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Vatican
City,
officially the State of the Vatican City (Italian:
Stato della Città del Vaticano) is a landlocked
sovereign city-state whose territory consists of a
walled enclave within the city of Rome, the capital
city of Italy. It has an area of approximately 44
hectares (110 acres), and a population of just over
800.
Vatican City was established in 1929. It is distinct
from the Holy See, which dates back to early
Christianity and is the main Episcopal see of 1.147
billion Latin and Eastern Catholic adherents around
the globe. Ordinances of Vatican City are published
in Italian; official documents of the Holy See are
issued mainly in Latin. The two entities even have
distinct passports: the Holy See, not being a
country, only issues diplomatic and service
passports; the state of Vatican City issues normal
passports. Very few passports are issued by either
authority.
The Lateran Treaty in 1929, which brought the
city-state into existence, spoke of it as a new
creation (Preamble and Article III), not as a
vestige of the much larger Papal States (756-1870)
that had previously encompassed central Italy. Most
of this territory was absorbed into the Kingdom of
Italy in 1860, and the final portion, namely the
city of Rome with a small area close to it, ten
years later, in 1870.
Vatican City is an ecclesiastical or
sacerdotal-monarchical state, ruled by the bishop of
Rome—the Pope. The highest state functionaries are
all Catholic clergymen of various nationalities. It
is the sovereign territory of the Holy See (Sancta
Sedes) and the location of the Pope's residence,
referred to as the Apostolic Palace.
The Popes have resided in the area that in 1929
became Vatican City since the return from Avignon in
1377. Previously, they resided in the Lateran Palace
on the Caelian Hill on the opposite side of Rome,
which site Constantine gave to Pope Miltiades in
313. The signing of the agreements that established
the new state took place in the latter building,
giving rise to the name of Lateran Pacts, by which
they are known.
Territory
The name "Vatican" is ancient and predates
Christianity, coming from the Latin Mons Vaticanus,
meaning Vatican Mount. The territory of Vatican City
is part of the Mons Vaticanus, and of the adjacent
former Vatican Fields where St. Peter's Basilica,
the Apostolic Palace, the Sistine Chapel, and
museums were built, along with various other
buildings. The area was part of the Roman rione of
Borgo until 1929. Being separated from the city, on
the west bank of the Tiber river, the area was an
outcrop of the city that was protected by being
included within the walls of Leo IV (847–55), and
later expanded by the current fortification walls,
built under Paul III (1534–49), Pius IV (1559–65)
and Urban VIII (1623–44). When the Lateran Treaty of
1929 that gave the state its present form was being
prepared, the boundaries of the proposed territory
were influenced by the fact that much of it was all
but enclosed by this loop. For some tracts of the
frontier, there was no wall, but the line of certain
buildings supplied part of the boundary, and for a
small part of the frontier a modern wall was
constructed. The territory includes St. Peter's
Square, distinguished from the territory of Italy
only by a white line along the limit of the square,
where it touches Piazza Pio XII. St. Peter's Square
is reached through the Via della Conciliazione which
runs from the Tiber River to St. Peter's. This grand
approach was constructed by Benito Mussolini after
the conclusion of the Lateran Treaty.
According to the Lateran Treaty, certain properties
of the Holy See that are located in Italian
territory, most notably Castel Gandolfo and the
major basilicas, enjoy extraterritorial status
similar to that of foreign embassies. These
properties, scattered all over Rome and Italy, house
essential offices and institutions necessary to the
character and mission of the Holy See.
Castel Gandolfo and the named basilicas are
patrolled internally by police agents of Vatican
City State and not by Italian police. St. Peter's
Square is ordinarily policed jointly by both.
Within the territory of Vatican City are the Vatican
Gardens (Italian: Giardini Vaticani), which account
for more than half of this territory. The gardens,
established during the Renaissance and Baroque era,
are decorated with fountains and sculptures.
Head of
state
The
Pope is ex officio head of state and head of
government of Vatican City, functions dependent on
his primordial function as bishop of the diocese of
Rome. The term Holy See refers not to the Vatican
state but to the Pope's spiritual and pastoral
governance, largely exercised through the Roman
Curia. His official title with regard to Vatican
City is Sovereign of the State of the Vatican City.
His principal subordinate government official for
Vatican City is the President of the Pontifical
Commission for Vatican City State, who since 1952
exercises the functions previously belonging to the
Governor of Vatican City. Since 2001, the President
of the Pontifical Commission for Vatican City State
also has the title of President of the Governorate
of the State of Vatican City.
