OAR@UM Collection:/library/oar/handle/123456789/916812025-11-16T20:51:02Z2025-11-16T20:51:02ZLiving and dying in the horrible summer of 1837/library/oar/handle/123456789/957182022-05-17T09:40:56Z2017-01-01T00:00:00ZTitle: Living and dying in the horrible summer of 1837
Abstract: Epidemic cholera reached Europe for the first time at the beginning of the nineteenth
century. After devastating countries all over Europe, it reached Malta in June 1837
finding a poor and destitute population that was too fragile to withstand its onslaught. It
attacked the old and weak inmates of the Ospizio and then spread to every corner of the
archipelago. The Government, belatedly appointed Committees of Health to deal with the
consequences of the epidemic and cholera hospitals were opened in the cities and villages,
directives issued and health workers and priests mobilized. The malady wreaked havoc
for 3 months attacking 8785 and killing 4252. Many Maltese doctors feared contagion and
would not attend the cholera hospital but others and a few British army and navy doctors
did not believe it was contagious and cared for the sick and the dying. Parish priests did
their best for their parishioners and the monks (especially the Capuchins) contributed
immensely to the spiritual needs of the dying. The population at large was in terror;
brother shunned brother, mothers abandoned their sick children and sons and daughters
would not go near their sick parents. People died in the streets locked out of their homes.
Amid all this horror there were courageous and kind persons who took care of the sick
and the dying. This thesis considers the relations and conflicts amongst people; the
Government, the people, the doctors and the churchmen. Many people were very poor,
deeply religious, illiterate, and uneducated, the few were better off but all had to face the
destructing calamity of terror. Their reactions and behaviour vary from fear to fatalism,
abandonment to attempts at self-preservation.
Description: M.MALTESE STUD.2017-01-01T00:00:00ZFeelings, suffering and events : the poetic writings of Maltese physicians on doctoring/library/oar/handle/123456789/957162022-05-17T09:40:20Z2017-01-01T00:00:00ZTitle: Feelings, suffering and events : the poetic writings of Maltese physicians on doctoring
Abstract: This research was conducted (a) to identify local physicians who wrote poetry and (b) to
select and analyse those poems which included doctoring as a theme, particularly those
that concentrated on feelings, suffering and significant events associated with their
medical experiences.
Through a mixed methodology approach, twelve such physicians were identified whilst
fifty-two out of four hundred and eleven analysed poems could be classified under a
broad definition of doctoring.
Significant events noted included the execution of Mattew Callus, the healing properties
of the earth of St. Paul’s Grotto, Malta acting as the ‘Nurse of the Mediterranean’ in
World War I, the clashes between the medical union and government and the scourges of
past diseases such as leprosy, brucellosis and plague, all of which touch on elements of
local history and identity.
Rużar Briffa stands out as the leading physician poet, both in the number of his
compositions and in his reflections on the suffering endured by patients. However, as is
demonstrated, other physicians also wrote verse on feelings generated by direct patient
contact or endowed with a medical sensibility or background. This study also highlights
and discusses a number of physicians hitherto unknown or forgotten for their poetry.
This thesis, whilst contributing further to the multi-faceted aspects of Maltese studies,
should serve as a reminder that the poetic writings of physicians, even in languages other
than Maltese, should be acknowledged, appreciated and quoted.
Description: M.MALTESE STUD.2017-01-01T00:00:00ZProtestant challenges to Malta's Roman Catholic Identity in the early nineteenth century/library/oar/handle/123456789/957042022-05-17T09:39:41Z2017-01-01T00:00:00ZTitle: Protestant challenges to Malta's Roman Catholic Identity in the early nineteenth century
Abstract: In researching and writing about Catholic-Protestant relations in the early nineteenth-century
Malta, especially on how Protestant-tinged activity could have possibly challenged Malta‟s
Roman Catholic identity, I realised that Anglicisation posed an insidious threat to Maltese
culture more than before. It is ironic, for instance, how in a post-colonial, republican Malta,
many Maltese couples, who are themselves native speakers of Maltese, choose to bring up
their children speaking only English. Our Catholic churches, once the home of heavenly
sacred music, seem to have succumbed to a plethora of Protestant-style worship songs, some
of which in English, limiting the Latin Tridentine mass to but one little church, St Paul's in
Birkirkara. Queen Elizabeth II's cipher has also found its place on the Commonwealth
walkway bronze markers in streets around Valletta. New Protestant churches, mostly of
American provenance, such as the Mormons and Baptists, have set up shop on the island,
even though their scant following by locals is rather dubious. Some processions have
thankfully survived, and have seen unprecedented growth and modification, though others,
such as the procession of the Viaticum have disappeared. Some street niches are still lit by
candles from devotees, though the indulgence plaques beneath, may now only have historical
and linguistic merit. Rather than offering a chronological inventory of what the Protestants
did in Malta, this dissertation is more of an appraisal or critique of Maltese Catholic culture.
