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Lateran Treaty

The Lateran Treaty (Italian: Patti Lateranensi; Latin: Pacta Lateranensia) was one component of the Lateran Pacts of 1929, agreements between the Kingdom of Italy under King Victor Emmanuel III of Italy and the Holy See under Pope Pius XI to settle the long-standing Roman Question. The treaty and associated pacts were named after the Lateran Palace where they were signed on 11 February 1929,[1] and the Italian parliament ratified them on 7 June 1929. The treaty recognized Vatican City as an independent state under the sovereignty of the Holy See. The Italian government also agreed to give the Roman Catholic Church financial compensation for the loss of the Papal States.[2] In 1948, the Lateran Treaty was recognized in the Constitution of Italy as regulating the relations between the state and the Catholic Church.[3] The treaty was significantly revised in 1984, ending the status of Catholicism as the sole state religion.

Lateran Treaty
Vatican and Italian delegations prior to signing the treaty
TypeBilateral treaty
ContextEstablishment of papal state on the Italian Peninsula
Signed11 February 1929 (1929-02-11)[1]
LocationRome, Italy
Effective7 June 1929
ConditionRatification by the Holy See and the Kingdom of Italy
Signatories  Holy See
 Italy
LanguageItalian

Content

The Lateran Pacts are often presented as three treaties: a 27-article treaty of conciliation, a three-article financial convention, and a 45-article concordat.[4] However, the website of the Holy See presents the financial convention as an annex of the treaty of conciliation, considering the pacts as two documents:[5]

  • A political treaty recognising the full sovereignty of the Holy See in the State of Vatican City, which was thereby established, accompanied by four annexes:
    • A map of the territory of Vatican City State
    • Maps of buildings with extraterritorial privilege and exemption from expropriation and taxes (owned by the Holy See but located in Italy and not forming part of Vatican City)
    • Maps of buildings with exemption from expropriation and taxes (but without extraterritorial privilege)
    • A financial convention agreed on as a definitive settlement of the claims of the Holy See following the loss in 1870 of its territories and property[a]
  • A concordat regulating relations between the Catholic Church and the Italian state

History

 
Francesco Pacelli was the right-hand man to Pietro Gasparri during the Lateran Treaty negotiations
 
Territory of Vatican City State, established by the Lateran Accords
 
2013 map of Vatican City

During the unification of Italy in the mid-19th century, the Papal States resisted incorporation into the new nation, even as all the other Italian countries, except for San Marino, joined it; Camillo Cavour's dream of proclaiming the Kingdom of Italy from the steps of St. Peter's Basilica did not come to pass. The nascent Kingdom of Italy invaded and occupied Romagna (the eastern portion of the Papal States) in 1860, leaving only Latium in the pope's domains. Latium, including Rome itself, was occupied and annexed in 1870. For the following sixty years, relations between the Papacy and the Italian government were hostile, and the status of the pope became known as the "Roman Question".

The Popes knew that Rome was irrevocably the capital of Italy. There was nothing they wanted less than to govern it or be burdened with a papal kingdom. What they wished was independence, a foothold on the earth that belonged to no other sovereign.[7]

Negotiations for the settlement of the Roman Question began in 1926 between the government of Italy and the Holy See, and culminated in the agreements of the Lateran Pacts, signed—the Treaty says—for King Victor Emmanuel III of Italy by Prime Minister Benito Mussolini and for Pope Pius XI by Cardinal Secretary of State Pietro Gasparri,[8] on 11 February 1929.[9] It was ratified on 7 June 1929.[10]

The agreements included a political treaty which created the state of the Vatican City and guaranteed full and independent sovereignty to the Holy See. The Pope was pledged to perpetual neutrality in international relations and to abstention from mediation in a controversy unless specifically requested by all parties. In the first article of the treaty, Italy reaffirmed the principle established in the 1848 Constitution of the Kingdom of Italy, that "the Catholic, Apostolic and Roman Religion is the only religion of the State".[11] The attached financial agreement was accepted as settlement of all the claims of the Holy See against Italy arising from the loss of temporal power of the Papal States in 1870.

