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PANTELLERIA, or PANTALARIA (ancient C...

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Originally appearing in Volume V20, Page 682 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PANTELLERIA, or PANTALARIA (ancient Cossyra1)  , an island in the Mediterranean, 62 m . S. by W. of the south-western extremity of Sicily, and 44 M . E. of the
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African coast, belonging to the Sicilian province of Trapani . Pop . (1901), 8683 . It is entirely of volcanic origin, and about 45 sq. m. in
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area; the highest point, an
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extinct
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crater, is 2743 ft. above sea-level . Hot
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mineral springs and ebullitions of steam still testify to the presence of volcanic activity . The island is fertile, but lacks fresh
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water . The
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principal
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town (pop. about 3000) is on the north-west, upon the only harbour (only
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fit for small steamers), which is fortified . There is also a penal colony here . The island can be reached by steamer from Trapani, and lies close to the main route from east to west through the Mediterranean . In 1905 about 300,000 1 The name is Semitic, but its meaning is uncertain.-PANTHEISM gallons of wine (mostly sweet wine), and 'goo tons of dried raisins, to the value of 34,720, were exported .

On the west coast, 2 M. south-east of the harbour, a

neolithic
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village was situated, with a rampart of small blocks of
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obsidian, about 25 ft. high, 33 ft. wide at the
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base, and 16 at the top, upon the undefended eastern side: within it remains of huts were found, with pottery, tools of obsidian, &c . The
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objects discovered are in the museum at Syracuse . To the south-east, in the
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district known as the Cunelfe, are a large number of tombs, known as sesi, similar in character to the nuraghi of Sardinia, though of smaller
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size, consisting of round or elliptical towers with sepulchral chambers in them, built of rough blocks of
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lava . Fifty-seven of them can still be traced . The largest is an ellipse of about 6o by 66 ft., but most of the sesi have a diameter of 20-25 ft. only . The identical character of the pottery found in the sesi with that found in the prehistoric village proves that the former are the tombs of the inhabitants of the latter . This population came from Africa, not from Sicily, and was of Iberian or Ibero-Ligurian stock . After a considerable
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interval, during which the island probably remained uninhabited, the Carthaginians took possession of it (no doubt owing to its importance as a station on the way to Sicily) probably about the beginning of the 7th century B.C., occupying as their acropolis the twin hill of
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San Marco and Sta Teresa, i m. south of the town of Pantelleria, where there are considerable remains of walls in rectangular blocks of
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masonry, and also of a number of cisterns . Punic tombs have also been discovered, and the votive terra-cottas of a small sanctuary of the Punic period were found near the north coast . The Romans occupied the island as the
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Fasti Triumphales record in 255 B.C., lost it again the next
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year, and recovered it in 217 B.C . Under the
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Empire it served as a place of banishment for prominent persons and members of the imperial
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family . The town enjoyed municipal rights .

In 700 the

Christian population was annihilated by the
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Arabs, from whom the island was taken in 1123 by Roger of Sicily . In 1311 a
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Spanish
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fleet, under the command of Requesens, won a considerable victory here, and his family became princes of Pantelleria until 1J53, when the town was sacked by the
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Turks . See Orsi, " Pantelleria " (in Monumenti del Lincei 1899, ix . 193-284) . (T .

End of Article: PANTELLERIA, or PANTALARIA (ancient Cossyra1)
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