Welcome to Malta
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Photograph by John Swansburg.
Malta’s capital, Valletta.
As seen from the nearby city of Sliema.
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Photograph by John Swansburg.
Lord Byron, who visited Malta in 1809 and again in 1811, complained of having to scale Valletta’s steep streets.
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Photograph by John Swansburg.
One of the antiques in Malta’s ragtag bus fleet.
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Photograph by Happy Menocal.CREDIT:
A statue, probably of the emperor Claudius.
Found in the Domus Romana, a Roman peristyle villa excavated outside the walls of Malta’s ancient capital of Mdina.
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Photograph by Happy Menocal.
Detail of a mosaic floor at the Domus Romana.
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Photograph by John Swansburg.CREDIT: -
Photograph by Happy Menocal.CREDIT:
Colorful window boxes are a common feature of Malta’s limestone row houses.
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Photograph by John Swansburg.
The Maltese language is a strange blend of Arabic and Italian.
Its words feature unexpected quantities of Z's and J's.
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Photograph by John Swansburg.
A can of Diet Kinnie.
The low-calorie version of Malta’s national soda. It tastes like a Campari and soda.
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Photograph by John Swansburg.CREDIT:
The parish church of the town of Paola.
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Photograph by John Swansburg.CREDIT:
Christ bearing the cross, parish church of Paola.
Return to the article, "Malta: 10 Days, 6,000 Years of History"