <a + href="#p408" title="go to p. 408">408</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Alicante, <a + href="#p417" title="go to p. 417">417</a>, <a + href="#p422" title="go to p. 422">422</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Almaden, <a + href="#p392" title="go to p. 392">392</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Almagro, <a + href="#p391" title="go to p. 391">391</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Almeida, <a + href="#p481" title="go to p. 481">481</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Almería, <a + href="#p412" title="go to p. 412">412</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Alpheus, <a + href="#p061" title="go to p. 61">61</a>, <a + href="#p063" title="go to p. 63">63</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Alps, <a + href="#p010" title="go to p. 10">10</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Alpujarras, <a + href="#p397" title="go to p. 397">397</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Amarante, <a + href="#p479" title="go to p. 479">479</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Anadoli-kavak, <a + href="#p104" title="go to p. 104">104</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ancona, <a + href="#p282" title="go to p. 282">282</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Andalusia, <a + href="#p394" title="go to p. 394">394</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Andorra, <a + href="#p438" title="go to p. 438">438</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Andros, <a + href="#p072" title="go to p. 72">72</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Anio, <a + href="#p273" title="go to p. 273">273</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Antequera, <a + href="#p412" title="go to p. 412">412</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Antimilos, <a + href="#p071" title="go to p. 71">71</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Antiparos, <a + href="#p071" title="go to p. 71">71</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Apennines, <a + href="#p257" title="go to p. 257">257</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Aquila, <a + href="#p284" title="go to p. 284">284</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Aragon, <a + href="#p427" title="go to p. 427">427</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Aragon Steppes, <a + href="#p436" title="go to p. 436">436</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Arán, <a + href="#p438" title="go to p. 438">438</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Aranjuez, <a + href="#p393" title="go to p. 393">393</a>, <a + href="#p394" title="go to p. 394">394</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Arcadia, <a + href="#p058" title="go to p. 58">58</a>, <a + href="#p065" title="go to p. 65">65</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Arezzo, <a + href="#p252" title="go to p. 252">252</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Argentaro, Monte, <a + href="#p243" title="go to p. 243">243</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Argolis, <a + href="#p059" title="go to p. 59">59</a>, <a + href="#p065" title="go to p. 65">65</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Argos, <a + href="#p068" title="go to p. 68">68</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Argostoli, <a + href="#p079" title="go to p. 79">79</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ariano, <a + href="#p305" title="go to p. 305">305</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Armenians, <a + href="#p102" title="go to p. 102">102</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Arno, <a + href="#p240" title="go to p. 240">240</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Arosa, <a + href="#p459" title="go to p. 459">459</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Arta, Gulf of, <a + href="#p048" title="go to p. 48">48</a>, <a + href="#p053" title="go to p. 53">53</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Aspromonte, <a + href="#p288" title="go to p. 288">288</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Astorga, <a + href="#p387" title="go to p. 387">387</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Asturias, <a + href="#p448" title="go to p. 448">448</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Astypalæa, <a + href="#p094" title="go to p. 94">94</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Athens, <a + href="#p054" title="go to p. 54">54</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Athos, Mount, <a + href="#p108" title="go to p. 108">108</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Attica, <a + href="#p053" title="go to p. 53">53</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Avéiro, <a + href="#p476" title="go to p. 476">476</a>, <a + href="#p481" title="go to p. 481">481</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ávila, <a + href="#p389" title="go to p. 389">389</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Azcoitia, <a + href="#p447" title="go to p. 447">447</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Azof, Sea of, <a + href="#p025" title="go to p. 25">25</a></p> +</div><!--dp501--> + +<div class="dp501"> +<p class="pndx">Badajoz, <a + href="#p391" title="go to p. 391">391</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Baéza, <a + href="#p407" title="go to p. 407">407</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Balagna, <a + href="#p365" title="go to p. 365">365</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Balearic Islands, <a + href="#p423" title="go to p. 423">423</a>–<a + href="#p427" title="go to p. 427">427</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Balkans, <a + href="#p133" title="go to p. 133">133</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Baragan, <a + href="#p159" title="go to p. 159">159</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Barcellos, <a + href="#p479" title="go to p. 479">479</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Barcelona, <a + href="#p436" title="go to p. 436">436</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Bari, <a + href="#p306" title="go to p. 306">306</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Barletta, <a + href="#p306" title="go to p. 306">306</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Basque Provinces, <a + href="#p439" title="go to p. 439">439</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Basques, <a + href="#p372" title="go to p. 372">372</a>, <a + href="#p442" title="go to p. 442">442</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Bastelica, <a + href="#p366" title="go to p. 366">366</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Bastia, <a + href="#p368" title="go to p. 368">368</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Batalha, <a + href="#p489" title="go to p. 489">489</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Batuecas, <a + href="#p387" title="go to p. 387">387</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Bayona, <a + href="#p459" title="go to p. 459">459</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Beja, <a + href="#p495" title="go to p. 495">495</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Belem, <a + href="#p487" title="go to p. 487">487</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Belgrad, <a + href="#p174" title="go to p. 174">174</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Bellas, <a + href="#p488" title="go to p. 488">488</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Benevento, <a + href="#p305" title="go to p. 305">305</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Berda, <a + href="#p179" title="go to p. 179">179</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Berici, <a + href="#p193" title="go to p. 193">193</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Berlingas, <a + href="#p483" title="go to p. 483">483</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Bessarabia, <a + href="#p164" title="go to p. 164">164</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Bidassoa, <a + href="#p437" title="go to p. 437">437</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Bientina, <a + href="#p245" title="go to p. 245">245</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Biguglia, <a + href="#p368" title="go to p. 368">368</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Bilbao, <a + href="#p446" title="go to p. 446">446</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Biscay, Bay of, <a + href="#p441" title="go to p. 441">441</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Black Sea, <a + href="#p025" title="go to p. 25">25</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Bœotia, <a + href="#p053" title="go to p. 53">53</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Bologna, <a + href="#p228" title="go to p. 228">228</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Bolsena, <a + href="#p259" title="go to p. 259">259</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Bomfica, <a + href="#p488" title="go to p. 488">488</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Bonifacio, <a + href="#p369" title="go to p. 369">369</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Bosnia, <a + href="#p127" title="go to p. 127">127</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Bosphorus, <a + href="#p098" title="go to p. 98">98</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Botosani, <a + href="#p169" title="go to p. 169">169</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Braga, <a + href="#p479" title="go to p. 479">479</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Bragança, <a + href="#p481" title="go to p. 481">481</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Braila, <a + href="#p170" title="go to p. 170">170</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Brenner, <a + href="#p222" title="go to p. 222">222</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Brindisi, <a + href="#p306" title="go to p. 306">306</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Bucharest, <a + href="#p168" title="go to p. 168">168</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Bulgaria, <a + href="#p131" title="go to p. 131">131</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Bulgarians, <a + href="#p138" title="go to p. 138">138</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Búrgos, <a + href="#p388" title="go to p. 388">388</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Bussaco, <a + href="#p481" title="go to p. 481">481</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Butrinto, <a + href="#p076" title="go to p. 76">76</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Buyukdere, <a + href="#p103" title="go to p. 103">103</a></p> +</div><!