Mdina Gate (1724) — a baroque entrance to the Silent City, designed as theatrical scenery. Behind the monumental façade lies one of the quietest places in Malta.
Mdina — the Silent City — is Malta's former capital, inhabited continuously for over 4,000 years. The only entrance to the city surrounded by mighty walls is Mdina Gate, designed in 1724 by French architect Charles François de Mondion for Grand Master António Manoel de Vilhena.
De Mondion designed the gate as a piece of stage scenery. Crossing the bridge over the dry moat, you step into a frame of baroque façade crowned with de Vilhena's coat of arms, flanked by sculptures of lions, angels, and war trophies. This was a deliberate dramatic effect: the gate was meant to impress visitors and remind them that different rules applied behind these walls.
Interestingly, before the current gate, an older medieval gate with a drawbridge stood here. De Mondion demolished it, deeming it too austere. Fragments of the older gate were discovered during conservation work.
Behind the gate, the city is surprisingly quiet. Residents' cars require special permits, and tourist buses do not enter. In the evening, when tourists leave, Mdina falls still — the only sounds are footsteps on limestone slabs and the buzzing of insects. The contrast between the monumental gate and the silence beyond it is the essence of Mdina.
Practical tip: Best visited after 8 PM, when crowds disappear and the city returns to its natural state — absolute silence. Free entry.
What was Mdina called in the Middle Ages?
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Free entry. Best in the evening after 8 PM when crowds disappear.
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