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LIVE: King Charles and Pope Leo pray together in Vatican

King Charles has today made history by praying alongside Pope Leo in the Sistine Chapel during a historic state visit to the Vatican.

Charles will become the first British monarch to appear at a public service with the head of the Catholic Church, since the Reformation, England’s break from Rome, nearly 500 years ago.

His state visit to the Holy See, the government of the Roman Catholic Church in the Vatican, also marks the first meeting with Pope Leo XIV following his papal election in May.

The King and Queen arrived in Rome last night ahead of a day packed with historic events.

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Watch: Historic moment King Charles and Pope Leo prayed together

Here’s the historic moment earlier today in the Sistine Chapel where King Charles and Pope Leo prayed together.

Charles became the first British monarch in 500 years to pray in public with a pope during a state visit to The Holy See

King and Pope to hold nature meeting

King Charles III says goodbye to Pope Leo XIV in the San Damaso Courtyard, in St Peter's Square, after attending the ecumenical service in the Sistine Chapel in Vatican City, during the state visit to the Holy See. Picture date: Thursday October 23, 2025. PA Photo. Photo credit should read: Aaron Chown/PA Wire

Following the service in the Sistine Chapel, King Charles and Pope Leo entered the Sala Regia, a state hall adjoining the chapel.

There the men will meet groups of people, including representatives from climate organisations and private sector leaders, to discuss efforts being made to support sustainability and nature.

The Queen will join His Majesty and Pope Leo in the Sala Regia, before their Majesties bid farewell to Pope Leo.

The King and Queen are now travelling to their next engagement on their whistlestop Vatican state visit.

Sistine Chapel hosts another historic milestone

VATICAN CITY, VATICAN - OCTOBER 23: Queen Camilla during a visit to the Pauline Chapel on October 23, 2025 in Vatican City, Vatican. During this historic State Visit, King Charles III and Queen Camilla will meet Pope Leo XIV for the first time since he was elected in May 2025. The King and Queen will join the Catholic Church's 2025 Jubilee Year celebrations, during which the heads of the Catholic Church and Church of England will pray together, the first time the British monarch and pontiff have done so at a church service since the English Reformation. (Photo by Samir Hussein/WireImage)

The Sistine Chapel takes its name from Pope Sixtus IV, who had the old Cappella Magna restored between 1477 and 1480.

The Chapel’s walls were decorated in the 15th century and feature stories of Moses and Christ and portraits of Popes.

From 1508 to 1512 Michelangelo painted the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel, before being commissioned in 1533 to paint the Last Judgement on the altar wall.

The Sistine Chapel is also the site of the Papal Conclave, for the election of the Supreme Pontiff, which most recently took place in May this year.

Inside the historic service where King Charles and Pope Leo prayed together

Pope Leo XIV, and Britain's King Charles and Queen Camilla stand in the courtyard of San Damaso following an ecumenical prayer in the Sistine Chapel led by the Pope and Archbishop of York Stephen Cottrell, at the Vatican, October 23, 2025. REUTERS/Phil Noble

King Charles and Queen Camilla, accompanied by Pope Leo, attended a special ecumenical service in the Sistine Chapel, marking the joining of hands between the Catholic Church and Church of England.

Their Majesties were first to take their seats on a stage facing the congregation, before Pope Leo and the Archbishop of York entered a few minutes later, signalling the start of the service.

The Children of the Choir of His Majesty’s Chapel Royal and the Choir of St. George’s Chapel, Windsor, performed in another sign of friendship, accompanied by the Sistine Chapel Choir.

The Choir of the Sistine Chapel and Lay Clerks from Windsor then sang two Psalms together.

The service included an introduction by Pope Leo and the Archbishop of York and a reading from the Letter to the Romans by the Foreign Secretary, Yvette Cooper.

At the conclusion of the service, The King, accompanied by Pope Leo, moved to the ‘Sala Regia’, a room next door to the Chapel.

The Queen remained in the Sistine Chapel to meet the Choirs.

King Charles and Pope Leo leave Sistine Chapel as service ends

Pope Leo marked the end of the ecumenical service by reading a prayer.

God our father, you have created the heavens and Earth. You made us in your own image.
Teach us to see your hand in all your works and your likeness in all your children.

