An Egg Yolk Chronicle
The Encircled Egg Yolk |
However, such a state of affairs does exist, and you can probably guess where. If you thought of Italy, you were correct. The Vatican, an independent sovereignty inside Italy, is a perfect example. Its current status was brought about by the 1929 Lateran Treaty.[a] Earlier in 1791, France had taken over papal lands in France and by 1861 all the pope's Italian
The Vatican |
So, I guess that about does it when it comes to those unique, surrounded, ‘yellow yolk’ situations. But that’s not exactly true. Trusting that Lady Luck is on my side, I’m betting that even fewer know of a place called San Marino. No, San Marino is not an Italian city like San Gimignano or one of the thousands of other “Sans” across Italy. Long before we visited San Marino in 2016, I recall their
The Formidable Mountain Citidel of San Marino |
While over the centuries other Italian city-states gradually
disappeared, San Marino managed to keep to itself and maintain a low
profile. In 1631, however, a treaty of
protection negotiated years earlier with Pope Clement VIII came into effect.[d]
Although it did not integrate San Marino
as a Papal State, it did extend it papal protection while confirming its
independence. Things remained quiet
until Napoleon invaded Italy and in 1797 demanded that San Marino turn over a
bishop they sought who had taken refuge there.
Stuck between a pope and emperor or a rock, many rocks, and a hard
decision, they placated both sides in a clever move designed not to antagonize
either side. Appearing to fully support
the French and doing all they could to cooperate, San Marino let the bishop quietly
slip away thus pleasing the pope. It was
such a good ruse that Napoleon went so far as to embrace the Republic.[d] In fact, the emperor liked the regent of San
Marino so much that he made the citizens of rocky San Marino exempt from all
taxes. Basically, by carefully threading
a needle between powerful interests, San Marino had escaped any backlash from the
pope and earned the goodwill of Napoleon. They would continue to do so in the years
ahead. Shortly afterward, San Marino was
recognized as independent by Napoleon in the Treaty of Tolentino, and by the Congress
of Vienna in 1815.[d] Then Giuseppe
Garibaldi honored San Marino’s desire to be left out of the Italian unification
movement then underway. It is believed
that Garibaldi did this out of appreciation for San Marino had taken in war refugees
in prior years including Giuseppe himself and 250 of his Red Shirt followers.[d]
Remaining neutral in both World Wars
also helped to further insure its 1,700-year history of sovereignty and independence. In retrospect, had it simply been chance? Unlike other Italian territories, had they simply been
fortunate to have befriended Napoleon and then to have earned Garibaldi’s
gratitude thus insuring their sovereignty?
Some actions aren’t nearly as lucky. In fact, some acts are thought utterly ill-fated and ominous. Take for instance a cat crossing your path. Not any cat of course, it must be black. If a cat takes such a course, it is thought to presage misfortune, even death. A variant of this theme, serving as an emergency exit, makes an important distinction. It seems to depend on the direction the cat is moving relative to you. Crossing your path from right to left is the bad omen but when traveling in the other direction, it portends favorable times ahead. As for eggs,
Choose Your Superstition, the Obvious to Egg Yolks and Centipedes |
And then there are the triskaidekaphobics. I can’t even pronounce it, but its ‘phobic’
ending tells me something bothers them.
Yes indeed. These folks fear the
number thirteen, thought unlucky.[e] This phobia derives from the Greek word for
thirteen, treiskaideka. You may
have noticed that some buildings lack a 13th floor. Calendar dates, like Friday the Thirteenth, follow suit. In fact, we just had one,
Friday, 13 May. Lady Luck appears to
have been providential for here I am writing this and there you are reading
it. When you think about it, we are all
lucky because we’re all here. The dice
were rolled on us thousands of years ago on our individual lines of ancestors, possibly
numbering in the thousands, and at this moment we are the result. Our distant ancestors themselves had been
lucky to have survived. It wasn’t looks,
or connections, or wealth but ability that made the difference. If not another trifecta of all three, they
had to run very, very fast, or been really smart, or possessed an incredible
immune system. But I see I’ve digressed.
