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Ventotene

Ventotene (Italian: [ventoˈtɛːne]; locally Vientutene; Latin: Pandataria or Pandateria, from Ancient Greek: Πανδατερία, romanizedPandatería, or Πανδατωρία Pandatōría)[1] is one of the Pontine Islands in the Tyrrhenian Sea, 46 kilometres (25 nautical miles) off the coast of Gaeta right at the border between Lazio and Campania, Italy. The municipality of Ventotene, of the province of Latina (Lazio) had 708 permanent residents as of 2008.

Ventotene
Vientutene (Neapolitan)
Comune di Ventotene
Ventotene within the Province of Latina
Location of Ventotene
Ventotene
Location of Ventotene in Italy
Ventotene
Ventotene (Lazio)
Coordinates: 40°47′51″N 13°25′48″E / 40.79750°N 13.43000°E / 40.79750; 13.43000
CountryItaly
RegionLazio
ProvinceLatina (LT)
Government
 • MayorCarmine Caputo (Civic list)
Area
 • Total1.54 km2 (0.59 sq mi)
Elevation
18 m (59 ft)
Population
 (30 November 2018)
 • Total768
 • Density500/km2 (1,300/sq mi)
DemonymVentotenesi
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
04031
Dialing code0771
ISTAT code059033
Patron saintSt. Candida
Saint daySeptember 20
WebsiteOfficial website

Geography Edit

The island, the remains of an ancient volcano,[2] is elongated, with a length of 3 kilometres (2 miles) and a maximum width of about 800 metres (2,600 feet).

The municipality includes the small ancillary island of Santo Stefano, located 2 km (1+14 mi) to the east, which was the site of a massive prison, now closed. Further islands are Ponza, Palmarola and Zannone, located 40 km (25 mi) to the west.

Climate Edit

Ventotene has a typical Mediterranean climate with hot, dry summers and mild, wet winters that tend to be very windy. Vento, as in the island’s name, meaning wind in Italian, is apt to describe the prominent weather condition for this small island far out at sea. The temperature never drops below 0 °C (32 °F).

History Edit

Roman Empire Edit

Ventotene, like all the Pontine Islands, was owned by the Emperor Augustus (r. 31 BC - 14 AD) who had a huge summer palace built on the island in the early part of his reign, including extensive thermae, terraces, gardens, an exedra and aqueducts, and which remained thereafter an imperial property. It is now known as the Villa Giulia as it was possibly the place to which he banished his daughter Julia the Elder in 2 BC as a reaction to her notorious adultery[3] and where he could easily keep an eye on her. Augustus had two villas on the island but Julia was probably sent to the Villa Giulia located on the Punta d'Eolo on the north of the island, with all the facilities of an imperial retreat.[4]

In 29 AD, emperor Tiberius banished Augustus' granddaughter Agrippina the Elder,[5] who perished, probably of malnutrition, on 18 October 33 AD. After Agrippina the Elder's son Gaius, (better known as Caligula), became emperor in 37 AD, he went to Pandataria to collect her remains and reverently brought them back to Rome. Agrippina the Elder's youngest daughter, Julia Livilla, was exiled to Pandateria twice: the first time by her brother Caligula for plotting to depose him, and the second time by her uncle, the emperor Claudius, at the instigation of his wife, Messalina, in 41 AD.

Sometime later, Julia Livilla was discreetly starved to death and her remains were probably brought back to Rome when her older sister Agrippina the Younger became influential as Claudius' wife. Another distinguished lady of the Julio-Claudian dynasty, Claudia Octavia, who was the first wife of the emperor Nero, was banished to Pandateria in 62 AD and then executed on the orders of her husband.[6]

This is also the island to which St. Flavia Domitilla, the granddaughter of the emperor Vespasian, was banished.

Twentieth Century Edit

A prison camp was created under the Bourbons and restructured under Benito Mussolini on the nearby island of Santo Stefano. There, up to 700 opponents, including 400 communists, were incarcerated between 1939 and 1943. One of them was Altiero Spinelli who wrote there a text now known as the "Ventotene Manifesto", promoting the idea of a federal Europe after the war.