The sum thereby given to the Holy See was actually less than Italy declared it would pay under the terms of the Law of Guarantees of 1871, by which the Italian government guaranteed to Pope Pius IX and his successors the use of, but not sovereignty over, the Vatican and Lateran Palaces and a yearly income of Lire 3,250,000 as indemnity for the loss of sovereignty and territory. The Holy See, on the grounds of the need for clearly manifested independence from any political power in its exercise of spiritual jurisdiction, had refused to accept the settlement offered in 1871, and the popes thereafter until the signing of the Lateran Treaty considered themselves prisoners in the Vatican, a small, limited area inside Rome.

To commemorate the successful conclusion of the negotiations, Mussolini commissioned the Via della Conciliazione (Road of the Conciliation), which would symbolically link the Vatican City to the heart of Rome.

After 1946

The Constitution of the Italian Republic, adopted in 1948, states that relations between the State and the Catholic Church "are regulated by the Lateran Treaties".[3]

In 1984, the concordat was significantly revised. Among other things, both sides declared: "The principle of the Catholic religion as the sole religion of the Italian State, originally referred to by the Lateran Pacts, shall be considered to be no longer in force".[12] The Church's position as the sole state-supported religion of Italy was also ended, replacing the state financing with a personal income tax called the otto per mille, to which other religious groups, Christian and non-Christian, also have access. As of 2013, there are ten other religious groups with access. The revised concordat regulated the conditions under which civil effects are accorded by Italy to church marriages and to ecclesiastical declarations of nullity of marriages.[13] Abolished articles included those concerning state recognition of knighthoods and titles of nobility conferred by the Holy See,[14] the undertaking by the Holy See to confer ecclesiastical honours on those authorized to perform religious functions at the request of the State or the Royal Household,[15] and the obligation of the Holy See to enable the Italian government to present political objections to the proposed appointment of diocesan bishops.[16]

In 2008, it was announced that the Vatican would no longer immediately adopt all Italian laws, citing conflict over right-to-life issues following the trial and ruling of the Eluana Englaro case.[17][failed verification]

Violations

Italy's anti-Jewish laws of 1938 prohibited marriages between Jews and non-Jews, including Catholics: the Vatican viewed this as a violation of the Concordat, which gave the church the sole right to regulate marriages involving Catholics.[18] Further, Article 34 of the Concordat had also specified that marriages performed by the Catholic Church would always be considered valid by civil authorities: [19] the Holy See understood this to apply to all marriages in Italy celebrated by Roman Catholic clergy, regardless of the faiths of those being married.[19]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ The Italian state agreed to pay Lire 750 million immediately plus consolidated bearer bonds with a coupon rate of 5% and a nominal value of Lire 1,000 million. It thus paid less than it would have paid, Lire 3.25 million per annum, under the 1871 Law of Guarantees, which the Holy See had not accepted.[6]

