| Visiting
Information: |
The cemetery stays
open Monday to Friday until dusk, and on weekends and public holidays
08.30 to dusk, but is only staffed at the following times: April - June
06.30 - 16.30 July - September 06.30 - 13.00 October - March 07.00 -
16.00 (except Wednesdays 07.00 - 13.00) NOTE: The earth is shallow on
Malta and during both wars, many joint or collective burials were made
as graves had to be cut into the underlying rock.
During the Second World War, such work
was particularly hazardous because of air raids. Most of these graves
are marked by recumbent markers on which several inscriptions could be
carved, and for the sake of uniformity, the same type of marker was used
for single graves.
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| Historical
Information: |
From
the spring of 1915, the hospitals and convalescent depots established on
the islands of Malta and Gozo dealt with over 135,000 sick and wounded,
chiefly from the campaigns in Gallipoli and Salonika, although increased
submarine activity in the Mediterranean meant that fewer hospital ships
were sent to the island from May 1917.
During the Second World War, Malta's
position in the Mediterranean was of enormous Allied strategic
importance. Heavily fortified, the island was never invaded, but was
subjected to continual bombardment and blockade between Italy's entry
into the war in June 1940 and the Axis defeat at El Alamein in November
1942. At the height of Axis attempts to break Malta's resistance in
April 1942, the island and her people were awarded the George Cross by
King George VI. Malta's defence relied upon a combined operation in
which the contributions made by the three branches of the armed forces
and Merchant Navy were equally crucial.
Although heavily pressed in defence,
offensive raids launched from the island by air and sea had a crippling
effect on the Axis lines of communication with North Africa, and played
a vital part in the eventual Allied success there. Malta (Capuccini)
Naval Cemetery, which once belonged to the Admiralty, is divided into
two sections, Protestant and Roman Catholic. Most of the 351
Commonwealth burials of the First World War form a triangular plot in
the Protestant section, the rest are scattered elsewhere.
Among those buried in the cemetery are
44 men from HMS "Egmont", the Depot ship at Malta, and 22 who
died when HMS "Russell" was sunk by a mine off Malta in April
1916. Most of the 694 Commonwealth burials of the Second World War are
also in the Protestant section in a plot near the entrance, but there is
another group in the Roman Catholic section. The rest are scattered. The
Commission also cares for 1,445 non-war burials in the cemetery, and 137
war graves of other nationalities.
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