A San Francisco builder is attempting to usurp a British aristocrat as head of a family whose reputation for valour has been tainted by tragedy and scandal.
Paul FitzGerald claims he is the rightful Duke of Leinster, a title regarded as the premier dukedom of Ireland.
He says he should have inherited the dukedom from his grandfather, Desmond, the second of three sons of the 5th Duke of Leinster, who was thought to have been killed in the First World War while serving in the Irish Guards, but who, Mr FitzGerald claims, secretly emigrated to North America and lived there until his death in 1967.
(snip)
The American construction manager, 39, told The Daily Telegraph that his father had told him stories about the family's aristocratic lineage and later took him to Ireland to research their roots.
"I heard stories of where my grandfather grew up," he said yesterday.
"There was a house with stables and my dad was just astounded when he was able to see everything for himself because his father had told him about it all in such detail."
He believes a collection of heirlooms and legal documents compiled by his grandfather for his father holds the key to proving his right to the dukedom.
The package was lodged in a government department, said the Californian, but had since been mislaid. "We know that my father's name was attached to the documents either in 1929 or 1930.
(snip)
Paul FitzGerald's aunt, Theresa Caudhill, 80, who claims to be Desmond's daughter, has produced an affidavit giving an account of his life before and after he changed identity.
She claims her father joined the Irish Republican Brotherhood when he was a teenager and carried messages to the United States for the movement. This, she believes was the reason for him being spirited out of the trenches.
Desmond, she recalls, had two leather-bound Dickens novels stamped with a gold-coloured Leinster coat of arms, military medals and uniforms, and a strand of pearls said to have come from his grandmother.
She also remembers a trunk containing documents that he claimed proved his identity.
(snip)
The current duke refused to comment.
Paul FitzGerald, who is married with two children, said of him: "I really don't know the guy but I don't believe he is the current duke."
He added that his quest to secure the title had nothing to do with wealth or power. "All the money's been burned up. It's basically about righting the wrong that should have been done in the 1970s.
"It's an adventure. Every person has something that they want to see through. This story is so amazing, but the truth is always stranger than fiction."
Monday, February 27, 2006
This story caught my eye...
Blogging will be light, folks - I have much on my plate at the moment. (In the sense of being busy...) But I couldn't not post this curious tale from the Telegraph:
Saturday, February 25, 2006
Disturbing news from India...
From the Telegraph:
Thousands of primary school teachers have been ordered to find two "volunteers" for sterilisation as part of a draconian solution to India's population explosion.
The order was issued to 6,400 teachers in Uttar Pradesh, India's most populous state (pop 170 million), where the teachers have been given until March 31 to meet the "sterilisation target" or face disciplinary action.
The plan, imposed by a district magistrate in the southern city of Allahabad, is a radical approach to dealing with India's population of almost 1.1 billion.
The nation's population, as displayed on a giant screen in the capital at noon yesterday, stood at 1,089,752,843. It is expected to overtake China (currently 1.3 billion) by 2020 as the world's most populous nation. It is estimated that 29 children are born in India every minute.
The magistrate, Amrit Abhijat, has remained unapologetic despite an outcry from religious groups and social activists. They say the scheme evokes memories of the forced sterilisation of the Indira Gandhi government of the 1970s, when nearly a million men and women, mostly from the lowest castes, were targeted. "The root cause of all evils is population explosion," Mr Abhijat said.
(snip)
Experts disagree over whether the population will be a burden or a boon in the years ahead. Some economists predict India will benefit from the fact that China's economy is expected to slow by 2030 because of the ageing effects of its one-child policy.
India, by contrast, is one of the youngest countries in the world, with half the population now under 25, a fact that could give India a potential competitive edge over Europe where the population will soon be top-heavy with pensioners. Any advantage could depend on India's ability to educate its masses sufficiently to compete in the global economy.
Randomness...
I was in Santa Maria sopra Minerva a few days ago and snapped a picture of this tombstone.

I mentioned Wilberforce in this post back in 2004:
My first thought was that it was a horrendous modern art exhibit - 'Crucified Christ Tanning Himself, with Plastic Bottles.' However, closer examination showed that the crucifix in question is being restored and the restorers are working in the side chapel.