The King and Pope made their way out of the Sistine Chapel, where the Queen remained to meet the choirs.

Why is Queen Camilla wearing a black veil?

VATICAN CITY, VATICAN - OCTOBER 23: Queen Camilla during a visit to the Pauline Chapel on October 23, 2025 in Vatican City, Vatican. During this historic State Visit, King Charles III and Queen Camilla will meet Pope Leo XIV for the first time since he was elected in May 2025. The King and Queen will join the Catholic Church's 2025 Jubilee Year celebrations, during which the heads of the Catholic Church and Church of England will pray together, the first time the British monarch and pontiff have done so at a church service since the English Reformation. (Photo by Samir Hussein/WireImage)

Queen Camilla is wearing a black silk dress designed by Fiona Clare with a Philip Treacy mantilla – a lace veil traditionally worn by women during Catholic services – of the same colour.

The mantilla is worn increasingly less but remains protocol for female dignitaries when meeting the Pope.

First Lady Melania Trump noticeably wore a black mantilla at her 2017 meeting with Pope Francis and at his funeral in April this year.

It is understood only royals from certain Catholic countries i.e. Spain can wear white when meeting a pontiff – known as ‘le privilege du blanc’.

Pope Leo ends half a millennium of division in three short words

With three short words, Pope Leo ended almost half a millennium of division between the Roman Catholic Church and the Church of England in the Sistine Chapel.

‘Let us pray,’ he said, as the King stood to his left.

Watch: Moment King and Queen arrive at Vatican to meet Pope Leo

Here’s footage we can sow you of the moment King Charles and Queen Camilla arrived in the Vatican this morning to meet Pope Leo.

Historic moment King Charles and Pope Leo take part in public prayer

This is the historic moment an Anglican King and the head of the Catholic Church prayed together.

King Charles has become the first British monarch to pray alongside a Pope in 500 years – since the Reformation when England broke away from the Roman Catholic papal authority.

The first prayer is the Lord’s prayer and is spoken in English.

MANDATORY CREDIT: Vatican Media PERMISSION TO USE THIS IMAGE EXPIRES 24 HOURS AFTER ISSUE. Screen grab taken from video provided by Vatican Media of Archbishop of York Stephen Cottrell, (second left), Pope Leo XIV (third left) and King Charles III and Queen Camilla attending an ecumenical service at the Sistine Chapel in Vatican City, during the state visit to the Holy See.  Issue date: Thursday October 23, 2025. PA Photo. Photo credit should read: Vatican Media/PA Wire NOTE TO EDITORS: This handout photo may only be used for editorial reporting purposes for the contemporaneous illustration of events, things or the people in the image or facts mentioned in the caption. Reuse of the picture may require further permission from the copyright holder.
MANDATORY CREDIT: Vatican Media PERMISSION TO USE THIS IMAGE EXPIRES 24 HOURS AFTER ISSUE. Screen grab taken from video provided by Vatican Media of King Charles III and Queen Camilla attending an ecumenical service at the Sistine Chapel in Vatican City, during the state visit to the Holy See.  Issue date: Thursday October 23, 2025. PA Photo. Photo credit should read: Vatican Media/PA Wire NOTE TO EDITORS: This handout photo may only be used for editorial reporting purposes for the contemporaneous illustration of events, things or the people in the image or facts mentioned in the caption. Reuse of the picture may require further permission from the copyright holder.

King and Queen arrive at Sistine Chapel

MANDATORY CREDIT: Vatican Media PERMISSION TO USE THIS IMAGE EXPIRES 24 HOURS AFTER ISSUE. Screen grab taken from video provided by Vatican Media of King Charles III and Queen Camilla attending an ecumenical service at the Sistine Chapel in Vatican City, during the state visit to the Holy See.  Issue date: Thursday October 23, 2025. PA Photo. Photo credit should read: Vatican Media/PA Wire NOTE TO EDITORS: This handout photo may only be used for editorial reporting purposes for the contemporaneous illustration of events, things or the people in the image or facts mentioned in the caption. Reuse of the picture may require further permission from the copyright holder.

The King and Queen have arrived at the Sistine Chapel for a service.

