Vatican
City
The
State
of
the
Vatican
City
is
the
smallest
independent
country
in
the
world
(both
in
area
and
in
population),
a
landlocked
enclave
surrounded
by
the
city
of
Rome
in
Italy.
"The
Vatican"
is
the
home
of
the
Pope,
and
forms
the
territory
of
the
Holy
See,
the
central
authority
of
the
Roman
Catholic
Church.
The
Vatican
City
includes
the
Vatican
Hill
(mons
vaticanus),
whose
name
antedates
Christianity,
and
the
Vatican
Fields
north
of
the
hill,
upon
which
St.
Peter's
Basilica,
the
Sistine
Chapel,
and
the
Vatican
Museums
are
built.
History
Main
article:
History
of
the
Vatican
City
It
is
supposed
that
this
originally
uninhabited
part
of
Rome
(the
ager
vaticanus)
had
always
been
considered
sacred,
even
before
the
arrival
of
Christianity.
In
326
the
first
church
was
built
on
the
supposed
site
of
the
tomb
of
Saint
Peter,
and
from
then
on
the
area
started
to
become
more
populated.
Popes
in
their
secular
role
gradually
extended
their
control
over
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
most
of
the
territory
of
the
Papal
States
was
seized
by
the
newly
united
Kingdom
of
Italy.
In
1870,
the
Pope's
holdings
were
further
circumscribed
when
Rome
itself
was
annexed.
Disputes
between
a
series
of
"prisoner"
popes
and
Italy
were
resolved
on
February
11,
1929
by
three
Lateran
treaties
(also
known
as
the
Concordat),
which
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
of
the
earlier
treaty
provisions,
including
the
primacy
of
Roman
Catholicism
as
the
Italian
state
religion.
Politics
Main
article:
Politics
of
the
Vatican
City
The
Vatican
is
technically
a
rare
case
of
a
non-hereditary
elective
monarchy;
the
monarch,
the
Pope,
being
elected
for
life
by
those
Cardinalss
under
the
age
of
80
during
a
Conclave
(held
in
the
Sistine
Chapel).
The
term
"Holy
See"
refers
to
the
composite
of
the
authority,
jurisdiction,
and
sovereignty
vested
in
the
Pope
and
his
advisers
to
direct
the
worldwide
Roman
Catholic
Church.
As
the
"central
government"
of
the
Roman
Catholic
Church,
the
Holy
See
has
a
legal
personality
that
allows
it
to
enter
into
treaties
as
the
juridical
equal
of
a
state.
The
Pope
delegates
the
internal
administration
of
the
Vatican
City
to
the
Pontifical
Commission
for
the
State
of
the
Vatican
City.
The
legal
system
is
based
on
canon,
or
ecclesiastical,
law;
if
canon
law
is
not
applicable,
the
laws
of
the
city
of
Rome
apply.
As
an
independent
state,
the
Vatican
has
the
right
to
send
and
receive
diplomatic
representatives,
including
foreign
embassies,
which
are
located
in
the
Italian
part
of
Rome
due
to
the
very
limited
territory
of
the
state.
This
means,
that
Italy
hosts
its
own
Embassy
of
Italy.
Geography
Main
article:
Geography
of
the
Vatican
City
The
Vatican
City
is
situated
on
the
Vatican
Hill
in
the
northwestern
part
of
Rome,
several
hundred
metres
west
of
the
Tiber
river.
Its
borders
(3.2
km
in
total,
all
with
Italy)
closely
follow
the
city
wall
constructed
to
protect
the
Pope
from
outside
attack.
The
situation
is
more
complex
at
the
famous
St.
Peter's
Square
in
front
of
the
St.
Peter's
Basilica,
where
the
correct
border
is
the
middle
of
the
round
area
surrounded
by
Bernini's
columns.
It
is
the
smallest
sovereign
state
in
the
world
(108.7
acres).
In
addition
to
Vatican
City
the
State
includes
certain
extra-territorial
properties
in
Italy
belonging
to
the
Holy
See
(Major
Basilicas,
Curial
and
diocesan
offices,
Castel
Gandolpho).
The
Pope
is
the
Head
of
State,
though
he
governs
through
the
Pontifical
Commission
for
the
State
of
Vatican
City.
The
Gubernator
manages
the
day
to
day
affairs
of
the
State.
Its
climate
is
naturally
much
the
same
as
Rome's;
a
temperate,
mediterranean
clime
with
mild,
rainy
winters
from
September
to
mid-May
and
hot,
dry
summers
from
May
to
September.
Economy
Main
article:
Economy
of
the
Vatican
City
This
unique,
noncommercial
economy
is
supported
financially
by
contributions
(known
as
Peter's
Pence)
from
Roman
Catholics
throughout
the
world,
the
sale
of
postage
stamps,
coins
and
tourist
mementos,
fees
for
admission
to
museums,
and
the
sale
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