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  • Sant'Antioco island, the archeological museum Ferruccio Barreca preserves and displays a wide range of artifacts from the island. The main part of the collection it’s about the important urban settlement built on the eastern coasts of the island at the beginning of the eighth century. B.C., known by the name of Sulky or Sulci, port benchmark of the territorial district of the south-western Sardinia.
    em7162464.jpg
  • Sant'Antioco island, the archeological museum Ferruccio Barreca preserves and displays a wide range of artifacts from the island. The main part of the collection it’s about the important urban settlement built on the eastern coasts of the island at the beginning of the eighth century. B.C., known by the name of Sulky or Sulci, port benchmark of the territorial district of the south-western Sardinia.
    em7162441.jpg
  • Sant'Antioco island, the archeological museum Ferruccio Barreca preserves and displays a wide range of artifacts from the island. The main part of the collection it’s about the important urban settlement built on the eastern coasts of the island at the beginning of the eighth century. B.C., known by the name of Sulky or Sulci, port benchmark of the territorial district of the south-western Sardinia.
    em7162454.jpg
  • Sant'Antioco island, the archeological museum Ferruccio Barreca preserves and displays a wide range of artifacts from the island. The main part of the collection it’s about the important urban settlement built on the eastern coasts of the island at the beginning of the eighth century. B.C., known by the name of Sulky or Sulci, port benchmark of the territorial district of the south-western Sardinia.
    em7162447.jpg
  • Sant'Antioco island, two Phoenician lions of Hittite or Syriac influence that once protected the gate of the Punic city. The archeological museum Ferruccio Barreca preserves and displays a wide range of artifacts from the island. The main part of the collection it’s about the important urban settlement built on the eastern coasts of the island at the beginning of the eighth century. B.C., known by the name of Sulky or Sulci, port benchmark of the territorial district of the south-western Sardinia.
    em7162436.jpg
  • Sant'Antioco island, the archeological museum Ferruccio Barreca. Tofet steles represented the parents’ thanks of the little dead to the gods for having received the gift of a new birth and the continuation of their descendance. The term Tofet is commonly used to identify a particular type of sanctuary present in the Phoenician and Punic cities of the central Mediterranean. The main part of the museum's collection it’s about the important urban settlement built on the eastern coasts of the island at the beginning of the eighth century. B.C., known by the name of Sulky or Sulci, port benchmark of the territorial district of the south-western Sardinia.
    em7162451.jpg
  • Sant'Antioco Island. Coecuaddus and Canai Tower.
    em7162494.jpg
  • San Pietro island,  Carloforte. Tonino Sanna, one of the last two shipwright of the island. Carloforte boasts a long-standing tradition of wooden boatbuilding. In the 18th century the then-uninhabited San Pietro was colonized by people of Ligurian language and ethnicity, coming from the Republic of Genoa's colony at Tabarka after it had been taken over by the Bey of Tunisia. Today most of the population has retained a variant of Genoese dialect, called Tabarchino,
    em7162183.jpg
  • Sant'Antioco island, Canai Plain the agricoltural area of the island.
    em7162537.jpg
  • Sant'Antioco island. The reconstruction of a Punic burial site in the hypogaeum village including a series of Punic tombs built between the late sixth and the end of the third century B. C. later adapted as houses from the poorer classes of the country; these underground places are known by the name of Is Gruttas, the caves.
    em7162477.jpg
  • Sant'Antioco village. The Palaeo-Christian Basilica of Sant'Antioco. On the back the Savoy fortress build against Barbaresque pirates.
    em7162410.jpg
  • Sant'Antioco island. The Mangiabarche lighthouse ("Eating boats" after many wrecks on these cliffs) near Calasetta village.
    em7162348.jpg
  • San Pietro island, Carloforte. The traditional  "Farinata", the gruel, another Ligurian heritage of the tabarchini.
