The college of cardinals meets at the sistine chapel to submit their votes under oath each time a new pope is elected as they have done since 1492.
Room of tears sistine chapel.
It is at this instant more tha.
The room has the nickname because of the strong emotions experienced by the new pope.
Once elected the pope is led into the room of tears in italian camera lacrimatoria a chapel that is so called because here the new pope usually burst into tears after his election.
Then the new pope goes to the room of tears a small red room next to the sistine chapel.
The sistine chapel is also in use as the pope s private chapel further adding to the visitor numbers.
Welling up outside the room of tears the sistine chapel vatican city.
This is the little antechamber just off of the sistine chapel where the newly elected pope repairs in order to change into his white cassock.
The on screen conversation continues in the room of tears a space where newly elected popes change into their official robes for the first time.
The newly elected pope must retire to this room remove his cardinal red cassock and don the white cassock of a pope.
There is a small side room nicknamed the room of tears.
This is where the chosen candidate.
Apparently michelangelo painted the face of christ so that the eyes would look directly at the peephole where the pope watched the mass.
Whilst michelangelo s frescos on the ceiling of the sistine chapel are divinely exceptional it was also the manner in.
The sistine chapel originally it was known as cappella magna and it was dedicated to saint mary assumed in heaven.
It s just a few feet away from the sistine chapel but most importantly it s where a newly el.
Like any other movie the sistine chapel set.
9 election of pope and room of tears considering all the facts that we have gone through till now suffice it to say the sistine chapel proudly stands as an important bastion of history and art within the vatican state.
Where in relation to the sistine chapel is the room of tears.
Small medium and large.
I read once that there was a secret room where renaissance popes would participate in the mass without having to be the celebrant.