Siggiewi
16 Archival description results for Siggiewi
Michel’Angelo Saliba (N. 287) esercitò la professione dal 1745-1796 a Siggiewi e Cospicua. Giovanni Ignazio Balzan (N.) esercitò la professione dal 1753 al 1774 a Siggiewi. Francesco Caruana (N.) esercitò la professione dal 1772 al 1799 a Siggiewi. Giovanni Dimech (N.) esercitò la professione dal 1714 al 1743 a Siggiewi. Nicola Azzopardi (N.) esercitò la professione dal 1791 al 1831 a Siggiewi. Salvatore Balzan (N.) esercitò la professione dal 1807 al 1852 a Siggiewi. Francesco Cremona (N.) esercitò la professione dal 1770 al 1824 a Naxar, Valletta e Siggiewi.
Thomas Cutajar from Siggiewi, and servant of the same village's captain, accuses Martinus Imbrol from Siggiewi. Cutajar had approached Imbrol at the tavern of Mario Mallia in Siggiewi and told him to go deposit the money owed with the village Captain or he would have had him imbrisoned as a debtor. At which point Imbrol stabbed him with a knife (stilletto). Witness statements collected. Imbrol sentenced to two years' rowing on the galleys of the Order with no payment and with bound feet. The case was then appealed to the Suprema Curia Appellationis (ACA) but the sentence was upheld.
Curia CapitanalisPart of the last will and testament of Angelica []. First folios missing. She leaves money for masses to be sung in suffrage of her soul and remission of her sins and to individuals and institutions. Mention is made of land called Ta Hasfura at Casal Chibir etc.
Vincent Caruana and his family had left Senglea for the safety of Siggiewi in June 1940 when the first Italian air raids had been carried out. He described the evacuation process and resettlement in a new village in the countryside with emotion and lucidity. He was later conscripted into the Royal Malta Artillery (R.M.A.) and also talked about his time in the army, the shelters, the internees, the arrival of the Pedestal convoy and the capitulation of Italy.
In the first part of the interview, Vincent 'Censinu' Caruana explained how he was conscripted into the army in the summer of 1941. He described the drills practiced, the duties gunners had to attend to on the anti-aircraft guns, the bombardments and cases of thefts and pilfering by soldiers.
In the first part of the interview, Vincent 'Censinu' Caruana started by going on a long monologue. He talked about the pre-war political situation by mentioning Neville Chamberlain, Adolf Hitler, Benito Mussolini, the Italian conquest of Abyssinia and the German occupation of Austria. He talked about the capitulation of France and how the Italian declaration of war by Mussolini was perceived in Malta. He remembered the first air raid, his family's hasty relocation to Siggiewi and the introduction of German bombers in January 1941.
In the second part of the interview, Vincent 'Censinu' Caruana started explaining how refugees (including his family) had been welcomed in Siggiewi. He had to get accustomed to the new conditions in a rural setting, far from home. He talked about the pre-war situation, the arrival of anti-aircraft guns, the plight of the internees, the sirens and the people's interactions in the shelters.
In the fifth part of the interview, Vincent 'Censinu' Caruana described the sanitation at Siggiewi, the lack of medicine and doctors, Mussolini's death, the prisoners of war incarcerated in Malta and his demobilisation from the army.