Manderaggio, Valletta, Malta (Manderaggio in la Valletta) - Franz Richard Unterberger
Valletta - Malta
Coleção privada
OST - 82x70 - 1878-1879
The Manderaggio (Maltese: Il-Mandraġġ)
is a neighbourhood in Valletta, Malta. It is located behind the Manderaggio
Curtain of the fortifications of Valletta, on the side of Marsamxett
Harbour.
Originally
intended as a mandracchio for
galleys, it became a slum area
in the late 16th century. By the early 20th century, over 2,500 people lived in
an area of 2.5 acres (10,000 m2), with the worst sanitary conditions on
the Maltese islands. The slums were demolished in the 1950s, being replaced
by housing
estates and a square.
When the city
of Valletta began to be constructed in 1566, the Order
of St. John planned to build a mandracchio, a sheltered
area to serve as a galley pen, in Marsamxett Harbour. The area began to be
excavated, and the stones quarried were used to build houses in the city.
However, the rocks proved to be unsuitable for construction. This pen would
also mean that the galleys would be placed in Marsamxett Harbour which did not
offer as much protection as the Grand Harbour. Thus, the project was abandoned.
Between 1572
and 1600, houses began to be built within the abandoned quarry. The outer
houses, located in four streets surrounding the area (St. Mark, St. Lucia, St.
Patrick and Marsamxett Streets), kept with the architecture of Valletta, but
the inner circle of houses was built with no prior planning, and became a slum area.
The entrances
to the slum area were located in St. Mark, St. Lucia and St. Patrick Streets.
The entrance at St. Mark Street was known as Il-mina taċ-Ċintura, while
that at St. Lucia Street was called It-tomba tal-Mandraġġ. The Manderaggio
consisted of a single street called Triq il-Mandraġġ (Manderaggio
Street), as well as a number of alleys, which were known by several names such
as it-triq tal-kanal (canal street) and it-triq ta' taħt
il-bastjun (street under the bastion).
At its main
entrance, Manderaggio Street was about 7 m (23 ft) wide, like the
streets in other parts of Valletta. However, along the way the street was only
2 m (6 ft 7 in) wide, with buildings being about 3 m
(9.8 ft) away from each other. The streets in the Manderaggio had a length
of around 574 m (1,883 ft), so the area had a road space of around
1,940 m2 (20,900 sq ft)
The heights of
the buildings in the Manderaggio ranged from around two to three floors in St.
Mark Street, four floors in St. Lucia Street, and four or five floors in St. Patrick
and Marsamxett Streets.
In the early
20th century, the Manderaggio had a population of 2544.
In the 19th
and early 20th centuries, the Professor Bernard, Dr. W. H. Burrell, Captain P.
Galton, Dr. J. Sutherland, Mr. Read, Sir Walter Johnson C.M.G., F.R.C.S. and
several other people made reports calling for the demolition of the Manderaggio
due to a lack of space and hygiene.
In 1913,
Attilo Critien, who was the head of the Department of Health, visited the
Manderaggio and found out that there were around 333 dwellings in the slum. He
published his findings in the report The Manderaggio. Notes, historical
and other in 1938.
In the
Government Gazette of 24 March 1937, the government issued a draft Ordinance on
improving areas which had substandard hygiene, including the Manderaggio. The
scheme began to be implemented in November 1948, when the area's inhabitants
were granted temporary residence in other parts of Valletta or in various
localities around Malta, such as Floriana, Gżira and St. Julian's. Meanwhile,
the houses in the Manderaggio began to be demolished and rebuilt as housing estates. The first
block of 42 flats was completed on 8 August 1951 by the Ministry of Works and
Reconstruction. The remaining flats were completed in the 1950s. Today, very
few buildings of the original Manderaggio remain, and they are located in
Marsamxett Street.
One of the
buildings which was demolished during the reconstruction of the Manderaggio was
a house which had belonged to the 17th-century artist Mattia Preti.
In 1938, Rużar
Calleja made a 1:16 scale model of the Manderaggio. It took nine months to
build, and is now exhibited in the Inquisitor's
Palace in Birgu.

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