Syracuse, Sicily


Syracuse is a city and municipality, capital of the free municipal consortium of the same name, located in the autonomous region of Sicily in Southern Italy. As of 2025, with a population of 115,636, it is the fourth most populous city in Sicily, following Palermo, Catania, and Messina.
Situated on the southeastern coast of the island, Syracuse boasts a millennia-long history: counted among the largest metropolises of the classical age, it rivaled Athens in power and splendor, which unsuccessfully attempted to subjugate it. It was the birthplace of the mathematician Archimedes, who led its defense during the Roman siege in 212 BC. Syracuse became the capital of the Byzantine Empire under Constans II. For centuries, it served as the capital of Sicily, until the Muslim invasion of 878, which led to its decline in favor of Palermo. With the Christian reconquest, it became a Norman county within the Kingdom of Sicily.
During the Spanish era, it transformed into a fortress, with its historic center, Ortygia, adopting its current Baroque appearance following reconstruction after the devastating 1693 earthquake. During World War II, in 1943, the armistice that ended hostilities between the Kingdom of Italy and the Anglo-American allies was signed southwest of Syracuse, in the contrada of Santa Teresa Longarini, historically known as the Armistice of Cassibile.
Renowned for its vast historical, architectural, and scenic wealth, Syracuse was designated by UNESCO in 2005, together with the Necropolis of Pantalica, as a World Heritage Site.

Etymology

The origins of Syracuse’s name are highly uncertain. The toponym first appears on the city’s ancient coinage in the 6th century BC. Among the most notable hypotheses are derivations:

Ancient Syracuse

Excavations in the area have established that the region where Syracuse arose was inhabited continuously from the Neolithic period: the so-called "Stentinello culture," named after the coastal site north of Syracuse, is particularly significant, with artifacts dating back to 6000 BC.
The city of Syrakousai was founded by the Corinthians in 733 BC. The leader of the new colonists was the oekist Archias, and their landing place was the island of Ortygia, from which they expelled the Sicels, the previous inhabitants of the area.
The new Corinthian colony grew rapidly and subjugated nearby territories. Throughout its centuries-long Greek history, Syracuse had a long line of tyrants and brief periods of popular rule, mostly under oligarchy. Among the numerous men who governed the polis, six stood out in the ancient world for their ingenuity, fame, and power: Gelon, Hiero I, Dionysius I, Agathocles, and Hiero II, alongside the moderate oligarchic rule of the Corinthian general Timoleon, which lasted about a decade. These leaders dominated much of Sicily, extending Syracusan presence within the Magna Graecia, and influenced the broader Mediterranean, colonizing and establishing strategic commercial outposts or subjugating cities they encountered to thwart enemies.
Syracuse was the main rival of the Phoenician capital, Carthage, which, occupying the western part of the island, gave rise to the Greco-Punic Wars. These two influential metropolises, through a series of peace treaties and renewed battles, fiercely shaped the entire history of Greek Sicily.
In addition to internal conflicts with other Siceliot poleis and Barbarians, Syrakousai faced an ambitious external offensive from Athens: the Attic capital launched a massive expedition to Sicily during the Peloponnesian War, aiming to conquer the renowned coastal city, whose expansionist policies threatened Athenian interests in the West. During this conflict, the Syracusan general Hermocrates distinguished himself, later leading Syracusan soldiers to Asia Minor alongside Sparta in the final phase of the same war.
File:Death of Archimedes.png|thumb|upright=1.1|Archimedes drawing his circles as a Roman soldier prepares to strike him
The Syracusan court was a hub of patronage, hosting some of the most renowned names of the Greek world, including Aeschylus, Pindar, Ibycus, Xenophon, and Plato; the latter not only stayed in the pentapolis but, according to tradition, was deeply involved in Syracusan political history, and becoming a confidant of Dion, the main political adversary of the tyrant Dionysius II. Syracuse was the birthplace of numerous figures who contributed to the arts, philosophy, and science. Among the natives, Archimedes stands out: a mathematician, inventor, and scientist who led Syracuse during the Roman siege in 212 BC.
After prolonged resistance, Roman legions entered the city, leading to its capitulation under the consul Marcus Claudius Marcellus. In the heat of the conquest, a Roman soldier killed Archimedes. All of Syracuse’s wealth, accumulated over centuries of hegemony and prosperity, was looted and transported to Rome. This marked a significant turning point in Mediterranean culture. However, despite losing its autonomy, Syracusae remained the main center of the island during the entire Roman era. The Syracusan province was established, and the city was designated the capital of Roman Sicily. Cicero, arriving in the 1st century BC, described it as "the most beautiful and largest Greek city", and the emperor Augustus, in the same period, sent a colony of Roman citizens to aid its repopulation.
With the advent of Christianity, extensive catacombs emerged in the city. The apostolic message arrived early, as the Syracusan port was central to the maritime routes of the Roman Empire, traveled by early missionaries. Tradition holds that the protobishop of Syracuse was Marcian from Antioch, sent by the apostle Peter.
The Acts of the Apostles record that in 61, the apostle Paul of Tarsus stayed in the city for three days. During the reign of Diocletian, on 13 December 304, the martyrdom of Lucy of Syracuse occurred.

