Their homeland
a narrow coastal plain, and hemmed in by their enemies
between the mountains and the Mediterranean, the only
direction in which the Phoenicians could expand was
seawards.
The Maltese islands with their fine natural harbors
were one such outpost, which the Phoenicians founded
around 800 BC. As it was in other countries, so it was
in Malta: having gained a foothold as traders, they
gradually intermarried and integrated with the bronze-age
farmers. This assimilation did not, of course, take
place overnight, but when it eventually did happen,
the new race became the rootstock of the Maltese People,
and the language of these people the basis of the Maltese
Language.
The larger island was now called M-L-T (Malet: meaning
shelter) and the smaller island was named G-L (Gol,
after the broad beamed trading vessel).
In this period of the story of Malta we are in the
realm of written history, and it is recorded that overlooking
the two main harbors in Malta were famous temples dedicated
to Phoenician Deities - one in what is now the Grand
Harbor, probably under the foundations of Fort St. Angelo,
sacred to Melkart and another dedicated to Astarte in
the aforementioned Tas-Silg area.
In the case of the Maltese Islands the Phoenicians
did venture inland because their remains have been found
in several places, even as far as Rabat in the center
of the island of Malta.
The weaving industry that flourished before the arrival
of the Phoenicians probably received an added boost
and a wider export market Pottery was now thrown on
a wheel instead of being coiled, as was previously the
case.
The links between the Phoenician colonies and the Mother
Country were never very strong and when the Phoenician
homeland was overrun it was the Phoenician colony of
Carthage that took over the role of Mother Country.
In many sectors of the Mediterranean littoral the Phoenicians/Carthaginians
strove to establish a sphere of influence, their chief
rivals in this respect being the Greeks. Surprisingly,
in the Maltese Islands these differences did not seem
to exist: it is not known how many Creeks lived, co-existed
rather, with the Phoenicians and the Carthaginians on
the Island, but some undoubtedly did - civic institutions
resembled their Greek counterparts and Greek coins and
pottery have been found on the islands.
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