INSIDE THE VATICAN could be considered a coffee table book as it is so richly illustrated with color photographs. Many of these are of the numerous works of art that adorn the walls and ceilings of St. Peter's Basilica. The copyright is from 1991 when John Paul II was pope and in that regard it may be considered a little dated, but considering that most of the works were already centuries old, who cares?
At that time the book stated that the Catholic Church had some 906 million adherents, yet the seat of power, if you can call it that, lay in only 108.7 acres of the Vatican. Since 1929 the Vatican has enjoyed the status of a separate city state, the smallest in the world. It has no privately owned real estate, no general elections or income tax. It does have its own post office and diplomatic corp and is guarded by its own small contingent of 100 Swiss Guards.
By the way, even though Guards carry medieval halberds and swords and wear plate armor, their colorful dress dates from 1914! They do carry mace and know martial arts, and being ex-Swiss soldiers they do have firearms training. Being a guardsman may be an honor to a Catholic but it is still a serious business. In times past an angry Roman mob killed the entire guard force.
A brief history of the popes and the Vatican is included. Even though the claim is that the role of leader of the church has been handed down from Peter, it is admitted that some popes were pretty bad. And because they were heavily involved in secular affairs they were political leaders as well, therefore sometimes Roman mobs wanted them dead. Having lost church lands they have distanced themselves from most secular affairs, which seems to have made everyone happy.
Most of the works of art in the Vatican were commissioned by popes. However some pieces came from archaeology digs. Many pieces are priceless.
It was interesting to read about Michelangelo. In my opinion some artists are eccentric, or a bit crazy, and Michelangelo was no exception. He had very few friends and rarely took his boots off. It was said that when he did, skin would peel off with the boots and smelled pretty bad. When the pope told him that he wanted him to paint the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel he was upset because he was a sculptor, not a painter. Yet I doubt any modern painter could duplicate his work.
I must mention that the 'secret' Vatican library refers to 'private' papers and correspondence of past popes. Except for the more recent ones, all this is available for historians to examine.
There is a huge foldout picture of Pope John Paul II in Gdansk, Poland. He is offering up prayers for the faithful assembled there. I have never seen 750,000 people in one photo before!
This is a great book for a Catholic, especially one who probably won't be going to the Vatican any time soon. I will therefore pass it on to one who will appreciate it.