The Republic of
Cyprus was established in 1960, after the former colony
gained independence from Britain. Since 1974, however, a de
facto division of the island has existed, with the Greek
Cypriot community controlling 63 percent of the territory,
and the Turkish Cypriots, backed by Turkish army units, 37
percent. The scene of constant anticolonial and
intercommunal strife since the mid-1950s, Cyprus assumed an
importance out of proportion to its size and population
because of its strategic location and its impact on the
national interests of other nations. The island's location
in the eastern Mediterranean Sea has made it easily
accessible from Europe, Asia, and Africa since the earliest
days of ships. Its timber and mineral resources made it
important as a source of trade goods in the ancient world,
but attracted conquerors, pirates, and adventurers in
addition to merchants and settlers. About the middle of the
second millennium B.C. Cyprus was subjected to foreign
domination for the first time, and from then until 1960,
almost without interruption, outside powers controlled the
island and its people. Christianity was
introduced early in the Christian Era, when Cyprus was under
Roman rule, by the apostles Paul, Mark, and Barnabas. The
martyrdom of Barnabas and the later discovery of his tomb
are particularly important events in the history of the
Church of Cyprus and were instrumental in its becoming
autocephalous rather than remaining subordinate to the
patriarchate of Antioch. After doctrinal controversies split
Christianity between East and West, the church survived 400
years of attempts by Roman Catholic rulers to force
recognition of the authority of the pope in Rome. After
Cyprus's conquest by Ottoman Turks in the sixteenth century,
the sees of the Orthodox bishops were reestablished,
according to the Ottoman practice of governing through a
millet (a community distinguished by religion)
system. Provided a millet met the empire's demands,
its leaders enjoyed a degree of autonomy. The head of the
Greek Cypriot millet, the archbishop, was therefore
both a religious and a secular leader, and it was entirely
consistent with historical tradition that, in the
anticolonial struggle of the mid-1950s, Archbishop Makarios
III emerged as the leader of the Greek Cypriots and was
subsequently elected president of the new
republic. After Greece had
won its independence from the Ottoman Empire in 1821, the
idea of enosis (union with Greece) took hold among ethnic
Greeks living in the Ionian and Aegean islands, Crete,
Cyprus, and areas of Anatolia. Britain ceded the Ionian
Islands to Greece in 1864, and after control of Cyprus
passed from the Ottoman Empire to the British Empire in
1878, Greek Cypriots saw the ceding of the Ionian islands as
a precedent for enosis for themselves. Under British rule,
agitation for enosis varied with time. After World War II,
in the era of the breakup of colonial empires, the movement
gained strength, and Greek Cypriots spurned British
liberalization efforts. In the mid-1950s, when anticolonial
guerrilla activities began, Turkish Cypriots--who until that
time had only rarely expressed opposition to enosis--began
to agitate for taksim, or partition, and Greece and
Turkey began actively to support their respective ethnic
groups on the island. After four years
of guerrilla revolt by Greek Cypriots against the British, a
compromise settlement was reached, in Zurich between Greece
and Turkey and in London among representatives of Greece,
Turkey, and Britain and the Greek and Turkish Cypriot
communities. As a result of this settlement, Cyprus became
an independent republic. Independence was marked on August
16, 1960. In separate communal elections Makarios became
president, and Fazil Küçük, leader of the
Turkish Cypriots, became vice president. In the early 1960s,
political arguments over constitutional interpretation
continually deadlocked the government. Greek Cypriots
insisted on revision of the constitution and majority rule.
Turkish Cypriots argued for strict constructionism, local
autonomy, and the principle of minority veto. The result was
stalemate. Intercommunal violence broke out in December
1963, and resulted in the segregation of the two ethnic
communities and establishment of the United Nations
Peace-keeping Force in Cyprus (UNFICYP). Even with United
Nations (UN) troops as a buffer, however, intermittent
conflict continued and brought Greece and Turkey to the
brink of war in 1964 and 1967. The irony of the
divided Cyprus that has existed since 1974 is that the stage
was set for Turkish intervention by the Greek government in
Athens. The military junta that controlled Greece came to
view Archbishop Makarios as an obstacle to settlement of the
Cyprus problem and establishment of better relations between
Athens and Ankara. A successful coup was engineered in
Cyprus in July 1974, Makarios was ousted, and a puppet
president installed. Turkey, as one of the guarantor powers
according to the agreements that led to Cypriot
independence, sent troops into Cyprus to restore order.
Britain, as another guarantor power, refused to participate.
Meanwhile, in Greece the junta had collapsed, and a new
government was being established. After a short cease-fire
and a few days of hurried negotiations, the Turkish
government reinforced its troops and ordered them to secure
the northern part of the island. Turkish forces
seized 37 percent of the island and effected a de facto
partition that was still in existence at the beginning of
the 1990s. Turkish Cypriots declared the establishment of
their own state in 1983, but as of 1990 only Turkey had
recognized the "Turkish Republic of Northern Cyprus."
Although more populous and considerably richer, and enjoying
international recognition, the Republic of Cyprus had not
been able to regain its lost territory. Increased military
expenditures could not offset the considerable Turkish
military presence on the island. Years of laborious
negotiations at numerous venues had also achieved little
toward ending the island's tragic division.
Library of Congress Country Study
Library of Congress Country Study
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