Ładowanie…
Ładowanie…
Without the Knights there is no Malta as we know it. For 268 years they turned a bare rock into a fortress all of Europe feared. Then Napoleon took everything in 6 days.
You cannot understand Malta without the Knights of Malta. For 268 years they transformed the island into a military power and the cultural centre of the Mediterranean. Valletta, the Co-Cathedral, the great forts — all their creation.
They started in Jerusalem as the Order of Hospitallers — caring for sick pilgrims. But in the Holy Land they quickly learned that prayers alone were not enough. They became one of the most feared elite fighting forces of the medieval age.
They arrived on Malta in 1530 — Emperor Charles V gave them the island in exchange for a symbolic annual rent: one falcon. Arguably the greatest real-estate deal in history.
The defining moment in Maltese history. Sultan Suleiman the Magnificent sent 40,000 soldiers to crush 700 Knights and a few thousand Maltese. Four months of siege in July heat. The Knights defended every fort to the last man.
Jean de Valette, the 70-year-old Grand Master, fought personally on the walls. The Ottomans withdrew. Europe was astonished. Valletta, built afterwards as a votive offering from the defenders of Christendom, carries his name to this day.
After their years of glory the Knights grew complacent. They lived lavishly, drank, and conducted piracy under the cover of "corso" (officially protecting Christian ships). When Napoleon arrived in 1798, Grand Master Hompesch surrendered the island with barely a fight. The Knights packed their bags and left.
Highlights from Robert Maklowicz's travels
7,000 years of Malta's history
“Malta to miejsce, gdzie historia napisana jest w kamieniu.”
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