Excavations have proved the existence of a Neolithic culture on Cyprus in the period from 6000 B.C. to 3000 B.C. Contact with the Middle East and, after 1500 B.C., with Greece greatly influenced Cypriot civilization. Phoenicians settled on the island c.800 B.C. Cyprus subsequently fell under Assyrian, Egyptian, and Persian rule. Alexander the Great conquered it in 333 B.C., after which the island again became an Egyptian dependency until its annexation by Rome in 58 B.C. Ancient Cyprus was a center of the cult of Aphrodite.
After A.D.
395, Cyprus was ruled by the Byzantines until 1191, when Richard I of
England conquered it. In 1192, Richard bestowed the island on Guy of Lusignan.
In 1489, Cyprus was annexed by Venice. The Turks conquered it in 1571.
At the Congress of Berlin (1878) the Ottoman Empire placed Cyprus under
British administration, and in 1914, Britain annexed it outright.
Under British rule the movement among the Greek Cypriot population for union (enosis)
with Greece was a constant source of tension. In 1955 a Greek Cypriot
organization (EOKA), led by Col. George Grivas, launched a campaign of
widespread terrorism. Tension and terror mounted, especially after
British authorities deported (1956) Makarios III,
the spokesman for the Greek Cypriot nationalists. The conflict was
aggravated by Turkish support of Turkish Cypriot demands for partition
of the island. Negotiations (1955) among Britain, Greece, and Turkey on
the status of Cyprus broke down completely. Finally in 1959, a
settlement was reached, providing for Cypriot independence in 1960 and
for the terms of the constitution. Treaties precluded both enosis and partition. Makarios was elected president in 1959 and reelected in 1968 and 1973.
In
1961, Cyprus joined the Commonwealth of Nations and the United Nations.
Large-scale fighting between Greek and Turkish Cypriots erupted several
times in the 1960s, and a UN peacekeeping force was sent in 1965. In
Mar., 1970, there was an attempt on Makarios's life by radical Greek
Cypriots. The government was also fearful of a possible coup led by
Grivas, who favored enosis. Turkish Cypriots demanded official
recognition of their organization (which exercised de facto political
control in the 30 Turkish enclaves) and the stationing of Turkish troops
on the island to offset the influence of the Cypriot national guard,
which was dominated by officers from Greece. Greek Cypriots interpreted
the proposal as amounting to partition. Acts of violence against the
government increased and were met in 1973 by an effort to suppress the
guerrillas by the national police force (which had been created by
Makarios to counter the national guard). Grivas died in Jan., 1974, and
although EOKA was split between hard-liners and moderates, it continued
to be dominated by Greek officers.
On July 15, 1974,
following a large-scale national police assault on EOKA, the Makarios
government was overthrown by the national guard. Nikos Sampson, a Greek
Cypriot newspaper publisher, acceded to the presidency and Makarios fled
the country. Both Greece and Turkey mobilized their armed forces.
Citing its obligation to protect the Turkish Cypriot community, Turkey
invaded (July 20) N Cyprus, occupied over 30% of the island, and
displaced about 200,000 Greek Cypriots. The invasion precipitated the
fall of the military regime in Athens and also resulted in the
resignation of Sampson. He was replaced by Glafkos Clerides, the
conservative Greek Cypriot president of the house of representatives.
A
UN-sponsored cease-fire was arranged on July 22, and Turkey was
permitted to retain military forces in the areas it had captured.
Makarios was returned to office in Dec., 1974. In 1975 the island was
partitioned into Greek and Turkish territories separated by a
UN-occupied buffer zone. Makarios remained president until his death in
1977 and was succeeded by Spyros Kyprianou
(1977–88). In 1983, Turkish Cypriots declared themselves independent
from the Cypriot state; the resulting Turkish Republic of Northern
Cyprus, with Rauf Denktash as president, was recognized only by Turkey.
Negotiations to end the division of the country continued intermittently
and inconclusively in the subsequent decades.
George
Vassiliou, a leftist, defeated Clerides in the presidential elections
of 1988, but Clerides was elected president in 1993 and again in 1998.
By the late 1990s it was estimated that over half the population of
Turkish Cyprus consisted of recent settlers from Turkey. In 1998, Cyprus
began membership talks with the European Union (EU), a move that was
bitterly opposed by Turkish Cypriots, and Turkey insisted on a political
settlement for the island prior to its joining the EU. Denktash was
elected to his fourth term as president in 2000, but Clerides lost his
bid for a third consecutive term in 2003, losing to Tassos Papadopoulos
of the Democratic party.
In Apr., 2003, long-standing
Turkish Cypriot restrictions on cross-border travel were eased, and the
Greek south ended a ban on trade with the north. Later the same year,
parliamentary elections in the north resulted in gains for opposition
parties favoring reunification, but both sides won an equal number of
seats. The United Nations sponsored renewed negotiations to reunify the
island, and an accord establishing a federation was reached in 2004, but
failed to win approval in a referendum in April. Although Turkish
Cypriot voters approved the accord, the Greek population rejected it.
Turkish approval of the accord, however, did result in many nations,
including S Cyprus, ending or reducing the economic embargo the north
had been under since the Turkish invasion.
Cyprus
joined the European Union in 2004, but the north was excluded due to the
failure of the referendum in the south. The Turkish Cypriot government
subsequently fell, but elections (Feb., 2005) returned the government to
power. In April, Prime Minister Mehmet Ali Talat was elected to succeed
Denktash as Turkish Cypriot president. The 2006 parliamentary elections
in the Greek areas generally resulted in increased support for the
Democratic and other parties that had opposed the 2004 accord. In Feb.,
2008, Demetris Christofias, the AKEL (Communist) party candidate, was
elected president of Cyprus after a runoff; Papadopoulos was eliminated
in the first round. Subsequently, Greek and Turkish Cypriots agreed to
restart reunification talks.
Source: www.factmonster.com
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