Buġibba Battery
Buġibba Battery | |
---|---|
Batterija ta' Buġibba | |
Buġibba, St. Paul's Bay, Malta | |
Coordinates | 35°57′10.2″N 14°24′41.9″E / 35.952833°N 14.411639°E |
Type | Artillery battery |
Site information | |
Owner | Government of Malta |
Condition | Only rock-hewn ditch and foundations remain |
Site history | |
Built | 18th century |
Built by | Order of Saint John |
Materials | Limestone |
Fate | Demolished |
Buġibba Battery (Maltese: Batterija ta' Buġibba), also known as Elbene Battery (Maltese: Batterija ta' Bileben),[1] was an artillery battery in Buġibba, limits of St. Paul's Bay, Malta. It was built in the 18th century by the Order of Saint John as one of a series of coastal fortifications around the coasts of the Maltese Islands. The battery no longer exists, but its rock-hewn ditch and some foundations can still be seen.
History
Buġibba Battery was built in the 18th century during one of the building programmes of coastal batteries in Malta. Sources conflict as to whether it was built in 1715–16,[2] or sometime between 1747 and 1784.[3] It was one of a series of fortifications defending St. Paul's Bay, with the nearest ones to it being Wignacourt Tower and Battery to the southwest and Qawra Tower and Battery to the northeast.
The battery's exact layout is not known, but it had a semi-circular gun platform with a parapet, and a blockhouse at the rear. It was surrounded by a ditch which was filled with seawater.[4]
Present day
Today, the battery no longer exists, but some of its rock-hewn foundations and ditch can still be seen.[2]
References
- ↑ de Boisgelin, Louis (1805). Ancient and Modern Malta: Containing a Full and Accurate Account of the Present State of the Islands of Malta and Goza, the History of the Knights of St. John of Jerusalem, Also a Narrative of the Events which Attended the Capture of These Islands by the French, and Their Conquest by the English: and an Appendix, Containing Authentic State Papers and Other Documents - Volume II. London: Richard Phillips. p. 189.
- 1 2 "Buġibba Battery" (PDF). National Inventory of the Cultural Property of the Maltese Islands. 28 June 2013. Retrieved 27 June 2015.
- ↑ Farrugia Randon, Stanley (2015). Heritage Saved – Din l-Art Ħelwa – 1965–2015. Luqa: Miller Distributors Ltd. p. 121. ISBN 9789995752132.
- ↑ Spiteri, Stephen C. (10 April 2010). "18th Century Hospitaller Coastal Batteries". MilitaryArchitecture.com. Retrieved 27 June 2015.