There is historical precedence behind the abhorrence of Fridays numbered 13. It all has to do with the massacre of the Knights Templar on Friday, 13 October 1307 (even that fateful year began with a 13). The Templars were a wealthy military order during the Crusades, formed to protect pilgrims visiting the Holy Land while also carrying out military operations, and later expanding into banking. Though powerful and influential, they nevertheless were not thought “too big to fail.” The intrigue of a king and pope made sure of it. Fortunately, there was another organization, even older than the Templars, with a major advantage the Templars lacked which brings me to the Knights Hospitaller. Here was a more humanitarian, holy order with a primary focus on charitable efforts also on-site in Jerusalem.[f] It began as a volunteer group running a single hospice to care for pilgrims, the sick, and the homeless founded by Italian merchants from the maritime republic of Amalfi then trading in Palestine. They obtained authorization from the Caliph of Egypt to build a church, a convent, and a hospital in Jerusalem.[g] Had their military activities failed, they could still present themselves as
'Maltese Falcon' Movie |
After the fall of the Kingdom of Jerusalem in 1291, the
Hospitallers moved offshore to the Greek island of Rhodes (1309). In 1530 they relocated to the island of Malta
when Holy Roman Emperor Charles V bestowed Malta to them in return for a yearly
gift payable to the Viceroy of Sicily.
The stipulated annual gift was a single Maltese falcon.[h] Even then, it was a pittance of a price
to pay. The real money materialized
years later. Well, sort of in the 1941 film noir, The Maltese Falcon, where the falcon was
supposedly filled with treasure. This
prop was auctioned in 2013 and realized a real treasure of $4M paid by Las
Vegas casino billionaire Steve Wynn.[I]
The Hospitallers survive to this day. Its 970-year history is preserved in the present-day organization, The Knights of Malta. Their official name is the Sovereign Military Hospitaller Order of Saint John of Jerusalem, of Rhodes and of Malta, commonly known as the Sovereign Military Order of Malta (S.M.O.M.). Even after seeing reference to them in Quebec at
1647 Order of Malta Symbol Hotel Frontenac, Quebec City [n] |
According to international law, S.M.O.M is a sovereign entity but with a catch. It represents a rare example of a sovereign entity (like a country) while it is not a country. I had to scratch my head at that. If instead, I’d been a lawyer with a specialty in international law, I likely might have had some idea. Different references on international law offer different explanations. Apparently, since it does not have territory, it does not live up to the requirements of being recognized as a country. Come to find out, all that is needed is that it be considered a country by other sovereign entities.[m] It is a mishmash of understanding and not being a member of the bar, lies beyond my wherewithal. In a corkscrew of logic, some countries consider it a sovereign organization, others consider it a country without territory, and still others consider it the world's smallest country. Whether a country or not appears to rest on how you split the fine hairs of interpretation concerning their headquarters. This headquarters consists
S.M.O.M. Hq on Via dei Condetti, Rome |
Number 68 Via dei Condotti has been the seat of the Sovereign Order of Malta’s government since 1834. Here we also find the residence of the Grand Master and where the Order’s governmental bodies meet. The Magistral Mint is also found here where they produce Maltese scudo, the coin of the Order, pegged to the Euro. While the Order relies on it, likely on the basis of tradition, the Maltese have gone to the Euro. The Post Office is also there where correspondence bearing Order of Malta stamps can be sent to any of 57 countries with which it has postal arrangements.