I mentioned Wilberforce in this post back in 2004:
I am also working my way through the Gracewing/University of Notre Dame published ‘Birmingham Oratory Millennium’ edition of Newman’s ‘The Church of the Fathers’ which has a preface by Marist Francis McGrath FMS. In it he notes that when Newman re-issued the work as a Catholic in 1857 he added a dedication to the recently deceased Robert Isaac Wilberforce (1802-57), one of the most significant converts who crossed the Tiber under Newman’s influence. He was the son of prominent Evangelical social reformer William Wilberforce. (It’s worth noting that three of his sons converted to Catholicism, whilst one became an Anglican bishop.) Having converted in 1854, Wilberforce moved to Rome to study for the priesthood as a Dominican, but died a few weeks before ordination. His funerary stone can be found set into the pavement of S.Maria Sopra Minerva, about three-quarters of the way up the right hand side of the church. Newman’s dedication reads:I also visited the Gesu (head Jesuit Church) recently. I had a little shock when I saw this in one of the side chapels:
TO A FRIEND,/WHO IS AS DEAR TO ME NOW,/AS WHEN HIS NAME STOOD HERE,/AND THREW LIGHT OVER THESE PAGES;/WHOSE HEART IS IN GOD’S HAND,/TO BRING INTO THAT SACRED HERITAGE,/WHICH IS BOTH THE CHURCH OF THE FATHERS,/AND THE HOME OF THE CHILDREN.

My first thought was that it was a horrendous modern art exhibit - 'Crucified Christ Tanning Himself, with Plastic Bottles.' However, closer examination showed that the crucifix in question is being restored and the restorers are working in the side chapel.
Newman on Marriage...
Pardon the lack of posts of late... I find myself busier than normal. Anyway, searching for something else, I turned up the following passage from the Parochial and Plain Sermons:
I fear, indeed, that most men, though they profess and have a regard for religion, yet have very low and contracted notions of the dignity of their station as Christians. To be a Christian is one of the most wondrous and awful gifts in the world. It is, in one sense, to be higher than Angel or Archangel. If we have any portion of an enlightened faith, we shall understand that our state, as members of Christ's Church, is full of mystery. What so mysterious as to be born, as we are, under God's wrath? What so mysterious as to be redeemed by the death of the Son of God made flesh? What so mysterious as to receive the virtue of that death one by one through Sacraments? What so mysterious as to be able to teach and train each other in good or evil? When a man at all enters into such thoughts, how is his view changed about the birth of children! in what a different light do his duties, as a parent, break upon him! The notion entertained by most men seems to be, that it is a pleasant thing to have a home;—this is what would be called an innocent and praiseworthy reason for marrying;—that a wife and family are comforts. And the highest view a number of persons take is, that it is decent and respectable to be a married man; that it gives a man a station in society, and settles him. All this is true. Doubtless wife and children are blessings from God: and it is praiseworthy and right to be domestic, and to live in orderly and honourable habits. But a man who limits his view to these thoughts, who does not look at marriage and at the birth of children as something of a much higher and more heavenly nature than any thing we see, who does not discern in Holy Matrimony a divine ordinance, shadowing out the union between Christ and the Church, and does not associate the birth of children with the Ordinance of their new birth, such a one, I can only say, has very carnal views. It is well to go on labouring, year after year, for the bread that perisheth; and if we are well off in the world, to take interest and pleasure in our families rather than to seek amusements out of doors; it is very well, but it is not religion; and let us endeavour to make our feelings towards them more and more religious. Let us beware of aiming at nothing higher than their being educated well for this world, their forming respectable connections, succeeding in their callings, and settling well. Let us never think we have absolved ourselves from the responsibility of being their parents, till we have brought them to Christ, as in Baptism, so by religious training. Let us bear in mind ever to pray for their eternal salvation; let us "watch for their souls as those who must give account." Let us remember that salvation does not come as a matter of course; that Baptism, though administered to them once and long since, is never past, always lives in them as a blessing or as a burden: and that though we may cherish a joyful confidence that "He who hath begun a good work in them will perform it," then only have we a right to cherish it, when we are doing our part towards fulfilling it.
Wednesday, February 22, 2006
In the Red...
