VATICAN CITY
 
General Information
National name:
Stato della Città del Vaticano (Santa Sede)
Ruler:
Benedict XVI (2005)
Land area:
0.17 sq mi (0.44 sq km)
Population (July 2003
est.): 911; density per sq mi: 5,362
Monetary unit:
Euro
Languages:
Italian, Latin, French, various other languages
Ethnicity/race:
Italian, Swiss, other
Religion:
Roman Catholic.
Labor force:
dignitaries, priests, nuns, guards, and 3,000 lay workers who live outside the
Vatican.
Budget (2001):
Revenues: $173.5 million; expenditures: $176.6 million, including capital
expenditures.
Communications:
Telephones: main lines in use: n.a.; mobile cellular:
n.a. Radio broadcast stations: AM 3, FM 4, shortwave 2 (1998). Radios:
n.a. Television broadcast stations: 1 (1996). Televisions: n.a.
Transportation: Railways:
total: 0.86 km; note: connects to Italy's network at Rome's Saint Peter's
station (2001). Highways: none; all city streets. Ports and harbors:
none. Airports: none. Heliports: 1 (2002).
International disputes:
none.
The Vatican City State is situated on the
Vatican hill, on the right bank of the Tiber River, within the city of Rome.
The pope has full legal, executive, and
judicial powers. Executive power over the area is in the hands of a commission
of cardinals appointed by the pope. The College of Cardinals is the pope's chief
advisory body, and upon his death the cardinals elect his successor for life.
The Vatican City State, sovereign and
independent, is the survivor of the papal states that in 1859 comprised an area
of some 17,000 sq mi (44,030 sq km). During the struggle for Italian
unification, from 1860 to 1870, most of this area became part of Italy. By an
Italian law of May 13, 1871, the temporal power of the pope was abrogated, and
the territory of the papacy was confined to the Vatican and Lateran palaces and
the villa of Castel Gandolfo. The popes consistently refused to recognize this
arrangement. The Lateran Treaty of Feb. 11, 1929, between the Vatican and the
kingdom of Italy, established the autonomy of the Holy See.
The first session of Ecumenical Council
Vatican II was opened by John XXIII on Oct. 11, 1962, to plan and set policies
for the modernization of the Roman Catholic Church. Pope Paul VI continued the
council, presiding over the last three sessions. Vatican II, as it is called,
revolutionized some of the church's practices. Power was decentralized, giving
bishops a larger role, the liturgy was vernacularized, and laymen were given a
larger part in church affairs.
On Aug. 26, 1978, Cardinal Albino Luciani was
chosen by the College of Cardinals to succeed Paul VI, who had died of a heart
attack on Aug. 6. The new pope took the name John Paul I. Only 34 days after his
election, John Paul I died of a heart attack, ending the shortest reign in 373
years. On Oct. 16, Cardinal Karol Wojtyla, 58, was chosen pope and took the name
John Paul II.
Pope John Paul II became the first Polish pope and the first non-Italian
pope since the 16th century.
On May 13, 1981, a Turkish terrorist shot the
pope in St. Peter's Square, the first assassination attempt against the pontiff
in modern times. The pope later met and forgave him. On November 3, 1985, the
Vatican and Italy ratified a new church-state treaty, known as a concordat,
replacing the Lateran Treaty of 1929. The new accord affirmed the independence
of Vatican City but ended a number of privileges that the Catholic Church had in
Italy, including its status as the state religion.
On April 2, 2005, John Paul died. He was the
third-longest reigning pope (26 years). A champion of the poor, he is credited
by many with hastening the fall of Communism in Poland and other eastern bloc
countries. His vitality and charisma energized the world's 1 billion Catholics.
His rule was characterized by conservatism regarding church doctrine,
particularly on issues such as birth control, women's roles in the church, and
homosexuality. The pope also remained circumspect about the U.S. church's sexual
abuse scandals in 2002. He was the Vatican's greatest ambassador, traveling to
129 countries. John Paul canonized 482 saints and beatified 1,338 people, which
was believed to be more than all his predecessors combined.
On April 19, German cardinal
Joseph Ratzinger was named the new pope. Pope Benedict XVI is known as an
accomplished scholar of theology and is considered an archconservative in his
religious views. He served as Pope John Paul II's closest associate and is
expected to continue the policy of a “strong Rome.” In Sept. 2006, Pope Benedict
XVI apologized after angering Muslims around the world by quoting medieval
passages that referred to Islam as “evil and inhuman.”
