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・ Pontifical Institute of Arab and Islamic Studies
・ Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies
・ Pontifical Institute of Sacred Liturgy
・ Pontifical Institute of Sacred Music
・ Pontifical Irish College
・ Pontifical John Paul II Institute for Studies on Marriage and Family
・ Pontifical Lateran University
・ Pontifical Legate
・ Pontifical Mission for Palestine
・ Pontifical Mission Societies
・ Pontifical Missionary Union
・ Pontifical North American College
・ Pontifical Oriental Institute
・ Pontifical right
・ Pontifical Roman Athenaeum S. Apollinare
Pontifical Roman Seminary
・ Pontifical secret
・ Pontifical Theological Faculty Teresianum
・ Pontifical universities in Rome
・ Pontifical university
・ Pontifical University Antonianum
・ Pontifical University of John Paul II
・ Pontifical University of Saint Thomas Aquinas
・ Pontifical University of Salamanca
・ Pontifical University of St. Bonaventure
・ Pontifical University of the Holy Cross
・ Pontifical Urban University
・ Pontifical vestments
・ Pontifical Xavierian University
・ Pontifical Xavierian University Faculty of Medicine


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Pontifical Roman Seminary : ウィキペディア英語版
Pontifical Roman Seminary
The Pontifical Roman Seminary is a seminary in Rome, Italy located at the Basilica of St. John Lateran.
==History==
The Council of Trent in its 23rd session decreed the establishment of diocesan seminaries. Pope Pius IV decided to set a good example, and on 1 February 1565, the Roman Seminary was solemnly opened with 60 students. The rules were drawn up by Diego Lainez, General of the Society of Jesus, and to this order Pius IV entrusted the management of the college.
Up to 1773 the students attended the lectures in the College Romano. The residence was changed several times before 1608, when they settled in the Palazzo Borromeo in the Via del Seminario (now 'Collegio Bellarmino', a residence for Jesuit priests, students at the Gregorian University). A country seat was erected for the students in a portion of the baths of Caracalla. Each year, at Pentecost, a student delivered a discourse on the Holy Ghost in the papal chapel.
After the suppression of the Society of Jesus, in 1773, the seminary was installed in the Collegio Romano of the Jesuits. After the changes in 1798 the number of the students, generally about 100, came down to 9. Pope Pius VII restored the seminary which continued to occupy the Collegio Romano until 1824, when Pope Leo XII returned this building to the Jesuits and transferred the seminary to the Palazzo di Sant'Apollinare, formerly occupied by the Collegio Germanico; the seminary, however, retained its own schools comprising a classical course, and a faculty of philosophy and theology, to which in 1856 a course of canon law was added. The direction of the seminary and, as a rule, the chairs were reserved to the secular clergy. After the departure of the Jesuits in 1848 the seminary again removed to the Collegio Romano.
The Collegio Cerasoli with four burses for students of the Diocese of Bergamo endowed by Cardinal Cerasoli, is connected with the seminary. The students take part in the ceremonies in the church of the Seminario Pio. Their cassock is violet. The seminary possesses an excellent library.
By order of Pope Pius X, a new building for the seminary was constructed near the Lateran Basilica.
Gregory XV, Clement IX, Innocent XIII, Clement XII, and John XXIII received part of their formation in this seminary.
On 28 October 1958, the election of Angelo Roncalli, a former pupil of the Roman Seminary, as Pope John XXIII was a source of joy for the seminary community. John XXIII expressed his appreciation and support for the Seminary by visiting it on 27 November 1958, just one month after his election as Pope.

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