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The magnificent harbours and central Mediterranean location of Malta have attracted seafarers, traders and imperialists throughout history, resulting in a lively legacy of influences. The Islands are most readily associated with the Knights of the Order of St John, who ruled here between the 16th and 18th centuries AD, but there is a deeper heritage to Malta which includes a remarkable prehistoric fluorescence โ the Neolithic temple culture of around BC. Both these periods have bequeathed sites of World Heritage status to Malta.
A further layer of interest was added by the vital role the islands played in the allied war effort of the Second World War. Temple Builders: Around BC the Maltese islanders exhibited an extraordinary flowering of Stone Age culture through artistic and architectural achievements that were notably advanced for their time, predating Stonehenge and the Pyramids. These Neolithic monuments are now World Heritage sites of international importance, and an archaeological claim to fame for Malta.
The temples at Tarxien, Hagar Qim and Gigantija are readily accessible and well-presented, and the National Archaeological Museum in Valletta has a wonderful gallery of treasures. But make sure your visit to Malta includes the underground tomb complex at the Hypogeum โ a sacred prehistoric world of the dead. Phoenicians: Some time after BC Phoenician colonists brought eastern influences and innovations to Malta, including ironworking, the alphabet and a range of crafts.
The Neolithic temples of Malta are outstanding for their age and give us vivid insights into prehistoric beliefs. Valletta was the capital of the Knights of St. John, and still resonates its early Baroque character. Roman Malta: Secure and prosperous, Roman Malta spawned wealthy villa estates and busy harbours.
Mdina was the capital, and here today one can visit the excavated remains of a wealthy Roman town house. This can be explored through a visit to the Christian catacombs of Rabat, but the Arab invasion in AD brought a devastating turbulence to the islands during which much physical evidence was lost.