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  1. Official website. www .armenianchurch .org. Mother See of Holy Etchmiadzin ( Armenian: Մայր Աթոռ Սուրբ Էջմիածին, romanized : Mayr At’oř Surb Ēĵmiatsin ), known in Armenian as simply the Mother See (Մայր Աթոռ, Mayr At’oř ), is the governing body of the Armenian Apostolic Church. It is headquartered around ...

  2. t. e. The Secretariat of State ( Latin: Secretaria Status; Italian: Segreteria di Stato) is the oldest dicastery in the Roman Curia, the central papal governing bureaucracy of the Catholic Church. It is headed by the Cardinal Secretary of State and performs all the political and diplomatic functions of the Holy See.

  3. The Embassy of the Republic of China (Taiwan) to the Holy See ( Chinese: 中華民國駐教廷大使館) is the diplomatic mission of the Republic of China (as known as Taiwan) accredited to the Holy See, one of its few de jure embassies in the world, and the only one remaining in Europe. [2] It also has responsibility for relations with the ...

  4. Holy See–United Kingdom relations. Holy See–United Kingdom relations are foreign relations between the Holy See and the United Kingdom. The Holy See maintains an Apostolic nunciature in London, and the United Kingdom has an Embassy in the Vatican City. The current Nuncio in London is Claudio Gugerotti, and the British Ambassador is Chris Trott.

  5. United Nations, New York ( Permanent Observer) United Nations, Geneva ( Permanent Observer) Council of Europe, Strasbourg ( Permanent Observer) Paris ( Permanent Observer of the Holy See to UNESCO) Nairobi UN agencies: UNEP and UN-Habitat. Madrid to UNWTO. Rome to FAO and food programs.

  6. Rothschild loans to the Holy See refers to a series of major financial loans arranged between the Rothschild family and the Holy See of the Catholic Church. The first loan which occurred in 1832 took place in the aftermath of the Napoleonic Wars during the Pontificate of Pope Gregory XVI (involving James Mayer de Rothschild and Carl Mayer von Rothschild ).

  7. Ambassador Matthew S.M. Lee. Chargé d'affaires Pavol Talapka. Relations between the Holy See and the Republic of China (today commonly known as Taiwan) were established on a non-diplomatic level in 1922 and at a diplomatic level in 1942. The Holy See, under the One-China policy, recognizes the Republic of China as the representative of China.