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  1. Jun 6, 2020 · However, according to a Vatican curator, the Vatican Hill takes its name from the Latin word Vaticanus, a vaticiniis ferendis, in allusion to the oracles, or Vaticinia, which were anciently delivered here.

  2. Apr 18, 2023 · He took the name Sixtus IV. Pope Sixtus IV was known for many things including rebuilding the Cappella Magna, which had become decrepit. Between 1473 and 1481, architects worked to rebuild the chapel before it was opened in 1483. It was thereafter called the Sistine Chapel, named for Pope Sixtus IV.

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  4. Aug 16, 2019 · The Church decided that this name needed to be replaced with the words “God” and “Lord” and so “Yahweh” was stricken from all the passages and the scrolls were kept in the Apostolic archives of the Vatican and hidden from public knowledge as the name of the God was to be known by the Pope only.

  5. While the the modern independent state of Vatican City was only born in 1929, its beginnings as the seat of the Roman Catholic Church began back in 4th century BC with the construction of the St. Peter’s Basilica.

  6. www.history.com › topics › religionVatican City - HISTORY

    Aug 4, 2015 · The Vatican’s history as the seat of the Catholic Church began with the construction of a basilica over St. Peters grave in Rome in the 4th century A.D. The area developed into a popular ...

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  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Vatican_CityVatican City - Wikipedia

    In 1279, Pope Nicholas III (Giovanni Gaetano Orsini, 1277–1280) moved his residence back to the Vatican from the Lateran Palace and enclosed this area with walls. He planted an orchard (pomerium), a lawn (pratellum), and a garden (viridarium).

  8. In the view of many churchmen, the renewal achieved by Vatican II challenges Protestantism to put its own houses of God in order and revise its attitude toward the church against which the ...