
Pope Francis' final resting place: Pontiff wanted to be 'in the earth' and with just a simple tombstone carrying his name in Latin
The details of Pope Francis' final resting place have been revealed, as some 400,000 mourners turned out for his Funeral in Rome on Saturday.
The Argentine pontiff, who died on Easter Monday, aged 88, wanted his grave to be within the church of Santa Maria Maggiore, four miles from the Vatican, and which is dedicated to the Virgin Mary.
His will said he wanted it to be 'in the earth' and with just a simple tombstone carrying his name in Latin, Franciscus and a black cross for decoration.
As the converted Popemobile hearse wound its way past the Tomb of the Unknown Soldier, the Roman Forum and the Colosseum, thousands turned out to line the streets.
For one last time Pope Francis made his way from the Vatican, symbolically crossing the River Tiber, as he made the 30-minute journey to the church in the Esquilino district.
In his will, Pope Francis specifically asked that his final resting place be 'in the niche of the side nave between the Cappella Paolina and the Capella Sforza'.
Above his is the marble memorial plaque of Paul V, who died in 1621 and who was Pope at the time of the Gunpowder Plot.
The Cappella Paolina holds the Salus Populi Romani icon, which according to tradition was painted by St Luke and shows the Virgin Mary holding the baby Christ, and which was also brought to the altar for his funeral yesterday.
Before each international trip Pope Francis would visit the chapel and spend time in quiet prayer and he is said to have visited the Basilica 100 times in 2023 alone.
Pope Francis is not the first Pope to be buried in Santa Maria Maggiore but he is the first to be buried outside the Vatican in more than 100 years.
The last Pope not to be buried in the traditional 'papal cemetery' under St Peter's Basilica in the Vatican was Leo XIII, who lies in in St John the Lateran church.
Several other Popes are buried at Santa Maria Maggiore and the last to be laid to rest there was Pope Clement IX who died in 1669.
In his autobiography Pope Francis wrote: 'I've always had a great devotion to Santa Maria Maggiore, even before I became pope.'
He visited the church more than 120 times and returned there on his way back from the Gemelli hospital on March 23, after his 38-day stay, to lay flowers and he was there on April 12 to pray one final time.
The Basilica of Santa Maria Maggiore is particularly significant to Catholic faithful this year as Pope Francis had decaled 2025 to be a Jubilee year.
According to tradition those that pass through the Basilica's Porta Santa (Holy Door) on the left-hand side of the building, will have 'redemption and forgiveness.'
Santa Maria Maggiore means St Mary Major in Italian, and the church is a spectacular building with a ceiling covered in gold, brought back by from the Americas by the explorer Christoper Colombus.
It is one of the oldest in the city of Rome and dates to AD358, where according to tradition the Virgin Mary told Pope Liberius in a dream to build a church where snow would fall.
Earlier on Saturday hundreds of thousands of mourners and world leaders including Donald Trump packed St Peter's Square today for the funeral of Pope Francis.
Some waited overnight to get a seat for the ceremony, with final estimates stating some 400,000 people packed into the square and surrounding streets.
The crowds, packed with young people, applauded as the pope's coffin was carried out of St Peter's Basilica by white gloved pallbearers, accompanied by more than 200 red-robed cardinals.
Francis was 'a pope among the people, with an open heart', who strove for a more compassionate, open-minded Catholic Church, Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re said in his funeral homily.
There was applause as he hailed the pope's 'conviction that the Church is a home for all, a home with its doors always open'.
Guests included Argentina's President Javier Milei and Britain's Prince William as well as Ukraine 's Volodymyr Zelenskyy - who met with Trump shortly beforehand, their first encounter since February's Oval Office clash.
Prince William was also seen arriving on Saturday, attending on behalf of King Charles III. His appearance continues a tradition set in 2005 when the then-Prince of Wales attended the funeral of Pope John Paul II on behalf of Queen Elizabeth II.
The British delegation included Sir Keir Starmer and his wife, as well as Foreign Secretary, David Lammy.
Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re, dean of the College of Cardinals, led the service, addressing thousands gathered in St Peter's Square.
But it will be prisoners and migrants who ultimately usher the pope into the basilica where he will be buried, reflecting his priorities as head of the Catholic Church.
Francis is breaking with tradition and will be buried in the St. Mary Major Basilica, where a simple underground tomb awaits him with just his name: Franciscus.
Pope Francis died on Monday, aged 88, from a stroke and irreversible heart failure in his beloved Casa Santa Marta residence.
In his final hours, he had joined crowds for an Easter Sunday blessing at St Peter's Square. The pontiff had only recently been discharged from hospital, after five weeks of treatment for an infection that led to double pneumonia.