There the royals will take part in an historic public prayer with Pope Leo.

Revealed: What King Charles said to Pope Leo during historic first meeting

This photo taken and handout on October 23, 2025 by The Vatican Media shows Pope Leo XIV exchanging gifts with Britain's King Charles III and Britain's Queen Camilla during a State visit in The Vatican. (Photo by Handout / VATICAN MEDIA / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT

King Charles told Pope Leo that cameras recording their historic first meeting in the Vatican were a ‘constant hazard’, it has emerged.

In footage released by Vatican Media, the King and Queen could be seen getting out of their State Bentley with Camilla saying: ‘Lovely to be here.’

After walking through the Apostolic Palace they were greeted by the Pope who said:  ‘Good morning, welcome.’

‘Your holiness it’s such a pleasure to meet you if I may say so,’ the King replied.

‘You are so kind to see us.’

Posing for official photographs he also quipped:  ‘Constant hazard, the cameras.’

‘You get used to it,’ Pope Leo smiled.

They sat down to chat with the King telling his host: ‘I am so thrilled.’

An audience with the Pope

Here’s another picture of the first meeting between King Charles and Pope Leo in the Vatican.

Later the two men will pray together inside the Sistine Chapel – the first time in 500 years a British monarch and the head of the Catholic Church have done so.

Pope Leo XIV meets with Britain's King Charles and Queen Camilla during a private audience at the Vatican October 23, 2025. Vatican Media/Handout via REUTERS ATTENTION EDITORS â¿

King Charles and Pope Leo exchange gifts during first meeting

This photo taken and handout on October 23, 2025 by The Vatican Media shows Pope Leo XIV during a meeting with Britain's King Charles III and Britain's Queen Camilla in The Vatican. (Photo by Handout / VATICAN MEDIA / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT

After being ushered inside the couple were introduced to Pope Leo XIV in the palace library, the traditional place for such meetings.

There was also an exchange of gifts, with His Majesty presenting the Catholic leader with a large silver photograph, and Icon of St Edward the Confessor.

The Pope presented His Majesty with a scale version of the mosaic of ‘Christ Pantocrator’, in the Norman Cathedral of Cefalu, in Sicily. The mosaic was made in the Vatican.

The King also met with Cardinal Pietro Parolin, the Holy See’s Cardinal Secretary of State, who attended his coronation in May 2023.

The Cardinal was the first papal representative to attend the Coronation of a British monarch for almost 500 years.

Breaking:First picture of King Charles and Pope Leo

This is the first picture of King Charles and Pope Leo as the monarch and the head of the Catholic Church meet for the first time.

This photo taken and handout on October 23, 2025 by The Vatican Media shows Pope Leo XIV during a meeting with Britain's King Charles III and Britain's Queen Camilla in The Vatican. (Photo by Handout / VATICAN MEDIA / AFP) / RESTRICTED TO EDITORIAL USE - MANDATORY CREDIT

Foreign Office say King’s visit will help promote world peace

As we await more developments from Rome, let’s take a look at what the UK Government has said about the King’s visit to the Vatican.

A Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office spokesperson said:

At a time of global instability and conflict, the UK’s relationship with the Holy See is more important than ever – and this historic State Visit will be a key moment to strengthen this relationship. The Holy See has been a key actor on the international stage, promoting peace, effective measures to combat climate change and promote human dignity.
The Catholic Church is the largest denomination of the world’s largest religion; it is the world’s largest non-state education provider, educating 68 million students worldwide, and delivers a quarter of the world’s healthcare.
His Majesty’s visit will therefore strengthen the UK’s relationship with this crucial and influential partner, helping to deliver on the Government’s priorities – from promoting peace and security around the world to working with our international partners to tackle climate change.

King Charles to pray with Pope after late Queen banned him

The King’s visit comes forty years after Queen Elizabeth banned him from taking part in a papal Mass when he visited Vatican City with former wife Diana, Princess of Wales in 1985.

Charles, 76, who has been a life-long advocate for better inter-Faith dialogue and relations, had been keen to join Pope John Paul II in prayer.

The then Archbishop of Canterbury, Robert Runcie, wrote to the Vatican to say that the Prince and Princess of Wales would like to attend a service.

