My Grandfather was born in Paola and came to Canada in the mid 50s I can't wait to visit someday soon! Love the history of the island and the courage that our people had to keep it theirs 🇲🇹💚
Visited 30+ yrs ago with my then husband . I visited with my sister just over 10yrs ago and said we’d be back. Well finally we are returning in October. I love this wee country so friendly and easy to get round. So looking forward to our return. 💕
My grandfather did some business out there, said it was one of the nicest catholic countries he’s visited keep in mind hes been to Argentina, Italy, Mexico, France, Spain, Chile, And coloumbia always told me Malta was his favorite I’m putting it on my bucket list, from Arizona
I went there for my 18th Birthday last year with my family and canfirm that it's an amazing place to visit. Culture, food and people are amazing and ALL speak English which is quite a big thing for a Country in the Med (and your holiday experience. Pro tip! stay in central Valletta old town if you visit, so you can suck up the culture; there are plenty of super little palazzos run as hotels or B&B's. Be prepared for very steep streets, and blistering heat in the summer. I went in February and it was about 20-25C in the day time (so very pleasant)..evenings were a bit chilly but I didn't mind that. If you get to go; I hope you have fun : )
@@theart8039 the food is a bit rubbish really. I'm in Malta as I type this and all I've seen is pizza, burgers and some pasta. The sea is nice and clear so swimming is good but the architecture here isn't particularly inspiring :/
@@dooooooo123 Yeah well, plenty of those places as well for people on a budget for crummy food but as I was there for a special event I didn't try them. I think the architecture in Valletta is very interesting actually but not the modern parts that we avoided..After all, the Germans flattened the place in WWII, hence the modern buildings on the other side of the harbour
@@theart8039 I will say that Malta food redeemed itself today a bit though. Had gelato in a small parlour called Con Gusto in Bugibba and it was delicious. Very very nice.
I loved Malta. Lived in NAXXAR 67-69. My father guarded a convoy delivering food munitions P40 Warhawks and Spitfires during WWII before going to the Pacific theater.
Malta my great little country. Malta has been Christianised by St Paul and many Maltese remained Christian during the arab rule and when count Roger came they joined his side with tears of joy. They used to pay the 'jizya' heavy tax to practice their religion.
Good video, died of laughter at the pronunciation and one point you skipped over our part in ww1 and a lot of other historical moments that should be included but still loved it
@@lukesciortino5589 Oh, you mean: *"excuses for me, but none for thee"* . I could die laughing at your 'excuse making', and lefthanded complements. Next time, YOU put up a proper video on Malta, since you know so much. Cheers
I always say I was born in Malta lived in Canada now but my heart will belong to Malta people go on holidays to malta but be sure they will never forget their stay in malta viva malta and gozo
pertinent to mention the award of the George Cross in 1942 when Malta was incurring the wreath of the Axis bombing. The Geoge Cross has been integrated into the national flag.
A long and varied history since about 5900 BC which must have been even more important as a strategical asset for countries wanting to control all aspects of social and economic life around the Med. I am not sure we know when and who was in Malta to the extent discussed here, but the information from about 1000 years ago is mainly correct. Thanks for an interesting video.
It is worth noting that even after the """re-conquest""" of Malta, their language remains very much connected to Arabic, unlike in Sicily, where Sicilian Arabic was replaced by Italian
Hellobi am maybe soon going to work in malta and wanted to ask if you know what 3 languages they speak the most if you know? I thought it would be spanish or Italien but am i wrong ?
@@OliverMichael7 I do not know too much about Malta, but I would wager they know Maltese, English (because they were owned by the Brits for a while), and probably Italian, since Italy is just north of them.
@@OliverMichael7hi my family heritage comes from Malta- but we originally came there from Asia Minor. It’s actually that language and there is influence from Spanish once they settled in Malta not much Italian that’s a misconception we are not Italian at all
I live here, video is 95% correct and I enjoyed it. Small gripes though about your pronunciation of people and places but it's an unusual language so you're forgiven.
Very nice potted history. I am half Maltese and have been living here for 10 years. Unfortunately rampant construction and immigration have all but ruined a once great island.
Maltese are basically catholic half-europeans half-arabs speaking semitic language connected to arabic, influenced by european culture and even being part of nowadays European Union. Damn! This place looks interesting
I worked at a Water Park years ago. A hat and sunscreen were a must! The lifeguards provided us with a 5 gallon tub of sunscreen that looked like paint! It must have been mineral based because it left us all with a mega white cast but I never got sunburnt!
