Tower of Omigna | |
Native Name: | Torra d'Omigna |
Native Language: | Corsican |
Designation1: | Monument historique |
Designation1 Date: | 8 March 1991 |
Built: | 1605 - 1606 |
Restored: | 2009 |
Architect: | Giacomo della Piana |
Coordinates: | 42.1464°N 8.56°W |
Map Relief: | yes |
The Tower of Omigna (Corsican: torra d'Omigna, French: tour d'Omigna) is a ruined Genoese tower located in the commune of Cargèse on the French island of Corsica.
The tower was built between 1605 and 1606 under the direction of Giacomo della Piana. It was one of a series of coastal defences built by the Republic of Genoa between 1530 and 1620 to stem the attacks by Barbary pirates.[1] In 1991 it was listed as one of the official Historical Monuments of France.
Since 1977 the tower has been owned by a French government agency, the Conservatoire du littoral. The agency has announced that it plans to purchase 212ha of the headland and as of 2011 had acquired 121ha.[2] The tower was restored in 2009 and visitors can climb up onto the roof terrace.
An area of 255hectare that includes the headland and portions of the adjacent coastline is owned by an agency of the French state, the Conservatoire du littoral.[3]
In 1729, the Greek inhabitants of Paomia, pursued by the Corsicans of Vico and Niolo who wished to drive them from their lands, took refuge in the Tower of Omigna. Boats from Ajaccio came to recover the women and children to transport them by sea to Ajaccio, while the men resisted to the siege. Once the women and children were safe, the men left the tower, crossed the enemy lines and were able to reach Ajaccio by land.[4]