Early years The Order of Saint John was expelled from its base in
Rhodes during the
Ottoman siege of 1522. After seven years of moving from place to place in Europe, the Knights became established in 1530 when
Emperor Charles V, as King of Sicily, gave them Malta,
Gozo and the North African port of
Tripoli in perpetual fiefdom in exchange for an
annual fee of a single Maltese falcon, which they were to send on
All Souls' Day to the King's representative, the
Viceroy of Sicily. The Order settled in the town of
Birgu and made it their capital. The ancient fortress known as
Castrum Maris was rebuilt as
Fort Saint Angelo, the town's defences were strengthened, and many new buildings were constructed. The Order soon began to mint
its own coins as it settled in Malta. In 1553, Charles V offered a third possession to the Order, the city of
Mahdia in modern
Tunisia. However, the Order refused to take control of the city since the commission that was set up decided that it would be too expensive to maintain. Therefore, the emperor ordered the Viceroy of Sicily,
Juan de Vega, to destroy Mehdia to prevent Muslim occupation. De Vega burnt Mehdia, but retaliated against Malta for not accepting the city, and prohibited exportation of wheat to the island. To combat this,
Grandmaster Sengle brought the engineer Vincenzo Vogo to Malta to upgrade the mills so the population would not starve. Authors such as
Giovanni Francesco Abela claim that, following the
Battle of Verbia in 1561, the Order may have gained a puppet state in
Moldavia, which was ruled by the Malta native
Iacob Heraclid until 1563; their assessment remains disputed.
Great Siege and aftermath In 1565 Suleiman sent an invasion force of about 40,000 men to besiege the 700 knights and 8,000 soldiers and expel them from Malta and gain a new base from which to possibly launch another assault on Europe. When the Ottomans departed, the Hospitallers had but 600 men able to bear arms. The most reliable estimate puts the number of the Ottoman army at its height at some 40,000 men, of whom 15,000 eventually returned to Constantinople. The siege is portrayed vividly in the frescoes of
Matteo Perez d'Aleccio in the Hall of St. Michael and St. George, also known as the Throne Room, in the
Grandmaster's Palace in Valletta; four of the original
modellos, painted in oils by
Perez d'Aleccio between 1576 and 1581, can be found in the Cube Room of the
Queen's House at
Greenwich, London. After the siege a new city was built,
Valletta, which was named in memory of the Grand Master who had withstood the siege. It became the Order's headquarters in 1571 and remains Malta's capital city to this day. In 1574, the Roman Inquisition was established in Malta when
Pope Gregory XIII sent
Pietro Dusina as mediator between the Grandmaster and the Bishop. This inquisition replaced the old medieval inquisition in Malta that had been run by the
Bishop of Palermo. In 1581, there was a crisis between the General Convent of the Order and the Grandmaster,
Jean de la Cassière. This escalated into a mutiny in which la Cassière was confined in Fort St Angelo and the knight
Mathurin Romegas was elected Grandmaster. Pope Gregory XIII sent the envoy
Gaspare Visconti to settle the dispute, and la Cassière and Romegas were summoned to Rome to explain and plead the case. Romegas died within a week of arriving in Rome, and la Cassière was restored to his position as Grandmaster. However, he too died within a month in Rome thus ending the dispute. In January 1582,
Hugues Loubenx de Verdalle was elected Grandmaster. ==Seventeenth century==