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Brama Greków (Mdina)

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Brama Greków (Mdina)

Atrakcja • Pomnik

Brama Greków (Mdina)

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    Najlepsze trasy piesze do: Brama Greków (Mdina)

    4.1

    (14)

    83

    wędrowcy

    1. Trasa Brama Mdiny–Stare Miasto Mdiny (początek: L-Imdina)

    3.63km

    00:57

    30m

    30m

    Łatwa trasa piesza. Dostosowana do każdego poziomu sprawności. Łatwo dostępne ścieżki. Odpowiednie dla każdego poziomu sprawności.

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    Umiarkowana wędrówka. Wymagany dobry poziom sprawności. Łatwo dostępne ścieżki. Odpowiednie dla każdego poziomu sprawności.

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    Trudna wędrówka. Wymagany bardzo dobry poziom sprawności. Łatwo dostępne ścieżki. Odpowiednie dla każdego poziomu sprawności.

    Trudne

    Wskazówki

    3 stycznia, 2023

    Also known as Porta dei Greci and Bib I-Harrekin, the Greek Gate served as a side entrance to Mdina. In its current state, the gate is the result of various additions and alterations in the 17th and 18th centuries, which led to the construction of a Baroque façade that opens directly onto the moat. The gate includes an original medieval lancet arch door opening onto the town and was once part of a medieval enclosure. The Baroque façade was constructed in 1724 by the order's permanent military engineer, Charles François de Mondion, as part of a major restoration program carried out during the reign of Grand Master Antonio Manoel de Vilaine.

    Przetłumaczone przez Google •

      24 czerwca, 2019

      The "Greek Gate" is the smaller of the two main gates of Mdina. It takes its name from a small Greek community that once lived near the gate. This gate was the only entrance to the city that slaves could use.

      Przetłumaczone przez Google •

        16 czerwca, 2021

        The Greek Gate is a gateway to the fortified city of Mdina in Malta. The gate was originally built in the Middle Ages and its outer portal was built in the Baroque style by Charles François de Mondion in 1724.

        Przetłumaczone przez Google •

          19 czerwca, 2023

          In its current state, the gate is the result of various additions and alterations in the 17th and 18th centuries, which led to the construction of a Baroque façade.

          Przetłumaczone przez Google •

            3 listopada, 2022

            The Greeks Gate (Maltese: Bieb il-Griegi or Il-Mina tal-Griegi; Italian: Porta dei Greci; Latin: Porta Grecorum) is a gate into the fortified city of Mdina, Malta. The gate was originally built in the medieval period, and its outer portal was built in the Baroque style in 1724 by Charles François de Mondion. Despite this, the rear part of its gate retains its original form, making it one of the few visible remains of Mdina's medieval walls.

            The Greeks Gate is one of two main gates of Mdina, the other being the Mdina Gate. It is located near the southwest corner of the city, and it got its name since a small Greek community once lived close to the gate. This gate was the only entrance into Mdina from which slaves were allowed to enter.

            In the medieval period, the Greeks Gate was flanked by a D-shaped wall tower, which remained in use until the early 18th century, when Mdina's fortifications were upgraded under the military engineer and architect Charles François de Mondion. It is believed that the tower still exists buried behind Mondion's ramparts. At this point, Mondion also grafted a Baroque portal onto the Greeks Gate, giving it its present appearance. The inscription on the gate which commemorates this renovation is dated 1724.

            The Greeks Gate was restored between January and June 2003 by the Restoration Unit of the Ministry for Resources and Infrastructure. Restoration cost Lm15,000, and it included cleaning the gate, consolidating its decorative elements, and removal of vegetation on the roof. Plans for another restoration were made in 2014, when the government allocated €1 million of ERDF funds for the restoration of Greeks Gate and the surrounding areas. Restoration of the gate commenced in late 2015 and was completed in early 2016.

            The Greeks Gate was included on the Antiquities List of 1925. Today, it is scheduled as a Grade 1 national monument, and it is also listed on the National Inventory of the Cultural Property of the Maltese Islands.

            The Greeks Gate actually consists of two vaulted gateways grafted in front of each other. The inner gate still retains its original medieval features, including a pointed arch. A guardhouse was located inside the passageway between the gates. The outer gate consists of a Baroque portal, decorated with various coats of arms and a Latin inscription reading:

            VETUSTISSIMÆ HUJUS URBIS
            SUB SERENISS. M. MAG. D. ANTONII MANOEL
            FELICISSIMO PRINCIPATU RESTAURATA MOENIA
            TUO, DIVE PAULE, HOSPITO,
            PRÆDICATIONE, QUAM VETUSTATE, CLARIORE
            TIBI MERITO NUNCUPANT MELITENSES CIVES
            ANNO SALUTIS MDCCXXIV.


            The upper part of Greeks Gate contains a mural and oil paintings, one representing the Virgin and Child with Saint Anne and the Trinity, and the other showing the Baptism of Saint Publius by Paul the Apostle accompanied by Luke the Evangelist.

            The gate is approached through a pas-de-souris which is sometimes referred to as the Outer Greeks Gate. This was originally protected by a re-entrant place-of-arms, and was linked to the gate by a caponier. Today, the pas-de-souris provides vehicular access into the Mdina ditch, while the place-of-arms and caponier no longer exist. The gate was protected by a wooden à la Vauban drawbridge and a drop ditch, but the latter has been filled in. The underground chamber in which the drawbridge was retracted still exists. The gate still retains its wooden door in situ.

              26 kwietnia, 2023

              The gate is called the Greek Gate and is the oldest gate in the city walls of Mdina. The name comes from the fact that the Knights Hospitaller came to Malta from Rhodes and brought Greeks with them, who gave the gate its name.

              Przetłumaczone przez Google •

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