La Valette is well known for being the Grandmaster who won the Great Siege and founded Valletta. A street in the town of
Naxxar as well as the flagship of
Virtu Ferries are both named after him. La Valette was also featured on Maltese
stamps, coins, banknotes and telecards a number of times.
Jean de Valette Square In 2012, a square was inaugurated in Valletta named Pjazza Jean de La Valette which also features a statue of the Grandmaster. The statue is 2.5m high and was cast in bronze by the local sculptor Joseph Chetcuti. In the statue, La Valette is shown in armour and holding Valletta's plan in one hand and a sword in the other. For many years, the widely accepted version of the Grandmaster's surname was
de La Valette. However, during the unveiling of the statue at Pjazza Jean de Valette in November 2012, judge and historian
Giovanni Bonello stated that the Grandmaster always signed his name as
de Valette without the
La. A week later, Désireé von la Valette Saint Georges, a descendant of the Grandmaster, stated that the family name was
de la Valette not
de Valette and since then, a dispute has started as to what his name actually was. Members of the various branches of the Valette family actually used both versions at the time, but the Grandmaster himself never used the
La. In fact, all 138 coins and 19 medals minted by the Order during de Valette's reign show the names
de Valette,
de Valetta or just
Valette. Bonello additionally stated that the
La possibly originated since the city of Valletta was commonly called
La Valletta, so people started including the
La and sometimes the double
l in the Grandmaster's name. When de Vallette was around 45 years old and already in Malta, Francis I, seeing the wide linguistic disparity in the use of various Romance and Germanic languages in France, enacted the
Ordinance of Villers-Cotterêts which prescribed the use of standard French, mostly as spoken in northern France and in the Paris area where the ''langues d'oui'' prevailed. The name
de Valette is now used in Malta, although many still refer to him as
de La Valette due to the collective memory. The Order's successor, the
Sovereign Military Order of Malta, call the Grandmaster ''Fra' Jean de La Vallette-Parisot''. ==In literature==