{"id":943,"date":"2024-08-02T07:28:12","date_gmt":"2024-08-02T07:28:12","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/zebbugheritagetrail.com\/the-parish-church-of-the-assumption\/"},"modified":"2025-04-26T09:55:22","modified_gmt":"2025-04-26T09:55:22","slug":"the-parish-church-of-the-assumption","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/zebbugheritagetrail.com\/en\/the-parish-church-of-the-assumption\/","title":{"rendered":"The Parish Church of the Assumption"},"content":{"rendered":"\n<p><strong>Early references to the church<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The church of the Assumption \u2013 originally a small chapel &#8211; is first<br>recorded in a 1540 document which states that Joanne Peribon,<br>widow of James, bequeathed a sheep to this church. The church was<br>subsequently enlarged in 1644 having been profaned in 1637. It seems<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>that it was reopened in 1667, when a priest\u2019s service is documented in<br>this church. Early references to the church, referred to as Santa Marija<br>Ta Zebbug are found in various documents including a 1639 one<br>referring to the marriage of Paschal Farrugia and Catherine Aquilina.<br>Moreover, the church is documented in the pastoral visit of Bishop<br>Luke Bonus. The report mentions that the church had a sanctuary lamp<br>and a belfry above the main door. The church had three doors, the<br>main door looking towards the south, another looking towards the<br>west and another one facing east. After \u017bebbu\u0121 was declared as a<br>parish by Bishop Davide Cocco Palmieri \u2013 through the decree entitled<br>Cum in Prima &#8211; the first parish priest of \u017bebbu\u0121 and one of its key<br>benefactors, Rev. Francesco Vella (1662-1743), built a bigger church<br>that included the original chapel. The old chapel was still integrated<br>within the fabric of the church till 1936 when it was dismantled in<br>order to make way for the new western transept that was built. The<br>latter transformed the 18th century plan into a latin cross. The original<br>church was therefore smaller than the present one, without the<br>present choir and transepts and the current barrel vault.<br>Work on the old church started in 1692 and works were completed by<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>1719. Gozitan Michael Agius made the design. So what remains of the<br>old church built by Rev. Francesco Vella? The church fa\u00e7ade, albeit<br>remodelled in the first decades of the 20th century, together with the<br>northern and southern wall and the side chapels are original parts of<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>the old church. The statue of our Lady in the niche on top of the<br>current fa\u00e7ade and the stone scallop re-integrated behind it are parts<br>of the old church too. According to a correspondence between Rev.<br>Vella and the Bishop\u2019s Curia in Malta, the expenses of the building of<br>the new church amounted to 3,100 skudi. The church was consecrated<br>by Bishop Paul Alpheran de Bussan in 30th September 1736. It was the<br>second church, after the Matrix Church in Rabat and has been hailed<br>by De Soldanis for its riches and imposing architecture. This comes to<br>a surprise as an 18th century document signed by a certain man named<br>Caxaro, describes the population of \u017bebbu\u0121 as very poor.<br>In 1861 Bishop Caietanus Pace Forno O.S.A. consecrated two bells, one<br>named after the Assumption of the Virgin and one after himself.<br>The old church was first enlarged in the first decades of the 20th<br>century when the Baroque portico was closed and its space added to<br>the church\u2019s interior. However the biggest enlargement of the church<br>took place between 1936 and 1942.<br>Among the works hanging in the church one finds (clockwise on<br>entering the main door from the left hand side: The Holy Family by<br>Vincenzo Monti (1852-1942) and upon the northern entrance, the<br>huge 18th century canvas representing The Circumcision of Christ by<br>unknown artist. A thorough restoration of this canvas is needed for a<br>better appreciation of this work. In the chapel dedicated to the Holy<br>Spirit, one finds the altar painting representing Pentecost by Robert<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Caruana Dingli (1882-1940). Moving into the northern transept one<br>finds the canvases representing St Peter and St Andrew, both by<br>renowned Maltese artist Emvin Cremona (1919-1987). These flank the<br>huge and monumental altarpiece representing The Crucifixion of Christ<br>by the great Maltese artist Giuseppe Cali (1846-1930). As can be seen<br>in the inscription on the right bottom corner of the canvas, this work<br>was commissioned by the great Maltese philanthropist Vincenzo<br>Bugeja. Underneath this work one finds the 18th century sotto quadro<br>representing The Virgin of Sorrows.