Árdís - 01.01.1964, Side 27

Árdís - 01.01.1964, Side 27
Ársrit BancLalags lúterskra kvenna 25 A Visit To Sardinia LILIA EYLANDS Since our return from our holiday trip last summer we have been asked many questions about the countries we visited and I’m going to tell about some of the things I observed in Sardinia where our daughter and her family reside. We left Iceland on July 26, 1963 and flew from Keflavik to London. There we changed planes and flew directly to Rome. The most interesting part of that trip was to see the jagged peaks of the Alps below us which pierced the clouds here and there. In Rome we had a short wait before taking off for Cagliari which was about an hour’s flight. The family was waiting for us at the airport and we had a happy reunion after more than two years. In their home we had our first introduction to marble which we were to see in such abundance everywhere. This is largely due to the scarcity of wood. Marble is more easily available and not expensive. It also creates a feeling of coolness in that hot climate. Sardinia is the second largest island in the Mediterranean Sea —the larger being Sicily. It is about 160 miles long from south to north and about seventy miles wide from east to west. It covers about nine thousand five hundred square miles and has a popula- tion of one and one half million. It is an autonomous province of Italy. The island has been a veritable political football for many centuries among many nations. The Greeks apparently never col- onized Sardinia. Carthage annexed it about 500 B.C. Rome seized the island from Carthage in 238 B.C. and organized it as a province. Sardinia was treated as a conquered land that sent money and grain to Rome. The frequent Sardinian revolts ceased in 114 B.C. The island never really flourished and finally fell successively to Vandals, Goths, Byzantine emperors and Saracens, later to Spain etc. Each of these nations left some influence. The greatest of course being the present Italian influence. Our children reside in the the capital city of Cagliari with a population of about one hundred and eighty thousand. It is located on the southern coast— a mixture of the old and the new as is the whole island. They live
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