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PORT MAHON, or MAHON (Spanish Puerto ...

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Originally appearing in Volume V22, Page 122 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PORT MAHON, or MAHON (
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Spanish Puerto Mahon)
  , the capital and
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principal seaport of Minorca, in the .
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Spanish province of the Balearic Islands . Pop . (1900), 17,144 .
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Port Mahon is situated on the east coast, at the head of a deep inlet which extends inland for 32 m . It is an important harbour (see MINORCA) . The city occupies a conspicuous hill, and presents a
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fine appearance from the sea; it is solidly built of excellent stone . Many of the houses date from the
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British occupation, which has also
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left curious traces in the customs and speech of the
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people . The King's Island (Isla del Rey, so called as the landing-place of
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Alphonso III. of Aragon in 1287) contains a hospital built by the
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admiral of the British
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squadron in 1722; farther south-east on the
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shore is the
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village of
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Villa Carlos or George
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Town, with ruins of extensive British barracks; and at the mouth of the port, on the same side, are the remains of Forte
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San Felipe, originally erected by Charles V. and twice the scene of the capitulation of British troops . Opposite San Felipe is the easily defended peninsula of La Mola (256 ft. high), which is occupied by extensive Spanish fortifications . Mahon is one of the principal quarantine stations of Spain; the
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lazaretto, erected between 1798 and 1803, stands on a long tongue of
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land, separated from La Mola by the inlet of Cala Taulera . The principal
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modern buildings are the military and
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naval hospitals, the theatre, museum, library and
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schools .

There are an

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arsenal and extensive quays . From its position on the route of vessels plying between Algeria and the south of France, the harbour is much frequented by French cargo-steamers; it is also a Spanish naval station . The principal exports are grain, live stock and fruit; cement,
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coal, iron, machinery,
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flour, raw cotton and hides are imported . Shoes and cotton and woollen goods are manufactured . About 250 vessels enter the port every
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year, and the
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annual value of the
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foreign trade is, approximately, £200,000 to £250,000 . Mahon is the ancient
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Portus Magonis, which under the Romans was a municipium (Mun. ftavium magontanum), probably including the whole island under its authority . As the name suggests, it had previously been a Carthaginian settlement . The Moors, who occupied Minorca in the 8th century, were expelled by James I. of Aragon in 1232 . Khair-ed-Din Barbarossa besieged and captured the city in 1535; and in 1558 it was sacked by a corsair called Piali . The British, who under James Stanhope, afterwards
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Earl Stanhope, seized the island in 1708, made Mahon a flourishing city, and in 1718 declared it a
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free port . In '756 it fell into the hands of the French through the failure of Admiral Byng to relieve the garrison of St Philip's (San Felipe) . Restored to the British in 1762, it was in '782 heroically but unsuccessfully defended by General Murray .

In 1802 it was finally ceded to Spain by the treaty of

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Amiens .

End of Article: PORT MAHON, or MAHON (Spanish Puerto Mahon)
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