About Casa Rocca Piccola
Casa Rocca Piccola is a sixteenth-century castle in Malta, and home of the respectable de Piro family. It is arranged in Valletta, the capital city of Malta. There are day by day tours. The royal residence incorporates an eatery named as La Giara Restaurant. The Casa Rocca Piccola was worked in 1580 a period in which the Knights of St John, having effectively warded off the attacking Turks in 1565, chose to manufacture a lofty city to match other European capitals, for example, Paris and Venice. Palaces were intended for notoriety and tasteful magnificence in the majority of Valletta's roads, and bastion dividers sustained the new sixteenth-century city.
Casa Rocca Piccola was one of two houses worked in Valletta by Admiral Don Pietro la Rocca. It is referenced in maps of the time as "la casa con giardino" which means, the house with the garden, as typically houses in Valletta were not permitted gardens. Changes were made in the late eighteenth century to separate the house into two littler houses. Additionally changes were made in 1918 and before the Second World War an air assault covers was included. The Casa Rocca Piccola Family Shelter is the second air-strike asylum to be done in Malta. Casa Rocca Piccola was outlined with long enfilades of interconnecting rooms on the main floor, while leaving the ground floor spaces for kitchens and stables. The house has more than fifty rooms, including two libraries, two lounge areas, many illustration rooms, and a chapel.