The Arabs
in Sicily we're divided, and taking advantage of the
situation, Count Roger the Norman, after a series of
campaigns, subdued that island to Norman Rule. Count
Roger had invaded the islands to make sure his southern
Hank was secure from a possible Arab attack, having
reduced the Arabs to a state of vassalage and releasing
the foreign Christian slaves, he returned to Sicily
without even bothering to garrison his prize.
In Sicily itself the Normans followed the same enlightened
policy and although the Christian Faith was regarded
as the official religion there, nobody was persecuted
because of his race or for his religious beliefs.
In 1127, Roger 11 the son of Count Roger, led a second
invasion of Malta; having overrun the Island he placed
it under a more secure Norman domination under the
charge
of a Norman governor. He also garrisoned with Norman
soldiers the three castles then on the islands. From
about this period the Maltese
moved back gradually into the European orbit to which
they had belonged for a thousand years prior to the
Arab interlude.
Because the last Norman king died without a male heir,
the new masters of the Maltese islands came, in turn,
from the ruling houses of Germany, France and Spain:
the Swabians (1194); the Angevins (1268); the Aragonese
(1283) and finally, the Caslillians (1410).
When the Norman Period came to an end, the Fief of
Malta was granted to loyal servants of the Sicilian
Crown: these Counts, or Marquises of Malta, as these
nobles were styled, looked on the fief simply as an
investment - a source for the collection of taxes and
something that was bartered or sold when no
longer viable.
The last feudal lord of Malta. Don Gonsalvo Monroy,
had been expelled from the Island following a revolt
and at the Court of Sicily the count demanded that
the
strongest measures be taken against the insurgents.
At the same Court the representatives of the Maltese
offered to repay the 30,000 florins originally paid
by Monroy for the Fief of Malta; they also asked for
the Island to be incorporated in the Royal Domains
once
they had redeemed their homeland. The king, Alphonse
V. impressed by their loyalty, called Malta the most
notable gem in his crown, thus the capital of Malta
came to be
called Notabile although, then, as now, the Maltese
continued to call the town Mdina.
By this time, the Maltese were thoroughly Christianized
and the houses of the great Religious Orders were being
established in the Island: the Franciscans (1370);
the
Carmelites (1418); the Augustinians (l450); the Dominicans
(1466); and the Minor Observants (1492), while the
Benedictine
Sisters arrived in
1418. In 1429 a determined attempt was made by an army
of 18,000 Moors from Tunisia under Kaid Ridavan to
capture
the Maltese islands with the intention of using them
as an advance post for further conquests. The Maltese
population then numbered between 16,000 to 18,000 with
only some 4,000 men under arms. The invaders were beaten
back but not before they liad captured over 3.000 of
the inhabitants as prisoners.
|