During World War II, the island served as home to a 114-man German garrison, which defended a key radar station. On the night of 8 December 1943, an American PT boat slipped into Ventotene's harbour undetected and offloaded 46 American paratroopers from the 509th Parachute Infantry Battalion, led by naval lieutenant (and actor) Douglas Fairbanks Jr., who was tactical commander of the Beach Jumpers; a group that used all forms available of deception to deceive the enemy, and commando-trained.[7] The paratroopers met with a local exile from the Italian mainland who then lied to the German commander that there was a regiment of paratroopers on the island, deposited by a fleet of Allied ships. Terrified, the German commander demolished his positions, weapons, and quickly surrendered to the weaker American force before realizing his mistake. Ventotene was liberated at 03:00 without a shot being fired. The story is reported by John Steinbeck in Once There Was A War.[7]

In August 2016, then-Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi met with then-German Chancellor Angela Merkel and then-French President François Hollande on Ventotene, to lay a wreath at the tomb of Altiero Spinelli and review European Union policy in the light of the then-impending British withdrawal from the EU.[8]

Environment Edit

Nature Reserve Edit

Ventotene and Santo Stefano are both part of a nature reserve created in 1999 in order to preserve the ecological, geomorphological and naturalistic-environmental characteristics and to promote activities compatible with the conservation of the reserve's natural resources. This means that new buildings cannot be erected, and reconstruction is limited.[9]

Marine Reserve Edit

The marine reserve, which covers a 10 km long coastal area, is divided into three zones with varying degrees of protection and permitted activities.[10][11]

Ventotene is a popular destination for scuba divers due to its clear, warm waters and variety of marine life.[12] Several diving centres take divers of all levels of competency to nearby destinations to see caves filled with prawns, or swim among fish which have become rather unafraid of people since fishing was banned in 1997. There are also guided tours to see Roman amphorae from ships sunk 2000 years ago and the large steamer Santa Lucia, which was sunk during World War II, resulting in nearly 100 dead. It lies at a depth of about 40 m (130 ft).[13][circular reference] There is also a lot to be seen with the use of snorkeling gear at only a few meters depth around the island and its beaches.[14]

Bird migration Edit

 
Birds being released from nets, ready for ringing

Ventotene is a well-known birdwatching location as the island serves as an essential stopover point for large numbers of migratory birds. The bird observatory, which was founded in 1988, rings approximately 20,000 birds a year. During the height of the spring migration in April and May, thousands of birds arrive daily from North Africa’s coasts after having flown 400 – 500 km non-stop.[15] The Pontian Archipelago offers the first chance to stop after the prolonged flight and, due to the tiny size of Ventotene, the concentration of birds of numerous species is extremely high. The exhausted birds rest and feed frenetically quite indifferent to human presence, allowing birdwatchers to observe and photograph them as in few other places in Italy.[16]

The bird observatory is part of PPI (Progetto Piccole Isole), a project which has studied the bird migration across the Mediterranean since 1988 at 46 sites in seven countries. The results of these studies led to the creation of the Ventotene Bird Migration Museum in 2006.[15]

Main sights Edit

The Ruins of Villa Giulia Edit

 
Domus farm area of Villa Giulia

In the early part of his reign, emperor Augustus had a summer palace built on the island, which at the time was private property.[17]: 12  The remnants of the huge complex of over 3,000 m² (32,000 ft²), which included thermae, terraces, gardens, an exedra and aqueducts, can be seen at Punto Eolo. Over the centuries, the villa has been subject to systematic plundering and senseless excavations. However, excavations have revealed thermal baths, servants’ quarters, courtyards, water reservoirs and passages to the sea. The imperial summer residence has become known as Villa Giulia as it became the place of exile of Augustus’s daughter Julia the Elder in 2 BC.[17]: 31–32 

 
The Roman port with a mooring on the left

The Roman Port Edit

The Roman port, which is still in use, was built to support emperor Augustus’ summer residence, as there was no natural harbour on the island. It was entirely excavated in the rock banks and about 60,000 m³ (2.119,000 ft³) were removed to create a port with a narrow, protected inlet. It is approximately 180 m (600 ft) long by 85 m (280 ft) at its widest and 3 m (10 ft) deep. The quayside was lined by storerooms and depots hewn from the rock, nowadays converted to bars, restaurants, shops and diving centres.[17]: 20–22 

The Fishery Edit

At the foot of the lighthouse are the remnants of the Roman fishery excavated in the rock, consisting of three pools, one outside and two in rooms with arched roofs where fragments of decorated plaster and stuccoes remain. A sophisticated system of canals and shutters, devised for water exchange and the transfer of fish from one compartment to another, ensured a constant supply of many kinds of fresh fish to the imperial household, all year round and in all weather conditions.

