Pityusic Islands Explained

Pityusic Islands
Pitiüses
Etymology:Greek, Modern (1453-);: Πιτυοῦσσαι|translit=Pityûssai|translation=pine-covered (islands)
Local Name:Spanish; Castilian: Islas PitiusasCatalan; Valencian: Illes Pitiüses
Native Name Link:Spanish/Catalan language
Location:Mediterranean Sea
Coordinates:38.7°N 28°W
Archipelago:Balearic Islands
Area Km2:655.8
Highest Mount:Sa Talaiassa
Elevation M:475
Country:Spain
Country Admin Divisions Title:Autonomous Community
Country Admin Divisions:Balearic Islands
Country Admin Divisions Title 1:Province
Country Admin Divisions 1:Balearic Islands
Country Largest City:Ibiza
Country Largest City Population:49,783
Population:160,025
Population As Of:1 January 2019
Density Km2:244.0

The Pityusic Islands,[1] [2] often referenced simply as the Pityuses (Catalan; Valencian: Pitiüses in Catalan; Valencian pronounced as /pitiˈuzəs/, Spanish; Castilian: Pitiusas; from the Greek πιτύα pitýa, pine tree), or commonly but informally (and ambiguously) as the Pine Islands, is the name given collectively to the Balearic Islands of Ibiza (Catalan: Eivissa), Formentera, S'Espalmador and other small islets in the Mediterranean Sea.

Geography

The islands are situated approximately 100km (100miles) southwest of the island of Majorca, and approximately 80km (50miles) east of the Cap de la Nau in the Iberian Peninsula.

History

The first known name of the islands was the Ancient Greek geonym Πιτυοῦσσαι Pityûssai ("covered in pine trees").[3]

From about 200 BCE, the islands were used as a base by Cilician pirates. They and a renegade Roman general, Quintus Sertorius, who had formed an alliance with the pirates, were driven out by a large Roman fleet, commanded by Caius Annius Luscus.

The two largest of the islands, under the names Ebyssus (Ibiza) and Ophiusis (Formentera), were listed in Claudius Ptolemy's Geography (2nd century CE). Ptolemy noted that Ebyssus had a town by the same name.

Administration

The Pine Islands are sometimes grouped together as part of the Balearic Islands, or else considered separate with the Balearics proper being Mallorca and Menorca (which together with their islets form the Gymnesian Islands). Politically, they are part of the autonomous community of the Balearic Islands.

Initially, they were administratively part of the same insular council (of Ibiza and Formentera), but since 2007 they are now separated between the insular council of Ibiza and the insular council of Formentera (each one is also assimilated to a single comarca), which are two of the four main administrative subdivisions of the province (and autonomous community) of the Balearic Islands.

See also

Further reading

Notes and References

  1. Lagartija de las Pitiusas - Podarcis pityusensis (Boscá, 1883), Enciclopedia virtual de los vertebrados españoles, Alfredo Salvador, Museo Nacional de Ciencias Natural (CSIC), Madrid, published 20-06-2006.
  2. http://imedea.uib-csic.es/publicacion.php?id=1425 A new species of rail (Aves, Rallidae) from the Upper Pleistocene and Holocene of Ibiza (Pitiusic Island, Western Mediterranean)
  3. Numerous places were given names like Pityûssai, Pityussa, Pityusa, or similar names by the Ancient Greeks,especially in Anatolia and Greece : the pre-Hellenic name of Miletus of the Leleges was also Pityussa (Strabo, 14.1.3); Spetses' ancient name was Pityoussa; during the Roman Civil Wars Sertorius with some Cilician pirates effected a landing at an island of Pityussa on the North African coast of Mauretania, and was driven off (Plutarch, Life of Sertorius 7).