|
This section is being
prepared by Vinessa Falzon
(Student and member of the Word of Life PH Church)
This section of our website is to offer the visitor highlights
of the Maltese Islands. We would like to make your visit to
Malta as welcoming as possible and enjoy with us the rich
Maltese Heritage.
All the various periods of Malta’s history make fascinating
reading, but there are two particular periods- the Neolithic
period and the period of the Knights of St.John. Research,
however, has shown that the earliest Neolithic temples on Malta
are about 1000 years older than the famous pyramids of Giza.
Huge rocks, several tons in weight, were used in the
construction of these temples. Even with modern techniques and
tools this would not be an easy task today. How these enormous
loads were moved, or even lifted, between 5000 and 6000 years
ago, still remains a mystery.
The earliest temples, such as the one at Ggantija in Gozo, were
built by piling huge rocks on top of each other. They did not
have any carvings or decorations. Later temples, such as the one
at Hagar Qim, in Malta, were made of huge stones fitting very
closely together and ornately decorated. Carving was done only
with very primitive flint and obsidian tools. No archeological
remains made of metal from this period have been discovered on
Malta.
The subterranean burial place at Malta’s Hal Saflieni, the so
called Hypogeum, is an even more astonishing relic and its
accidental discovery in 1902 caused quite a sensation in world
archeological circles. The temple must have been literally
carved into the rocks over hundreds of years with simple tools
made from flint and obsidian. Starting at ground level the
hypogeum descends several stories below ground and covers an
area of more than 500 square meters. The Hypogeum was certainly
a place of worship and burial- the bones of over 7000 people
have been found- and could also have been used as a place for
the training of priestesses. A number of relics support this
hypothesis.
All traces of the mysterious people who built the hypogeum
disappeared suddenly around 2000 B.C- at the height of their
culture. It remains pure speculation as to whether conquerors
with the modern metal weapons wiped out this unarmed,
unfortified people or whether a sudden epidemic destroyed all
human life on Malta for centuries. Equally strange and
mysterious are the cart ruts found on many of the rocky rides in
Malta. The most popular theory is that these were made by
primitive slide-carts used before the invention of the wheel.
Ghar Dalam is 144m long natural cave located about 500m from
St.George’s Bay, Birzebbugia. The cave is renowned for the
remains of the characteristic dwarf stalactites and stalagmites,
which it contains which reveal its very great antiquity.
Hypogeum used in about 2400 B.C. This is an ancient underground
burial groan- 12 meters blow street level situated in Paola. It
consists of a system of caves, passages and cubicles cut in the
rocks at times resembling the interior of a megalithic temple.
Ghar Hasan is to be found at the south of the island, near Hal
far. It is a huge cave with a large window in the cliff- facing
rising perpendicularly out of the water.
St.Agatha and St.Paul’s catacombs are typical of the underground
Christian cemeteries, which were common in the 4th century A.D.
Cart ruts, these are mostly found on the exposed surface of
outcrops of the harder coralline limestone. The most widely
excepted dating for our ancient cart ruts is the Bronze Age,
roughly between 1500 and 700 B.C. Some archeologists tend to
believe that they were intended for the transport of heavy
blocks of stone from the quarry face. Hagar Qim is unique among
the Maltese temples as globigerina limestone is used throughout
its construction there are complicated decorations carved on
some of the stones, an oracular chamber and altars. Mnajdra
temple is better preserved in Hagar Qim and is a short walk down
from the Hagar Qim site.
|