Ustica

Ustica
Comune
Comune di Ustica

View of Ustica
Ustica

Location of Ustica in Italy

Coordinates: 38°43′N 13°11′E / 38.717°N 13.183°E / 38.717; 13.183Coordinates: 38°43′N 13°11′E / 38.717°N 13.183°E / 38.717; 13.183
Country Italy
Region Sicily
Province / Metropolitan city Palermo (PA)
Government
  Mayor Aldo Messina
Area
  Total 8 km2 (3 sq mi)
Elevation 49 m (161 ft)
Population (2001)
  Total 1,330
  Density 170/km2 (430/sq mi)
Demonym(s) Usticesi or Usticani
Time zone CET (UTC+1)
  Summer (DST) CEST (UTC+2)
Postal code 90010
Dialing code 091

Ustica (Sicilian: Ùstica) is the name of a small island, about 9 kilometres (6 mi) across, situated 52 kilometres (32 mi) north of Capo Gallo, Italy in the Tyrrhenian Sea. Roughly 1,300 people live in the comune (municipality) of the same name. There is regular ferry service from the island to Palermo, Italy.

History

Excavations begun in 1989 at Faraglioni have unearthed what was a large prehistoric village dating from the 14th to the 13th century BC. The foundations of some 300 stone-built houses were discovered, and the defensive walls of the settlement are among the strongest fortifications of any period known in Italy. It is believed that these early settlers came over from the Aeolian Islands.

In historic times, the island has been populated at least since about 1500 BC by Phoenician peoples. In ancient Greece, the Island was named Osteodes (ossuary) in memory of the thousands of Carthaginian mutineers left there to die of hunger in the 4th century BC. The Romans renamed the island Ustica, Latin for burnt, for its black rocks. The island is also known locally as the "black pearl".

In the 6th century, a Benedictine community settled in the island, but was soon forced to move because of ongoing wars between Europeans and Arabs. Attempts to colonize the island in the Middle Ages failed because of raids by Barbary pirates.

In the mid-18th century, the island was settled by approximately 90 people from the island of Lipari, an island also located north of Sicily, but east of Ustica. They brought with them the patron saint of Lipari, Bartholomew the Apostle, who became the patron saint of Ustica as well. In the mid- to late 19th century and early 20th century, as the population of the island grew too large, hundreds of Ustican families emigrated to the United States. Many of these families settled in New Orleans and surrounding areas, where there are today thousands of descendants whose ties remain strong to Ustica. A smaller number of families settled in San Jose and San Francisco, in New York, and in Massachusetts.

Fascist prison island

During the Fascist years in Italy and until the 1950s, Ustica was used as an island prison. Benito Mussolini banished thousands of political opponents to Ustica, often as many as 1,500 at a time; many were homosexuals. Both Antonio Gramsci and Amadeo Bordiga were sent there.[1] In the early 1940s Yugoslav war prisoners were crammed onto the island, and many of them died from malnutrition and tuberculosis. In the 1950s they were followed by suspected Mafia hoods expelled from Sicily.[2]

On June 27, 1980 Aerolinee Itavia Flight 870 crashed a short distance from the island while on approach to Palermo, killing all 81 passengers and crew.

Environment

Location of Ustica in the Tyrrhenian Sea.

The island is characterized by reduced sources of water, and the vegetation is consequently scarce. The coast has numerous rocks and grottoes.

Ustica is home of the honeybee Apis mellifera sicula.

Tourism

Ustica is particularly known for scuba diving, with a number of diving schools established on the island. Recreational divers are attracted by the relatively deep dives, which are a feature of the island's volcanic geology.

Genealogy

Because Ustica is a small island with limited resources, several waves of emigration have left Ustica.

In the mid nineteenth century, groups of usticesi left for America, notably for New Orleans. Enough had arrived by the 1860s that, in the American Civil War, a regiment of Italians including many usticesi fought for the Confederacy. Today, around 30,000 residents of New Orleans claim usticese ancestry.

Another wave of usticesi left for the San Francisco bay area in the late nineteenth century. Many settled in the fertile Santa Clara Valley, whose mild Mediterrean climate was reminiscent of Ustica.

At the turn of the twentieth century many usticesi went to North Africa in search of land and employment.

The story of usticese genealogy and emigration is thoroughly explored on the Ustica Genealogy web page cited below.

References

  1. Peregalli, Arturo; Saggioir, Sandro (1998). La sconfitta e gli anni oscuri (1926-1945). Milan: Edizioni Colibri.
  2. "New Capri?". Time, September 1, 1961.
Wikivoyage has a travel guide for Ustica.
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