à »ebbuá () is a village and an administrative unit of Malta, in the northwest coast of the island of Gozo. It is located close to Gçarb and Gçasri and is built on two hilltop plateaus, Ta' Abram and Ix-Xagçra taà ¼-à »ebbuá. The fishing port and tourist resort of Marsalforn lies within the à »ebbuá Council. The village has a population of 2,956 (as of March 2014), which makes it the fifth largest in Gozo, after Xewkija.
With an area of 7.6 km<sup>2</sup>, à »ebbuá is the largest local council in Gozo by land area. The word à »ebbuá means "wild olive trees", a crop for which the village used to be noted, although nowadays very few olive trees remain on the slopes of à »ebbuá. The village is also well known for its fine lacework and its nearby coastal beauty spots.
The areas around à »ebbuá have been inhabited for millennia. There are Bronze Age remains on Ta' Kuljat hill, and even older remains can be found to the north, close to Qbajjar Bay. Punic tombs were also found at Qbajjar.
Over the following centuries, the area was inhabited only by a few farmers. A community began to take shape in the 13th century, and eventually a small chapel was built.
In 1643, plans were made to build a fortified city in Marsalforn, to serve as Gozo's capital instead of the ancient Cittadella, but the project was eventually abandoned due to a lack of funds.
The parish of à »ebbuá, which is dedicated to the Assumption of Mary (), was established on 28 April 1688 by bishop Davide Cocco Palmieri. The village's parish church is the oldest one in Gozo, apart from St George's basilica (1678) and the cathedral (1714) in Victoria.
From 1715 onwards, a chain of fortifications were built along the à »ebbuá coastline, especially at Marsalforn. Most of these have been destroyed over the years, with the only surviving vestige being Qolla l-Bajda Battery between Qbajjar and Xwejni Bays.
In 1738, deposits of calcite travertine (referred to locally as alabaster, or, though it is related to neither, as 'onyx marble' on account of its banded appearance when cut) were discovered in a field known as TaÃÂ-ÃÂaqra or Is-Sagçtrija. The travertine was used to decorate the interior of the parish church of à »ebbuá, as well as in some other churches in Gozo and Malta.
à »ebbuá is twinned with: