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The name
The metal copper is named after Cyprus. Romans received their
copper from Cyprus. In Latin it was called aes Cyprium- the
'metal of Cyprus', shortened to cyprium and then corrupted
to cuprum. The ancient Greek word for copper is chalkos.
Mythology
Greek historians have constructed a history of Cyprus that
includes many mythological elements, but may contain valuable
information on the early history of some local dynasties.
Prehistory
- ca. 8.500: Possible first human settlement by epipalaeolithic
hunters and gatherers at Aetokremnos
- 7000-5300 BCE: Neolithic
- ca. 7000: Settlement of the island by Neolithic farmers
from the Levant (PPN B) who introduced domesticated
wheat, cattle, sheep, goats, dogs and fallow deer, wild
foxes and tamed cats.
- 6th Millennium: aceramic Khirokitia-culture with round
houses
- 4500-4000: first pottery produced during the Sotira-Phase
- 4000-2500 Chalcolithic
- Erimi-Phase (Chalcolithic I), copper known, but used
sparingly
- Ambelikou/Ayios Georghios (Chalcolithic II)
- 2700-1050 Bronze Age
- 2700-1900: Early Bronze age. First rectangular houses,
re-introduction of cattle from Anatolia, introduction
of plough. Strong Anatolian influences
- Enkomi-phase: first cities, Systematic copper mining
and trade
- 1900-1600: Middle Bronze Age
- 1600-1050: Late Bronze Age, First use of The Cypriot syllabic
script in (LCIB).
- 1300-1200 BC Late Cypriot (LC) IIC, local prosperity,
re-building of cities
- 1200-1100 BC: end of the late Bronze Age (LCIIIA).
Local production of so-called Mycenaean pottery
- 1100-1050: latest bronze Age (LCIIIB,), introduction
of a a new type of grave, Mycenean influences in pottery
decoration, interpreted by some as an invasion from
the Greek mainland
- 1125-1050: Submycenean period
- 1050-700: Iron Age
- 1050-750: Geometric period
- 8th Century: foundation of numerous Phoenician colonies
Ancient history
- 709: Assyrian conquest of Cyprus by king Sargon II (721-705
BC) of Assyria

- 669/663: Independent city-kingdoms
- 570: conquest by the Egyptians under Amasis
- around 500: first Cypriote coins, using the Persian weight
system
- 499: Kingdoms of Cyprus take part in the Ionian rising
under Onesilos of Salamis
- defeat of the Cypriote kings, re-conquest of the island.
- Around 450: increased importance of Kition
- 450 Phoenician rulers in Salamis
- 411 The Teucrid Evagoras I regains the throne of Salamis
- around 400: Evagoras attempts an independent rule oy Cyprus
with Athenian help
- Ca. 380: Persian reconquest
- 386: treaty of Antakidas, Persian rule over Cyprus accepted
by Athens
- 350 Cypriote rebellion, crushed by Artaxerxes in 344.
- 351-332 Pnythagoras of Salamis and other Cypriote kings
go over to Alexander The Great during the siege of Tyre
- 331-310 Nicocreon
- 310-306 Menelaos is made satrap of Cyprus
- 306-301 Antigonus
- 301-30 BC Ptolemaic Lagid Dynasty
- 116 BC Ptolemy Philometor sent to Cyprus by his mother
Cleopatra
- 109 BC Alexander the brother of Ptolemy sent to Cyprus
by his mother Cleopatra
- 107 BC Alexander returns from Cyprus and is made king
of Egypt. Ptolemy campaigns in Palestine.
- 58 BC Cyprus becomes a Roman province.
- 51 BC Cyprus placed under the rule of Cleopatra by Julius
Caesar
- 30 BC Cyprus reverts to Roman rule.
- 45 AD Saint Paul, St Barnabas and St Mark introduce Christianity
to Cyprus and convert the Roman governor Sergius Paulus
- 115-116 AD A messianic Jewish revolt results in the massacre
of 240,000 Cypriots. Trajan intervenes to restore the peace
and expels the Jews from Cyprus.
- 335 The revolt of the usurper Calocaerus is omated by
Flavius Dalmatius
- c.350 AD Salamis is rebuilt by Constantius II the son
of Constantine after being destroyed by earthquakes and
is renamed Constantia.