While the Pope’s office initially agreed to make the arrangements, Buckingham Palace later contacted them overruling the decision, saying a Papal audience would be sufficient during their 17-day tour of Italy.

Britain and the Vatican had only established full diplomatic relations three years earlier after a rift of more than four and a half centuries following Henry VIII’s decision to break with the Roman Catholic Church in the 1530s when it refused to allow him to divorce Katharine of Aragon and marry Anne Boleyn.

King and Queen welcomed by Swiss Guards and national anthem

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Victoria Jones/Shutterstock (15557130u) Their Majesties King Charles III and Queen Camilla pass through St. Peter's Square to arrive at the San Damaso Courtyard, the ceremonial entrance to the Apostolic Palace, where they will be greeted by the Regent of thePrefecture of the Papal Household, Reverend Monsignor Leonardo Sapienza. King Charles III and Queen Camilla visit to the Holy See, Day 2, Arrival at Vatican City, Italy - 23 Oct 2025 Their Majesties will visit the Holy See to celebrate the 2025 Papal Jubilee and the warm ecumenical relationship between the Church of England, of which His Majesty is Supreme Governor, and the Roman Catholic Church.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Victoria Jones/Shutterstock (15557130f) Swiss guards in the Vatican City King Charles III and Queen Camilla visit to the Holy See, Day 2, Arrival at Vatican City, Italy - 23 Oct 2025 Their Majesties will visit the Holy See to celebrate the 2025 Papal Jubilee and the warm ecumenical relationship between the Church of England, of which His Majesty is Supreme Governor, and the Roman Catholic Church.

The day’s ceremonial events began with a Guard of Honour provided by the iconic Swiss Guard and the playing of both the British and Vatican City national anthems.

Their Majesties were also met by a group of ‘Papal Gentlemen’ and the ‘Gentlemen of the Pope’, Prince of Windisch-Gaetz, Mariano Hugo, before being guided inside.

The Swiss Guards are one of the oldest and most prestigious European military forces, drawn exclusively from Roman Catholic Swiss citizens who have completed military training.

They fulfill ceremonial functions and form the Pope’s bodyguard.

Breaking:King Charles arrives to meet Pope Leo

Britain's King Charles III and Britain's Queen Camilla arrive at San Damaso courtyard for a meeting with Pope Leo IV in the Vatican on October 23, 2025. (Photo by Alberto PIZZOLI / AFP) (Photo by ALBERTO PIZZOLI/AFP via Getty Images)

King Charles will today become the first British monarch in 500 years to pray in public with a pope as he makes an historic state visit to The Holy See.

His Majesty, accompanied by his wife, Queen Camilla, arrived at the ceremonial entrance to the Apostolic Palace in the San Damascus Courtyard, having been driven through iconic St Peter’s Square.

The couple were greeted by the Regent of the Prefecture of the Papal Household, Reverend Monsignor Leonardo Sapienza.

As per tradition Pope Leo was waiting inside the palace to greet his visitors.

Pictures: Vatican waits for King and Queen to arrive

Here’s the latest scenes from the Vatican where the King and Queen will arrive imminently.

Catholic pilgrims holding a cross have come to watch the royals arrival while a marching band has performed as part of a welcoming ceremony.

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Victoria Jones/Shutterstock (15557130h) Pilgrims hold a cross in the Vatican City King Charles III and Queen Camilla visit to the Holy See, Day 2, Arrival at Vatican City, Italy - 23 Oct 2025 Their Majesties will visit the Holy See to celebrate the 2025 Papal Jubilee and the warm ecumenical relationship between the Church of England, of which His Majesty is Supreme Governor, and the Roman Catholic Church.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Victoria Jones/Shutterstock (15557130f) Swiss guards in the Vatican City King Charles III and Queen Camilla visit to the Holy See, Day 2, Arrival at Vatican City, Italy - 23 Oct 2025 Their Majesties will visit the Holy See to celebrate the 2025 Papal Jubilee and the warm ecumenical relationship between the Church of England, of which His Majesty is Supreme Governor, and the Roman Catholic Church.
Mandatory Credit: Photo by Victoria Jones/Shutterstock (15557130c) Band in the Vatican City King Charles III and Queen Camilla visit to the Holy See, Day 2, Arrival at Vatican City, Italy - 23 Oct 2025 Their Majesties will visit the Holy See to celebrate the 2025 Papal Jubilee and the warm ecumenical relationship between the Church of England, of which His Majesty is Supreme Governor, and the Roman Catholic Church.

