The island has been known since ancient times. The
Phoenicians called it
Enosim or
Inosim, which means "island of
Accipiters", while for the
Greek it was
Hieracon Nesos and for the
Romans Accipitrum Insula (Sparrowhawk Island). The latter is derived from the presence of the small
Eleonora's falcon, which is still present on the island. San Pietro is home today to remains from the Phoenician, Roman and
Sardinian civilizations. According to a legend, the island is so named because
St. Peter visited the island in 46 AD. In 1739 century the then-uninhabited San Pietro was colonized by people of
Ligurian language and ethnicity. They had fled the
Republic of Genoa's colony on the small
Tunisian island of
Tabarka, established in 1542 for the purpose of coral fishing, after it had been taken over by the
Bey of Tunisia. Today most of the population has retained a variant of the
Genoese dialect, called
Tabarchino, which is also spoken in
Calasetta, in the northern part of the neighboring
Sant'Antioco island, whose residents are of the same origin. The island is
twinned with the Spanish island of
Tabarca, which was likewise settled by former residents of the Tabarkan colony. The town of
Carloforte (
Fort Charles) on the Island of San Pietro was dedicated to
Charles Emmanuel III of Sardinia, who had granted the island to the Tabarkan refugees. ==See also==