The Malta Independent 20 April 2024, Saturday
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Planning Authority schedules properties having rare 'muxrabija' feature

Wednesday, 30 November 2016, 14:51 Last update: about 8 years ago

The Planning Authority has recently scheduled, as a Grade 2 protection, 36 properties which incorporate within their facade the rare Mediterranean architectural feature consisting of a window-like element know as the Muxrabija. The respective properties are found in the localities of Balzan, Birkirkara, Lija, Marsascala, Naxxar, Qrendi, Qormi, Rabat, Siġġiewi, Żabbar, Żebbug and Żejtun, whilst in Gozo these can be found in Rabat, Għasri, Għarb and San Lawrenz.

The Muxrabija is a Mediterranean feature and its earliest records date back to the 7th century in the Middle East.  They developed around the Middle East and North Africa, mainly to cool the building interior by allowing the breeze to circulate through the trelliswork and also allow women to look onto the street without being seen. They were also used as a cooling device for water storage and as a security measure to see who was at the door or on the approaching roads.

In Maltese architecture, the earliest version of the Muxrabija, dates back to the late Middle Ages (1300-1400) and were probably introduced through cultural contacts the Islands had with the Arab world. Muxrabiji that carry a security component are most commonly found in the villages whose inhabitants lived away from the safety of Mdina and fortified cities around the harbour area. This is evident in the geographic distribution of the surviving specimen.

The Muxrabiji that are found in the Maltese Islands carry distinct characteristics, namely, that the older ones are constructed in local limestone, with more modern ones being made out of  timber; they are small in size; they often carry a crude shape and rather simplistic design, which was probably meant to render it inconspicuous adding to its surveillance potential. Muxrabiji are not an isolated feature within these scheduled properties but other period features typical of Maltese architecture are usually also found within the interior of these buildings.

In some places the Arab term Mashrabiyah also refers to balconies having equally intricately designed screens. These are found mainly in Egypt and were an important status symbol for the owners of the houses to which they were attached to.  

 

 

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