Bonifacio
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
- For other meanings, see Bonifacio (disambiguation).
Commune of Bonifacio |
|
Bunifaziu | |
Motto: Libertas |
|
The harbor | |
Location | |
Time Zone | GMT+1 |
Administration | |
---|---|
Country | France |
Region | Corsica |
Department | Corse-du-Sud |
Arrondissement | Sartène |
Canton | Bonifacio |
Mayor | Jean-Baptiste Lantieri |
Statistics | |
Elevation | 0 m (0 ft)–70 m (230 ft) |
Land area¹ | 138.36 km² |
Population² (1999) |
2,658 |
- Density | 19.2/km² (1999) |
Miscellaneous | |
INSEE/Postal code | 2A041/ 20169 |
1 French Land Register data, which excludes lakes, ponds, glaciers > 1 km² (0.386 sq mi or 247 acres) and river estuaries. | |
2 Population sans doubles comptes: residents of multiple communes (e.g. students and military personnel) only counted once. | |
Bonifacio (Bunifaziu in Corsican) is a commune at the southern tip of the island of Corsica, in the Corse-du-Sud department of France. Its inhabitants are called Bonifaciens, feminine Bonifaciennes. The commune in this case is identical to the canton and is the largest commune of Corsica.
Contents |
[edit] Geography
Bonifacio is located directly on the Mediterranean Sea, separated from Sardinia by the Strait of Bonifacio. It is a city placed on the best and only major harbor of the southern coast and also is a commune covering a somewhat larger region including the offshore Isles Lavezzi, giving it the distinction of being the southernmost commune in Metropolitan France. The commune is bordered on the northwest by the canton of Figari and has a short border on the northeast with the canton of Porto-Vecchio. The combined border runs approximately from the Golfe de Ventilegne on the west to the mouth of the Golfu di Sant'Amanza on the east. The coastline circumscribed by the two points in about 75 km (47 mi). Highway N198 runs north along the east coast and N196 along the west.[1]
The islands are part of the French portion, 79,460 hectares (196,350 acres), of the international Bouches de Bonifacio ("Strait of Bonifacio") marine park,[2] a nature reserve, signed into legal existence by France and Italy in 1993 for the protection of the strait against passage of ships bearing dangerous chemicals, and implemented in France by a ministerial decree of 1999 detailing the land to be included in the réserve naturelle de Bouches de Bonifacio for the preservation of wild birds, other fauna and flora, fish and nature in general.[3]
The southern coast in the vicinity of Bonifacio is an outcrop of chalk-white limetone, precipitous and sculpted into unusual shapes by the ocean. Slightly further inland the limestone adjoins the granite of which the two islands, Sardinia and Corsica, are formed. The port of Bonifacio is placed on the Bay of Bonifacio, a drowned ravine of a fjord-like appearance separated from the ocean by a finger-like promontory 1500 m (4921 ft) long and 200 m (656 ft) wide. In prehistoric post-glacial times when sea levels were low and the islands were connected, the ravine was part of a valley leading to upland Corsica. The maximum draught supported by the harbor is 3.5 m (11 ft), more than ample for ancient ships and modern small vessels.
The city of Bonifacio is split into two sections. The vieille ville (old town), or la Haute Ville (the Upper city), on the site of a citadel, is located on the promontory overlooking the Mediterranean Sea. The citadel was begun in the 9th century with the foundation of the city, has been reconstructed and rennovated many times since then, and most recently was an administrative center for the French Foreign Legion. Today it is more of a museum. Historically most of the inhabitants have resided in the Haute ville under the immediate protection of the citadel. The harbor facilities and residential areas below, la marine, line the narrow shelf of the inlet and extend for some distance up the valley, giving the settlement a linear appearance and creating a third residential section limited by St. Julien on the east.
The city and its fortifications also extend for some distance along the cliff-tops, which are at about 70 m (230 ft) elevation. The cliffs have been undercut by the ocean so that the buildings, which have been placed on the very lip of the precipice, appear to overhang it. The appearance from the sea is of a white city gleaming in the sun and suspended over the rough waters below.