--dp501--> + +<div class="dp501"> +<p class="pndx">Cabo da Roca, <a + href="#p488" title="go to p. 488">488</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Cáceres, <a + href="#p391" title="go to p. 391">391</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Cádiz, <a + href="#p401" title="go to p. 401">401</a>, <a + href="#p410" title="go to p. 410">410</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Calabria, <a + href="#p287" title="go to p. 287">287</a>, <a + href="#p295" title="go to p. 295">295</a>, <a + href="#p296" title="go to p. 296">296</a>, <a + href="#p308" title="go to p. 308">308</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Calahorra, <a + href="#p448" title="go to p. 448">448</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Calamata, <a + href="#p067" title="go to p. 67">67</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Calatayud, <a + href="#p434" title="go to p. 434">434</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Calvi, <a + href="#p369" title="go to p. 369">369</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Caminha, <a + href="#p479" title="go to p. 479">479</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Campania, <a + href="#p289" title="go to p. 289">289</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Campo dell’ Oro, <a + href="#p365" title="go to p. 365">365</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Campo de Ourique, <a + href="#p492" title="go to p. 492">492</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Candia, <a + href="#p090" title="go to p. 90">90</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Canea, <a + href="#p092" title="go to p. 92">92</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Cantabrian Pyrenees, <a + href="#p451" title="go to p. 451">451</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Capri, <a + href="#p302" title="go to p. 302">302</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Capua, <a + href="#p304" title="go to p. 304">304</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Carcavellos, <a + href="#p487" title="go to p. 487">487</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Cardona, <a + href="#p431" title="go to p. 431">431</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Carghese, <a + href="#p366" title="go to p. 366">366</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Casabianda, <a + href="#p365" title="go to p. 365">365</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Cascães, <a + href="#p487" title="go to p. 487">487</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Caserta, <a + href="#p304" title="go to p. 304">304</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Casino, <a + href="#p304" title="go to p. 304">304</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Castelfollit, <a + href="#p431" title="go to p. 431">431</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Castel-Gandolfo, <a + href="#p361" title="go to p. 361">361</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Castiles, <a + href="#p377" title="go to p. 377">377</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Castro Marim, <a + href="#p495" title="go to p. 495">495</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Catalonia, <a + href="#p427" title="go to p. 427">427</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Catania, <a + href="#p325" title="go to p. 325">325</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Catanzari, <a + href="#p309" title="go to p. 309">309</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Celtiberians, <a + href="#p372" title="go to p. 372">372</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Celts, <a + href="#p372" title="go to p. 372">372</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Cephalonia, <a + href="#p078" title="go to p. 78">78</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Cephissus, <a + href="#p051" title="go to p. 51">51</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Cerigo, <a + href="#p069" title="go to p. 69">69</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Cezimbra, <a + href="#p490" title="go to p. 490">490</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Chalcidice, <a + href="#p107" title="go to p. 107">107</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Chalcis, <a + href="#p070" title="go to p. 70">70</a>, <a + href="#p071" title="go to p. 71">71</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Chaves, <a + href="#p481" title="go to p. 481">481</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Chiana, <a + href="#p244" title="go to p. 244">244</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Cintra, <a + href="#p483" title="go to p. 483">483</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Circassians, <a + href="#p142" title="go to p. 142">142</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Cithæron, <a + href="#p047" title="go to p. 47">47</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ciudad Real, <a + href="#p391" title="go to p. 391">391</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Civita Vecchia, <a + href="#p281" title="go to p. 281">281</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Coimbra, <a + href="#p481" title="go to p. 481">481</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Columbretes, <a + href="#p424" title="go to p. 424">424</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Comacchio, <a + href="#p220" title="go to p. 220">220</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Como, <a + href="#p198" title="go to p. 198">198</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Constantinople, <a + href="#p088" title="go to p. 88">88</a>, <a + href="#p098" title="go to p. 98">98</a>, <a + href="#p150" title="go to p. 150">150</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Copais, <a + href="#p051" title="go to p. 51">51</a>, <a + href="#p052" title="go to p. 52">52</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Corcubion, <a + href="#p459" title="go to p. 459">459</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Córdova, <a + href="#p406" title="go to p. 406">406</a>, <a + href="#p408" title="go to p. 408">408</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Corfu, <a + href="#p075" title="go to p. 75">75</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Corinth, <a + href="#p057" title="go to p. 57">57</a>, <a + href="#p066" title="go to p. 66">66</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Corsica, <a + href="#p363" title="go to p. 363">363</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Corte, <a + href="#p366" title="go to p. 366">366</a>, <a + href="#p369" title="go to p. 369">369</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Corunna, <a + href="#p459" title="go to p. 459">459</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Cosenza, <a + href="#p309" title="go to p. 309">309</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Cotrone, <a + href="#p309" title="go to p. 309">309</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Cranz, <a + href="#p065" title="go to p. 65">65</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Crato, <a + href="#p495" title="go to p. 495">495</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Crete, <a + href="#p090" title="go to p. 90">90</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Cuenca, <a + href="#p392" title="go to p. 392">392</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Cyclades, <a + href="#p070" title="go to p. 70">70</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Cyllene, <a + href="#p057" title="go to p. 57">57</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Cythera, <a + href="#p069" title="go to p. 69">69</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Cythnos, <a + href="#p071" title="go to p. 71">71</a></p> +</div><!--dp501--> + +<div class="dp501"> +<p class="pndx">Daimiel, <a + href="#p391" title="go to p. 391">391</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Danube, <a + href="#p136" title="go to p. 136">136</a>, <a + href="#p159" title="go to p. 159">159</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Dardanelles, <a + href="#p105" title="go to p. 105">105</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Dede Aghach, <a + href="#p107" title="go to p. 107">107</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Delos, <a + href="#p071" title="go to p. 71">71</a>, <a + href="#p074" title="go to p. 74">74</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Delphi, <a + href="#p047" title="go to p. 47">47</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Despeñaperros, <a + href="#p395" title="go to p. 395">395</a>, <a + href="#p396" title="go to p. 396">396</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Dobruja, <a + href="#p134" title="go to p. 134">134</a>, <a + href="#p142" title="go to p. 142">142</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Dodona, <a + href="#p118" title="go to p. 118">118</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Dolomites, <a + href="#p192" title="go to p. 192">192</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Dora Baltea, <a + href="#p197" title="go to p. 197">197</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Dóuro, <a + href="#p473" title="go to p. 473">473</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Drin, <a + href="#p115" title="go to p. 115">115</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Drina, <a + href="#p174" title="go to p. 174">174</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Duero, <a + href="#p383" title="go to p. 383">383</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Durango, <a + href="#p447" title="go to p. 447">447</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Durazzo, <a + href="#p125" title="go to p. 125">125</a></p> +</div><!