Modern
Greek island group off the west coast of Greece, stretching south
from the Albanian coast to the southern tip of the Peloponnese,
and often called Heptanesos ("Seven Islands"). The
islands are Corfu (Kerkira), Cephalonia (Kefallonia), Zacynthus
(Zakinthos, Zante), Leucas (Levkas), Ithaca (Ithaki), Cythera
(Kíthira), and Paxos (Paxoí), with their minor dependencies.
Their combined land area is 2,307 square km.
With good rainfall and much arable soil, the Ionian Islands produce
timber, fruit, and flax and raise pigs, sheep, and goats. Their
exports include currants, wine, cotton, salt, olives, and fish,
and the islands are largely self-sufficient in grains. Their harbours
are superior to those of the west coast of Greece and more conveniently
located for international shipping.
Because
of their strategic maritime location between the Greek and Italian
mainlands, intervention from outside has affected the islands
and their people since classical times. Leo IV the Wise (c. AD
890) formed most or all of the islands into a province of the
Byzantine Empire as the theme of Cephalonia. The Norman adventurer
Robert Guiscard captured Corfu (1081) and Cephalonia, but his
death (1085) prevented the establishment of a dynasty. When the
Latin empire (1204-61) was established at Constantinople, the
Venetians received Corfu; but in 1214 the Greek despotate of Epirus
annexed the first Venetian colony, and a long period of Epirote,
Sicilian, and Neapolitan-Angevin rule followed until 1386, when
Corfu submitted voluntarily to the Venetian republic. In 1479
the Turks captured the islands of Cephalonia, Zacynthus, Leucas,
and Ithaca, annexing them to their empire. The Venetians soon
counterattacked and retook them during the 15th and 16th centuries.
The Venetians won the adherence of the principal local families
on the islands by the bestowal of titles and appointments. The
Roman Catholic church was established there, and the Italians
and Greeks intermarried. Greek
ceased to be spoken except by the peasantry, who remained faithful
to the Greek Orthodox communion. On the fall of the Venetian republic
in 1797, the islands were awarded to France, whose rule was quickly
ended by a Russo-Turkish force (1798-99). Reclaimed by France
in 1807 and made an integral part of the French empire under Napoleon,
the islands were placed by the Treaty of Paris (1815) under the
exclusive protection of Great Britain.
An Ionian senate and legislative assembly began to function in
1818, but real authority was vested in a British high commissioner.
Schools of higher learning and a judiciary were set up, but the
inhabitants resented the restrictions imposed by the firm British
rule. After 1848 periodic insurrections by the peasantry, notably
in Cephalonia, had to be put down with force, and the Ionian parliament
voted for immediate union with the new Greek kingdom. In 1864
Britain ceded the islands to Greece as a gesture marking the accession
of a new Greek king, George I (the former Prince William George
of Glücksburg), son of Christian IX of Denmark. Following
their annexation, the prosperity of the islands decreased, partly
because of the loss of the special tax and trading privileges
granted under the protectorate. The islands were occupied by Italy
and, later, Germany during World War II. They were liberated with
the rest of Greece in 1944. Pop. (1991 prelim.) 191,003.
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