Britain's Prince William (L) arrives ahead of the late Pope Francis' funeral ceremony on April 26
Donald Trump (back) waves as he leaves with US First Lady Melania Trump after attending Pope Francis' funeral ceremony, in Rome on April 26, 2025
Hundreds of thousands of people turned out in St Peter's Square, joining world leaders and special guests to mourn and formally mark Francis' passing.
Bells tolled as the last of leaders from more than 150 countries took their places on Saturday.
The massive crowd was largely silent, watching proceedings on several large screens around the square.
Applause then rang out at the start of the ceremony as 14 white-gloved pallbearers carried the coffin, inlaid with a large cross, out of St. Peter's Basilica and into the square.
The pope's casket was placed on a carpet in front of the altar, with the book of gospels laid on top, as the Vatican choirs sang.
Choirs sang Latin hymns and prayers were recited in various languages, including Italian, Spanish, Chinese, Portuguese and Arabic, reflecting the global reach of the 1.4-billion-member Roman Catholic Church.
Massed ranks of red-robed cardinals sat to one side of the altar, facing rows of black-suited world leaders on the other side.
In front of them were hundreds of priests in white vestments and then thousands of ordinary mourners.
'I'm touched by how many people are here. It's beautiful to see all these nationalities together,' said Jeremie Metais, 29, from Grenoble, France, ahead of the ceremony.
'It's a bit like the centre of the world today.'
'We want to say goodbye because he (was a) living saint, very humble and simple,' said Mary James, a Franciscan nun, who had stayed up overnight to guarantee a good place.
'You can feel a lot of energy, yes, a little bit of despair because we are tired, but ultimately we want to come and say 'thank you', thanks to Pope Francis for all he did for his church,' said Eduardo Valencia, visiting from Mexico.
US former President Joe Biden (C) and his wife Jill arrive for the funeral Mass of Pope Francis in St. Peter's Square
The coffin bearing the body of Pope Francis is seen on the parvis of St. Peter's Basilica during his funeral service in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican on April 26
Prisoners and migrants will later usher the late pontiff into the basilica where he will be buried, reflecting his priorities as pope
People attend the funeral Mass of Pope Francis at the Vatican, on Saturday April 26
Tens of thousands of people are gathering in St Peter's Square in the Vatican City to bid farewell to Pope Francis after his death at 88
The crowd broke into applause when Italian Cardinal Giovanni Battista Re spoke of Francis' care for immigrants, his constant pleas for peace, the need for negotiations to end wars and the importance of the climate.
'Rich in human warmth and deeply sensitive to today's challenges, Pope Francis truly shared the anxieties, sufferings and hopes of this time,' Re said.
The open-air ceremony, which will be celebrated by 220 cardinals, 750 bishops and more than 4,000 other priests, was due to last 90 minutes.
Among the other heads of state who flew into Rome were the presidents of Argentina, France, Gabon, Germany, the Philippines and Poland, together with the prime ministers of Britain and New Zealand, and many royals, including the king and queen of Spain.
The British Government delegation includes Sir Keir Starmer and his wife, Victoria, as well as Foreign Secretary David Lammy.
Prince William is also in attendance to represent King Charles III.
Ukraine's president Volodymyr Zelensky arrived on Saturday morning and will attend with his wife Olena Zelenska, following uncertainty over where he could, after his travel plans were disrupted by air strikes in Kyiv.
A spokesperson said Zelenskyy had met with Trump in Rome, after the White House said Kyiv and Moscow were 'very close to a deal'.
'The meeting took place and is already over,' Zelenskyy's spokesman Sergiy Nykyforov told journalists without elaborating.
Trump also shook hands with EU chief Ursula von der Leyen at the funeral.
Former U.S. president Joe Biden and his wife, Jill, were also pictured arriving on Saturday, joining president Trump and his wife from the United States.
A seating order was published on the eve of the funeral, showing Francis's birth country of Argentina, then Italy, take precedence.
Thereafter, leaders are seated 'in alphabetical order' in French - considered the language of diplomacy.
Ireland's delegation comes ahead of both Prince William and the British Government delegation in the official order of precedence, because it is led by head of state Mr Higgins.
Haakon, the Crown Prince of Norway, and William follow soon after in a category set aside for crown princes.
