Melita in the Bible Encyclopedia - ISBE
mel'-i-ta (Melite, Acts 28:1): Is now generally identified
with Malta. The former error in attributing the reference to
the island of Meleda on the East coast of the Adriatic Sea
was due to the ancient practice of employing the term Adria
to include the Ionian and Sicilian seas.
Malta is the largest of a group of islands including Gozo
and the islets Comino, Cominotto and Filfla, lying about 56
miles from the southern extremity of Sicily, 174 from the
mainland of Italy, and 187 from the African coast. Malta
itself is 17 1/2 miles long and 9 1/4 broad, and contains an
area of 95 square miles. Its modern capital, Valetta, is
situated in 35 degrees 54' North latitude and 14 degrees 31'
East longitude.
The central position of Malta in the Mediterranean Sea gave
it great importance as a naval station. It was probably at
first a Phoenician colony, and later passed under the
influence, if not domination, of the Sicilian Greeks. But
the Romans captured it from the Carthaginians in 218 BC
(Livy xxi.51) and attached it definitely to the province of
Sicily. Under Roman rule the inhabitants were famous for
their industry, especially in the production of textile
fabrics, probably of native cotton. The celebrated vestis
melitensis was a fine and soft material for dresses and for
the covering of couches (Cicero Verr. ii.72,176; ii.74,183;
iv.46,103; Diodorus v.12,22). At the time when Paul visited
the island it would seem that the administration was
entrusted to a deputy of the proprietor of Sicily, who is
referred to as protos Melitaion (Acts 28:7; CIG, 5754), or
Melitensium primus omnium (CIL, x, 7495) (see PUBLIUS). A
bay 2 1/2 miles Northwest of Valetta, the mouth of which is
held by tradition to be the place where the vessel that bore
Paul ran ashore, tallies admirably with the description of
the locality in Acts. The Admiralty charts indicate places
near the west side of the entrance to the bay, where the
depth is first 20 ft. and then 15 ft., while the rush of the
breakers in front of the little island of Salmoneta and
behind it suit the reference to a place "where two seas met"
(Acts 27:41). The inlet is called the Bay of Paul. The
topographical question has been exhaustively treated by
Ramsay in Paul the Traveler.
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