<br><br><br>In the chapel of the Immaculate Conception one finds the 17th century<br>canvas representing The Immaculate Conception, originally known as<br>St Mary of Virtues. While its artist is unknown, originally this canvas<br>was the titular painting of the chapel of St. Mary. This painting has<br>always been of great devotional importance for the \u017bebbu\u0121<br>community. Several legends are ascribed to it including ones related<br>to the intercession of the Virgin in tumultuous times. Legend has it<br>that the Virgin pelted marauders with stones and kept them away from<br>the village. In 1723, a golden necklace decorating the canvas was<br>stolen and the thief consequently committed suicide. It is also believed<br>ahead of catastrophic times, the Virgin\u2019s face would turn pale.<br>On the right side of the chapel of the Immaculate Conception one finds<br>a monument that contains the remains of the first parish priest of<br>\u017bebbu\u0121 Rev. Francis Vella. The monument, executed in the local<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>alabaster was erected in 1988 as part of 300th anniversary celebrations<br>of the establishment of the Parish of \u017bebbu\u0121 by Bishop Davide Cocco<br>Palmieri.<br>The choir is dominated by the main altarpiece, or titular painting<br>representing The Coronation of the Virgin. According to G. P. Agius de<br>Soldanis this is the work of Francesco de Domenici (1655-1723). It<br>must have been painted a few years before the artist\u2019s demise as it is<br>first documented in the 1623 report of the pastoral visit by Bishop Gori<br>Mancini.<br><br><br>In 1980, during a solemn ceremony in the village square, a gold crown<br>commissioned by the people of \u017bebbu\u0121 was fixed to the head of the<br>Virgin by the Bishop of Gozo Mgr. Nicholas Cauchi. Cardinal Mario Luigi<br>Ciappi O.P. , Mgr. Salvatore de Salvo, Bishop of Nicosia in Sicily and Mgr.<br>Carlo Urro were present for the occasion that coincided with the 30th<br>anniversary since the promulgation of the Dogma of the Assumption.<br>In 2022 the painting was restored by RECOOP, a restoration firm based<br>in Malta. A considerable amount of overpainting was taken off and this<br>revealed very important original elements in the canvas, including a<br>cherub underneath the Virgin and that was completely hidden for a<br>century or so. Through this restoration intervention, a better<br>appreciation of the painting and the technical competence of the artist<br>can be carried out.<br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The titular painting is flanked by two paintings executed by Emvin<br>Cremona. They represent The Annunciation and The Visitation. The<br>bozzetto of the former is treasured in the church collection. Also in the<br>choir, one finds two large lateral canvases, one representing The Birth<br>of the Virgin and another one representing The Presentation of the<br>Virgin. They were both painted by Antonio Zammit (1830-1864).<br>Zammit was a student of the famous Maltese artist Tommaso Madiona<br>(1803-1864).<br><br><br>At the back of the tabernacle lies an 18th century silver door of the<br>original tabernacle that existed before the current one. On it there is<br>the embossed figure of Christ holding the Cross, a composition<br>inspired from an important work by the great Italian artist Guido Reni,<br>commissioned during the Knights\u2019 Period and which is part of the<br>National Collection.<br><br><br>In the chapel of St. Francis Xavier one finds an altarpiece representing<br>the same subject by Robert Caruana Dingli. In the chapel one finds<br>several interesting papier-m\u00e2ch\u00e9 devotional statues, amongst which<br>the statue representing St. Fortunatus which contains relics dating<br>back to the Roman persecution and that were donated to church by<br>the Mizzi family. This was the family of two important Maltese<br>politicians, namely Fortunato, leader of the Anti-Riformist Party and<br>his son Enrico, a former prime minister of Malta. Also in the same<br>chapel, one finds the statue of Il-Madonna tal-G\u0127a\u017c\u017ciel. A fine 19th<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>century statue manufactured at Marseilles, the statue bears the<br>G\u0127a\u017c\u017ciela, a century old symbol representing the Name of Mary,<br>produced out of dough and salt and which is distributed in the feast<br>dedicated to the same title. It is believed that this symbol protects<br>houses during storms. In the same chapel one finds a monument to<br>Saviour Cefai, who donated the alabaster to be used for the<br>embellishment of the church.