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Church of St Nicholas, Valletta

Church of Saint Nicholas (All Souls)
Il-Knisja ta' San Nikola (tal-Erwieħ)
St Nicholas Church Valletta.jpg
Façade of the Church of St. Nicholas
35°53′58.3″N 14°31′0.5″E / 35.899528°N 14.516806°E / 35.899528; 14.516806Coordinates: 35°53′58.3″N 14°31′0.5″E / 35.899528°N 14.516806°E / 35.899528; 14.516806
Location Valletta, Malta
Denomination Greek Catholic
Previous denomination Greek Orthodox
History
Founded 1569
Dedication Saint Nicholas
Architecture
Status Church
Functional status Active
Architect(s) Francesco Buonamici
Style Baroque
Years built 1652
Specifications
Number of domes 1
Number of spires 1
Materials Limestone
Bells 5 (1886)

The Church of Saint Nicholas (Maltese: Il-Knisja ta' San Nikola), also known as the Church of All Souls (Maltese: Il-Knisja tal-Erwieħ), is a Greek Catholic church in Valletta, Malta, dedicated to Saint Nicholas. Originally built as a Greek Orthodox church in 1569, it was conceded to the Confraternity of the Souls in Purgatory in 1639, who rebuilt the church in the Baroque style in 1652. The church was passed back to the Greek Catholic congregation in 2014.

The Church of St. Nicholas was originally built in 1569 as a Byzantine Rite parish church for the Greek Orthodox Church. The Greek Catholic Church came into existence following the Union of Brest in 1595–96. In 1639, the parish priest Papas Giovanni Metaxi decided to separate from the Orthodox church and join the Greek Catholic Church, and he conceded the church to the Confraternity of the Souls in Purgatory.

The church building was completely reconstructed to designs of the Baroque architect Francesco Buonamici in 1652. Relations between the parish and the Confraternity are regulated by a concordat signed on 17 September 1766.

The church suffered considerable due to aerial bombardment during World War II. It was repaired by 1951, and the repair works included a complete reconstruction of the façade.

The church formally passed back into the hands of the local Greek Catholic congregation in 2014. Today, it is used by the Latin Rite church although authority falls under Greek Catholic hierarch Archimandrite Fr. George Mifsud Montanaro. Greek Catholic (Byzantine Rite) liturgy is celebrated daily at the nearby Church of Our Lady of Damascus. The church is also used for Sunday Divine Services by the Serbian Orthodox Church and Romanian Orthodox Church.


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