Roman Catholic Pontiffs
|
|
Reigned |
Name |
Birthplace |
From |
To |
St. Peter |
Bethsaida |
42? |
67? |
St. Linus |
Tuscia |
c. 67 |
76 |
St. Anacletus (Cletus)
|
Rome |
76 |
88 |
St. Clement |
Rome |
88 |
97 |
St. Evaristus |
Greece |
97 |
105 |
St. Alexander I |
Rome |
105 |
115 |
St. Sixtus I |
Rome |
115 |
125 |
St. Telesphorus |
Greece |
125 |
136 |
St. Hyginus |
Greece |
136 |
140 |
St. Pius I |
Aquileia |
140 |
155 |
St. Anicetus |
Syria |
155 |
166 |
St. Soter |
Campania |
166 |
175 |
St. Eleutherius |
Epirus |
175 |
189 |
St. Victor I |
Africa |
189 |
199 |
St. Zephyrinus |
Rome |
199 |
217 |
St. Callistus I |
Rome |
217 |
222 |
St. Urban I |
Rome |
222 |
230 |
St. Pontian |
Rome |
230 |
235 |
St. Anterus |
Greece |
235 |
236 |
St. Fabian |
Rome |
236 |
250 |
St. Cornelius |
Rome |
251 |
253 |
St. Lucius I |
Rome |
253 |
254 |
St. Stephen I |
Rome |
254 |
257 |
St. Sixtus II |
Greece |
257 |
258 |
St. Dionysius |
Unknown |
259 |
268 |
St. Felix I |
Rome |
269 |
274 |
St. Eutychian |
Luni |
275 |
283 |
St. Caius |
Dalmatia |
283 |
296 |
St. Marcellinus |
Rome |
296 |
304 |
St. Marcellus I |
Rome |
308 |
309 |
St. Eusebius |
Greece |
3091
|
3091 |
St. Meltiades |
Africa |
311 |
314 |
St. Sylvester I |
Rome |
314 |
335 |
St. Marcus |
Rome |
336 |
336 |
St. Julius I |
Rome |
337 |
352 |
Liberius |
Rome |
352 |
366 |
St. Damasus I |
Spain |
366 |
384 |
St. Siricius |
Rome |
384 |
399 |
St. Anastasius I |
Rome |
399 |
401 |
St. Innocent I |
Albano |
401 |
417 |
St. Zozimus |
Greece |
417 |
418 |
St. Boniface I |
Rome |
418 |
422 |
St. Celestine I |
Campania |
422 |
432 |
St. Sixtus III |
Rome |
432 |
440 |
St. Leo I
(the Great) |
Tuscany |
440 |
461 |
St. Hilary |
Sardinia |
461 |
468 |
St. Simplicius |
Tivoli |
468 |
483 |
St. Felix III (II)2
|
Rome |
483 |
492 |
St. Gelasius I |
Africa |
492 |
496 |
Anastasius II |
Rome |
496 |
498 |
St. Symmachus |
Sardinia |
498 |
514 |
St. Hormisdas |
Frosinone |
514 |
523 |
St. John I |
Tuscany |
523 |
526 |
St. Felix IV (III)
|
Samnium |
526 |
530 |
Boniface II |
Rome |
530 |
532 |
John II |
Rome |
533 |
535 |
St. Agapitus I |
Rome |
535 |
536 |
St. Silverius |
Campania |
536 |
537 |
Vigilius |
Rome |
537 |
555 |
Pelagius I |
Rome |
556 |
561 |
John III |
Rome |
561 |
574 |
Benedict I |
Rome |
575 |
579 |
Pelagius II |
Rome |
579 |
590 |
St. Gregory I
(the Great) |
Rome |
590 |
604 |
Sabinianus |
Tuscany |
604 |
606 |
Boniface III |
Rome |
607 |
607 |
St. Boniface IV |
Marsi |
608 |
615 |
St. Deusdedit (Adeodatus I)
|
Rome |
615 |
618 |
Boniface V |
Naples |
619 |
625 |
Honorius I |
Campania |
625 |
638 |
Severinus |
Rome |
640 |
640 |
John IV |
Dalmatia |
640 |
642 |
Theodore I |
Greece |
642 |
649 |
St. Martin I |
Todi |
649 |
655 |
St. Eugene I3
|
Rome |
654 |
657 |
St. Vitalian |
Segni |
657 |
672 |
Adeodatus II |
Rome |
672 |
676 |
Donus |
Rome |
676 |
678 |
St. Agatho |
Sicily |
678 |
681 |
St. Leo II |
Sicily |
682 |
683 |
St. Benedict II |
Rome |
684 |
685 |
John V |
Syria |
685 |
686 |
Conon |
Unknown |
686 |
687 |
St. Sergius I |
Syria |
687 |
701 |
John VI |
Greece |
701 |
705 |
John VII |
Greece |
705 |
707 |
Sisinnius |
Syria |
708 |
708 |
Constantine |
Syria |
