An exhibition in the Netherlands showcasing several artefacts from Malta’s rich prehistoric period has been highly successful, attracting more than 75,000 visitors until the end of its run.
The exhibition – ‘Temples of Malta’ – was held between the end of May and the end of October at the National Museum of Antiquities of the Netherlands – the Rijksmuseum van Oudheden in the city of Leiden. Thanks to this exhibition, the museum witnessed one of its best periods in the last ten years with regard to admissions.
Heritage Malta transported over 90 artefacts and six temple models for the ‘Temples of Malta’ exhibition, offering an excellent cross-section of the Maltese Neolithic period, which dates back to 5900 – 2500 BC. The display included temple decorations, tools, decorated pottery and statuettes. A two-centimetre-high statuette found at Tarxien Temples, representing two figures in a loving embrace, was also part of this collection.
This exhibition was just one of the outcomes of a memorandum of understanding between Heritage Malta and the Rijksmuseum van Oudheden. Visitors of the Dutch museum had already been given an anticipatory foretaste of Malta’s prehistory through another exhibition born out of this collaboration. The first exhibition, featuring photographs of Maltese megalithic temples, was held between October 2020 and March 2021.
“The excellent feedback to this exhibition is a clear indication that our national heritage attracts many Dutch people and will pave the way for more Dutch cultural tourists, who in turn are living proof that the national cultural patrimony is an important asset for our country and a pillar for our economy. Such collaborations boost relations between Malta and the Netherlands, and between Heritage Malta and foreign museums, both in the Netherlands and beyond,” said Noel Zammit, Heritage Malta’s CEO.