Rocco at 'Whispers in the Loggia' has posted the list of Cardinals announced this morning:
It's an interesting list - the fact that the Holy Father has decided to limit the number of voting cardinals to 120 means that sees like Paris, Dublin and Barcelona remain without a red hat for the time being. Also, curialists like Comastri and Cordes who were tipped have been passed over.
The list of over-80s is curious too. One might have expected more theologians to receive this honour from Papa Ratzinger.
The Cardinal from Hong Kong is a surprise too. It is thought that he may have been JPII's last in pectore appointment. It will be interesting to see how the Chinese react to this.
Archbishop William Levada, Archbishop-emeritus of San Francisco, Prefect of the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith
Archbishop Franc Rode, C.M., Archbishop-emeritus of Ljubljana, Prefect of the Congregation for Institutes of Consecrated Life and Societies of Apostolic Life
Archbishop Agostino Vallini, Bishop-emeritus of Albano, Prefect of the Supreme Tribunal of the Apostolic Signatura
Archbishop Jorge Liberato Urosa Savino of Caracas
Archbishop Gaudencio Rosales of Manila
Archbishop Jean-Pierre Ricard of Bordeaux
Archbishop Antonio Canizares Lloveda of Toledo
Archbishop Nicholas Cheong Jin-Suk of Seoul
Archbishop Sean O'Malley, O.F.M. Cap. of Boston
Archbishop Stanislaw Dziwisz of Krakow
Archbishop Carlo Caffara of Bologna
Bishop Joseph Zen Ze-kiun, S.D.B of Hong Kong
The Pope announced his intent to elevate three additional clerics who are above voting age to the College of Cardinals, in recognition of their service to the life of the church
Archbishop Andrea Cordero Lanza de Montezemolo, Archpriest of St. Paul's Outside the Walls
Archbishop-emeritus Peter Proeku Dery of Tamale, Ghana
Father Albert Vanhoye, S.J., former secretary of the Pontifical Biblical Commission
It's an interesting list - the fact that the Holy Father has decided to limit the number of voting cardinals to 120 means that sees like Paris, Dublin and Barcelona remain without a red hat for the time being. Also, curialists like Comastri and Cordes who were tipped have been passed over.
The list of over-80s is curious too. One might have expected more theologians to receive this honour from Papa Ratzinger.
The Cardinal from Hong Kong is a surprise too. It is thought that he may have been JPII's last in pectore appointment. It will be interesting to see how the Chinese react to this.
Tuesday, February 21, 2006
News...
Via ANSA:
Strangest Headline I've Read in a While: Hindu gods turn down plans for a Himalayan ski resort:
(ANSA) - Rome, February 20 - A priceless Caravaggio loaned by Rome to Milan for a major exhibition has not been vandalised, the Italian cultural heritage ministry said on Monday .Also from ANSA:
"Reports that someone poked a hole in the canvas with a pen are completely without foundation," the ministry said .
However, the ministry admitted the masterpiece had suffered "slight" damage during its stay in Milan .
"There has been slight flaking of the coating on a piece of canvas, less than one square centimetre," officials said .
The piece of canvas was covered with tissue paper, as a precaution, and the coating will now be glued back on, they said .
The Madonna, which was restored seven years ago, was "in good condition." The Madonna di Loreto returned to its home in a Rome church on Monday after its appearance as one of the star attractions in the Milan show, Caravaggio And Europe .
(snip)
The Madonna di Loreto (in Italian, Madonna dei Pellegrini or pilgrims) is one of Caravaggio's most famous works, painted in 1604-1606 .
It hangs in the Cavalletti Chapel of the church of Sant'Agostino, near Rome's Piazza Navona. In the work, a barefoot Virgin and naked child appear to two peasants on a pilgrimage.
(ANSA) - Bronte, February 20 - A Roman villa dating back to the III Century AD has been found near Catania in Sicily .The Telegraph makes us wonder whether neckties are dangerous:
Digs began a few months ago after archaeologists found red potsherds scattered at the site, a stone's throw from a famous castle built by Admiral Horatio Nelson .
Italian police kept the discovery secret until Monday in order to keep tomb raiders away .
Until today, it was fairly safe to assume that a grubby tie was the sign of a slob, not an assassin.It sounds like a good argument could be made for the resurgence of the bow-tie amongst the medical profession.
