Celebrating St Patrick’s day in Malta

St. Patrick’s Day is no longer just an Irish event. During recent years the celebrations of St. Patrick – people participating in the parades, singing and dancing to Irish music, making Irish jokes and Irish toasts – have gained tremendous popularity around the world,  including on Malta.

As the Irish would say, “On St. Patrick’s Day everyone is Irish so why not to join us?”

Indeed, following the success of the St. Patrick’s celebrations in the Maltese Capital City Valletta last year, the Irish Maltese Circle  with several other organisations has decided to join the forces to organise another great event on Sunday 16th March 2014 at 11:45.

The Parade will leave from the City Gate of Valletta.

[alerts title=”More info” type=”info”]http://irishmaltesecircle.org.mt/1323/st-patricks-day-parade-2014/[/alerts]

 

Where is Malta? This Infographic has the answer.

You might be reading this blog because you have been on the Island and you have fallen in love with it’s ways and it’s people. However, we all have met those who have asked us “Where is Malta?” or even worse “What is Malta?”

Here’s a very informative infographic to help you answer your curiousity (and hopefully book your next trip to visit Malta)

Hit Like to Download the Inforgraphic…

[like-gate]where-is-malta[/like-gate]

 

[alerts title=”Find Malta on Google Maps” type=”info”]Here’s a link to Malta and Gozo on Google Maps[/alerts]

The Colours of Marsaxlokk

Marsaxlokk Bay is Malta’s second largest natural harbour. In this typical fishing village, it is easy to spot the colourful, traditional Maltese fishing boats, the Luzzus, with the mythical Osiris eye painted on their prows.

The village is the Islands’ main fishing harbour; its Sunday fish market a fascinating insight into local life and a traditional industry. The stalls brim with the night’s catch – fish of all shapes, colours and sizes. The village itself has many good fish restaurants lined along the village’s promenade and renowned not just for their quality but also for their value-for-money.

Marsaxlokk derives its name from the Arabic word marsa, meaning harbour, and Maltese for the South-Easterly Mediterranean wind, the Xlokk (Sirocco in Italian). Marsaxlokk, with its sheltered habour, was an easy landing place for pirates and the Ottoman Turks. It was here that the Ottoman Turks landed for an attack which ended in the Great Siege of 1565.

In 1978 Napoleon’s army used this bay to land on the island and take over it’s governance from the Knights of St. John.

Very close to the picturesque fishing village, there are a few secluded beaches, amongst which the most popular with the locals is St Peter’s Pool in the area knows as Delimara Point.

MaltaVillageHolidays recommends staying at Bellavista Holiday Apartment in Marsaxlokk.

[alerts title=”Fireworks Festival” type=”info”]Marsaxlokk will be hosting the Malta International Fireworks Festival on  25th April 2014

More info about the Malta International Fireworks Festival here.[/alerts]

[VIDEO] L’ultimo concerto di Lucio Dalla

Il grande cantautore Italiano Lucio Dalla a pochi mesi dalla sua scomparsa, si esibisce sul palco di Joseph Calleja, il tenore, per il suo concerto estivo nella piazza alle porte della Valletta.

Cantando dal vivo il brano Caruso – scritto nel 1986, in questo video amatoriale Dalla e Calleja hanno commosso il publico presente.

Lucio Dalla e scomparso il 1 Marzo 2012 a pochi giorni dal suo 69o compleanno.

Si prega di premere LIKE per vedere il video…

[like-gate]

[/like-gate]

 

The Maltese Village for Hollywood Stars

Like everywhere else, life has become fast-paced in Malta. People seem to be in a rush everywhere. The buzz of activity in the commercial centres of Valletta and Sliema is living proof of this. No doubt it’s all fun if you’re on holiday and people watching is your kind of thing. And if it does get tiring you can always try an altogether different scene…

Just outside the quaint village is Palazzo Guarena – a knight’s summer residence of some elegance but of more interest to film buffs. Hollywood’s most glamorous couple Brad Pitt and Angelina Jolie stayed here for some time in 2011 while Pitt was filming World War Z in various locations in Malta.  A year later actor Tom Hanks, no doubt on reputable recommendation, chose to use the same palazzo as his base for fourteen weeks while filming Captain Philips.

Some of the villages further out of the harbour areas seem to escape this madness completely, and once most of their inhabitants have driven off to their work places, an oasis of calm descends on these villages with very few (understandably mostly elderly) people about. The commercial activity in these places is also on a much slower level with a couple of grocery shops, the odd bar and the obligatory confectionery – the Maltese are big on their sweetmeats.

The village of Qrendi on the way to Hagar Qim is one such place and makes for a pleasant diversion before or after visiting the hallowed megalithic site. Tracing its origins to at least as far back as 1417, Qrendi became a parish in 1618.  An elegant parish church was built around 1720, and this takes pride of place right in the centre of the village. The church is flanked on both sides by a series of picturesque narrow streets. Some two hundred meters to the church’s right one can find a unique octagonal tower known as the Captain’s Tower on Triq it-Torri (translates as Tower Street appropriately enough) with features like drop boxes which are unknown on other defensive buildings here. In the area is also a largish chapel, St.Saviour’s which during the Second World War served as a dormitory for people made homeless by the enemy raids in the Grand Harbour area.

