In Pictures: Pope Francis' final farewell

Applause rang out as the coffin, inlaid with a large cross, was brought out of St. Peter's Basilica and into the sun-filled square by 14 white-gloved pallbearers.
Pope Francis' wooden coffin was carried into St. Peter's Square on Saturday at the start of a funeral Mass attended by a multitude of mourners, including powerful world leaders, clerics and pilgrims.
Applause rang out as the coffin, inlaid with a large cross, was brought out of St. Peter's Basilica and into the sun-filled square by 14 white-gloved pallbearers.
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Bells tolled as the last of the leaders from more than 150 countries took their places. Dignitaries included Kenyan President William Ruto, U.S. President Donald Trump, as well as the presidents of Argentina, France, Gabon, Germany, Italy, the Philippines, Poland and Ukraine, together with the prime ministers of Britain and New Zealand, and many European royals.

The open-air ceremony was celebrated by 220 cardinals, 750 bishops and more than 4,000 other priests.


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.


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.
The faithful hurried to the Vatican from the early hours, while many camped out to try and secure spots at the front of the crowd for the ceremony.


"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.




The Argentine pope died on Monday, aged 88, following a stroke. His death ushered in a meticulously planned period of transition for the 1.4-billion-member Roman Catholic Church, marked by ancient ritual, pomp and mourning.
Over the past three days, around 250,000 people filed past his body, which was laid out in an open coffin before the altar of the cavernous, 16th-century St. Peter's Basilica.

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