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Santa Maria della Pietà in Camposanto dei Teutonici

15th-century Roman Catholic church buildings in ItalyChurches of Rome (rione Borgo)National churches in RomeRoman Catholic churches in RomeSource attribution
Borgo (CdV) Edificio con SM in Camposanto teutonico
Borgo (CdV) Edificio con SM in Camposanto teutonico

The Church of Our Lady of Mercy in the Teutonic Cemetery (Latin: Sancta Maria Pietatis in Coemeterio Teutonicorum, Italian: Santa Maria della Pietà in Camposanto dei Teutonici) is a Roman Catholic church in the rione Borgo of Rome, Italy. It is located on the Via della Sagrestia. The building lies near the Vatican City, is attached and adjacent to the Collegio Teutonico, and the German Teutonic Cemetery in Vatican City. The site belonged to the Schola Francorum, a hospice for German pilgrims which was the oldest German institution in Rome. The church, lying in piazza Protomartiri Romani, is in the area of the Palazzo del Sant'Uffizo, which belongs to Italy but according to the Lateran treaty has an extraterritorial status in favour of the Holy See. The term "Teutonico" is a reference to the Germanic peoples. The church is the National Church in Rome of Austria, Germany, and the Netherlands.

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Santa Maria della Pietà in Camposanto dei Teutonici (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Santa Maria della Pietà in Camposanto dei Teutonici
Via della Sagrestia, Rome Municipio Roma I

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N 41.901255 ° E 12.454861 °
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Chiesa di Santa Maria della Pietà (Chiesa di Santa Maria in Campo Santo)

Via della Sagrestia
00193 Rome, Municipio Roma I
Lazio, Italy
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Borgo (CdV) Edificio con SM in Camposanto teutonico
Borgo (CdV) Edificio con SM in Camposanto teutonico
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Vatican Christmas Tree
Vatican Christmas Tree

The Vatican Christmas Tree, also called the Saint Peter's Square Christmas Tree, is the decorated tree that is erected annually in the Saint Peter's Square directly in front of St. Peter's Basilica in the Vatican City to celebrate the Christmas holiday season. The tradition of placing a Christmas tree as well as the life-size Nativity scene in Saint Peter's Square started in 1982 during the pontificate of Pope John Paul II, when the Polish-born Pope introduced the northern European symbol of Christmas spirit. The tradition of erecting a Christmas Tree was celebrated in northern Europe and in Poland, Pope John Paul II's country of origin, but not in the Vatican at the time. The first tree came from Italy. Since then, the offering of the Christmas Tree to the Pope has become an honour, and each year the Vatican accepts a tree donated by a different European country or region.The Christmas tree is installed in the centre of Saint Peter's Square, together with a life-size nativity scene that is unveiled on Christmas Eve. The nativity scene has seventeen life-size statues. Of these, nine are the original figures donated in 1842 by Saint Vincent Pallotti for the nativity scene in the Roman church of Sant'Andrea della Valle, and the other eight figures were added over the course of the years. In 2006 the Italian province of Trentino, and the local council of a village of Tesero, have provided a further thirteen sculpted wooden figures and animals, as well as household utensils for the depiction of daily life.