Sunday, April 17, 2016

Sunday in Marsaxlokk

On Sunday I decided to grab the hop on hop off tour because it was the most efficient way to see the rest of the island. I was staying in St. Julian's Bay so that's where I started and ended my tour. First stop from there was Spinola Bay


Then by Balutta Bay




And the Silema Seafront


Then we headed by Valletta and the three cities before we headed south towards Marsaxlokk






And then I finally made it! On Sundays Marsaxlokk has a market making it quite a popular stop on the tour.


Oh it's a fish market :) well mostly . . .



Joe made it once again for the trip




And some lunch to end off my time in Marsaxlokk




Outside of the city walls

Immediately outside the walls of Valletta there are a number of sites to see. Aside from the first one, I can't really remember what they were but they pictures are nice enough to share (and I was told recently I didn't post enough pictures) so here you go. . .

Fountain of Triton








An afternoon in Valletta

Post tour I decided it was time for some lunch. I found a small place on a side street not far from Palace square called Angelica. It was both a restaurant and a food store and the meal was fantastic!

Local sausage in a champagne sauce
Malta also has a burgeoning wine industry so I sampled a few different kinds along the way. I had a few from this one in particular


I spent a while sitting there chatting with the owner before I wandered off to see the rest of Valletta.Here is some of what I saw . . .



























I will end with more views of the Grand Harbour where you can see Fort Ricasoli I previously mentioned which now serves as the headquarters of the Malta film industry. Films like Troy and Gladiator were filmed here and much of Games of Thrones. The view also includes the three cities which includes three fortified cities of Birgu, Senglea and Cospicua in Malta. It got the name of the three cities by Napoleon because he could never remember the names and they meld together so their borders are hard to define. Lastly is the also previously seen Fort St. Angelo which is famous for withstanding the great siege.

Fort Ricasoli
Fort Ricasoli


Fort St. Angelo



In search of more sun . . .

So the flight I was getting on was to Malta. I wanted to have a weekend away that was not going to be a whole lot of anything. While it was sunny and warmer than Paris, it wasn't exactly beach weather so I spent the time seeing the sites. My new thing is not doing much research before I leave so I really had no idea what Malta had to offer.   

Day one was spent in the capital of Malta - Valletta. Valletta is one of the smallest capitals and the most southern in Europe - and a UNESCO World Heritage site. The entrance of the city is a gate that's gone through some renos over the years and it's now modern looking so a little out of place with the rest of the town.



I took advantage of one of the free walking tours to get a sense of the place. The tour starts at the Renzo Piano Stairs - same guy designed the gate.

Next stop I have a photo of is the statute of Jean Parisot de Valette, a French nobleman and 49th Grand Master of the Order of Malta. Malta has a long history of Grand Masters and orders of knights. This guy is famous in part for leading the resistance against the Ottomans at the Great Siege of Malta in 1565.

Valette

From there we passed the St. Catherine of Italy church, past the Auberge de Castille onto the Upper Barrakka Gardens which is the highest point of the city.


Originally built in the 1570s for the Order St. John, now it's the PM's office


Saluting Battery
The view from the gardens is the best part!

Fort Ricasoli in the distance

Fort St. Angelo



















Then it was off to the center of town . . . and St. John's Cathedral which is probably the top tourist attraction in Valletta but due to my lack of planning, I couldn't visit because it was closed at noon on Saturday and all day Sunday.

The outside of St. John's


National Library with statue of Queen Victoria out front




























Mid-way through the tour we hit the oldest street in Valletta that used to be filled with bars and hotels where the sailors would hang out when they got into port. A couple of the signs are still hanging outside.

   


Palace square was getting set up for some performance making it hard to snap pics. The weekend I was there was the one before Easter and apparently there was a public holiday already in Malta on the Saturday which this was a part of. Palace square houses the Armoury and the Grand Master's Palace - but it was closing early so when I got there I couldn't visit. 

The balconies in Malta have a very distinctive look to them as you have seen above and will on the Palace. They serve both an aesthetic and a structural purpose and define the look of the buildings in Valletta. 

The Armoury
The Palace
More of the Palace
And the Palace
The courtyard of the Palace
Also in the courtyard
And so ended the tour . . .