--dp501--> + +<div class="dp501"> +<p class="pndx">Ebro, <a + href="#p427" title="go to p. 427">427</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ebro Delta, <a + href="#p432" title="go to p. 432">432</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ecija, <a + href="#p402" title="go to p. 402">402</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Elba, <a + href="#p255" title="go to p. 255">255</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Elche, <a + href="#p417" title="go to p. 417">417</a>–<a + href="#p419" title="go to p. 419">419</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Eleusis, <a + href="#p055" title="go to p. 55">55</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Elis, <a + href="#p059" title="go to p. 59">59</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">El Torcal, <a + href="#p398" title="go to p. 398">398</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Élvas, <a + href="#p495" title="go to p. 495">495</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Etna, <a + href="#p311" title="go to p. 311">311</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Epakto, <a + href="#p053" title="go to p. 53">53</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Epidaurus, <a + href="#p068" title="go to p. 68">68</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Epirus, <a + href="#p115" title="go to p. 115">115</a>, <a + href="#p117" title="go to p. 117">117</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Erasinus, <a + href="#p061" title="go to p. 61">61</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Erymanthus, <a + href="#p057" title="go to p. 57">57</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Escorial, <a + href="#p393" title="go to p. 393">393</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Espinho, <a + href="#p479" title="go to p. 479">479</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Espozende, <a + href="#p479" title="go to p. 479">479</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Estrella, <a + href="#p483" title="go to p. 483">483</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Estremadura, <a + href="#p377" title="go to p. 377">377</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Estremoz, <a + href="#p495" title="go to p. 495">495</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Etruscans, <a + href="#p248" title="go to p. 248">248</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Eubœa, <a + href="#p070" title="go to p. 70">70</a>, <a + href="#p071" title="go to p. 71">71</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Euganean Hills, <a + href="#p193" title="go to p. 193">193</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Euripus, <a + href="#p070" title="go to p. 70">70</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Eurotas, <a + href="#p062" title="go to p. 62">62</a>, <a + href="#p067" title="go to p. 67">67</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Euskarians, <a + href="#p442" title="go to p. 442">442</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Evora, <a + href="#p495" title="go to p. 495">495</a></p> +</div><!--dp501--> + +<div class="dp501"> +<p class="pndx">Falticeni, <a + href="#p169" title="go to p. 169">169</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Farilhãos, <a + href="#p483" title="go to p. 483">483</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Faro, <a + href="#p495" title="go to p. 495">495</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ferdinandea, <a + href="#p316" title="go to p. 316">316</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ferrara, <a + href="#p228" title="go to p. 228">228</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ferrol, <a + href="#p459" title="go to p. 459">459</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Figuéira da Foz, <a + href="#p481" title="go to p. 481">481</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Fiumicino, <a + href="#p271" title="go to p. 271">271</a>, <a + href="#p273" title="go to p. 273">273</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Florence, <a + href="#p251" title="go to p. 251">251</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Foggia, <a + href="#p306" title="go to p. 306">306</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Fontibre, <a + href="#p432" title="go to p. 432">432</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Fucino, <a + href="#p262" title="go to p. 262">262</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Fuenterrabia, <a + href="#p447" title="go to p. 447">447</a></p> +</div><!--dp501--> + +<div class="dp501"> +<p class="pndx">Gaeta, <a + href="#p304" title="go to p. 304">304</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Gaia, <a + href="#p479" title="go to p. 479">479</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Galaxidi, <a + href="#p053" title="go to p. 53">53</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Galatz, <a + href="#p169" title="go to p. 169">169</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Galicia, <a + href="#p448" title="go to p. 448">448</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Gallipoli, <a + href="#p106" title="go to p. 106">106</a>, <a + href="#p308" title="go to p. 308">308</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Gastuni, <a + href="#p063" title="go to p. 63">63</a>, <a + href="#p064" title="go to p. 64">64</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Gata, Sierra de, <a + href="#p381" title="go to p. 381">381</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Gaytanos, <a + href="#p399" title="go to p. 399">399</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Genoa, <a + href="#p234" title="go to p. 234">234</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Gerania, <a + href="#p048" title="go to p. 48">48</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Gerona, <a + href="#p437" title="go to p. 437">437</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Gibraltar, <a + href="#p400" title="go to p. 400">400</a>, <a + href="#p413" title="go to p. 413">413</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Gibraltar, Strait of, <a + href="#p026" title="go to p. 26">26</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Gijon, <a + href="#p459" title="go to p. 459">459</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Gipsies, <a + href="#p373" title="go to p. 373">373</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Girgenti, <a + href="#p329" title="go to p. 329">329</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Giurgevo, <a + href="#p170" title="go to p. 170">170</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Giurgiu, <a + href="#p170" title="go to p. 170">170</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Golden Horn, <a + href="#p098" title="go to p. 98">98</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Golfolino of Arno, <a + href="#p240" title="go to p. 240">240</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Granada, <a + href="#p407" title="go to p. 407">407</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Grand Paradis, <a + href="#p191" title="go to p. 191">191</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Gráo de Valencia, <a + href="#p424" title="go to p. 424">424</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Grédos, Sierra de, <a + href="#p380" title="go to p. 380">380</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Greece, <a + href="#p036" title="go to p. 36">36</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Greeks in Turkey, <a + href="#p102" title="go to p. 102">102</a>, <a + href="#p114" title="go to p. 114">114</a>, <a + href="#p141" title="go to p. 141">141</a>, <a + href="#p153" title="go to p. 153">153</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Guadalajara, <a + href="#p393" title="go to p. 393">393</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Guadalaviar, <a + href="#p415" title="go to p. 415">415</a>, <a + href="#p417" title="go to p. 417">417</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Guadalquivir, <a + href="#p395" title="go to p. 395">395</a>, <a + href="#p399" title="go to p. 399">399</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Guadarrama, <a + href="#p378" title="go to p. 378">378</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Guadiana, <a + href="#p395" title="go to p. 395">395</a>, <a + href="#p383" title="go to p. 383">383</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Gubbio, <a + href="#p282" title="go to p. 282">282</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Guernica, <a + href="#p447" title="go to p. 447">447</a>, <a + href="#p453" title="go to p. 453">453</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Guetaria, <a + href="#p447" title="go to p. 447">447</a>, <a + href="#p452" title="go to p. 452">452</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Guimarães, <a + href="#p479" title="go to p. 479">479</a>, <a + href="#p480" title="go to p. 480">480</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Guipúzcoa, <a + href="#p446" title="go to p. 446">446</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Gythion, <a + href="#p065" title="go to p. 65">65</a></p> +</div><!--dp501--> + +<div class="dp501"> +<p class="pndx">Hagio Rumeli, <a + href="#p091" title="go to p. 91">91</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Helicon, <a + href="#p047" title="go to p. 47">47</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Hellenes, <a + href="#p041" title="go to p. 41">41</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Hellespont, <a + href="#p105" title="go to p. 105">105</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Hercules, Tower of, <a + href="#p459" title="go to p. 459">459</a>, <a + href="#p463" title="go to p. 463">463</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Hermopolis, <a + href="#p074" title="go to p. 74">74</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Herzegovina, <a + href="#p127" title="go to p. 127">127</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Huelva, <a + href="#p406" title="go to p. 406">406</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Hydra, <a + href="#p060" title="go to p. 60">60</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Hylice, <a + href="#p051" title="go to p. 51">51</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Hymettus, <a + href="#p048" title="go to p. 48">48</a></p> +</div><!