POETIC
TOUCH
According to legend, Erice, son of Venus and Neptune, founded a small
town on top of a mountain (750 metres above sea level) more than three
thousand years ago. The founder of modern history - i.e. the recording
of events in a methodic and chronological sequence as they really happened
without reference to mythical causes -the great Thucydides (~500 B.C.),
writing about events connected with the conquest of Troy (1183 B.C.),
says: "After the fall of Troy some Troyans on their escape from
the Achaei arrived in Sicily on boats and as they settled near the border
with the Sicanians all together they were named Elymi: their towns were
Segesta and Erice"., This inspired Virgil to describe the arrival
of the Troyan royal family in Erice and the burial of Anchise, by his
son Enea, on the coast below Erice. Homer (~ 1000 B.C.). Theocritus
(~300 B.C.), Polybius (~200 B.C.), Virgil (~50 B.C.), Horace (~20 B.C.)
and others have celebrated this magnificent spot in Sicily in their
poems. During seven centuries (XIII-XIX) the town of Erice was under
the leadership of a local oligarchy, whose wisdom assured a long period
of cultural development and economic prosperity which in turn gave rise
to the many churches, monasteries and private palaces which you see
today. In Erice you can admire the Castle of Venus, the Cyclopean Walls
(~800 B.C.) and the Gothic Cathedral (~1300 A.D.). Erice is at present
a mixture of ancient and medieval architecture. Other masterpieces of
ancient civilization are to be found in the neighbourhood: at Motya
(Phoenician), Segesta (Elymian), and Selinunte (Greek). On the Aegadian
Islands - theatre of the decisive naval battle of the first Punic War
(264-241 B.C.) - suggestive neolithic and paleolithic vestiges are still
visible: the grottoes of Favignana. the carvings and murals of Levanzo.
Splendid beaches are to he found at San Vito Lo Capo, Scopello, and
Cornino, and a wild and rocky coast around Monte Cofano: all at less
than one hour' s drive from Erice.