Malta's geographic location has either been a blessing or a curse. It sits half way between Europe (mainland Italy) and Africa (Tunisia) and almost half way between the Gates of Gibraltar and the Levant. In fact any civilisation or Empire worth its salts has invaded (or attempted to invade) Malta accept maybe the Mongols! As a result Malta's history is possibly much richer than the Island's size deserves due purely to its location. The period of Arab rule on the island and nearby Sicily left its legacy in the form of the Maltese language which derived from Siculo Arabic after that time when it came under Norman rule from Sicily it was cut off from the main Arab dialects and stated to absorb Sicilian/Italian words and received a adapted latin script.
Malta very likely was already inhabited by humans during the ice age, they probably built Ggantija and were wiped out during the cataclysm that ended the ice age
Re: 04:45 ... Malta was a trading post and port connecting Sicily and Tripolitania across the MEDITERRANEAN SEA - not the Atlantic Ocean, as claimed here. The Atlantic Ocean had not even been named yet, surely? (Crossing the Atlantic had to wait a long time until Christopher Columbus 😂 )
You didn't mention how the independence referendum for Malta gave the option to join the UK as a constituent country much like england, scotland, wales
I’m fascinated with Malta and going there in a few days, but this is one of the most annoying short documentaries I’ve ever seen. The cadence and tone of the narration is annoying, the damaged film effect on the video is distracting and who the hell thought the fast bounce-in effect in the text would be a good idea!
Great video about my homeland! Some corrections or further info though 1) In 5900 BC, only Sicilians came and not north africans. 2) In the arab times, the Maltese were forced to convert to Islam, the Christians either suffered from; high tax, slavery and even executions. Adding to the Muslim uprising, the Maltese Christians joined the Normans and attacked them. 3) The Great Siege (1565) was a siege of 8k maltese/knights against around 40k Ottoman invaders (numbers arent so accurate) 4) When the maltese protested against the knights, help from Russia supposedly came but never arrived. 5) You forgot to mention that during the French occupation, the Maltese attacked the French which was successful however when the french last stand was in Valletta, the British came and unfortunately they took the credit. 6) Before the british took Malta, there were 2 options; 1) either Malta would become independent but we weren't strong enough 2) to be given back to the knights that by that time were ruled by the Tsar (king of Russia) since the knights fled to Easter europe. The knights under the Tsar were supposedly to come to Malta from Napli in Italy, but since they didn't come, the British stayed and owned Malta as a colony. 7) In WW1, Malta was called "The nurse of the Mediterranean" since many injured Commonwealth soldiers were taken here for recovery 8) In 1921 the British didnt give us the rights for nothing but were forced to. In 7 July 1919 the Maltese started a revolution, linking with the Communist revolution in Russia, however in Malta it was rather a protest than a revolution since a war didnt escalate. In result, 4 maltese died with many other injured and 1 British soldier died by getting brutally beated to death. The British gave a small portion of what the Maltese wanted and therefore the Maltese were calm before a real revolution would occur. 9) In ww2, Malta was the most bombed country at the time, if not still. Around 16k tons of bombs and was in a fear of an Axis invasion by 200k German and Italian soldiers, however Germans feared high casualties like in the battle of Crete and so the invasion didnt happen also because the Axis were pressured by the Soviets. Thats all the fixtures and most of all additions. Hopefully some of u may find this information useful and interesting. Thanks for the video! Love from Malta❤
There is an North African skull in Ggantijja. So yes African blood. The Maltese were not forced, they were Muslim to start off with and remained Muslim for 300 years, even after St Paul came to the Islands.
Why do you call it Ar-CHI-pelogo instead of Ar-kI-pelogo or Ar-ka-pelogo? I know it's spelled archipelago, but the pronunciation is different. It just sounds like you don't have any clue of what you're talking about.
The narrator knows nothing M Dina not Medina Rabat Also tarxein is pronounced tashein X in Maltese makes a sh sound, Melite comes from the Greek word for honey/sweet Melita is the latin and the English is Malta! Viva il-Maltin 🇲🇹
@@vincemercieca8057 I'm very confused as to why the video says Malta links the two sides of the Atlantic at all when it has nothing to do with the Atlantic...
