Chapel of St Anthony of Padua, Fort Manoel
Chapel of St Anthony of Padua | |
---|---|
Kappella ta' Sant'Antnin ta' Padova | |
35°54′11.4″N 14°30′18.4″E / 35.903167°N 14.505111°ECoordinates: 35°54′11.4″N 14°30′18.4″E / 35.903167°N 14.505111°E | |
Location | Fort Manoel, Gżira, Malta |
Denomination | Roman Catholic |
History | |
Status | Chapel Parish church (formerly) |
Dedication | Anthony of Padua |
Consecrated | 9 June 1727 |
Relics held | St Generoso |
Architecture | |
Style | Baroque |
Years built | 1727 2007–2009 (reconstruction) |
Specifications | |
Materials | Limestone |
The Chapel of St Anthony of Padua (Maltese: Kappella ta' Sant'Antnin ta' Padova) is a Roman Catholic chapel located in Fort Manoel on Manoel Island in Gżira, Malta. It was completed in 1727 as an integral part of the fort, and it was partially destroyed by aerial bombardment in 1942 during World War II. The chapel was reconstructed as part of a restoration project and it was completed in 2009.
History[]
Fort Manoel is a star fort which was constructed by the Order of St John in the 1720s on Manoel Island. It was financed by and named after Grand Master António Manoel de Vilhena. Churches were important features of Hospitaller fortifications due to the Order's religious nature, and the Chapel of St Anthony of Padua was designed as a central feature within the fort's main piazza.[1]
The chapel was one of the first parts of the fort to be completed, and by 1727 it was dome was being built and the interior was being decorated. It was consecrated on 9 June 1727 by Bishop in the presence of Grand Master de Vilhena and various other knights and dignitaries including the fort's commander Gio Alessio Margon. It became a parish church in 1728, with Michele Angelo Pisani being appointed as its parish priest on 28 June 1729.[1]
While the fort was garrisoned by the Hospitallers, two masses were celebrated within the chapel every day. Two confraternities dedicated to St Anthony and St Anne were also permitted to meet at the chapel in the 18th century. These were later merged into a single confraternity of St Anne, and it continued to use the chapel until 1775, when it was closed to the public after the Rising of the Priests.[1]
The piazza of Fort Manoel, including the chapel and the Vilhena statue, was the subject of the earliest known photographs of Malta which were taken in 1840 by Horace Vernet while he was quarantined at the nearby Lazzaretto. It is documented that the photographs were taken in the presence of a group of guests including Governor Henry Bouverie, but today the photos themselves seem to be lost.[2]
The chapel was hit by aerial bombardment in 1942 during World War II.[3][4] About two thirds of the building were destroyed, while some of the surviving stonework was stolen after the war. The chapel's crypt remained intact but it was vandalized when the fort was abandoned after being decommissioned in 1964.[5]
The building remained in ruins until it was reconstructed between 2007 and 2009[3] as part of a restoration project of the entire fort undertaken by MIDI plc. The crypt was also restored at this point.[5] Today the chapel is listed on the National Inventory of the Cultural Property of the Maltese Islands.[4]
Architecture[]
The chapel is built in the Baroque style, and it has a rectangular plan with a small dome.[4] It has a classical façade with a central main doorway, four giant Ionic pilasters and two niches which formerly contained statues of saints Anthony of Padua and John the Baptist. The façade is topped by a triangular pediment which contains a defaced escutcheon which formerly contained Vilhena's coat of arms, surrounded by carvings of military paraphernalia. The side elevation of the church is rather plain, containing Ionic pilasters, two doors and five windows.[1]
The chapel contains a nave with a main altar and four side altars, and the rear part of the building includes a sacristy.[1] A crypt with a single altar is located beneath the chapel,[4] and the following people are known to have been buried there:[1]
- Charles François de Mondion (1733) – architect and military engineer involved in the fort's design and construction
- Mederico Attard (1754)
- Aloisio de Lucia (1760)
- Carmelo Galea (1771)
- Emmanuel Solano (1803) – the fort's last chaplain
Artworks and relics[]
The chapel's main altarpiece, which depicts St Anthony of Padua, was relocated to the National Museum of Fine Arts (now MUŻA) in Valletta. Four other paintings from the chapel's secondary altars were destroyed during World War II. These depicted Saint Anne, the Immaculate Conception, Saint Joseph and the Assumption of Mary.[1]
The chapel contained several relics, including the body of St Generoso which was placed within the main altar and a relic of the True Cross which was donated to the chapel by Vilhena.[1]
References[]
- ^ a b c d e f g h Spiteri, Stephen C. (2014). "Fort Manoel". ARX Occasional Papers (4): 94–105. Retrieved 16 October 2020.
- ^ Bonello, Giovanni (10 February 2019). "But who was the first Maltese photographer?". Times of Malta. Archived from the original on 30 June 2020.
- ^ a b "Reconstruction Of St Anthony's Chapel at Fort Manoel complete". The Malta Independent. 20 October 2009. Archived from the original on 16 October 2020.
- ^ a b c d "Chapel of St Anthony of Padua – Fort Manoel" (PDF). National Inventory of the Cultural Property of the Maltese Islands. 28 June 2013. Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 October 2020.
- ^ a b "MIDI restoring crypt, chapel at Fort Manoel". Times of Malta. 6 December 2008. Archived from the original on 16 October 2020.
External links[]
- Media related to Chapel of St Anthony of Padua (Fort Manoel) at Wikimedia Commons
- Times of Malta
- Baroque church buildings in Malta
- Buildings and structures in Malta destroyed during World War II
- Church buildings of the Knights Hospitaller
- Church buildings with domes
- Church ruins in Malta
- Gżira
- Limestone churches in Malta
- National Inventory of the Cultural Property of the Maltese Islands
- Rebuilt buildings and structures in Malta
- Rebuilt churches
- Roman Catholic chapels in Malta
- Roman Catholic churches completed in 1727
- Roman Catholic churches completed in 2009
- Ruins of churches destroyed during World War II
- 18th-century Roman Catholic church buildings in Malta