Medieval era

With the Barbarian invasions, the Western Roman Empire declined, and in the 5th century, Syracuse became part of the Eastern Roman Empire. By the political design of Constans II, Syracuse became the capital of the Eastern Empire, replacing Constantinople, from 663 to 668, until the emperor’s assassination in a location in the city called "the Daphne Baths". From the 7th century, Syracuse was targeted by Arabs, with attacks intensifying in the 9th century: after repelling a first siege in 827, the city fell violently during the second siege, concluded on 21 May 878.
The Islamic period in Syracuse is shrouded in silence from ancient sources, particularly the early years following the brutal conquest. A damnatio memoriae contributed to the absence of Arab architectural evidence in the city. Despite the near-total destruction, Syracuse was soon reintegrated into the island’s social circuits.
In 1040, the Byzantine emperor Michael IV sent General George Maniakes to Syracuse to reconquer the Aretusean land. His main companions were Italic and Norman warriors, led by Harald Hardrada, William Iron Arm, Drogo of Hauteville, Arduin the Lombard, and Stephen the Caulker, the emperor’s brother-in-law, who commanded the fleet. The city was conquered by them. However, after numerous victories, serious internal discord arose within Maniakes’ army, forcing him to abandon Sicily. The Normans turned against the Byzantines, and the new balance led to a swift Muslim resumption of control over Syracuse.
File:Castello Maniace Front.jpg|thumb|upright=1.1|left|In the foreground, the totem recalling the Hohenstaufen origin of the Maniace Castle
The city was definitively wrested from the Arabs in 1085, following a naval battle in the Great Harbor, where the last Arab emir of Syracuse, Benavert, clashed with the Norman Robert Guiscard.
The new political order established by the Normans did not restore Syracuse’s ancient role as Sicily’s capital.
With the arrival of the Nordic people, the Syracusans formed a county; the first established on the island, governed by its own count in the figure of Jordan of Hauteville, nephew of Roger I of Sicily, who became the Great Count of Sicily.
In the 12th century, Syracuse was contested by the maritime republics of Genoa and Pisa, both aiming to establish themselves there and include it among their fiefs. In 1204, Syracuse even had a Genoese count as its feudal lord: the pirate Alamanno da Costa, who took the title of Count of Syracuse "by the Grace of God, the King of Sicily, and the Republic of Genoa". However, Barbarossa’s grandson, Frederick II, King of Sicily and Emperor of the Holy Roman Empire, decided to bring Syracuse under the direct control of the Sicilian government, removing it from feudal disputes and declaring it in 1234 his "urbs fidelissima".
During the Sicilian Vespers, Syracuse declared itself a free commune; an institution that ceased with the arrival of the Aragonese to the island’s government. In 1302, the city became the seat of the queens of the Kingdom of Sicily and was governed for a long time through the Queen's Chamber, which granted the Syracusans significant autonomy, "like a state within a state," while their ultimate allegiance remained to the holder of the Sicilian crown.
The first queen of the Syracusans was Eleanor of Anjou, the last being the infanta of Navarre Germaine of Foix, granddaughter of King of France Louis XII and consort of Ferdinand II of Aragon.