Middle Ages
- 395 AD Cyprus becomes part of the Byzantine Empire
- 649 The Arabs invade and pillage Cyprus sacking the city
of Salamis
- 654 The Arabs invade Cyprus again and occupy it with a
garrison of 20,000 men
- 683 The Arab garrison is withdrawn after the Arabs are
defeated by Constantine IV
- 688 Cyprus is declared neutral
- 965 Cyprus is restored to Byzantine rule by Nicepheros
Phokas
- 1185-1192 Cyprus independent Empire under Isaak Comnenus
- 1191 Richard the Lionheart sacks Famagusta and sells Cyprus
to the Knights Templar
- 1192 The Knights Templar sell Cyprus to Guy de Lusignan,
the exiled king of Jerusalem
- 1194 Amaury introduces a feudal system to Cyprus
c.1300 The Orthodox Church of Cyprus is given religious
freedom
- 1489 The Venetians take control of Cyprus and the Greek
Orthodox Church is given full religious freedom.
- 1570 The Ottomans invade Cyprus. Famagusta is held under
siege
Ottoman Empire
- 1571 The Ottomans take Famagusta, Cyprus becomes a part
of the Ottoman Empire
- 1572-1668 Twenty eight bloody uprisings
- 1625-1700 Great depopulation of Cyprus. The plague wipes
out over half of the population
- 1821 Greek Cypriots side with Greece in a revolt against
Turkish rule. The island's leading churchmen are executed
as punishment. 20,000 Christians flee the island
- 1869 The Suez Canal opens.

Modern History
Overview
Following the Ottoman Empires defeat in World War I, Cyprus
was annexed by Britain in 1925 and made a crown colony. Between
1955-59 EOKA was created by Greek Cypriots and led by George
Grivas which targeted mainly British but also Turkish Cypriots
and leftist Greeks at a smaller scale, in a campaign of violence
to perform enosis (union of the island with Greece). However
the EOKA campaign did not result union with Greece but rather
an independent republic, The Republic of Cyprus, with two
communal chambers in 1960.
The 1960 constitution carried important safeguards for the
participation of Turkish Cypriots to the state affairs, like
vice-president being Turkish Cypriot, 30% of parliament being
Turkish Cypriot, etc. Archbishop Makarios would be the President
and Dr Fazil Kucuk would become Vice President. One of the
articles in the constitution was the creation of separate
local municipalities so that Greek and Turkish Cypriots could
manage their own municipalities in the big towns. This article
of the constitution has never been implemented by the Republic
and president Archbishop Makarios. In response to the Greek-backed
coup Turkey invaded the island in 1974 and seized the northern
third of the island, Turkish Cypriots in the south would travel
north and Greek Cypriots in the north would move south. The
de facto state of northern Cyprus was proclaimed in 1975 under
the name "Turkish Federated State of Northern Cyprus".
The name was changed to its present form on 15 November 1983.
The only country to formally recognise The Turkish Republic
of Northern Cyprus is Turkey. Turkey and the TRNC refer to
the Republic of Cyprus as the "Greek Cypriot Administration
of Southern Cyprus" and refuse formal recognition.
Timeline
- 1878-1960: British occupation. The British take over the
administration of the island, ceded by the Ottomans, for
its strategic value, to protect their sea route to India
via the Suez Canal. In exchange, Britain agrees to help
Turkey against future Russian attacks.
- Crown commissioners:
- Sir Robert Biddulph (1880-?)
- Sir Walter Sendall (1892-1898)
- Sir Charles King-Harman (1904-1910)
- 1914: Cyprus is annexed by Britain when Turkey joins with
Germany and Austro-Hungary in World War I
- 1925: Cyprus becomes a British Crown Colony
- Governors:
- 1931: First serious riots of Greek Cypriots demanding
Enosis, the union with Greece. The government-house in Nicosia
is burned down and martial law is declared afterwards and
the legislative council is abolished. The display of the
Greek flag and the Greek National Anthem were banned.
- 1939: Greek Cypriots fight with the British in World War
II, but remain set on Enosis after the war is over. The
Turkish Cypriots, however want the British rule to continue.
- 1946-1949: Thousands of displaced Jews are sent to camps
on Cyprus by the British Government.
- 1950: Archbishop Makarios III is elected as political
and spiritual leader. Makarios becomes the head of the autocephalous
Cypriot Orthodox Church and heads the campaign for Enosis
with the support of Greece.