The Pope resides in the Papal Apartments of the
Papal Palace just off Saint Peter's Square. It is
here he carries out his business and meets foreign
representatives.
The current Pope is Benedict XVI, born Joseph Alois
Ratzinger in Bavaria, Germany. Italian Cardinal
Giovanni Lajolo serves as President of the
Pontifical Commission for the State of Vatican City.
He was appointed by Pope Benedict XVI on 11
September 2006.
History
In
this originally uninhabited area (the ager vaticanus)
on the opposite side of the Tiber from the city of
Rome, Agrippina the Elder (14 BC – 18 October AD 33)
drained the hill and environs and built her gardens
in the early 1st century AD. Emperor Caligula
(37-41) started construction of a circus (AD 40)
that was later completed by Nero, the Circus Gaii et
Neronis, usually called, simply, the Circus of Nero.
The Vatican obelisk was originally taken by Caligula
from Heliopolis, Egypt to decorate the spina of his
circus and is thus its last visible remnant. This
area became the site of martyrdom of many Christians
after the Great Fire of Rome in AD 64. Ancient
tradition holds that it was in this circus that
Saint Peter was crucified upside-down. Opposite the
circus was a cemetery separated by the Via Cornelia.
Funeral monuments and mausoleums and small tombs as
well as altars to pagan gods of all kinds of
polytheistic religions were constructed lasting
until before the construction of the Constantinian
Basilica of St. Peter's in the first half of the 4th
century. Remains of this ancient necropolis were
brought to light sporadically during renovations by
various popes throughout the centuries increasing in
frequency during the Renaissance until it was
systematically excavated by orders of Pope Pius XII
from 1939 to 1941.
In 326, the first church, the Constantinian
basilica, was built over the site that early Roman
Catholic apologists (from the first century on) as
well as noted Italian archaeologists argue was the
tomb of Saint Peter, buried in a common cemetery on
the spot. From then on the area started to become
more populated, but mostly only by dwelling houses
connected with the activity of St. Peter's. A palace
was constructed near the site of the basilica as
early as the 5th century during the pontificate of
Pope Symmachus (reigned 498–514). Popes in their
secular role gradually came to govern neighbouring
regions and, through the Papal States, ruled a large
portion of the Italian peninsula for more than a
thousand years until the mid 19th century, when all
of the territory of the Papal States was seized by
the newly created Kingdom of Italy. For much of this
time the Vatican was not the habitual residence of
the Popes, but rather the Lateran Palace, and in
recent centuries, the Quirinal Palace, while the
residence from 1309–77 was at Avignon in France.
Territory of Vatican City according to the
Lateran Treaty.
In
1870, the Pope's holdings were left in an uncertain
situation when Rome itself was annexed by the
Piedmont-led forces which had united the rest of
Italy, after a nominal resistance by the papal
forces. Between 1861 and 1929 the status of the Pope
was referred to as the "Roman Question". They were
undisturbed in their palace, and given certain
recognitions by the Law of Guarantees, including the
right to send and receive ambassadors. But they did
not recognize the Italian king's right to rule in
Rome, and they refused to leave the Vatican compound
until the dispute was resolved in 1929. Other states
continued to maintain international recognition of
the Holy See as a sovereign entity. In practice
Italy made no attempt to interfere with the Holy See
within the Vatican walls. However, they confiscated
church property in many other places, including,
perhaps most notably, the Quirinal Palace, formerly
the pope's official residence. Pope Pius IX
(1846–78),
the last ruler of the Papal States,
claimed that after Rome was annexed he was a "Prisoner
in the Vatican". This situation was resolved on 11
February 1929 between the Holy See and the Kingdom
of Italy.
The treaty was signed by Benito Mussolini on behalf
of King Victor Emmanuel III and by Cardinal
Secretary of State Pietro Gasparri for Pope Pius XI.
The Lateran Treaty and the Concordat established the
independent State of the Vatican City and granted
Roman Catholicism special status in Italy. In 1984,
a new concordat between the Holy See and Italy
modified certain provisions of the earlier treaty,
including the position of Roman Catholicism as the
Italian state religion.
Politics of
Vatican City
The
politics of Vatican City takes place in an absolute
elective monarchy, in which the head of the Roman
Catholic Church takes power. The Pope exercises
principal legislative, executive, and judicial power
over the State of Vatican City (an entity distinct
from the Holy See), which is a rare case of a
non-hereditary monarchy. Vatican City is currently
the only country that has not become a member of the
United Nations; the Holy See is a permanent observer
state. However, it has all the rights of a full
member, but a vote in the UN General Assembly.
