Cyprus
Portrait of a Divided Nation
"Cyprus: Portrait of a Divided Nation" invites readers on a sweeping journey through the island’s layered past, from the mythic birth of Aphrodite on its shores to the turbulent present where a UN‑patrolled Green Line still slices through Nicosia. Robert Mann traces how successive empires—Assyrian, Persian, Hellenistic, Roman, Byzantine, Lusignan, Venetian, Ottoman, and British—left their imprint on Cyprus’s culture, religion, and demography, laying the groundwork for the competing Greek and Turkish Cypriot identities that would later clash.
The book delves into the rise of enosis and taksim, the birth of the Republic of Cyprus in 1960, and the constitutional experiment that quickly unraveled into intercommunal violence. Readers will witness the pivotal moments of Bloody Christmas, the 1974 coup and Turkish invasion, the creation of the Attila Line, and the haunting ghost town of Varosha, gaining a clear sense of how political decisions, external guarantor powers, and grassroots militancy reshaped the island’s human landscape.
Beyond the headlines of conflict, Mann explores everyday life on both sides of the divide: the economic boom and EU integration of the south, the isolation and dependence on Turkey in the north, the divergent education systems that perpetuate separate narratives, and the enduring agony of missing persons and disputed property. Chapters on religion, energy discoveries in the Eastern Mediterranean, and the hopes and fears of a new generation reveal how the conflict continues to evolve while touching on culture, memory, and identity.
By weaving together political analysis, personal testimonies, and vivid on‑the‑ground reporting, the book offers a nuanced portrait of a nation where beauty and tragedy coexist. Readers will come away with a deep understanding of why Cyprus remains divided, what reconciliation efforts have succeeded or failed, and how the island’s past informs its uncertain future—knowledge essential for anyone interested in Mediterranean history, conflict resolution, or the human consequences of nationalism.
This book is ideal for students and scholars of international relations, conflict resolution, and Mediterranean studies seeking a comprehensive understanding of the Cyprus conflict. It will also benefit policy makers, diplomats, and professionals working on ethnic conflicts or peace processes who need historical context and analysis of failed settlement attempts. General readers interested in how historical grievances, competing nationalisms, and external interventions create enduring divisions will find the narrative both informative and accessible.
May 28, 2026
43,887 words
3 hours 4 minutes
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