At the village’s southern end is the quaint chapel of St. Matthew with a regenerated piazza ideal for some quality lazing. Of more interest is a huge “hole in the ground” behind the chapel, known locally as Il-Maqluba. In reality this is a karstic depression created by a collapse of huge underground caves creating a sizable sinkhole. Reputably the collapse occurred during a storm in 1343 and was superstitiously seen as a sort of heavenly warning – thus the building of the chapel as a conciliatory gesture. Steps lead down some way down this sinkhole where one can appreciate its sheer size.

Quite near to St.Matthew’s  and on the village periphery is the ancient sanctuary of Our Lady of Mercies – a church with origins dating back to the 13th century – ironically before Qrendi came into being and the area was then a long lost hamlet going by the name of Hal Lew. It’s a robust church with a lovely porticoed façade bordering some lovely country lanes.

[alerts title=”Hit LIKE to read our recommendations…” type=”info”] [like-gate]
Places to visit nearby include

Stay at this Traditional Village Townhouse in Zurrieq.

[/like-gate][/alerts]

The Traditional (Spontaneous) Carnival in Malta

Carnival may be seen as an occasion for the younger ones to immerse themselves in the world of fantasy and fiction, but many adults take this occasion to party and express themselves in creative ways.

Here are a number of shots taken during this year’s edition of the Nadur (Gozo) Traditional Carnival, famous for attracting the weirdest and funniest carnival costumes on the islands.

 

[alerts title=”Want to share?” type=”info”]Have you got photos to share? drop us an email at [email protected] and we will add them to this blog[/alerts]
 

How does Paul McCartney, David Bowie relate to Valletta?

Did you know David Bowie took his first baby steps of his carrier at the Premier Cafè in Valletta? And that the Valletta Carnival features in one of Paul McCarthney’s music videos?

Discover more fun fact about the Capital City of Malta, Valletta.

[alerts title=”Hit Like to download more facts” type=”info”] [like-gate]
Download Valletta Facts[/like-gate]
[/alerts]

The Gardjola Gardens in 360°

Gardjola Gardens in Senglea’s bastions across Valletta, offer spectacular views of the Grand Harbour

The Gardjola Gardens are located in Senglea or Isla as it is known by the locals. It overlooks the bastion with fantastic panoramic views over Marsa, Valletta, Grand Harbour and Fort St. Angelo.

The gardens were planned by Grandmaster De La Sengle in 1551 with a lovely guard tower built on the tip of the bastions. The guard tower, ‘Il-gardjola’, has various symbols sculpted on in such as an eye, an ear and the crane bird, representing guardianship and observance protecting the Maltese shores.

The eye on the tower is a popular icon representing Malta, featured in many brochures about the Island. The gardens have palm trees and provide a spot to relax under the shade while enjoying the view.

Hit LIKE to view a 360° Panoramic Video…

[like-gate]

[/like-gate]

 

World football freestyle champion Andrew Henderson in Malta

The skills of world renowned freestyle champion Andrew Henderson marry with the unique backdrop of the Valletta Grand Harbour. This video was shot on a warm bright day from the Gardjola Gardens in Sengela (Isla) under the watchful eye of the “gardjola” tower.

The gardens were planned by Grandmaster De La Sengle in 1551 with a lovely guard tower built on the tip of the bastions. The guard tower, ‘Il-gardjola’, has various symbols sculpted on in such as an eye, an ear and the crane bird, representing guardianship and observance protecting the Maltese shores.

 Hit LIKE to watch this video…

[like-gate]

[/like-gate]

 

How many UNESCO World Heritage Sites are there in Malta?

The Maltese Islands have three sites listed on the UNESCO World Heritage List. These are the City of Valletta, the Megalithic Temples and the Ħal Saflieni Hypogeum.

In all, seven megalithic temples are found on the islands of Malta and Gozo, each the result of an individual development. The two temples of Ġgantija on the island of Gozo are notable for their gigantic Bronze Age structures. The Ġgantija Temples are the oldest, free-standing monuments in the world and are a testament to the Island’s inhabitation for at least 1,000 years before the famous Egyptian pyramids of Giza were constructed.

On the island of Malta, the temples of Ħaġar Qim, Mnajdra and Tarxien are unique architectural masterpieces, given the limited resources available to their builders. The Ta’ Ħagrat and Skorba complexes show how the tradition of temple-building was handed down in Malta. These temples were inscribed on the World Heritage List as a group and represent a unique architectural tradition that flourished on the Maltese Islands between 3600 and 2500 B.C.

The Ħal Saflieni Hypogeum is a rock-cut underground complex that was used both as a sanctuary as well as for burial purposes by the temple builders. It was discovered during construction works in 1902. The three underground levels date from around 3600 to 2400 B.C. The monument is considered one of the essential prehistoric monuments in the world.

The capital of Malta, Valletta, is inextricably linked to the history of the military and charitable Order of St John of Jerusalem. Built after the Great Siege of 1565 and named after Grandmaster Jean Parisot de la Valette, this fortified city has hundreds of monuments, all within a relatively small space, making it one of the most concentrated historic areas in the world.

[alerts title=”UNESCO Entities in Malta” type=”info”]

[/alerts]