- 1955: A series of bomb attacks starts a violent campaign
for Enosis by EOKA (National Organisation of Cypriot Fighters)
led by George Grivas, an ex-colonel in Greek army, born
in Cyprus. Grivas takes name of Dighenis, and conducts guerrilla
warfare from a secret hideout in the Troodos Mountains.
He is estimated to have 300 men at maximum, yet successfully
plagues 20,000 British troops and 4,500 police.
- 1956: Britain deports Makarios to the Seychelles in attempt
to quell the revolt. Turkish Cypriots are used as auxiliaries
of British Security Forces, and become one of the major
targets of the EOKA.
- 1957: Field Marshal Sir John Harding is replaced by the
civilian governor Sir Hugh Foot in a conciliatory move.
- 1958: Turkish Cypriots are alarmed by British conciliation
and begin demands for partition. There are inter-communal
clashes and attacks on British.
- 1960: British, Greek and Turkish governments sign a Treaty
of Guarantee to provide for an independent Cypriot state
within the Commonwealth and allowing for the retention of
two Sovereign Base Areas of Dhekelia and Akrotiri. Under
the treaty, each power has the right to take military action
in the face of any threat to the constitution. Cyprus becomes
independent of foreign rule. Archbishop Makarios, (Greek
Cypriot) becomes the first President, Dr Kutchuk (Turkish
Cypriot) Vice-President. Both have the right of veto. Turkish
Cypriots, who form 18% of the population, are guaranteed
vice-presidency, three out of ten ministerial posts and
30% of jobs in the public service, 40% in the army and separate
municipal services in the five major towns. Overall, a very
complex constitution is drafted, including a lot of decisions
to be taken by majority of votes overall as well as within
each community.
- 1963-1973: Greek Cypriots view the constitution as unworkable
and propose changes abolishing all veto rights and many
ethnic clauses; these proposals are rejected by Turkish
Cypriots and the Turkish government. Inter-communal fighting
errupts. A UN Peace Keeping Force is sent in, but is powerless
to prevent incidents. Thousands of Turkish Cypriots retreat
into enclaves and are embargoed by the Greeks Cypriots.
The UN attempts to supply them with food and medicine. The
Turks are to remain in the enclaves for the next 11 years
until the partition of the island in 1974.
- 1974: On 15 July the military government (junta) in Greece
with the support of the CIA and American national security
advisor Henry Kissinger orders a coup by the Greek National
guard to overthrow Makarios who they see as being too pro-Russian.
Makarios is forced to flee to the British base. A puppet
regime is imposed under Nikos Sampson, a former EOKA fighter
and paid CIA operative.
- Five days after the coup on 20 July Turkey invades
Cyprus and captures 3% of the islands territory around
the town of Kyrenia, driving out the Greek Cypriot population.
- Three days later the coup is put down and democracy
is restored.
- On 14 August after UN talks break down it lands 40,000
troops on the north coast. 200,000 Greek Cypriots Flee
to the South, while turkish Cypriots are forced to leave
their homes in the South. Turkish forces are left in
control of 37% of the island. Facing threats from Turkey
the United Nations and the Cyprus government agree to
allow the Turkish Cypriots living in the free areas
to be transferred by the UN and British SBA authorities
to the occupied north against their will.
- 1975: Turks announce a Federate State in the north, with
Rauf Denktas as leader. UN Forces stay as buffer between
the two zones. *1977: Makarios dies, having been restored
as President of Greek Cyprus after 1974. He is succeeded
by Spyros Kyprianou.
- 1983: The Turkish Federated State declares itself independent
as the Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus (TRNC), with
Denktas as President. The new state is not recognised by
any country except Turkey and officially boycotted.
- 1992-1995: UN sponsored talks between the two sides run
into the sand, but with a commitment to resume.
- 2001: The European Court of Human Rights finds Turkey
guilty of continuing human rights violations against the
Greek Cypriots, and the Turkish Cypriots also.
- 2003: Cyprus is set to join the European Union in May
2004. Renewed negotiations about the status of the island
take place.
- On 23 April 2003, the line which divides the two parts
of Cyprus was partly opened. Thousands of Turkish and
Greek Cypriots cross the border to the "other side"
after 30 years.
- 24 April 2004 The Annan Plan for unification is rejected
by the mayority of Greek Cypriots in a bipartisan referendum.
- Cyprus as a whole joins the EU on 1 May but the EU
acquis is suspended in the occupied north.
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