The fishery is best viewed from the water, swimming with snorkeling gear, as the sea level today is about a metre (1 yard) higher than when it was constructed.[17]: 27–29 

 
Wall paintings at the reservoir the Carcerati

The cistern of the Carcerati Edit

As Ventotene has never had an adequate supply of fresh water, several enormous cisterns to collect rainwater were built in Roman times in the central parts of the island. They were excavated in the rock to a depth of approximately 10 m and consist of a system of vaulted roof tunnels, galleries, basins and corridors. One of these, known as the Carcerati (prisoners), can be visited on guided tours. The name derives from the convicts who were sent to the island in the late 18th century to build the present village and were housed in the by then empty reservoir. The walls of the galleries are covered with graffiti, inscriptions and drawings from various centuries, but particularly from the convicts who drew images of houses and nature to remember places they were never to see again.[17]: 49–50 

Santo Stefano Prison Edit

 
The courtyard of the prison at Santo Stefano

The prison on the island of Santo Stefano was completed in 1797 with a design based on the theories of Jeremy Bentham, the English philosopher, jurist and social reformer, and his concept of the ideal prison he named Panopticon. This involved the architecture of institutional buildings to allow all prison cells to be observed by a single unseen security guard, who may or may not be present, giving them the sensation of being constantly watched. The prison is an attractive large three-story building with 99 cells in the shape of a horseshoe and a watchtower at the centre of the courtyard.[17]: 85–89 [18][circular reference]

Many famous political prisoners have spent time here, such as Carmine Crocco, the most important brigand during the Italian unification, and Gaetano Bresci, the anarchist who killed King Umberto I in 1900 and was imprisoned there for a year before being hanged in his cell by his jailers. During the Fascist regime, many antifascists were locked up at Santo Stefano, including the future President of Italy, Sandro Pertini. The prison was closed in 1965.[17]: 91 [19][circular reference]

 
Emperor Tiberius at the Archaeological Museum

The Archaeological Museum Edit

The Archaeological Museum of Ventotene is located on the ground floor of the Bourbon castle, seat of the Town Council. It contains finds from the island, the seabed and the wreckages of Roman ships around the island, as well as a large model of the island during the Augustan age with the Imperial residence and connected structures, such as the port and other villas. Unfortunately, all statues from Villa Giulia have disappeared or been sold in indiscriminate plundering over the centuries, and all that remains is a marble head bust of emperor Tiberius, on display in the museum.[17]: 94–95 [20]

In July 2009, archaeologists announced the discovery of a "graveyard" of five ancient Roman ships in the deep waters off Ventotene, with their pristine cargoes of olive oil, garum and metal ingots.[21][22] One ship carried a full load of a kind of dish called a mortarium, in which foods were ground or mashed.[22] Some of the recovered objects were immediately placed on view at Ventotene.

 
A wood warbler being ringed

The Bird Observatory and Migration Museum Edit

Italy’s only bird migration museum can be found at the high, southern end of the island in a building called Il Semaforo. The information at the museum is based on 20 years of the observatory’s research and monitoring, and explains how, where and why birds migrate as they do and the importance of bird ringing. There are real-sized models of many of the species which use Ventotene as a stopover. During the spring and autumn migration, visitors can go along and watch while birds are weighed, measured and ringed.[15]

Culture Edit

 
Launch of a hot air balloon at the Santa Candida festival

Santa Candida Festival Edit

The celebration of the island’s patron saint, Saint Candida, takes place on 20 September, but the festivities start ten days beforehand with the daily launch of a hot air balloon accompanied by a marching band. The decorated paper balloons, a type of giant sky lantern up to 10 m in height, are constructed by the island’s youth during the summer and on the 19th there is a balloon competition as part of “The Games” that take place in the Roman port all afternoon. The festival culminates in a day-long feast and religious procession on the 20th, when a statue of Saint Candida, placed on a flower adorned boat, exits the church, and is carried around the island’s narrow streets on the shoulders of eight men. As with all events during the festival, the band plays and firecrackers and fireworks are set off continuously. The celebrations end with two fireworks displays.[23][24]

