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ORIGINS OF TOURISM
Mallorca's
early inhabitants were people who lived from the sea. The first place
used as settlements, dating back to 4000 BC, were the large number of
natural caves, which can be found around the Mallorcan coastline. Later,
other groups of settlers arrived and went to live inland in dwellings
made of massive stones known as "Talaiots", of which more than a thousand
have been recorded.
Far back in the past, people from Central Asia began to emigrate
towards the west, reaching as far as their ships would allow them. Phoenicians,
Greeks and Carthaginians succeeded one another, taking over the Mediterranean
until the year 123 BC when the Romans arrived under the command of Quinto
Cecilio Metelo and founded colonies on the island. The most important
cities that they founded were Pollentia in the north and Palma in the
south and today, we can still marvel at the remains of their civilization.
Not
only was the island visited by people from the East, but also from the
North of Africa. From the 10th to the 13th century, when the Christians
conquered Mallorca, the Moors and Arabs dominated the island. We can
still see part of their legacy in the dry stonewalls which form hillside
terraces, the irrigation tanks, wells and irrigation channels needed
for agriculture.
In
1229, King Jaime I of Aragon and Catalonia marched into Medina Mayurqa,
breaching the defences of the Moorish army who were forced to flee or
join the new settlers. Shortly afterwards construction began on the
Cathedral which was dedicated to the Virgin Mary by express wish of
the King. His son, Jaime II King of Mallorca, ordered palaces and mansions
to be built all over. He had Bellver Castle built, and castles built
at Sineu and Valldemossa. This was the kingdom's golden age, but unfortunately
it was short-lived.
The
king's nephew, Jaime III, died at the Battle of Lluchmajor, and the
beautiful kingdom in the middle of the sea lost its independence. With
Spain's unity under the auspices of the Catholic Monarchs, Mallorca
came to form part of the Kingdom of Spain, and followed its ups and
downs from a distance throughout history until the present day. Only
with the establishment of democracy, did the Balearic Island once again
become an autonomous region. From 1983, with the signing of the Statute
of Autonomy, the islands had their own autonomic government and each
island was granted its own local administrative body.