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Philippe Villiers de L'Isle Adam

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Monarch
  
King Charles II

Nationality
  
French

Battles and wars
  
Siege of Rhodes

Allegiance
  
Knights Hospitaller

Preceded by
  
Fabrizio del Carretto

Battles/wars
  
Siege of Rhodes

Succeeded by
  
Piero de Ponte

Philippe Villiers de L'Isle-Adam httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Died
  
21 August 1534, Rabat, Malta

Resting place
  
Saint John's Co-Cathedral (originally buried at Fort St. Angelo)

Philippe villiers de l isle adam top 10 facts


Fra' Philippe de Villiers de L'Isle-Adam (1464–1534) was a prominent member of the Knights Hospitaller at Rhodes and later Malta. Having risen to the position of Prior of the Langue of Auvergne, he was elected 44th Grand Master of the Order in 1521.

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He commanded the Order during Sultan Suleiman's long and bloody Siege of Rhodes in 1522, when 600 knights and 4500 soldiers resisted an invading force of about 100,000 men for six months, but eventually negotiated the capitulation and the departure of the knights on New Year's Day 1523 to Crete.

He then led the Order during several years without a permanent domicile—first Kandi on Crete, then successively Messina, Viterbo and finally Nice (1527-1529). In 1530 de L'Isle-Adam obtained the islands of Malta and Gozo and the North African port city of Tripoli as fief for the Order from Emperor Charles V and established the Order, henceforth known as the Maltese Knights, in their new base. The Order arrived on the island on 26 October 1530 on their flagship, the Santa Anna.

L'Isle-Adam took formal possession of the islands on 13 November, when the silver key of the capital Mdina was given to the Grand Master. Despite this, the Order settled in the coastal town of Birgu and made it their capital city. They settled in Fort Saint Angelo, which served as both a fortification and as a palace. The city was fortified and eventually Auberges for each of the Langues were built. Despite this, the Grand Master and the Order still hoped that one day they would recapture Rhodes (in fact the Order decided to make Malta their permanent home only after the Great Siege 35 years later).

L'Isle-Adam died in the Our Lady of Jesus convent (ta' Giezu) in Rabat, Malta on 21 August 1534. He was buried in the Chapel of Saint Anne within Fort Saint Angelo, but was reburied in the crypt of St. John's Co-Cathedral in Valletta in the late 16th century.

Philippe villiers de l isle adam


References

Philippe Villiers de L'Isle-Adam Wikipedia