When the
Order made Malta its home, for the first time the Masters
of the Maltese lived on the Island itself, and wealth
poured into the Island, rather than the other way round.
The Knights of the Order of St. John came from the
noblest and richest families of Europe and a Knight
was expected to pass on his property to the Order on
his death, but it was not unusual for a member of the
Order to make gifts and endowments during his lifetime
as well.
Six years after the Great Siege the Turks were also
defeated at sea, in the Battle of Lepanto, in which
the galleys of the Order participated. The finances
of the Order were now in a precarious position. Unemployment
was rife and poverty was widespread. Towards the end
of the 18th century matters for the Order were going
from bad to worse: in France, where most of her overseas
property lay, the possessions of the Order were taken
over by the Republican Government and French refugees,
fleeing to Malta from the Revolution, were an added
drain on the treasury of the Order. In the wake of his
victorious Italian campaign. Napoleon confiscated the
Order's property in that country as well. At the time
the last Grand Master of Malta, Ferdinand von Hompesch
was being elected, Napoleon was making his plans to
take over the Island. |