Supriya Ghosh (Editor)

Slaves' Prison

Updated on
Edit
Like
Comment
Share on FacebookTweet on TwitterShare on LinkedInShare on Reddit
Alternative names
  
Gran PrigioneBagnio

Type
  
Completed
  
c. 1585

Opened
  
1585

Material
  
Status
  
Destroyed

Location
  
Destroyed
  
1940s–50s

Floors
  
3

Architect
  
Slaves' Prison httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediaenthumbb

Similar
  
Church of Our Lady of Pilar - Vall, Basilica of St Dominic - Valletta, Casa del Commun Tesoro, Church of St Lucy - Valletta, Hostel de Verdelin

The Slaves' Prison (Italian: Prigione degli Schiavi, Maltese: Il-Ħabs) officially known as the Gran Prigione and colloquially as the bagnio, was a prison in Valletta, Malta. It was established in the late 16th century, and remained in use as a prison throughout the 17th and 18th centuries. It was subsequently used as a naval hospital, a school and an examination hall. It was bombed in World War II, and the ruins were demolished to make way for a block of flats.

Contents

History

The Gran Prigione was established in around 1585 during the magistracy of Hugues Loubenx de Verdalle (1582–95). It was probably designed by the architect Girolamo Cassar. The building served as the Order of St. John's main prison, as well as a compound in which slaves were locked up at night. It could house around 900 inmates.

After 1615, the prison was supplied by water from the Wignacourt Aqueduct. A Turkish slave who had been a hydrologist in Constantinople reportedly helped in the construction of the aqueduct, and in recognition of his work he was given his freedom and the prison became one of the first buildings in Valletta to be supplied by running water.

By 1631, part of the building was used as the Infermeria delle Schiavi, a hospital where ill land-bound slaves were treated. Sick galley slaves were not treated there but at the Great Magazine Ward of the nearby Sacra Infermeria.

In the Conspiracy of the Slaves of 1749, slaves at the Grandmaster's Palace planned to revolt, free the other slaves from the Slaves' Prison, and take over Fort Saint Elmo and the rest of Valletta. After the plot was discovered and brutally suppressed, a decree was issued stating that all slaves were to be locked up at the prison at night.

From 1804 to 1819, the prison was used as a temporary naval hospital with 50 beds. Later on in the 19th century, the building housed an elementary school, which was known as l-iskola tal-ħabs (school of the prison). It eventually became an examination hall before being closed down in 1940. The building was included on the Antiquities List of 1925. The prison was bombed in World War II, and the ruins were subsequently demolished. A large block of flats was built on its site in the 1950s.

The building

The prison was a large three-story high building occupying an entire city block close to the Lower Barrakka Gardens. A mid-19th century report describes it as:

Other slaves' prisons were located in Birgu and Senglea, and these were both demolished in the 20th century like the Valletta prison.

Life in the prison

The prison contained a tavern, from which slaves could buy food and drink, a mosque for Muslim slaves, and chapels dedicated to St. John the Baptist and the Holy Cross for Christian prisoners. Parts of the prison were accessible to the public, and some slaves operated barber shops and other establishments from within the prison.

A court case dated 1779 describes the situation within the prison as:

The prison was run by a Prodomo, who served as the governor and was a knight of the Order of St. John. Agozzini had direct control over the prisoners, dividing them into work gangs for the galleys, while carcerieri were responsible for the register of prisoners and probably also acted as guards.

References

Slaves' Prison Wikipedia