, dated back to 18th century. In ancient times Favignana was called
Aegusa, meaning "goat island" in
Greek (Αιγούσα). The present name is derived from
Favonio, an Italian name for the
foehn wind. The
Phoenicians established an outpost on the island as a stopping point on their trans-
Mediterranean trading routes until the defeat of the
Carthaginian army during the
First Punic War. On 10 March 241 BC, a major naval battle was fought a short distance offshore between the two powers. Two hundred Roman ships under the
consul Gaius Lutatius Catulus met and decisively defeated a much larger Carthaginian fleet of 400 ships, with the Romans sinking 120 Carthaginian vessels and taking 10,000 prisoners. So many dead Phoenicians washed ashore on the northeastern part of Favignana that the shoreline there acquired the name "Red Cove" (
Cala Rossa) from the bloodshed. The Romans took possession of the island under the terms of the treaty that ended the war. In the early Middle Ages, Favignana was captured by Arabs and was used as a base for the
Islamic conquest of Sicily. The Saracens constructed a castle on top of the tallest hill called Santa Caterina. Soon after, the
Normans took possession of the island, and built fortifications there in 1081. Under the
Aragonese rulers of Sicily, Favignana and the other
Aegadian Islands were hired out to
Genoese merchants and in the 15th century the islands were granted to one Giovanni de Karissima, who adopted the grand title "Baron of Tuna". The plentiful tuna fish found offshore were first exploited systematically under the Spanish from about the 17th century onwards. Facing severe financial problems from their ongoing wars, the Spanish sold the islands to the Marquis Pallavicino of Genoa in 1637. The Pallavicini substantially developed the economy of the island, prompting the establishment of the modern town of Favignana around the Castello San Giacomo. In 1874, the Pallavicino family sold the Aegadian Islands to
Ignazio Florio, the son of a wealthy mainland industrialist, for two million liras. He invested heavily in Favignana and built a major tuna cannery on the island, bringing prosperity to many of the inhabitants.
Calcarenite quarries were also opened with stone being exported to
Tunisia and
Libya. During the 20th century, Favignana's economy slumped between the two
World Wars and many inhabitants emigrated to the mainland and abroad. The fishery declined with the rise of factory fishing after
World War II. Thanks to the Parodi brothers, who bought the factory—after the troubles of the Florio family—tuna fishing continued through the 1980s. The factory is now a museum due to the unavoidable decline. The island's fortunes were turned around by the advent of tourism from the late 1960s onwards. During
World War II, American Forces under Gen. Patton drove the Axis forces from Sicily. Two American officers, Lt. Louis Testa, and Capt. R.E. Gerard, were a two-man 'expedition' which 'captured' the three Aegadian Islands and 1027 prisoners. The officers went over from a Sicilian fishing boat, which they paid $3. They went ashore on Favignana Island and the Italian Lt. Colonel surrendered it along with Levanzo and Marittimo islands and their garrisons. ==Geography==