The 10th anniversary issue of the internationally peer-reviewed Journal of Maltese History () of the Department of History, has just been published. This issue includes the following papers:
  
'Capital, conflict and Mediterranean frontiers: the Mobilization of Funds from the Order of St John's European Estates' by Ivan Grech;
  
'Maritime Areas, Ports, and Sea Routes: Defining space and connectivity between Malta and the Eastern Mediterranean' by Frank Theuma;
  
'The Stevens Family : Consuls in Malta and the Levant by Sarah Watkinson and 'Paying a Visit to the Memorials of the Japanese War Dead in Malta' by Noriko Sato.
  
The 'Research Notes' section carries an extensive study on 'The Maltese Calesse; Visitors impressions in nineteenth century travel narratives', by Emanuel Chetcuti.
  
Professor John Chircop is founding editor of the Journal of Maltese History, supported by a high-powered international advisory board.
  
For these ten years JMH has provided scholars a platform to publish original, interdisciplinary research on Maltese/regional history, and for critical debates on issues of a historiographical, theoretical, pedagogical and archival nature.
		'Capital, conflict and Mediterranean frontiers: the Mobilization of Funds from the Order of St John's European Estates' by Ivan Grech;
'Maritime Areas, Ports, and Sea Routes: Defining space and connectivity between Malta and the Eastern Mediterranean' by Frank Theuma;
'The Stevens Family : Consuls in Malta and the Levant by Sarah Watkinson and 'Paying a Visit to the Memorials of the Japanese War Dead in Malta' by Noriko Sato.
The 'Research Notes' section carries an extensive study on 'The Maltese Calesse; Visitors impressions in nineteenth century travel narratives', by Emanuel Chetcuti.
Professor John Chircop is founding editor of the Journal of Maltese History, supported by a high-powered international advisory board.
For these ten years JMH has provided scholars a platform to publish original, interdisciplinary research on Maltese/regional history, and for critical debates on issues of a historiographical, theoretical, pedagogical and archival nature.

 
								 
								