Pietà, Malta

Pietà (Maltese: Tal-Pietà) is a small town in the Central Region of Malta, located near the outskirts of the capital city Valletta. Pietà is the suburb next-closest to the capital after Floriana. Its name is derived from Italian and signifies "Mercy."

Pietà

Tal-Pietà
Pietà skyline with St. Luke's Hospital
Flag
Coat of arms
Coordinates: 35°53′35″N 14°29′37″E
Country Malta
RegionCentral Region
DistrictNorthern Harbour District
BordersFloriana, Ħamrun, Msida
Government
  MayorKeith Tanti (PL)
Area
  Total0.5 km2 (0.2 sq mi)
Population
 (Jan. 2019)
  Total4,892
  Density9,800/km2 (25,000/sq mi)
Demonym(s)Pjetaniż (m), Pjetaniża (f), Pjetaniżi (pl)
Time zoneUTC+1 (CET)
  Summer (DST)UTC+2 (CEST)
Postal code
PTA
Dialing code356
ISO 3166 codeMT-41
Patron saintOur Lady of Fatima
Day of festaBetween last week of May and first Sunday of June
WebsiteOfficial website

Description

The Pietà creek in 1856-1859
Pietà waterfront by Richard Ellis (1842-1924)

Malta's former national hospital, St. Luke's, is located in Tal-Pietà. Tal-Pietà is a coastal town, and an old boathouse of notable historic interest (now in use as a restaurant) is located on the waterfront. Also of historic interest, and visible in several old prints, is the little chapel of Our Lady of Sorrows, which dates from the seventeenth century, still in active use today.

A couple of streets nearby bear the names of St. Augustine and his mother, St. Monica. Tal-Pietà was a departure point for the Gozo ferry before the construction of a yacht marina. The patrol boat depot of the Armed Forces of Malta is located at the Hay Wharf in nearby Floriana. Also within the boundaries of Pietà are St. Ursula's Orphanage; PBS, the national broadcaster; Villa Guardamangia, which served as the residence of then Princess Elizabeth of Great Britain (later Queen Elizabeth II), when she lived in Malta between 1949 and 1951; the Ta' Braxia Cemetery Complex is a Commonwealth War Graves Commission site and where many World War I garrison veterans from the British army and navy are buried; and the headquarters of the Nationalist Party. The party built its base here in 1969. Tal-Pietà is regarded as a suburb of Ħamrun, Msida, Floriana and Valletta. Most of its resident population over the past 30 years hails from this area.

The population of Pietà was 3,853 in November 2005, which had been an increase over previous years due to a new housing estate and the redevelopment of old homes over the past thirty years. In March 2014 the population stood at 4,020.[1]

A large number of Maltese citizens have Tal-Pietà as their place of birth, because many women give birth at St. Luke's Hospital. Tal-Pietà is not, however, considered by the Maltese born there to be their home town, that being considered instead the town or city they first lived in.[2]

Education

Administration

The current Pietà local council members are:

  • Keith Tanti (Mayor, PL)
  • Josephine Fabri (Deputy Mayor, PL)
  • Anthony Camilleri (PL)
  • Josef Fitzpatrick (PN)
  • Annhelica Agius (PN)
  • Simon Cauchi (Executive Secretary)

Locations within Pietà

Zones in Tal-Pietà

Tal-Pietà Main Roads

  • Misraħ San Luqa (St Luke's Square)
  • Misraħ il-Madonna ta' Fátima (Our Lady of Fátima Square)
  • Telghet Gwardamanġa (Gwardamanġa Hill)
  • Triq ix-Xatt (Marina Street)
  • Triq il-Mimosa (Mimosa Street)
  • Triq San Luqa (St Luke's Road)
  • Triq Santa Monika (St Monica Street)
  • Triq San Guzepp (St. Joseph Street)
  • Triq id-Duluri (Our Lady of Sorrows Street)
  • Triq Zammit Clapp (Zammit Clapp Street)
  • Triq Hookham Frere (Hookham Frere Street)
  • Triq San Girgor (St Gregory Street)
  • Triq is-Sorijiet tal-Ursolini (Ursoline Sisters Street)
  • Sqaq Borton (Borton Lane)
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gollark: https://rootsofprogress.org/devanney-on-the-nuclear-flop
gollark: Indeed. We could just not do bad things and it would be fine.
gollark: The political system being as it is does not help.
gollark: People are predisposed to pay more attention to obvious immediate problems than abstract ones.

References

  1. "Estimated Population by Locality 31st March, 2014". Government of Malta. 16 May 2014. Archived from the original on 21 June 2015.
  2. "Pieta in Malta". My Guide Malta. Retrieved 29 February 2020.
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