Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The bank came to be known as the "priests' bank"; one chairman was Franco Ratti, nephew to Pope Pius XI. In the 1960s, the bank began to expand its business, opening a holding company in Luxembourg in 1963 which came to be known as Banco Ambrosiano Holding. This was under the direction of Carlo Canesi, then a senior manager, and from 1965 chairman.
The Pope would again meet Vietnamese leader Trần Đại Quang and his associates in Vatican in 2016. [66] Vietnam remains as the only Asian communist country to have an unofficial representative of the Vatican in the country and has held official to unofficial meetings with the Vatican's representatives both in Vietnam and the Holy See ...
The Institute for the Works of Religion (Italian: Istituto per le Opere di Religione; Latin: Institutum pro Operibus Religionis; abbreviated IOR), [4] [5] commonly known as the Vatican Bank, is a financial institution [2] that is situated inside Vatican City and run by a Board of Superintendence, which reports to a Commission of Cardinals and ...
What links here; Related changes; Upload file; Special pages; Permanent link; Page information; Get shortened URL; Download QR code
7 January 2021 – Australia's financial watchdog is reviewing calculations for transfers worth US$1.8 billion sent to the country from the Vatican since 2014, after the Vatican and the Australian Church call for clarification. The transfers ranged from yearly totals of A$71.6 million (US$55.2 million) in 2014 to A$581.3 million in 2017, with ...
1 Archbishop Paul Nguyễn Văn Bình: November 24, 1960 – November 23, 1976 Remained as Archbishop [11] Metropolitan Archbishops of Thành-Phô Hô Chí Minh: 1 Archbishop Paul Nguyễn Văn Bình November 23, 1976 – July 01, 1995 Died in office [12] – Bishop Nicolas Huỳnh Văn Nghi: 1993 – March 01, 1998: Apostolic Administrator: 2
The government of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam maintains that between 2 September 1945 and 2 July 1976 only the Democratic Republic of Vietnam and the Republic of South Vietnam were legitimate governments and that any rival governments were illegal ("reactionary" or "counter-revolutionary") organisations. This template excludes:
The Holy See managed its affairs in Vietnam through a Delegation to Indochina established on 20 May 1925. [2] Pope John XXIII changed its name to the Delegation to Vietnam and Cambodia on 17 June 1964. [3] Such relations as existed between the Holy See and the government ended with the formation of the Socialist Republic of Vietnam in 1976.