The official age of the oldest high culture of Malta with 4000 - 6000 years is unbelievable. The C14 isotope method could never be unequivocally assigned to the stone. That these are the oldest monuments of mankind is since 2000 also no longer credible because of Göbekli Tepe. Archaeoastronomical calculations at the Mnajdra complex in Malta even suggest that the temples are around 21,000 years old. See also "Das Vermächtnis der Tempel von Malta" by AncientMail Publisher.
disliked the video because you not allow offline downloading for youtube premium clients - very disruptive for travelers plus the video is not good to be honest, skips all details of the siege
There is no evidence that shows that the first settlers were North African, but like you said the evidence points to Sicily. There is also no evidence of Greeks ever colonizing Malta either. I'd also like to add that during the Middle ages, there was what was known as the Battle of Malta. This happened in 1283 in Malta as a cause of the Sicilian Vespers. It was the time when the Aragonese were taking over the Kingdom of Sicily from the Angovines. Apart from those two points, your video was really accurate and you mentioned the different theories related to some events too.
I’ve literally just arrived home from a week in Malta. It’s absolutely stunning.
same here. Very pretty, but oh boy, the heat ._.
@@pixelmaster98 40 in London.
@@pixelmaster98 yeah...its like summer the whole year here!
Which hotel do you recommend?
We stayed at an airbnb known as 'Four Winds Farmhouse'. An absolutely amazing place. @@missluna
My Grandfather was born in Paola and came to Canada in the mid 50s I can't wait to visit someday soon! Love the history of the island and the courage that our people had to keep it theirs 🇲🇹💚
Visited 30+ yrs ago with my then husband . I visited with my sister just over 10yrs ago and said we’d be back. Well finally we are returning in October. I love this wee country so friendly and easy to get round. So looking forward to our return. 💕
You must be here as it is October! Have a lovely stay!
You can take the boy out of Malta BUT you can't take MALTA out of the boy Even though I've been in Australia for 63 Years I STILL LOVE MALTA.
Third generation American always wanted to visit
it was given in 1942, The George cross@sk8ordie828
I’m looking at moving to Malta… what’s your take?
@@greatlouee It has pros and cons, it's a very nice island but it depends on the person
My grandfather did some business out there, said it was one of the nicest catholic countries he’s visited keep in mind hes been to Argentina, Italy, Mexico, France, Spain, Chile, And coloumbia always told me Malta was his favorite I’m putting it on my bucket list, from Arizona
I went there for my 18th Birthday last year with my family and canfirm that it's an amazing place to visit. Culture, food and people are amazing and ALL speak English which is quite a big thing for a Country in the Med (and your holiday experience. Pro tip! stay in central Valletta old town if you visit, so you can suck up the culture; there are plenty of super little palazzos run as hotels or B&B's. Be prepared for very steep streets, and blistering heat in the summer. I went in February and it was about 20-25C in the day time (so very pleasant)..evenings were a bit chilly but I didn't mind that. If you get to go; I hope you have fun : )
If you want to come ill take you around my friend, merbha minn malta
@@theart8039 the food is a bit rubbish really. I'm in Malta as I type this and all I've seen is pizza, burgers and some pasta. The sea is nice and clear so swimming is good but the architecture here isn't particularly inspiring :/
@@dooooooo123 Yeah well, plenty of those places as well for people on a budget for crummy food but as I was there for a special event I didn't try them. I think the architecture in Valletta is very interesting actually but not the modern parts that we avoided..After all, the Germans flattened the place in WWII, hence the modern buildings on the other side of the harbour
@@theart8039 I will say that Malta food redeemed itself today a bit though. Had gelato in a small parlour called Con Gusto in Bugibba and it was delicious. Very very nice.
My beautiful, beautiful country ❤
From a Maltese.. this is Great to watch!
I’m looking at moving to Malta… what’s your take?
I've been to Malta many times - it's wonderful. I always say there's a bit of my heart there - just can't explain it x
Malta is definitely one of my favourite places I’ve visited. Interesting to learn even more about it!
I loved Malta. Lived in NAXXAR 67-69. My father guarded a convoy delivering food munitions P40 Warhawks and Spitfires during WWII before going to the Pacific theater.
So would a British woman have visited Malta before WW2?
Malta my great little country. Malta has been Christianised by St Paul and many Maltese remained Christian during the arab rule and when count Roger came they joined his side with tears of joy. They used to pay the 'jizya' heavy tax to practice their religion.
Some of the information you mentioned isn't accurate but we have a lovely history :)
The gizja was paid not for practising freely the religion but to finance the arabs that fought for the maltese in times of war
@@franshans9078 it was payed even in times of peace
@@stefanvella9807 yes of course it was paid in case war occurs
@@franshans9078 still in my country and elsewhere they had to pay jizya to practice their religion.