--dp501--> + +<div class="dp501"> +<p class="pndx">Iberia, <a + href="#p369" title="go to p. 369">369</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Iberians, <a + href="#p372" title="go to p. 372">372</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ibiza, <a + href="#p425" title="go to p. 425">425</a>, <a + href="#p427" title="go to p. 427">427</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ile Rousse, <a + href="#p369" title="go to p. 369">369</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Illyria, <a + href="#p127" title="go to p. 127">127</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Imbro, <a + href="#p096" title="go to p. 96">96</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Insua, <a + href="#p479" title="go to p. 479">479</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ionian Isles, <a + href="#p075" title="go to p. 75">75</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Iri, <a + href="#p062" title="go to p. 62">62</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ischia, <a + href="#p291" title="go to p. 291">291</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Iseo, <a + href="#p200" title="go to p. 200">200</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Isker, <a + href="#p132" title="go to p. 132">132</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ismail, <a + href="#p169" title="go to p. 169">169</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Italy, <a + href="#p183" title="go to p. 183">183</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ithaca, <a + href="#p078" title="go to p. 78">78</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Iviza, <a + href="#p425" title="go to p. 425">425</a>, <a + href="#p427" title="go to p. 427">427</a></p> +</div><!--dp501--> + +<div class="dp501"> +<p class="pndx">Jarama, <a + href="#p394" title="go to p. 394">394</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Jaizquibel, <a + href="#p439" title="go to p. 439">439</a>, <a + href="#p445" title="go to p. 445">445</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Jerez, <a + href="#p405" title="go to p. 405">405</a>, <a + href="#p410" title="go to p. 410">410</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Júcar, <a + href="#p415" title="go to p. 415">415</a>, <a + href="#p417" title="go to p. 417">417</a></p> +</div><!--dp501--> + +<div class="dp501"> +<p class="pndx">Katavothras, <a + href="#p048" title="go to p. 48">48</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Kilia, <a + href="#p169" title="go to p. 169">169</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Kraguyevatz, <a + href="#p174" title="go to p. 174">174</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Kraina, <a + href="#p129" title="go to p. 129">129</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Krushevatz, <a + href="#p173" title="go to p. 173">173</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Kutzo-Wallachians, <a + href="#p044" title="go to p. 44">44</a></p> +</div><!--dp501--> + +<div class="dp501"> +<p class="pndx">Laconia, <a + href="#p069" title="go to p. 69">69</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">La Coruña, <a + href="#p459" title="go to p. 459">459</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Lago Maggiore, <a + href="#p198" title="go to p. 198">198</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Lagoons of Venice, <a + href="#p202" title="go to p. 202">202</a>, <a + href="#p207" title="go to p. 207">207</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">La Mancha, <a + href="#p378" title="go to p. 378">378</a>, <a + href="#p385" title="go to p. 385">385</a>, <a + href="#p391" title="go to p. 391">391</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Lamego, <a + href="#p478" title="go to p. 478">478</a>, <a + href="#p481" title="go to p. 481">481</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Lamia, <a + href="#p056" title="go to p. 56">56</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Larouco, <a + href="#p480" title="go to p. 480">480</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Laurium, <a + href="#p048" title="go to p. 48">48</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Lebrija, <a + href="#p409" title="go to p. 409">409</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Leça, <a + href="#p479" title="go to p. 479">479</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Lecco, <a + href="#p308" title="go to p. 308">308</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Leghorn, <a + href="#p255" title="go to p. 255">255</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Leiria, <a + href="#p489" title="go to p. 489">489</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Lemnos, <a + href="#p097" title="go to p. 97">97</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Lentini, <a + href="#p316" title="go to p. 316">316</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Leon, <a + href="#p377" title="go to p. 377">377</a>, <a + href="#p387" title="go to p. 387">387</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Lepanto, <a + href="#p053" title="go to p. 53">53</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Lerida, <a + href="#p435" title="go to p. 435">435</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Leucadia, <a + href="#p077" title="go to p. 77">77</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Lezirias, <a + href="#p482" title="go to p. 482">482</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Liébana, <a + href="#p450" title="go to p. 450">450</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Liguria, <a + href="#p230" title="go to p. 230">230</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Lima, <a + href="#p475" title="go to p. 475">475</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Limans, <a + href="#p161" title="go to p. 161">161</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Limia, <a + href="#p475" title="go to p. 475">475</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Lináres, <a + href="#p405" title="go to p. 405">405</a>, <a + href="#p407" title="go to p. 407">407</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Lipari, <a + href="#p331" title="go to p. 331">331</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Lisbon, <a + href="#p484" title="go to p. 484">484</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Livadia, <a + href="#p056" title="go to p. 56">56</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Logroño, <a + href="#p439" title="go to p. 439">439</a>, <a + href="#p448" title="go to p. 448">448</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Lorca, <a + href="#p417" title="go to p. 417">417</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Loreto, <a + href="#p283" title="go to p. 283">283</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Loulé, <a + href="#p495" title="go to p. 495">495</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Lucca, <a + href="#p253" title="go to p. 253">253</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Lugo, <a + href="#p459" title="go to p. 459">459</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Lycæus, <a + href="#p058" title="go to p. 58">58</a></p> +</div><!--dp501--> + +<div class="dp501"> +<p class="pndx">Maccalubas, <a + href="#p317" title="go to p. 317">317</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Macedonia, <a + href="#p098" title="go to p. 98">98</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Madrid, <a + href="#p392" title="go to p. 392">392</a>, <a + href="#p393" title="go to p. 393">393</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Maffia, <a + href="#p321" title="go to p. 321">321</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Mafra, <a + href="#p488" title="go to p. 488">488</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Magra, <a + href="#p254" title="go to p. 254">254</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Mainotes, <a + href="#p043" title="go to p. 43">43</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Majorca, <a + href="#p425" title="go to p. 425">425</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Málaga, <a + href="#p412" title="go to p. 412">412</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Malaria, <a + href="#p247" title="go to p. 247">247</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Malea, <a + href="#p057" title="go to p. 57">57</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Mallorca, <a + href="#p425" title="go to p. 425">425</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Malta, <a + href="#p335" title="go to p. 335">335</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Malvoisie, <a + href="#p067" title="go to p. 67">67</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Mancha Real, <a + href="#p402" title="go to p. 402">402</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Manfredonia, <a + href="#p306" title="go to p. 306">306</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Mantinea, <a + href="#p061" title="go to p. 61">61</a>, <a + href="#p062" title="go to p. 62">62</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Mantua, <a + href="#p227" title="go to p. 227">227</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Marathon, <a + href="#p056" title="go to p. 56">56</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Marathonisi, <a + href="#p065" title="go to p. 65">65</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Marchena, <a + href="#p409" title="go to p. 409">409</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Marches, <a + href="#p257" title="go to p. 257">257</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Maremma, <a + href="#p246" title="go to p. 246">246</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Mariana, <a + href="#p367" title="go to p. 367">367</a>, <a + href="#p368" title="go to p. 368">368</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Maritza, <a + href="#p136" title="go to p. 136">136</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Marmara, Sea of, <a + href="#p104" title="go to p. 104">104</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Marsala, <a + href="#p326" title="go to p. 326">326</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Matapan, <a + href="#p059" title="go to p. 59">59</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Mataró, <a + href="#p437" title="go to p. 437">437</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Mattozinhos, <a + href="#p479" title="go to p. 