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HISTORIC SUMMARY
Ciutadella can pride itself on very ancient foundations. The bishop
Sever, in his famous encyclical letter (418), tells us, " There
are two small towns founded on the island, to which they give name
according to their situation : Jammona looks to the west....".
But we believe the Semitic establishment superimposed an already
existent stone age village. After 123 AD, date of which Quintus
Cecilius Metellus conquered the Balearics for Rome, Jammona was
a small village, possibly of a military nature, a "parvum oppidum".
The areas of Saint Nicholas street and Camí de Baix, have
produced abundant finds - mosaics, tombs, ceramics and small metal
pieces. Very soon, Ciutadella became a Roman municipal, the "Municipium
Flavium lamontarum", , and its Episcopal once under Christianity
- we know Sever, who reigned as Bishop, not only over our town but
also over the whole island ; and Macari, whom in 484 was called
to Cartago by the King Hunneric-.
Our town, like the whole island, was subject to the power of the
Vandals and, afterwards, incorporated to the Byzantine Empire (534).
But it seems that, with time, Menorca enjoyed an almost total independence.
From the end of the 7th Century the Muslims began to devastate it
on repeated spells, even though the total occupation was delayed
until the beginning of the 10th Century.
During the Muslim domination, the old Jammona was the Medina Menurca,
the capital of the island, where the leader resided- there is a
remainder on the street del Palau which still shows the exact location
of the building-.
It had a walled enclosure or qasr, a main Mosque - the actual location
of which is where the Cathedral stands, the minaret was converted
into a bell tower -, and other secondary ones, cemeteries, etc.
It was the only town of such importance of Menurca. After a period
of vassalage (1231-1287) during which the island prospered economically,
culturally and demographically, it was conquered by King Alfonso
III the Liberal, 701 years ago. Little remains of the Muslim culture
- some construction and ceramic techniques-. The population was
sold as slaves and the land was populated by "nice Catalan
people"- Muntaner-.
Alfonso III confirmed the condition of Capital to the now Catalan
Ciutadella of Menorca, where the tribunals of government, royal
patrimony and the general mayors office were to be established,
and the Governor, the Paborde (ecclesiastic head of the island),
and the cavaliers all made their residencies. The organiser of the
most important aspects of Menorcan life was James II of Mallorca
: he established the system of defence (the cavalry), the parochial
system, the monetary system, etc. All this in 1301.
The struggles between the dynasties of the House of Aragon and
that of Mallorca, under which Menorca lived from 1298, proceed the
conquest of the Balearic by Peter IV the Ceremonious. During a great
part of the Middle ages, the University of Ciutadella - Municipal
entity of great power - was the only on the island, even during
the 14th Century when other outside populations emerged, it still
maintained its supremacy. Run by four judges - one from each class
- and ten councillors. Despite its demographic weakness - it never
passed, until 16th Century, 3,500 inhabitants -, Ciutadella represented
half of the islands population. Our town suffered the plague in
1348, the "Antijueves" violence in 1291, two civil wars
in the 15th Century, and an almost permanent tension between the
privileged classes and those less favoured. When it was recovering
from all of this , in 1558 witnessed the most heroic act of its
haserdous history : a powerful Turkish Armada, composed of 140 ships
and 15,000 soldiers, put the town under siege for eight days, the
town who only had a few hundred men to defend itself. The resistance
was fierce but useful. All of Ciutadella's people - 3,099 - who
survived were taken as slaves to Turkey together with other inhabitants
of surrounding villages - total of 3,452 -. Very few to return.
Even today, every 9th of July we commemorate the "year of the
atrocity" with a solemn act where the Constantinople Act is
read, which describes the facts.
The town has to be reconstructed over the ruins : houses and churches,
ramparts and convents were rebuilt according to the intermittent
rhythm marked by the economic difficulties.
The 17th Century was that of maturity of the islands capital :
churches were built like Sant Crist dels paraires ; convents, like
that of Socors ; palaces of the cavalier families, who were becoming
wealthier due to the politics of matrimony and inheritance ; the
first noble titles were achieved ; the ramparts are completed, etc.
No lacking of demographic crisis', like the plague of 1652 which
produced hundreds of deaths, pirate attacks, conflicts between the
University and the Governors, plague of rats and locusts, prolonged
droughts, banditry, etc.
The dominion of the Spanish Crown ends in 1708, the year in which
an English squadron occupies the island in the of the Archduke Charles
of Austria. The Utrecht treaty in 1713 consolidates the British
occupation which signifies for Ciutadella the loss as the Capital
when, in February of 1722, Richard Kane transfers to Maó
the tribunals and Government offices, even though the people of
Ciutadella defend, until the start of the19th Century, their condition
as capital. The French domination (1756-1763) produced a cultural
current of great importance and opened many souls to the ideas ruling
in Europe. The stage of the Spanish domination which followed the
second British domination, made possible an old wish of Ciutadella
: to reinstate its own bishopric (1795). The character of the Episcopal
town is still very visible today, and here its appropriate to remember
advice given by Unamuno to a friend of his : "Don't stop visiting
small towns that aren't provincial capitals and bishoprics ; they
are all extremely interesting".
The 19th Century signified the awakening : Ciutadella passes from
being an eminently agricultural town, surrounded by ramparts, with
narrow streets to being a town with ample that expanded from the
Contramurada (rampart). It had now an industrial economy, fruit
of the implantation of shoe manufacture, demographics on a constant
increase that passes from 7,000 inhabitants at the beginning of
the 19th Century to 21,000 now, and economic dynamics and culture
that any of our visitors can appreciate. This is the Ciutadella
that you will find, modern but yet traditional.
ETYMOLOGY
Over the centuries, the different settlers whom inhabited the most
westerly town of the island of Menorca gave it diverse names : Jamma,
lamo, lamona, lamnona, Jamona, Medina Minurka.
But since 1287, with the incorporation of the Christian and European
cultures in Menorca, imposes the name of Ciutadella, a name which
etymologically, means in old Latin civitatella, diminutive of civitas
(city) ; however this name prevailed during the Roman town, and
the Menorcan Mozarabs called our town by this name before the arrival
on the island of the Catalans settlers.
With this name, even with its diverse spelling, is what the old
Menorcan capital is called in the Chronicles of James I (Ciutadela)
in 1308, by Ramon Muntaner (Ciutadella) in 1287 and by Marsili (Ciutadeyla).
Afterwards, it still appeared with various spelling on maps, depending
on the nationality of the geographer ; but, in accordance with the
Catalan grammar, the correct form is CIUTADELLA.
The Decree 36/1998, of 14th April (BOCAIB nº 51.28.04.88),
it appears as CIUTADELLA DE MENORCA, determinative which is added
to the habitual name, to describe its geographics and explain its
etymology, as the name is a diminutive of City, to it is added of
Menorca in parallelism to the Balearic capital : City of Mallorca,
with which the name Ciutadella of Menorca offers same certain historical
connotations to the old political personality of this town within
the island of Menorca.
PRESENT
At present Ciutadella of Menorca has a population of approximately
26,000 inhabitants, the majority of whom live in the extensions
to the old nucleus and the rest in one of the many suburbs that
surround our territory ( Calan Blanes, Cales Piques, Cala en Bosc,
Santa Galdana....).
Even though the manufacture of shoes and costume jewellery continues
being an important source of wealth for our town, today tourism
has taken over as being the principal source of income for the majority
of the population.
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