Trisha Shetty (Editor)

Hompesch Gate

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Status
  
Intact

Location
  
Żabbar, Malta

Opened
  
December 1801

Owner
  
Government of Malta

Type
  
Commemorative arch

Completed
  
December 1801

Architectural style
  
Neoclassical architecture

Material
  
Limestone

Hompesch Gate

Address
  
Triq Il- Foss, Il-Fgura, Malta

Named for
  
Ferdinand von Hompesch zu Bolheim

Similar
  
Żabbar Sanctuary Museum, De Rohan Arch, Cottonera Lines, Notre Dame Gate, National Museum of Archaeol

The Hompesch Gate (Maltese: Il-Mina ta' Hompesch) is a commemorative archway in Żabbar, Malta. It was built in 1801 to commemorate the locality's status as a city, which had been granted by Grand Master Ferdinand von Hompesch zu Bolheim on 14 September 1797.

Contents

History

Ferdinand von Hompesch zu Bolheim, the Grand Master of the Order of St. John, attended the feast of the village of Żabbar on 10 September 1797. The inhabitants welcomed the Grand Master's visit, and the parish priest, Don Carlo Caruana, requested that the village be elevated to the status of a city. Hompesch agreed and gave Żabbar the title Città Hompesch by a decree dated 14 September 1797.

Following the elevation of their village to a city, the people of Żabbar wanted to build a monument to the Grand Master. In 1798, the French invaded Malta and expelled Hompesch and the Order from the island. The invasion was followed by a brief French occupation and a Maltese uprising, before Malta became a British protectorate in 1800. These political upheavals delayed the construction of a monument.

In December 1801, while repair works were being made to the Żabbar Sanctuary, Don Caruana decided to build the Hompesch Gate. The arch does not make any reference to the Grand Master or the Order, due to the sensitive political context in which it was constructed. An armorial crest was supposed to surmount the arch, and although the sculpture was begun it was never finished.

The Hompesch Gate was included on the Antiquities List of 1925. The archway is now scheduled as a Grade 1 national monument, and it is listed on the National Inventory of the Cultural Property of the Maltese Islands.

Architecture

Hompesch Gate is built in the neoclassical style. It consists of a single arched opening, flanked by two pairs of Doric pilasters. The arch is topped by a triangular pediment, below which lies a depiction of Our Lady of Graces.

References

Hompesch Gate Wikipedia