Ładowanie…
Ładowanie…
Malta has more churches per square kilometre than any other country. All Baroque. Here is why — and what to see.
Malta has 365 churches. One for every day of the year. This is not an urban legend — it is true. And nearly all of them are Baroque. Why? Because the Knights of Malta had money, ambition and wanted to demonstrate to the world that Catholicism was rich, beautiful and unconquerable. They hired the best artists in Europe and told them to go wild.
Picture 17th-century Italian Baroque — and multiply by two. Gold, marble, angel sculptures, great domes dominating every village, disputes between neighbouring parishes over whose dome is taller (seriously — this was a genuine social and political phenomenon).
Malta developed its own local Baroque school. Architects such as Lorenzo Gafa (17th century) designed churches suited to the sunny warm climate and Malta's white limestone — a building material that is soft when quarried and hardens in the open air.
Every year each parish organises a Festa for its patron saint. Part of the fun? Competition over which church has the better fireworks, better band and better decorations. This rivalry has been going on since the 16th century and is the Maltese equivalent of arguing over who cooks better.
Highlights from Robert Maklowicz's travels
Maklowicz discovers Valletta's history
“Malta to miejsce, gdzie historia napisana jest w kamieniu.”
Inside St John's Co-Cathedral with Caravaggio
“Caravaggio uciekał przed wyrokiem śmierci, a na Malcie stworzył dzieło, które przetrwało wieki.”
Maklowicz enters Mdina — The Silent City
“Mdina to miasto, które odmawia bycia głośnym — i właśnie dlatego mówi tak wiele.”
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Every article is built from real tourist discussions and enriched with tips from Monika and the community.