Bengħisa Tower
35°48′42.6″N 14°32′23″E / 35.811833°N 14.53972°E / 35.811833; 14.53972Type Coastal watchtower Site history Built 1659 Built by Order of Saint John Materials Limestone Fate Demolished, 1915 Wignacourt towers Lascaris towers De Redin towers Tour–Reduits Other Hospitaller towers Privately built
Bengħisa Tower (Maltese: Torri ta' Bengħisa), originally known as Torre di Benissa[1] and also referred to as the Red Tower (Maltese: Torri l-Aħmar), was a small watchtower in Bengħisa, limits of Birżebbuġa, Malta. It was built in 1659 as the seventh of the De Redin towers, on or near the site of a medieval watch post.[2] An entrenchment was built around the tower in 1761, and it was armed with 10 guns. The tower was demolished by the British to clear the line of fire of the nearby Fort Benghisa in 1915.[3][4]
The site of the tower and the entrenchment is now occupied by oil tanks forming part of the Malta Freeport.
References
- ^ Ġrajjet Malta - It-Tielet Ktieb (in Maltese) (4 ed.). Sliema: Department of Education. 2006. p. 81.
- ^ Zammit, Vincent (1984). "Fortifications in the Middle Ages". Civilization. 1. Ħamrun: PEG Ltd: 33.
- ^ Guillaumier, Alfie (1987). Bliet u Rħula Maltin (in Maltese). Valletta: Valletta Publishing & Promotion Co. Ltd. p. 104.
- ^ Mifsud, A. (1920). "La Milizia e le Torri antiche di Malta" (PDF). Archivum Melitense (in Italian). 4 (2): 80. Archived from the original (PDF) on 26 March 2017.
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Historic watch towers of Malta
Associated with the Order of Saint John
^ Demolished/destroyed
1 Builder unknown or uncertain
1 Builder unknown or uncertain
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