Chapter

Bronze Age & Phoenician-Carthaginian Maritime Trade

After the temple-builders vanished, a new Bronze Age population reoccupied Malta around 2500 BC, leaving cart ruts gouged into limestone bedrock and fortified settlements at sites like Borġ in-Nadur. By the 8th century BC, Phoenician traders from Tyre and Sidon established a lasting presence, transforming Malta into a node in their Mediterranean trading network. The Phoenician sanctuary at Tas-Silġ—built directly atop the megalithic temple ruins and dedicated to Astarte—demonstrates the sacred-site layering principle: each new cult physically incorporated the previous sacred structure. The Cippi of Melqart, bilingual Phoenician-Greek votive altars found in Malta, were key to deciphering the Phoenician alphabet in the 17th century, much as the Rosetta Stone unlocked Egyptian hieroglyphics. Under Carthaginian (Punic) rule from the 6th century BC, Malta's olive oil production expanded—the Żejtun Roman villa's torcularium would later be built on Punic-era agricultural infrastructure. Phoenician traders established a lasting presence in Malta, but the dominant linguistic and cultural layer visible in modern Maltese life derives from the Siculo-Arabic period; Phoenician influence on the modern Maltese language is minimal, though the Cippi remain the most important Phoenician artifacts on the island.

-2500 - -218
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Places connected to this chapter

Places are linked through Research Center era-node mappings.

spiritual

Borġ in-Nadur

A multi-period site near Birżebbuġa spanning the late Neolithic and Bronze Age (3000-700 BC), with a Tarxien-phase megalithic temple overlaid by Bronze Age settlement and fortification walls. One of the few sites where the transition from temple culture to Bronze Age is archaeologically visible. Heritage Malta manages the site. Anchor modes: custodian; material_layer | Search hooks: Borġ in-Nadur; Bronze Age temple Malta; Tarxien phase Birzebbuga; Bronze Age fortification Malta; prehistoric settlement Malta

Walk among the megalithic temple remains and Bronze Age wall foundations overlooking St George's Bay—500m from Għar Dalam, making a paired visit possible.

other

Misraħ Għar il-Kbir Cart Ruts

Parallel grooves carved into limestone bedrock at 'Clapham Junction' near Dingli, of unknown date and purpose—possibly Bronze Age transport routes, quarrying channels, or irrigation systems. The ruts are physically visible in the landscape but their meaning remains debated, making them a visible mystery that connects the Bronze Age to the present terrain. Anchor modes: custodian; material_layer | Search hooks: Misraħ Għar il-Kbir Cart Ruts; Clapham Junction Malta; cart ruts Dingli; Bronze Age transport routes; limestone grooves Malta

Walk among the parallel grooves carved into the limestone plateau near Dingli Cliffs—their purpose still unresolved after centuries of study.

knowledge

National Museum of Archaeology

Housed in the Auberge de Provence in Valletta, this museum displays Malta's archaeological sequence from the Neolithic (5900 BC) through the early Phoenician period (8th-6th century BC)—but ends there, making the Arab/Islamic period materially invisible in the national museum. The Cippi of Melqart, key Phoenician artifacts, are displayed here. This curatorial gap is itself a cultural fact: it shapes which eras are legible to visitors. Anchor modes: custodian; signal; material_layer | Search hooks: National Museum of Archaeology; Cippi of Melqart Valletta; Phoenician artifacts Malta; Auberge de Provence; Heritage Malta collection display

View the Cippi of Melqart, the 'Sleeping Lady' figurine from the Hypogeum, and the full Neolithic-to-Phoenician sequence—and notice the absence of Arab-era material that follows.

spiritual

Tas-Silġ Archaeological Complex

The most important multi-period sacred site in Malta, demonstrating 4,000 years of continuous sacred-space use: megalithic temple → Phoenician temple to Astarte → Roman sanctuary to Juno → Byzantine basilica with prehistoric temple reused as baptistery → abandoned c. 870 AD. Each new cult physically built upon the previous sacred structure. Visitable only by appointment through Heritage Malta, limiting public understanding of sacred-site continuity. Anchor modes: custodian; material_layer | Search hooks: Tas-Silġ Archaeological Complex; sacred site continuity Malta; Astarte Juno basilica stratigraphy; Ta' Berikka; Phoenician sanctuary Malta; Missione Archeologica Italiana a Malta

Book an appointment through Heritage Malta to walk the stratified ruins where megalithic, Phoenician, Roman, and Byzantine layers are physically visible one atop another—the principle that sacred space in Malta persists across cultural transitions.