Political system
The government of Vatican City has a unique
structure. The Pope is the sovereign of the state.
Legislative authority is vested in the Pontifical
Commission for Vatican City State, a body of
cardinals appointed by the Pope for five-year
periods. Executive power is in the hands of the
President of that commission, assisted by the
General Secretary and Deputy General Secretary. The
state's foreign relations are entrusted to the Holy
See's Secretariat of State and diplomatic service.
Nevertheless, the pope has full and absolute
executive, legislative and judicial power over
Vatican City. He is currently the only absolute
monarch in Europe.
There are specific departments that deal with health,
security, telecommunications, etc.
The Cardinal Camerlengo heads the Apostolic Chamber
to which is entrusted the administration of the
property and the protection of the temporal rights
of the Holy See during a papal vacancy. Those of the
Vatican State remain under the control of the
Pontifical Commission for the State of Vatican City.
Acting with three other cardinals chosen by lot
every three days, one from each order of cardinals
(cardinal bishop, cardinal priest, and cardinal
deacon), he in a sense performs during that period
the functions of head of state. All the decisions
these four cardinals take must be approved by the
College of Cardinals as a whole.
The nobility that was closely associated with the
Holy See at the time of the Papal States continued
to be associated with the Papal Court after the loss
of these territories, generally with merely nominal
duties (see Papal Master of the Horse, Prefecture of
the Pontifical Household, Hereditary officers of the
Roman Curia, Black Nobility). They also formed the
ceremonial Noble Guard. In the first decades of the
existence of the Vatican City State, executive
functions were entrusted to some of them, including
that of Delegate for the State of Vatican City (now
denominated President of the Commission for Vatican
City). But with the motu proprio Pontificalis Domus
of 28 March 1968, Pope Paul VI abolished the
honorary positions that had continued to exist until
then, such as Quartermaster General and Master of
the Horse.
The State of the Vatican City, created in 1929 by
the Lateran Pacts, provides the Holy See with a
temporal jurisdiction and independence within a
small territory. It is distinct from the Holy See.
The state can thus be deemed a significant but not
essential instrument of the Holy See. The Holy See
itself has existed continuously as a juridical
entity since Roman Imperial times and has been
internationally recognized as a powerful and
independent sovereign entity since late antiquity to
the present, without interruption even at times when
it was deprived of territory (e.g. 1870 to 1929).
The Holy See has the oldest active continuous
diplomatic service in the world, dating back to at
least AD 325 with its legation to the Council of
Nicea. Ambassadors are accredited to the Holy See,
never to the Vatican City State.
Swiss
Guard in their traditional uniform
Though earlier Popes recruited Swiss mercenaries as
part of an army, the Pontifical Swiss Guard was
founded by Pope Julius II on 22 January 1506 as the
personal bodyguard of the Pope and continues to
fulfil that function. It is listed in the Annuario
Pontificio under "Holy See", not under "State of
Vatican City". At the end of 2005, the Guard had 134
members. Recruitment is arranged by a special
agreement between the Holy See and Switzerland and
is restricted to Swiss Catholic male citizens. The
Palatine Guard and the Noble Guard were disbanded by
Pope Paul VI in 1970. While the first body was
founded as a militia at the service of the Papal
States, its functions within the Vatican State, like
those of the Noble Guard, were merely ceremonial.
The Corpo della Gendarmeria acts as a police force.
Its full name is Corpo della Gendarmeria dello Stato
della Città del Vaticano (which means "Gendarmerie
Corps of the Vatican City State"), although it is
sometimes referred to as Vigilanza, as a shortening
of an earlier name. The Gendarmeria is responsible
for public order, law enforcement, crowd and traffic
control, and criminal investigations in Vatican
City.
Administration
Palace of the Governorate of Vatican City State
Legislative functions are delegated to the
unicameral Pontifical Commission for Vatican City
State, led by the President of the Pontifical
Commission for Vatican City State. Its seven members
are cardinals appointed by the Pope for terms of
five years. Acts of the commission must be approved
by the pope, through the Holy See's Secretariat of
State, and before taking effect must be published in
a special appendix of the Acta Apostolicae Sedis.
