Lascaris Towers

The Lascaris Towers (Maltese: Torrijiet ta' Lascaris) are a series of mostly small coastal watchtowers built in Malta by the Order of Saint John between 1637 and 1652.

The first seven towers were built around the coast of mainland Malta between 1637 and 1638. Between 1647 and 1652, a large tower was also built on mainland Malta, and two smaller ones were built on Gozo.

Lascaris Towers
Torrijiet ta' Lascaris
Various locations in Malta and Gozo
TypeCoastal watchtowers
Site information
Condition9 intact
1 destroyed
Site history
Built1637–1638
1647–1652
Built byOrder of Saint John
In use1637–20th century
MaterialsLimestone

History

Lascaris Towers 
Giovanni Paolo Lascaris

Commissioning and construction

The Italian knight Giovanni Paolo Lascaris was elected Grand Master of the Order of St. John on 16 June 1636. Unlike the earlier Wignacourt towers which were personally funded by the Grand Master, the cost of the Lascaris towers was paid by the Università. Construction of the first tower, located at ta' Lippija near Ġnejna, began in 1637. Another six towers were built within the following year.

Six of the seven original towers were coastal watchtowers, built on or near the sites of medieval watch posts. The only Lascaris tower which is located inland is the Nadur Tower at Binġemma Gap, which was built to facilitate communication between the other towers and the fortified city of Mdina.

Another tower, Saint Agatha's Tower, was built between 1647 and 1649. Unlike the original towers, this was a large bastioned structure similar to the earlier Wignacourt towers.

The last two towers to be built in Lascaris' reign were the ones at Xlendi and Dwejra. These were built in 1650 and 1652 respectively, and the cost of construction was paid by the Università of Gozo.

In 1658 and 1659, Lascaris' successor, Martin de Redin, built another 13 watchtowers around Malta's coastline, which became known as the De Redin towers. The design of the new towers were based on Sciuta Tower. Due to their similarity in design, sometimes the Lascaris and De Redin towers are collectively known as "De Redin towers".

Eighteenth and nineteenth centuries

In around 1715, as part of a programme to improve Malta's coastal defences, Qawra Tower was upgraded into a coastal battery. A gun platform was built around the seaward face of the tower, which served as a blockhouse. At this point, a redan trace entrenchment was built near Saint Agatha's Tower.

Blat Mogħża Tower collapsed in around 1730 when the cliffs on which it was built gave way. The tower was never rebuilt, and no traces of it can be seen today.

In the 1760s, entrenchments were built near Qawra Tower.

Most of the towers were decommissioned in the 19th century, but some saw use again in World War II.

Conservation and restoration

By the end of the 20th century, most of the nine surviving towers were in a rather dilapidated state. St. Agatha's Tower and Lippija Tower were in a particularly bad state, and were in danger of collapsing.

St. George's Tower, Dwejra Tower, St. Agatha's Tower, Għajn Tuffieħa Tower and Lippija Tower were all restored between the late 1990s and 2013. Xlendi Tower is currently being restored, while plans are also being made for the restoration of Sciuta Tower.

Today, Għajn Tuffieħa, St. Agatha's and Dwejra Towers are open to the public. St. George's Tower is within the grounds of a hotel, and Qawra Tower is open as a restaurant.

The towers

Name Image Location Built Status
Lippija Tower Lascaris Towers  Mġarr 1637 Intact
Għajn Tuffieħa Tower Lascaris Towers  Mġarr 1637 Intact
Blat Mogħża Tower Mġarr c. 1637 Collapsed
Nadur Tower Lascaris Towers  Rabat 1637 Intact
Qawra Tower Lascaris Towers  St. Paul's Bay 1638 Intact
Sciuta Tower Lascaris Towers  Qrendi 1638 Intact
Saint George's Tower Lascaris Towers  St. Julian's 1638 Intact
Saint Agatha's Tower Lascaris Towers  Mellieħa 1647-9 Intact
Xlendi Tower Lascaris Towers  Munxar 1650 Intact
Dwejra Tower Lascaris Towers  San Lawrenz 1652 Intact

References

See also

Tags:

Lascaris Towers HistoryLascaris Towers The towersLascaris TowersGozoKnights HospitallerMaltaMalta (island)Maltese languageWatchtowers

🔥 Trending searches on Wiki English:

Rachel McAdamsTurtles All the Way Down (film)SexElizabeth IISusunu! Denpa ShōnenDeadpool & WolverineTrisha (actress)Alexander IsakKendrick Lamar discography2024 Indian general electionGoodyear InflatoplaneWorld War INava Mau2024 ICC Men's T20 World CupBob BaffertReid Scott (actor)Gable StevesonFranklin D. RooseveltLiverpool F.C.Emma WatsonMillennialsElisabeth MossApple Inc.Michelle YeohBirmingham City F.C.Girona FC2024 Indian Premier LeagueCanelo ÁlvarezStuart BinghamList of 9-1-1 episodes2024 West Midlands mayoral electionH. D. Deve GowdaMayor of the West MidlandsBottoms (film)2024 Kentucky DerbyDev PatelPlanet of the Apes (1968 film)Tina TurnerRyan ReynoldsArsenal F.C.Late Night with the DevilManjummel BoysProject 2025Elon MuskRyan GoslingJohnny DeppShōgun (novel)Jonah Hauer-KingShardlake (TV series)Ewan McGregorHaku (wrestler)Venus WilliamsSeven deadly sinsPlanet of the Apes (2001 film)Hannah Waddingham2016 London mayoral electionJeffrey DahmerChatGPTNew York CityHamida Banu BegumIsrael–Hamas warList of countries by GDP (nominal) per capitaJ. ColeRahul GandhiInstagramPremier LeagueJennifer LawrenceUFC 301Drake–Kendrick Lamar feudAGM-114 HellfireMadame Web (film)Bigg Boss (Malayalam TV series) season 6Teenie HodgesAlcohol by volumeBade Miyan Chote Miyan (2024 film)Anna Nicole Smith🡆 More