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Ta' Għemmuna Battery
Part of the French blockade batteries
St. Julian's, Malta
Dragonara Palace, built on the site of the former battery
Coordinates 35°55′34.98″N 14°29′41.1″E / 35.9263833°N 14.49475°E / 35.9263833; 14.49475
Type Artillery batteries
Site history
Built 1799
Built by Maltese insurgents
In use 1799–1800
Materials Limestone
Fate Demolished
Battles/wars Siege of Malta (1798–1800)

Ta' Għemmuna Battery was an artillery battery in St. Julian's, Malta, that was built by Maltese insurgents during the French blockade of 1798-1800. The battery was located at Dragonara Point, in front of the Hospitaller entrencments at Spinola. The battery had a large parapet with nine embrasures and a magazine. It was armed with seven guns, which had been taken from St. Mary's Tower and St. Paul's Bay.

The battery was built by Vincenzo Borg in February 1799, after a French force of around 30 ships was sighted close to the Maltese coast. The battery was built to prevent a French relief force from landing at St. Julian's Bay and St. George's Bay, therefore protecting other insurgent positions from the rear.[1]

The battery still existed in 1811,[2] but it was eventually demolished. Its site is now occupied by the Dragonara Palace, which was built in 1870 and is now used as a casino.[3]

References[]

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