Pov: You're Maltese and you're listening to an American mispronounce everything
Uff jaq
“ Malta Island “
Ma nahseb li hadd isejjah malta hekk 😂😂
@@robertborg852 eżatt
Xi dwejjaq
@@QuillOfTheIsles2199 'Translate to English' ezatt=just 👀
We are in Malta now! Totally awesome! Thanks for the video!
Love this proud of my heritage
Just arrived yesterday from malta. This place is super beautiful , so diverse and rich in history
Great video, from someone who's lived in Malta for 3 years it's an awesome place to live and to holiday.... super chilled atmosphere
Great information in 11 minutes. Worthy to watch n Kudos to the creators👍🏼
Good video, died of laughter at the pronunciation and one point you skipped over our part in ww1 and a lot of other historical moments that should be included but still loved it
Is punctuation illegal in Malta?
@@stephencarter7266 dude I got dyslexia and writing isn’t where I shine
@@lukesciortino5589 Oh, you mean: *"excuses for me, but none for thee"* .
I could die laughing at your 'excuse making', and lefthanded complements.
Next time, YOU put up a proper video on Malta, since you know so much.
Cheers
Our beautiful country 🇲🇹
I’m looking at moving to Malta… what’s your take?
@@greatlouee in my opinion it's a great country, can get a little crowded sometimes haha but our food here is a must try!
@@Kye_kaiju thank you
Mata is a beautiful country and hugged history people they are friendly they help you any experience tank you for information 🇲🇹🇨🇦
I always say I was born in Malta lived in Canada now but my heart will belong to Malta people go on holidays to malta but be sure they will never forget their stay in malta viva malta and gozo
So small the country, So rich the history
I’m going to Malta next week. Cannot wait 😁
pertinent to mention the award of the George Cross in 1942 when Malta was incurring the wreath of the Axis bombing. The Geoge Cross has been integrated into the national flag.
A long and varied history since about 5900 BC which must have been even more important as a strategical asset for countries wanting to control all aspects of social and economic life around the Med.
I am not sure we know when and who was in Malta to the extent discussed here, but the information from about 1000 years ago is mainly correct. Thanks for an interesting video.
It is worth noting that even after the """re-conquest""" of Malta, their language remains very much connected to Arabic, unlike in Sicily, where Sicilian Arabic was replaced by Italian
Hellobi am maybe soon going to work in malta and wanted to ask if you know what 3 languages they speak the most if you know? I thought it would be spanish or Italien but am i wrong ?
@@OliverMichael7 I do not know too much about Malta, but I would wager they know Maltese, English (because they were owned by the Brits for a while), and probably Italian, since Italy is just north of them.
@@OliverMichael7hi my family heritage comes from Malta- but we originally came there from Asia Minor. It’s actually that language and there is influence from Spanish once they settled in Malta not much Italian that’s a misconception we are not Italian at all
In fact we are Phoenician to be precise. In my DNA I have no Italian or British. We came here to Malta from Asia.
@@minas.831You cannot be 100% Phoenician. 😅
Great Video! Malta is Amazing place
Nice knives.
Excellent Historical analysis 🏴
I live here, video is 95% correct and I enjoyed it. Small gripes though about your pronunciation of people and places but it's an unusual language so you're forgiven.
Visited for almost a week in '07 and I still want to move there
Im from Malta and its so funny how you pronounce the places. Thank you for the video.
You forgot to mention the islands of St Paul. In total we have six islands and not five.
Let's not forget Manoel Island as well... part of the reason why Gzira is called Gzira
Wrong: "connecting the two sides of the Atlantic". (4:45)
Lovely place with a unique character. I have visited twice.
Not muxh is known about MALTA, a combo of a few inlands. Thanks for this piece of information.
Excellent and informative video!That said, It’s pronounced ‘AR KĀ Pelligo’ not Arch a pelligo! (When using an American or Canadian English accent)
Imagine wearing armour and a tin helmet in the Maltese summer!
Love to head there.
Very nice potted history. I am half Maltese and have been living here for 10 years. Unfortunately rampant construction and immigration have all but ruined a once great island.
Maltese are basically catholic half-europeans half-arabs speaking semitic language connected to arabic, influenced by european culture and even being part of nowadays European Union. Damn! This place looks interesting
There very little Arab DNA in maltese people, its mostly Sicilain/Italian and greek
I love Malta 🇲🇹 support from nepal 🇳🇵
I worked at a Water Park years ago. A hat and sunscreen were a must! The lifeguards provided us with a 5 gallon tub of sunscreen that looked like paint! It must have been mineral based because it left us all with a mega white cast but I never got sunburnt!
