Illustrated History of Sicily

A visual journey through the land, cuisine, people, language, and living traditions of Sicily — the crossroads of civilizations.

Roman Sicily

241 BC–476 AD

Rome’s first overseas province. Its granary. Its training ground for empire. And the first era of great injustice suffered by the Sicilian people at the hands of a foreign conqueror.

Era overview

When the First Punic War ended in 241 BC with Roman victory over Carthage, Sicily became something it had never been before: a province. For the first time in its history, the entire island was ruled by a single foreign power as a territorial possession. Rome would hold Sicily for over 700 years — longer than any other civilization in Sicilian history. The relationship between the island and its Roman rulers would set a repeated pattern of foreign rule in Sicily throughout the ages – extraction of wealth and resources from the land, coupled with the subjugation and exploitation of its population. 

Sicily became Rome’s granary. The island’s fertile plains were organized into vast estates, worked by enslaved laborers imported from across the Mediterranean. Grain from Sicily fed the city of Rome and Rome’s legions abroad. The tremendous revenue from Sicilian agriculture fueled Roman expansion. And the conditions on the great agricultural estates — the latifundia — were so brutal that they ignited two separate  Servile Wars, massive slave revolts that required full Roman armies to suppress.

The most notorious episode of Roman misrule in Sicily is preserved forever by Cicero’s prosecution of the Roman governor Gaius Verres in 70 BC. Verres systematically plundered Sicily during his three-year governorship, stealing art treasures, extorting citizens, and perverting justice on a scale so vast that his name became synonymous with corrupt provincial governance. The Sicilian people themselves brought the case to Rome, and Cicero’s speeches against Verres became one of the most famous prosecutions in Roman legal history. Thus, the pattern of foreign rulers exploiting Sicily as their personal wealth-extraction zone had been fully established by the end of the Roman Republic.

On May 11, 1860, a 53-year-old revolutionary named Giuseppe Garibaldi

At the conclusion of the War of Spanish Succession in

After the Sicilian Vespers drove the French from the island,

When the last Norman king died in 1189 without a

The Norman conquest of Sicily was one of the most

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356
420
476