708 |
715 |
St. Gregory II |
Rome |
715 |
731 |
St. Gregory III |
Syria |
731 |
741 |
St. Zachary |
Greece |
741 |
752 |
Stephen II (III)4
|
Rome |
752 |
757 |
St. Paul I |
Rome |
757 |
767 |
Stephen III (IV) |
Sicily |
768 |
772 |
Adrian I |
Rome |
772 |
795 |
St. Leo III |
Rome |
795 |
816 |
Stephen IV (V) |
Rome |
816 |
817 |
St. Paschal I |
Rome |
817 |
824 |
Eugene II |
Rome |
824 |
827 |
Valentine |
Rome |
827 |
827 |
Gregory IV |
Rome |
827 |
844 |
Sergius II |
Rome |
844 |
847 |
St. Leo IV |
Rome |
847 |
855 |
Benedict III |
Rome |
855 |
858 |
St. Nicholas I (the Great)
|
Rome |
858 |
867 |
Adrian II |
Rome |
867 |
872 |
John VIII |
Rome |
872 |
882 |
Marinus I |
Gallese |
882 |
884 |
St. Adrian III |
Rome |
884 |
885 |
Stephen V (VI) |
Rome |
885 |
891 |
Formosus |
Portus |
891 |
896 |
Boniface VI |
Rome |
896 |
896 |
Stephen VI (VII) |
Rome |
896 |
897 |
Romanus |
Gallese |
897 |
897 |
Theodore II |
Rome |
897 |
897 |
John IX |
Tivoli |
898 |
900 |
Benedict IV |
Rome |
900 |
903 |
Leo V |
Ardea |
903 |
903 |
Sergius III |
Rome |
904 |
911 |
Anastasius III |
Rome |
911 |
913 |
Landus |
Sabina |
913 |
914 |
John X |
Tossignano |
914 |
928 |
Leo VI |
Rome |
928 |
928 |
Stephen VII (VIII)
|
Rome |
928 |
931 |
John XI |
Rome |
931 |
935 |
Leo VII |
Rome |
936 |
939 |
Stephen VIII (IX)
|
Rome |
939 |
942 |
Marinus II |
Rome |
942 |
946 |
Agapitus II |
Rome |
946 |
955 |
John XII |
Tusculum |
955 |
964 |
Leo VIII5
|
Rome |
963 |
965 |
Benedict V5
|
Rome |
964 |
966 |
John XIII |
Rome |
965 |
972 |
Benedict VI |
Rome |
973 |
974 |
Benedict VII |
Rome |
974 |
983 |
John XIV |
Pavia |
983 |
984 |
John XV |
Rome |
985 |
996 |
Gregory V |
Saxony |
996 |
999 |
Sylvester II |
Auvergne |
999 |
1003 |
John XVII |
Rome |
1003 |
1003 |
John XVIII |
Rome |
1004 |
1009 |
Sergius IV |
Rome |
1009 |
1012 |
Benedict VIII |
Tusculum |
1012 |
1024 |
John XIX |
Tusculum |
1024 |
1032 |
Benedict IX6
|
Tusculum |
1032 |
1044 |
Sylvester III |
Rome |
1045 |
1045 |
Benedict IX
(2nd time) |
Tusculum |
1045 |
1045 |
Gregory VI |
Rome |
1045 |
1046 |
Clement II |
Saxony |
1046 |
1047 |
Benedict IX
(3rd time) |
Tusculum |
1047 |
1048 |
Damasus II |
Bavaria |
1048 |
1048 |
St. Leo IX |
Alsace |
1049 |
1054 |
Victor II |
Germany |
1055 |
1057 |
Stephen IX (X) |
Lorraine |
1057 |
1058 |
Nicholas II |
Burgundy |
1059 |
1061 |
Alexander II |
Milan |
1061 |
1073 |
St. Gregory VII |
Tuscany |
1073 |
1085 |
Bl. Victor III |
Benevento |
1086 |
1087 |
Bl. Urban II |
France |
1088 |
1099 |
Paschal II |
Ravenna |
1099 |
1118 |
Gelasius II |
Gaeta |
1118 |
1119 |
Callistus II |
Burgundy |
1119 |
1124 |
Honorius II |
Flagnano |
1124 |
1130 |
Innocent II |
Rome |
1130 |
1143 |
Celestine II |
Città di Castello
|
1143 |
1144 |
Lucius II |
Bologna |
1144 |
1145 |
Bl. Eugene III |
Pisa |
1145 |
1153 |
Anastasius IV |
Rome |
1153 |
1154 |
Adrian IV |
England |
1154 |
1159 |
Alexander III |
Siena |
1159 |
1181 |
Lucius III |
Lucca |
1181 |
1185 |
Urban III |
Milan |
1185 |
1187 |
Gregory VIII |
Benevento |
1187 |
1187 |
Clement III |
Rome |
1187 |
1191 |
Celestine III |
Rome |
1191 |
1198 |
Innocent III |
Anagni |
1198 |
1216 |
Honorius III |
Rome |
1216 |
1227 |
