A Short Sketch of The Maltese Nobility
A Short Sketch of The Maltese Nobility
A Short Sketch of The Maltese Nobility
-f
SHORT SKETCH
OF THE
MALTISI NOBILITY ^-
5^^
-^
MALTA:
Printed by E. Laferla,
No. 98, Strada Reale, Valletta.
187G.
'^^^^'^^^"^^^ ^1'
A
SHORT SKETCH
OF THE
MALTESE NOBILITY
.^lALTA:
Printed bv E. Laferla,
Xo. 98^ Strada Reale, Valletta.
1876.
A SHORT SKETCH
OF THE MALTESE NOBILITY,
Cl
Noblesse oUige'''
true that the peers of the realm enjoy certain privileges from
which the other members of the aristocracy or nobility are
excluded, but it does not arise in consequence that the
younger sons of dukes, marquesses, &c., are less noble than
their fathers or elder brothers, — otherwise there would be a
manifest contradiction in the rules of precedency observed
in the United Kingdom. The peers are only, as it were, the
formerly enjoyed.
Malta can boast of an aristocracy from the time of the
Grecian occupation — IJ. C. 757 — when this island enjoyed
(•) "A LilylMW, consul, Tlicrono ciim classo rcgia demisso relirtoque prac-
toro atl tuomlaniSicili:io. orani ipso in insiilam .MeiiUni iiuue a Carth.itriniiMi-
prac.sidii cum paulo minus duobus millibus mtlitum oppidumque cum insula
tratlitiir. Imie post p;iuco.s dies reditum Lilybacuin, captivique et a coasulc ct
a pr:i»>torc praclcr uisignc:* aobilitatc viros sub corona vcnicrunt.''
— —
a noble, domi nobilis (B. C. 70), and in the Acts of the Apo-
stles, Luke the Evangelist calls St. Publius ri&oTo,- or primus,
L •
Castriccio •
Delia •
Tribii •
Quirina
Prudentc *
Cavaliere •
Romano
11 •
Primo •
Dei '
Maltesi
Arcipatrouo •
E '
Flamine
Del •
Dio •
Augusto
Very many of the present noble families descend in di-
rect line from the Normans, who under Count Roger (A. D.
presentative institutions.
During the Aragonese dominion, 13th to 16th century,tlie
proved from the words which Frederick III. used on the 7th
April, 1365, in his diploma granting certain prerogatives to
who had lent him the sum of 3,000 gold florins (a large amount
at that time), on condition that when he ascended the throne,
he would grant him the fief of 5e«Mflrra^ until the extinction
(*) Canon Panzavecchia in Ms well known work— "L' ultimo periodo della
reward for signal services. During the said period titles and
distinctions granted by foreign princes were also acknow-
ledged.
The British Government, on receivjng this Island sponta-
leged class for more than nineteen centuries were put aside
jHjlare, and the other nobles were entitled to elect and dej)utc
as their representatives in the said Council a certain num-
ber of their own Body, a circumstance which alone suiTiccs
ill a despatch, addressed to the Ri:,'ht Ilnn. William Win Ihain, oil the •2Sth.
Felmi.^rv, 1m>7: '"Yon are aware, Sir, tint wiien tin' liri' ssi->n of
' • '
the Pre-
the Three Cities, -Yittoriosa, Scnglca and Cospicua;
sident of the Water Supply; the President and
Commissaries of
Hospitals, and
the Monte di Pida; the President of the Civil
chosen
the Depositary of the Universities, were all exclusively
from the Nobility, commencing from the 12th century and
ending with Sir Thomas Maitland's administration. And
that
it v/as (*) usual and customary, for many and many" years past,
of this city, M'ho had passed through all its highest dignities,
ished, the object of the writer being that of proving that the
M. C. 1).
(*-) The writer has made it a pcdnt not to mention any person living.
UNIVERSITY OF CALIFORNIA LIBRARY
Los Angeles
This book is DUE on the last date stamped below.
Form L9-10m-l.'52(02Ul)444
1HK UBRAKt^^.
767
^ ^>K