Tal-Qadi Temple is a megalithic temple in Salina, limits of Naxxar, Malta.[1] It is in a very bad state of preservation, with only the temple's general outline still visible.

Tal-Qadi Temple
Ruins at Tal-Qadi
Tal-Qadi Temple is located in Malta
Tal-Qadi Temple
Shown within Malta
LocationSalina, Malta
Coordinates35°56′11.96″N 14°25′13.74″E / 35.9366556°N 14.4204833°E / 35.9366556; 14.4204833
TypeTemple
Part ofMegalithic Temples of Malta
History
MaterialLimestone
Foundedc.4000 BC (earliest remains)
c.3300–3000 BC (temple)
PeriodsTarxien phase
Tarxien Cemetery phase
Site notes
Excavation dates1927–1952
ArchaeologistsThemistocles Zammit
L. Upton Way
ConditionPoorly preserved ruins
OwnershipGovernment of Malta
Public accessYes

Site

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The site of Tal-Qadi was possibly in use around 4000 BC, during the Ġgantija phase of Maltese prehistory, but the temple itself was built during the Tarxien phase between 3300 and 3000 BC. The temple continued to be used during the Tarxien Cemetery phase, since pottery shards from that era have been found.

Tal-Qadi is the only temple in Malta which is orientated to the north-east. Most other temples face the south or south-east, but in the case of Tal-Qadi, this would not have been possible since there is a steep slope in that direction.[2]

Today, the temple is in poor condition, with few remains visible apart from its general outline. The remains of a central area and two apses can still be seen. The temple probably contained another two apses, giving it a four-apse shape which was typical of the late temple period. No traces of the temple's façade exist.[3]

Excavation and recent history

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The tablet at the Archeology Museum

The scattered remains of the temple, spread out on an upper and a lower field, were discovered by Henry Sant, a government civil engineer, in 1916. The area was excavated in 1927 by Themistocles Zammit and L. Upton Way. According to Zammit, years before the identification of the temple, the tenant of the site had destroyed a group of upright stones. These might have been the remains of the temple's missing façade or its outer casing.

The remains of the temple were surveyed and mapped in 1952.[4]

 
Sketch of the sky tablet of Tal-Qadi after [5]

During the early excavations, a broken globigerina limestone slab showing five sections separated by lines, and incised with star-like figures and a crescent shape in the middle was found. This slab possibly was a star map or a moon calendar. It is now located in the National Museum of Archaeology in Valletta.[6]

The following pictures explain how the sky tablet of Tal-Qadi can be used in order to measure the ecliptic latitude of the moon or the planets that always apparently move along the arc of the ecliptic:[7]

Full history

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References

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  1. ^ Zammit, V. (1997, January 12). It-tempju preistoriku tal-Qadi. Mument, pp. 9.
  2. ^ "Tal-Qadi Ancient Temple". megalithic.co.uk. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
  3. ^ "Tal-Qadi Temple" (PDF). National Inventory of the Cultural Property of the Maltese Islands. 30 March 2012. Archived from the original (PDF) on February 19, 2015. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
  4. ^ "Tal-Qadi". web.infinito.it. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
  5. ^ Stone fragment with incised rays, stars, and crescent, New York University, Institut for Studies of the Study of the Ancient World, Globigerina Limestone. H. 23.5, W. 30.0, D. 4.5 cm Tal-Qadi Temple (Malta) HM–NMA: 21314
  6. ^ Hamer, Colin James. "The Tal 'Qadi Stone in Malta's National Museum of Archaeology". beautytruegood.co.uk. Archived from the original on 15 November 2014. Retrieved 18 February 2015.
  7. ^ Markus Bautsch: The Tal-Qadi Sky Tablet, Wikibook, 2020, retrieved 10 November 2020
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