What’s So Great About Cinque Terre?
What's so great about Cinque Terre, you ask? Well, let me tell you. First, it's a place that has stood still in time. Although many have found out about my beloved Cinque Terre in the last 15 years or so, it is still a place of quiet beauty where one can easily hang out on a bench overlooking the sea for the majority of the day and not feel guilty.
And so, tell me where else in Europe you can find five beautiful, charming villages with a total population of not quite 6,000 that are connected, not by roads and highways, but rather footpaths and a train? That's right, The Cinque Terre is your answer. Check out the map of Cinque Terre here.
Basically, the entire part of this coast is nothing but the ends of the French Alps and Italy's Apennine Mountains - crashing into each other and spilling down into the Mediterranean Sea. With no coastal plain and hardly any beaches to speak of (many of the beaches known today are man made by hauling sand in expressly for this purpose), land access along this coast has been very difficult throughout history.
Most people think that the Mediterranean coasts have been settled for a long time and that the local communities of Cinque Terre and other coastal towns were centered around the sea.
Yes, the second part of this statement is true since trade and commerce happened mostly by sea, but the first part of the above sentence isn't true. And this is because with the exception of a few centuries under the extensive Pax Romana throughout the Mediterranean basin, living on the coast or anywhere in sight of the ocean wasn't considered safe.
What we know today, as the Italian Riviera was plagued by pirates, slave traders, and marauders, to name a few of the evils that abounded. Around 1000 AD came the rise of the Italian cities of Pisa, Genoa, Venice and Amalfi and this created a new century of "pax" (peace) which allowed farmers and fishermen to begin to inhabit and develop their trades along the coasts of the Italian and French Rivieras.
The above mentioned maritime empires now made the seas safe for trading and the coasts safe for settling. In addition, with the turn of the 2nd millennium in the Christian era - this also marked the beginning of an increasing agricultural revolution. The population of Europe was increasing and this caused people to branch out and move east.
What did this mean for the Mediterranean basin? Farmers soon began to settle the Ligurian coast. It was during this era that the villages of the Italian and French Rivieras as well as the Cinque Terre were built.
Check out the links below for more interesting articles about the history of Cinque Terre, the Italian Riviera.
Historical Cinque Terre
History of Cinque Terre
Cinque Terre Map
If you have a link that you would like to share in reference to the history of this beautiful spot in Italy - please contact us! We would love to add it to our collection of history notes and articles.
In the meantime, please feel free to browse through our site. I bet you'll find yourself making a reservation and hopping on a plane to Cinque Terre pronto!
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