Thousands pay tribute to late Pope Benedict at the Vatican
Mourners have begun paying their respects to the former pope, whose body will lie in state for the next three days. A quarter of a million visitors are expected to pass by.
The doors to St. Peter's Basilica in the Vatican opened on Monday to allow the thousands of people queued up outside the chance to pay their respects to the late Pope Emeritus Benedict XVI, who died on New Year's Eve at the age of 95.
The body of the German former pope, who stepped down from the role in 2013, will lie in state for three days before his funeral on Thursday morning.
People began gathering outside the basilica at dawn before the doors opened. The public were allowed to view the body for 10 hours on Monday, while 12 hours are scheduled for Tuesday and Wednesday each.
What do we know about Benedict's funeral?
The Vatican has not yet released the guest list for Benedict's funeral, aside from the fact that it will include delegations from Italy as well as Germany — where Benedict, formerly Joseph Ratzinger, was born.
He will be buried in the papal tombs under St. Peter's Basilica in a "solemn but simple" funeral, the Vatican has said.
Officials said they are expecting around 25,000 people to come and pay their respects to the pope, who was considered by many an expert theologian but also a divisive and highly conservative figure in the Catholic Church.
The 2005 funeral for Benedict's predecessor, Pope John Paul II, was attended by a million people, including heads of states from around the world.
Why was Benedict such a controversial figure?
Born in the German state of Bavaria, Ratzinger served as Archbishop of Munich until 1982. He left Germany to head up the Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith, one of the oldest bodies in the Catholic Church which seeks to defend the Roman Catholic doctrine.
He was named pope in 2005 but served during a time when scandals and allegations of sexual abuse were rife.
Benedict came under fire for failing to respond to the numerous revelations of widespread abuse before he retired a decade ago, citing health issues.
The former pope also admitted in early 2022 to having made a false statement during an investigation into sexual abuse within the German Catholic Church, but rejected claims that he had tried to cover up cases of abuse.
ab/fb (AFP, AP)