<br><br><br>In the south transept one finds three works by Emvin Cremona, one<br>representing St. Ursula and a second one representing St. George.<br>These canvases flank the large altarpiece representing The Shipwreck<br>of St. Paul. The marble altar of St. Paul was the original main altar of<br>the church before it was replaced by the current one. This altarpiece<br>has an interesting story as it is the second canvas produced by<br>Cremona for this altar, as the original work was refused. While the<br>original canvas\u2019s whereabouts are unknown, luckily an old photo of it<br>still survives. This clearly shows that most probably the work was<br>refused as it was deemed too modern. Both the composition and the<br>rendition of the figures point towards Cremona\u2019s later modern<br>expression. Today, Cremona is known as a pioneer of modern and<br>abstract art in Malta. The current work shows a more conventional<br>iconography of St. Paul and is based on Melchiorre Cafa\u2019s baroque<br>statue for the Valletta church.<br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In the side chapels on the southern side of the church, one finds the<br>painting representing The Virgin of the Rosary and the canvas<br>representing St Michael, both large altar paintings hanging in chapels<br>dedicated to their respective title. The Rosary chapel altar contains the<br>remains of Rev. Carmelo Cachia (1882-1950) whose virtuous life and<br>ministry are well documented. In the side chapel facing the northern<br>entrance of the church, one finds the devotional papier-m\u00e2ch\u00e9 group<br>representing The Crucifixion produced by Agostino Camilleri (1885-<br>1979) This is one the statues produced by the same artist, which are<br>carried in procession in the traditional Good Friday procession.<br>On top of the main entrance one finds a pipe organ manufactured in<br>Crema, Italy in 1926 by the renowned Milanese organ builders Pacifico<br>Inzoli e Figli.<br><br><br>A tour inside the church would not be complete without admiring the<br>titular statue of St. Mary. Acquired by Archpriest John Camilleri in 1863<br>from the Gallard et Fils. workshop in Marseilles, the papier-m\u00e2ch\u00e9 was<br>the first in a series of commissions by Gozitan parishes. It was also the<br>fourth titular statue in Gozo. The \u017bebbu\u0121 statue was carried in<br>procession in the same year of its execution. Stylistically, the statue<br>betrays neo-classical elements characterized by idealized beauty. This<br>is especially felt in the Virgin\u2019s pose and the undulating tunic, partly<br>suspended on her left shoulder. Those classical elementstogether with<br>the palette, are typical of the academic and salon style that were<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>prevalent in France in the second half of the 19th century, before being<br>seriously challenged by the modernism of Impressionist art.<br>The statue is a symmetrical composition with the Virgin opening her<br>arms in a humble gesture while ascending into the heavens.<br>Accompanying the Virgin are two angels, one on each side while two<br>winged heads of putti look on from the cloud underneath the Virgin.<br>The statue was restored for the first time in 2023 by PrevArti on the<br>initiative of the current parish priest Can. John Sultana.<br>Scattered across the six side chapels flanking the main nave, one finds<br>the Stations of the Cross by Gozitan artist Michele Busuttil ( 1762-<br>1831). Trained in Rome, Busuttil was one of the major artists of the<br>early 19th century and his classical training can be felt in the canvases<br>of the Stations.<br><br><br>In the church collection one finds several important works. These are:<br>The Virgin of Light by Gian Nicola Buhagiar (1698-1752), St. Francis<br>Xavier by unknown 18th century Maltese artist and the large Adoration<br>of the Eucharist by unknown artist. Another important canvas is a<br>portrait of Giovanni Maria Cini (1859) by Lorenzo Aspetti, portraying<br>the benefactor who paid for the church\u2019s damask decoration. Several<br>portaits of parish priests who served in the parish of \u017bebbu\u0121 hang in<br>the sacristy.