A weekend in Malta
Colorful fishing boats in Marsaxlokk harbor.
(Christopher Groenhout / Getty Images/Lonely Planet Image)This is a view from the Palace in Sliema over Matla’s capital, Valletta, with a church in the foreground.
(www.christophefaugere.com / Getty Images)The Valletta skyline with St. Paul’s Anglican Cathedral and Carmelite Church as seen from Sliema.
(Sylvain Sonnet / Getty Images)Typical Maltese boats moored in the fishermen village Marsaxlokk on Malta.
(Markus Gebauer Photography / Getty Images)Passengers on small boats visit the natural rock formations of Blue Grotto on the southeast coast of Malta.
(Barry Winiker / Getty Images)Valletta, a UNESCO World Heritage site, features narrow streets lined with colorful balconies.
(Freeartist / Getty Images/iStockphoto)A crystal lagoon at Comino, a small island in the Maltese archipelago.
(danilovi / Getty Images)A water fountain in Upper Barrakka Gardens in Valletta.
(Geography Photos / UIG via Getty Images)People walk past the Renzo Piano-designed Parliament House on Freedom Square in Valletta.
(Martin Child / Getty Images/Robert Harding World Images)Children play around a red phone box in Valletta. Malta had been ruled by a number of other powers over the millenniums until it gained its independence from the last, the United Kingdom, in 1964. It remains a member of the Commonwealth.
(Dan Kitwood / Getty Images)The Blue Grotto on Malta.
(LatitudeStock - Nick Holt / Getty Images/Gallo Images)Mdina, home to the Baroque St. Paul’s Cathedral, was likely founded in the early Middle Ages.
(Michael Melford / Getty Images)