Pictures: Vatican rolls out red carpet for King

The Vatican has literally rolled out the red carpet ahead of the arrival of King Charles and Queen Camilla.

The couple are due to arrive shortly at the Apostolic Palace in the San Damascus Courtyard before greeting Pope Leo.

A worker hammers nails to secure the red carpet ahead of the arrival of Britain's King Charles and Queen Camilla at the courtyard of San Damaso as part of their first state visit to the Holy See since Pope Leo XIV's election, at the Vatican, October 23, 2025. REUTERS/Phil Noble
VATICAN CITY, VATICAN - OCTOBER 23: An employee does some last minute cleaning of the red carpet in San Damaso Courtyard on October 23, 2025 in Vatican City, Vatican. During this historic State Visit, King Charles III and Queen Camilla will meet Pope Leo XIV for the first time since he was elected in May 2025. The King and Queen will join the Catholic Church's 2025 Jubilee Year celebrations, during which the heads of the Catholic Church and Church of England will pray together, the first time the British monarch and pontiff have done so at a church service since the English Reformation. (Photo by Samir Hussein/WireImage)

King’s visit comes during Catholic Jubilee

King Charles’ state visit to the Holy See is one laden with symbolism and comes during the Catholic Church’s Jubilee year

Traditionally marked every 25 years, the Jubilee is a special time for the Catholic Church which is likely to result in more than 30 million pilgrims heading to Rome this year.

On Christmas Eve last year, Pope Francis launched jubilee year by opening the usually bricked-up Holy Door at St Peter’s Basilica.

The ceremony was meant to represent the forthcoming ‘year of hope’ with Catholics encourages to pass through the door and seek forgiveness of their sins.

Why King’s visit to Vatican was postponed earlier this year

King Charles and Queen Camilla have a private meeting with Pope Francis in the Vatican City on April 9 this year

The King and Queen were due to make the state visit to the Holy See in April but the health problems of Pope Francis meant the trip was postponed, although the couple did privately meet the pontiff, who died later that month.

Paying tribute to him following his death, Charles said Francis, who was the first Latin American pope, would be ‘remembered for his compassion’ and had ‘profoundly touched the lives of so many’.

Today marks his first visit with his successor Pope Leo who was elected in May.

Jacob Rees-Mogg: King’s visit to Vatican is ‘wonderful symbolic gesture’

Former Conservative cabinet minister Jacob Rees-Mogg said King Charles’s state visit to the Vatican marked a ‘wonderful symbolic gesture of Christian unity’.

Mr Rees-Mogg made the remarks last night on his GB News show.

Revealed: Pope Leo to bestow King Charles with new honour

Mandatory Credit: Photo by Maria Grazia Picciarella/SOPA Images/Shutterstock (15572241b) Pope Leo XIV arrives for his weekly general audience at St. Peter's square. Pope Leo XIV' s weekly general audience in Vatican - 22 Oct 2025

In recognition of his lifetime of campaigning on issues of inter-faith harmony, Pope Leo will make Charles a ‘Royal Confrater’ of the Papal Basilica and Abbey of St. Paul’s Outside the Walls.

The gift of ‘confraternity’ is a recognition of spiritual fellowship – ‘frater’ meaning brother in Latin.

In further celebration of this new bond, a special seat has been created for His Majesty, which will remain in the Basilica as a perpetual mark of mutual respect between Pope Leo and The King as Heads of State.

The special chair is decorated with His Majesty’s Coat of Arms and will be used by the King during the service, after which it will remain in the apse of the Basilica for future use by the monarch and his heirs and successors.

King and Pope to pray together in historic moment at Sistine Chapel

During an ecumenical service in the famous Sistine Chapel, the King, Supreme Governor of the Church of England, will become the first British monarch to pray at a public service with the Pope, head of the Catholic Church, since the Reformation.