<br>The church also possesses an interesting antique silver and jewellery<br>collection and other objets d\u2019art. These include the silver statue of The<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>Virgin and Child which is first documented in the report of the 1736<br>pastoral visit by Bishop Alpheran de Bussan, several silver chalices and<br>pyxes and an interesting collection of sacred vestments, books and<br>furniture. Some of these artefacts were transferred to the Archpriest\u2019s<br>House to embellish its interior.<br><br><br><strong>The alabaster quarried in \u017bebbu\u0121<\/strong><br>In 1980 the parish started a long and ambitious programme of<br>embellishing the church interior with the alabaster that had been<br>found in a field at Ta\u010b-\u010aaqra in the 18th century which towards the end<br>of the 20th century belonged to Saviour Cefai. Several pieces of church<br>furniture including the altar, the ambo and baptismal font were carved<br>out of this material by Maltese sculptor Ronnie Pisani (1951-2023).<br>The altar is considered as Pisani\u2019s masterpiece and has &#8211; since its<br>execution &#8211; drawn hundreds of visitors to appreciate the beauty of the<br>material and its workmanship. The design is inspired from the<br>eucharistic symbols that intertwine around four vines arranged in the<br>form of a table. Underneath, a bowl containing bread and a chalice<br>complement the symmetrical composition of the altar. The whole<br>alabaster project together with a long list of initiatives were the<br>brainchild of Archpriest Aloysius Vella.<br>But what is the history of this alabaster?<br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>According to 18th century historian Gian Pietro Agius de Soldanis, in<br>1738 a considerable amount of a beautiful stone was discovered in<br>\u017bebbu\u0121. He recounts that \u201csome men were carrying the marble for the<br>altars that had had been ordered for the parish church and as they<br>were crossing this field they stumbled upon a large block of this crude<br>alabaster uncovered by a recent heavy rainfall. They split the rock and<br>found that it consisted of alabaster\u2026\u201d He also maintains that many<br>works of art for churches and palaces were made during this time. But<br>which works of art?<br><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>De Soldanis also explains that as soon as world spread around the<br>islands about the discovery of this alabaster, Grand Master Despuig<br>and other members of the nobility sent for some samples which they<br>sent abroad for further analysis. All the answers were words of praise<br>for this newly found rock. Among the reactions, he makes reference to<br>one that came from France, by Bal\u00ec Fra Sesto Angelo Dericard D\u2019Aix, a<br>very reliable man not only because he was in the military but also<br>because he is an expert lapidarian. De Soldanis explains how he sent a<br>sample of this alabaster for analysis on 22 July 1741 to Dericard D\u2019Aix<br>himself. The reply from Paris was the following:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cJe vais vous render compte a present de v\u00f4tre marbre du Gozo. Le<br>habiles marbriers a qui je l\u2019ait fait voir dissent que c\u2019est de l\u2019alabastre<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>oriental et le trouvent fort beau, d\u2019un grain beaucoup plus dur, plus fin<br>et d\u2019un plus beau polique celuis de Trapano en Sicile.\u201d<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>The following is an English translation:<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>\u201cNow I am going to render to you an account of the your marble from<br>Gozo. I showed it to some marble workers of experience and they told<br>me that this is oriental marble and very beautiful and of a harder<br>quality and finer quality and lends itself to a finer polish than that of<br>Trapani.\u201d<br>It could be possible that the \u017bebbu\u0121 alabaster was discovered much<br>earlier than the 18th century. A Roman double mortar found in the<br>Gozo Museum of Archaeology might be made up of the same material.<br>On close examination, the stone quarried at Tas-Sag\u0127trija area, locally<br>known at Ta\u010b-\u010aaqra, is a fine type of orange banded honey calcite,<br>sometimes also referred to as onyx. The latter is usually formed when<br>calcium carbonate precipitates from a solution of dissolved calcium<br>carbonate and ground water. The calcium carbonate is deposited<br>within a large opening or fissure in the mother rock and parallel bands<br>are created as additional calcium carbonate precipitates.