Books by Charles A. Gauci
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The nobility in Malta comprises the Maltese Nobility together with the Holders of Foreign Titles.
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MALTESE NOBILITY
The Maltese Nobility, as it stands today, dates back to the Norman Conquest in 1090 AD. The ancestors of many of the present day noble families came to Malta with Count Roger and were granted tracts of Land. Following the conquest, these islands became part of the Kingdom of Sicily and the Sicilian Monarchs granted several titles based upon Maltese fiefs.
In 1530, Charles V ceded the Maltese islands to the Order of St. John of Jerusalem. The Grandmasters of the Order who ruled these Islands as Sovereign Princes created many titles of nobility. During the magistracy of the Order, some Maltese citizens were granted titles by European monarchs and many of these titles were recognized by the Grandmasters.
The nobility was abolished in 1798 following the Napoleonic occupation but was restored with the advent of British rule. A Royal Commission instituted in 1877 recommended which titles the Crown should recognize; these recommendations augmented by several later decisions set out the Maltese Nobility as it exists today. Various other foreign titles have been granted to Maltese citizens both before and after Independence (see below).
Subsequent to Malta becoming a Republic, on 13th. December 1974, the Maltese Parliament passed a law on 23rd. June 1975 withdrawing recognition of all titles of nobility which, however, can still be used socially without let or hindrance.
The Committee of Privileges of the Maltese Nobility regulates the Maltese Nobility and its main task is deciding the succession to those titles once recognized by the Government. The Committee, originally instituted by the British Crown in 1882, lost its legal status both in Britain and in Malta in 1975 and is now a purely private body.
Precedence amongst the Maltese Nobles is based on the antiquity of the title not on its degree.
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The Maltese Nobility (in order of precedence)
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- Dr. Carmelo Apap Bologna Sceberras D'Amico Inguanez, MD FRCS FRCSA; Hereditary Knight of the Holy Roman Empire, Hereditary Patrician of Rome & Messina; Baron of Djar-il-Bniet and of Buqana.
- Carole Ann Sceberras Trigona; Hereditary Patrician of Rome & Messina; Baroness of Castel Cicciano
- John Sant Cassia; Hereditary Knight of the Holy Roman Empire, Hereditary Patrician of Rome & Messina; Baron of Ghariexem & Tabia & Count Sant
- Adriana Testaferrata Abela; Hereditary Patrician of Rome & Messina; Baroness of Gomerino
- Nicholas De Piro Inguanez KM; Hereditary Knight of the Holy Roman Empire, Hereditary Patrician of Rome & Messina; Baron of Budaq & Marquis de Piro
- Agnes Gera de Petri Testaferrata Bonici Ghaxaq; Hereditary Patrician of Rome & Messina; Marchioness of San Vincenzo Ferreri & Baroness of Qlejja
- Dr. Franz Preziosi MD DOMS (Wien); Count Preziosi
- John Chapelle Paleologo; Hereditary Roman Patrician; Count Ciantar Paleologo)
- Igino Trapani Galea Feriol KM; Hereditary Knight of the Holy Roman Empire, Hereditary Patrician of Rome & Messina; Baron of San Marciano
- Lilianina Bugeja Viani;, Hereditary Patrician of Rome & Messina; Baroness of Tabria
- Maria Angela Kitson Attard Montalto; Baroness of Benwarrad
- Giovanni Consoli Palermo Navarra; Count of Bahria
- Henry Hornyold-Strickland KM; Hereditary Knight of the Holy Roman Empire, Hereditary Patrician of Rome & Messina; Count of Catena
- Paul Thomas Olivier; Hereditary Knight of the Holy Roman Empire, Hereditary Patrician of Rome & Messina; Marquis Testaferrata Olivier
- Anthony Cassar Desain KM; Hereditary Knight of the Holy Roman Empire, Hereditary Patrician of Rome & Messina; Marquis Cassar Desain
- Alfred Anthony Sant Fournier; Hereditary Knight of the Holy Roman Empire, Hereditary Patrician of Rome & Messina; Count Fournier
- Joseph Manduca Piscopo Macedonia; Count of Mont'Alto
- Francis Chapelle; Baron of San Giovanni
- Joseph Manduca Azopardi; Baron of Buleben
- Beatrice Cremona Barbaro; Marchioness of St. George
- Maria Theresa Deguara Caruana Gatto; Countess of Beberrua
- Dr. John Laferala LL.D; Marquis of Fiddien
- Joseph Sammut Testaferrata Alessi; Hereditary Patrician of Messina; Marquis of Taflia
- Mary Frances McCutcheon Teuma Castelletti; Countess of Ghajn Tuffieha
- Philip Apap Bologna; Hereditary Knight of the Holy Roman Empire, Hereditary Patrician of Rome & Messina; Marquis of Gnien-is-Sultan
- Daniel Borg Carbott; Hereditary Knight of the Holy Roman Empire, Hereditary Patrician of Rome & Messina; Baron of Grua
- Joseph A. Bugeja Fontani; Count of Senia
- Rev. Victor Formosa Gauci LL.D SJ; Marquis of Ghajn Qajjed
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Holders of Foreign Titles in Malta.