A One Scudo S.M.O.M. Stamp |
If appearances matter, and they do, although the order may be absent land, it certainly appears to function as a country, enhanced further by the inclusion of special privileges. If you watch enough TV or follow the news, you eventually become acquainted with the term diplomatic immunity. A more lawyerly term for it is ‘extraterritoriality’. This is a privilege usually granted to diplomats that frees them from the jurisdiction of the country in which they are present. Extraterritorial status has been conferred on the Order’s headquarters by the Italian Government, but it is not clear whether
Villa dei Priorato Gardens on Rome's Aventine Hill |
the headquarters is the ‘territory’ of the S.M.O.M. or simply its embassy in Italy. Other advantages include permanent observer status at the UN. And though not a member of the European Union, it enjoys diplomatic relations with 112 countries and is a member of numerous international organizations.[g] It even issues passports, a privilege only countries, the Red Cross, and the UN can perform.
Another Rome property in the possession of the Order since the 14th century is Villa del Priorato di Malta on the Aventine Hill in southwestern Rome. The Villa hosts the headquarters of the Grand Priory of Rome as well as the Sovereign Order’s Embassy to the Holy See and the Embassy of the Order to Italy. Its one other territory is in Fort Saint Angelo located in the Grand Harbor in the Maltese capital city of Valletta. A portion of this medieval bastion was given to the Order for a duration of 99 years by the Republic of Malta. This agreement grants the Order use of the upper portion of Fort St. Angelo including limited extraterritoriality.
Fort Saint Angelo, Malta |
One last twist concerns its citizenry. Today, the Order has some 100 knights and female members in Malta. Worldwide, there are about 13,500 Knights, Dames, and Chaplains in the Order. Next to
Possibly the Rarest of Them All |
Depending on interpretation, the Sovereign Military Order of Malta just might be the smallest non-island, sovereign country in the world, taking the lead in the current ranking of smallness by area: The Vatican, followed by Monaco, and then San Marino.[p] I think it safe to say that this ‘trifecta trinity,’ unique in the world to Italy — the unyielding Vatican, remote San Marino, and the charitable Military Order of Malta — are all winning historic survivors in a turbulent world. Yes, as I said, we do live in a crazy world where it seems consensus can anoint sovereignty absent even a shovelful of dirt. And while our world is neither true Heaven nor Hell, in my analogy the world is
That Neapolitan Dish "Eggs in Purgatory" |
Paolo
[a] Lateran Treaty, https://www.britannica.com/event/Lateran-Treaty
[b] The Irish Times, May 4, 2022,
https://www.irishtimes.com/opinion/vatican-city-looks-back-on-75-years-as-a-sovereign-state-1.1133452
[c] San Marino, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/San_Marino
[d] History of San Marino, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_San_Marino
[e] Triskaidekaphobia, https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/triskaidekaphobia
[f] Who were the Knights Hospitaller? LiveScience,
Martyn Conterio, https://www.livescience.com/knights-hospitaller.html
[g] Knights Hospitaller, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knights_Hospitaller
[h] SMOM: Small ‘Country,’ Long Name, https://www.intltravelnews.com/2019/smom-small-country-long-name
[i] The Mystery of the Maltese Falcon, One of the Most
Valuable Movie Props in History, https://www.vanityfair.com/hollywood/2016/02/mystery-of-the-maltese-falcon
[j] Order of Malta, https://www.orderofmalta.int/humanitarian-medical-works/hospitaller-mission/
[k] Sovereign Military Hospitaller Order of St. John - Fort
St Angelo Agreement, - 5 Dec 1998, https://foreign.gov.mt/en/treaties%20series/documents/sovreign%20military%20hospitalier%20order%20of%20st.%20john%20-%20fort%20st%20angelo%20agreement%20-%205%20december%201998.pdf
[m] R.M.M. Wallace: "International Law",
Sweet & Maxwell, 2nd edition, London 1992, pg 76. Elias Granqvist, 14 March
2001
[n] Priory of the Knights of Malta stone, Chateau Frontenac,
Quebec City, Quebec, Canada | Manuel Cohen, https://www.manuelcohen.com/image/I0000UFKl5i2S7bA
[o] Order of Malta, https://www.orderofmalta.int/government/magistral-palace/
[p] Smallest Countries in the World by Area, https://www.infoplease.com/world/population/smallest-countries-world
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