<br>In the history of early travellers to Gozo one notices that the alabaster<br>quarry was one of the main attractions travellers visited while in Gozo.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>In 1777, an important visitor visited the alabaster quarry. He was none<br>other than Jean Pierre Louis Laurent Hou\u00ebl (1735 -1813) a French<br>painter, engraver and draftsman. During his long life, Hou\u00ebl witnessed<br>the reign of Louis XV, the French Revolution, and the period of<br>Napoleon&#8217;s First Empire. Hou\u00ebl spent the years 1776 to 1779 travelling<br>in Sicily, Lipari, and Malta, after which, based on his journey, he<br>published a series of four volumes of lavishly illustrated travel books<br>(1782\u20131787), one of which was entitled Voyage picturesque des Isles<br>de Sicile, de Malte et Lipari.<br><br><br>Several projects were carried out in Gozo using the \u017bebbu\u0121 alabaster.<br>During the 18th century, the baptismal font of the Gozo matrice \u2013 now<br>the Cathedral of St. Mary &#8211; and a twin copy of it to adorn the main<br>entrance of the church were carved out of the material. The main altar<br>of the church of Our Lady of Patronage in G\u0127asri, formely part of the<br>\u017bebbu\u0121 parish is also made of the same material. Moreover, the claim<br>that the alabaster has been used for the altar decorations at the<br>Conventual Church of St. John in Valletta and for the twin cabinets at<br>Verdala Palace need further investigation as similar material was<br>quarried in Malta, especially in the Dingli area.<br><br><br>For several centuries, the onyx quarry was completely forgotten. It<br>seems that in the 1930s a huge boulder from the same material was<br>visible, and the then owners of the land, Francis and Michael Agius had<br>shown interest in donating the material to the church. Michael Agius<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>was the father-in-law of Saviour Cefai, who in 1980 fulfilled Agius\u2019s<br>wish of donating the onyx to the \u017bebbu\u0121 parish. Cefai gave permission<br>to excavate the rock as Vincent Saliba located the quarry. Saliba was in<br>charge of the onyx\u2019s quarrying and its transportation to Pisani\u2019s studio<br>in Malta. One of the first projects was the main altar. One must<br>underline the collective patronage that followed, managed by the then<br>archpriest of \u017bebbu\u0121 Mgr. Aloysius Vella and the numerous individuals<br>hailing from the community who donated huge sums of money for the<br>embellishment programme of the \u017bebbu\u0121 church with onyx.<br><br><strong>Recent times<\/strong><br>In the 1990s the restoration of the church started being planned<br>during the office of Parish Priest Can. Noel Saliba while works on the<br>dome started during the office of Parish Priest Can. Reuben Micallef.<br>These works still continue during the current office of Parish Priest<br>Can. \u0120wann Sultana.<br>Extensive restoration and reconstruction works were carried out in<br>recent years with the left bell tower being completely demolished and<br>rebuilt. This was due to extensive damage incurred by the church\u2019s<br>fabric because of salt penetration. Decision was taken to rebuild the<br>structures according to the original 19th century design that was<br>altered several times during the last century.<br><br><strong>Conclusion<\/strong><\/p>\n\n\n\n<p>One can say without hesitation that the \u017bebbu\u0121 church is a testimony<br>of how the small Gozitan communities went against all odds when<br>building and decorating their temples. The various treasures and<br>works of art that decorate the parish church of St. Mary will surprise<br>you especially when you consider the financial and demographic<br>limitations that the \u017bebbu\u0121 community was synonymous with in the<br>past.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>References<\/strong><br>Vella, H. C. R. (2018). \u017bebbu\u0121 of Gozo \u2013 Its People, Inscriptions and<br>History. Malta: Print It<br>Vella, J. (1987 ) I\u017c-\u017bebbu\u0121 \u2013 Il-Parro\u010b\u010ba ta\u2019 Santa Marija. Malta: Gozo<br>Press.<\/p>\n\n\n\n<p><strong>Research:<\/strong> Mario Cassar<br><strong>Copyright:<\/strong> So\u010bjeta\u2019 Banda Santa Marija and \u017bebbu\u0121 Gozo Local Council<br><strong>Photo credits:<\/strong> Mario Cassar<br><strong>Acknowledgments:<\/strong> The old photos of the church and the onyx<br>quarrying are being reproduced by courtesy of Ri\u0127 id-Deheb Historical<br>House and Natural Grotto, \u017bebbu\u0121.