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Aug

A History of the Secret Vatican Archive

   Posted by: Hunter   in European History, History Blog, Religious History, The Renaissance, World History

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Vatican City: A History of the Secret Vatican ArchiveBeneath the Great Courtyard of the Belvedere in Vatican City lies the Secret Vatican Archive. Though no official index or inventory of its contents exists for public inspection, its collection runs through some 25 miles of shelving and contains not only all of the Catholic Church’s official records, but thousands of documents pertaining to important events in world history as well - including English monarch Henry VIII’s petition for a marriage annulment from Pope Clement VII.

Formally established as a distinct entity apart from the neighboring Vatican Library in 1621, the Archives’ “Secret” title is predicated upon the fact it truly was a covert operation, until it was opened to secular academics in 1881. At the time, Pope Leo XIII justified the decision by stating, “The Church needs nothing but the truth.”

Pope Leo XIIISince that time, the Archive’s overseers have granted scholars access to their collection on an application-only basis; on average, only two hundred historians from outside of the Catholic hierarchy are permitted entrance each year. Among the records that those select few have inspected are accounts of the goings-on behind the canonization of saints, architectural schematics for Vatican City’s buildings, chapels and infrastructure, transcripts and evidence from the trials of Galileo and the Knights Templar and papal reports, correspondence and diaries.

The Archive’s earliest known document dates from 471 AD. It is an Act of Donation from Junius Bassus, the Roman consul of Tivoli and a Catholic-converted Goth, who bequeathed the majority of his property to the Church before retiring to the countryside. When the document was copied in the 12th century, it could still be read and handled. The original has since disintegrated, but remains in possession of the Archive.

Napoleon is depicted as King of Italy. He wears the 'Grand Aigle' (collar) of his (French) Legion of Honour and the sash and star of the Order of the Iron Crown.The wide-ranging subject matter and depth of the Vatican’s closely guarded collection has made it ripe for conquest by would-be conquerors. In 1810, during Napoleon’s occupation of Rome, the Emperor annexed the Archives in his bid to create a world library and had its contents packaged and shipped to Paris by wagon. After his fall in 1814, it was immediately recalled to Rome – but only after many “unimportant” pieces of parchment were sold off to French paper manufactures in bulk. One story tells of the Archive’s former prefect visiting Paris to oversee its restoration, only to discover that a seven hundred-volume registry of papal bulls had been distributed as wrapping paper to butcher shops throughout the city.

Today, the number of documents released from the Archive grows with each passing decade. Most recently, Pope Benedict XVI approved the release of all documents through 1939. Echoing his predecessor’s call for “nothing but the truth,” Benedict XVI cited the “unjust and thoughtless speculation” concerning the Church’s supposed complicity with Nazi Germany in the years prior to World War II – an issue that remains contentious to this day.


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Tags: 1621, 1810, 1814, 1881, 471 AD, Act of Donation from Junius Bassus, Belvedere in Vatican City, Catholic Church history, Church’s supposed complicity with Nazi Germany, Henry VIII’s petition for a marriage annulment, History DVDs, Napoleon's conquest of Italy, papal bulls, Pope Benedict XVI, Pope Clement VII, Pope Leo XIII, replica guns, Replica Swords, Roman consul of Tivoli, scale model kits, Secret Vatican Archive, Vatican library

This entry was posted on Friday, August 21st, 2009 at 11:03 am and is filed under European History, History Blog, Religious History, The Renaissance, World History. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

One comment

The End
 1 

The problem with releasing documents to the public that exculpates the Vatican during WW2 is that they’ve had 70 years to doctor, destroy or replace the documents in their favour.

End.

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August 25th, 2009 at 10:46 am

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