References

  1. ^ a b "Vatican City turns 91". Vatican News. 11 February 2020. Retrieved 2 September 2021. The world's smallest sovereign state was born on February 11, 1929, with the signing of the Lateran Treaty between the Holy See and the Kingdom of Italy
  2. ^ A History of Western Society (Tenth ed.). Bedford/St. Martin's. 2010. p. 900.
  3. ^ a b Constitution of Italy, article 7.
  4. ^ Multiple sources:
    • . www.aloha.net. Archived from the original on 23 May 2018. Retrieved 5 April 2013.
    • James Brown Scott, "The Treaty between Italy and the Vatican" in Proceedings of the American Society of International Law at Its Annual Meeting (1921–1969), volume 23, (24-27 April 1929), p. 13.
    • "Holy See (Vatican City) Government Profile 2017". www.indexmundi.com.
    • "CIA Factbook, "Holy See (Vatican City)"". Retrieved 26 October 2013.
    • (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 29 October 2013. Retrieved 26 October 2013.
    • . www.pbmstoria.it. Archived from the original on 11 October 2013. Retrieved 26 October 2013.
  5. ^ Pacts between the Holy See and the Kingdom of Italy, 11 February 1929.
  6. ^ Multiple sources:
    • "End of Roman Question: Lateran Treaty Signed". lactualite.tripod.com.
    • John F. Pollard, The Vatican and Italian Fascism, 1929–32: A Study in Conflict (Cambridge University Press 2005 ISBN 978-0-52102366-5), p. 43.
    • John Whittam, Fascist Italy (Manchester University Press 1995 ISBN 978-0-71904004-7), p. 77.
    • Gerhard Robbers, Encyclopedia of World Constitutions (Infobase Publishing 2006 ISBN 978-0-81606078-8), p. 1007.
    • (PDF). Archived from the original (PDF) on 16 May 2012..
    • "How the Vatican built a secret property empire using Mussolini's millions", The Guardian, 21 January 2013.
  7. ^ Vatican Journal, p. 59 (entry dated June 14, 1931).
  8. ^ Kertzer, Prisoner of the Vatican, p. 292
  9. ^ Rhodes, The Vatican in the Age of the Dictators, p. 46
  10. ^ The National Encyclopedia, Vol. 10, p. 266
  11. ^ "Patti lateranensi, 11 febbraio 1929 - Segreteria di Stato, card. Pietro Gasparri". www.vatican.va.
  12. ^ "Agreement between the Italian Republic and the Holy See (English translation)" (PDF). The American Society of International Law. (PDF) from the original on 22 September 2020. Retrieved 2 September 2021.
  13. ^ Article 8 of the revised concordat
  14. ^ Articles 41–42 of the 1929 concordat
  15. ^ Article 15 of the 1929 concordat
  16. ^ Article 19 of the 1929 concordat
  17. ^ Elgood, Giles (31 December 2008). "Vatican ends automatic adoption of Italian law". Reuters. from the original on 9 March 2021. Retrieved 9 January 2009. The Vatican will no longer automatically adopt new Italian laws as its own, a top Vatican official said, citing the vast number of laws Italy churns out, many of which are in odds with Catholic doctrine.
  18. ^ Zuccotti, 2000, p. 37.
  19. ^ a b Zuccotti, 2000, p. 48.

Sources

  • Kertzer, David I. (2004). Prisoner of the Vatican: The Popes' Secret Plot to Capture Rome from the New Italian State (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Company).
  • Kertzer, David I. (2014). The Pope and Mussolini: The Secret History of Pius XI and the Rise of Fascism in Europe. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780198716167.
  • Latourette, Kenneth Scott. Christianity in a Revolutionary Age: A History of Christianity in the 19th and 20th Century: Vol. 4 The 20th Century in Europe (1961), pp. 32–35, 153, 156, 371.
  • McCormick, Anne O'Hare (1957). Vatican Journal: 1921-1954 (New York: Farrar, Straus and Cudahy)
  • Pollard, John F. (2005). The Vatican and Italian Fascism, 1929–32: A Study in Conflict. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0521023665.
  • Pollard, Jonh F. (2014). The Papacy in the Age of Totalitarianism, 1914–1958. Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780199208562.
  • Rhodes, Anthony (1974). The Vatican in the Age of the Dictators, 1922-1945. New York, NY; Chicago, IL; San Francisco, CA: Holt, Rinehart and Winston.
  • Riccards, Michael (1998). Vicars of Christ: Popes, Power, and Politics in the Modern World. New York, NY: Crossroad. ISBN 0-8245-1694-X.
  • Suzzallo, Henry, Ph.D., Sc.D., LL.D., Editor in Chief, The National Encyclopedia: Volume 10, (New York, P. F. Collier & Son Corporation, 1935)
  • Zuccotti, Susan (2002). Under His Very Windows: The Vatican and the Holocaust in Italy. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press. ISBN 0-300-09310-1.

