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The
Messina Palace (No 141 and 141A St. Christopher Street), in
Valletta was built by Fra Pietro La Rocca, Prior of Santo Stefano,
towards the end of the 16th century and formed part of a larger
magnificent palace called Casa Rocca Grande which had two
entrances in the same style of the Magisterial Palace of the
Grandmaster. In 1598, Fra Pietro La Rocca was appointed Admiral of
the Order and later created Bali of Santo Stefano. On Bali La
Rocca's death, the house passed to the Italian Langue and it was
henceforth occupied by many of its important dignitaries. Fra
Francesco Saccano, Prior of Santo Stefano, held it in 1614 and
Comm. Fra Gio. Batta Macedonio in 1643. It was next let to Fra
Carlo Gattola, Prior of Capua, who was appointed Admiral in 1681
and who died in the Convent in 1684 at the age of 80 years. Fra
Carlo Spinelli, Bali of Armenia and Captain General of the Galleys
in 1687, then occupied the house and he was followed by Fra Mario
Bichi, on whose death it was taken over by Bali Vincenzo Caravita,
Admiral of the Order in 1709. In 1722 we find the premises in the
possession of Bali Fra Pietro Platamone, Lieutenant to the Admiral
in 1723, who was followed by Comm. Fra Francesco Pappalettere
(Admiral 1745) on whose death, in 1757, it was occupied up to 1767
by Comm. Fra Giuseppe Provana da Colegno. The next occupier was
Comm.
Fra Massimiliano Buzzacarini Gonzaga who took the house on a
life lease in 1773. It was let to Comm. Fra Galgano Scozzini in
1783, Comm. Fra Francesco Mazzei in 1785, and to Comm. Fra
Michel'Angelo Arezzo in 1791, who relinquished the lease the same
year, when it was taken over by Comm. Fra Michele Benedetto
Grimaldi. The estimated value of the Casa Rocca Grande in 1685 was
Scudi 4478 (today’s equivalent being around €850). In a Deliberation of
the Langue of Italy, confirmed by the Council on July 16, 1783, it
was agreed to revalue the rent of the houses belonging to the
Italian Langue, and the rent of the house under review was fixed,
by the Commissioners appointed for this purpose, at Sc. 360 per
annum. Comm. Fra Francesco Mazzei, the lessee at the moment,
thought that the estimate was exorbitant, especially as a few
years previously the rent of this same house had been assessed at
Sc. 135. Mazzei appealed to the Council which, on June 3, 1786,
after having appointed assessors, reduced the rent to Sc. 240 per
annum.
The
French Republican Government sold the house to Citoyen (Count)
Francesco Sant on the 14 Fructidor year 6 of the Republic (21st
August 1798). It is not known exactly when Casa Rocca Grande was
divided into two separate houses - No.141 (Palazzo Messina) and
No.143 (Palazzo Marina), St. Christopher Street. According to
Muir's Malta Almanac, No.141 was between 1845 and 1863, occupied
by Nicholas de Ataliottis (Merchant and Agent for Anglo-Grecian
Insurance Co.). In 1864, merchant Count Rosario Messina
(1796-1875) who had settled in Malta from Bagnara in Calabria, and
his wife, Maria de Ataliottis, together with their five children,
moved into this house. It is assumed that it was around this time
that this house was named Palazzo Messina. The coat of arms of the
family Messina is still prominently inlaid in marble in the Main
Hall of said Palace. It is of interest to record that according to
A. V. Laferla in his book "British Malta", the
brigantine which transported the exiled Jesuits from Sicily to
Malta in 1860 was owned by Rosario Messina.
Following
the death in 1875 of Count Rosario Messina, the house passed on to
Count Dr Giovanni Messina. Giovanni (President of the Malta
Chamber of Commerce 1894-1911) and his brother Francesco (both
lawyers) ran their own bank "Messina & Sons,
Bankers" from 141A, St. Christopher Street. They both resided
in Messina Palace even after they were married. Upon the death of
Count Giovanni Messina in 1911, Messina Palace was bequeathed to
his daughter Maria and to the children of his sisters Giuseppina
and Concettina. In 1932 the house, still the residence of Countess
Lucia Messina (neé Bentivoglio), wife of Francesco, who had
benefited through the usufruct of the Palace, was purchased by
Noble Liliana Stilon DePiro. When Countess
Messina, an Italian national, left the Island at the outbreak of the Second World
War, Messina Palace was requisitioned for public
use by the Government of Malta to be used as a school and after
the war, as a Department of
Education and later as the Mi nistry of Education.
The Palace was
leased to the German-Maltese Circle in 1975 until it was purchased
by the Circle with the financial assistance of the Government of
the Federal Republic of Germany in 1989 from the heirs of the
Noble Liliana Stilon DePiro. Today, Messina Palace houses the
administration and the activities of the German-Maltese Circle.
Though some rooms formerly part of the Palace, have been lost
through the years to third parties, yet Messina Palace has lost
nothing of its grandeur. The elegant staircase, the arched
courtyard, the main hall adorned with frescoes hand painted in
lively colours, the private chapel with its marble altar, the
typical Maltese spiral staircase (il-garigor) leading to the roof
and the arched basement, not to mention a rock-cut tunnel under
the same basement, are examples of this statement.
St.
Christopher Street in Valletta was first named "Strada della
Fontana" as a spring or fountain of fresh water was struck in
its vicinity whilst a well for the storage of water was being
excavated during the building of Valletta. The French Republican
Government altered the name to "Rue des Droits de l'Homme".
The British Colonial Government then changed the name to "Strada
San Cristoforo".
Article
is based on material taken from the book "The Houses of
Valletta" by Chev. Victor F. Denaro and from research on the
Messina family carried out by Rev. Joachim Schembri of Qormi.
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