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On 15th. August 1994, His Serene Highness Friedrich Wilhelm Ernst Victor Alexander, Furst zur Lippe, Sovereign Prince of Lippe, Noble Lord of Biesterfeld, Count of Schwalenberg and Sternberg, Hereditary Burrgrave of Vianen and Ameiden near Utrecht, Grandmaster of the House Order of Lippe extended his Royal recognition and patronage to a number of holders of foreign titles in Malta. This group now forms the Association of Foreign Title-Holders in Malta.
All these titles, which have been endorsed by Burke's Peerage, satisfy one or more of the following criteria;
a. Granted or confirmed by a sovereign ruler who, at the time of the grant, was actually reigning.
b. Granted or confirmed by the head of an ex-regnant House whose status as a Fons Honorum with the consequent Jus Honorum has been unquestionably and unequivocally upheld by a regularly constituted court of law.
Most of the foreign title-holders are themselves descended from families belonging to the Maltese nobility and are of ancient lineage.
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Association of Foreign Title Holders - Malta
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- Magistrate Dr. Albert Borg Olivier de Puget Paleologo LLD; Hereditary Roman Patrician; Prince of Selimbria
- Reno Ellul Bonici Mompalao Bugeja; Hereditary Knight of the Holy Roman Empire, Hereditary Patrician of Rome & Messina; Marquis Bugeja
- Anthony Buttigieg de Piro CStJ, KLJ(J), Commanding Officer St. John's Rescue Corps, Malta; Hereditary Knight of the Holy Roman Empire, Hereditary Patrician of Rome & Messina; Marquis Buttigieg de Piro
- Lt. Colonel John B. Mattei BA(Hons) RA (Retd); Hereditary Roman Patrician; Marquis Mattei
- Joseph Philip Testaferrata Bonici; Hereditary Knight of the Holy Roman Empire, Hereditary Patrician of Rome & Messina; Marquis Testaferrata
- Salvino Testaferrata Moroni Viani, Hon. Consul for the Republic of San Marino in the Republic of Malta; Hereditary Knight of the Holy Roman Empire, Hereditary Patrician of Rome & Messina ; Baron Testaferrata Moroni Viani (Baron Testaferrata & Marquis Testaferrata Moroni Viani)
- Chev. Anthony Zammit CStJ KCN KHS KCLK KMLJ, Hon. Consul for the Republic of Chile in the Republic of Malta; Marquis of Tiana
- Lt. Colonel Charles A. Gauci KHS MD FRCA FSA.Scot RAMC(Retd); Hereditary Roman Patrician, Hereditary Noble in the Noblesse of Scotland; Count Gauci
- Giuseppe (Josie) Attard Montalto de Ribera S.Th.Dip, A.L.A. (Lon); Hereditary Knight of the Holy Roman Empire, Hereditary Patrician of Rome & Messina; Baron of San Paolino
- Lt. Colonel Edward von Brockdorff ED KOMR(Retd); Baron von Brockdorff
- Dr. Edward Rutter Giappone LLD; Hereditary Knight of the Holy Roman Empire, Hereditary Patrician of Rome & Messina; Baron of Calaforno & Tumarello
- Joseph Drago d'Aragona Cuzkeri Testaferrata; Hereditary Knight of the Holy Roman Empire, Hereditary Patrician of Rome & Messina; Baron della Gabella della Scannatura di Trapani
- Alfred Anthony Sant Fournier, Count Fournier; Hereditary Knight of the Holy Roman Empire, Hereditary Patrician of Rome & Messina; Baron de Pausier
- Lt. Colonel Ronald F. Sceberras Trigona RMA (Retd), Baroncino di Castel Cicciano; Hereditary Knight of the Holy Roman Empire, Hereditary Patrician of Rome & Messina; Baron of Montagna di Marzo (not a member of the Association)
- Barony of Ortigos title vacant
- Maria Angela Kitson Attard Montalto, Baroness of Benwarrad; Hereditary Patrician of Rome & Messina; Baroness of San Paolino
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For Further Information see;
The Nobles of Malta 1530-1800 by J. Montalto (1979). Midesea Books Ltd. (Malta)
The Genealogy and Heraldry of the Noble Families of Malta by C.A. Gauci; Vol. 1 (1981) & Vol. 2 (1992). PEG Ltd. (Malta)
A Guide to the Maltese Nobility by C.A. Gauci; (1986). PEG Ltd. (Malta)
The Malta Year Book (published annually)
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ADDENDUM : THE MALTESE RACE
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The original, prehistoric inhabitants of Malta probably reached the island from Sicily; the earliest recorded settlers were the Neolithic inhabitants of 5000BC.