Gregory IX |
Anagni |
1227 |
1241 |
Celestine IV |
Milan |
1241 |
1241 |
Innocent IV |
Genoa |
1243 |
1254 |
Alexander IV |
Anagni |
1254 |
1261 |
Urban IV |
Troyes |
1261 |
1264 |
Clement IV |
France |
1265 |
1268 |
Bl. Gregory X |
Piacenza |
1271 |
1276 |
Bl. Innocent V |
Savoy |
1276 |
1276 |
Adrian V |
Genoa |
1276 |
1276 |
John XXI7
|
Portugal |
1276 |
1277 |
Nicholas III |
Rome |
1277 |
1280 |
Martin IV8
|
France |
1281 |
1285 |
Honorius IV |
Rome |
1285 |
1287 |
Nicholas IV |
Ascoli |
1288 |
1292 |
St. Celestine V |
Isernia |
1294 |
1294 |
Boniface VIII |
Anagni |
1294 |
1303 |
Bl. Benedict XI |
Treviso |
1303 |
1304 |
Clement V |
France |
1305 |
1314 |
John XXII |
Cahors |
1316 |
1334 |
Benedict XII |
France |
1334 |
1342 |
Clement VI |
France |
1342 |
1352 |
Innocent VI |
France |
1352 |
1362 |
Bl. Urban V |
France |
1362 |
1370 |
Gregory XI |
France |
1370 |
1378 |
Urban VI |
Naples |
1378 |
1389 |
Boniface IX |
Naples |
1389 |
1404 |
Innocent VII |
Sulmona |
1404 |
1406 |
Gregory XII |
Venice |
1406 |
1415 |
Martin V |
Rome |
1417 |
1431 |
Eugene IV |
Venice |
1431 |
1447 |
Nicholas V |
Sarzana |
1447 |
1455 |
Callistus III |
Jativa |
1455 |
1458 |
Pius II |
Siena |
1458 |
1464 |
Paul II |
Venice |
1464 |
1471 |
Sixtus IV |
Savona |
1471 |
1484 |
Innocent VIII |
Genoa |
1484 |
1492 |
Alexander VI |
Jativa |
1492 |
1503 |
Pius III |
Siena |
1503 |
1503 |
Julius II |
Savona |
1503 |
1513 |
Leo X |
Florence |
1513 |
1521 |
Adrian VI |
Utrecht |
1522 |
1523 |
Clement VII |
Florence |
1523 |
1534 |
Paul III |
Rome |
1534 |
1549 |
Julius III |
Rome |
1550 |
1555 |
Marcellus II |
Montepulciano |
1555 |
1555 |
Paul IV |
Naples |
1555 |
1559 |
Pius IV |
Milan |
1559 |
1565 |
St. Pius V |
Bosco |
1566 |
1572 |
Gregory XIII |
Bologna |
1572 |
1585 |
Sixtus V |
Grottammare |
1585 |
1590 |
Urban VII |
Rome |
1590 |
1590 |
Gregory XIV |
Cremona |
1590 |
1591 |
Innocent IX |
Bologna |
1591 |
1591 |
Clement VIII |
Florence |
1592 |
1605 |
Leo XI |
Florence |
1605 |
1605 |
Paul V |
Rome |
1605 |
1621 |
Gregory XV |
Bologna |
1621 |
1623 |
Urban VIII |
Florence |
1623 |
1644 |
Innocent X |
Rome |
1644 |
1655 |
Alexander VII |
Siena |
1655 |
1667 |
Clement IX |
Pistoia |
1667 |
1669 |
Clement X |
Rome |
1670 |
1676 |
Bl. Innocent XI |
Como |
1676 |
1689 |
Alexander VIII |
Venice |
1689 |
1691 |
Innocent XII |
Spinazzola |
1691 |
1700 |
Clement XI |
Urbino |
1700 |
1721 |
Innocent XIII |
Rome |
1721 |
1724 |
Benedict XIII |
Gravina |
1724 |
1730 |
Clement XII |
Florence |
1730 |
1740 |
Benedict XIV |
Bologna |
1740 |
1758 |
Clement XIII |
Venice |
1758 |
1769 |
Clement XIV |
Rimini |
1769 |
1774 |
Pius VI |
Cesena |
1775 |
1799 |
Pius VII |
Cesena |
1800 |
1823 |
Leo XII |
Genga |
1823 |
1829 |
Pius VIII |
Cingoli |
1829 |
1830 |
Gregory XVI |
Belluno |
1831 |
1846 |
Pius IX |
Senegallia |
1846 |
1878 |
Leo XIII |
Carpineto |
1878 |
1903 |
St. Pius X |
Riese |
1903 |
1914 |
Benedict XV |
Genoa |
1914 |
1922 |
Pius XI |
Desio |
1922 |
1939 |
Pius XII |
Rome |
1939 |
1958 |
John XXIII |
Sotto il Monte |
1958 |
1963 |
Paul VI |
Concesio |
1963 |
1978 |
John Paul I |
Forno di Canale |
1978 |
1978 |
John Paul II |
Wadowice, Poland |
1978 |