Archival sources

  • Jacuzio, Raffaele; Alfredo Rocco, Alfredo (1932). (in Italian). Turin: Unione tipografica editori torinese. pp. VIII, 693. OCLC 250715403. Archived from the original on 18 June 2019. Retrieved 27 August 2019 – via archive.is. {{cite book}}: External link in |via= (help)

External links

  • (English translation)
  • Text of the Lateran Pacts, including the financial convention and the concordat (original Italian)
  • Italian law executing the Lateran Pacts, with the text and annexed maps (original Italian)

lateran, treaty, italian, patti, lateranensi, latin, pacta, lateranensia, component, lateran, pacts, 1929, agreements, between, kingdom, italy, under, king, victor, emmanuel, italy, holy, under, pope, pius, settle, long, standing, roman, question, treaty, asso. The Lateran Treaty Italian Patti Lateranensi Latin Pacta Lateranensia was one component of the Lateran Pacts of 1929 agreements between the Kingdom of Italy under King Victor Emmanuel III of Italy and the Holy See under Pope Pius XI to settle the long standing Roman Question The treaty and associated pacts were named after the Lateran Palace where they were signed on 11 February 1929 1 and the Italian parliament ratified them on 7 June 1929 The treaty recognized Vatican City as an independent state under the sovereignty of the Holy See The Italian government also agreed to give the Roman Catholic Church financial compensation for the loss of the Papal States 2 In 1948 the Lateran Treaty was recognized in the Constitution of Italy as regulating the relations between the state and the Catholic Church 3 The treaty was significantly revised in 1984 ending the status of Catholicism as the sole state religion Lateran TreatyVatican and Italian delegations prior to signing the treatyTypeBilateral treatyContextEstablishment of papal state on the Italian PeninsulaSigned11 February 1929 1929 02 11 1 LocationRome ItalyEffective7 June 1929ConditionRatification by the Holy See and the Kingdom of ItalySignatories Holy See ItalyLanguageItalian Contents 1 Content 2 History 2 1 After 1946 3 Violations 4 See also 5 Notes 6 References 7 Sources 8 External linksContent EditThe Lateran Pacts are often presented as three treaties a 27 article treaty of conciliation a three article financial convention and a 45 article concordat 4 However the website of the Holy See presents the financial convention as an annex of the treaty of conciliation considering the pacts as two documents 5 A political treaty recognising the full sovereignty of the Holy See in the State of Vatican City which was thereby established accompanied by four annexes A map of the territory of Vatican City State Maps of buildings with extraterritorial privilege and exemption from expropriation and taxes owned by the Holy See but located in Italy and not forming part of Vatican City Maps of buildings with exemption from expropriation and taxes but without extraterritorial privilege A financial convention agreed on as a definitive settlement of the claims of the Holy See following the loss in 1870 of its territories and property a A concordat regulating relations between the Catholic Church and the Italian stateHistory EditThis section needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources in this section Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Lateran Treaty news newspapers books scholar JSTOR February 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Francesco Pacelli was the right hand man to Pietro Gasparri during the Lateran Treaty negotiations Territory of Vatican City State established by the Lateran Accords 2013 map of Vatican City During the unification of Italy in the mid 19th century the Papal States resisted incorporation into the new nation even as all the other Italian countries except for San Marino joined it Camillo Cavour s dream of proclaiming the Kingdom of Italy from the steps of St Peter s Basilica did not come to pass The nascent Kingdom of Italy invaded and occupied Romagna the eastern portion of the Papal States in 1860 leaving only Latium in the pope s domains Latium including Rome itself was occupied and annexed in 1870 For the following sixty years relations between the Papacy and the Italian government were hostile and the status of the pope became known as the Roman Question The Popes knew that Rome was irrevocably the capital of Italy There was nothing they wanted less than to govern it or be burdened with a papal kingdom What they wished was independence a foothold on the earth that belonged to no other sovereign 7 Negotiations for the settlement of the Roman Question began in 1926 between the government of Italy and the Holy See and culminated in the agreements of the Lateran Pacts signed the Treaty