Culture

Art, Food and the air of Rome. Curated by Lucy Gordon

The Edict of Milan’s 1700th Anniversary

The exhibition “Constantine A.D. 313: The Edict of Milan and the Age of Tolerance” commemorates the 1700th anniversary of this proclamation issued jointly by Emperors Constantine and Licinius in February 313 A.D. at Mediolanum (today’s Milan), then one of the Roman Empire’s four capital cities (the others being Nicomedia, Trier, and Sirmium). Milan was the seat [...]

A Tyrolean Restaurant and an Accommodation with a Heart

Way back in April 1995 we reviewed the Cantina Tirolese. Only about five minutes away from the obelisk in St. Peter’s Square, it is a cute restaurant run by the Macher family, in the form of a refined beer-cellar of the type usually seen in Germany and Austria. At the Cantina Tirolese, which has been around [...]

Vatican Watch – April 2013

February Monday 11 POPE BENEDICT ANNOUNCES HE WILL RESIGN “After having repeatedly examined my conscience before God, I have come to the certainty that my strengths, due to an advanced age, are no longer suited to an adequate exercise of the Petrine ministry,” the pontiff told the cardinals and announced that he would be resigning at the [...]

St. Peter’s Journey: The meaning of Faith

With his Apostolic Letter Porta Fidei, the Holy Father, now emeritus, had proclaimed a Year of Faith (October 11, 2012-November 24, 2013) to commemorate the Second Vatican Council’s opening 50 years ago and the publication of the Catechism of the Catholic Church 20 years ago. Only five days before Pope Benedict XVI’s resignation, Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone [...]

People – April 2013

DURING THE SEDE VACANTE Cardinal TARCISIO BERTONE leaves his position as secretary of state; with the interregnum the real work begins in his position as CAMERLENGO or CHAMBERLAIN of the Holy Roman Church; during the period when there is no Pope, he is charged with administering the temporal goods of the Church. When the private residence [...]

Francis, a Name with Implications

A number of gestures and actions by the newly-elected Pope, former Argentinian Cardinal Jorge Mario Bergoglio, now Pope Francis (but without the ordinal I, as expressly pointed out by the Sala Stampa Vaticana’s Father Lombardi) in the initial days of his pontificate have been hailed with words like humility, simplicity, care for the poor and marginalized, [...]

Excerpts From The Holy Father’s Lectio Divina

We have heard three verses from the First Letter of St. Peter (cf. 1:3-5). Before going into this text, it seems to me important to be aware of the fact that it is Peter who is speaking. The first two words of the Letter are “Petrus apostolus” (cf. v.1): he speaks and he speaks to the [...]

Mass in St. Peter’s Basilica

In the presence of the entire College of Cardinals, Cardinal Angelo Sodano, 85, the Dean of the College (he did not enter the Conclave to vote, because he is past the age of 80), delivered the homily “Pro Eligendo Romano Pontifice” (“For the Election of the Roman Pontiff”) in St. Peter’s Basilica — the last homily [...]

Our Lady of Africa

In our day, we tend to think of North Africa as being under the dominion of Islam, but in the second century AD the region was part of the Roman Empire, and by the third century, under Emperor Constantine, it began to become Christian. This was once the land of Saint Augustine, and it remained Christian [...]

The New Pope’s Clothes Are Ready

On February 11, a drowsy winter day, Annibale Gammarelli was working in his tailor’s workshop located in the building of the Pontifical Ecclesiastical Academy, close to the Pantheon and the Basilica of Santa Maria Sopra Minerva. At about midday a friend of his called him and told him excitedly: “Benedict XVI has resigned!” Annibale could not [...]

Load More Posts