Malta's geographic location has either been a blessing or a curse. It sits half way between Europe (mainland Italy) and Africa (Tunisia) and almost half way between the Gates of Gibraltar and the Levant. In fact any civilisation or Empire worth its salts has invaded (or attempted to invade) Malta accept maybe the Mongols! As a result Malta's history is possibly much richer than the Island's size deserves due purely to its location. The period of Arab rule on the island and nearby Sicily left its legacy in the form of the Maltese language which derived from Siculo Arabic after that time when it came under Norman rule from Sicily it was cut off from the main Arab dialects and stated to absorb Sicilian/Italian words and received a adapted latin script.
Ark -a -pelago - not Arch - a -pelago!
The Great siege of Malta. 6100 Knights of Malta against 28500 Ottomans. Guess who wins
Thought it was around 40 000
A new film needs to be made about this 😮
Proud to be Maltese
Hi from Malta
Fantastic vid. Thx.
0:34 nobody calls it Malta island, that’s ridiculous
I Was born here (Malta) and will probably die here also
Malta very likely was already inhabited by humans during the ice age, they probably built Ggantija and were wiped out during the cataclysm that ended the ice age
Malta small island with a big Heart❤️
AR-KEE-PEL,-AGO
Yes! #facepalm
Archie's bell ago
Malta my beautiful malta
In 4:46 you say "connecting the two sides of the Atlantic", you must mean "the Mediterranean".
I noticed that also. Plus, he says archipeligo with a ch sound instead of proper k sound.
Re: 04:45 ... Malta was a trading post and port connecting Sicily and Tripolitania across the MEDITERRANEAN SEA - not the Atlantic Ocean, as claimed here. The Atlantic Ocean had not even been named yet, surely?
(Crossing the Atlantic had to wait a long time until Christopher Columbus 😂 )
Been in Malta 4 times, Writing this comment from St Julian. Great place, preserve it.
You didn't mention how the independence referendum for Malta gave the option to join the UK as a constituent country much like england, scotland, wales
5 Islands big Asset of Malta and big source for developing Tourism industry in Malta...that's can be the biggest strength of Malta.....RGS
My Beautiful Islands
No mention of the Maltese Falcon?
My dream county ❤️❤️❤️
I’m fascinated with Malta and going there in a few days, but this is one of the most annoying short documentaries I’ve ever seen.
The cadence and tone of the narration is annoying, the damaged film effect on the video is distracting and who the hell thought the fast bounce-in effect in the text would be a good idea!
other than :) murdering :) the names of places in Malta great video :)
Great video about my homeland! Some corrections or further info though
1) In 5900 BC, only Sicilians came and not north africans.
2) In the arab times, the Maltese were forced to convert to Islam, the Christians either suffered from; high tax, slavery and even executions. Adding to the Muslim uprising, the Maltese Christians joined the Normans and attacked them.
3) The Great Siege (1565) was a siege of 8k maltese/knights against around 40k Ottoman invaders (numbers arent so accurate)
4) When the maltese protested against the knights, help from Russia supposedly came but never arrived.
5) You forgot to mention that during the French occupation, the Maltese attacked the French which was successful however when the french last stand was in Valletta, the British came and unfortunately they took the credit.
6) Before the british took Malta, there were 2 options; 1) either Malta would become independent but we weren't strong enough 2) to be given back to the knights that by that time were ruled by the Tsar (king of Russia) since the knights fled to Easter europe. The knights under the Tsar were supposedly to come to Malta from Napli in Italy, but since they didn't come, the British stayed and owned Malta as a colony.
7) In WW1, Malta was called "The nurse of the Mediterranean" since many injured Commonwealth soldiers were taken here for recovery
8) In 1921 the British didnt give us the rights for nothing but were forced to. In 7 July 1919 the Maltese started a revolution, linking with the Communist revolution in Russia, however in Malta it was rather a protest than a revolution since a war didnt escalate. In result, 4 maltese died with many other injured and 1 British soldier died by getting brutally beated to death. The British gave a small portion of what the Maltese wanted and therefore the Maltese were calm before a real revolution would occur.
9) In ww2, Malta was the most bombed country at the time, if not still. Around 16k tons of bombs and was in a fear of an Axis invasion by 200k German and Italian soldiers, however Germans feared high casualties like in the battle of Crete and so the invasion didnt happen also because the Axis were pressured by the Soviets.
