Tas-Samra Battery

Tas-Samra Battery
Batterija tas-Samra
Part of the French blockade batteries
Ħamrun, Malta

Map of Tas-Samra Battery
Coordinates 35°53′6.5″N 14°29′16.4″E / 35.885139°N 14.487889°E / 35.885139; 14.487889
Type Artillery battery
Site history
Built 1798
Built by Maltese insurgents
In use 1798–1800
Materials Limestone
Fate Demolished
Battles/wars Siege of Malta (1798–1800)
Garrison information
Past
commanders
Francesco Saverio Caruana (overall commander)
Angelo Cilia (direct commander)
Garrison Żebbuġ Battalion
Siġġiewi Battalion
Naxxar Battalion
Royal Navy sailors
HM Marine Forces

Tas-Samra Battery (Maltese: Batterija tas-Samra) was an artillery battery in Ħamrun, Malta, built by Maltese insurgents during the French blockade of 1798–1800. It was part of a chain of batteries, redoubts and entrenchments encircling the French positions in Marsamxett and the Grand Harbour.

History

The battery was built on top of a hill, overlooking the Floriana Lines, Strada San Giuseppe (the main road which led from Valletta to Mdina), Marsa and Corradino. It was very close to the hornwork of the Floriana Lines, and as such was one of the most important insurgent batteries.

Tas-Samra Battery took its name from the Chapel of Our Lady of Atocia, known as tas-Samra in Maltese. The chapel, which had been built in 1631 on the site of an earlier church, stood at the rear of the battery. The battery itself had a paved gun platform and a parapet with five embrasures. It had an open rear, but this was shielded by the chapel as well as a number of other buildings and rubble walls. One of these buildings was used as a barracks, and a flagpole was affixed to the side of the building. The battery was also guarded by two small sentry boxes on the east side.

At one point, the battery was armed with two 32-pounders, two 18-pounders, two 12-pounders, two 8-pounders and one 4-pounder, making a total of nine guns. However, contemporary illustrations show it armed with only four guns and two mortars. Two of the guns had been taken from St. Mary's Tower on Comino.

The battery formed part of Tas-Samra Camp, one of the insurgents' main camps. The camp fell under the overall command of Francesco Saverio Caruana and the direct command of Angelo Cilia and his deputy Isidoro Attard, and it was garrisoned by the Żebbuġ, Siġġiewi and Naxxar Battalions. Later, men from the Royal Navy and HM Marine Forces also assisted the camp. Overall, the garrison was made up of 223 men, and it was eventually increased to up to 600 men. Apart from Tas-Samra Battery, the camp was also responsible for two nearby smaller batteries that were armed with three and four cannons.

Men from Tas-Samra managed to demolish all field walls up to the Floriana Lines, to prevent the French from having any cover in the case of a counterattack. During the siege, the French were desperate to neutralize Tas-Samra Battery, and at one point, they bombarded it constantly for five hours. In an act of defiance, the Maltese insurgents removed a large wooden crucifix from the chapel and erected it on the roof, and they flew a black flag. Three Maltese were killed by French bombardment. In another incident, a cannonball fired from Tas-Samra hit St. James Bastion in Valletta, where it decapitated a French soldier manning one of the guns.[1]

Present day

Like the other French blockade fortifications, Tas-Samra Battery was dismantled, possibly sometime after 1814. The area formerly occupied by the battery is now heavily built up as a residential area.[1]

Although the battery itself no longer exists, the Chapel of Our Lady of Atocia is still standing, and it is one of the few surviving landmarks of the French blockade in Malta.[2] Another building located to the rear of the chapel, that was possibly used as a barracks, has also survived.

References

Wikimedia Commons has media related to Tas-Samra Battery.
  1. 1 2 Spiteri, Stephen C. (May 2008). "Maltese ‘siege’ batteries of the blockade 1798–1800" (PDF). Arx – Online Journal of Military Architecture and Fortification (6): 21–23. Retrieved 30 March 2015.
  2. Scerri, John. "Other Churches". malta-canada.com. Retrieved 30 March 2015.
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