Transport Edit

The island is connected by a daily ferry and hydrofoil service to Formia provided by the ferry company Laziomar. This is supplemented by summer services to Anzio and Terracina on the mainland, and the nearby island Ponza.[25] During the summer months, SNAV also operates routes between Ventotene and Naples, as well as the island of Ischia.[26]

Gallery Edit

See also Edit

References Edit

  1. ^ W. Pape; Gustav Eduard Benseler (1884). Wörterbuch der griechischen Eigennamen (in German). F. Vieweg. p. 1121.
  2. ^ Annamaria Perrotta; Claudio Scarpati; Lisetta Giacomelli; Anna Rita Capozzi (1996). . Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research. Archived from the original on 2011-07-19. Retrieved 2010-12-18.
  3. ^ Stephanus of Byzantium, Ethnica, §P500.16
  4. ^ Sarah T. Cohen, "Augustus, Julia and the Development of Exile "Ad Insulam"", The Classical Quarterly, New Series, Vol. 58, No. 1 (May, 2008), pp. 206–217
  5. ^ Tacitus. The Annals. 1.53 .
  6. ^ Tacitus. The Annals. 14.63-64 .
  7. ^ a b John Steinbeck (1958). Once There Was a War.
  8. ^ Nick Squires; Peter Foster (22 August 2016). "Renzi, Hollande and Merkel head to birthplace of European project to map out post-Brexit future". The Telegraph. Retrieved 23 August 2016.
  9. ^ "Riserva Naturale Statale Isole di Ventotene e S. Stefano". Riserva Ventotene. 18 May 2009.
  10. ^ "AMP Isole di Ventotene e S. Stefano". 17 May 2009.
  11. ^ "Zonizzazione AMP". Riserva Ventotene. 2 June 2009.
  12. ^ "Comune di Ventotene". Italpedia.
  13. ^ "Santa Lucia (nave ambulanza)". Italian Wikipedia.
  14. ^ Lambertini, Marco (2007). Ventotene sott'acqua con pinne e maschera (in Italian). Pisa, Italy: Pacini Editore SpA. p. 10. ISBN 978-88-7781-897-3.
  15. ^ a b c Spina, Fernando (2000). A guide to the Ventotene Migration Museum and Bird Observatory. Rome, Italy: Darwin SocietàCooperativa.
  16. ^ "Ventotene". Liguriabirding (in Italian). April 2007. Retrieved 29 February 2020.
  17. ^ a b c d e f g h De Rossi, Giovanni Maria (1995). Ventotene e S. Stefano (English transalation). Translated by Wright, Nicole Jane. Rome, Italy: Guido Guidotti Editore.
  18. ^ "Carcere di Santo Stefano". Italian Wikipedia (in Italian). Retrieved 29 February 2020.
  19. ^ "Santo Stefano Island". Wikipedia.
  20. ^ "Museo Storico Archeologico". Comune di Ventotene (in Italian).
  21. ^ "Ancient Roman shipwrecks found". BBC News. 24 July 2009. Retrieved 2010-11-19.
  22. ^ a b . Secrets of the Dead. PBS. November 15, 2010. Archived from the original on 2010-11-14. Retrieved 2010-11-19.
  23. ^ "Festa Patronale di Santa Candida". Comune di Ventotene (in Italian).
  24. ^ "Ventotene". Italpedia.
  25. ^ "Laziomar homepage". Laziomar (in Italian).
  26. ^ "SNAV homepage". SNAV Collegamenti Marittimi.

