Minorca has been, since prehistoric times to more recent times, a staging point of
different cultures owing to its strategic location in the heart of the western
Mediterranean. Its location has attracted, since the dawn of civilization, different
peoples who have coveted the island as a stopover port and a shelter.
All these people left a rich historical legacy in the island, which is the most
easterly of the Balearic territories and is a place of outstanding heritage.
It is for this reason that historians and archaeologists consider Minorca to be an
authentic open-air museum.
Both its prehistory and history are so intense that it seems inappropriate for such a
small territory.
Human presence in Minorca has been verified from the beginning of the Bronze Age
(2000 B.C.) that was called the pre-Talayotic period and it left important burial
monuments such as megalithic tombs and the collective tombs known as navetas. The best
known of these is the Naveta de Tudons. It also left small settlements made up
of apse rooms.
Towards 1400 B.C., the evolutionary process of this culture produced various large
stone constructions known as talayots. This word gives rise to the name of the
richest prehistoric period of the island, namely, the Talayotic period.
At this time there was a great expansion of settlements like Trepucó, Torre
d'en Galmés or Son Catlar. Each had a single monument of worship called a
taula and scores of artificial caves excavated in the cliffs had necropolis
characteristics, such as Calascovas o Cala Morell.
The indigenous culture, based fundamentally on cyclopean construction, soon received
important outside influence from expanding merchant peoples, such as the Carthaginians
who were already established in Ibiza and who above all were noted for introducing new
tools and ornaments.
Finally, in 123 B.C., the Roman conquest occurred and this brought with it the
transformation of the Talayotic settlements and the preponderance of three cities located
at important ports: Mago (Maó), Jammo (Ciutadella) and Sanisera (Sanitja).
Interesting early Christian basilicas were left behind from the end of the Roman era.
The most notable are those of Son Bou and Fornás de Torelló, that has an
interesting mosaic. These basilicas date from the 5th century A.D.
After this time, Minorca went through its least known about period of history until
903 A.D., when the Muslims annexed Minorca to the Caliphate of Cordoba.
Numerous ceramic fragments of this period have been found in some Talayotic
settlements. The settlements must have been very rural, even though written sources
describe a rich economy and a literary culture. Notable from this period are the ruins of
the Santa Águeda castle in Ferreries. This was a Muslim fort that was destroyed in
the time of Pedro el Ceremonioso (Peter the Ceremonious), years after the conquest of
Minorca by the crown of Aragón.
From 1287, the island lived through the ups and downs of the Aragón crown and
subsequently the kingdom of Majorca. Those were the centuries of the founding of towns in
the interior such as Alaior and Ferreries. It is worth visiting the gothic
cathedral of Ciutadella which is of this period and to go for a stroll
along the streets of the old town of this city.
Minorca lived through the most tragic times of its history in the 16th century. There
were incessant pirate incursions that resulted in a great instability for the inhabitants.
The culmination was the destruction of Maó (1535) and Ciutadella (1558) by Turkish
attacks. The island was on the verge of being left abandoned when Felipe II (Philip II)
took the decision of building the Sant Felipe fort at the entrance of the port of
Maó and some of the coastal defence towers such as Sant Nicolau in
Ciutadella.
In the 18th century, Minorca once again began to be involved in the ups and downs of
Europe and, as a result of the war of succession for the Spanish throne, it passed into
English hands in 1713. For one hundred years the island would be under English rule, with
short periods of French and Spanish domination. The English reinforced defences by
building more towers on the coast, such as those that can be seen in the port of
Maó, Fornells and Fort Malborough in cala San Esteban.
The 19th and 20th centuries were as cosmopolitan as the previous ones, firstly because
of the continuous arrival of foreign armies in the port of Maó that was initially
a free port. Dating from the 19th century are Lazareto and the Isabel II fort in la Mola,
both in the port of Maó.
Both the above centuries are witnesses to extreme poverty as well as times of economic
prosperity, thanks to incipient industry and commerce.
The 20th century was characterized by equilibrium between the primary, secondary and
tertiary economic sectors until the beginning of the 1980s, when the tourist industry
became the most developed sector. This resulted in a large number of visitors and this
threatened the image of the island that tourists themselves had of our island. This
situation was brought to a halt thanks to the declaration of the Biosphere Reserve and to
the popular conscience for its conservation.
The cultural opportunities are numerous and varied in Minorca. Special attention
should be given to the numerous prehistoric settlements and monuments, spread out
throughout the insular territory. These include, among many others, the Naveta des Tudons,
Torralba den Salord, Torre den Gaumés and Cales Coves.
There are numerous museums: Museu de la Natura in Ferreries, the Museu Diocesà
and the Museo Municipal des Bastió de Sa Font in Ciutadella, the Museo de Menorca
and the Museo Hernández-Sanz in Maó, as well as the Museo Militar and Fort
Marlborough in Es Castell.
The main cultural events of the year are the international opera week in Maó,
the summer music festival and the Capella Davídica concerts in Ciutadella, as well
as the international organ festivals in Santa Maria, Maó, and in the cathedral in
Ciutadella.
Jazz concerts are also enjoying a boom and they continue to be a part of the musical
offerings of the island.