Nearly 500 years ago, in 1534, King Henry VIII led the country’s breakaway from Rome as he declared himself the head of the Church of England and severed ties with the Roman Catholic Church over its refusal to grant him an annulment to his marriage of Catherine of Aragon – the first of his six wives.

REBECCA ENGLISH: King Charles may hope for divine intervention after Andrew furore

LONDON, UNITED KINGDOM - JUNE 05: (EMBARGOED FOR PUBLICATION IN UK NEWSPAPERS UNTIL 24 HOURS AFTER CREATE DATE AND TIME) Prince Andrew, Duke of York and Prince Charles, Prince of Wales attend a Service of Thanksgiving to celebrate Queen Elizabeth II's Diamond Jubilee at St Paul's Cathedral on June 5, 2012 in London, England. For only the second time in its history the UK celebrates the Diamond Jubilee of a monarch. Her Majesty Queen Elizabeth II celebrates the 60th anniversary of her ascension to the throne. Thousands of wellwishers from around the world have flocked to London to witness the spectacle of the weekend's celebrations. (Photo by Max Mumby/Indigo/Getty Images)

Today’s meeting with Pope Leo has enormous personal significance for King Charles, both as Supreme Governor of the Church of England and someone who has devoted his life to promoting interfaith harmony.

For the government, the State Visit to The Holy See is also seen as preaching a particularly important message of religious tolerance in an increasingly fractured world.

It’s also important to remember that the 76-year-old monarch is also still undergoing regular cancer treatment – something many easily forget given how packed his public diary is.

As a result, there is no doubt that Buckingham Palace are determinedly focusing on official duties and putting the ever-growing furore over his brother, Prince Andrew, to one side.

However today’s visit also comes at a difficult time for the monarch, who has faced weeks of uncomfortable headlines over the behaviour of his brother, Prince Andrew, his links to convicted paedophile Jeffrey Epstein, allegations of abuse against Virgina Giuffre, and outrage over his living arrangements.

While the King moved decisively on Friday and forced Andrew to voluntarily stand down from using his titles, including that of the the Duke of York, his attempts to seize the narrative have not halted the growing public furore.

There are increasing cross-party calls for an official investigation into the prince’s links with Epstein and his living arrangements at 30-room Royal Lodge, as well as demands that Parliament formally strip him of his titles and force him to become a private citizen.

As he becomes the first British monarch in almost half a century to pray with the leader of the Roman Catholic Church in the Sistine Chapel later this morning, Charles may quietly offer a silent plea of his own for some divine intervention.

King puts Prince Andrew drama to one side as he arrives in Rome

King Charles landed in Rome last night determined to focus on official duties and put the growing furore over his brother Prince Andrew to one side.

The monarch, 76, who despite his ongoing cancer treatement has a packed week of public engagements, is undertaking an historic meeting with Pope Leo this morning along with his wife, Queen Camilla.

As they touched down in Rome she sported a feather print silk dress by Fiona Clare and a brown cashmere trench coat by Anne Valentine. ‘It’s a great pleasure to be here,’ she said.

The King meanwhile told Monsignor Javier Domingo Fernández González, who greeted him on the Pope’s behalf: ‘It’s wonderful to be able to come back to Rome.’

King Charles to meet Pope Leo in the Vatican

Britain's King Charles greets a member of the clergy as he arrives in Rome to undertake a historic State Visit to the Holy See Their Majesties will join His Holiness Pope Leo XIV to celebrate the 2025 Jubilee year, in Rome, Italy, October 22, 2025.  Arthur Edwards/Pool via REUTERS

Hello and welcome to the Daily Mail’s live coverage as King Charles and Queen Camilla begin their state visit to the Vatican by meeting Pope Leo XIV for the first time since he was elected to office.

Charles and Camilla, who arrived in Rome on Wednesday evening, will be greeted by Pope Leo in his official residence, the Apostolic Palace ahead of a historic day of events.

The state visit to the Holy See, the government of the Roman Catholic Church in the Vatican, is understood to be deeply significant for the King personally and will celebrate the Papal Jubilee held every 25 years.

Stick with us for live updates throughout the day with the latest developments from the Vatican.

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