says for King Victor Emmanuel III of Italy by Prime Minister Benito Mussolini and for Pope Pius XI by Cardinal Secretary of State Pietro Gasparri 8 on 11 February 1929 9 It was ratified on 7 June 1929 10 The agreements included a political treaty which created the state of the Vatican City and guaranteed full and independent sovereignty to the Holy See The Pope was pledged to perpetual neutrality in international relations and to abstention from mediation in a controversy unless specifically requested by all parties In the first article of the treaty Italy reaffirmed the principle established in the 1848 Constitution of the Kingdom of Italy that the Catholic Apostolic and Roman Religion is the only religion of the State 11 The attached financial agreement was accepted as settlement of all the claims of the Holy See against Italy arising from the loss of temporal power of the Papal States in 1870 The sum thereby given to the Holy See was actually less than Italy declared it would pay under the terms of the Law of Guarantees of 1871 by which the Italian government guaranteed to Pope Pius IX and his successors the use of but not sovereignty over the Vatican and Lateran Palaces and a yearly income of Lire 3 250 000 as indemnity for the loss of sovereignty and territory The Holy See on the grounds of the need for clearly manifested independence from any political power in its exercise of spiritual jurisdiction had refused to accept the settlement offered in 1871 and the popes thereafter until the signing of the Lateran Treaty considered themselves prisoners in the Vatican a small limited area inside Rome To commemorate the successful conclusion of the negotiations Mussolini commissioned the Via della Conciliazione Road of the Conciliation which would symbolically link the Vatican City to the heart of Rome After 1946 Edit The Constitution of the Italian Republic adopted in 1948 states that relations between the State and the Catholic Church are regulated by the Lateran Treaties 3 In 1984 the concordat was significantly revised Among other things both sides declared The principle of the Catholic religion as the sole religion of the Italian State originally referred to by the Lateran Pacts shall be considered to be no longer in force 12 The Church s position as the sole state supported religion of Italy was also ended replacing the state financing with a personal income tax called the otto per mille to which other religious groups Christian and non Christian also have access As of 2013 update there are ten other religious groups with access The revised concordat regulated the conditions under which civil effects are accorded by Italy to church marriages and to ecclesiastical declarations of nullity of marriages 13 Abolished articles included those concerning state recognition of knighthoods and titles of nobility conferred by the Holy See 14 the undertaking by the Holy See to confer ecclesiastical honours on those authorized to perform religious functions at the request of the State or the Royal Household 15 and the obligation of the Holy See to enable the Italian government to present political objections to the proposed appointment of diocesan bishops 16 In 2008 it was announced that the Vatican would no longer immediately adopt all Italian laws citing conflict over right to life issues following the trial and ruling of the Eluana Englaro case 17 failed verification Violations EditItaly s anti Jewish laws of 1938 prohibited marriages between Jews and non Jews including Catholics the Vatican viewed this as a violation of the Concordat which gave the church the sole right to regulate marriages involving Catholics 18 Further Article 34 of the Concordat had also specified that marriages performed by the Catholic Church would always be considered valid by civil authorities 19 the Holy See understood this to apply to all marriages in Italy celebrated by Roman Catholic clergy regardless of the faiths of those being married 19 See also EditConcordat Law of Guarantees List of sovereigns of the Vatican City State Index of Vatican City related articles Properties of the Holy See Roman Question Reichskonkordat treaty between the Holy See and Nazi Germany Religion in ItalyNotes Edit The Italian state agreed to pay Lire 750 million immediately plus consolidated bearer bonds with a coupon rate of 5 and a nominal value of Lire 1 000 million It thus paid less than it would have paid Lire 3 25 million per annum under the 1871 Law of Guarantees which the Holy See had not accepted 6 References Edit a b Vatican City turns 91 Vatican News 11 February 2020 Retrieved 2 September 2021 The world s smallest sovereign state was born on February 11 1929 with the signing of the Lateran Treaty between the Holy