It’s confirmed: Pope Leo XIV will make historic first papal visit to Monaco

Monaco is preparing for one of the most significant moments in its modern history. Pope Leo XIV will make an Apostolic Visit to the Principality on Saturday 28th March — the first visit by a sitting pope to Monaco in the modern era.

Prince Albert II and Princess Charlene will welcome the Holy Father to the Principality in what the Princely Palace, in a communiquĂ© issued Wednesday, described as an occasion that will “mark a historic moment for Monaco and stand as a strong sign of hope, in a spirit of dialogue, peace, and shared responsibility.”

The last time a pope passed through Monaco was in 1802 — and even then, it was not a visit in any meaningful sense. The cortege carrying the body of Pope Pius VI passed through the Principality on its way back to Rome. More than two centuries later, a reigning pontiff will set foot in Monaco for the first time.

How the visit came about

The Apostolic Visit follows an invitation extended by Prince Albert II to Pope Leo XIV during a private meeting at the Vatican on 17th January. The Archbishop of Monaco, Dominique-Marie David, extended a parallel invitation — reflecting, the Palace noted, “both the institutional and pastoral dimensions of this event”.

This is not simply a diplomatic exchange between two sovereign states, though Monaco and the Holy See share historic and longstanding relations. It is also a pastoral visit to a Catholic nation — and the Palace was explicit about what that means. “As a sovereign State in which the Catholic, Apostolic and Roman religion is enshrined in the Constitution, the Principality of Monaco draws from this spiritual heritage a fundamental element of its identity, unity, and institutional continuity, while embracing a dynamic of openness and adaptation to the contemporary world,” the communiquĂ© read.

The visit, the Palace added, “reflects the enduring bonds linking the Grimaldi dynasty to the Roman Pontiffs, as well as the historic and trusted diplomatic relations between Monaco and the Holy See.”

What it means for Monaco

For a Principality of Monaco’s size, a papal visit is an event of extraordinary weight. The Grimaldi dynasty’s bonds with the Roman pontiffs stretch back centuries, and the Catholic faith has been woven into the fabric of Monegasque public life since the founding of the state. That no sitting pope has made a formal visit in the modern era makes the announcement all the more remarkable.

The visit also carries meaning well beyond Monaco’s borders. Pope Leo XIV arrives in a spirit the Palace has explicitly framed around dialogue and peace — values that resonate at a moment when the world is in particular need of both.

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Main photo of Prince Albert and Pope Leo at the Vatican in January 2026, credit: Vatican Media

Drop everything – the world’s funniest wildlife photos are here and open for a public vote

There is a frog in a headlock. A family of lions in hysterics. And somewhere in the Comedy Wildlife Photography Awards’ 2025 finalist collection, there is almost certainly an animal doing something so perfectly, absurdly human that you will stop scrolling and laugh out loud before you have even registered what you are looking at.

That is entirely the point.

Founded in 2015 by wildlife photographer Paul Joynson-Hicks MBE from a small office on the slopes of Mount Meru in Tanzania, the Comedy Wildlife Photography Awards has grown into one of the most watched photography competitions in the world — and one of the most quietly effective conservation platforms around. The public vote for this year’s finalists closes on 1st March, and it is well worth five minutes of your time.

‘Fonzies Advertising’ by Liliana Luca, Comedy Wildlife

Why funny works

The premise is deceptively simple. A funny animal photograph has no barriers — no difficult imagery to process, no statistics to absorb, no guilt to navigate. What it does have is an immediate, instinctive pull. You look longer. You look again. You wonder what the animal was thinking. And in that moment of connection, something shifts.

“Issues of wildlife conservation and sustainability are gaining momentum globally, yet the messages and images tend to be negative, depressing and enervating,” says Joynson-Hicks. The Comedy Wildlife Awards exist as a direct response to that — using humour and anthropomorphism, one of the most powerful triggers for human empathy, to bring people closer to the animals and habitats that need their attention.

‘Just can’t wait to be king’ by Bret Saalwaechter, Comedy Wildlife

The results speak for themselves. Each year the competition receives thousands of entries from photographers around the world, generates global media coverage, and reaches an audience that might never engage with a conventional conservation campaign. Co-founder Tom Sullam and Michelle Wood, who joined the team in 2017, have helped build it into a genuine fixture on the international photography calendar.

This year’s finalists

The 2025 finalists are everything you would expect — animal expressions that range from indignant to bewildered, situations that could only have been captured by a photographer in exactly the right place at exactly the right moment, and a handful of images that are simply impossible to look at without smiling. These are photographs you return to, share, and remember.

The public vote is open now at comedywildlifephoto.com and closes on 1st March. Entry to the competition itself is free, with photographers able to submit up to ten images across portfolio and category entries each year.

Monaco knows the power of this idea

The concept of using photography to connect people with the natural world is one that resonates here in Monaco. The Prince Albert II of Monaco Foundation runs its own Environmental Photography Awards each year, with the winning and shortlisted images displayed along the Larvotto promenade — turning one of the Principality’s most walked stretches of coastline into an open-air gallery dedicated to the beauty and fragility of the planet.

Both competitions understand the same truth: that a powerful image does what statistics cannot. It makes you feel something. And feeling something, as any conservationist will tell you, is where change begins.

Vote for your favourite Comedy Wildlife finalist at comedywildlifephoto.com before 1st March.

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Main photo: ‘Now which direction is my nest’ by Alison Tuck, Comedy Wildlife

 

Opéra de Monte-Carlo celebrates double win at the 2026 Oper! Awards

The Opéra de Monte-Carlo has taken two of the top prizes at the 2026 Oper! Awards, with Cecilia Bartoli named Best Production and Gianluca Capuano recognised as Best Conductor.

Cecilia Bartoli, who serves as both Director of the OpĂ©ra de Monte-Carlo and Artistic Director of the Salzburg Whitsun Festival, was honoured for Hotel Metamorphosis — an inventive pastiche weaving Vivaldi arias together with Ovid’s Metamorphoses, presented in Salzburg last year. The award reflects the critical attention the production attracted across the opera world since its premiere.

Gianluca Capuano, principal conductor of Les Musiciens du Prince – Monaco, claimed the Best Conductor prize in recognition of his work on the same Vivaldi pastiche as well as his direction of Das Rheingold, which was presented at the OpĂ©ra de Monte-Carlo in January 2025.

Gianluca Capuano, principal conductor of Les Musiciens du Prince – Monaco, claimed the Best Conductor prize. Photo credit: Sylvain Guillot, Opera de Monte Carlo

The double recognition is a significant moment for Monaco’s opera house and the artistic community it has built around it, and confirms the international standing of both its leadership and its resident ensemble.

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Photo of Cecilia Bartoli, credit: Sylvain Guillot, Opera de Monte Carlo