External links Edit

  • Ventotene official website
  • ‘Tiny, charming island offers taste of pure Italy’, cnn.com/travel, October 6, 2008.
  • in The Global Herald, July 2011
  • "Ventotene". Global Volcanism Program. Smithsonian Institution. Retrieved 14 September 2016.

ventotene, italian, ventoˈtɛːne, locally, vientutene, latin, pandataria, pandateria, from, ancient, greek, Πανδατερία, romanized, pandatería, Πανδατωρία, pandatōría, pontine, islands, tyrrhenian, kilometres, nautical, miles, coast, gaeta, right, border, betwee. Ventotene Italian ventoˈtɛːne locally Vientutene Latin Pandataria or Pandateria from Ancient Greek Pandateria romanized Pandateria or Pandatwria Pandatōria 1 is one of the Pontine Islands in the Tyrrhenian Sea 46 kilometres 25 nautical miles off the coast of Gaeta right at the border between Lazio and Campania Italy The municipality of Ventotene of the province of Latina Lazio had 708 permanent residents as of 2008 update Ventotene Vientutene Neapolitan ComuneComune di VentoteneVentotene within the Province of LatinaLocation of VentoteneVentoteneLocation of Ventotene in ItalyShow map of ItalyVentoteneVentotene Lazio Show map of LazioCoordinates 40 47 51 N 13 25 48 E 40 79750 N 13 43000 E 40 79750 13 43000CountryItalyRegionLazioProvinceLatina LT Government MayorCarmine Caputo Civic list Area Total1 54 km2 0 59 sq mi Elevation18 m 59 ft Population 30 November 2018 Total768 Density500 km2 1 300 sq mi DemonymVentotenesiTime zoneUTC 1 CET Summer DST UTC 2 CEST Postal code04031Dialing code0771ISTAT code059033Patron saintSt CandidaSaint daySeptember 20WebsiteOfficial website Contents 1 Geography 1 1 Climate 2 History 2 1 Roman Empire 2 2 Twentieth Century 3 Environment 3 1 Nature Reserve 3 2 Marine Reserve 3 3 Bird migration 4 Main sights 4 1 The Ruins of Villa Giulia 4 2 The Roman Port 4 3 The Fishery 4 4 The cistern of the Carcerati 4 5 Santo Stefano Prison 4 6 The Archaeological Museum 4 7 The Bird Observatory and Migration Museum 5 Culture 5 1 Santa Candida Festival 6 Transport 7 Gallery 8 See also 9 References 10 External linksGeography EditThe island the remains of an ancient volcano 2 is elongated with a length of 3 kilometres 2 miles and a maximum width of about 800 metres 2 600 feet The municipality includes the small ancillary island of Santo Stefano located 2 km 1 1 4 mi to the east which was the site of a massive prison now closed Further islands are Ponza Palmarola and Zannone located 40 km 25 mi to the west Climate Edit Ventotene has a typical Mediterranean climate with hot dry summers and mild wet winters that tend to be very windy Vento as in the island s name meaning wind in Italian is apt to describe the prominent weather condition for this small island far out at sea The temperature never drops below 0 C 32 F History EditRoman Empire Edit Ventotene like all the Pontine Islands was owned by the Emperor Augustus r 31 BC 14 AD who had a huge summer palace built on the island in the early part of his reign including extensive thermae terraces gardens an exedra and aqueducts and which remained thereafter an imperial property It is now known as the Villa Giulia as it was possibly the place to which he banished his daughter Julia the Elder in 2 BC as a reaction to her notorious adultery 3 and where he could easily keep an eye on her Augustus had two villas on the island but Julia was probably sent to the Villa Giulia located on the Punta d Eolo on the north of the island with all the facilities of an imperial retreat 4 In 29 AD emperor Tiberius banished Augustus granddaughter Agrippina the Elder 5 who perished probably of malnutrition on 18 October 33 AD After Agrippina the Elder s son Gaius better known as Caligula became emperor in 37 AD he went to Pandataria to collect her remains and reverently brought them back to Rome Agrippina the Elder s youngest daughter Julia Livilla was exiled to Pandateria twice the first time by her brother Caligula for plotting to depose him and the second time by her uncle the emperor Claudius at the instigation of his wife Messalina in 41 AD Sometime later Julia Livilla was discreetly starved to death and her remains were probably brought back to Rome when her older sister Agrippina the Younger became influential as Claudius wife Another distinguished lady of the Julio Claudian dynasty Claudia Octavia who was the first wife of the emperor Nero was banished to Pandateria in 62 AD and then executed on the orders of her husband 6 This is also the island to which St Flavia Domitilla the granddaughter of the emperor Vespasian was banished Twentieth Century Edit A prison camp was created under the Bourbons and restructured under Benito Mussolini on the nearby island of Santo