Iran's culture minister Seyed Abbas Saleh Shariata, center, arrives for the funeral of Pope Francis in St. Peter's Square
A member of the clergy attends the funeral Mass of Pope Francis in St. Peter's Square at the Vatican, April 26, 2025
The rite of the Velatio before to seal the coffin of Pope Francis on the eve of his funeral at The Vatican
U.S President Donald Trump and first lady Melania Trump walk to attend the funeral Mass
US President Donald Trump and US First Lady Melania Trump arrive ahead of the late Pope Francis' funeral ceremony at St Peter's Square at The Vatican on April 26, 2025
Joe Biden and his wife Jill Biden walk ahead of the funeral Mass of Pope Francis, at the Vatican, April 26, 2025
Italian Prime Minister Giorgia Meloni arrives at the funeral of Pope Francis in St. Peter's Square on April 26, 2025 in Vatican City
The pope shunned much of the pomp and privilege usually associated with the papacy and will carry that desire for greater simplicity into his funeral, having rewritten the elaborate, book-long funeral rites used previously.
Francis also opted to forego a centuries-old practice of burying popes in three interlocking caskets made of cypress, lead and oak. Instead, he has been placed in a single, zinc-lined wooden coffin, which was sealed closed overnight.
The funeral sets off the first of nine days of official Vatican mourning for Francis, who took over following the resignation of Pope Benedict XVI in 2013.
After the mourning, cardinals will gather for the conclave to elect a new pope to lead the world's 1.4 billion Catholics.
The Pope will be ushered into his final resting place by prisoners and migrants - in a nod to his focus on the needy and the poor during his time as leader of the Catholic church.
Scaffolding has been erected to provide international media with the best vantage points overlooking St Peter's Square while there is a strong Italian police presence managing numbers and security.
The complex security operation, estimated to cost five million Euros (£4.3m), comprises 8,000 security staff members, including 2,000 uniformed police officers and 1,400 plainclothes officers.
The Vatican has a small ceremonial army of Swiss Guards and there is also the Vatican Security Service, the Pope's bodyguards.
But the main security will be provided by the Italian government and there will be thousands of police and soldiers in and around the Vatican and along the four-mile route from St Peter's to the Santa Maria Maggiore Basilica where Francis will be buried.
Anti-drone technology is being deployed to jam any UAVs that attempt to film proceedings from above.
The operation also includes special forces sharp-shooters on rooftops, undercover units, security teams on horseback, helicopter patrols and boats on the nearby River Tiber.
Tens of thousands of people are expected to pack out St Peter's Square - with thousands more lining the streets of Rome
Former US President Joe Biden and his wife Jill are seen within Vatican City ahead of Pope Francis' funeral
Faithful gather at the Vatican obelisk in St Peter's Square on Saturday ahead of Francis' funeral
People on Via della Conciliazione - the long thoroughfare in Rome that leads to the Vatican - ahead of the service
A nun takes a photograph on her mobile phone as she arrives for Pope Francis' funeral
Crowds gathered early on Saturday for Pope Francis' funeral, which starts from 9am UK time
Pope Francis died on Monday aged 88, hours after greeting the faithful to mark Easter Sunday (pictured)
Following the funeral, Francis will be taken through the streets of Rome in a break with tradition as he is carried to his final, unconventional resting place.
Rather than in the Vatican, where popes are typically buried, Francis will be laid to rest in the church of Santa Maria Maggiore in the centre of Rome, where he regularly prayed before and after trips overseas.
Francis' simple coffin will be entombed in an alcove that had previously been used to store candlestick holders. Per his request, it will not be decorated and will be inscribed only with his papal name in Latin, Franciscus.
It is another departure from tradition for the liberal Pope, who held progressive views on the rights of immigrants and LGBT rights, as well as climate change and the ethics of modern technology such as social media and artificial intelligence.
The last pope who asked to be buried outside of the Vatican was Pope Leo XIII, who died in 1903.
And while today marks the first of nine days of mourning, speculation regarding the next pope is likely to begin shortly after the funeral.
Conclave, the secret meeting of cardinals to elect Francis's successor, is thought likely to begin on May 5.
Slovakia's President Peter Pellegrini, center, and Slovakia's Foreign Minister Juraj Blanar, left, stand in front of their seats ahead of the funeral
A nun holds a rosary as she sits waiting for the service to begin, flanked by other faithful
A woman is seen praying in St Peter's Square ahead of Pope Francis' funeral mass on Saturday
Cardinals walk through the Vatican ahead of Francis' funeral
Clerg arriving at St Peter's Square on Saturday morning. The service was due to start at 10am local time
A complex security operation has been rolled out at an estimated cost of five million Euros, including anti-drone technology (pictured: a soldier with a 'drone gun' alongside a spotter with binoculars)
One Vatican expert has said she thinks it is 'totally unpredictable' at this point as to who the next pope might be.