History shows us that the Phoenicians colonized Malta in about 800BC. A Semitic race, they occupied the islands until their successors, the Carthaginians (same race) were ousted by the Romans in 216 BC.
The Semitic people, a Caucasian group, included the Babylonians, Assyrians, Chaldeans, Amorites (ancestors of the Phoenicians), Nabateans, Arameans, Hebrews, Arabians and Abyssianians; they all at one time or another inhabited the fertile crescent (region forming an arc between the head of the Persian Gulf and the Southeastern Corner of the Mediterranean Sea). The term Semitic is derived from the name of Shem, the son of Noah and ancestor of Abraham who was himself probably an Amorite and who many scholars believe lived between the years 2000and 1900 BC.
The Amorites migrated into the Fertile Crescent in about 2500BC. They came from the northern fringe of the Syrian Desert and they gave the famous law-giving king, Hammurabi. The component elements of this tribe were the Canaanites who occupied Western Syria and Palestine after 2500BC and the coastal people called Phoenicians by the Greeks. Various tribes from the Arabian Peninsula also migrated into the Fertile Crescent over the centuries but the mass migration occurred in the 7th. Century AD under the banner of Islam in the course of which they not only entered the fertile crescent but also Egypt, N.Africa including Byzantine Carthage, Spain, Malta (869AD), Sicily etc. To many authorities the term Semitic has more linguistic than ethnological implications; they regard the Assyrio-Babylonian, Aramaic, Hebrew, Phoenician, South Arabic, Ethiopic and Arabic languages as dialects developing out of one common tongue the Ursemitisch. Hence the similarity Maltese bears to Arabic, derived as it does from Phoenician, a Semitic language. This however does not make the Maltese, Arabs. Indeed, Phoenician together with Hebrew and Aramaic belongs to a different subdivision of the Hamito- Semitic family of languages (Northwest Semitic) than does Arabic, which with Ethiopic and Amharic belongs to the Southwest Semitic subdivision.
Like many Mediterranean countries, the Maltese islands were once under Arab domination. The period of Arab occupation ranged from 200 years in Malta and Gozo and 400 years in Sicily and parts of Italy while the longest occupation was 800 years in Spain. The Normans started to rule Malta in 1090.
The Arabs left their mark in the place names and the language. This was to be expected since the original Maltese language derived from Phoenician was, like Arabic, a Semitic language.
Prior to the 200 years of Arab domination, Malta had been Roman (later part of the Eastern Empire) from 216B.C. to 869 AD-just short of 11 centuries. Contrary to popular belief, the Arabs, wherever they occupied were on the whole fairly benign; they did not go in for mass slaughter of their defeated foes (which is more than can be said for many 'Christian' European powers); people who refused to convert to Islam were subjected to a special tax. When the Arabs expelled the Byzantine rulers they did not put the Maltese population to the sword or in any way try to deport them from the islands. It is true that they tried to convert as many as possible to Islam; the degree of this conversion has still to be definitely ascertained. The view that the entire Byzantine population simply deserted the islands allowing the Arabs to move in does not stand up to historical scrutiny; the islands were far too strategically important to be simply abandoned to a hostile power.
From the advent of the Normans up to 1530, Malta was part of the Kingdom of Sicily; thus from 1091 to 1530 when the Order of St. John came to Malta, the original Italic and Byzantine population from the Roman period was further reinforced by other European elements-a period of 440 years.
It also bears stating that the island of Malta under Moslem rule had a very tiny population; the population of the island grew under the Norman rule which started in 1090AD; this was followed by a steady migration of people from Sicily and the European mainland over the ensuing centuries.
The Euro-ethnicity of the Maltese race stands out even from a cursory perusal of the island's telephone directory! In culture and tradition the Maltese are European and Christian; thus for example Heraldry, a concept totally alien to the Arab world, is deeply rooted in the Maltese islands. The Maltese can also boast of an old and illustrious nobility deeply rooted in the traditions of European chivalry.
It is in Europe that Malta's roots and destiny lie.
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Books by Charles A. Gauci
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