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Vatican City

By May 4, 2021Monuments

Vatican City

CITTÀ DEL VATICANO - Gabbiaservices

The Vatican City, officially the Vatican City State also called simply the Vatican, is a State of the Italian Peninsula.

It is the smallest sovereign state in the world, both in terms of population (453 inhabitants) and territorial extension (0.44 km), the sixth in terms of population density.

As a form of government it is a theocracy, that is, a form of government, according to which the management of religious and secular governmental activities coincide.

The city-state was born on 7 June 1929 with the Lateran Pacts, signed on 11 February of the same year between Benito Mussolini and the cardinal secretary of state Pietro Gasparri, respectively the representatives of the Kingdom of Italy and the Holy See.

The official language is Latin and the state bills its own currency, but, as a result of the customs and monetary union with Italy, adopts the euro.

It issues its own stamps, which can be used for the postal service to the whole world (but obviously only with shipment from the Vatican Post Office).

The Vatican also publishes a daily newspaper, L’Osservatore Romano, founded in 1861, and since 1931 a station has been operating, Vatican Radio, which broadcasts in various languages.

Three extraordinary points of interest can be visited in the Vatican City:

 – St. Peter’s Square

 – Saint Peter’s Church

 – The Vatican Museums, where the Sistine Chapel is located.

St. Peter’s Square

Roma: Piazza San Pietro

The dimensions of the square are spectacular: 320 meters long and 240 meters wide.

On the occasion of important liturgical events, St. Peter’s Square has come to welcome more than 300,000 people.

The square was built, by order of Pope Alexander VII, between 1656 and 1667, based on a project by Bernini,

and in addition to its enormous size, the 284 columns and 88 pillars that surround the square in a four-row portico are truly impressive.

In the upper part of the columns there are 140 statues of saints, made in 1670 by Bernini’s disciples.

In the center of the square we find an obelisk and two fountains, one designed by Bernini (1675) and the other designed by Maderno (1614).

The obelisk, 25 meters high, was brought to Rome from Egypt in 1586.

The most suggestive way to reach St. Peter’s Square is to take Via della Conciliazione, a long road that starts from Sant’Angelo Castle.

Saint Peter’s Church St.

Peter’s Basilica welcomes the Holy See and is the most important temple of the Catholic Church, where the Pope celebrates the most important liturgies.

Construction of the basilica began in 1506 and ended in 1626, and was consecrated on November 18 of this last year.

Various architects took part in its construction, including Bramante, Michelangelo and Carlo Maderno.

The name is due to the first Pope in history, St. Peter, whose body lies in the basilica.

The interior of the Basilica

San Pietro, basilica

St. Peter’s Basilica can hold up to 20,000 people.

It is 190 meters high and the central nave is 46 meters high, while the dome reaches 136 meters in height.

Among the works of art preserved inside are Bernini’s Baldacchino, Michelangelo’s Pietà and the bronze statue of St. Peter.

This last sculpture has the right foot consumed by the kisses of the faithful.

The dome

La cupola di San Pietro

It was designed by Michelangelo and was carried out by Giacomo Della Porta and, in 1914, by Carlo Maderno

Vatican Museums

The Sistine Chapel

Gli affreschi quattrocenteschi della Cappella Sistina – Michelangelo Buonarroti è tornato
The Sistine Chapel is one of the most important treasures of the Vatican, Rome and the world.
It is famous for its frescoes but also because it is where the Popes are elected.
All the frescoes on the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel are the work of Michelangelo Buonarroti, who took four years to paint the vault (from 1508 to 1512).
Among the most fascinating images of the frescoes are the stories of the genesis, which occupy the central part, from the Drunkenness of Noah to the Separation of Light from Darkness.

Creation of Adam

The Creation of Adam is, without a doubt, the most famous image in the Sistine Chapel.
It is located in the central part of the vault and represents the passage from Genesis in which God gives life to Adam.

Universal Judgment

On the main altar there is another masterpiece by Michelangelo, The Last Judgment, a large fresco (13.7 by 12.2 meters) which illustrates what is narrated in the book of John’s Apocalypse.
Michelangelo took five years to fresco the apse, from 1536 to 1541.
The task was assigned to him by Pope Clement VII, to replace the frescoes that previously decorated the walls of the apse.
Rome is not just a city, but it is a history book that can be read by walking through it …
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