Difference between revisions of "Teatru Manoel [Valletta] (Q8290)"

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Theatre building in Valletta, Malta, opened in 1731

(‎Created claim: Preservation state (P233): Used as theatre today (Q25456), #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1754926593236)
(‎Added qualifier: Source (P63): CARTHALIA (Q495), #quickstatements; #temporary_batch_1757591661939)
 
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Property / Note
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Built 1731-1732 within 10 months by Francesco Zerafa and Antonio Azzopardi for the Grand Master of the Maltese Order, Fra Antonio Manoel de Vilhena. Opened 19 Jan 1732 with Scipione Maffei's drama La Merope. Later also known as Teatro reale. Restorations in 1812, 1844, and 1960. (English)
Property / Note: Built 1731-1732 within 10 months by Francesco Zerafa and Antonio Azzopardi for the Grand Master of the Maltese Order, Fra Antonio Manoel de Vilhena. Opened 19 Jan 1732 with Scipione Maffei's drama La Merope. Later also known as Teatro reale. Restorations in 1812, 1844, and 1960. (English) / rank
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Normal rank
Property / Note: Built 1731-1732 within 10 months by Francesco Zerafa and Antonio Azzopardi for the Grand Master of the Maltese Order, Fra Antonio Manoel de Vilhena. Opened 19 Jan 1732 with Scipione Maffei's drama La Merope. Later also known as Teatro reale. Restorations in 1812, 1844, and 1960. (English) / qualifier
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Latest revision as of 12:40, 11 September 2025

Theatre building in Valletta, Malta, opened in 1731
  • Teatru Manoel
Language Label Description Also known as
English
Teatru Manoel [Valletta]
Theatre building in Valletta, Malta, opened in 1731
  • Teatru Manoel

Statements

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35°53'59.377"N, 14°30'46.156"E
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Built 1731-1732 within 10 months by Francesco Zerafa and Antonio Azzopardi for the Grand Master of the Maltese Order, Fra Antonio Manoel de Vilhena. Opened 19 Jan 1732 with Scipione Maffei's drama La Merope. Later also known as Teatro reale. Restorations in 1812, 1844, and 1960. (English)
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No heritage stage machinery contact Perspectiv: Elizabeth Ebejer, CEO (English)
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An eighteenth-century playhouse built by the Grand Master Antonio de Vilhena in 1731. It opened a year later with a performance of Maffei's Merope, and flourished for a century or more with a nine-month season of mixed opera and plays. Renamed the Royal Theatre by the British occupying powers, it continued pre-eminent until the building of the much larger Opera House, after which it sank into disrepair. In the 1953 steps were taken to restore it. It was bought by the Maltese Government, and in 1957 a committee was set up to rebuild and modernize it backstage while retaining the historic auditorium and facade. On 27 Dec. 1960 it reopened as the National Theatre of Malta with a season by the Ballet Rambert. (English)
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1731
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HST_0082
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yes
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1732
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623
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115 Triq it-Teatru l-Antik
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Timeline

 

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