[edit] History
- See also: History of Corsica
[edit] Prehistoric period
Bonifacio has two prehistoric sites of some importance: the ancient cave shelter of Araguina-Sennola near the village of Capello on Route N96 just north of the city and a chambered tomb of Vasculacciu further north near Figari. The first is the site of the notable Lady of Bonifacio, a female burial carbon-dated to about 6570 BC, which is either late Mesolithic or Early Neolithic, and the second belongs to the Megalithic Culture and is dated to the Middle Neolithic. The alignment of the two and the extensive use of chert from Monte Arci in Sardinia shows that the Bay of Bonifacio was a route to inland Corsica from the earliest times.
[edit] Roman period
The only record of southernmost Corsica in Roman times comes from the geographer Ptolemy. He reports[4] the coordinates of Marianum Promontory and town, which, plotted on a map, turn out to be the farthest south of Corsica. After listing the peoples of the east coast he states that the Subasani (ancient Greek Soubasanoi) were "more to the south."
The people do not appear subsequently and the town and promontory have not been identified, nor do any Roman roads point to it. The only official road, the Via Corsica, ran between the Roman castra of Mariana and Aleria on the east coast and further south to Pallas, according to the Antonine Itinerary.[5] Ptolemy places Pallas unequivocally on the east coast north of Marianum. Although unrecorded tracks and paths to the far south are possible, it is unlikely they would have carried any significant Roman traffic.
Maritime traffic through the strait however was significant and it could hardly have neglected the fine harbor at Bonifacio. The most popular choice for Marianum Promontory therefore is Cape Pertusato, southernmost point of Corsica island, about 9 km (6 mi) east of the harbor, with Bonifacio itself as Marianum town.[6] A second possibility would be the first century AD Roman ruins adjoining Piantarella Beach near the village of Ciappili and next to the grounds of Sperone golf course, a recreational suburb to the west of Bonifacio, but those ruins appear to represent a Roman villa and the beach though eminently suitable for recreation is of little value as a port. More likely the villa belonged to a citizen of Bonifacio as Marianum.
[edit] Tuscan period
Corsica was taken from the Roman Empire in 469 AD by Genseric, king of the Vandals, and recovered by the Eastern Empire in 534. The Lombards having taken it again in 725, Charlemagne (Defender of the Faith) cleared them out by 774 and handed the island over to the Papacy, which had been the most powerful complainant of the island's devastation by Germanics. Starting in 806 the Moors of Spain began to contend for the island and held it for a short time but in 828 the Papacy assigned its defense to the margrave of Tuscany, a powerful state of the Holy Roman Empire nominally under the Kingdom of Italy.[7]
The city in evidence today was founded as a fortress by and subsequently named after Boniface II of Tuscany in 828. He had led a naval expedition to suppress the Saracens of North Africa and returned to build an unassailable fortress and naval base from which the domains of Tuscany could be defended at the outermost frontier. Most of the citadel postdates the 9th century or is of uncertain date but Il Torrione, a round tower, was certainly part of the original citadel.
[edit] Sights
The town's charm and proximity to idyllic beaches makes it a popular tourist destination in the summer, predominantly for residents of mainland France.
[edit] Transportation
The town is served by Figari airport (car or taxi required), and ferry service to Sardinia is available multiple times daily.
[edit] Famous citizens
The following persons of note were born in Bonifacio:
- Tommaso Maria Zigliara (1833-1893), Roman Catholic cardinal, theologian, and philosopher.
- The film star, Marie-José Nat.
[edit] Miscellanea
- Bonifacio is the setting of Guy de Maupassant's short story, Vendetta.
[edit] Notes
- ^ France, le trésor des régions: Département: Corse-du-Sud (html). Retrieved on 2008-05-06. (French).
- ^ le Parc international marin des bouches de Bonifacio.
- ^ Décret du 23 septembre 1999 portant création de la réserve naturelle des Bouches de Bonifacio (département de la Corse-du-Sud) (html). Retrieved on 2008-05-06. (French)
- ^ Book III Chapter II.
- ^ Parthey, Gustav; Moritz Pinder (1848). Itinerarium Antonini Augusti et Hierosolymitanum. Berolini: impensis Frederici Nicolai, pages 39-40.
- ^ Price, Gillian (2004). Walking on Corsica. Milnthorpe: Cicerone Press Limited, pages 149-150. ISBN 185284387X.
- ^ "Corsica". Encyclopedia Britannica. (1911).
[edit] External links
- Official website (English/French/German/Italian/Spanish)
- Scotto, Régis. Bonifacio.com (html). Retrieved on 2008-05-05. (French)