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Inside Vatican City
| Article
# : |
11373 |
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Section : |
CULTURE
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| Issue
Date : |
11 / 1986 |
1,255 Words |
| Author
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Nancy Lee Fernas Nancy Lee Fernas is a free-lance writer and associate editor
of Mercury Magazine, a publication of the Los Angeles Athletic
Club. |
Gazing upward through the bright rays of sunlight streaming in through the centuries-old stained glass windows set high in the magnificently adorned ceilings of St. Peter's Basilica, the viewer feels an unspeakable awe at the sheer genius of the structure -the largest church in the World- Consecrated in 1626 after more than a century of planning and building.
The basilica, joined by the Piazza of St. Peter, lies near the center of Vatican City, the religious and administrative heart of the Roman Catholic Church. With 800 million followers, it is the largest single organized group of Christians in the world.
A holy site from the early days of Christianity and home to the popes since the fourteenth century, the modern state of Vatican City has existed by treaty with Italy only since 1929 when the Lateran Treaty between Mussolini's Italian government and the Holy See resolved a long dispute by recognizing the Vatican's sovereignty and establishing its borders.
The world's smallest country-Liechtenstein-is 360 times as large. Vatican City covers 108.7 acres and has a permanent resident population of about 300. It retains all the trappings of nationhood-its own postage stamps, its own diplomatic corps, its own flag, its own "army," the familiar Swiss Guard, and the right under international compact to have its own navy.
Shrouded in an aura of religious mystique and imbued in the artistic and historical chronicles of the ages, the Vatican is many things to many people. It is a political state, a religious headquarters, and a multinational
... (1988 of 7541 Characters)
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