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- China–Holy_See_relations abstract "There have been no official People's Republic of China – Holy See relations since 1951.The Beijing government broke off diplomatic relations with the Holy See in 1951 after a complicated incident. Throughout 1950 and 1951, China had been putting pressure on the Vatican by threatening a breakaway of \"independent Catholics\", but many priests opposed the movement, and Zhou Enlai sought a middle ground. A deadly controversy was then manufactured: a priest working at the Holy See internunciature (legation) had thrown out an old 1930s-era mortar in a trash pile out of his home. A businessman named Antonio Riva discovered the mortar and took a non-functioning piece of it back to his house to display as an antique. When Communist officials saw Riva's curio in his home, they arrested him for conspiracy to assassinate Mao Zedong, which Riva denied. Riva was executed and the Holy See's diplomatic mission was banished from the country for \"espionage\". Tarcisio Martina, the regional apostolic prefect, was sentenced to life in prison and died in 1961, while four other \"conspirators\" were given shorter sentences.The Beijing government has set two conditions for reestablishing the relations: that the Holy See \"not interfere in religious matters in China\" and that, in line with Beijing's One-China policy, it break the ties with the Taipei government that it established after the expulsion of Archbishop Riberi, ties that, since the United Nations' recognition of the Beijing government as the government of China, it now maintains only at the level of chargé d'affaires. The Holy See has indicated that it would have no difficulty about the second condition, but requires discussion about the concrete meaning of the first. The main point of contention concerns the appointing of Catholic bishops in mainland China, who are now named by the Chinese Patriotic Catholic Association (CPCA), at some periods in agreement with the Holy See, at other times in direct opposition to its declared wishes. The PRC government's position is that bishops should be appointed by itself; the Holy See's position is that bishops can only be appointed by the Pope, while envisaging in some cases a form of consultation with the civil authorities.The Holy See made efforts in 2007 to create formal ties with the PRC. High-ranking bishops in the Roman Catholic Church implied that such a diplomatic move was possible, predicated on the PRC granting more freedom of religion and interfering less in the hierarchy of the church in mainland China.In September 2007, the appointment of Father Joseph Li Shan by the PRC authorities was said to be \"tacitly approved\" by the Vatican. In May 2008, the China Philharmonic Orchestra from mainland China performed a concert for the Pope inside the Vatican, prompting analysts to speak of a \"growing rapprochement\" between the two countries. Since Pope Francis' inauguration in March 2013 he has publicly expressed his wish to visit China and improve the Sino-Holy See relationship in a media interview. It was also reported that on a Papal visit to South Korea in August 2014 China opened up its airspace to the Pope's plane, and while crossing the Chinese airspace the Pope sent a telegram expressing his \"best wishes\" to the Chinese people.However, in some areas the relationship between the Catholic Church and the PRC remains tense, with vocal and influential critics inside the church such as Cardinal Joseph Zen Ze-kiun, Bishop emeritus of the Roman Catholic Diocese of Hong Kong.In the late 1990s, officials of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Beijing raised the possibility that it might one day be used as the Holy See's embassy as a reason against demolishing an abandoned architecturally distinctive mansion belonging to the archdiocese (the reputedly haunted house at Chaonei No. 81).The two countries have the largest and the smallest populations in the world.".
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageExternalLink btcajg.pdf.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageExternalLink KDA_Sino_Vatican_Relations_Masters_Thesis.pdf.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageID "21396316".
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageLength "12117".
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageOutDegree "31".
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageRevisionID "697607900".
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink Antonio_Riva_(pilot).
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink Apostolic_prefect.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink Beijing.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink Bishop_(Catholic_Church).
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink Cardinal_(Catholicism).
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink Category:Bilateral_relations_of_China.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink Category:Bilateral_relations_of_the_Holy_See.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink Catholic_Church.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink Chaonei_No._81.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink Chargxc3xa9_daffaires.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink China_Philharmonic_Orchestra.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_Patriotic_Catholic_Association.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink Chinese_Regional_Bishops_Conference.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink Foreign_relations_of_China.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink Foreign_relations_of_the_Holy_See.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink Holy_See–Taiwan_relations.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink Joseph_Li_Shan.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink Joseph_Zen.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink List_of_Apostolic_Nuncios_to_China.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink List_of_reportedly_haunted_locations.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink Mao_Zedong.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink Mortar_(weapon).
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink One-China_policy.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink Pope.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink Pope_Francis.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink Roman_Catholic_Archdiocese_of_Beijing.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink Roman_Catholic_Diocese_of_Hong_Kong.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink Roman_Catholicism_in_China.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink South_Korea.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLink Zhou_Enlai.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLinkText "China–Holy See relations".
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLinkText "Holy See legation".
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLinkText "diplomatic relations with the Holy See".
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLinkText "longstanding tensions and strained relations".
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageWikiLinkText "relations between it and China".
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:About.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Citation_needed.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Foreign_relations_of_China.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Foreign_relations_of_the_Holy_See.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Infobox_Bilateral_relations.
- China–Holy_See_relations wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- China–Holy_See_relations subject Category:Bilateral_relations_of_China.
- China–Holy_See_relations subject Category:Bilateral_relations_of_the_Holy_See.
- China–Holy_See_relations type Redirect.
- China–Holy_See_relations type Relation.
- China–Holy_See_relations comment "There have been no official People's Republic of China – Holy See relations since 1951.The Beijing government broke off diplomatic relations with the Holy See in 1951 after a complicated incident. Throughout 1950 and 1951, China had been putting pressure on the Vatican by threatening a breakaway of \"independent Catholics\", but many priests opposed the movement, and Zhou Enlai sought a middle ground.".
- China–Holy_See_relations label "China–Holy See relations".
- China–Holy_See_relations sameAs Q25015.
- China–Holy_See_relations sameAs m.0bm98qt.
- China–Holy_See_relations sameAs Q25015.
- China–Holy_See_relations sameAs 中華人民共和國與梵蒂岡關係.
- China–Holy_See_relations wasDerivedFrom China–Holy_See_relations?oldid=697607900.
- China–Holy_See_relations isPrimaryTopicOf China–Holy_See_relations.