479">479</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Medina del Campo, <a + href="#p389" title="go to p. 389">389</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Mediterranean, <a + href="#p023" title="go to p. 23">23</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Megara, <a + href="#p056" title="go to p. 56">56</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Mega-Spileon, <a + href="#p057" title="go to p. 57">57</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Menorca, <a + href="#p426" title="go to p. 426">426</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Mérida, <a + href="#p391" title="go to p. 391">391</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Merinos, <a + href="#p385" title="go to p. 385">385</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Messenia, <a + href="#p065" title="go to p. 65">65</a>, <a + href="#p068" title="go to p. 68">68</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Messina, <a + href="#p325" title="go to p. 325">325</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Messina, Strait of, <a + href="#p309" title="go to p. 309">309</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Meteora, <a + href="#p113" title="go to p. 113">113</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Methone, <a + href="#p059" title="go to p. 59">59</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Milan, <a + href="#p225" title="go to p. 225">225</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Milos, <a + href="#p072" title="go to p. 72">72</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Minho, <a + href="#p455" title="go to p. 455">455</a>, <a + href="#p473" title="go to p. 473">473</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Miño, <a + href="#p455" title="go to p. 455">455</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Minorca, <a + href="#p426" title="go to p. 426">426</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Mirdits, <a + href="#p116" title="go to p. 116">116</a>, <a + href="#p123" title="go to p. 123">123</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Missolonghi, <a + href="#p049" title="go to p. 49">49</a>, <a + href="#p053" title="go to p. 53">53</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Mistra, <a + href="#p068" title="go to p. 68">68</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Moldavia, <a + href="#p157" title="go to p. 157">157</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Moncayo, <a + href="#p429" title="go to p. 429">429</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Monchique, <a + href="#p495" title="go to p. 495">495</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Mondego, <a + href="#p473" title="go to p. 473">473</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Monjuich, <a + href="#p436" title="go to p. 436">436</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Monserrat, <a + href="#p431" title="go to p. 431">431</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Monte Cinto, <a + href="#p363" title="go to p. 363">363</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Monte Gargano, <a + href="#p287" title="go to p. 287">287</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Montemor, <a + href="#p495" title="go to p. 495">495</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Montenegro, <a + href="#p179" title="go to p. 179">179</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Monte Pellegrino, <a + href="#p316" title="go to p. 316">316</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Montepulciano, <a + href="#p253" title="go to p. 253">253</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Monte Viso, <a + href="#p189" title="go to p. 189">189</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Montieri, <a + href="#p242" title="go to p. 242">242</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Montilla, <a + href="#p409" title="go to p. 409">409</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Moors in Spain, <a + href="#p372" title="go to p. 372">372</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Morava, <a + href="#p127" title="go to p. 127">127</a>, <a + href="#p173" title="go to p. 173">173</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Morea, <a + href="#p056" title="go to p. 56">56</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Múrcia, <a + href="#p413" title="go to p. 413">413</a>, <a + href="#p417" title="go to p. 417">417</a>–<a + href="#p420" title="go to p. 420">420</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Mycenæ, <a + href="#p068" title="go to p. 68">68</a></p> +</div><!--dp501--> + +<div class="dp501"> +<p class="pndx">Naples, <a + href="#p286" title="go to p. 286">286</a>, <a + href="#p300" title="go to p. 300">300</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Narenta, <a + href="#p128" title="go to p. 128">128</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Naupactus, <a + href="#p053" title="go to p. 53">53</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Navarino, <a + href="#p067" title="go to p. 67">67</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Navarra, <a + href="#p439" title="go to p. 439">439</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Navas de Tolosa, <a + href="#p395" title="go to p. 395">395</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Naxos, <a + href="#p071" title="go to p. 71">71</a>, <a + href="#p074" title="go to p. 74">74</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Nea Kaimeni, <a + href="#p072" title="go to p. 72">72</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Negroponte, <a + href="#p071" title="go to p. 71">71</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Nemea, <a + href="#p068" title="go to p. 68">68</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Nicosia, <a + href="#p326" title="go to p. 326">326</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Nish, <a + href="#p143" title="go to p. 143">143</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Noya, <a + href="#p459" title="go to p. 459">459</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Numancia, <a + href="#p379" title="go to p. 379">379</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Numantia, <a + href="#p387" title="go to p. 387">387</a></p> +</div><!--dp501--> + +<div class="dp501"> +<p class="pndx">Oeiras, <a + href="#p487" title="go to p. 487">487</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Okhrida, <a + href="#p116" title="go to p. 116">116</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Olite, <a + href="#p448" title="go to p. 448">448</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Olivença, <a + href="#p495" title="go to p. 495">495</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Olot, <a + href="#p437" title="go to p. 437">437</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Olto, <a + href="#p158" title="go to p. 158">158</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Olympus, Mount, <a + href="#p110" title="go to p. 110">110</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Oporto, <a + href="#p478" title="go to p. 478">478</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Orense, <a + href="#p459" title="go to p. 459">459</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Orezza, <a + href="#p368" title="go to p. 368">368</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Orihuela, <a + href="#p417" title="go to p. 417">417</a>, <a + href="#p419" title="go to p. 419">419</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Orvieto, <a + href="#p282" title="go to p. 282">282</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ostia, <a + href="#p271" title="go to p. 271">271</a>, <a + href="#p273" title="go to p. 273">273</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Osuna, <a + href="#p409" title="go to p. 409">409</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Otranto, <a + href="#p306" title="go to p. 306">306</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ovar, <a + href="#p481" title="go to p. 481">481</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Oviedo, <a + href="#p459" title="go to p. 459">459</a></p> +</div><!--dp501--> + +<div class="dp501"> +<p class="pndx">Pæstum, <a + href="#p303" title="go to p. 303">303</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Paiz do Vinho, <a + href="#p477" title="go to p. 477">477</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Palatine Hill, <a + href="#p277" title="go to p. 277">277</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Palencia, <a + href="#p387" title="go to p. 387">387</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Palermo, <a + href="#p322" title="go to p. 322">322</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Palma, <a + href="#p429" title="go to p. 429">429</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Palmanova, <a + href="#p229" title="go to p. 229">229</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Pamisus, <a + href="#p063" title="go to p. 63">63</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Pantellaria, <a + href="#p334" title="go to p. 334">334</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Parnassus, <a + href="#p047" title="go to p. 47">47</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Parnes, <a + href="#p047" title="go to p. 47">47</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Parnon, <a + href="#p057" title="go to p. 57">57</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Paros, <a + href="#p071" title="go to p. 71">71</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Patones, <a + href="#p394" title="go to p. 394">394</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Patras, <a + href="#p066" title="go to p. 66">66</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Pelasgians, <a + href="#p041" title="go to p. 41">41</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Peloponnesus, <a + href="#p056" title="go to p. 56">56</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Pelorus, <a + href="#p315" title="go to p. 315">315</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Peñagache, <a + href="#p473" title="go to p. 473">473</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Peñas de Europa, <a + href="#p449" title="go to p. 449">449</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Peneus, <a + href="#p064" title="go to p. 64">64</a>, <a + href="#p113" title="go