Entrance fees to the Inquisitor’s Palace in Vittoriosa are being reduced on Sunday, Heritage Malta said.
It said this was being done to give those visiting the city for the feast of St Dominic between 7 and 11 p.m. the opportunity to tour the Palace and learn more about its significance in Maltese history.
The Inquisitor’s Palace is one of the very few surviving examples of a style of palace that would have been found all over Europe and South America in the early modern period.
Mgr Pietro Dusina arrived in Malta in 1574 as the first general inquisitor and apostolic delegate of the Maltese Islands. The Grand Master offered him the unused palace as an official residence. Almost all successive inquisitors sought to transform the palace into a decent mansion.
They all shared the same cultural values of clerical baroque Roman society, and by the mid-18th century they had managed successfully to transform the building into a typical Roman palace.
Tickets, at €2 for people over 12, can be bought at the door.