Stefano There up to 700 opponents including 400 communists were incarcerated between 1939 and 1943 One of them was Altiero Spinelli who wrote there a text now known as the Ventotene Manifesto promoting the idea of a federal Europe after the war During World War II the island served as home to a 114 man German garrison which defended a key radar station On the night of 8 December 1943 an American PT boat slipped into Ventotene s harbour undetected and offloaded 46 American paratroopers from the 509th Parachute Infantry Battalion led by naval lieutenant and actor Douglas Fairbanks Jr who was tactical commander of the Beach Jumpers a group that used all forms available of deception to deceive the enemy and commando trained 7 The paratroopers met with a local exile from the Italian mainland who then lied to the German commander that there was a regiment of paratroopers on the island deposited by a fleet of Allied ships Terrified the German commander demolished his positions weapons and quickly surrendered to the weaker American force before realizing his mistake Ventotene was liberated at 03 00 without a shot being fired The story is reported by John Steinbeck in Once There Was A War 7 In August 2016 then Italian Prime Minister Matteo Renzi met with then German Chancellor Angela Merkel and then French President Francois Hollande on Ventotene to lay a wreath at the tomb of Altiero Spinelli and review European Union policy in the light of the then impending British withdrawal from the EU 8 Environment EditNature Reserve Edit Ventotene and Santo Stefano are both part of a nature reserve created in 1999 in order to preserve the ecological geomorphological and naturalistic environmental characteristics and to promote activities compatible with the conservation of the reserve s natural resources This means that new buildings cannot be erected and reconstruction is limited 9 Marine Reserve Edit The marine reserve which covers a 10 km long coastal area is divided into three zones with varying degrees of protection and permitted activities 10 11 Ventotene is a popular destination for scuba divers due to its clear warm waters and variety of marine life 12 Several diving centres take divers of all levels of competency to nearby destinations to see caves filled with prawns or swim among fish which have become rather unafraid of people since fishing was banned in 1997 There are also guided tours to see Roman amphorae from ships sunk 2000 years ago and the large steamer Santa Lucia which was sunk during World War II resulting in nearly 100 dead It lies at a depth of about 40 m 130 ft 13 circular reference There is also a lot to be seen with the use of snorkeling gear at only a few meters depth around the island and its beaches 14 Bird migration Edit nbsp Birds being released from nets ready for ringingVentotene is a well known birdwatching location as the island serves as an essential stopover point for large numbers of migratory birds The bird observatory which was founded in 1988 rings approximately 20 000 birds a year During the height of the spring migration in April and May thousands of birds arrive daily from North Africa s coasts after having flown 400 500 km non stop 15 The Pontian Archipelago offers the first chance to stop after the prolonged flight and due to the tiny size of Ventotene the concentration of birds of numerous species is extremely high The exhausted birds rest and feed frenetically quite indifferent to human presence allowing birdwatchers to observe and photograph them as in few other places in Italy 16 The bird observatory is part of PPI Progetto Piccole Isole a project which has studied the bird migration across the Mediterranean since 1988 at 46 sites in seven countries The results of these studies led to the creation of the Ventotene Bird Migration Museum in 2006 15 Main sights EditThe Ruins of Villa Giulia Edit nbsp Domus farm area of Villa GiuliaMain article Villa Giulia Ventotene In the early part of his reign emperor Augustus had a summer palace built on the island which at the time was private property 17 12 The remnants of the huge complex of over 3 000 m 32 000 ft which included thermae terraces gardens an exedra and aqueducts can be seen at Punto Eolo Over the centuries the villa has been subject to systematic plundering and senseless excavations However excavations have revealed thermal baths servants quarters courtyards water reservoirs and passages to the sea The imperial summer residence has become known as Villa Giulia as it became the place of exile of Augustus s daughter Julia the Elder in 2 BC 17 31 32 nbsp The Roman port with a mooring on the leftThe Roman Port Edit The Roman port which is still in use was