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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: BER-BLA |
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BIRETTA (Ital. berretta, Med. Lat. biretum, birettum, dim. of birrus, " a hooded cloak "; from the Fr. form barrette is derived the Eng. " barret-cap ") , a cap worn by the Catholic clergy. It is square and stiff, being made of a framework of cardboard covered with cloth or silk; on the top, along the sutures of the stuff, are three or four raised, board-like, arched ridges, at the junction of which in the centre is a knob or tassel (ftoccus). Its colour varies with the rank of the wearer, that of the pope being white, of the cardinals red, of bishops purple, and of the lower clergy black. It is not in the strictest sense a liturgical head-dress, its use not being confined to liturgical functions. In these functions, moreover, its use is strictly limited; e.g. it is worn at low masses by the priest only when he goes to and from the altar, at high masses also when the celebrant sits during the singing of the Kyrie, Gloria and Creed, and at pro-cessions when these take place outside the church and are not sacramental, and so on. Though the form of the biretta, devised in the 17th century, is peculiar to the Roman Church, it is but a variant of the original
This use of the biretum as a symbol of office or dignity was not confined to the clergy. With various modifications of form it was worn by all persons of standing
investiture of laymen with office, e.g. a duke or the prefect of the city of Rome (Du Cange, Gloss. s.v. birretum). The "cap of maintenance" or "cap of estate," still borne be-fore the British sovereign on state occasions, is a barretcap of the type of the 14th and 15th centuries; it is of crimson velvet, turned up with ermine. By the 16th century the barret-cap had become the common head-gent of all people of substance, men and women. It was flat, square or round, sometimes with edges that could be turned up or down according to convenience, and was often elaborately decorated. By the 17th century it had given place in ordinary civil life to the brimmed hat; but in various shapes it still survives as official head-gear in many European countries: the Bared', worn in church by the Lutheran clergy, in the courts by German lawyers, and by the deans and rectors of the universities, the barrette of French judges and barristers, the " black cap " of the English judge, and the " college cap " familiar in English and American universities, and vulgarly known as the " mortar-board."Meanwhile the ecclesiastical developments of the biretum are not without interest
enlarged, forming a rim of thick stuff projecting beyond the close-fitting cap. This was the " square cap " so virulently denounced by the Puritans as a symbol of High Church Erastianism. With the triumph
On the continent, meanwhile, in the Roman Catholic Church, the biretum had' also developed into its present characteristic form, and by a very similar process. By the end of the 16th century the square shape was every-where prevalent; at the beginning of the 17th century cardboard was introduced to stiffen the sides and emphasize the squareness, and the actual form of the biretta, as described above, had be-come fixed (see fig. 2). Only in Spain has the biretta continued to be worn without the raised ridges. The use of the Roman biretta has been introduced by a certain number of the clergy into the Anglican Church. It is clear that there is no historical justification
late
in fixing and pro- pagating the square shape, and he quotes a decree of the synod of Aix (1585) ordering the 8 h clergy to wear a biretta sewn in the form of a cross (biretum in modum crucis consutum, ut ecclesiasticos homines decet). So far as the legality of the use of the biretta in the Church of England is concerned, this was pronounced by Sir R. Phillimore in the Court of Arches ( Elphinstone v. Purchas, 187o) to be legal " as a protection to the head when needed," but this decision was reversed on appeal by the judicial committee of the privy council (Hebbert v. Purchas, 1871). Of late years the old square cap of soft padded cloth or velvet has been revived in the Anglican Church by some dignitaries.See J. Braun, S.J., Die liturgischeGewandung (Freiburg-i-B., 1907) ; Hierurgica Anglicana, part ii. (London, 19o3); H. Druitt, Costume on Brasses (London, 1906). (W. A. P.) End of Article: BIRETTA (Ital. berretta, Med. Lat. biretum, birettum, dim. of birrus, " a hooded cloak "; from the Fr. form barrette is derived the Eng. " barret-cap ") If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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