Illustrated History of Sicily

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

Barbarian and Byzantine Rule

476–827 AD

Following a century of control by Germanic tribes, Constantinople’s distant hand ruled the island for nearly three centuries. Sicilians were oppressed by fellow Greeks from the east and the island was overly taxed and steadily impoverished.

Era overview

When the Western Roman Empire collapsed in 476 AD, Sicily did not collapse with it. The island was briefly ruled by barbarian kingdoms, first by the Vandals and then by the Ostrogoths. However,  in 535 AD the Byzantine general Belisarius, acting on the orders of Emperor Justinian, reconquered Sicily for the Eastern Roman Empire in a matter of months. For the next 292 years, Sicily was a province of the Byzantine Empire, ruled distantly from Constantinople, with Greek as its language of government and Orthodox Christianity as its dominant faith.

The Byzantine centuries in Sicily are often called the “forgotten centuries” because so little is written about them compared to the glamour of Greek temples or the Norman golden age. But this was a formative period in Sicilian identity. Orthodox monasteries proliferated across the island. Byzantine art and architecture shaped Sicilian cities. Greek was spoken on the island for so long that it continued to be used in rural Sicily even centuries after Norman rulers replaced the Arab and Byzantine ones.

But Byzantine rule was also an era of increasing neglect. Constantinople was preoccupied by constant  wars against foreign enemies, such as the Persians, Arabs, and Slavic nations, as well as by  internal political and religious conflicts (including the divisive iconoclast controversy that outlawed the veneration of Christian images). During most of Byzantine rule, Sicily was a distant, heavily taxed province, important only as a source of grain and revenue. When Arab armies began raiding the island’s coasts in the early 9th century, Byzantine defenses were insufficient to turn back the invaders.  The stage was set for the island’s next great transformation.

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

476 AD
525 AD
653 AD
729 AD
827 AD