Celebrations and traditions

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Chapter

Mediterranean Megalithic Temple Culture

-5000 - -2500

The Mediterranean megalithic temple-building tradition reached its most extraordinary expression on Malta, where you can still walk through stone monuments older than the Egyptian pyramids. Between roughly 3600 and 2500 BC, island communities built at least seven major temple complexes—Ġgantija, Ħaġar Qim, Mnajdra, Tarxien, Skorba, Ta' Ħaġrat, and the Ħal Saflieni Hypogeum—using colossal limestone blocks without metal tools. The temples follow a distinctive cloverleaf plan found nowhere else in the Mediterranean, suggesting a localized ritual tradition. Mnajdra's lower temple is aligned to the solstices and equinoxes, embedding a seasonal calendar into stone that still functions today. The Ħal Saflieni Hypogeum, an underground necropolis carved to mimic the above-ground temples, held over 7,000 burials and reveals a culture with elaborate funerary ritual. Għar Dalam cave preserves the deepest stratigraphic record: Pleistocene fauna overlaid by Malta's earliest Neolithic human deposits from around 5900 BC. The temple culture ended around 2500 BC for reasons still debated—climate shift, resource exhaustion, or cultural collapse—and the island may have been briefly depopulated before the Bronze Age resettlement.

Chapter

Roman Mediterranean Integration & Early Christianization

-218 - 870

Rome absorbed Malta in 218 BC during the Second Punic War, integrating the island into the Roman provincial system. The Domvs Romana in Rabat reveals the refined domestic life of a Roman aristocrat with intricate mosaics, while the Żejtun Roman villa preserves one of Malta's best olive-pressing operations (torcularium). The Tas-Silġ sanctuary was rededicated from Astarte to her Roman equivalent Juno, continuing the sacred-site layering pattern. A Byzantine basilica later rose in the temple's courtyard, reusing the prehistoric megalithic structure as a baptistery—4,000 years of sacred continuity inscribed in one site's stratigraphy. The tradition of St Paul's shipwreck on Malta, recorded in the Acts of the Apostles, has been the founding narrative of Maltese Christianity since the medieval period and continues to shape the island's ritual calendar through the February 10 feast. The St Paul's Catacombs in Rabat, dating from the 3rd to 8th centuries CE, represent the earliest and largest archaeological evidence of Christianity in Malta—not proof of Paul's AD 60 presence, but evidence of established Christian community centuries later. The site was abandoned c. 870 AD following the Arab occupation.

Chapter

Arab-Islamic Mediterranean Expansion & Siculo-Arabic Formation

870 - 1091

The Aghlabid conquest of 870 AD marks the most consequential rupture in Malta's cultural sequence. The conquest's demographic impact is debated: Al-Himyarī describes depopulation, while other Arabic sources suggest continuing agriculture and settlement. The total shift to a Siculo-Arabic language and the disappearance of Christianity favor significant population change, but the survival of some place-names and stratified linguistic evidence complicate the picture. What is certain is that this period created the linguistic bedrock of modern Malta: Maltese, the only Semitic language written in the Latin alphabet, derives its core grammar and basic vocabulary from Siculo-Arabic. The island's capital was renamed Madīnah (becoming Mdina), and its suburb Rabat preserves the Arabic word for 'quarter.' Arabic-derived toponyms across the landscape—Marsa (harbor), Sliema (peace), Bir (well), Wied (valley), and Żejtun (zaytūn = olive)—constitute a fossil layer of Arab-era geography that survived Norman, Knights, and British rule. The Randan (Lent) folk term echoes Ramadan, and the għana folk-singing tradition's name and improvisational structure derive from Arabic ghena/zajal. Christianity effectively vanished during this period, breaking any claim of unbroken Christian continuity from St Paul to the present. The Tas-Silġ sanctuary was abandoned around 870 AD, its 4,000-year sacred sequence ending with the Arab conquest.

Chapter

Norman-Sicilian & Aragonese Christian Reconquest

1091 - 1530

Roger I of Sicily's 1091 raid was initially just that—a razzia rather than a permanent occupation. A lasting Christian regime was only established after 1127 under King Roger II, who brought Christian settlers including clergy and re-established the diocese at Mdina. This Norman-diocesan layer is the institutional bedrock of every living Maltese festa: without a bishop at Mdina authorizing parishes and assigning patron saints, there is no festa calendar, no band club, no procession route. Mdina remained the capital through the subsequent Swabian, Angevin, and Aragonese periods, its winding Arabic street plan preserved inside Norman and later medieval walls. St Paul's Cathedral, traditionally founded in the 12th century on the site where the Roman governor Publius was said to have met St Paul, became the ecclesiastical center of the island. Palazzo Falzon, the best-preserved medieval palace in Mdina, testifies to the Norman-Sicilian aristocratic presence. Rabat, the Arabic-named suburb outside Mdina's walls, remained the main residential and agricultural area. Under Aragonese rule from 1282, Malta was governed as part of the Sicilian kingdom—a peripheral dependency that received little investment but maintained its parish structure. Carnival was first recorded in Malta in 1535 under Grand Master Piero de Ponte, but scholars trace its probable origins to the mid-15th century, before the Knights arrived; the absence of carnival traditions in Rhodes (where the Knights were based for 200 years) suggests they adopted an existing Sicilian-Maltese practice rather than introducing it.