    em7162209.jpg
  • San Pietro island,  Carloforte, the architecture of the village is strongly connected to the Ligurian roots of the local people. In the 18th century the then-uninhabited San Pietro was colonized by people of Ligurian language and ethnicity, coming from the Republic of Genoa's colony at Tabarka after it had been taken over by the Bey of Tunisia. Today most of the population has retained a variant of Genoese dialect, called Tabarchino,
    em7162120.jpg
  • San Pietro island. The monument of the King of Piedmont-Sardinia Charles Emmanuel III that granted the permission to colonize the then-uninhabited island (1739) to people of Ligurian language and ethnicity, coming from the Republic of Genoa's colony at Tabarka after it had been taken over by the Bey of Tunisia. Today most of the population has retained a variant of Genoese dialect, called Tabarchino, which is also spoken in the northern part of the next Sant'Antioco island, in Calasetta, of same origin.
    em7162050.jpg
  • Calasetta, the harbour with the old Savoy tower, now a museum. Calasetta is a small town on the island founded in 1770. In the middle of the 16th century some Ligurian families from Pegli near Genoa moved to a deserted island off the coast of the Tunisian city of Tabarka in order to work the waters as coral fishermen. Increasing  incursions by Barbery pirates, and expansionist competition by France began a long period of trials for the Tabarchini.<br />
In 1738 a group of Tabarchini decided to leave the island and were received by King Charles Emmanuel III of Savoy in the Kingdom of Sardinia, who gave them the Island of San Pietro to settle. When the Bey of Tunis learned that the Lomellini family intended to sell the island to his enemies the French, he invaded the island   the population. Part of the liberated Tabarchini originated the village of Calasetta
    em7162377.jpg
  • Sant'Antioco island. The Mangiabarche lighthouse ("Eating boats" after many wrecks on these cliffs) near Calasetta village.
    em7162328.jpg
  • San Pietro island,  Carloforte, the architecture of the village is strongly connected to the Ligurian roots of the local people. In the 18th century the then-uninhabited San Pietro was colonized by people of Ligurian language and ethnicity, coming from the Republic of Genoa's colony at Tabarka after it had been taken over by the Bey of Tunisia. Today most of the population has retained a variant of Genoese dialect, called Tabarchino,
    em7162129.jpg
  • San Pietro island,  Carloforte, the architecture of the village is strongly connected to the Ligurian roots of the local people. In the 18th century the then-uninhabited San Pietro was colonized by people of Ligurian language and ethnicity, coming from the Republic of Genoa's colony at Tabarka after it had been taken over by the Bey of Tunisia. Today most of the population has retained a variant of Genoese dialect, called Tabarchino,
    em7162106.jpg
  • San Pietro island,  Carloforte, the architecture of the village is strongly connected to the Ligurian roots of the local people. In the 18th century the then-uninhabited San Pietro was colonized by people of Ligurian language and ethnicity, coming from the Republic of Genoa's colony at Tabarka after it had been taken over by the Bey of Tunisia. Today most of the population has retained a variant of Genoese dialect, called Tabarchino,
    em7162098.jpg
  • Sant'Antioco village. The Palaeo-Christian Basilica of Sant'Antioco.
    em7162423.jpg
  • San Pietro island, La Caletta beach.
