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Vatican Media
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Vatican Media, formerly Centro Televisivo Vaticano (lit. 'Vatican Television Centre') from 1983 to 2017, is the national broadcaster of the Holy See. It first aired in 1983 and is based in Vatican City.
Key Information
Overview
[edit]Created in 1983 by Pope John Paul II, Vatican Media has been legally associated with Vatican City since November 1996. Its main goal is the universal expansion of Catholicism by creating television content and broadcasting images of the pope and of Vatican activities.
Organization
[edit]Directors
[edit]- Archives director, John Patrick Foley: 1984–1989
- Emilio Rossi: 1989–2008
- Claudio Maria Celli: since 26 May 2009
General directors
[edit]- Giovanni Marra: 1984 – 7 June 1986
- Ugo Moretto: May 1997 – June 2001
- Federico Lombardi: 11 July 2001 – 22 January 2013
- Dario Edoardo Viganò: 22 January 2013 – 21 December 2015
- Stefano D’Agostini: since 21 December 2015
Administrative secretaries
[edit]- Antonio Mandelli: 1988–2001
- Roberto Romolo: since 2001
Programs
[edit]Programs are mainly based on what happens in the Vatican. Daily prayers such as Angelus, general audiences on Wednesdays, and various celebrations are broadcast. The pope's travels around the world are also broadcast. Each year, it broadcasts around 130 events in the Vatican and covers daily public activities of the pope, as well as his main activities outside the Vatican.
Octava Dies is a weekly magazine of 25 minutes, broadcast in the entire world since Easter 1998. It is also broadcast by Italian Catholic television channels and by press agencies such as APTN. It is available in English and Italian on the Vatican's website (broadcast every Sunday at 12:30 after the Angelus).
Broadcast (Vatican Television Center)
[edit]Live broadcasts are made on the Vatican's website and by other Italian Catholic television channels such as Telepace or TV2000, and foreign television channels such as EWTN and KTO. The Vatican does not have its own television station.
Vatican Media provides images to other television channels of events in the Vatican itself or papal activities around the world. Within Vatican City, it assists in organizing press centers and press conferences, and it also provides for special reporters and audio-video services for foreign television channels. "It conducts around 130 live broadcasts per annum, produces documentaries, creates a weekly magazine program called Octava Dies that is distributed internationally, and serves as an archival facility for all of its footage. On Sundays, the station uses Intelsat to broadcast the pope's Angelus to the United States."[1]
Production
[edit]Vatican Media produced many documentaries during the reigns of Pope John Paul II and Pope Benedict XVI. It made documentaries on the lives of the popes, on the Vatican City, and on the main churches of Catholicism. They were mainly broadcast in Italian but also in English, Spanish, French and other languages.
Archive center
[edit]Vatican Media owns a library of more than 10,000 recordings, amounting to 4,000 hours of recordings and images of Pope John Paul II's reign since 1984. This library is open to foreign television channels and documentary producers from throughout the world. The Vatican Media Center is open Monday to Saturday from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.
Logos
[edit]See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Vatican City State Press, Media, TV, Radio, Newspapers - television, broadcasting, government, censorship, agency". www.pressreference.com. Retrieved 2019-11-19.
External links
[edit]Vatican Media
View on GrokipediaVatican Media is the audiovisual production and distribution service of the Dicastery for Communication of the Holy See, responsible for capturing, archiving, and disseminating audio, photographic, and video content depicting the activities of the Pope and the Holy See.[1] It operates under the Dicastery, which was established by Pope Francis through the Motu Proprio The Communications of the Church in the Current Context on June 27, 2015, to centralize and modernize the Vatican's fragmented media operations by unifying nine historical entities into a single editorial and administrative framework.[2] Integrating the Vatican Television Center—founded on October 22, 1983, for live papal broadcasts—with audio services derived from Vatican Radio (inaugurated in 1931 by Guglielmo Marconi at the behest of Pope Pius XI) and the Photographic Services of L'Osservatore Romano (formalized in 2006), Vatican Media provides raw footage, advisory support, and co-production opportunities to international broadcasters and documentary filmmakers focused on Holy See events.[1][2] This structure enables the global dissemination of papal ministry materials while safeguarding intellectual property through cataloged archives dating back decades.[1] Notable for its role in bridging traditional Catholic outreach with digital platforms, Vatican Media supports the broader mission of Vatican News, the Holy See's primary news portal, though it has faced scrutiny amid broader Dicastery challenges, such as the 2018 resignation of communications prefect Dario Viganò following a manipulated image scandal in papal correspondence.[3]
