Description
Table of Contents: The delimitation of boundaries between Church and State in late nineteenth and early twentieth-century Malta; Riding through the procession: conflict between British soldiers and sailors and subaltern communities in late nineteenth- and early twentieth-century Malta; The venial sins of the common people. Petty offences and other misdemeanours on Gozo in the late nineteenth century (1889-1891); Noise, smell and other nuisances: Valletta c.1880s – c.1930; ‘Our English visitors’ – Some British women in Malta during the nineteenth century; Shylock walked in before Capulet.’ The assault on the status of the Maltese nobility during the late nineteenth century; and an example of the heterogeneity of voices in colonial rule; The discourse on the problem of begging and almsgiving in late nineteenth century Malta; Sacrifice in a Roman Catholic Church; Malta connections: The Austro-Hungarian Empire (1830s-1914)