Modern era

Thanks to the deep emotional bond between Germaine of Foix and the first ruler of the Spanish Empire, Charles V of Habsburg, Syracuse had a particularly close relationship with this monarch, reflected in the extensive documentation of his deeds across various aspects of Syracusan history. The era of Charles V was marked by war against the Ottoman Empire. As a borderland between the western and eastern Mediterranean, Syracuse became a key stronghold for defending Spanish imperial borders. Charles V fortified it so robustly that it earned the title of fortress.
It was also the work of Spanish soldiers under Charles V that transformed Ortygia into an island by cutting the isthmus built by the Greeks about a thousand years earlier, restoring Ortygia to its original geographical form.
In 1529, the Order of the Knights Hospitaller moved to Syracuse: sources are divided on whether it was Charles V who directed them to the Syracusan area to keep Turkish fleets and Barbary pirates at bay, or whether it was the initiative of the Grand Master Philippe Villiers de L'Isle-Adam. The wandering knights, homeless after losing the island of Rhodes, remained in Syracuse for a year until, in April 1530, they received documents from Charles V, as King of Sicily, granting them the Maltese archipelago as a fief for their Order; in return, the Habsburg demanded loyalty to the Sicilian monarch. The knights accepted.
Syracuse thus became a witness to the birth of the Knights Hospitaller.
File:Stemma di Carlo al Castello Maniace Stemma di Carlo V nel suo palazzo.png|thumb|upright=1.0|left|Top: The Pillars of Hercules with the motto Plus Ultra and the terrestrial globe; the personal symbols of Charles V—adopted following the discovery of the Americas—still adorn the entrance to Syracuse’s Maniace Castle.
Bottom: The same symbols at the Palace of Charles V
The 16th century was a century of major natural disasters for Syracuse: the most destructive event was the 1542 earthquake, which nearly obliterated the city. Famines and epidemics decimated the population. Even Charles V, during the height of religious fervor, became convinced that unknown sinners, having provoked the "wrath of Heaven", had brought the calamity upon the city.
Wars and calamities continued at a relentless pace throughout the following century. Syracuse could no longer keep up with the demographic growth of other major Sicilian centers.
In the Spanish era, Syracuse was primarily known as Zaragoza de Sicilia : from the outset of their presence on the island, the Spanish referred to it as the Aragonese capital Zaragoza, and in official documents, it was always distinguished as the Zaragoza of Sicily.
Among the major military events of the period, particularly significant for Syracuse were: the attempted invasion by Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent, the defeat of the Knights of Malta at Plemmirio, and the war of the Sun King, Louis XIV of France, which particularly affected the Spanish domains in the Syracusan area; during this last conflict, the Dutch admiral Michiel de Ruyter died and was buried in Syracuse.
In 1693, another destructive earthquake, accompanied by a tsunami, struck, affecting most of eastern Sicily. Syracuse suffered less damage than in the 1542 event but was still severely weakened. In 1700, with the premature death of Charles II of Spain, a fierce contest arose to determine the new ruler of the Spanish Empire. The War of the Spanish Succession fully involved Syracuse, as Sicily became a contested territory following the Treaty of Utrecht, through which the Duchy of Savoy was united with the Kingdom of Sicily, and Spain lost control of the latter.
Spain, under Philip V, had no intention of relinquishing the island and defied European expectations by waging war to free Sicily from the Piedmontese and restore Iberian influence. In this context, Syracuse became a Savoyard fortress where Annibale Maffei, viceroy of Victor Amadeus II, took refuge while the Spanish army had already conquered most of the island. For the first time, the British army intervened in the Aretusean land, as George I of Great Britain aimed to prevent Spain from reclaiming its former domains.
The battle of 11 August 1718 between the Spanish and the English, which saw the latter’s victory in Syracusan waters, marked a significant turning point: it ended relations with the Iberian Peninsula and initiated a sustained British presence in the territory.
After separation from Piedmont and a brief, turbulent Austrian period, lasting about fifteen years, Syracuse became part of the domains of the Bourbons of Naples. In 1798, Napoleon Bonaparte ended a long period of peace by claiming France’s control over the island of Malta and expelling the knights, some of whom sought aid from the Tsar of Russia, Paul I. This sparked a dispute over the Maltese archipelago, extending to the Syracusans, as Bonaparte was not averse to conquering Sicily. The Aretusean city first welcomed the British fleet of Horatio Nelson and later that of Cuthbert Collingwood, Nelson’s successor as commander of the Mediterranean Fleet, who requested full naval control of Syracuse for British soldiers. British land and sea forces garrisoned the city throughout the Napoleonic Wars, leaving it exposed only after 1813.
Notably, during the same period, Syracuse hosted the United States fleet, which remained in its port from 1803 to 1807 during the First Barbary War. The Americans, however, left the city due to strained relations with British soldiers.
The Kingdom of the Two Sicilies, established in 1816, faced a profound crisis from the 1820s, as Sicily never accepted the union of its crown with Naples, resulting in a loss of autonomy. Syracuse joined the rebellion in the 1840s: the turning point, which eroded trust in the Bourbon government in one fell swoop, was the health crisis of 1837, when a cholera epidemic devastated the city. Revolts erupted, leading to irreconcilable conflicts between the Syracusans and Bourbon authority: Ferdinand II resorted to military force to regain control, with the armed forces enacting harsh reprisals against the population. The king then stripped the city of its status as a provincial capital, creating the Province of Noto. Thus, the Syracusans, joining the revolutionary movements of 1848, welcomed British soldiers, as Great Britain, soon joined by France, positioned itself as a mediating power in the ongoing dispute between Sicilians and the Bourbons of Naples, who were forced to temporarily accept the existence of a new Kingdom of Sicily.
Divided between British and French garrisons, Syracuse saw its brief independence end quickly, returning under Ferdinand’s rule, partly due to rivalry among the European powers involved in the conflict. The definitive turning point came with the subsequent movements for the birth of the Kingdom of Italy: Syracuse, freeing itself autonomously from Bourbon rule, surrendered to the Garibaldians on 28 July 1860. The power of the Bourbon monarchs was annulled, and from 1865, the city stably resumed its role as the capital of the southeastern Sicilian province.