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Prehistory (5200 - 800 B.C.)
5200 Neolithic settlers arrive on Malta and Gozo, probably by sea from Sicily. The first temples are built – Ghar Dalam phase.
3600 Megalithic temples constructed.
2000 Invasion of Bronze-using people.

Phoenicians and Carthaginian (800 – 218 B.C.)
800 The Phoenicians, merchants from the eastern Mediterranean, settle on the islands using the safe harbour as a trading post.
550 Cathage, originally a Phoenician colony, conquers Malta and controls sea routed in the Western Mediterranean.

Roman Period (218 B.C. – 318 A.D.)
218 B.C. The islands become part of the Roman Empire during the Second Punic War, and the Romans build their capital where Mdina stands today.
60 A.D. Shipwreck of St. Paul the Apostle who converts populace.

Byzantine and Arab Periods (318 - 1090)
395 Byzantine rule.
870 The Maltese Islands are conquered by the Aghlabid Caliphs. The Arabic language is adopted along with the Islamic region.

The Medieval Period (1090 – 1530)
1090 Count Roger the Norman,  takes Malta and imposed taxes but leaves Arab rulers
1127 Roger II, son of Count Roger, establishes Norman rule and makes Malta part of the Kingdom of Sicily.  Christianity returns.
1194 Malta comes under rule of Swabia (Germany) when the Queen of Sicily marries the Duke of Swabia.
1224 Final expulsion of Arabs from Sicily and Malta.
1266 Charles of Anjou, brother of Louis IX, conquers Kingdom of Naples and Sicily. Malta is now under Angevins (French) rule.
1283 Aragonese rule.
1397 Establishment of the Universita' (body of administration and non academic institution).
1412 Affiliation of the Houses of Castile and Aragon means that Sicily and Malta now form part of the new Spanish Empire.

The Knights of St. John (1530 - 1798)
1530 The islands of Malta are given to the Order of St John as their new base by Emperor Charles V (king Charles I of Spain). The Knights make Vittoriosa (then known as Birgu) their base.
1551 Dragut, prominent Turkish corsair, raids Gozo.
1561 Inquisition officially established.
1565 The Great Siege: For three months Suleiman the Magnificent's Ottoman fleet lays siege on Malta but the Knights helped by the Maltese resist and win.
1566 Founding of Valletta, the new capital city named after Grand Master La Valette, hero of the Great Siege.
1768 Jesuits expelled and property transferred to the Knights by Papal Order.
1775 Uprising of the priests brutally repressed.
1784 Creation of a legal code by Grand Master De Rohan.
1792 Possessions of the Knights of St. John located in France seized by the French revolutionary government.

The French Occupation (1798 - 1800)
1798 A French army under Napoleon Bonaparte invaded the Maltese Islands on its way to Egypt. The Knights are forced out, bearing only holy relics and personal possessions.
1798 The Maltese revolt against the French when these confiscate property belonging to the Maltese Church. The French take refuge behind the walls of Valletta and Cottonera and a two-year siege begins.
1799 Dun Mikiel Xerri and other Maltese executed by the French after a failed plot to storm the Valletta walls. The British take the islands under their protection in the name of the King of Two Sicilies.

The British Period (1800 - 1964)
1800 The French surrender. British rule begins.
1802 Treaty of Amiens. The Napoleonic Wars resume because of Malta.
1814 Malta is formally recognised as a British colony and becomes an important British naval base.
1835 First Council of Government under British rule.
1849 Council of Government with elected members under British rule.
1887 Council of Government with "dual control" under British rule.
1903 Return to the 1849 form of Council of Government under British rule.
1914-18 World War I; Malta is not directly involved in the fighting but becomes known as the "Nurse of the Mediterranean".
1919 Sette Giugno.  Riots sparked by British pricing policies on imported grain. National Assembly convened.   Self-government granted under British rule.
1921 Britain grants Malta its own constitution and partial self-government.
1930-39 Turbulent period of intermittent self government.
1939-45 Malta suffers severe aerial bombardment during World War II. For months the island is cut off from supply lines, causing severe famine.
1942 Award of the George Cross to the people of Malta to honour their bravery. Operation Pedestal Convoy arrives in Grand Harbour and saves Malta from starvation and surrender.
1943 Pres. Franklin D. Roosevelt, Winston Churchill and King George VI visit Malta.  Invasion of Sicily from Malta. Italy surrenders on the 8th of September and the Italian Fleet comes to Malta.
1947 Self-government restored under British rule.
1956 Referendum on Integration with Britain.

Independent Malta (1964 to the Present)
1964 Referendum on Independence Constitution. Malta granted independence, becoming a sovereign nation within the British Commonwealth.
1974 Malta becomes a Republic, remaining in the Commonwealth.
1979 Military base agreement terminated. British forces leave.
1990 Government formally applies for full membership in the European Community.
2004 Having held a referendum, Malta becomes a full member of the European Union.