UK theologian Professor Anna Rowlands said: 'That's partly because the process is genuinely both secret, so it happens in private, but also because the make-up of this College of Cardinals is very different from anyone that's been here to elect a pope before.
'It's going to be, I think, a surprise conclave, that is totally unpredictable at this point, but I think will produce, potentially, a really interesting candidate who possibly none of us will know.'
Irish-born Cardinal Kevin Farrell - the camerlengo or senior Vatican official - has been responsible for carrying out the administrative and financial duties of the Holy See until a new pope takes over.
He had the role of announcing the Pope's death on Easter Monday, coordinating meetings with the cardinals ahead of conclave and ensuring the Sistine Chapel is ready to accommodate them when that process begins in the coming weeks.
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Hedge Bindweed has heart-shaped leaves and funnel-shaped flowers (Image: Getty Images) Field Bindweed is described as "smaller and less vigorous", and has oval to arrow-shaped, grey-green leaves, with funnel-shaped flowers that are often pale pink, but can also be pink with a white centre and stripes, or plain white. Wildlife Trusts notes that Bindweed typically flowers between June and September. Despite Bindweed stems typically dying back in autumn, the root system remains and will be "ready to produce new shoots in spring". Nick Wood is a horticulture expert at online garden centre Gardening Express. He has issued a warning to Brits as we come into the seasons when Bindweed typically flowers. Arvensis: refers to plants typically found in, or associated with, fields or cultivated areas. From the Latin 'arvum' meaning field. Field Bindweed, Convolvulus arvensis. Leaves to 5cm, alternate with basal lobes. Flowers trumpet-shaped, white or pink and white, 1-3cm across. He said: "Bindweed might look pretty with its delicate flowers and heart-shaped leaves, but don't be fooled - it's a rampant twining vine that can quickly smother other plants in your garden. "Hedge bindweed is the real culprit here, with its fast-growing, climbing stems that can wrap around and strangle anything in their path. "Field bindweed is less aggressive, but it's still a persistent problem, especially in open soil where it can spread rapidly. "While it's a native wildflower, its aggressive growth and spreading roots can quickly take over gardens and other natural areas, which is why it's incredibly invasive in the UK. Mr Wood added that while there is "no specific law directly addressing bindweed in the UK", Brits "all have a legal duty to manage invasive plants to prevent them from spreading and causing harm to neighbouring properties". The RHS adds that while you do not need to remove Bindweed from your garden, it can spread to other plants, so controlling it is key. Bindweed in Mid June with its Beautiful White Flowers Bindweed, also known as Convolvulus arvensis, is a common weed that produces beautiful white flowers during the summer months, including mid-June. Despite its attractive appearance, bindweed is considered an invasive plant that can be problematic in gardens and agricultural fields. #bindweed It said: "If left to grow in a wildlife corner or less-cultivated area, or through a mature hedge, it will boost the variety of living organisms (plants, animals, fungi and microorganisms) in a particular environment. "Boosting the biodiversity of your garden has many benefits, including supporting wildlife, improving soil health and reducing the likelihood of pest and disease problems. biodiversity of your garden and gives you a chance to enjoy its attractive flowers. "It is, however, a good idea to control the spread of hedge and field bindweed as they are both capable of outcompeting and smothering other plants." With Bindweed being very common in the UK, it is important to know if it is poisonous to humans or pets. Thankfully, unlike some other weeds in the UK, Bindweed is not poisonous. The expert explained: "Luckily, bindweed isn't poisonous to humans or pets, but it can be a nightmare for gardeners trying to keep it under control. This is despite the fact that its flowers can attract pollinators. "But don't let that fact lull you into letting it run wild - the damage it can do far outweighs any small benefit." Mr Wood also touched on how best to remove the invasive plant. The expert warned Brits to "act quickly" if they find Bindweed in their garden. He also issued a guide on how to attack the plant and get rid of it. Bindweed can be a pest to properties as it grows fast and infiltrates property boundaries damaging the structure (Image: Getty Images) Mr Wood said: "Pull it up by hand, being careful to remove as much of the root system as possible. "If you leave even a tiny fragment behind, it can regrow and spread all over again. "You'll need patience and persistence, and be prepared to keep at it for several growing seasons. "Herbicides can work, but they often require multiple applications, and be careful not to damage nearby plants." If you are looking to dig out Bindweed, Mr Wood recommended against it. Recommended reading: He said: "You can try digging it out, but be warned - bindweed has a notoriously extensive root system. "If you miss even a tiny piece, it can regrow with a vengeance. Regular cutting and pulling can keep bindweed in check, but it's a long game. "Persistence is key, and whatever you do, don't let it flower - that's when it spreads even faster."