See and the Kingdom of Italy A History of Western Society Tenth ed Bedford St Martin s 2010 p 900 a b Constitution of Italy article 7 Multiple sources Text of the Lateran Treaty of 1929 www aloha net Archived from the original on 23 May 2018 Retrieved 5 April 2013 James Brown Scott The Treaty between Italy and the Vatican in Proceedings of the American Society of International Law at Its Annual Meeting 1921 1969 volume 23 24 27 April 1929 p 13 Holy See Vatican City Government Profile 2017 www indexmundi com CIA Factbook Holy See Vatican City Retrieved 26 October 2013 La Chiesa cattolica e il fascismo PDF Archived from the original PDF on 29 October 2013 Retrieved 26 October 2013 Scopri StoriaLive www pbmstoria it Archived from the original on 11 October 2013 Retrieved 26 October 2013 Pacts between the Holy See and the Kingdom of Italy 11 February 1929 Multiple sources End of Roman Question Lateran Treaty Signed lactualite tripod com John F Pollard The Vatican and Italian Fascism 1929 32 A Study in Conflict Cambridge University Press 2005 ISBN 978 0 52102366 5 p 43 John Whittam Fascist Italy Manchester University Press 1995 ISBN 978 0 71904004 7 p 77 Gerhard Robbers Encyclopedia of World Constitutions Infobase Publishing 2006 ISBN 978 0 81606078 8 p 1007 Law Library Journal volume 99 3 p 590 PDF Archived from the original PDF on 16 May 2012 How the Vatican built a secret property empire using Mussolini s millions The Guardian 21 January 2013 Vatican Journal p 59 entry dated June 14 1931 Kertzer Prisoner of the Vatican p 292 Rhodes The Vatican in the Age of the Dictators p 46 The National Encyclopedia Vol 10 p 266 Patti lateranensi 11 febbraio 1929 Segreteria di Stato card Pietro Gasparri www vatican va Agreement between the Italian Republic and the Holy See English translation PDF The American Society of International Law Archived PDF from the original on 22 September 2020 Retrieved 2 September 2021 Article 8 of the revised concordat Articles 41 42 of the 1929 concordat Article 15 of the 1929 concordat Article 19 of the 1929 concordat Elgood Giles 31 December 2008 Vatican ends automatic adoption of Italian law Reuters Archived from the original on 9 March 2021 Retrieved 9 January 2009 The Vatican will no longer automatically adopt new Italian laws as its own a top Vatican official said citing the vast number of laws Italy churns out many of which are in odds with Catholic doctrine Zuccotti 2000 p 37 a b Zuccotti 2000 p 48 Sources EditKertzer David I 2004 Prisoner of the Vatican The Popes Secret Plot to Capture Rome from the New Italian State Boston Houghton Mifflin Company Kertzer David I 2014 The Pope and Mussolini The Secret History of Pius XI and the Rise of Fascism in Europe Oxford University Press ISBN 9780198716167 Latourette Kenneth Scott Christianity in a Revolutionary Age A History of Christianity in the 19th and 20th Century Vol 4 The 20th Century in Europe 1961 pp 32 35 153 156 371 McCormick Anne O Hare 1957 Vatican Journal 1921 1954 New York Farrar Straus and Cudahy Pollard John F 2005 The Vatican and Italian Fascism 1929 32 A Study in Conflict Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0521023665 Pollard Jonh F 2014 The Papacy in the Age of Totalitarianism 1914 1958 Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199208562 Rhodes Anthony 1974 The Vatican in the Age of the Dictators 1922 1945 New York NY Chicago IL San Francisco CA Holt Rinehart and Winston Riccards Michael 1998 Vicars of Christ Popes Power and Politics in the Modern World New York NY Crossroad ISBN 0 8245 1694 X Suzzallo Henry Ph D Sc D LL D Editor in Chief The National Encyclopedia Volume 10 New York P F Collier amp Son Corporation 1935 Zuccotti Susan 2002 Under His Very Windows The Vatican and the Holocaust in Italy New Haven CT Yale University Press ISBN 0 300 09310 1 Archival sources Jacuzio Raffaele Alfredo Rocco Alfredo 1932 Commento della nuova legislazione in materia ecclesiastica in Italian Turin Unione tipografica editori torinese pp VIII 693 OCLC 250715403 Archived from the original on 18 June 2019 Retrieved 27 August 2019 via archive is a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a External link in code class cs1 code via code help External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Lateran Treaty Text of the Lateran Treaty English translation Text of the Lateran Pacts including the financial convention and the concordat original Italian Italian law executing the Lateran Pacts with the text and annexed maps original Italian Portals Vatican City Italy History Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lateran Treaty amp oldid 1146151071, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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