Anton Buttigieg - Il-Qala, Gozo, Malta
Posted by: Groundspeak Premium Member dtrebilc
N 36° 02.084 E 014° 18.583
33S E 437812 N 3988021
This life size bust of Anton Buttigieg, former president of Malta, stands at a road junction in his home town of Qala on the Maltese island of Gozo.
Waymark Code: WMYNRF
Location: Malta
Date Posted: 07/04/2018
Published By:Groundspeak Premium Member iconions
Views: 1


The statue is made of bronze and is a life size head and shoulders bust standing on a stone plinth.

It shows Anton Buttigieg in a suit with a shirt and tie and unusually for a statue he is wearing glasses.

"Anton Buttigieg KUOM (Maltese: Anton Buttigieg; 19 February 1912 – 5 May 1983) was a Maltese political figure and poet. He served as the second President of Malta from 1976 until 1981.

Anton Buttigieg was born in Qala, Gozo, on 19 February 1912, the third child of Salvatore and Concetta (née Falzon) Buttigieg. He was educated at the Government Primary School, Qala (from 1916 to 1922), the Gozo Seminary (from 1923 to 1927), St Aloysius' College Malta (from 1928 to 1930) and the University of Malta, where he graduated Bachelor of Arts in 1934, and Doctor of Laws in 1940.

In 1944 he married Censina and had three children – John, Rose and Emanuel . She then died. In 1953 he married Connie Scicluna, who also predeceased him. In 1975, he married, lastly, to Margery Patterson.

During World War II (1942–1944) he served in the Police Force as Inspector and after he practised the Law. In 1955 he also served as an acting Magistrate. He was the Law reporter and leader writer of the Times of Malta from 1946 to 1948 and the Editor of The Voice of Malta from 1959 to 1970.

He embarked on a political career and was first elected to the House of Representatives of Malta for the Labour Party in 1955. He was re-elected in all subsequent elections and held his seat in Parliament up to the time of his resignation in October 1976. From 1959 to 1961 he was President of the Malta Labour Party and from 1962 to 1976 its Deputy Leader. When the present administration took office in 1971, he served his country as Deputy Prime Minister and Minister of Justice and Parliamentary Affairs.

He was a delegate to the Malta Constitutional Conferences held in London in 1958 and in 1964. He was also a representative to the Consultative Assembly in the Council of Europe (1967–1971), where he was elected Vice-President (1967–1968). In October 1976 he resigned from the House of Representatives.

On December 27, 1976 he was elected as the second President of Malta.

Buttigieg also distinguished himself in the field of literature. During his undergraduate days he was one of the founder members of the 'Ghaqda tal-Malti – Università' (26 January 1931). He was a Member of the L-Akkademja tal-Malti (Academy of the Maltese Language).

In 1971 he won First Prize for Poetry by the Maltese government
In 1972 he won the Guzé Muscat Azzopardi prize for poetry
In 1975 the Circolo Culturale Rhegium Julii of Reggio Calabria awarded him with a silver plaque for his poetry
In 1977 he won the International Prize of Mediterranean Culture for Poetry, awarded by the Centro di Cultura Mediterranea of Palermo
In 1979 he was awarded First Prize and a Special Diploma for Poetry in the First Category by the Centro Culturale Artistico Letterario – Città di Brindisi
In 1979 he won the Malta Literary Award's 1st prize for the first volume of his auto-biography Toni tal-Bahri (Toni, the Seaman's Son, published 1978)" link

There is the following inscription on the statue's plinth.
ANTON
BUTTIGIEG

1912 - 1983


PRESIDENT TA' MALTA

U POETA
URL of the statue: Not listed

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