<\/p>\n\n\n    <style>\n        .zebbug-post-gallery {\n            margin-bottom: 50px;\n        }\n        .zebbug-row {\n            display: flex;\n            flex-wrap: wrap;\n            gap: 20px 0;\n            justify-content: space-between;\n        }\n        .zebbug-row > .column {\n            padding: 0 8px;\n        }\n\n        .zebbug-row:after {\n            content: \"\";\n            display: table;\n            clear: both;\n        }\n\n        \/* Create four equal columns that floats next to eachother *\/\n        .column {\n    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class=\"close cursor\" onclick=\"closeModal()\">&times;<\/span>\n            <div class=\"modal-content\">\n\n                                                            <div class=\"mySlides\">\n                            <div class=\"numbertext\">1 \/ 22<\/div>\n                            <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/zebbugheritagetrail.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/08\/Document-134_2-1-scaled.jpg\" style=\"width:100%\">\n                        <\/div>\n                                            <div class=\"mySlides\">\n                            <div class=\"numbertext\">2 \/ 22<\/div>\n                            <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/zebbugheritagetrail.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/08\/Document-134_3-1.jpg\" style=\"width:100%\">\n                        <\/div>\n                                            <div class=\"mySlides\">\n                            <div class=\"numbertext\">3 \/ 22<\/div>\n                            <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/zebbugheritagetrail.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/08\/Document-135_2-scaled.jpg\" style=\"width:100%\">\n                        <\/div>\n                                            <div class=\"mySlides\">\n                            <div class=\"numbertext\">4 \/ 22<\/div>\n                            <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/zebbugheritagetrail.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/08\/Screenshot_20240225_180319_Gallery.jpg\" style=\"width:100%\">\n                        <\/div>\n                                            <div class=\"mySlides\">\n                            <div class=\"numbertext\">5 \/ 22<\/div>\n                            <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/zebbugheritagetrail.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/08\/Screenshot_20240225_180334_Gallery.jpg\" style=\"width:100%\">\n                        <\/div>\n                                            <div class=\"mySlides\">\n                            <div class=\"numbertext\">6 \/ 22<\/div>\n                            <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/zebbugheritagetrail.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/08\/Screenshot_20240225_180348_Gallery.jpg\" style=\"width:100%\">\n                        <\/div>\n                                            <div class=\"mySlides\">\n                            <div class=\"numbertext\">7 \/ 22<\/div>\n                            <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/zebbugheritagetrail.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/08\/Screenshot_20240225_180355_Gallery.jpg\" style=\"width:100%\">\n                        <\/div>\n                                            <div class=\"mySlides\">\n                            <div class=\"numbertext\">8 \/ 22<\/div>\n                            <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/zebbugheritagetrail.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/08\/Screenshot_20240225_180403_Gallery-1.jpg\" style=\"width:100%\">\n                        <\/div>\n                                            <div class=\"mySlides\">\n                            <div class=\"numbertext\">9 \/ 22<\/div>\n                            <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/zebbugheritagetrail.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/08\/Screenshot_20240225_180417_Gallery.jpg\" style=\"width:100%\">\n                        <\/div>\n                                            <div class=\"mySlides\">\n                            <div class=\"numbertext\">10 \/ 22<\/div>\n                            <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/zebbugheritagetrail.