Ghajnsielem
A cemetery built for the population of the village of Ghajnsielem.
Gharb
A cemetery with its own chapel on the side of the Visitation church (Taz-Zejt).
Ghasri / Gharb
Within sight of the village parish church, this cemetery is square in shape and has a fairly simple chapel.
Kemmuna
Even on this tiny island one can find a fairly small, old cemetery surrounded by four low walls on top of a hill.
Nadur - Divine Mercy
A cemetery for the people of the town of Nadur existed already but was surrounded by residential buildings and could not be extended to meet the demand. In 2007 a new cemetery was developed. 600 graves radiate from a chapel which is the focal point in the new cemetery.
Qala - Immaculate Conception
On the way to Hondaq ir-Rummien, the church dates back to before 1575. The cemetery beside it is still in full use by the inhabitants of Qala. Adjacent to the church there is a small cemetery chapel.
San Lawrenz
A cemetery for the population of the area in the vicinity of Dwejra.
Sannat - St.Margaret
The people of Sannat have this village cemetery to cater for their dead.
Victoria - St.Augustine
In Rabat, the main town, there used to be an Angevin Cemetery which was used to inter the remains of several members of the church hierarchy and of the nobility on their way to Tunisia during the crusade of 1270. Nowadays there is only a stone cross in front of St Augustine’s Church to mark the place. In the early 1940s, this cemetery together with the old chapel of St John Evangelist, was leveled and the Salesian Don Bosco complex built instead.
Some Late Medieval tombstones that originated from the cemetery still exist.
Victoria
In front of St.Martha's Church, a cemetery for Cholera victims called 'Tal-Infetti'. A rectangular pillar with the embossed sculpture of souls in Purgatory, denotes the existence of a cemetery nearby.
Victoria
Crypt of St Francis Church
Victoria
In 1492 the Franciscan friars were entrusted with the Chapel of St.Mark in Rabat, by the bishop of Malta Mons.Paolo de la Cavaleria. A cemetery for the nobility existed in front of the same chapel and a stone cross marked the boundary of the said cemetery.
Victoria - Citadel cemetery
In 1607 Vittorio Cassar the son of the famous architect Gerolamo Cassar, constructed two tombs one for himself and another for the poor near the small chapel of St.Barbara. In 1889 the authorities revoked the burial permit. In 1934 it was taken over by the Cathedral Chapter as a cemetery for its canons and priests. Eventually even this practice came to an end, and nowadays St. Mary's cemetery (in the Xewkija jurisdiction), has enough space for all the deceased of Victoria.
Xaghra - St.Anthony Abbot
This is one of the oldest churches in Gozo reported to exist in 1400. Rebuilt in 1601, it includes an adjacent cemetery. It subsequently became the first parish church of Xaghra in 1688 and continued to serve as such until 1692. After the plague of 1814, which took 104 victims from the town, certain articles within the church were burnt in order to disinfect the place.
Xaghra
The cemetery in this village is in regular use. Beside the functioning present day cemetery there are two other cemeteries in Xaghra, one for each of the 1814 and 1837 plagues.
Xewkija
Two cemeteries in regular use. St.John Baptist: For the people of Xewkija itself. St.Mary: For the use of people from Rabat (Victoria), Fontana and Kerchem parishes. The civil authorities administer this cemetery.
Zebbug
Built in 1966, this cemetery is in regular use.