|

Capri is an island of limestone
rock that represents the outermost tip of the mountain chain on the Sorrentine peninsula.
The coastline, whose dolomite cliffs fall right to the sea in many spots, is dotted with
countless caves and surrounded by reefs whose shapes suggest fantastic creations.
Mount Tiberio (334 m.), to the east, and Mount Solaro (589 m.) to the west are the two
main peaks on the island. Between these heights, on a saddle-shaped ridge connecting the
Marina Grande, ("Large Marina") - north end - and the Marina Piccola,
("Small Marina") to the south - is the town of Capri (138 m.). The other town,
Anacapri (286 m.), sits in the large, verdant plain to the west of Mount Solaro.
|
|
Capri contains a vast variety of plants and flowers, offering no fewer than 850
species and 130 varieties, despite its extremely small surface area, including some
rarities, such as the dwarf palm, which has survived in a number of inaccessible areas. In
terms of wildlife, many species of marine animals enrich the surrounding sea. On land,
there are many types of non-migratory birds, such as the large diomedei gulls, and there
are also reptiles, whose number includes the very rare lizard of the Faraglioni rocks.
The etymology of the name Capri must be traced back to the Greeks, the first colonists to
populate the island in recorded time. This means that "Capri" was not derived
from the Latin "Capreae" (goats), but rather the Greek "Kapros" (wild
boar).
The numerous fossil remains of that animal found on Capri confirm that it was
once the Island of the Wild Boars, and not the island of the Goats, as the Latin
derivation would seem to indicate. Inhabited since the paleolithic age, when it was still
attached to the mainland, the island later became Greek, and then Roman. After visiting
Capri in 29 BC, Caesar Augustus was so taken with the islandls beauty that he bought it
from the city of Naples, giving up the nearby island of Ischia - much larger - in return.
Legend has it that his successor, Tiberius, who lived there from 27 to 37 AD, built twelve
villas, dedicating them to the twelve gods of Olympus.
From the most magnificent of these dwellings, the "Villa Jovis", he ruled the
Roman Empire. Other emperors spent time in Capri, which was visited and inhabited by Roman
nobles up through the IVth century AD.
Returned to the ownership of the Dutchy of Naples, the island was raided by the Saracens
in the sixth and seventh centuries, and was dominated during various periods in the years
that followed by the Longobards, the Normans, the Angevins, the Aragonese and, finally,
the Spanish.
The island experienced a period of renewed good fortune in the 17th and 18th
centuries, in coincidence with the great political and artistic upsurgence of Naples, and
thanks to the existence of an active church diocese, as well as the privileges granted the
island, first by the Spanish and then by the Bourbons. Evidence of this golden period is
the stupendous architecture of the churches and convents built in the two towns.
Beginning in the second half of the 18th century, the island became a preferred
destination of the Bourbons, who went there to hunt quayle and simply to travel. Many of
the increasing number of visitors from the north who came to take in the magnificently
primitive nature of the south included the island in their travel plans and gave the world
its first images of Capri.
Unfortunately, their arrival also brought about the systematic plundering of the extensive
Roman ruins, preserved almost intact throughout the centuries. As a result, a tremendously
rich heritage was devastated and dispersed, so that today only a few traces remain. These
are found primarily in the digs that are resumed at periodic intervals.
Starting in the first half of the last century, in the wake of the discovery of The Blue
Grotto, or "Blue Cave", the flow of Italian and foreign tourists began, being
drawn to the island by the climate, the hospitality of the people and the colors and
magnetic atmosphere of the various sites. Writers,
painters, exiles, rich and eccentric visitors: from the end of the 1800's until the Second
World War, many chose the island as their year-round or seasonal residence, building
villas and contributing to the creation of the multi-facetted, multi-lingual, cosmopolitan
colony that made the name Capri famous and established the island's myth.

|