Although this work is historical in nature, I have tried to reflect the multidisciplinary
approach of the Institute of Maltese Studies, which among other things, seeks to analyse in
depth the nature of Malteseness, and the complex make-up of the Maltese people. With this
in mind, the said Institute has helped me to appreciate further my love of Malta and its unique
character.
Description: M.MALTESE STUD.2017-01-01T00:00:00ZFesta rivalries : changing attitudes to the Maltese festa/library/oar/handle/123456789/956262022-05-12T13:21:07Z2017-01-01T00:00:00ZTitle: Festa rivalries : changing attitudes to the Maltese festa
Abstract: I have been living in the village of Ħaż-Żebbuġ for more than forty years. This gives me a good insight
of how the people in the village live, think and talk. In villages like Ħaż-Żebbuġ almost everyone knows
one another and if someone is not local, somehow, someone, finds about that person too. The same can
be said about Mqabba. Although I do not hail from there, it is the same village attitude where everyone
knows everyone on a smaller scale. Even though there is a distinction in population and distance between
Ħaż-Żebbuġ and Mqabba, the fact that one finds similarities, especially with regards to festa
celebrations, encouraged me to do the research about Mqabba too.
The village festa has always been an interesting event in the village of Ħaż-Żebbuġ as I am sure in almost
most of the other villages around Malta and Gozo. The name of the village of Ħaż-Żebbuġ is mostly
associated with the titular saint, San Filep especially with those that love to attend the village festa. Still,
San Filep is not the only village festa that we celebrate, there is also the festa of San Ġużepp, the
secondary festa. Since there are two festas in the same village this was eventually for Ħaż-Żebbuġ, the
cause for the festa rivalry that exists today.
The rivalry that exists within the village of Ħaż-Żebbuġ was the cause for this study to commence. At a
tender age, I remember people bickering on which saint is better or which band club is organising a
better festa than the other. Since I used to play the clarinet with one of the San Filep band clubs, such
criticism towards the other band clubs was the norm of the day. Still I could never share their opinion
regarding the insults that they used to say or the band criticism mentioned towards the other band clubs.
I wanted to find out the reason behind this rivalry, what causes it, what makes a person support one saint
and not the other and if the attitudes towards rivalry have ever changed.
I used a system of triangulation for my research, where I started off from the literature about both villages
and searched theories about people’s participation in the festa. This was one of the main reasons why I
chose Mqabba as a comparative study since there is abundant literature and studies on the place from
various authors. I also attended certain festa celebrations of both villages, and lastly, I used the interviews
to gather the information about my research which was the bulk of my research. Those interviewed come
from all walks of life, from labourers to professional people but mostly people from the same committee
of the local band, from the president to the secretary and local supporters that just attended the club. I
went through the local historical books of both villages of Ħaż-Żebbuġ and Mqabba. This gave me an
insight about how the villages originated and how the cults and band clubs started off in both villages.
The local festa booklets of both villages illustrated how both festas are organised: from the committee
members that take care of the organisation of the festa to the number of activities organised during the
week preceding the festa. The local booklets also shed light on the rivalry that exists between clubs in
the same villages especially for Ħaż-Żebbuġ. This was the first part of the write up of my research, the
introductory chapters deal with the historical part of both villages. Still, this was not enough for me.
Books do not give you details about rivalry. They illustrate facts, especially the historical ones. I wanted
to gather the opinion of the people regarding my theme of research and that is what my research was
mostly about: what the people know and think about the rivalry in their village. When possible, historical
facts helped me out in comparing what the people said in the interviews to what really happened.
Since I am from the village of Ħaż-Żebbuġ, it was easier for me to interview the people there mostly
because they knew who I was and because many knew some of my relatives. For the village of Mqabba
I had link persons that vouched for me and once I have stated from where I was, it was somehow easier
for them to communicate with me. The results of the interviews were then discussed in the sole chapter
entitled Oral History since it dealt with what the people told me in the interviews, what they know.
One of the last chapters in my research is about comparing the celebration of Palio di Siena with the
local village festa. There are many things that are common in both celebrations because after all in both
activities people attend to have fun and feel proud when participating in them. Since there is more than
one group involved that also means that there is cause for rivalry too as the research has shown.
The concluding chapter of this research was formulated from the historical books, the personal
experience of the village festa and the interviews that gave me an insight on what the people think about
rivalry and on the preparations involved for the celebration of the local village festa.
Description: M.MALTESE STUD.2017-01-01T00:00:00Z