Gozo Cittadella #One Restoration Results

in #history5 years ago (edited)

Gozo is part of the Malta archipelago and is believed to have been settled by Sicilian farmers around 5000BC. Sicily lies around 60 miles north of Gozo.

Towering above the present city is the Citadel which is seen below from a distance towering over the present city. The building has been recently restored to much of its former glory. This series of posts will show some of the restorations and provide a simple history of the building.

Citadel Victoria-2.jpg

The city of Victoria has built up around the original city over many generations. there was a time when although the city was expanding outwards, all citizens had to sleep inside the walls of the Citadel for safety as the Ottomans would raid the island. The last time being the great siege of 1551 when between 5 and 6000 people were captured and sold into slavery in the Lybian slave markets. This was almost the entire island population.

As can be seen, the citadel sits on a hill with views of most of the island. The present structure is built of limestone and was built with fortifications around 1500BC

Recently the entire building and approaches have been restored and include a visitors centre at the entrance to the site. I leave you to decide if the very modern centre is appropriate or not.

Visitors Center.jpg

On my arrival on the island almost eight years ago, the area where the visitors' centre now resides was a giant set of steps to the main entrance of the perimeter walls. Climbing was made worthwhile as an ice cream van was located at the top of the steps. No room for one now!

steep entrance.jpg

To approach the entrance this steep hill presents itself. The road has been remade but the pedestrian steps are quite slippery.

old silos.jpg

When the original steps to the main entrance were removed the original foundations were exposed, together with these circular openings which were the entrance to silos built in the early years of the structure for grain storage. Replacement silos were installed inside the fortifications to replace them.

walled up toilets.jpg

Here can be seen the extent of the excavations. The two walled up doorways used to be the toilets. Only seven years ago, the ground was flat right up to the doors. A large area of ground to remove. On such a small island only 9 miles by 5 miles, I wonder where they put the spoils.

exposed foundations.jpg

Some of the exposed foundations exposed during restoration.

Rather than tackle the stairs or lift a ramp to gain entrance to the main building can also be used, at the base of the ramp are air raid shelter entrances that were cut into the rock in the 1940's. The ramp starts on the north-west corner of the structure. Just after access to the north wall.

Air raid shelters 1940's.jpg

medieval wall not restored.jpg

medieval north wall not restored.jpg

Whole north wall.jpg

The north wall of the castle is of original medieval construction with minimal restoration or even rebuilding when the castle was massively rebuilt in the early 16th century.

Main Gate.jpg

And so we arrive at the main entrance. This was not the original entrance. The large archway was built to allow a very tall statue to be brought outside from the cathedral within the walls on religeous festival days. A practice that occurs all over the island on various festival days. The new door has an opening above to allow passage of the statue.
The door which is reported by the ministry to have cost 398,000 Euro is the subject of fierce debate. Some people like it. Some hate it. What do you think?

Look out for #2 the next trip around the Gozo Citadella when we go inside.

Sort:  

What a great post @honeycup-waters! I love the photos and thank you for taking the time to explain things along the way. I'm always a bit saddened when a "restoration" turns modern; I love when things are simply "restored" to their own glory days :)

I found your post because @matkodurko featured you in a Pay it Forward Curation Contest entry; please feel free to join us with an entry of your own some week :)


giphy.gif


Your post was featured in an entry into @pifc's Curation Contest:Week 39. Posts are selected because the entrant felt you are producing great content and deserve more attention (& rewards) on your post. As such your post has been upvoted and will be visited by other members of the PIFC Community.

We are always looking for new people to join our curation efforts. This is a great way to meet new people and become part of a community that focuses on helping one another.

Want to promote a post for free and have a chance to find some other great content? Check out this week's Pimp Your Post.

The Pay It Forward community also has a Discord Channel if you are interested in learning more about us.

Such an interesting post! I think that for such an expensive door, it's a shame that it's so out-of-place.

I found you today because @matkodurko featured you in the Pay it Forward Curation contest. Keep up the great work!

man this is a nice post, try to add #travelfeed tag instead of gozo or citadella. I think it will bring you more attention.

I've also shared it in my "curation" PIFC post soo hope it'll help bit as well :) Happy 2019!

Btw than north wall didnt really have any restoration? Cuz I can clearly see the bricks being nicely dfined and it looks kinda modern :D

Hi thanks for the tip on tags, the north wall new stones were mainly done before this restoration, the wall is really in two halves the nearest to the camera is more modern but the leftmost part, (farthest away) is the oldest part. There have been so many things done to the building its hard to know when. At one time the local farmers were stripping the building for the stones.
The same thing happened to a temple here which is the oldest free-standing building in Europe and almost the world (5000 years)
And again a wall built across a bay to sink invading ships has partly been dismantled by farmers. Fortunately this has stopped now.
Thanks again for the advice, it is much appreciated.