Most of the content of this appendix consists of
routine executive decrees, such as approval for a
new set of postage stamps. Executive authority is
delegated to the Governorate of Vatican City. The
Governorate consists of the President of the
Pontifical Commission — using the title "President
of the Governorate of Vatican City" — a General
Secretary, and a Vice General Secretary, each
appointed by the pope for five year terms. Important
actions of the Governorate must be confirmed by the
Pontifical Commission and by the Pope through the
Secretariat of State.
The Governorate oversees the central governmental
functions through several departments and offices.
The directors and officials of these offices are
appointed by the pope for five year terms. These
organs concentrate on material questions concerning
the state's territory, including local security,
records, transportation, and finances. The
Governorate oversees a modern security and police
corps, the Corpo della Gendarmeria dello Stato della
Città del Vaticano.
Judicial functions are delegated to a supreme court,
an appeals court, a tribunal, and a trial judge. In
all cases, the pope may choose at any time to
exercise supreme legislative, executive, or judicial
functions in the state.
The Country code prefix is SCV, and the only postal
code is 00120 -- altogether SCV-00120.
Economy of Vatican City
The
reverse of the Vatican €1 coin produced in 2006
depicting the current pope, Benedict XVI
The unique, non-commercial economy is supported
financially by the sale of postage stamps and
tourist mementos, fees for admission to museums, and
the sale of publications. Other industries include
printing, the production of mosaics and the
manufacture of staff uniforms.
The Vatican also conducts worldwide financial
activities, having its own bank, Istituto per le
Opere di Religione (also known as the Vatican Bank,
and with the acronym IOR). This bank has an ATM with
instructions in Latin, possibly the only such ATM in
the world.
Vatican City issues its own coins. It has used the
euro as its currency since 1 January 1999, owing to
a special agreement with the European Union (council
decision 1999/98/CE). Euro coins and notes were
introduced in 1 January 2002—the Vatican does not
issue euro banknotes. Issuance of euro-denominated
coins is strictly limited by treaty, though somewhat
more than usual is allowed in a year in which there
is a change in the papacy. Because of their rarity,
Vatican euro coins are highly sought by collectors.
Until the adoption of the Euro, Vatican coinage and
stamps were denominated in their own Vatican lira
currency, which was on par with the Italian lira.
The Vatican City State, which employs nearly 2000
people, ran a deficit in 2008 of over 15 million
euros, but in 2007 had a surplus of 6.7 million
euros. The incomes and living standards of lay
workers within the Vatican are comparable to, or
somewhat better than, those of counterparts who work
in the city of Rome.
Population and languages
Almost all of Vatican
City's 826 (2009 est.) citizens either live inside
the Vatican's walls or serve in the Holy See's
diplomatic service in embassies (called "nunciatures";
a papal ambassador is a "nuncio") around the world.
The Vatican citizenry consists almost entirely of
two groups: clergy, most of whom work in the service
of the Holy See, and a very few as officials of the
state; and the Swiss Guard. Most of the 3,000 lay
workers who comprise the majority of the Vatican
workforce reside outside the Vatican and are
citizens of Italy, while a few are citizens of other
nations. As a result, all of the City's actual
citizens are Catholic as are all the places of
worship.
Vatican City has no set official language. Unlike
the Holy See, which most often uses Latin for the
authoritative version of its official documents,
Vatican City uses Italian in its legislation and
official communications. Italian is also the
everyday language used by most of those who work in
the state. In the Swiss Guard, German is the
language used for giving commands, but the
individual guards take their oath of loyalty in
their own languages, German, French, Romansh or
Italian. Vatican City's official website languages
are Italian, English, French, German, and Spanish.
Citizenship
Unlike citizenship of other
states, which is based either on jus sanguinis
(birth from a citizen, even outside the state's
territory) or on jus soli (birth within the
territory of the state), citizenship of Vatican City
is granted jus officii, namely on the grounds of
appointment to work in a certain capacity in the
service of the Holy See. It usually ceases upon
cessation of the appointment. Citizenship is
extended also to the spouse, parents and descendants
of a citizen, provided they are living with the
person who is a citizen.
Anyone who on loss of Vatican citizenship possesses
no other citizenship, as judged by Italian law,
automatically becomes an Italian citizen.
As of 31 December 2005, there were, apart from the
Pope himself, 557 people with Vatican citizenship,
while there were 246 residents in the state who did
not have its citizenship.
Of the 557, 74% were clergy:
58 cardinals, resident in Rome, mostly outside the
Vatican;
293 clergy, members of the Holy See's diplomatic
missions, resident in other countries, and forming
well over half the total of the citizens;
62 other clergy, working but not necessarily living
in the Vatican.