built to support emperor Augustus summer residence as there was no natural harbour on the island It was entirely excavated in the rock banks and about 60 000 m 2 119 000 ft were removed to create a port with a narrow protected inlet It is approximately 180 m 600 ft long by 85 m 280 ft at its widest and 3 m 10 ft deep The quayside was lined by storerooms and depots hewn from the rock nowadays converted to bars restaurants shops and diving centres 17 20 22 The Fishery Edit At the foot of the lighthouse are the remnants of the Roman fishery excavated in the rock consisting of three pools one outside and two in rooms with arched roofs where fragments of decorated plaster and stuccoes remain A sophisticated system of canals and shutters devised for water exchange and the transfer of fish from one compartment to another ensured a constant supply of many kinds of fresh fish to the imperial household all year round and in all weather conditions The fishery is best viewed from the water swimming with snorkeling gear as the sea level today is about a metre 1 yard higher than when it was constructed 17 27 29 nbsp Wall paintings at the reservoir the CarceratiThe cistern of the Carcerati Edit As Ventotene has never had an adequate supply of fresh water several enormous cisterns to collect rainwater were built in Roman times in the central parts of the island They were excavated in the rock to a depth of approximately 10 m and consist of a system of vaulted roof tunnels galleries basins and corridors One of these known as the Carcerati prisoners can be visited on guided tours The name derives from the convicts who were sent to the island in the late 18th century to build the present village and were housed in the by then empty reservoir The walls of the galleries are covered with graffiti inscriptions and drawings from various centuries but particularly from the convicts who drew images of houses and nature to remember places they were never to see again 17 49 50 Santo Stefano Prison Edit nbsp The courtyard of the prison at Santo StefanoThe prison on the island of Santo Stefano was completed in 1797 with a design based on the theories of Jeremy Bentham the English philosopher jurist and social reformer and his concept of the ideal prison he named Panopticon This involved the architecture of institutional buildings to allow all prison cells to be observed by a single unseen security guard who may or may not be present giving them the sensation of being constantly watched The prison is an attractive large three story building with 99 cells in the shape of a horseshoe and a watchtower at the centre of the courtyard 17 85 89 18 circular reference Many famous political prisoners have spent time here such as Carmine Crocco the most important brigand during the Italian unification and Gaetano Bresci the anarchist who killed King Umberto I in 1900 and was imprisoned there for a year before being hanged in his cell by his jailers During the Fascist regime many antifascists were locked up at Santo Stefano including the future President of Italy Sandro Pertini The prison was closed in 1965 17 91 19 circular reference nbsp Emperor Tiberius at the Archaeological MuseumThe Archaeological Museum Edit The Archaeological Museum of Ventotene is located on the ground floor of the Bourbon castle seat of the Town Council It contains finds from the island the seabed and the wreckages of Roman ships around the island as well as a large model of the island during the Augustan age with the Imperial residence and connected structures such as the port and other villas Unfortunately all statues from Villa Giulia have disappeared or been sold in indiscriminate plundering over the centuries and all that remains is a marble head bust of emperor Tiberius on display in the museum 17 94 95 20 In July 2009 archaeologists announced the discovery of a graveyard of five ancient Roman ships in the deep waters off Ventotene with their pristine cargoes of olive oil garum and metal ingots 21 22 One ship carried a full load of a kind of dish called a mortarium in which foods were ground or mashed 22 Some of the recovered objects were immediately placed on view at Ventotene nbsp A wood warbler being ringedThe Bird Observatory and Migration Museum Edit Italy s only bird migration museum can be found at the high southern end of the island in a building called Il Semaforo The information at the museum is based on 20 years of the observatory s research and monitoring and explains how where and why birds migrate as they do and the importance of bird ringing There are real sized models of many of the species which use Ventotene as a stopover During the spring and autumn migration visitors can go