Human settlements existed
on Cyprus as early as 5800 B.C., during the Neolithic Era or New
Stone Age. The Neolithic Cypriots' origin is uncertain. Some
evidence, including artifacts of Anatolian obsidian, suggests that
the setters were related to the peoples of Asia Minor (present-day
Turkey). The discovery of copper on the island around 3000 B.C.
brought more frequent visits from traders. Trading ships were soon
bringing settlers to exploit the mineral wealth.
During the long
progression from stone to bronze, many Neolithic villages were
abandoned, as people moved inland to settle on the great plain (the
Mesaoria) and in the foothills of the mountains. Also during this
era of transition, Cypriot pottery was distinctive in shape and
design, and small figurines of fertility goddesses appeared for the
first time. During the same period, Cypriots were influenced by
traders from the great Minoan civilization that had developed on
Crete, but, although trade was extensive, few settlers came to
Cyprus. The Minoan traders developed a script for Cypriot commerce,
but unfortunately extant examples still await decipherment. The
cultural advances, thriving economy, and relative lack of defenses
invited the attention of more powerful neighbors, and during the
Late Bronze Age (about 1500 B.C.), the forces of the Egyptian
pharaoh, Thutmose III, invaded the island.
After 1400 B.C.,
Mycenaean and Mycenaean-Achaean traders from the northeastern
Peloponnesus began regular commercial visits to the island. Settlers
from the same areas arrived in large numbers toward the end of the
Trojan War (traditionally dated about 1184 B.C.). Even in modern
times, a strip of the northern coast was known as the Achaean Coast
in commemoration of those early settlers. The newcomers spread the
use of their spoken language and introduced a script that greatly
facilitated commerce. They also introduced the potter's wheel and
began producing pottery that eventually was carried by traders to
many mainland markets. By the end of the second millennium B.C., a
distinctive culture had developed on Cyprus. The island's culture
was tempered and enriched by its position as a crossroads for the
commerce of three continents, but in essence it was distinctively
Hellenic. It is to this 3,000 years of Hellenic tradition that the
present-day Greek Cypriots refer when arguing either for enosis or
for their own dominance in an independent state.
Later Greek poets and
playwrights frequently mention the early influences of Cyprus.
Aphrodite, Greek goddess of love and beauty, was said to have been
born out of the sea foam on the island's west coast. The most
important of many temples to Aphrodite was built at Paphos, where
the love goddess was venerated for centuries, and even in modern
times young women visited the ruins to make votive offerings and to
pray for good marriages or fertility (see fig. 2,
Ancient and Medieval Aites). Aphrodite is mentioned by Homer in the
Iliad and Odyssey, as is a Cypriot king, Kinyras, of Paphos.
The Late Bronze Age on
Cyprus was characterized by a fusion of the indigenous culture and
the cultures brought by settlers from the mainland areas. This
fusion took place over a long period and was affected by shifting
power relationships and major movements of peoples throughout the
eastern Mediterranean area. Cyprus was affected particularly by the
introduction of iron tools and weapons, signaling the end of the
Bronze Age and the beginning of the Iron Age, near the end of the
second millennium B.C. Iron did not displace bronze overnight, any
more than one culture immediately displaced another (pockets of
native Cypriot culture, for example, existed for several more
centuries), but the introduction of iron heralded major economic
changes, and the numbers of Greek settlers ensured the dominance of
their culture.
An important eastern
influence during the early part of the first millennium B.C. came
from a Phoenician settlement. The principal Phoenician concentration
was at Kition, the modern city of Larnaca, on the southeast coast.
Three thousand years later some Turks and Turkish Cypriots would try
to use such influences to prove that eastern cultures predated Greek
influence on the island. On this basis, modern Cypriots were said to
be descended from Phoenician Cypriot forebears. Greek Cypriots
responded that, even though visits by Phoenician traders probably
occurred as early as the third millennium, colonists did not arrive
until about 800 B.C. The Phoenicians settled in several areas and
shared political control with the Greeks until the arrival of the
Assyrians.
In 708 B.C. Cyprus
encompassed seven independent kingdoms that were conquered by the
Assyrian king, Sargon II. During the Assyrian dominance, about 100
years, Cypriot kings maintained considerable autonomy in domestic
affairs and accumulated great wealth. The number of city-kingdoms
increased to ten, one of which was Phoenician. The Cypriot kings
were religious as well as secular leaders and generally commanded
the city's defense forces. When Assyrian power and influence began
to decline, near the end of the seventh century, Egypt filled the
resulting vacuum in eastern Mediterranean affairs.
The Egyptian pharaohs had
built a powerful fleet of war ships that defeated the combined
fleets of Phoenicia and Cyprus, setting the stage for Egypt's
domination of the eastern Mediterranean. During the Egyptian
ascendancy, the Cypriot kings were again allowed to continue in
power after pledging themselves vassals of the pharaoh. The main
impact of Egyptian domination was the reorientation of commerce,
making Egypt the principal market for Cypriot minerals and timber.