How wrong we were. A liberally stained tie is not only the epitome of sloth, it is a lethal weapon, too, a germ warfare laboratory of terrifying capabilities.
Wear a dirty tie and you become a killer, was the suggestion yesterday from the British Medical Association, which is urging doctors to abandon neckwear.
The august body fears grubby ties could contribute to the spread of fatal superbugs, such as MRSA.
Strangest Headline I've Read in a While: Hindu gods turn down plans for a Himalayan ski resort:
The Himalayan Ski Village, a luxury resort with a cable-car reaching up to 14,000ft, was billed as a ski destination to rival Europe and America.There's some satire in the Times:
However, the project encountered opposition from local interest groups who claimed it would destroy a pristine environment, pollute water courses and trample over sacred mountains.
A formal Jagati Puch (grand convention) of 175 local deities was called to decide whether the project was in the interests of local people. The conclave is made up of 175 oracles, or gurs - local elders and villagers, who represent the deities that rule the valley according to traditional belief.
Mr Ford and John Sims, the project's managing director, adopted the Hindu names of "Amrish" and "Abhiram" ahead of the ceremony, but the gods were not to be appeased.
Nine out of 10 gods who expressed a preference said the village would be inimical to the valley's interests.
As so often with religion, however, things were not as simple as they first appeared. Suspicious minds noted that Maheshwar Singh, the "king" of Kullu, is a former MP for the Hindu-nationalist BJP party, sections of which are against foreign intervention.
Mr Sims could barely conceal his irritation. "The gods were asked all the wrong questions," he said.
The Himalayan Ski Village has been rejected "as it is presented" to the gods.
As keen students of the Hindu religion, Mr Ford and Mr Sims will know that, when the correct offerings are made, the gods are often open to persuasion.
Al-Jazeera News. Mark Seddon reporting . . .
These are the pictures of Our Lady’s Church in Shoreham, following the explosion in which 31 parishioners died, along with the suicide bomber, who is believed to belong to the majority Anglican community. This is the fourth such bomb attack on a Catholic church in the last two years.
(Read the whole thing for context)
Further info from my readers...
Following on yesterday's post which provided some more info about the burials of Bl. Pius IX and Pope Leo XIII, I've learned a little more. A Kenneth Lieblich informs me:
Apparently, San Lorenzo was Pius IX's favourite church and his willAnd on the subject of Leo XIII, a seminarian from here in Rome tells me:
specified that he be buried there. The mosaics on the wall of the chapel
where he lies (I've seen it too) depict the two dogmas that he solemnly
defined: Our Lady's Immaculate Conception and Papal Infallibility.
Incidentally, the mob that tried to fling his corpus into the Tiber were
Freemasons.
It is said that one of the reasons that Leo XIII asked to be buried to the left of the Apse in the Lateran is the fact that Innocent III is buried to the right of the Apse. Leo had a great admiration for Innocent who did much to increase the power and prestige of the Church.
Monday, February 20, 2006
Get Bach...
A simple but strangely pleasing visualization of Bach's Toccata and Fuge in D Minor (video link) via Google Video of the Day.
My most excellent readers...
... very kindly helped me answer the question posed here:
And in the comments box, Msgr. Edward Ryan notes:
In the news...
This story from the Telegraph highlights the continuing absurdity of the Anglican compromise regarding women priests.
The Corriere has a great picture from the Indian Rural Olympic Games.
Additions to Blogroll
Hymnography Unbound
Argent by the Tiber
Random Question: Does anyone know why Bl. Pius IX and Leo XIII chose to be buried in S. Lorenzo and at the Lateran respectively? The Popes immediately beforehand and after are all buried in St Peter's and one would have thought that the political climate of the time would have made St Peter's the obvious choice.I received an e-mail from a Professor Adams who says:
(An attempt was made by a Roman mob to fling the body of Pius IX into the Tiber as it was transported to S. Lorenzo. It is said that an international group of seminarians fought off the mob and the Pope's remians safely made their way to their resting place.)
In partial answer to your query about the tomb of Pius IX at S. Lorenzo:Do check out that website - there are some wonderful images of Papal and Sede Vacante medals. Particularly of interest are these 2005 Sede Vacante issues. I regret to say that in my opinion the site also shows that for all his virtues, Paul VI had a poor sense of the aesthetic.
