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Palazzo Fremaux

Palazzo Fremaux
Alternative names Palazzo de Fremaux
Villa Fremaux
Villa de Fremaux
General information
Status Demolished
Type Townhouse
Location Żejtun, Malta
Coordinates 35°51′23.5″N 14°31′48.9″E / 35.856528°N 14.530250°E / 35.856528; 14.530250
Named for Count Formosa de Fremaux
Completed 18th century or earlier
Demolished 1990–2003
Technical details
Material Limestone
Floor count 2

Palazzo Fremaux, also known as Palazzo de Fremaux, Villa Fremaux or Villa de Fremaux, was a townhouse in Żejtun, Malta. The building, together with a next door townhouse, was used as a hospital during the French blockade of 1798–1800. Despite being a designated heritage building, it was demolished gradually between 1990 and 2003.

Palazzo Fremaux was a townhouse surrounded by extensive gardens, which belonged to Count Agostino Formosa de Fremaux, a Maltese nobleman who was the Dutch Consulate, and who supported the Jacobins and the French occupation of Malta. Following the outbreak of the Maltese uprising against French rule in June 1798, Żejtun became an important headquarters for the Maltese insurgents and their British allies.

The British tasked Michele Cachia, one of the Maltese leaders, with finding a large building in Żejtun to serve as a hospital for wounded British troops. No single building was large enough to house a hospital for wounded British, Maltese and Neapolitan soldiers, so four sites were chosen. These were Palazzo Fremaux and its next door townhouse, the old church of St. Gregory, a villa belonging to Bishop Vincenzo Labini and another villa which also belonged to the Count de Fremaux (now known as Villa Arrigo).

The occupiers of Palazzo Fremaux damaged parts of the building throughout its use as a hospital, and some interior walls probably had to be demolished in order to enlarge rooms into hospital wards. After the blockade was over, Palazzo Fremaux was probably left unoccupied for some time. The building was later divided into several houses, being extensively modified in the process. It was included on the Antiquities List of 1925.

In June 1990, an application to demolish the building and replace it with a maisonette and forty-four garages was submitted to the Planning Areas Permits Board. The permit was granted, and demolition began before it was stopped in early 1991 on the orders of the Museums Department.

Applications to renew the permit were made in 1992 and 1993, and an agreement to continue the demolition while preserving the façade was made in July 1993. In late 1994, the building was scheduled as a Grade 2 property, meaning that the interior could be altered or demolished but the façade must be kept intact.


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