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Skorba,
like its neighbour Ta’ Hagrat, is on the small
side and has not survived the passage of time particularly
well. However, it is one of the few to have been excavated
using modern methods. The site was identified by Themistocles
Zammit in 1914 and partially cleared by his son Charles
in 1937 but proper excavations did not take place until
Donald Trump began work there in the early 1960’s.
It proved to have been occupied throughout the Neolithic
Period, from the Ghar Dalam phase right through to the
Bronze Age. Prior to the Temple Period it was the site
of a small village (discussed in the section Before
the Temples) and the foundations of the
temple cut through these deposits.
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There are two adjacent temples on the site—a trefoil
building, Skorba West, belonging to the Ggantija Phase
(c. 3600-3200 BC) and a four-apse temple, Skorba East,
from the Tarxien Phase (c. 3150-2500 BC). The older
one was in a little better shape than its neighbour—much
of the back half is still standing at any rate. A paved
entrance passage, pierced by five ‘libation’
holes led into a central court with a torba floor. Only
a single upright of the original trilithon doorway still
survives. The back walls of the outer apses have survived
reasonably well, however, along with a pair of large
monoliths to either side of the entrance to the terminal
apse.
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Skorba
West. View from the south |
Skorba
West. Libation holes |
During
the initial phase of the temple there were a pair of
standing blocks with pitted decoration but during the
Tarxien Phase these were taken down and re-laid as a
step to the right-hand apse. As part of the remodelling
of the temple that took place at this time, two trilithon
altars were set up in the apse and a porthole doorway
was installed to screen off the space. The left-hand
apse was provided with a step but no screen. The central
apse, on the other hand, was completely walled off apart
from a central doorway, which was flanked by altars—one
pair outside and one pair inside the room.
Skorba
West. Entrance (with surviving monolith) looking towards
the central apse
At some point during the Tarxien Phase, perhaps at the
same time as the other modifications, part of the eastern
side of the building was demolished to make way for
Skorba East. Unfortunately, this four-apse temple was
all but levelled and only the outline of the building
and the altar at the rear are visible today. A deposit
of debris about 15cm thick was found on the floors of
the temple, including the charcoal remains of the roof,
which had burned and collapsed into the rooms.
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