    em7162242.jpg
  • em7162470.jpg
  • Calasetta, the harbour with the old Savoy tower, now a museum. Calasetta is a small town on the island founded in 1770. In the middle of the 16th century some Ligurian families from Pegli near Genoa moved to a deserted island off the coast of the Tunisian city of Tabarka in order to work the waters as coral fishermen. Increasing  incursions by Barbery pirates, and expansionist competition by France began a long period of trials for the Tabarchini.<br />
In 1738 a group of Tabarchini decided to leave the island and were received by King Charles Emmanuel III of Savoy in the Kingdom of Sardinia, who gave them the Island of San Pietro to settle. When the Bey of Tunis learned that the Lomellini family intended to sell the island to his enemies the French, he invaded the island   the population. Part of the liberated Tabarchini originated the village of Calasetta
    em7162409.jpg
  • Calasetta, the city hall. Calasetta is a small town on the island founded in 1770. In the middle of the 16th century some Ligurian families from Pegli near Genoa moved to a deserted island off the coast of the Tunisian city of Tabarka in order to work the waters as coral fishermen. Increasing  incursions by Barbery pirates, and expansionist competition by France began a long period of trials for the Tabarchini.<br />
In 1738 a group of Tabarchini decided to leave the island and were received by King Charles Emmanuel III of Savoy in the Kingdom of Sardinia, who gave them the Island of San Pietro to settle. When the Bey of Tunis learned that the Lomellini family intended to sell the island to his enemies the French, he invaded the island   the population. Part of the liberated Tabarchini originated the village of Calasetta
    em7162396.jpg
  • Calasetta, is a small town on the island founded in 1770. In the middle of the 16th century some Ligurian families from Pegli near Genoa moved to a deserted island off the coast of the Tunisian city of Tabarka in order to work the waters as coral fishermen. Increasing  incursions by Barbery pirates, and expansionist competition by France began a long period of trials for the Tabarchini.<br />
In 1738 a group of Tabarchini decided to leave the island and were received by King Charles Emmanuel III of Savoy in the Kingdom of Sardinia, who gave them the Island of San Pietro to settle. When the Bey of Tunis learned that the Lomellini family intended to sell the island to his enemies the French, he invaded the island   the population. Part of the liberated Tabarchini originated the village of Calasetta
    em7162373.jpg
  • Sant'Antioco island. The cliffs of the Western coast.
    em7162368.jpg
  • San Pietro island,  Carloforte. Madonna of the Slave is a dark wooden statue of the Virgin Mary probably a figurehead, found by a tabarchine slave in Nabeul in Tunisia. Since then it was venerated by the Carlofortini slaves and after their liberation held in an oratory of Carloforte. In the 18th century the then-uninhabited San Pietro was colonized by people of Ligurian language and ethnicity, coming from the Republic of Genoa's colony at Tabarka after it had been taken over by the Bey of Tunisia. Today most of the population has retained a variant of Genoese dialect, called Tabarchino,
    em7162143.jpg
  • San Pietro island. The landscape of Cala Fico bay near Capo Sandalo.
    em7162046.jpg
  • San Pietro island. The landscape and the lighthouse of Capo Sandalo, the westermost lighthouse of Italy.
    em7162008.jpg
  • Sant'Antioco island.  the ‘tofet’, a particular type of city sanctuary of Phoenician cultural matrix. The town still preserves the name of ‘Sa guard ‘e is pingiadas’ -the guard of the pots-, popular reminiscence of the presence of many ceramic containers that often emerged in the area.<br />
The term Tofet is commonly used to identify a particular type of sanctuary present in the Phoenician and Punic cities of the central Mediterranean. The tofet is a sacred area in the open air. On the natural rock or on the ground were placed urns containing the ashes of children ever born or prematurely dead, who were cremated and often accompanied by a funerary offer, mainly lambs and poultry also incinerated. The tofet was a sacred and funerary area dedicated to those who did not yet have a social defined identity, therefore they were entrusted to the divinities as in need of special protections and rituals.
    em7162427.jpg
  • Sant'Antioco village. The Palaeo-Christian Basilica of Sant'Antioco. On the back the Savoy fortress build against Barbaresque pirates.
    em7162413.jpg
  • Calasetta, the Fondazione Macc, a contemporary art museum in the old village's slaughterhouse.
    em7162402.jpg
  • San Pietro island, the Northern coast.
    em7162226.jpg
  • San Pietro island,  Carloforte, the architecture of the village is strongly connected to the Ligurian roots of the local people. In the 18th century the then-uninhabited San Pietro was colonized by people of Ligurian language and ethnicity, coming from the Republic of Genoa's colony at Tabarka after it had been taken over by the Bey of Tunisia. Today most of the population has retained a variant of Genoese dialect, called Tabarchino,
    em7162113.jpg
  • San Pietro island. The monument of the King of Piedmont-Sardinia Charles Emmanuel III that granted the permission to colonize the then-uninhabited island (1739) to people of Ligurian language and ethnicity, coming from the Republic of Genoa's colony at Tabarka after it had been taken over by the Bey of Tunisia. Today most of the population has retained a variant of Genoese dialect, called Tabarchino, which is also spoken in the northern part of the next Sant'Antioco island, in Calasetta, of same origin.
