On a desolate spot, bleak, windswept and rocky, sits Hagar Qim on the west coast of Malta overlooking the island of Filfa - standing out gracefully about 4.8 kilometres away. Birdsong and the perfume of wildflowers permeate the air. Hagar Qim’s huge slabs display the giant hopes, ambitions, needs, fears, or religious beliefs that drove Neolithithe peoples to build it. Their task completed, they disappeared without trace.
Giant limestone slabs form a series of ovals laid out in a pattern that archaeologists have compared to Mother Goddess figurines found at Hagar Qim in 1839. These obese stone statuettes on display in Valletta Museum stood in the central court. Their heads changeable to fit the occasion have the features of reposing supernatural beings expecting devotion and worship. The central court also contained a stone altar with deep carving on each of the four sides representing plants, and a stone slab with spirals in relief. What could be idols, sacrificial altars and oracular chambers certainly makes it a temple of some kind.
Hagar Qim and the other Neolithic temples on Malta date from the Copper Age. Around then megalithics were appearing in various parts of the world. At the time society was changing to settled-farming and food supplies became more dependable on sunshine. Stonehenge in England through an alignment of stones showed when the winter solstice (not the summer solstice) had arrived and the sun would start rising again. Hagar Qim may have served the same purpose with the obese stone statuettes representing the sun and the changeable heads the seasons. A stone altar with deep carving of plants and a stone slab with spirals in relief possibly representing the sun or its phases together with carved animals adornments link the temple to agriculture – such is my theory!
The building methods are more easily understood. Flint or bone tools could prise up limestone stone flakes at the site of Hagar Qim. The builders after smoothing and squared the giant slabs laid them with consummate skill. The limestone slabs would have eroded badly had not a mound of earth, from which only the tops of the big stones protruded, protected them.
The Mnajdra temples are a few hundred meters closer to the Dingli Cliffs. Made up of two main temples they form the best-preserved temple site on Malta – but the sea is creeping closer! They sit on a heavy hard stone of bluish corcalline limestone - used partially for the construction. Softer larger slabs rubbed smooth and decorated originate from the near Hagar Qim site.
Some of the niches have decorations. Monolithic doors lead to the ‘oracle chambers’, and the columns of the doors of the central aisle support lintels of impressive dimensions. The main portal is nearly ten feet high.
You would think from inspecting these sites that giants walked the land and built the temples, but puny humans with ingenuity can achieve giant feats.