Hidden artifact appearances5/28/2023 ![]() In 1855, Augustin Theiner, prefect of the Archive, began to publish multi-volume collections of documents from the archive. Inadequate funding led to losses en route, with one scholar of the period estimating that "about one-fourth to one-third of the archival materials that went to Paris never returned to the Vatican." Access to scholars 19th-century developments Vatican officials raised funds by selling some volumes as well as bundling documents for sale by weight. In April 1814, after the coalition troops entered Paris, the new French government ordered the archive returned, but provided inadequate financing. In 1809 he ordered the entire Vatican Archive transferred to Paris, and by 1813 more than 3,000 crates had been shipped, with only modest losses. The 1798 Treaty of Tolentino made even greater demands, and the works sent to Paris included the Codex Vaticanus, the oldest extant manuscript of the Bible in Greek.īy the time Napoleon became emperor in 1804, he envisaged a central archive in Paris of the records and treasures of Europe. and five hundred manuscripts", all chosen by French agents. His armistice with Holy See on 23 June 1796 stipulated that "the Pope shall deliver to the French Republic one hundred pictures, busts, vases or statues. French seizure and restoration Īs Napoleon conquered the states on the Italian peninsula in the 1790s, he demanded works of art and manuscripts as tribute. In 1612, Pope Paul V ordered all Church records assembled in one place. His successor, Pope Gregory XII, supposedly sold off a large number of archival materials in 1406, including some of the papal registers. ![]() ĭuring the 1404 sack of the Vatican, papal registers and historical documents were thrown into the streets, and Pope Innocent VII fled the city. The disparate archives of the rival papal claimants were not fully reunited in the Vatican's archives until 1784. The Western Schism resulted in two sets of papal archives being developed at once this rose to three during the era of Pisan antipope John XXIII. The various places where the archives were kept along the way were sacked by the Ghibellines three separate times, in 1314, 1319, and 1320. When the Popes moved to Avignon, the process of transporting their archives took twenty years, all told. Between the 11th and the 13th centuries, a large part of these archives disappeared. Peter's Basilica, and the Palatine palace. Uprisings, revolts, and the Western Schism (1085–1415) īy the 11th century, the archives of the church were devolved to at least three separate sites: the Lateran, St. Initially, the archival materials of the Church were stored at the Lateran Palace, then the official papal residence. When they travelled for diplomatic or other purposes, they would take their archives with them, since they needed it for administrative work. Popes would also have multiple places of residency. In later centuries, as the Church amassed power, popes would visit heads of state to negotiate treaties or make political appearances around Europe. The vast majority of these documents are now lost, but are known of through references in contemporary and later works. Known alternately as the Holy Scrinium or the Chartarium, these records normally travelled with the current pope. In the 1st century of Christianity, the Church had already acquired, and begun to assemble, a sizable collection of records. On 28 October 2019, Pope Francis issued an Apostolic Letter motu proprio dated 22 October, renaming the archives from the Vatican Secret Archive to the Vatican Apostolic Archive. ĭespite the change in name, parts of the archive do remain classified in the modern sense of the word 'secret' most of these classified materials, which are actively denied to outsiders, relate to contemporary personalities and activities, including everything dated after 1958, as well as the private records of church figures after 1922. secret as an archeological dig is secret". One study in 1969 stated that use of the term "secret" was merited, as the archives' cataloguing system was so inadequate that it remained "an extensive buried city, a Herculaneum inundated by the lava of time. The word "secret" continues to be used in this older, original sense in the English language, in phrases such as "secret servants", "secret cupbearer", "secret carver", or "secretary", much like an esteemed position of honour and regard comparable to a VIP. A fuller and perhaps better translation of the archive's former Latin name may be the "private Vatican Apostolic archive", indicating that its holdings are the Pope's personal property, not those of any particular department of the Roman Curia or the Holy See. The use of the word "secret" in the former title, "Vatican Secret Archive", does not denote the modern meaning of confidentiality. ![]() ![]() 2.2 Uprisings, revolts, and the Western Schism (1085–1415). ![]()
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