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/08\/Screenshot_20240225_180431_Gallery.jpg\" style=\"width:100%\">\n                        <\/div>\n                                            <div class=\"mySlides\">\n                            <div class=\"numbertext\">11 \/ 22<\/div>\n                            <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/zebbugheritagetrail.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/08\/Screenshot_20240225_180437_Gallery.jpg\" style=\"width:100%\">\n                        <\/div>\n                                            <div class=\"mySlides\">\n                            <div class=\"numbertext\">12 \/ 22<\/div>\n                            <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/zebbugheritagetrail.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/08\/Screenshot_20240225_180442_Gallery.jpg\" style=\"width:100%\">\n                        <\/div>\n                                            <div class=\"mySlides\">\n                            <div class=\"numbertext\">13 \/ 22<\/div>\n                            <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/zebbugheritagetrail.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/08\/Screenshot_20240225_180446_Gallery.jpg\" style=\"width:100%\">\n                        <\/div>\n                                            <div class=\"mySlides\">\n                            <div class=\"numbertext\">14 \/ 22<\/div>\n                            <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/zebbugheritagetrail.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/08\/Screenshot_20240225_180450_Gallery.jpg\" style=\"width:100%\">\n                        <\/div>\n                                            <div class=\"mySlides\">\n                            <div class=\"numbertext\">15 \/ 22<\/div>\n                            <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/zebbugheritagetrail.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/08\/Screenshot_20240225_180500_Gallery.jpg\" style=\"width:100%\">\n                        <\/div>\n                                            <div class=\"mySlides\">\n                            <div class=\"numbertext\">16 \/ 22<\/div>\n                            <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/zebbugheritagetrail.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/08\/Screenshot_20240225_180511_Gallery.jpg\" style=\"width:100%\">\n                        <\/div>\n                  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src=\"https:\/\/zebbugheritagetrail.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/08\/Screenshot_20240225_180619_Gallery.jpg\" style=\"width:100%\">\n                        <\/div>\n                                            <div class=\"mySlides\">\n                            <div class=\"numbertext\">20 \/ 22<\/div>\n                            <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/zebbugheritagetrail.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/08\/the-church-today.jpg\" style=\"width:100%\">\n                        <\/div>\n                                            <div class=\"mySlides\">\n                            <div class=\"numbertext\">21 \/ 22<\/div>\n                            <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/zebbugheritagetrail.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/08\/38047_103022903086542_4004398_n.jpg\" style=\"width:100%\">\n                        <\/div>\n                                            <div class=\"mySlides\">\n                            <div class=\"numbertext\">22 \/ 22<\/div>\n                            <img decoding=\"async\" src=\"https:\/\/zebbugheritagetrail.com\/wp-content\/uploads\/2024\/07\/Screenshot_20240225_180541_Gallery-2.png\" style=\"width:100%\">\n                        <\/div>\n                                    \n                <!-- Next\/previous controls -->\n                <a class=\"prev\" onclick=\"plusSlides(-1)\">&#10094;<\/a>\n                <a class=\"next\" onclick=\"plusSlides(1)\">&#10095;<\/a>\n\n                <!-- Thumbnail image controls -->\n                <!-- <div class=\"zebbug-row\">\n                                                                        <div class=\"column\">\n                                <img decoding=\"async\" class=\"demo\" src=\"\" onclick=\"currentSlide()\" alt=\"Nature\">\n                            <\/div>\n                                                            <\/div> -->\n            <\/div>\n        <\/div>\n    <\/section>\n    <script>\n        \/\/ Open the 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