Libyan History Pre-historic remains suggest humans lived in central Libya at least 15,000
years ago. The cave paintings of Jebel Acacus and Wadi Methkandoush indicate
that people animals flourished and a much lusher vegetation existed in the area
from about 8000 to 2000 BC. The Berbers were the local indigenous population
until, in about 1000 BC, Phoenician traders established several cities on the
north coast of Tripolitanea to promote their trade. The greatest of these was
Carthage in present day Tunisia. The Phoenician period came to an end with the
Punic wars waged by Rome against Carthage. In 146 BC Carthage was completely
destroyed by the Romans. The Greeks established 5 trading outposts in Cyrenea; the Romans also displaced
them. A long and stable period ensued, the so-called "pax Romana". Cities
really developed and flourished, in particular under Septimus Severus who was
born in Libya and helped to develop cities such as Leptis Magna.
The end of this golden age came when Germanic Vandals were introduced to Libya.
Then a great earthquake in AD 365 led to further destruction. In AD 642 Arab
armies came to convert North Africa and southern Spain to Islam. The Moslem period saw a decline in the cities of the north and piracy along the
"Barbary Coast" was rampant. One of the most well known pirates was known as
"Red Beard" or "Barbarossa" in Italian - hence the name of the coast. The coming of the Ottoman Empire improved nothing and was marked by cruel rule
and exploitation. Attempts to control the Fezzan in the southwest always
failed. Ottoman control ended in 1911 when the Italians tried to establish a
colony in North Africa. Their occupation of Libya was equally cruel and
opposition was met with savage reprisals, which resulted in great numbers of
Libyans losing their lives. The Italians also encouraged settlers to take over
land taken from the locals. A great freedom fighter at this time was Omar
al-Mukhtar or the Lion of the Desert who fought the occupation till he was
caught and hung by the Italians at the age of 73. The Second World War saw more violent fighting along the north coast. Erwin
Rommel's campaigns and skirmishes with the allies under Montgomery are
particularly well documented. The end of the war heralded the creation of a
free and independent Libya in 1951, with a democratic government and a King
(Idris). The country devastated by wars and occupation needed rebuilding and reforming,
the discovery of oil in 1959 complicated the issue and a succession of weak
governments under a weak king failed to adapt rapidly enough to the changes
taking place. The stage was ripe for the military coup, which, in 1969, saw the
take over of power by an army colonel Muammar Gaddafi. His brutal regime benefitted some of his fanatical supporters many of whom died with him in his attempts to cling to power. Most Libyans now hope that his death on 20th October 2011 heralds a new era of a free and democratic Libya. |