to p. 113">113</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Penha de Cintra, <a + href="#p489" title="go to p. 489">489</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Peniche, <a + href="#p483" title="go to p. 483">483</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Pentelicus, <a + href="#p047" title="go to p. 47">47</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Pergusa, <a + href="#p317" title="go to p. 317">317</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Perugia, <a + href="#p263" title="go to p. 263">263</a>, <a + href="#p282" title="go to p. 282">282</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Pesaro, <a + href="#p283" title="go to p. 283">283</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Pezo da Régoa, <a + href="#p477" title="go to p. 477">477</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Phanar, <a + href="#p102" title="go to p. 102">102</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Phenea, <a + href="#p063" title="go to p. 63">63</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Pheneus, <a + href="#p060" title="go to p. 60">60</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Phigalia, <a + href="#p068" title="go to p. 68">68</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Phlegrean Fields, <a + href="#p290" title="go to p. 290">290</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Phonia, <a + href="#p060" title="go to p. 60">60</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Piave, <a + href="#p191" title="go to p. 191">191</a>, <a + href="#p205" title="go to p. 205">205</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Pietra Mala, <a + href="#p194" title="go to p. 194">194</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Pindus, <a + href="#p045" title="go to p. 45">45</a>, <a + href="#p116" title="go to p. 116">116</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Pirnatza, <a + href="#p063" title="go to p. 63">63</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Pizzighettone, <a + href="#p360" title="go to p. 360">360</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Plasencia, <a + href="#p391" title="go to p. 391">391</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Po, River, <a + href="#p210" title="go to p. 210">210</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Po, Valley of, <a + href="#p189" title="go to p. 189">189</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Pomarão, <a + href="#p495" title="go to p. 495">495</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Pompeii, <a + href="#p301" title="go to p. 301">301</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ponte de Lima, <a + href="#p479" title="go to p. 479">479</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Pontevedra, <a + href="#p459" title="go to p. 459">459</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Pontine Marshes, <a + href="#p267" title="go to p. 267">267</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Poros, <a + href="#p069" title="go to p. 69">69</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Portalegre, <a + href="#p495" title="go to p. 495">495</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Port Mahon, <a + href="#p427" title="go to p. 427">427</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Porto, <a + href="#p478" title="go to p. 478">478</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Portugal, <a + href="#p469" title="go to p. 469">469</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Potenza, <a + href="#p308" title="go to p. 308">308</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Pozzuoli, <a + href="#p290" title="go to p. 290">290</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Prato, <a + href="#p253" title="go to p. 253">253</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Prevesa, <a + href="#p125" title="go to p. 125">125</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Prisrend, <a + href="#p125" title="go to p. 125">125</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Procida, <a + href="#p291" title="go to p. 291">291</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Pruth, <a + href="#p159" title="go to p. 159">159</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Puigcerda, <a + href="#p435" title="go to p. 435">435</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Pylos, <a + href="#p066" title="go to p. 66">66</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Pyrenees, <a + href="#p429" title="go to p. 429">429</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Pyrgos, <a + href="#p067" title="go to p. 67">67</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Pytiuses, <a + href="#p424" title="go to p. 424">424</a>, <a + href="#p425" title="go to p. 425">425</a></p> +</div><!--dp501--> + +<div class="dp501"> +<p class="pndx">Queluz, <a + href="#p488" title="go to p. 488">488</a></p> +</div><!--dp501--> + +<div class="dp501"> +<p class="pndx">Rascia, <a + href="#p129" title="go to p. 129">129</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ravenna, <a + href="#p228" title="go to p. 228">228</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Reggio, <a + href="#p294" title="go to p. 294">294</a>, <a + href="#p309" title="go to p. 309">309</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Reinosa Pass, <a + href="#p454" title="go to p. 454">454</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Reni, <a + href="#p169" title="go to p. 169">169</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Reno, <a + href="#p208" title="go to p. 208">208</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Rhium, <a + href="#p053" title="go to p. 53">53</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Rhodope, <a + href="#p135" title="go to p. 135">135</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Rias of Galicia, <a + href="#p454" title="go to p. 454">454</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Rimini, <a + href="#p222" title="go to p. 222">222</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Rioja, <a + href="#p448" title="go to p. 448">448</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Rio Tinto, <a + href="#p405" title="go to p. 405">405</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Riviera, <a + href="#p230" title="go to p. 230">230</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Rocca d’Anfo, <a + href="#p360" title="go to p. 360">360</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Rodosto, <a + href="#p108" title="go to p. 108">108</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Roman Campagna, <a + href="#p265" title="go to p. 265">265</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Rome, <a + href="#p274" title="go to p. 274">274</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ronda, <a + href="#p413" title="go to p. 413">413</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Rosas, <a + href="#p437" title="go to p. 437">437</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Rota, <a + href="#p405" title="go to p. 405">405</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Rumania (Roumania), <a + href="#p155" title="go to p. 155">155</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Rumanians, <a + href="#p162" title="go to p. 162">162</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Rumili-kavak, <a + href="#p104" title="go to p. 104">104</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Ruphia, <a + href="#p063" title="go to p. 63">63</a></p> +</div><!--dp501--> + +<div class="dp501"> +<p class="pndx">Sado, <a + href="#p492" title="go to p. 492">492</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Sagres, <a + href="#p493" title="go to p. 493">493</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Saguntum, <a + href="#p423" title="go to p. 423">423</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Salamanca, <a + href="#p388" title="go to p. 388">388</a>, <a + href="#p389" title="go to p. 389">389</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Salamis, <a + href="#p056" title="go to p. 56">56</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Salerno, <a + href="#p302" title="go to p. 302">302</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Saloniki, <a + href="#p109" title="go to p. 109">109</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Salpi, <a + href="#p305" title="go to p. 305">305</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Salvaterra, <a + href="#p482" title="go to p. 482">482</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Samothrace, <a + href="#p096" title="go to p. 96">96</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">San Fernando, <a + href="#p410" title="go to p. 410">410</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Sanlúcar, <a + href="#p400" title="go to p. 400">400</a>, <a + href="#p410" title="go to p. 410">410</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">San Marino, <a + href="#p284" title="go to p. 284">284</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Santa Maura, <a + href="#p077" title="go to p. 77">77</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Santander, <a + href="#p448" title="go to p. 448">448</a>, <a + href="#p458" title="go to p. 458">458</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Santarem, <a + href="#p490" title="go to p. 490">490</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Santiago de Compostela, <a + href="#p460" title="go to p. 460">460</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Santoña, <a + href="#p458" title="go to p. 458">458</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Santorin, <a + href="#p072" title="go to p. 72">72</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">São João da Foz, <a + href="#p479" title="go to p. 479">479</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Saragossa, <a + href="#p434" title="go to p. 434">434</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Sarayevo, <a + href="#p130" title="go to p. 130">130</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Sarno, <a + href="#p303" title="go to p. 303">303</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Sciacca, <a + href="#p330" title="go to p. 330">330</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Scutari, <a + href="#p115" title="go to p. 115">115</a>, <a + href="#p125" title="go to p. 125">125</a>, <a + href="#p180" title="go to p. 