EditorialEduard Habsburg, Hungary’s ambassador to the Vatican, with a skull in the chapel of Santa Maria dell’Anima, which holds the relics of some of his imperial ancestors, in Rome, April 24, 2023. (Stephanie Gengotti/The New York Times)
EditorialEduard Habsburg, Hungary’s ambassador to the Vatican, with a skull in the chapel of Santa Maria dell’Anima, which holds the relics of some of his imperial ancestors, in Rome, April 24, 2023. (Stephanie Gengotti/The New York Times)
EditorialEduard Habsburg, Hungary’s ambassador to the Vatican, with a skull in the chapel of Santa Maria dell’Anima, which holds the relics of some of his imperial ancestors, in Rome, April 24, 2023. (Stephanie Gengotti/The New York Times)
EditorialEduard Habsburg, Hungary’s ambassador to the Vatican, with a skull in the chapel of Santa Maria dell’Anima, which holds the relics of some of his imperial ancestors, in Rome, April 24, 2023. (Stephanie Gengotti/The New York Times)
EditorialEduard Habsburg, Hungary’s ambassador to the Vatican, with a skull in the chapel of Santa Maria dell’Anima, which holds the relics of some of his imperial ancestors, in Rome, April 24, 2023. (Stephanie Gengotti/The New York Times)
EditorialEduard Habsburg, Hungary’s ambassador to the Vatican, with a skull in the chapel of Santa Maria dell’Anima, which holds the relics of some of his imperial ancestors, in Rome, April 24, 2023. (Stephanie Gengotti/The New York Times)
EditorialEduard Habsburg, Hungary’s ambassador to the Vatican, with a skull in the chapel of Santa Maria dell’Anima, which holds the relics of some of his imperial ancestors, in Rome, April 24, 2023. (Stephanie Gengotti/The New York Times)
EditorialEduard Habsburg, Hungary’s ambassador to the Vatican, with a skull in the chapel of Santa Maria dell’Anima, which holds the relics of some of his imperial ancestors, in Rome, April 24, 2023. (Stephanie Gengotti/The New York Times)