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Fort San Lucjan |
The fort was built by order of Grand Master Alof de
Wignacourt between 1610 and 1611, possibly on the design
of Victor Cassar or Girgor Xerri. Fort St. Lucjan was
originally armed with six strong bronze cannons. It
was surrounded by a dry ditch and had a drawbridge.
Grand Master Wignacourt was baptised in France, in a
church dedicated to St. Lucjan and therefore dedicated
the fort to his patron saint. In fact, the fort also
had a small chapel dedicated to St. Lucjan which included
the painting of the saint, now believed to be at the
Tarxien Parish Church. The fort was enlarged and strengthened
by Grand Master Emmanuel de Rohan and named Fort Rohan
in 1796. During the invasion of Malta by the French
in 1798, Fort St. Lucjan was one of the few forts to
offer resistance to the forces of Napoleon. It continued
to fire on the French troops until the ammunition had
run out. In 1876 under the governorship of Van Stranbenzee,
the fort was modernised and fitted with strong iron
coastal muzzle-loading guns on the newly constructed
outer defenses.
Between the late forties and early sixties, Fort St.
Lucjan was used by the R.A.F. as a bomb depot. It also
served as a military prison in certain periods. The
wooden drawbridge was replaced by a fixed bridge and
rail tracks were fitted across it and leading into the
fort. This enabled bombs to be carried inside the fort
with the least possible inconvenience. In 1964 the fort
was handed over to the Maltese government and soon after
began to be administered by the University, first under
the auspices of the Architecture Department and later
as a Marine Biology Station. In 1988 it was allocated
to the Ministry of Agriculture and Fisheries in order
to accommodate the newly set up National Aquaculture
Centre. On the 29 August 2001 the Centre was renamed
as the Malta Centre for Fisheries Sciences due to its
expansion in research related to capture fisheries along
with aquaculture.
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