180">180</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Scyros, <a + href="#p070" title="go to p. 70">70</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Sebino, <a + href="#p200" title="go to p. 200">200</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Segovia, <a + href="#p389" title="go to p. 389">389</a>, <a + href="#p390" title="go to p. 390">390</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Segre, <a + href="#p431" title="go to p. 431">431</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Segura, <a + href="#p416" title="go to p. 416">416</a>, <a + href="#p417" title="go to p. 417">417</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Serbelloni, <a + href="#p201" title="go to p. 201">201</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Serchio, <a + href="#p242" title="go to p. 242">242</a>, <a + href="#p253" title="go to p. 253">253</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Serena, <a + href="#p391" title="go to p. 391">391</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Sereth, <a + href="#p159" title="go to p. 159">159</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Serra da Estrella, <a + href="#p474" title="go to p. 474">474</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Serra de Monchique, <a + href="#p492" title="go to p. 492">492</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Serra do Gerez, <a + href="#p474" title="go to p. 474">474</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Servia, <a + href="#p172" title="go to p. 172">172</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Servians, <a + href="#p119" title="go to p. 119">119</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Setúbal, <a + href="#p490" title="go to p. 490">490</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Seville, <a + href="#p409" title="go to p. 409">409</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Shil, <a + href="#p158" title="go to p. 158">158</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Sicily, <a + href="#p309" title="go to p. 309">309</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Sierra Morena, <a + href="#p395" title="go to p. 395">395</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Sierra Nevada, <a + href="#p396" title="go to p. 396">396</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Sil, <a + href="#p455" title="go to p. 455">455</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Silves, <a + href="#p495" title="go to p. 495">495</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Sobrarbe, <a + href="#p430" title="go to p. 430">430</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Sofia, <a + href="#p143" title="go to p. 143">143</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Soria, <a + href="#p387" title="go to p. 387">387</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Spain, <a + href="#p369" title="go to p. 369">369</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Spaniards, <a + href="#p373" title="go to p. 373">373</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Sparta, <a + href="#p068" title="go to p. 68">68</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Spartans, <a + href="#p065" title="go to p. 65">65</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Sperchius, <a + href="#p050" title="go to p. 50">50</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Spezia, <a + href="#p069" title="go to p. 69">69</a>, <a + href="#p237" title="go to p. 237">237</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Sphakiotes, <a + href="#p092" title="go to p. 92">92</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Spoleto, <a + href="#p282" title="go to p. 282">282</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Sporades, <a + href="#p070" title="go to p. 70">70</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">St. Florent, <a + href="#p369" title="go to p. 369">369</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Stromboli, <a + href="#p333" title="go to p. 333">333</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Strymon, <a + href="#p136" title="go to p. 136">136</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">St. Sebastian, <a + href="#p446" title="go to p. 446">446</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Stymphalus, <a + href="#p061" title="go to p. 61">61</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">St. Yuste, <a + href="#p381" title="go to p. 381">381</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Styx, <a + href="#p057" title="go to p. 57">57</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Sulina, <a + href="#p138" title="go to p. 138">138</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Suliotes, <a + href="#p119" title="go to p. 119">119</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Sybaris, <a + href="#p308" title="go to p. 308">308</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Syra, <a + href="#p074" title="go to p. 74">74</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Syracuse, <a + href="#p327" title="go to p. 327">327</a></p> +</div><!--dp501--> + +<div class="dp501"> +<p class="pndx">Tafalla, <a + href="#p447" title="go to p. 447">447</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Tagliamento, <a + href="#p191" title="go to p. 191">191</a>, <a + href="#p205" title="go to p. 205">205</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Tagus, see Tajo and Tejo</p> + +<p class="pndx">Tajo, <a + href="#p383" title="go to p. 383">383</a>, <a + href="#p482" title="go to p. 482">482</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Talavera de la Reina, <a + href="#p391" title="go to p. 391">391</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Taranto, <a + href="#p307" title="go to p. 307">307</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Tarragona, <a + href="#p436" title="go to p. 436">436</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Tavira, <a + href="#p495" title="go to p. 495">495</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Tavogliere of Puglia, <a + href="#p286" title="go to p. 286">286</a>, <a + href="#p299" title="go to p. 299">299</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Taygetus, <a + href="#p058" title="go to p. 58">58</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Tejo, <a + href="#p482" title="go to p. 482">482</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Tempe, <a + href="#p111" title="go to p. 111">111</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Terni, <a + href="#p270" title="go to p. 270">270</a>, <a + href="#p282" title="go to p. 282">282</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Tharsis, <a + href="#p405" title="go to p. 405">405</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Thasos, <a + href="#p094" title="go to p. 94">94</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Thebes, <a + href="#p056" title="go to p. 56">56</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Thera, <a + href="#p072" title="go to p. 72">72</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Therapia, <a + href="#p103" title="go to p. 103">103</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Thermia, <a + href="#p071" title="go to p. 71">71</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Thermopylæ, <a + href="#p050" title="go to p. 50">50</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Thessaly, <a + href="#p098" title="go to p. 98">98</a>, <a + href="#p111" title="go to p. 111">111</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Thomar, <a + href="#p489" title="go to p. 489">489</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Thracia, <a + href="#p098" title="go to p. 98">98</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Tiber, <a + href="#p257" title="go to p. 257">257</a>, <a + href="#p268" title="go to p. 268">268</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Tierra de Campos, <a + href="#p385" title="go to p. 385">385</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Tirgovist, <a + href="#p170" title="go to p. 170">170</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Tirnova, <a + href="#p133" title="go to p. 133">133</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Tivoli, <a + href="#p271" title="go to p. 271">271</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Toledo, <a + href="#p390" title="go to p. 390">390</a>, <a + href="#p393" title="go to p. 393">393</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Tolosa, <a + href="#p447" title="go to p. 447">447</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Topino, <a + href="#p269" title="go to p. 269">269</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Torres Vedras, <a + href="#p483" title="go to p. 483">483</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Tortosa, <a + href="#p435" title="go to p. 435">435</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Trajan’s Wall, <a + href="#p161" title="go to p. 161">161</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Trani, <a + href="#p306" title="go to p. 306">306</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Transylvanian Alps, <a + href="#p157" title="go to p. 157">157</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Trapani, <a + href="#p326" title="go to p. 326">326</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Trasimeno, <a + href="#p264" title="go to p. 264">264</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Trichonis, <a + href="#p048" title="go to p. 48">48</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Tripolis, <a + href="#p066" title="go to p. 66">66</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Tripolitza, <a + href="#p066" title="go to p. 66">66</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Trujillo, <a + href="#p391" title="go to p. 391">391</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Tudela, <a + href="#p448" title="go to p. 448">448</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Turin, <a + href="#p224" title="go to p. 224">224</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Turkey in Europe, <a + href="#p087" title="go to p. 87">87</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Turkish Empire, <a + href="#p151" title="go to p. 151">151</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Turks, <a + href="#p147" title="go to p. 147">147</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Turnu Severinu, <a + href="#p170" title="go to p. 170">170</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Tuscans, <a + href="#p248" title="go to p. 248">248</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Tuscany, <a + href="#p239" title="go to p. 239">239</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Tuy, <a + href="#p459" title="go to p. 459">459</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Tyrrhenian Sea, <a + href="#p248" title="go to p. 248">248</a></p> +</div><!