Make a Donation

Home

Ring Options :
Add your site updated
Edit Site Information
Forgot Password?
List of Sites
Random Site!

Services :
Classified
Top Sites

General Information and Links
about Malta, Gozo and Comino :
Airline Reservations
Archaeology
Ancient Pics / Photos
Beaches
Books
Bus Routes of Malta & Gozo
Car Hire
Carnival
Churches
Cinema Schedule
Coat of Arms
Comino
Coins
Culture
Currency Converter
Dictionary English-Maltese
Driving in Malta
EuroVision History
Exchange Rates
Facts about Malta
Flights (Arrivals)
Flights (Departures)
Gozo
Gozo Ferry
History
Hotel Reservations
ICQ Malta
Local Councils
Malta Song for Europe
Maltese Accent Codes
Maltese Language
Maltese Surnames Logos
Museums
Newspapers
Parish Feasts
Police Stations
Public Transport History
Radio and Television Stations
Schools
Time
Today in History
WebCams in Malta

Maps :
Malta, Gozo and Comino
Mdina
Valletta
Interactive Map

Weather :
5 Day Forecast
Current Obersvations
IsoBar Chart
Radar Images
Satellite Images
Wind & Temp.

Practical Information :
Airlines
Archipelago
Artefact Export
Climate
Currency / Credit Cards / Banks
Duty-Free Shopping
Electricity and Water
Flight Enquiries
Gozo and Comino Island Hopping
History
Maltese Embassie and Consulates
Postal Service
Public Holidays
Public Transport
Religion & Worship
Shop Hours
Swimming and Sunbathing
Where’s Malta?

Sister Sites :
The United States Ring
Italian Soccer Ring
France Webcams Ring
Pink Panther Ring
Just Everything
Italian Soccer
English Soccer



Maltese Ring TopSites

VOTE FOR US

Guestbook by GuestSigns

Email this to a friend
Valletta
 

Until the arrival of the Knights of St John, Mount Sceberras, on which Valletta stands, lying between two natural harbours, was an arid tongue of land. No building stood on its bare rocks except for a small watchtower called St Elmo, to be found at its extreme end.

When the Knights arrived in 1530, they settled in the small village of Birgu on the eastern shores of Grand Harbour, which, at that time, had the advantage of being protected by the bulwark of St Angelo in the main harbour.

As an invasion of the island by the Turks was considered imminent, the Knights hurriedly reinforced the few defences available, and built a stronger fort at St Elmo to guard the entrance to the harbour.

The Turkish invaders struck in May 1565. The besieged Knights and the Maltese defenders rose valiantly to the occasion. Their loss of men and property was considerable, but the Turkish invaders suffered so many more deaths and causalities that after four months of assault, they decided to call it a day and return to their land.

Grand Master La Valette, the gallant hero of the siege, soon realised that if the Order was to maintain its hold on Malta, it had to provide for adequate defences. Therefore, he drew up a plan for a new fortified city on the Sceberras peninsula. Pope Pius V and Philip II of Spain showed interest in the project. They both announced financial aid and the Pope lent the Knights the services of Francesco Laparelli, a military engineer, who drew up the necessary plans for the new city and its defences.

Work started in earnest in March 1566 - first on the bastions and, soon after, on the more important buildings. The new city was to be called Valletta in honour of its founder, Grand Master La Valette. La Valette died in 1568, and his successor, Pietro del Monte continued with the work at the same step. By 1571 , enough homes were completed and the Knights could transfer their quarters from girgu to their new capital.

Architect Laparelli left Malta in 1570. He was replaced by his assistant Gerolamo Cassar, who had spent some months in Rome, where he had observed the new style of buildings in that great city. Cassar designed and supervised most of the early buildings, including the Sacra Infermeria, St John's Church, the Magisterial Palace and the seven Auberges, or Inns of Residence of the Knights.

By the turn of the 16th Century, Valletta had grown to a sizeable city. People from all parts of the Island flocked to live within its safe fortifications. Mdina, till then Malta's capital, lost much of its importance when the new city of Valletta became the island's capital.

In the ensuing years, the austere mannerist style of Cassar's structures gave way to the more lavish palaces and churches with graceful facades and rich sculptural motifs.

The new city, with its strong bastions and deep moats, became an impregnable bulwark of great strategic importance. The Knights gained the gratitude of Popes and foreign rulers for their achievement. Grand Master La Valette christened his city The humble city of Valletta.







Google
 
Click here to Add the above Search Box to your Site







[ Join WebRing  |  Add your site to JustEverything!  |  Advertise on this site  |  Add to Bookmarks/Favorites ]
Copyright © 1996-2008 www.MalteseRing.com.