The 101 members of the Papal Swiss Guard constituted
18% of the total, and there were only 43 other lay
persons with Vatican citizenship.
Culture of Vatican City
Vatican
City is home to some of the most famous art in the
world. St. Peter's Basilica, whose successive
architects include Bramante, Michelangelo, Giacomo
della Porta, Maderno and Bernini is a renowned work
of Renaissance architecture. The Sistine Chapel is
famous for its frescos, which include works by
Perugino, Domenico Ghirlandaio and Botticelli as
well as the ceiling and Last Judgement by
Michelangelo. Artists who decorated the interiors of
the Vatican include Raphael and Fra Angelico. The
Vatican Library and the collections of the Vatican
Museums are of the highest historical, scientific
and cultural importance. In 1984, the Vatican was
added by UNESCO to the List of World Heritage Sites;
it is the only one to consist of an entire state. Furthermore, it is the only site to date
registered with the UNESCO as a centre containing
monuments in the "International Register of Cultural
Property under Special Protection" according to the
1954 Hague Convention for the Protection of Cultural
Property in the Event of Armed Conflict.
St Peter's
Basilica
The
centre of the Catholic world, this magnificent
basilica with its Michelangelo designed dome has an
awe-inspiring interior. This place is huge, but
everything is in such proportion that the scale
escapes you. To give you a comparison, you can fit
the Statue of Liberty, statue and pedestal (height
from ground of pedestal to torch: 93m), underneath
the dome (interior height of 120m from floor to top
of dome) with room to spare.
To
get in, you will first go through a metal detector
(after all,this is an important building). Don't be
put off if there is a long line in front of the
detectors; the whole thing moves quickly. The line
is usually shorter in the morning and during mid
week.Aside
from going inside, you can take an elevator up to
the roof and then make a long climb up 323 steps to
the top of the dome for a spectacular view. It costs
€7 for the elevator (€5 to climb the stairs) and
allow an hour to go up and down. During the climb
and before reaching the very top, you will find
yourself standing on the inside of the dome, looking
down into the Basilica itself. Be warned that there
are a lot of stairs so it is not for the faint at
heart (literally or figuratively) nor the
claustrophobic as the very last section of the
ascent is through a little more than shoulder-width
spiral staircase. Instead of leaving out the doors
you came in, go down into the crypt to see the tomb
of Pope John Paul II, the crypt leaves out the
front.
Note:
A strict dress code is enforced (as in many other
houses of worship), so have shoulders covered, wear
trousers or a not-too-short dress, and take your
hats off (which is the custom in churches in Europe,
women must wear scarves or some thing to cover their
heads. You might be required to check bags at the
entrance. Photos are allowed to be taken inside, but
not with a flash. The lack of light will probably
cause your pictures not to turn out very well, so
you may want to buy a few postcards to keep as
souvenirs.
The
basilica is open daily April to September 9AM-7PM
and October to March 9AM-6PM; closed Wednesday
mornings for papal audiences.
Daily
mass at 8:30AM, 10AM, 11AM, 12PM, & 5PM Monday to
Saturday, and Sundays & holidays at 8:30AM, 10:30AM,
11:30AM, 12:10AM, 1PM, 4PM, & 5:30PM.
Free
90 minute tours leave daily from the Tourist
Information at 2:15PM, many days also at 3PM.
Telephone: 06-6988-1662. €5 audio-guides can be
rented from the checkroom.
Tours
are the only way to see the Vatican Gardens, €12,
book at least a day in advance by calling
06-6988-4676, Tuesday, Thursday, & Saturday at 10AM,
depart from tour desk and finish in St. Peter's
Square. To tour the Necropolis and Saint's Tomb,
call the excavations office at least a week in
advance at 06-6988-5318, €10 for 2 hour tour, office
open Monday to Saturday 9AM-5PM.(www.vaticantourservices.com)
If
you want to see the pope, you can either see a usual
blessing from his apartment at noon on Sunday, just
show up (but in the summer he gives it from his
summer residence at Castel Gandolfo, 25 miles from
Rome) or you can go to the more formal Wednesdayappearance.