--dp501--> + +<div class="dp501"> +<p class="pndx">Ubeda, <a + href="#p407" title="go to p. 407">407</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Urbino, <a + href="#p283" title="go to p. 283">283</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Utrera, <a + href="#p409" title="go to p. 409">409</a></p> +</div><!--dp501--> + +<div class="dp501"> +<p class="pndx">Valdeon, <a + href="#p450" title="go to p. 450">450</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Valdoniello, <a + href="#p366" title="go to p. 366">366</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Valencia, <a + href="#p413" title="go to p. 413">413</a>, <a + href="#p419" title="go to p. 419">419</a>, <a + href="#p422" title="go to p. 422">422</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Valladolid, <a + href="#p388" title="go to p. 388">388</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Vardar, <a + href="#p135" title="go to p. 135">135</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Vendetta, <a + href="#p367" title="go to p. 367">367</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Venice, <a + href="#p202" title="go to p. 202">202</a>, <a + href="#p207" title="go to p. 207">207</a>, <a + href="#p229" title="go to p. 229">229</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Verbano, <a + href="#p197" title="go to p. 197">197</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Vergara, <a + href="#p447" title="go to p. 447">447</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Verona, <a + href="#p229" title="go to p. 229">229</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Vesuvius, <a + href="#p288" title="go to p. 288">288</a>, <a + href="#p291" title="go to p. 291">291</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Vianna do Castello, <a + href="#p479" title="go to p. 479">479</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Vigo, <a + href="#p459" title="go to p. 459">459</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Vilkof, <a + href="#p169" title="go to p. 169">169</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Villa do Conde, <a + href="#p479" title="go to p. 479">479</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Villanova de Portimão, <a + href="#p494" title="go to p. 494">494</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Villa Real, <a + href="#p480" title="go to p. 480">480</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Villa Real de Santo Antonio, <a + href="#p495" title="go to p. 495">495</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Vitosh, <a + href="#p132" title="go to p. 132">132</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Vizéu, <a + href="#p481" title="go to p. 481">481</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Vostitza, <a + href="#p067" title="go to p. 67">67</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Vóuga, <a + href="#p476" title="go to p. 476">476</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Vulcano, <a + href="#p332" title="go to p. 332">332</a></p> +</div><!--dp501--> + +<div class="dp501"> +<p class="pndx">Wallachians, <a + href="#p120" title="go to p. 120">120</a>, <a + href="#p162" title="go to p. 162">162</a></p> +</div><!--dp501--> + +<div class="dp501"> +<p class="pndx">Yalomitza, <a + href="#p161" title="go to p. 161">161</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Yanina, <a + href="#p116" title="go to p. 116">116</a>, <a + href="#p125" title="go to p. 125">125</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Yassy, <a + href="#p168" title="go to p. 168">168</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Yuruks, <a + href="#p107" title="go to p. 107">107</a></p> +</div><!--dp501--> + +<div class="dp501"> +<p class="pndx">Zamora, <a + href="#p388" title="go to p. 388">388</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Zante, <a + href="#p079" title="go to p. 79">79</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Zaragoza, <a + href="#p434" title="go to p. 434">434</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Zezere, <a + href="#p482" title="go to p. 482">482</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Zinzares, <a + href="#p114" title="go to p. 114">114</a>, <a + href="#p119" title="go to p. 119">119</a></p> + +<p class="pndx">Zyria, <a + href="#p057" title="go to p. 57">57</a></p> + +<div>END OF VOL. I.</div> +</div><!--dp501--> + +<div class="chapter"><div class="transnote"> +TRANSCRIBER’S NOTE + +<p class="pfirst">Original spelling and grammar have +generally been retained, with some exceptions noted below. +Footnotes have been converted to endnotes, inserted ahead +of the Index, and renumbered 1–185. Original printed page +numbers are shown like this: {52}. Enlarged curly brackets +} or { used as graphic devices to combine information on +two or more lines of text have been eliminated. Ditto marks +have been eliminated. The transcriber produced the cover +image and hereby assigns it to the public domain. Original +page images are available from archive.org — search for<br +/> “earthitsinhabita01recl”.</p> + +<p>Illustrations originally printed within paragraphs +of text have been moved to nearby locations between +paragraphs. In the epub and mobi editions, all of the +images are smaller than 601 by 801 pixels, and image file +sizes are less than 100kb. Larger image files with better +resolution are available for many images. <i>In the <span +class="fsz6">HTML</span> edition only</i>, these are linked +with the symbol “Μ” in the caption. Alternatively, all +of the images are available from the Project Gutenberg +download page for this book. The original scanned images +have been only conservatively edited for these editions in +order to avoid destruction of detail.</p> + +<p class="pfirst padtopc">Page <a +href="#p005" title="go to p. 5">5</a>. There were two pages numbered +5, which are the last page of the Introductory Remarks—the latter is +now {5a}—and the first page of Chapter I.</p> + +<p class="pfirst padtopc">Page <a + href="#p086" title="go to p. 86">86</a>. The number 44,557 at the end of the table was not +printed clearly, and so could be erroneous in this edition.</p> + +<p class="pfirst padtopc">Page <a + href="#p093" title="go to p. 93">93</a>, Fig. 29. +Changed “1 : 2 470,000” to “1 : 2,470,000”.</p> + +<p class="pfirst padtopc">Page <a href="#fn28" title="go to note 28">104n</a>. +The note beginning “Length of the Bosphorus” had +no anchor in the text. A new one has been placed on page +103, after “shores of Europe and Asia.”</p> + +<p class="pfirst padtopc">Page <a href="#fn43" title="go to note 43">152n</a>. In the table, +the row headings in the left columns were indented in the printed book +in an unhelpful fashion. Of the three rows headed “Turkey in Europe”, +“Turkey in Asia”, and “Tripoli, &c.”, the first represents the sum +of the rows above, while the next two are independent, but all three +were indented the same. In this edition, the row heading indents have +been modified to more usefully reflect the structure of the table.</p> + +<p class="pfirst padtopc">Page <a href="#fn48" title="go to note 48">166n</a>. +Changed the phrase “52,500 foreigners 30,000 Austrians, +10,000 Greeks, 5,000 Germans, 1,500 French)” to “52,500 +foreigners (30,000 Austrians, 10,000 Greeks, 5,000 Germans, +1,500 French)”.</p> + +<p class="pfirst padtopc">Page <a href="#p223" title="go to p. 223">223</a>. +“Quadilateral” to “Quadrilateral”.</p> + +<p class="pfirst padtopc">Page <a href="#fn81" title="go to note 81">238n</a>. +“Chiavari, 8 414” to “Chiavari, 8,414”.</p> + +<p class="pfirst padtopc">Page <a href="#fn92" title="go to note 92">280n</a>. +The number printed for the water supply of Washington, per inhabitant, +is not clear, but might be 660, as rendered herein.</p> + +<p class="pfirst padtopc">Page +<a href="#fn97" title="go to note 97">283n</a>. +“foriegn” to “foreign”.</p> + +<p class="pfirst padtopc">Page +<a href="#fn98" title="go to note 98">284n</a>. +“Pesaro, 12, 75;”, where the blank shown here was not quite blank +in the print, is changed to “Pesaro, 12,375;”, on weak evidence.</p> + +<p class="pfirst padtopc">Page +<a href="#fn119" title="go to note 119">352n</a>. +“Cagliari, 31,9 5” is retained from the printed book.</p> + +<p class="pfirst padtopc">Page +<a href="#p470" title="go to p. 470">470</a>, +Fig. 191. In the caption, the name rendered herein as “Jelinek” +was not printed clearly.</p> + +<p class="pfirst padtopc">Page +<a href="#p491" title="go to p. 491">491</a>, +Fig. 203. In the caption, “<span class="smcap">T<b>HOMAH</b></span>” to “<span class="smcap">T<b>HOMAR</b></span>”.</p> + +<p class="pfirst padtopc">Page +<a href="#p500" title="go to p. 500">500</a>. +In the second table, the number “47·223” means +forty-seven thousand two hundred twenty-three. This may be +the only instance in this book of a middle dot used as a +digit grouper, instead of a decimal mark.</p> +</div></div> + + + + + + + + +<pre> + + + + + +End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Earth and its inhabitants, Volume +1: Europe., by Élisée Reclus + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK EARTH AND ITS INHABITANTS--EUROPE *** + +***** This file should be named 54760-h.htm or 54760-h.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/5/4/7/6/54760/ + +Produced by Josep Cols Canals, RichardW, and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This +file was produced from images generously made available +by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.) + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will +be renamed. + +Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright +law means that no one owns a United States copyright in these works, +so the Foundation (and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United +States without permission and without paying copyright +royalties. 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