In the mid-nineteenth century, there were two partially ruined small basilicas next to one another. Pius had them converted into one (hence the odd articulation between the nave and choir and the two styles). The western basilica became the nave with the narthex on the Piazza, and the eastern one, which lost its apse, no longer needed a narthex. Pius reserved the narthex space for the tomb that is the subject of your posting. He also had the column in the piazza erected.
There are medals commemorating these expensive undertakings. I have one of them in my collection, and it is on my web site:
http://www.csun.edu/~hcfll004/PiusIX.html
The whole collection is at
http://www.csun.edu/~hcfll004/popes-medals.html
And in the comments box, Msgr. Edward Ryan notes:
Leo XIII, I believe, chose the Lateran Basilica as his final resting place because he had presided over the re-builing of the apse. Pius may have chosen St. Lawrence-Ottside-the Walls precisely to be out of the Vatican. In death, if not in later life, he would not be imprisoned. It was, I believe, several months after Pius' death that the attempt to transport his body was made in the dead of night. Even then the procession incited a riot. In accord with St. Lawrence, Pius XII left the Vatican to visit it when it was bombed during the War. Some say it was because his parents were buried in the cemetery adjacent to the basilica which was also bombed.Msgr, I think you're quite right about Pius XII and IIRC his family tomb was destroyed in the San Lorenzo bombing. Pius XII's visit to San Lorenzo in the aftermath of the bombardment was greatly appreciated by the Roman people. The following monument to Pius XII is in the porch of San Lorenzo.

In the news...
This story from the Telegraph highlights the continuing absurdity of the Anglican compromise regarding women priests.
A senior figure in the Church of England yesterday defended a village that has refused to appoint a woman priest.I should make it clear the real absurdity of the situation is not that there are women priests. I think that adopting that position drags them even further away from the tradition and orthdox doctrine. However, as a protestant body it is quite understandable that they should interpret the rights of women as permitting female ordination. What is inexplicable is that they should permit what should seem to their lights (not mine!) little pockets of bigotry who can refuse the ministry of a woman priest. It smacks of a decided lack of conviction and commitment to the truth.
Barsham, in Suffolk, has vetoed the idea of a woman in the pulpit for the church in their joint parish of Bungay.
The parochial church council decided it did not want a woman and the vacancy is advertised for male priests only.
The Ven Geoffrey Arrand, the Archdeacon of Suffolk, defended the parish's right to take the decision, but said he did not necessarily agree with it.
"I understand why they are doing it, but that is not the same thing as saying I agree with them," he said.
"They are perfectly within their rights to take this decision because when it was decided that women could be ordained to priesthood in 1993 safeguards were put in place for those who could not accept this decision.
"This is either because in particular interpretations of the scripture, in various places, it is indicated that women should know their place.
"Others believe that the Church of England should wait until the whole Church has women priests and have no right to go ahead on their own.
"I would disagree with both these views, but that is where some people come at it from and therefore we have to safeguard their position."
(snip)
He added: "The Church of England always tries to be a Church that is inclusive and welcomes as many people as possible."
The Corriere has a great picture from the Indian Rural Olympic Games.
Additions to Blogroll
Hymnography Unbound
Argent by the Tiber
Saturday, February 18, 2006
About the city...
I had the pleasure of strolling around the city with the Roamin' Roman (no relation) last week. Fortunately she brings her camera everywhere and snapped some great shots...
The Tomb of SS. Lawrence, Stephen and Justin.
Detail of the Chapel of St Catherine in the Basilica of S.Sabina.
The stone the devil flung at St Dominic.
The Lateran Baptistry.
I snapped a couple of pics that day as well...
A Mosaic from the Benedictine Church of S. Anselmo.

The Tomb of Bl. Pius IX at S. Lorenzo.
Random Question: Does anyone know why Bl. Pius IX and Leo XIII chose to be buried in S. Lorenzo and at the Lateran respectively? The Popes immediately beforehand and after are all buried in St Peter's and one would have thought that the political climate of the time would have made St Peter's the obvious choice.
