Photographer's Note
Grand Harbour (in Maltese: Il-Port il-Kbir) is a natural harbour on the island of Malta. It has been used as a harbour since at least Phoenician times.
The natural harbour has been greatly improved with extensive docks and wharves, and has been massively fortified. The harbour mouth faces north east and is bounded to the north by St Elmo's Point and further sheltered by an isolated breakwater and is bounded to the south by Ricasoli Point. Its north west shore is formed by the Scebarras peninsula, which is largely covered by the city of Valletta and its suburb Floriana. This peninsula also divides Grand Harbour from a second parallel natural harbour, Marsamxett Harbour. The main waterway of Grand Harbour continues inland almost to Marsa. The south eastern shore of the harbour is formed by a number of inlets and headlands, principally Rinella Creek, Kalkara Creek, Dockyard Creek, and French Creek, which are covered by Kalkara and the Three Cities: Cospicua, Vittoriosa, and Senglea.
With its partner harbour of Marsamxett, Grand Harbour lies at the centre of gently rising ground. Development has grown up all around the twin harbours and up the slopes so that the whole bowl is effectively one large conurbation. Much of Malta's population lives within a three kilometer radius of Floriana. This is now one of the most densely populated areas in Europe.
Grand Harbour was the base for the Knights of St John for 268 years, and after their departure became a strategic base for the British for a further 170 years. It was the site in the late 16th century of a devastating tornado that killed 600 people and destroyed a shipping armada. The area was the scene of much of the fighting in the First Siege of Malta when the Turks attempted to eject the Knights of St John. The whole area was savagely bombed during the Second Siege of Malta during World War II, as the docks and military installations around the port were legitimate targets for Axis bombers. However collateral damage wrecked much of Valletta and The Three Cities, and caused large numbers of civilian casualties.
The harbours and docks are still active but with the departure of the British Military the harbour lost much of its military significance. A considerable part of Malta's commercial shipping is now handled by the new free port at Kalafrana, so the harbour is much quieter than it was in the first half of the 20th century.
(Extract from Wikipedia)
Critiques | Translate
albertojr
(738) 2009-04-13 8:40
Excellent city view from a very high vantage point. i can see the color of the sea so green, it is so attractive with the rippled reflection of buildings. the boat is bonus here as it improves the sense of scale in composition. It's a picturesque shot, congratulations on this one.
kiks
(12805) 2009-04-14 6:41
Hi FRancis, verry impressive view you present us here. I like the composition showing the old and modern harbour. Good choice of a high horizon.
Best regards
KIKs
dvlazar
(6662) 2009-04-16 5:55
Nice shot of the harbour in panorama. Slightly high exposure on the building faces, i think, but otherwise all good :)
Dave
Dragut
(14) 2009-04-26 9:06
Hi Francis
Nice shot and intersting..This explain very well human activity all along history of Malta. It's seams that it's difficult to extend more and more buildings. God job.
att
(1114) 2009-05-03 14:41
I think this is a very good view of the harbour and the fortifications. Seeing another comment by "Dragut" reminded me of the more famous historical one. The famous captain "Dragut" or "Turgut", first a famous pirate, but then rising to be the grand admiral of the Ottoman navy, was killed by cannon fire in the Turkish siege of Malta, right in front of this castle.
Photo Information
-
Copyright: Francis Xavier Camilleri (Fransx)
(1457)
- Genre: 地方
- Medium: 彩色
- Date Taken: 2007-05-20
- Categories: 建築
- Camera: Nikon coolpix S4
- Exposure:f/4
- More Photo Info: view
- Photo Version:Original Version
- Date Submitted: 2009-04-13 8:07