<!--'''{{Rabat}}''' is a town in Malta.-->

Understand

Rabat means suburb in old Arabic and this is indeed because Rabat is the town lying outside the citadel of Mdina. The two towns used to be a single one until the Arabs dug a moat across the hill and fortified its tip creating Mdina. Rabat had walls of its own in Roman times but this can only be seen today in parts of the streetpattern.

Get in

There are several buslines going to Rabat, from the main busterminal in Valletta it should take about 35 mins. If it's an old bus be prepared for a bumpy ride. 80 Valletta-Rabat, 81 Valletta-Dingli (through Rabat), 84 Valletta-Mtarga (through Rabat)

Rabat is also only a short walk from Mdina - through regular city streets with plenty of quaint buildings and homes. Simply exit the old capital's fortress walls and keep walking; soon enough, you'll be in Rabat.

Get around

All the sights are within minutes walking distance of the busdepot located between Rabat and Mdina.

See

  • '''St. Pauls' church''' with '''St. Paul's grotto''', where the saint apparently lived after being shipwrecked on his way to being put on trial in Rome. Pope John Paul II visited this place of pilgrimage in 1990. One can take the underground passage from here to the Wignacourt Museum.
  • '''The Roman Museum''' which houses the remains of a Roman villa. It lies in between Rabat and Mdina. This rebuilt Roman villa features mosaics and sculpture from the original house excavated on the site, along with artifacts and displays relating the the Roman, Byzantine and Arab periods, from the 3rd century B.C. through the 10th century A.D.
  • '''The catacombs of St. Paul and St. Agatha''', these are early Christian underground cemeteries, particularly the latter is very interesting to visit despite the grumpy tourguide.
  • '''The Wignacourt museum'''[http://www.wignacourtmuseum.com], this was formerly Grand Master Wignacourt's palace, and is now a dusty but charming old-style museum. It now houses a mediocre local art collection on the ground floor and a slightly random collection of historic furniture and paintings upstairs. Do see the painting of Mary proferring her bared breast to her child with a strangely lascivicious look on her face. Also do visit the cellars of the museum which connect to another set of ancient catacombs, these have not been 'streamlined' for tourism like the other catacombs which make them particularly interesting.
  • Do

    Buy

    Eat

    Drink

    Sleep

    Get out

    To the south one can visit the Buskett gardens which is without a doubt the greenest place on Malta, the Inquisitor's palace and the quiet clifftop village of Dingli.