|
Valletta Malta

The Osborne Hotel is located in the capital city
of Valletta amidst the history and allure of the Knights of St.
John.
Shopping centres, shops, cinemas, museums, palaces, the Upper and
Lower Barrakka Gardens, Hastings Gardens, plus the Bus Terminus are
all walking distance from the hotel Osborne
It is an ideal combination….relaxing in peaceful Valletta whilst
being able to enjoy all the attractions that this city has to offer.

Valletta, The Fortress City, Citta' Umilissima, “a
city built by gentlemen for gentlemen” is Malta's capital city: a
living, working city, the administrative and commercial heart of the
Islands. Valletta is named after its founder, the respected Grand
Master of the Order of St John, Jean Parisot de la Valette. The
magnificent fortress city grew on the arid rock of Mount Sceberras
peninsula, which rises steeply from two deep harbours, Marsamxett
and Grand Harbour. Started in 1566, Valletta was completed, with its
impressive bastions, forts and cathedral, in the astonishingly short
time of 15 years.
Valletta has many titles, all recalling its rich historical past. It
is the “modern” city built by the Knights of St John; a masterpiece
of the Baroque; a European Art City and a World Heritage City.
Spanning an area of just around 55 hectares it is one of the most
concentrated historic areas in the world.

The city is busy by day, yet retains a timeless
atmosphere. The grid of narrow streets boasts some of Europe's
finest art works, churches and palaces.
Hosting a vast cultural programme, walking around Valletta you’ll
come across an intriguing historical site around every corner:
votive statues, niches, fountains and coats of arms high up on
parapets. Narrow side streets are full of tiny, quaint, shops and
cafés, while Valletta’s main streets are lined with larger
international branded shops for fashion, music, jewellery and much
more.

Valletta is named after its founder, the respected Grand Master of
the Order of St John, Jean Parisot de la Valette, but the city
really owes its birth to his arch enemy, Grand Turk Suleiman the
Magnificent.
When the Knights arrived in Malta in 1530, they had settled in the
small village of Birgu (Vittoriosa), which was protected by Fort St
Angelo. They managed to enlarge the old St Elmo watchtower on the
Sceberras Peninsula opposite, but their defences were still weak.
The strategic importance of Mount Sceberras was to become all too
evident during the Great Siege.
Valletta had been planned before the siege. But the plans could only
be executed once a grateful Christendom had lavished riches on the
Knights for their defeat of Suleiman. Pope Pius V and King Philip of
Spain gave financial aid and loaned the services of an outstanding
military engineer, the Italian, Francesco Laparelli.
The magnificent fortress city grew on the arid rock of Mount
Sceberras peninsula, which rises steeply from two deep harbours,
Marsamxett and Grand Harbour. Started in 1566, Valletta was
completed, with its impressive bastions, forts and cathedral, in the
astonishingly short time of 15 years.
Laparelli had a unique
opportunity to create the perfect city. Valletta may not strike you
as a modern city, but it is one of the first examples of town
planning based on a grid pattern of streets.
The city catered well for all strata of society, from the Knights to
their servants and trades people. Laparelli's design provided for
fresh water to be piped in, and for sanitation; both advanced
concepts for the time. The grid of streets allowed for fresh air
from the two harbours to circulate easily in the narrow streets – a
kind of city-scale air-conditioning.
Valletta is a fine example of a planned, 16th century city: unusual
for the times, since urban centres mostly evolved from earlier
settlements. The rocky Mount Sceberras on which it was built was not
an easy location: it took considerable levelling before construction
could begin. La Valette died in 1568, before the city was completed.
By 1571, enough of the city was built to allow the Knights to
transfer from Birgu.
Laparelli left Malta in 1570, but work was continued by the Maltese
Architect Gerolamo Cassar. Cassar was responsible for most of the
major early buildings from the Cathedral of St John to the Sacra
Infermeria, the Auberges or Inns of Residence of the Knights and the
Magisterial Palace.
By the turn of the 16th century, Valletta was a sizeable city.
People from across the Islands came to live within the safety of its
bastions.
Valletta was soon pre-eminent in the life of the Order and the
Islands. However, the Three Cities, across the harbour, the first
home to the Knights, retained economic importance because of their
docks. Mdina, the old medieval capital, all but lost its role and
became a backwater. It remained home to the Maltese nobility,
descendents of the Sicilian and Spanish overlords.
World War II brought havoc to Malta. Valletta was badly destroyed by
bombardment, but the city managed to withstand the war with many of
its treasures, such as the Knights' masterpiece, St John's
Cathedral, intact.
Today Valletta has a smaller population than before the war, but it
is a bustling place as the Islands' main business centre and the
seat of government Below
is a Satellite Map View of Valletta City for you to Explore
|