The pope arrives in the popemobile at 10:30AM to
bless crowds from a balcony or platform, except in
winter, when he speaks in the Aula Paola VI
Auditorium next to the square. You can easily watch
from a distance, or get a free ticket, which you
must get on the Tuesday before. There are a number
of ways:
Your hotelier may be able to book one for you
-
You could wait in a long line at St. Peter's on
Tuesday where the Swiss Guards hand out tickets
at their post to the right of the basilica,
after 12:00 on Tuesday
-
You could contact
WWW.VATICANTOURSERVICES.COM
The pope may occasionally be
away on a state visit, however.
Crime in Vatican City
In accordance with Article 22 of the 1929 Lateran
Treaty between the Holy See and Italy, the Italian
government, when requested by the Holy See, handles
the prosecution and detention of criminal suspects,
at the expense of the Vatican. In 1969, the Vatican
state abolished capital punishment, which was
envisaged in the legislation it adopted in 1929 on
the basis of Italian law, but which it never
exercised.
Transport in Vatican
City
Vatican City has a reasonably well developed
transport network considering its size. As a country
that is 1.05 kilometres (0.6 mi) long and .85
kilometres (0.5 mi) wide, it has a small
transportation system with no airports or highways.
There is one heliport and a standard gauge railway
connected to Italy's network at Rome's Saint Peter's
station by an 852 metres (932 yd) long spur, only
300 metres (328 yd) of which is within Vatican
territory. Pope John XXIII was the first Pope to
make use of this railway, and Pope John Paul II used
it as well, albeit very rarely. The railway is
mainly used to transport freight. As Vatican City
has no airports (it is one of the few independent
states in the world without one), it is served by
the airports that serve the city of Rome, within
which the Vatican is located, namely: Leonardo da
Vinci-Fiumicino Airport and to a lesser extent,
Ciampino Airport, which both serve as the departure
gateway for the Pope's international visits.
Communications
The
City is served by an independent, modern telephone
system, the Vatican Pharmacy, and post office. The
postal system was founded on 11 February 1929, and
two days later became operational. On 1 August, the
state started to release its own postal stamps,
under the authority of the Philatelic and Numismatic
Office of the Vatican City State. The City's postal
service is sometimes recognised as "the best in the
world" and mail has been noted to get to its target
before the postal service in Rome.
The Vatican also controls its own Internet TLD,
which is registered as (.va). Broadband service is
widely provided within Vatican City. Vatican City
has also been given a radio ITU prefix, HV, and this
is sometimes used by amateur radio operators.
Vatican Radio, which was organised by Guglielmo
Marconi, broadcasts on short-wave, medium-wave and
FM frequencies and on the Internet.Its main
transmission antennae are located in Italian
territory. Television services are provided through
another entity, the Vatican Television Center.
L'Osservatore Romano is the multilingual
semi-official newspaper of the Holy See. It is
published by a private corporation under the
direction of Roman Catholic laymen but reports on
official information. However, the official texts of
documents are in the Acta Apostolicae Sedis, the
official gazette of the Holy See, which has an
appendix for documents of the Vatican City State.
Vatican Radio, the Vatican Television Center, and
L'Osservatore Romano are organs not of the Vatican
State but of the Holy See, and are listed as such in
the Annuario Pontificio, which places them in the
section "Institutions linked with the Holy See",
ahead of the sections on the Holy See's diplomatic
service abroad and the Diplomatic Corps accredited
to the Holy See, after which is placed the section
on the State of Vatican City.
Talk
Latin enthusiasts rejoice! There is one country in
the world that holds Latin (in addition to Italian)
as its official language, and you can indeed get by
within the city state only using the "dead" language.
Italian, however, remains the more useful of the two.
English is widely spoken here, as are most major
languages of the world—this is the Vatican, a city
for the world's Catholics and all who wish to see St.
Peter's Basilica.
See
Monte Mario. The largest hill in Rome, with sweeping
views of the Vatican and Rome across the Tiber.
Teatro Adriano.
Palazzo di Giustizia (Palace of Justice).
Castel Sant'Angelo, 09.00 to 19.00, last entry
at 18.30, closed on Mondays. - Perhaps the most
fascinating building in Rome. The core of the
structure began life as the mausoleum of the Emperor
Hadrian, built between 135 and 139 AD. Subsequent
strongholds built on top of the mausoleum were in
turn incorporated into a residence and castle by
medieval Popes. The building was used as a prison
until 1870, but now houses a museum. Opera buffs
will be exhilarated to visit the balcony from which
Tosca leaps to her death. Film buffs will recognise
as a setting from "Angels and Demons". Euros 8,5,
with reductions. Roma Pass accepted.

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