San Pietro's Cathedral

The word VATICAN is an ancient place-name of Etruscan origin. In pre-Christian times it was applied to a vast area of swampy land stretching between what is today Trastevere and Monte Mario. During the Imperial age, however, the area was transformed into sprawling parks, with huge arenas built for sporting events. In fact, what is now St.Peter’s Square was probably a circus for chariot racing, and the sire where early Christians in the early part of the 4th Century, constructed a great basilica on the site of what is thought to be St. Peter’s Tomb. The current St. Peter’s, built during the 16th and 17th centuries, replaced that basilica. For centuries the Popes lived in the area of the right bank of the Tiber that has become the Vatican City, but the Vatican only developed into the Church’s governmental center in the 14th Century when Pope Gregory XI returned from exile in Avignon. From the late 16th through the mid-19th centuries, the Popes again neglected the Vatican, preferring to live in a new palace on the Quirinale Hill, where they believed the air was healthier. It was only after 1870 and the political unification of Italy that the Popes permanently returned to the Vatican. And it was not until 1929, when the Lateran Treaty between Italy and the Holy See recognized its sovereignty and defined its boundaries, that the State of the Vatican City was established as the official home of the Pope and the center of the Roman Catholic Church. The Vatican is the smallest sovereign state in the world (its 108 1/2 acres make it one-third the size of Monaco). It has its own currency, postal service, passport, newspapers, radio station and railroad system. Its population of less than 1000 consists almost entirely of Church personnel, Vatican administrators and representatives of international organizations.

Saint Peter's Cathedral was the first church Barb and I visited in Italy and that was probably a mistake. The mistake being, that all other churchs failed in comparison. It was amazing, you would have to be there yourself to really appreciate the cathedral. We also climbed to the top of the cathedral. If you notice the dome on top of the cathedral, this is where we took a couple of these pictures. It had awesome views of Rome and beyond. Beneath the cathedral are the tombs of all the previous Popes, including St Peters. The Vatican Musuem and Sistine Chapel were very nice, but St Peter's was breath taking.