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Palace Armoury

Palace Armoury
L-Armerija tal-Palazz
Malta Valletta BW 2011-10-07 14-03-30.jpg
Suits of armour at the Palace Armoury
Established 1604 (armoury)
1860 (museum)
Location Grandmaster's Palace, Valletta, Malta
Coordinates 35°53′56″N 14°30′50″E / 35.89889°N 14.51389°E / 35.89889; 14.51389Coordinates: 35°53′56″N 14°30′50″E / 35.89889°N 14.51389°E / 35.89889; 14.51389
Type Armoury
Owner Government of Malta
Public transit access 500m walk from City Gate
Website Heritage Malta

The Palace Armoury (Maltese: L-Armerija tal-Palazz) is an arms collection housed at the Grandmaster's Palace in Valletta, Malta. It was the main armoury of the Order of St. John in the 17th and 18th centuries, and as such it was the last arsenal established by a crusader military order. Although today only a part of the original armoury still survives, it is still one of the world's largest collections of arms and armour still housed in its original building (although not the original location). The Palace Armoury has been open to the public as a museum since 1860.

In 1604, the Order's arsenal was transferred to the Grandmaster's Palace by Alof de Wignacourt, and was housed in a large hall at the rear of the building. At the time, it contained enough arms and armour for thousands of soldiers. The armoury was rearranged under Manuel Pinto da Fonseca's magistracy in the 18th century.

Parts of the armoury are believed to have been removed and shipped to France during the French occupation of Malta in 1798–1800, as part of "the organised robbery of art treasure and historic treasures" carried out by Napoleon. In the early 19th century, the armoury was altered by the British with the addition of Egyptian style column-like supports. These were removed and returned to England in 1855.

In the late 1850s, the armoury was restored under the personal direction of Governor John Gaspard Le Marchant, and it opened to the public as a museum in 1860. In around 1900, the armoury's collections were catalogued by Guy Francis Laking, who published a book entitled The Armoury of The Knights of St. John of Jerusalem.

In World War II, the hall housing the armoury was damaged by aerial bombardment on 7 April 1942. The collections were subsequently transferred to the basement of the Grandmaster's Palace or to Girgenti Palace for safekeeping. The hall was repaired after the war, and the armoury reopened in 1948. In 1969, UNESCO sent Polish experts A. Czerwinski and Z. Zygulski to make an inventory of the armoury, and they called it one of "the most valuable historic monuments of European culture" in their report.


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