Thanks for sharing the #travelfeed love @matkodurko 😍

Always! ;)

Posted using Partiko Android

Second that!

Congratulations! Your high-quality travel content was selected by @travelfeed curator @guchtere and earned you a reward, in form of a 100% upvote and a resteem. Your work really stands out! Your article now has a chance to get featured under the appropriate daily topic on our TravelFeed blog.
Thank you for being part of the TravelFeed community!

TravelFeed
Learn more about our travel project on Steemit by clicking on the banner above and join our community on Discord


This post was shared in the Curation Collective Discord community for curators, and upvoted and resteemed by the @c-squared community account after manual review.
@c-squared runs a community witness. Please consider using one of your witness votes on us here

Hi, @honeycup-waters!

You just got a 1.08% upvote from SteemPlus!
To get higher upvotes, earn more SteemPlus Points (SPP). On your Steemit wallet, check your SPP balance and click on "How to earn SPP?" to find out all the ways to earn.
If you're not using SteemPlus yet, please check our last posts in here to see the many ways in which SteemPlus can improve your Steem experience on Steemit and Busy.

Happy New year and great blog. I was There last year When in holiday. I loved the blog. Found it through @pifc and @matkodurko good luck blogging oh and you are allowed 5 tags you used only 4!
Gr. Btitt

Hi, thanks for the comment, I did originally put 5 tags then took one out as an edit to put the travelblog tag in. I then got the message I could not use more than five tags and to remove it I had to remove a second tag. Then I tried to reinsert a tag but again it claimed I had used more than five. So I left it at four tags. If you come back to gozo in the future perhaps we could have a Steemit meet up. OK maybe a drink.

Interesting @honeycup-waters 😯 but I think that the restoration is not to preseved the citadel after I read your post, sounds like renovation to make it more modern.

Because you didn't show us the old main entrance before the new one, I can't telll what I think 😊 never been to Malta. Thanks anyway for sharing this information with us.

I found your post through @matkodurko entry post in the pay it forward contest this week. By the way, where's the new toilet then?

Hi, I think you are right in some respects. the new door is completely out of place there. The old door only has a space in front of it around 1.5 meters deep so taking a photograph of it is not really possible. Which is why I was only able to do a rear shot of the old door. The new door is fitted in an arch that was cut into the old wall years ago. Not in keeping with the rest of the building. Fortunately, most of the other restorations are more in keeping with the building. If you look at the picture of the old doorway from the rear. On the left, it is possible to see part of the sign saying toilets. The toilets are about 4 meters past the sign. Just before the steps leading down to the ditch.
Because the pedestrian access tends to be small it is difficult to get pictures that show everything. all though the building is enormous, the interior is not due to the walls being meters thick. The next post will be on the ditch where pictures are easier due to the open spaces being larger.

Do you think that the pedestrian access is more small now to avoid the crowd which could turn it into a big probs in the future? But I think that a citadel is a citadel, you supposed to stay in there no matter what happened out side 😉 yeah.. I can see the toilet sign now.. LOL😊 I'd better wait for your next post

Hi, The new pedestrian access is now larger than the original. The large arch with the new door in, was just a wall, with no access. The arch was opened to allow passage of the statue in recent years. The original door is only around 1.8 meters wide. Small doors are easier to defend than wide ones.

Oohhh... now I got it!
It is more for commercial and business purpose then... I mean the restoration of citadel 😂

Well, a lot of the Citadel was paid for by Europe. so proper restoration had to be carried out. Obviously, the church has a certain amount of commercial activity and now most of the places of entry are charged for such as the old prison. However almost everything is free of charge.
Money does come into the city by tourists visiting the citadel. Gozo does have a tremendous amount of attractions that are free so some money is needed. There are fireworks every day throughout the summer including large displays every weekend, music concerts both modern and classical and all free to attend. Parades, carnivals, brass bands are also free of charge.

So yes business and commercial a lot of which goes back to the residents in the form of entertainments.

Aww, these are sweet memories - I used to live on Gozo :) We often just walked all the way from Marsalforn to Victoria :) Great shots, nice read.

I discovered this post thanks to @matkodurko.

Hi we are in Xaghra and often walk to Marsalforn. In fact, quite a lot now since our bank machine doesn't accept all card now.
We often go to the Cittadella, there always seems to be something going on or changing. Interior is still having some upgrading being carried out.
Thanks for the comment.

Coin Marketplace

STEEM 0.30
TRX 0.12
JST 0.034
BTC 63688.35
ETH 3125.30
USDT 1.00
SBD 3.97