(An attempt was made by a Roman mob to fling the body of Pius IX into the Tiber as it was transported to S. Lorenzo. It is said that an international group of seminarians fought off the mob and the Pope's remians safely made their way to their resting place.)
The Tomb of SS. Lawrence, Stephen and Justin.
Detail of the Chapel of St Catherine in the Basilica of S.Sabina.
The stone the devil flung at St Dominic.
The Lateran Baptistry.
I snapped a couple of pics that day as well...
A Mosaic from the Benedictine Church of S. Anselmo.
The Tomb of Bl. Pius IX at S. Lorenzo.
Random Question: Does anyone know why Bl. Pius IX and Leo XIII chose to be buried in S. Lorenzo and at the Lateran respectively? The Popes immediately beforehand and after are all buried in St Peter's and one would have thought that the political climate of the time would have made St Peter's the obvious choice.
(An attempt was made by a Roman mob to fling the body of Pius IX into the Tiber as it was transported to S. Lorenzo. It is said that an international group of seminarians fought off the mob and the Pope's remians safely made their way to their resting place.)
Newsy bits and pieces...
From ANSA:
Also from ANSA:
Il Papa seems to be talking about his last fishing trip.
Ooooookay... It's not quite as awful as Archbishop Niederauer's vestments but Cardinal Lehman's outfit is pretty bizarre.
(ANSA) - Florence, February 17 - Italians restorers have managed to rescue a Gentile da Fabriano masterpiece that had long been believed lost because of severe fire damage .The Corriere has a photo of the polyptych.
The work, a rare five-pannelled altarpiece called a polyptych, had been gathering dust in the basement of Palazzo Pitti since a fire in 1897 .
It was taken out for the first time a few years ago and experts decided to try to recover it .
The two-year restoration has largely restored the vivid colours and splashes of gold the pre-Renaissance master (1370-1427) is famous for .
The restorers used infra-red scanners to pick out figures under the charred surface of the picture .
A classic religious motif, the Intercession of Mary, forms the centre-piece of the complex work, which also features the Resurrection of Lazarus and a number of saints including St.Bernard holding a devil on a leash .
Also from ANSA:
(ANSA) - Milan, February 17 - An ancient bundle of designs, sketches, notes and ideas by Renaissance genius Leonardo da Vinci will shortly open to the public at Milan's Sforza Castle .
The exhibition of the Codex Trivulzianus, normally accessible only to scholars, has been timed to coincide with the fifth centenary of Leonardo's return to Milan .
Although originally from Tuscany, Leonardo spent a great deal of his life in Milan, residing there from 1482 to 1499 and again from 1506 until 1513 .
The precious manuscript, usually stored in the private Trivulziana Library in the Sforza Castle, last went on public display in 1998 .
Il Papa seems to be talking about his last fishing trip.
Ooooookay... It's not quite as awful as Archbishop Niederauer's vestments but Cardinal Lehman's outfit is pretty bizarre.
Have you ever noticed...
That Madonna's Papa Don't Preach is more or less an updated version of Puccini's O Mio Babbino Caro?
Thursday, February 16, 2006
Various...
From the Telegraph:
Italian police have foiled a plot to kidnap a wealthy countess in Piemonte by having a male officer dress up as the target - and fooling the gang.This story annoys me because it confuses the concepts of 'capital'/'lump sum' and 'income.
For four days police lay in wait for the kidnappers at the luxury villa of Countess Anna Maria Fantuzzi, 57 and her husband Count Luigi Bottazzi, 59, in the village of Stazzano.
(snip)
The police were alerted to the plot to hold her for ransom by phone taps used in another investigation, which was into lorry theft.
Although the countess was never mentioned by name, the would-be kidnappers spoke of her swimming pool, the couple's wealth and the Volkswagen Touareg that the countess drove, which led police to deduce her identity.
Officers even heard how the gang - two Italians and two Bosnians - would attempt to lure the mother of four away from her home by pretending that they worked for the post office.
They then planned to hold her for several days in a camper van parked near the gates of her villa. The two men who were to carry out the kidnapping would wear carnival masks bearing the faces of Felix the Cat and Captain Hook, in a set-up that the gang hoped would lead her husband to pay up a ransom of £137,300.
But in the event it was the police who proved to be the masters of disguise.
