The Maltese archipelago consists of three islands:
Malta, Gozo and Comino. Malta, the largest island, is 237 sq. kms in
area; Gozo is 68 sq. kms and Comino, 2 sq. kms.
The population numbers circa 370,000. Of these, 28,000
live in Gozo. Comino is only inhabited by a few farmers. Because of
their strategic position, Malta and Gozo have been inhabited for the
past 7,000 years. The two islands have a long and varied prehistoric
period: Neolithic, Copper and Bronze age civilisations lasted more than
4,000 years; one can still admire vestiges of those remote times in form
of impressive stone temples, a unique hypogeum and remains of skilful
handicrafts.
The first known people to settle in Malta were the
Phoenicians, who reached these shores on their trading ventures in the
9th century BC. They were succeeded by their Punic kinsmen, the
Carthaginians, who were eventually conquered by the Romans in the 3rd
century BC. The Romans governed these islands until the division of the
Roman Empire in the 4th century AD.
Arabs from North Africa occupied the Islands from the
9th to the 13th century and when the last Arab rulers were driven out in
the year 1249, they left behind them notable imprints of their culture
on the language of the Maltese people.
After the Norman overlords, Swabian and Angevin
dynasties ruled for brief periods and at the beginning of the 14th
century, the Islands fell under Aragonese domination. In 1530, the King
of Spain, Emperor Charles V, granted the Islands on fief to the
international Order of the Knights of St. John of Jerusalem.
The Knights administered the Islands for 268 years until
1798, when Napoleon Bonaparte drove them from these shores and occupied
the country in the name of the French Republic.
Following a brief occupation the French were forced to
surrender after two years of a land and sea blockade by combined British
and Maltese forces, and in 1800, Malta became a part of the British
Empire.
In 1964, Malta attained its Independence. and ten years
later, in 1974, it was declared a Republic within the Commonwealth.
Until the 1960s, the Maltese economy depended mostly on
the British services and the Naval Dockyard. After independence,
industry and tourism advanced at a fast pace, and at present Malta and
Gozo have established a good industrial base and flourishing tourist
enterprises.