*** Welcome to piglix ***

National Museum of Archaeology, Malta

National Museum of Archaeology
Mużew Nazzjonali tal-Arkeoloġija
Malta - Valletta - Triq ir-Repubblika + Auberge de Provence 01 ies.jpg
National Museum of Archaeology at Auberge de Provence
Former name National Museum
Established January 1958 (1958-01)
Location Auberge de Provence, Republic Street, Valletta, Malta
Coordinates 35°53′51″N 14°30′40.5″E / 35.89750°N 14.511250°E / 35.89750; 14.511250
Type Archaeology Museum
Public transit access 200 metre walk from Valletta City Gate
Website www.heritagemalta.org

The National Museum of Archaeology is a Maltese museum of prehistoric artifacts, located in Valletta. It is managed by Heritage Malta.

The Auberge de Provence was opened as the National Museum in 1958 by Agatha Barbara, then the Minister of Education. The museum originally included the archaeological collection on the ground floor and fine arts on the first floor. The first curator was Captain Charles G. Zammit, the son of the eminent Maltese archaeologist .

In 1974, the fine arts collection was moved to the National Museum of Fine Arts, newly established in the Admiralty House building in South Street, Valletta, and the National Museum was renamed the National Museum for Archaeology.

The museum was refurbished and upgraded in 1998. Artifacts were placed in climate-controlled displays so that the exhibition met with current conservation standards.

The Auberge de Provence is a baroque building in Republic Street, Valletta, built for the Order of Saint John in 1571. It was designed by the Maltese architect Girolamo Cassar, who directed the building of most important buildings in the early days of Valletta. The building’s façade is imprinted with Mannerist characteristics usually associated with Cassar.

The Grand Salon on the first floor is the most ornate room in the building. The Knights used it for business discussions, and as a refectory and banqueting hall, where they sat at long tables according to seniority.

When Napoleon expelled the Knights from Malta in 1798 the Auberge was leased to the Malta Union Club. Though the lease was to expire in 2002, on 12 August 1955 the Auberge was assigned to house Malta's National Museum.

The ground floor of the museum exhibits prehistoric artefacts from the Maltese islands, from the Għar Dalam phase (5200 BC), the earliest appearance of settlement on the island, up to the Tarxien phase (2500 BC).


...
Wikipedia

...