St. john's tower
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
St. John's Tower (Torre San Giovanni) is a round structure located on a hilltop in the westernmost tip of Vatican City. [1] It is located in the Western end of the diminutive Vatican City, near Vatican Radio overlooking the Vatican Gardens.[2] The Medieval tower is located along an ancient wall built by Pope Nicholas III, but it fell into disuse at the beginning of the 16th century. It was rebuilt by Pope John XXIII in the early 1960s.[3]
The Tower also houses papal apartments used by popes when maintenance work is being done on the Apostolic Palace and is reserved for illustrious guests of the Pontiffs.[4] In 1979, Pope John Paul II temporarily moved into St John's Tower while the work in his apartment was being done.[5] In 1971, Hungarian Cardinal József Mindszenty was allowed to stay in the tower by Pope Paul VI, when the prelate was allowed to leave Budapest, where he had lived in asylum at the U.S. Embassy. [6] After Cardinal Tarcisio Bertone replaced Cardinal Angelo Sodano as Vatican Secretary of State in 2005, Bertone lived in the Tower while Sodano continued to live in the official residence.[7]
In June 2008, the Vatican announced that Pope Benedict XVI would welcome U.S. President George W. Bush in the Tower during the American President's visit to the Vatican that month, to repay Bush for the warm reception the Pope enjoyed at the White House during his April 2008 visit to the United States of America. (Normally the Pope greets heads of state in his private library in the Apostolic Palace.)
[edit] Notes
- ^ Pope to host Bush in unusual Vatican setting
- ^ HOLY SEE, STATE OF VATICAN CITY
- ^ The Vatican, Vatican Gardens
- ^ Pope moves into papal apartment
- ^ Makeover for papal apartment
- ^ End of a Private Cold War
- ^ Ratzinger's Revolutionary-in-Chief