    em7162054.jpg
  • San Pietro island, the last survivor of the two stacks on the Western coast of the island.
    em7162268.jpg
  • San Pietro island. The landscape and the lighthouse of Capo Sandalo, the westermost lighthouse of Italy.
    em7162003.jpg
  • San Pietro island, Carloforte. The harbour. Madonna of the Slave is a dark wooden statue of the Virgin Mary probably a figurehead, found by a tabarchine slave in Nabeul in Tunisia. Since then it was venerated by the Carlofortini slaves and after the liberation held in an oratory of Carloforte.
    em7162197.jpg
  • San Pietro island,  Carloforte, St Carlo Borromeo church, the main church of the village. In the 18th century the then-uninhabited San Pietro was colonized by people of Ligurian language and ethnicity, coming from the Republic of Genoa's colony at Tabarka after it had been taken over by the Bey of Tunisia. Today most of the population has retained a variant of Genoese dialect, called Tabarchino,
    em7162092.jpg
  • Sant'Antioco Island. Coecuaddus beach.
    em7162496.jpg
  • Calasetta, is a small town on the island founded in 1770. In the middle of the 16th century some Ligurian families from Pegli near Genoa moved to a deserted island off the coast of the Tunisian city of Tabarka in order to work the waters as coral fishermen. Increasing  incursions by Barbery pirates, and expansionist competition by France began a long period of trials for the Tabarchini.<br />
In 1738 a group of Tabarchini decided to leave the island and were received by King Charles Emmanuel III of Savoy in the Kingdom of Sardinia, who gave them the Island of San Pietro to settle. When the Bey of Tunis learned that the Lomellini family intended to sell the island to his enemies the French, he invaded the island   the population. Part of the liberated Tabarchini originated the village of Calasetta
    em7162389.jpg
  • Calasetta, the harbour with the old Savoy tower, now a museum. Calasetta is a small town on the island founded in 1770. In the middle of the 16th century some Ligurian families from Pegli near Genoa moved to a deserted island off the coast of the Tunisian city of Tabarka in order to work the waters as coral fishermen. Increasing  incursions by Barbery pirates, and expansionist competition by France began a long period of trials for the Tabarchini.<br />
In 1738 a group of Tabarchini decided to leave the island and were received by King Charles Emmanuel III of Savoy in the Kingdom of Sardinia, who gave them the Island of San Pietro to settle. When the Bey of Tunis learned that the Lomellini family intended to sell the island to his enemies the French, he invaded the island   the population. Part of the liberated Tabarchini originated the village of Calasetta
    em7162388.jpg
  • San Pietro island, La Caletta beach.
    em7162251.jpg
  • San Pietro island,  Carloforte.T o the north of the town (at the La Punta locale) some buildings housed a former owned a tuna-processing plant and now contain a new, privately owned tuna processing business. Some of the buildings are still in ruins, but remain of great architectural interest.
    em7162235.jpg
  • San Pietro island,  Carloforte, Santa Teresa fortress. In the 18th century the then-uninhabited San Pietro was colonized by people of Ligurian language and ethnicity, coming from the Republic of Genoa's colony at Tabarka after it had been taken over by the Bey of Tunisia. Today most of the population has retained a variant of Genoese dialect, called Tabarchino,
    em7162145.jpg
  • San Pietro island,  Carloforte. Monument to the fallen in the wars, in a square named Pegli, the Genoa's area from where the Ligurian fishermen sailed to the Tabarka island in search of red coral. In the 18th century the then-uninhabited San Pietro was colonized by people of Ligurian language and ethnicity, coming from the Republic of Genoa's colony at Tabarka after it had been taken over by the Bey of Tunisia. Today most of the population has retained a variant of Genoese dialect, called Tabarchino,
    em7162189.jpg
  • San Pietro island,  Carloforte, the main square. In the 18th century the then-uninhabited San Pietro was colonized by people of Ligurian language and ethnicity, coming from the Republic of Genoa's colony at Tabarka after it had been taken over by the Bey of Tunisia. Today most of the population has retained a variant of Genoese dialect, called Tabarchino,
    em7162070.jpg
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