Thats all the fixtures and most of all additions. Hopefully some of u may find this information useful and interesting. Thanks for the video! Love from Malta❤
There is an North African skull in Ggantijja. So yes African blood. The Maltese were not forced, they were Muslim to start off with and remained Muslim for 300 years, even after St Paul came to the Islands.
Malta the best country in the world.
Free education
Free medication
Free schooling
Free public buses
8 months of sun and much much more
And that my friend is why im proud to be Maltese
The Irish have been here many times. They have invaded Malta many times
I love the way he presented but the pronounciation of Maltese names bug the hell out of me.
"Arch" apelego?
Arky Pell a go
It's an uncanny accent
What about the missing people in the tunnels
not the atlantic !!!
Bagus banget
Please learn to say "archipelago" properly. The "ch" is as in Bach, or loch, or architecture, not as in archery.
Depends on your accent
@@Caseshells123 Like Eye-Talin or Eee-Talin? Lots of American's seem to say the Eye version. But R-chi-pel-ago is annoying! lol!
@@Caseshells123 Sorry, no. Accent can be a great excuse, but not with this one.
@@Caseshells123 No, it doesn’t.
Are you here to lectures or for the story?
The George Cross Island Malta 🇲🇹
Why do you call it Ar-CHI-pelogo instead of Ar-kI-pelogo or Ar-ka-pelogo? I know it's spelled archipelago, but the pronunciation is different. It just sounds like you don't have any clue of what you're talking about.
The narrator knows nothing
M Dina not Medina
Rabat
Also tarxein is pronounced tashein X in Maltese makes a sh sound,
Melite comes from the Greek word for honey/sweet Melita is the latin and the English is Malta!
Viva il-Maltin 🇲🇹
So you despise " Daphne Caruana Galizia"?
Didn't talk about the Aragonese from Spain.
malta the best place
4:44 Sicily and Tripolitania are on the same side of the Atlantic.
Malta is in the Mediterranean Sea, not the Atlantic ocean. Sicily lies to the north and Tripolitania to the south.
@@vincemercieca8057 I'm very confused as to why the video says Malta links the two sides of the Atlantic at all when it has nothing to do with the Atlantic...
@@dooooooo123 My guess is they meant to say Mediterranean and misspoke and said Atlantic instead.
Why does this entire clip have a stupid "old film look" filter on?
It's a shame your interesting film is ruined by silly filters.
Before recording these these, please learn how to pronounce the place names and other Maltese names for eras e
The official age of the oldest high culture of Malta with 4000 - 6000 years is unbelievable.
The C14 isotope method could never be unequivocally assigned to the stone.
That these are the oldest monuments of mankind is since 2000
also no longer credible because of Göbekli Tepe. Archaeoastronomical calculations
at the Mnajdra complex in Malta even suggest that the temples are around 21,000 years old. See also "Das Vermächtnis der Tempel von Malta" by AncientMail Publisher.
You forgot st Paul's islands
disliked the video because you not allow offline downloading for youtube premium clients - very disruptive for travelers
plus the video is not good to be honest, skips all details of the siege
Nice video, only the names of the places was butchered 😄, but i can understand that if you're not from here it's not easy to pronounce. 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼
There is no evidence that shows that the first settlers were North African, but like you said the evidence points to Sicily.
There is also no evidence of Greeks ever colonizing Malta either.
I'd also like to add that during the Middle ages, there was what was known as the Battle of Malta. This happened in 1283 in Malta as a cause of the Sicilian Vespers. It was the time when the Aragonese were taking over the Kingdom of Sicily from the Angovines.
Apart from those two points, your video was really accurate and you mentioned the different theories related to some events too.
The old time news real effect over the video really detracts from your content and makes this unwatchable!
History of Malta in 11:51 minutes*
Who’s gonna tell him North Africans aren’t black
🙄🙄🙄
im proud to be maltese 🇲🇹
Popeye!
3:44 Climate Change 1K years ago.
What happened to the Jewish population of Malta?
Mary 🇦🇺🙋♀️♥️♥️🇲🇹♥️♥️🙋♀️🙋♀️🙋♀️👍👍👍
The best time for us maltese was under muslim rule . About 500 years under arab rule
I am inside the giant fish
Malta मा नेपाली कामदारले धेरै बेईमानी गरेको छ होला।
केही बेईमानी नेपाली nepali workerहरूले बेईमानी गरेका होलानी?🌍🌎🏕🏡🏝