When Egypt fell to the
Persians in the late sixth century, Cyprus was made part of a
satrapy of King Darius. By the time of Persian domination, Salamis
outshone the other city-kingdoms in wealth and splendor, and its
kings were looked on as first among equals. Petty kings ruled at
Amathus, Kition, Kyrenia, Lapithos, Kourion, Marion, Paphos, Soli,
and Tamassos, but leadership in the fifth and fourth century
struggles against the Persians stemmed from Salamis. The king of
Salamis, Onesilos, is remembered as the hero who died leading the
revolt against the Persians in 498 B.C.
The Cypriot kings
continued to enjoy considerable autonomy while paying tribute to
Persia, and were even allowed to strike their own coinage. They
remained culturally oriented toward Greece, and when the Ionians
revolted against the Persians, those of the Cypriot kings who were
Greek also rebelled. The revolt was suppressed quickly, apparently
without retaliation.
In 411 B.C. another Greek
Cypriot, Evagoras, established himself as king of Salamis and worked
for a united Cyprus that would be closely tied to the Greek states.
By force and by guile, the new king brought other Cypriot kingdoms
into line and led forces against Persia. He also allied the Cypriots
with Athens, and the Athenians honored him with a statue in the
agora. As the Salamisian king gained prominence and power in the
eastern Mediterranean (even attacking Persian positions in
Anatolia), the Persians tried to rid themselves of this threat, and
eventually defeated the Cypriots. Through diplomacy Evagoras managed
to retain the throne of Salamis, but the carefully nurtured union of
the Cypriot kingdoms was dissolved. Although Cyprus remained divided
at the end of his thirty-seven-year reign, Evagoras is revered as a
Greek Cypriot of uncommon accomplishment. He brought artists and
learned men to his court and fostered Greek studies. He was
instrumental in having the ancient Cypriot syllabary replaced by the
Greek alphabet. He issued coins of Greek design and in general
furthered the integration of Greek and Cypriot culture.
Cypriot freedom from the
Persians finally came in 333 B.C. when Alexander the Great
decisively defeated Persia at the Battle of Issue. A short time
later, the Cypriot kings were granted autonomy in return for helping
Alexander at the siege of Tyre. The death of Alexander in 323 B.C.
signaled the end of that short period of self-government.
Alexander's heirs fought over Cyprus, a rich prize, for several
years, but in 294 B.C. it was taken by Ptolemy, one of Alexander's
generals, who had established himself as satrap (and eventual king)
of Egypt. Under the rule of the Ptolemies, which lasted for two and
one-half centuries, the city-kingdoms of Cyprus were abolished and a
central administration established. The Ptolemaic period, marked by
internal strife and intrigue, was ended by Roman annexation in 58
B.C..
At first Rome governed
the island as part of the province of Cilicia, and for a time
Cicero, the famous orator, was governor. Later, when administration
was vested in the Roman Senate, the island was governed by a
proconsul and divided into four districts, Amathus, Lapithos,
Paphos, and Salamis. The government seat was at Paphos and the
center of commerce at Salamis.
Although the object of
Roman occupation was to exploit the island's resources for the
ultimate gain of the Roman treasury, the new rulers also brought a
measure of prosperity as their enforced peace allowed the mines,
industries, and commercial establishments to increase their
activities. The Romans soon began building new roads, harbors, and
public buildings. Although Paphos supplanted Salamis as the capital,
the latter retained its glory, remaining a center of culture and
education as well as of commerce. An earthquake leveled much of
Salamis in 15 B.C., but the Emperor Augustus bestowed his favor on
the city and had it rebuilt in the grand Roman fashion of the time.
Salamis was shattered by
earthquakes again in the fourth century. Again reconstructed,
although on a smaller scale, the city never achieved its former
magnificence. When its harbor silted up in medieval times, it was
abandoned to the drifting coastal sand that eventually covered it.
Twentieth-century archaeologists have uncovered much of ancient
Salamis, revealing glories from every epoch from the Bronze Age to
its final abandonment.
The single most important
event during Roman rule was the introduction of Christianity during
the reign of the Emperor Claudius. According to tradition, the
apostle Paul landed at Salamis in A.D. 45, accompanied by Barnabas,
also a convert to Christianity and an apostle. Barnabas's arrival
was a homecoming; he was a native of Salamis, of Hellenized Jewish
parentage. The two missionaries traveled across Cyprus preaching the
new religion and making converts. At Paphos they converted the Roman
proconsul, Sergius Paulus, who became the first Roman of noble birth
to accept Christianity, thus making Cyprus the first area of the
empire to be governed by a Christian.
In 285 the Emperor
Diocletian undertook the reorganization of the Roman Empire,
dividing its jurisdiction between its Latin- speaking and
Greek-speaking halves. Diocletian's successor, Constantine, accepted
conversion and became the first Christian Roman emperor. In 324 he
established his imperial residence at Byzantium, on the shore of the
Bosporus. Byzantium was renamed Constantinople and eventually became
the capital of the Byzantine (Eastern)
Empire.