2005 |
Benedict XVI |
Marktl Am Inn, Germany |
2005 |
|
2. He should be called Felix II, and his
successors of the same name should be numbered accordingly. The discrepancy
was caused by the erroneous insertion in some lists of the name of St. Felix
of Rome, Martyr.
3. He was elected during the exile of St.
Martin I, who endorsed him as pope.
4. After St. Zachary died, a Roman priest
named Stephen was elected but died before his consecration as bishop of
Rome. His name is not included in all lists for this reason. In view of this
historical confusion, the National Catholic Almanac lists the true
Stephen II as Stephen II (III), the true Stephen III as Stephen III (IV),
etc.
5. Confusion exists concerning the
legitimacy of claims. If the deposition of John was invalid, Leo was an
antipope until after the end of Benedict's reign. If the deposition of John
was valid, Leo was the legitimate pope and Benedict an antipope.
6. If the triple removal of Benedict IX
was not valid, Sylvester III, Gregory VI, and Clement II were antipopes.
7. Elimination was made of the name of
John XX in an effort to rectify the numerical designation of popes named
John. The error dates back to the time of John XV.
8. The names of Marinus I and Marinus II
were construed as Martin. In view of these

The Basilica of Saint Peter (Latin: Basilica Sancti Petri),
officially known in Italian as the Basilica di San Pietro in Vaticano and
commonly known as St. Peter's Basilica, is located within the Vatican City. It
occupies a "unique position" as one of the holiest sites and as "the greatest of
all churches of Christendom". In Catholic Tradition, it is the burial site of
its namesake Saint Peter, who was one of the twelve apostles of Jesus and,
according to Tradition, was the first Bishop of Antioch, and later first Bishop
of Rome and therefore first in the line of the papal succession. While St.
Peter's is the most famous of Rome's many churches, it is not the first in rank,
an honour held by the Pope's cathedral church, the Basilica of St. John Lateran.
Catholic Tradition holds that Saint Peter's tomb is below the altar of the
basilica. For this reason, many Popes, starting with the first ones, have been
buried there. There has been a church on this site since the 4th century.
Construction on the present basilica, over the old Constantinian basilica, began
on April 18, 1506 and was completed in 1626.
St. Peter's is famous as a place of pilgrimage, for its liturgical functions and
for its historical associations. It is associated with the papacy, with the
Counter-reformation and with numerous artists, most significantly Michelangelo.
As a work of architecture, it is regarded as the greatest building of its age.
Contrary to popular misconception, Saint Peter's is not a cathedral, as it is
not the seat of a bishop. It is properly termed a basilica. Like all the
earliest churches in Rome, it has the entrance to the east and the apse at the
west end of the building.
References
St. Peter's Basilica
(
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Peter's_Basilica , November, 2008).
Info please (
http://www.infoplease.com/ipa/A0108136.html , November, 2008).
|