#Giovanni Francesco Abela
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natasa-pantovic · 10 months ago
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Lecture “Knowledge in the Making” by Dr Reuben Grima, National Library Series, exploring images of the 17th Century Maltese Book written by Giovanni Francesco Abela (1582–1655). Abela cabinet of antiquities became the core of Malta's national archaeological collection.
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Lecture “Knowledge in the Making” by Dr Reuben Grima, National Library Series, exploring images of the 17th Century Maltese Book written by Giovanni Francesco Abela (1582–1655).   Abela obtained the title of Doctor in Law in December 1606.  His cabinet of antiquities became the core of Malta’s national archaeological collection.
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kappavision · 2 years ago
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This small church has a vague but interesting history, with its origins dating back to at least the 14th century. The church is dedicated to St. John the Almoner and was built in the area known as t’Għuxa in Cospicua (Bormla) in 1682, between St. Helen’s Gate and Għajn Dwieli. The date 1682 inscribed on the façade of the church indicates the year in which it was built. The present-day church replaced an older one that stood outside the Santa Margarita Lines, and which had been demolished in 1680 to make way it for the newly-built fortifications in Cottonera. The main benefactor was Friar Fra Pietro Viany, prior of the Order of St. John. ST. JOHN THE ALMONER St. John the Almoner was the Chalcedonian Patriarch of Alexandria and a Christian Saint. He was born in 556 in Cyprus and died there between 616-620. The original church dedicated to St. John the Almoner in Bormla was built in 1373 but was not located in the same place as the one we find today. The exact place is still unknown but probably it stood just outside the Santa Margherita Lines. One of the bastion there is dedicated to him. The old church was dismantled in order to allow for the building of the Cottonera Lines. The nickname t’Għuxa that this church carries seems to have been given by the Carthaginians to an area where a hermit once lived, which was later developed into a garden and to which was added, probably during the Norman Conquest, a church dedicated to St. John. The titular altarpiece represents the Eternal Father and was painted by the Italian Baroque artist Mattia Preti. Both the titular painting and a small lunette which surrounded it, both works of Mattia Preti, are nowadays conserved in the National Museum of Fine Arts in Valletta. They were replaced by replicas in the church. Both the historians Giovanni Francesco Abela and Gian Pietro Agius De Soldanis refer to a wooden statue of St. John the Baptist found in the church which they state was brought over from Rhodes by the Order when they came to Malta in 1530. During World War 2 the church was extensively damaged during the and although it has since been restored, it has never again been used for religious services. (at Cospicua) https://www.instagram.com/p/CjViRhHoS7c/?igshid=NGJjMDIxMWI=
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alotoftrips · 5 years ago
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Mdina, the city of silence and the nobles
Close to the heart of Malta, where it should be its place, is the fortress Mdina, which opens your doors to a completely different world and takes you in a fascinating journey in time where you can hardly get away. Situated on a hill overlooking the modern world, Mdina, a historic jewel founded by the Phoenicians 4,000 years ago, was the capital of ancient Malta until the arrival of the Ioannite knights in 1530.
Mdina Malta - Old Capital and the Silent City of Malta - Medieval Town
It was home then, as now, to Malta's noble families; some are descendants of the Norman, Sicilian and Spanish overlords who made Mdina their home from the ...
The thick walls and broad ditch surrounding the city, built during the Arab occupation of the 9th-11th centuries, separate Mdina from Rabat, the city that surrounds it. In order to recreate the medieval atmosphere, the horse-drawn carriages are waiting for you at the entrance to the city, where you can take a tour of the ancient city.In the "Silent City", as it is known to the locals, nothing has changed for 350 years. You will be fascinated to wander for hours between the debris walls of golden brick, interrupted instead of small windows with lattices or shutters, flower balconies and lanterns. Here's how time stays in place, and silence and mystery-filled atmosphere make you want to talk like a whisper. From the main streets with sumptuous buildings, each with a distinct history, the narrow streets, which sometimes cling to a door behind you, find it hard to believe that there is still life. But there is, even a noble one, for this makes Mdina the more special. Beyond the old walls and separated from the world we know, there are only noble families living in Mdina, 80 of them, that is, almost 300 inhabitants, all descendants of some of the oldest families of noblemen in Malta - Normans, Sicilians and Spaniards, have settled on these lands since the 12th century. In fact, Mdina is also called "The City of the Barons." With luck, on Sunday mornings at Don Mesquita, you can have your coffee with the barons who chew with the new world by browsing the newspapers. But after a stroll full of history, we are asked to stop for a rustic Mediterranean lunch, and Malta can be a revelation to amateur tourists of new culinary experiences. Although the traditional dish is the rabbit stew (Fenek), Sicilian, Spanish and North African influences have brought seafood, olives, capers, pasta, rice, couscous and an abundance of condiments to the Maltese meals. We will go to the south of the island, in the small fishing village of Marsaxlokk, where you can feel the full flavor of a fresh fish drawn from the Mediterranean. As soon as you get to the pier, the first instinct will be categorical to remove the camera, because dozens of assorted blue, red, yellow, and white boats are the charm and attraction of the place. The six temples of Haġar Qim On our way to the Blue Grotto, about a kilometer away from the small town of Qrendi, we will visit the Haġar Qim archaeological site, a megalithic complex of six temples built in the Neolithic Age around 3600-3200 BC. hr. That makes Haġar Qim one of the oldest religious sites in the world. The complex was uncovered in 1839, and during the archaeological researches many neolithic female statues were found, which shows that here were rituals for fertility, 5000 years ago. "These temples are made of stone blocks so large that only the giants could have built them," said Giovanni Francesco Abela, a 17th-century Maltese noble. That's because the largest of these stones weighs seven tons. But in order to better understand the value of this place, the entrance museum invites you to a small cinema hall that offers a 4D reconstruction of the temple story, from present to prehistoric times, where you will feel even the storms on your skin who have stumbled over these proofs of ancient civilizations buried for millennia. Nature's show is in the Blue Grotto A kilometer further south, we meet one of Malta's most famous tourist attractions - the Blue Grotto, the place where the electric blue of the water leaves you hypnotized. The small Qrendi pier in the cliff offers boat trips to the seven spectacular watersheds for 6 pounds. Although the caves are themselves a natural wonder, the true beauty of the place is revealed in sunny and sunny days, beyond the rocky arcade of 42 meters high. Then magic is happening and you have the chance to see a unique phenomenon - the blue sky is reflected in the white sand beneath the caves, resulting in colored waters in vibrant cobalt and azure shades. In addition, the walls of the caves mirror the orange, purple and green colors of the underwater flora, providing a light and color show.
MDINA - THE SILENT CITY - YouTube
Nov 19, 2013 ... The history of Mdina traces back more than 4000 years. According to tradition it was here that in 60 A.D. that the Apostle St. Paul is said to have ...
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natasa-pantovic · 10 months ago
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Lecture “Knowledge in the Making” by Dr Reuben Grima, National Library Series, exploring images of the 17th Century Maltese Book written by Giovanni Francesco Abela (1582–1655).   Abela obtained the title of Doctor in Law in December 1606.  His cabinet of antiquities became the core of Malta's national archaeological collection.
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