Palazzo Correa

Palazzo Correa, also known as Casa Correa,[1] Correa de Sousa Palace or Palazzo Hompesch, was a 17th-century Palazzo in Valletta, Malta, located in Old Bakery Street. It was built in the designs of architect Carlo Gimach on the mannerist style, the very first in Valletta and very unusual in the period.[2]

It was built in 1689 by Fra Antonio Correa de Sousa, the Balì of Lesa. It was sold to the Manoel Foundation in 1732, and it was let to Grand Master Ferdinand von Hompesch zu Bolheim from 1787 to 1798. The palace was occupied by the French minister in Malta, General Vial, during the Peace of Amiens between 1802 and 1803.[3]

The palace was the residence of John Hookham Frere and his wife Elizabeth Jemima, dowager Countess of Erroll[1] from 1811. The couple had several guests including the niece of Elizabeth, Ms Blake in 1825, followed by Honoria Hamilton Chichester. At this palace the Frere couple had looked after an orphaned girl, named Statyra Livedestro, who Frere had rescued from the sea of Turkey; this happened when the Christian Greeks were expelled from Turkey by orders of Mustafa Ataturk, that before the event was Greek land, during the exchange of Turkish-Greek population in the early 19th-century.[4]

In the late 19th century, the palace became the main residence of Marquis Emmanuele Scicluna, the President of La Borsa.[5]

The building was destroyed when it was hit by aerial bombardment in 1942 during World War II. Its site has been rebuilt as St Albert the Great College.[6]

Further Reading

Ellul, Michael, "Carlo Gimach (1651-1730) - Architect and Poet", p. 20-2.

See also

References

  1. 1 2 "Historic garden in total disrepair". The Malta Independent. 16 June 2013. Archived from the original on 6 September 2013.
  2. http://melitensiawth.com/incoming/Index/Proceedings%20of%20History%20Week/PHW%201986/02s.pdf p. 20-2.
  3. Denaro, Victor F. (1959). "Houses in Kingsway and Old Bakery Street, Valletta". Melita Historica 2 (4): 213.
  4. Cassar, Paul, "Hookham Frere in Malta, p. 50.
  5. Agius, Frederica (2014). The Dragonara Palace. A Historic Perspective. Dragonara Gaming Limited. pp. 41–43. ISBN 9789995707187.
  6. Manduca, John (4 November 2008). "Achievement, tragedy and failure". Times of Malta. Retrieved 12 November 2015.

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