Holy Trinity Church | |
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Il-knisja tat-Trinita Qaddisa | |
35°54′35.5″N 14°29′45.6″E / 35.909861°N 14.496000°ECoordinates: 35°54′35.5″N 14°29′45.6″E / 35.909861°N 14.496000°E | |
Location | Sliema |
Country | Malta |
Denomination | Church of England |
History | |
Founded | 19th Century |
Founder(s) | Walter Trower |
Dedication | Holy Trinity |
Consecrated | 1867 |
Architecture | |
Status | Active |
Functional status | Church |
Architectural type | Country English Church |
Style | High Victorian Gothic |
Completed | 1844 |
Construction cost | £4000 |
Administration | |
Archdeaconry | Italy and Malta |
Diocese | Diocese in Europe |
Province | Canterbury |
Clergy | |
Bishop(s) | Robert Innes |
Chancellor | Simon Godfrey |
Chaplain(s) | Neill Robb |
Laity | |
Reader(s) | David Felgate |
Churchwarden(s) | Aileen Grech Ursula Smith |
The Church of the Holy Trinity is an Anglican church in Sliema, Malta.
The land upon which the church and the adjacent Bishop's house are build was acquired by Jane Trower, the daughter of Walter Trower Bishop of Gibraltar for £1050. She intended to donate the property to the Diocese of Europe but the law did not permit an unmarried woman to make a donation exceeding £50. So her father became party to the Deed of Gift and refunded the money back to her. The church architecture is not common in Malta. The church was built to resemble an English village church. It was completed in 1844 and opened to the public. It was consecrated in 1867.
The building adjacent to the church is known as the Bishop's House. It was built in 1855 as a residence for the vicar. Today the house still serves the same purpose.