The phone call came at 8.45 this Tuesday morning. "Signora Anna, come to the post office. There is a parcel waiting for you," a voice on the line said.
But instead of the countess going in person, one of the policemen went out, dressed in a lady's camel coat and a blonde wig.
The gang pounced on what they thought was their prey. But so did the police, who were hiding in the bushes, and the gang were arrested.
People retiring this year were warned yesterday that they will need an average total income of at least £130,000 plus state benefits to support themselves until they die.
A study published yesterday said increased life expectancy meant pensioners' money had to last longer. The report found that those retiring over the next 15 years will need even more money as the proportion of state benefits, as part of pensioner income, declines and longevity continues to increase.
Today's 65-year-old man can expect to reach 82 while women retiring at 60 should live until at least 85. But with state benefits accounting for almost half of average pensioner incomes of £12,500 a year, they need around £6,250 from other sources such as private pensions or savings to make up the difference.
That means the average man needs a total income of £106,250 to last until 82, while the average woman needs £156,250 to survive until 85 - an average of about £130,000.
Wednesday, February 15, 2006
Curous story from ANSA
Panther panic in Rome:
ANSA) - Rome, February 15 - Italy has been hit by one of its periodic bouts of panther panic with a full-scale 'big game hunt' in Rome .
Recurrent reports of a panther on the loose in the capital on Wednesday spurred police to put out an all-points bulletin for the big cat .
It was Italy's sixth panther alert in just over a decade .
An early Wednesday morning sweep only smoked out a domestic cat but then the hunt began in earnest. A beast was reportedly tracked to a building site on the city's outskirts but managed to slip through the dragnet, snubbing its nose at police, veterinarians and wildlife experts .
Undeterred, the hunters began combing the underbrush around a well-known shrine but again turned up nothing .
Rome city council played down the panther fears Wednesday evening, saying the animal was probably a big black dog foraging for food .
It voiced the hope the animal would soon be caught for the good of Romans' nerves .
Huzzah for the Alanders...
Overtones of Passport to Pimlico in this story from the Telegraph. The future of the (worrying) EU Treaty may be sealed by a little Finnish archipelago:
In the decade since they voted to join the European Union the islanders of the Aland archipelago in the Baltic Sea have been outvoted and overruled by Brussels, time and again.
Now Aland, a unique, autonomous region of Finland, is about to teach Brussels a lesson in democracy it may never forget.
Thanks to a quirk of early 20th-century history, Aland's 26,000 people are essentially sovereign co-rulers of their home nation of Finland. As such, they can veto any international treaty that Finland wants to enter, including EU treaties.
And the islanders are threatening to do just that when the European Commission attempts to revive the moribund EU constitution later this year.
Flight into Egypt?
Rocco makes a good catch. He predicted the dimantling of a Pontifical Council and it may be coming to pass.
This morning, Archbishop Michael Fitzgerald, heretofore president of the Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue, was named apostolic nuncio to Egypt.Is the tsunami about to break?
Obviously, the buzz has been floating around for a bit. But the outbound transfer of a curial head for the first time in this pontificate does indicate that the reshuffle period has entered its open season.
Tuesday, February 14, 2006
No comment...
St Bernard on Wisdom
From yesterday's Office of Readings:
Clearly, you pour forth wisdom or understanding from your lips in three ways: if on your lips there is the admission of your own sinfulness, thanksgiving and the voice of praise, and words that encourage.
Italian Crown Jewels
From ANSA:
(ANSA) - Rome, February 14 - Priceless jewels which once belonged to Italy's royal family could soon emerge from the dusty vault where the Bank of Italy has kept them for nearly 60 years .
The 'Savoy Treasure' consists of regal jewelry encrusted with thousands of pearls, diamonds and other precious stones, some of which date back to the early 19th century. It includes a double string of diamonds which contains 1,859 diamonds and forms the Savoy House's ancient knot symbol. There is also a ten-string pearl necklace containing 684 pearls given by King Umberto I (1878-1900) to his consort Queen Margherita and a famous pink diamond which once belonged to a Sicilian ally of Napoleon .
Central bank governor Mario Draghi said the 'treasure' of the House of Savoy could be brought out and perhaps put on display as soon as a few unresolved legal problems were attended to .
