King Charles and Queen Camilla will visit the Vatican and meet with Pope Leo XIV for the first time next month
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The King and Queen will undertake a State Visit to the Holy See next month, Buckingham Palace has announced.

Charles, 76, and Camilla, 78, will travel to Vatican City in late October to meet Pope Leo XIV to celebrate the 2025 Jubilee Year.

This Catholic Church celebration takes place every 25 years, with this year’s theme being ‘Pilgrims of Hope’. 

It has been designated to symbolize ‘a year of hope for a world enduring the consequences of war, the ongoing effects of the COVID-19 pandemic, and a climate crisis,’ as stated on the Catholic Church website. 

The visit will also honor the ecumenical efforts by the Church of England and the Catholic Church, emphasizing the Jubilee year’s theme of journeying together as ‘Pilgrims of Hope’. 

The King and Queen were scheduled to visit Vatican City for a State Visit in April, but it was postponed due to Pope Francis’s poor health. Leo XIV became Pope after Pope Francis passed away at the age of 88 on April 21 this year.

Instead, the pair met with Pope Francis privately on their 20th wedding anniversary on April 9, just weeks before he passed away.

Charles and the Pope are understood to have wished each other well following their personal health battles in recent months.

Charles, 76, and Camilla, 78, (pictured at the State Banquet for President Trump) will travel to Vatican City in late October to meet Pope Leo XIV to celebrate the 2025 Jubilee Year

Charles, 76, and Camilla, 78, (pictured at the State Banquet for President Trump) are planned to visit Vatican City in late October to meet Pope Leo XIV in celebration of the 2025 Jubilee Year.

Pope Francis, who died aged 88, suffered several respiratory crises before having a stroke followed by heart failure. 

It is said that King Charles personally wrote to Pope Francis upon his initial illness; however, he did not attend the funeral, instead sending Prince William in his stead. 

This follows a royal precedent – when Pope John Paul II died, Charles who was then the Prince of Wales, represented the Queen at the funeral.

Moreover, in 2013, for Pope Francis’s inauguration, the Duke and Duchess of Gloucester were in attendance, and in 2005 for Pope Benedict XVI’s inauguration, Prince Philip represented the Queen.

Monarchs don’t typically attend funerals of heads of state, and it normally falls on the heir to the throne to represent the Royal Family at these events. 

Pope Leo XIV, the first American pontiff, born in Chicago, was elected as the new head of the Catholic Church on the second day of the conclave.

Earlier this month, the Pope paid a personal tribute to the Duchess of Kent, praising her ‘legacy of Christian goodness’ in a message delivered during her funeral.

The pontiff highlighted her ‘dedication to official duties’ as the King, Prince and Princess of Wales and other senior royals gathered with her immediate family and friends for her requiem mass, a Catholic funeral.

King Charles and Queen Camilla met privately with Pope Francis (pictured right) at Casa Santa Marta, Vatican City weeks before he died in April

King Charles and Queen Camilla met privately with Pope Francis (pictured right) at Casa Santa Marta, Vatican City weeks before he died in April 

Missing was the Queen, who pulled out of attending as she recovered from acute sinusitis.

The requiem mass was the first Catholic funeral to be held for a member of the royal family in modern British history.

The pontiff’s message was read by Archbishop Miguel Maury Buendia, the apostolic nuncio or diplomatic representative in the UK of the Holy See, the government of the Roman Catholic Church.

He said: ‘I was saddened to learn of the death of Her Royal Highness the Duchess of Kent, and I send heartfelt condolences, together with the assurance of my prayerful closeness, to Your Majesty, the members of the royal family, and especially to her husband, the Duke of Kent, and their children and grandchildren at this time of sorrow.

‘Entrusting her noble soul to the mercy of our Heavenly Father, I readily associate myself with all those offering thanksgiving to Almighty God for the duchess’s legacy of Christian goodness, seen in her many years of dedication to official duties, patronage of charities, and devoted care for vulnerable people in society.

‘To all who mourn her loss, in the sure hope of the resurrection, I willingly impart my apostolic blessing as a pledge of consolation and peace in the Risen Lord.’

Moments before the requiem mass began the duchess’s immediate family arrived, led by her daughter Lady Helen Taylor, walking arm in arm along the nave with her father the Duke of Kent.

Behind them were her siblings, Lord Nicholas Windsor and George, Earl of St Andrews, and the duchess’s many grandchildren.

Katharine, the wife of the late Queen’s cousin the Duke of Kent, died peacefully at home, surrounded by her family, on the evening of September 4, aged 92.

A devout follower of the Roman Catholic faith, the duchess became the first member of the royal family to convert to Catholicism for more than 300 years, doing so in 1994, and it was her wish to have her funeral at Westminster Cathedral.

The duchess was known for consoling losing Wimbledon finalists, notably a tearful Jana Novotna in 1993, and presented trophies at the championships for many years.

She preferred to be known as Mrs Kent and dropped her HRH style, retreating from royal life to spend more than a decade secretly teaching music in a state primary school in Hull.

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