Capraia Isola


Capraia Isola is a comune in the Province of Livorno in the Italian region of Tuscany, located on the island of the same name of the Tuscan Archipelago.
It is located 64 km from Livorno, 53 km from the, 37 km from Gorgona and 31 km from Corsica. It is the least populated Italian municipality among those with an outlet to the sea.
Since 1996 it has been part of the Arcipelago Toscano National Park.

Etymology

The name of the island referred, since classical antiquity, to the presence of goats : Àigilon in Ancient Greek, Capraria and Caprasia in Latin, Capraghja in the Capraiese dialect and Cravæa in Ligurian. Wild goats are now extinct on the island.

Geography

The island of Capraia is located in the , and is an island of volcanic origin, the third largest in the Tuscan archipelago after Elba and Giglio. It is approximately 8 km long and 4 km wide, for a surface area of 19.26 km². The perimeter is approximately 30 km. It is the island of the archipelago furthest from the mainland, being closer to the eastern coast of Corsica than to the Tuscan coast, from which it rises to the west of the . It is an island of volcanic origin, with an eruption cone still clearly visible today for half in the typical Cala Rossa, one of the most particular coves of the archipelago.
It has high and rocky coasts with no beaches and a small lake basin in the most internal mountainous area, with peaks along a central chain with peaks of over 400 metres. The highest point is Monte Castello, 447 metres high, which on the western side approaches the sea with cliffs while on the eastern side it descends more gently with small torrent valleys, the most important of which is the Vado del Porto, approximately 3 km long, which flows into the sea near the. The coast is rocky and often inaccessible by land due to the lack of roads; caves and inlets open up along it, with rock pinnacles caused by water erosion.
Geologically, the island's composition is predominantly characterized by andesite flows, combined with tuff and breccia, while at Punta dello Zenòbito, more recent basaltic rocks are found. At the southernmost tip, the remains of an ancient, no longer active volcano are visible, which left traces in the truncated cone-shaped rock walls, with colors ranging from red to black due to the accumulation of lava that settled on the cliffs.

Languages and dialects

An interesting aspect of the island's culture is the distinctive dialect spoken on Capraia until recent times: more closely related to Corsican than to mainland Tuscan, it was influenced by Ligurian for centuries, enriching itself with a number of lexical loanwords and morphological components of that origin. The Capraiese dialect died out during the 20th century following the renewal of the island's population: the local stock was gradually replaced by immigrants, mostly relatives of penal colony employees, who eventually became the majority without assimilating the linguistic habits of the old inhabitants.