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・ List of sovereign states in the 19th century BC
・ List of sovereign states in the 2000s
・ List of sovereign states in the 2010s
・ List of sovereign states in the 20th century BC
・ List of sovereign states in the 21st century BC
・ List of sovereign states in the 2nd century BC
・ List of sovereign states in the 35th century BC
・ List of sovereign states in the 3rd century BC
・ List of sovereign states in the 3rd millennium BC
・ List of sovereign states in the 4th century BC
・ List of sovereign states in the 5th century BC
・ List of sovereign states in the 6th century BC
・ List of sovereign states in the 7th century BC
・ List of sovereign states in the 8th century BC
・ List of sovereign states in the 9th century BC
List of sovereigns of Vatican City State
・ List of Soviet agents in the United States
・ List of Soviet Air Force bases
・ List of Soviet aircraft carriers named Admiral Kuznetsov
・ List of Soviet aircraft losses during the Soviet–Afghan War
・ List of Soviet and Eastern Bloc defectors
・ List of Soviet and Russian football champions
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List of sovereigns of Vatican City State : ウィキペディア英語版
List of sovereigns of Vatican City State

There have been eight sovereigns of Vatican City State since its establishment by the Lateran Treaty of 1929. The position as head of state of Vatican City is an ''ex officio'' role of the pope. The current sovereign, since his election on 13 March 2013, is Pope Francis.
==Background==

Like the bishops of many other cities in the disintegrating Roman Empire, the bishops of Rome came to exercise duties of civil administration in place of the ineffective imperial government. They became in practice the civil rulers, subordinate to the emperor, of the area around Rome referred to as the duchy of Rome.〔(''Transactions, American Philosophical Society'' (vol. 72, Part 4, 1982 ISBN 978-1-42237473-3), p. 16 )〕 The Donation of Pepin in 756 made the popes for the first time rulers in their own right of the territories that came to be known as the Papal States. These lands were taken by Napoleon but recovered at the successive Congress of Vienna. They were definitively lost when, on 20 September 1870, Victor Emmanuel II's troops captured Rome, which was later declared the new capital of a unified Kingdom of Italy. Pope Pius IX and his successors disputed the legitimacy of the annexation of the Papal States and, refusing to put themselves under the protection of the new civil authorities, remained "prisoners in the Vatican". Having lost secular power, the popes focused on spiritual issues.〔Wetterau, Bruce. World history. New York: Henry Holt & co. 1994.〕
This dispute, referred to as the Roman Question, continued until the Italian Government and the Holy See signed on 11 February 1929 the Lateran Treaty, which created the sovereign Vatican City State, with the pope as its ruler, making him ''ex officio'' the elected monarch, with absolute powers, of the newly created minuscule state.

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