Draghi suggested that the Culture Ministry and the premier's office look at the question in order to overcome what he called the "legal limitations weighing on the deposit" .
The chestful of jewels was placed in the Bank of Italy in 1946 when Italy's last king, Umberto II, left the country in the wake of a referendum which abolished the monarchy. The dethroned monarch entrusted the treasure to the bank along with a note saying "To be returned to the rightful owner." There has been debate over whether he meant his own family or the Italian people .
The legal questions to which Draghi referred reportdly concerned the right of the Bank to do anything at all with goods which had once been entrusted to it .
The central banker's thoughts came in response to a letter from centre-right MP Raffaele Costa, who had asked for the jewels to be dug out and put on show in Turin during the current Winter Olympics .
A first green light came from Rome prosecutors in 2002, when they said there was no longer any reason in national law why the jewels should remain buried in the Bank of Italy vaults .
Although the Italian constitution was recently changed to allow male Savoy heirs back into Italy, the section which put the family's belongings in the hands of the Republic remains in force .
Costa urged the Bank of Italy and the government to work quickly to overcome the lingering legal technicalities .
"It is vital to continue this initiative," he said, urging the Culture Ministry and the Premier's office to study "how the bank can respond to the request to bring the treasure of the Crown back into the light of day." Maria Gabriella di Savoia, one of the daughters of the last Italian king, apparently had no desire for the jewels to be returned to her family which is now based in Geneva .
She was quoted in Corriere della Sera on Tuesday as saying they should become the centre-piece of a permanent exhibition, along the lines of the Crown Jewels in London, because they were a "piece of Italian history" .
Monday, February 13, 2006
Fra Angelico Restoration...
From ANSA:
Also on ANSA it seems that there may be changes afoot at the Italian Episcopal Conference (CEI):
(ANSA) - Florence, February 13 - A renowned altarpiece by the Renaissance genius and patron saint of artists Fra Angelico is set for a full makeover that will restore it to its original beauty .I wish that were the POD conservation institute.
The project to restore the Linaioli Tabernacle, to be carried out by the OPD conservation institute, will take two years and cost over 55,000 euros .
The Linaioli Tabernacle comprises a central painting with two wings and the predella, a series of paintings running along the bottom of the frame .Picture of the Altarpiece can be seen here.
The central work depicts a Madonna sitting on a throne with a baby Jesus standing on a cushion on her lap. Gold curtains behind the pair open out onto a blue background with a dove representing the Holy Spirit .
The two wings of the altarpiece show St John the Baptist and St Mark against a gold backdrop, while the three predella pictures are of the Predicament of St Peter, the Adoration of the Magi and the Martyrdom of St Mark .
The altarpiece is surrounded by a massive marble frame, already restored by the OPD two years ago, which was designed by Lorenzo Ghiberti in 1432 .
Art historians believe it was Fra Angelico's only public commission, executed at the request of Florentine "Arte dei Linaioli" (Guild of Flaxmakers) .
Despite its age, the tabernacle, which stands in the San Marco convent where Fra Angelico lived for many years, has remained in remarkably good shape, according to Ciatti .
The restoration will principally focus on structural weaknesses - such as fractures in the wood - and aesthetic touch-ups, including removing the dirt and layers of varnish that have discoloured the once-brilliant hues .
Also on ANSA it seems that there may be changes afoot at the Italian Episcopal Conference (CEI):
(ANSA) - Vatican City, February 13 - In a clear break with tradition, the pope has ordered a secret vote among Italian bishops to choose the next head of the Catholic Church in Italy .And who'd have thunk it? The Corriere della Sera informs us that Valentine's Day falls within the mating period of elephants.
In the past it has always been the pontiff to name the president of the Italian Episcopal Conference. This reflected the traditionally intertwined relationship between the Vatican and the Italian Church .
That relationship now appears to be loosening as Benedict moves to bring the procedures into line with those of other countries, where it is always the bishops that decide who will lead them .
Cardinal Camillo Ruini, who has headed the bishops' conference since 1991, is shortly to step down in line with the tradition that sees prelates relinquish important posts when they reach 75 .
In recent days Italy's 226 bishops have received letters asking them to send their choice of successor to the pope's representative in Italy, Monsignor Paolo Romeo .
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