along and watch while birds are weighed measured and ringed 15 Culture Edit nbsp Launch of a hot air balloon at the Santa Candida festivalSanta Candida Festival Edit The celebration of the island s patron saint Saint Candida takes place on 20 September but the festivities start ten days beforehand with the daily launch of a hot air balloon accompanied by a marching band The decorated paper balloons a type of giant sky lantern up to 10 m in height are constructed by the island s youth during the summer and on the 19th there is a balloon competition as part of The Games that take place in the Roman port all afternoon The festival culminates in a day long feast and religious procession on the 20th when a statue of Saint Candida placed on a flower adorned boat exits the church and is carried around the island s narrow streets on the shoulders of eight men As with all events during the festival the band plays and firecrackers and fireworks are set off continuously The celebrations end with two fireworks displays 23 24 Transport EditThe island is connected by a daily ferry and hydrofoil service to Formia provided by the ferry company Laziomar This is supplemented by summer services to Anzio and Terracina on the mainland and the nearby island Ponza 25 During the summer months SNAV also operates routes between Ventotene and Naples as well as the island of Ischia 26 Gallery Edit nbsp Ventotene and the Pontine Islands nbsp View towards the island of Santo Stefano nbsp Piazza Castello nbsp The Cala Nave Beach nbsp The zig zag ramp leading from the port to the village nbsp Hot air balloon at the Santa Candida festival nbsp A bee eater after bird ringing nbsp A golden oriole during the spring migration nbsp Field of the lentils for which the island is famed nbsp View over Ventotene and the Bird Observatory nbsp The ancient portico at Porto Romano the Roman port nbsp Il Pozillo part of the Roman portSee also EditList of islands of Italy Ventotene Manifesto Santo Stefano Island Pontine Islands Santo Stefano lizardReferences Edit W Pape Gustav Eduard Benseler 1884 Worterbuch der griechischen Eigennamen in German F Vieweg p 1121 Annamaria Perrotta Claudio Scarpati Lisetta Giacomelli Anna Rita Capozzi 1996 Proximal facies of a caldera forming eruption the Parata Grande Tuff at Ventotene Island Italy Journal of Volcanology and Geothermal Research Archived from the original on 2011 07 19 Retrieved 2010 12 18 Stephanus of Byzantium Ethnica P500 16 Sarah T Cohen Augustus Julia and the Development of Exile Ad Insulam The Classical Quarterly New Series Vol 58 No 1 May 2008 pp 206 217 Tacitus The Annals 1 53 Tacitus The Annals 14 63 64 a b John Steinbeck 1958 Once There Was a War Nick Squires Peter Foster 22 August 2016 Renzi Hollande and Merkel head to birthplace of European project to map out post Brexit future The Telegraph Retrieved 23 August 2016 Riserva Naturale Statale Isole di Ventotene e S Stefano Riserva Ventotene 18 May 2009 AMP Isole di Ventotene e S Stefano 17 May 2009 Zonizzazione AMP Riserva Ventotene 2 June 2009 Comune di Ventotene Italpedia Santa Lucia nave ambulanza Italian Wikipedia Lambertini Marco 2007 Ventotene sott acqua con pinne e maschera in Italian Pisa Italy Pacini Editore SpA p 10 ISBN 978 88 7781 897 3 a b c Spina Fernando 2000 A guide to the Ventotene Migration Museum and Bird Observatory Rome Italy Darwin SocietaCooperativa Ventotene Liguriabirding in Italian April 2007 Retrieved 29 February 2020 a b c d e f g h De Rossi Giovanni Maria 1995 Ventotene e S Stefano English transalation Translated by Wright Nicole Jane Rome Italy Guido Guidotti Editore Carcere di Santo Stefano Italian Wikipedia in Italian Retrieved 29 February 2020 Santo Stefano Island Wikipedia Museo Storico Archeologico Comune di Ventotene in Italian Ancient Roman shipwrecks found BBC News 24 July 2009 Retrieved 2010 11 19 a b Lost Ships of Rome Secrets of the Dead PBS November 15 2010 Archived from the original on 2010 11 14 Retrieved 2010 11 19 Festa Patronale di Santa Candida Comune di Ventotene in Italian Ventotene Italpedia Laziomar homepage Laziomar in Italian SNAV homepage SNAV Collegamenti Marittimi External links Edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ventotene island Ventotene official website Tiny charming island offers taste of pure Italy cnn com travel October 6 2008 Ventotene An Island in The Global Herald July 2011 Ventotene Global Volcanism Program Smithsonian Institution Retrieved 14 September 2016 Portals nbsp Geography nbsp Islands nbsp Italy Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ventotene amp oldid 1179539096, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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