|
|
![]() Helping San Diego, California and beyond since 1997.
|
|
Click here and add this page to your favorites!

|
Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: MAL-MAR |
|
|
MANIPLE (Lat. manipulus, from minus, hand, and plere, to fill) , a liturgical vestment of the Catholic Church, proper to all orders from the subdeacon upwards. It is a narrow strip of material, silk or half-silk, about a yard long, worn on the left fore-arm in such a way that the ends hang down to an equal length on either side. In order to secure it, it is sometimes tied on with strings attached underneath, sometimes provided with a hole in the lining through which the arm is passed. It is ornamented with three crosses, one in the centre and one at each end, that in the centre being obligatory, and is often elaborately embroidered. It is the special
ensign of the office of subdeacon, and at the ordination is placed on the arm of the new subdeacon by the bishop with the words: " Take the maniple , the symbol of the fruit of good works."1 It is strictly a "mass vestment," being worn, with certain exceptions (e.g. by a subdeacon singing the Gospel at the service of blessing the palms), only at Mass, by the celebrant and the ministers assisting.The most common name for the maniple up to the beginning of the lrth century in the Latin Church was mappula (dim. of mappa, cloth), the Roman name for the vestment until the time of Innocent III. The designation manipulus did not come into general use until the 15th century. Father Braun (Liturg. Gewandung, p. 517) gives other early medieval names: sudanum, fano, mantile, all of them meaning " cloth" or " handkerchief." He traces the vestment ultimately to a white linen cloth of ceremony (pallium
circus . As late
practical
The maniple was originally carried in the left hand. In pictures of the 9th, loth and 11th centuries it is represented as either so carried or as hung over the left fore-arm. By the 12th century the rule
In the East
' According to Father Braun this custom cannot be traced earlier than the 9th century. It forms no essential part of the ordination ceremony (Liturg. Gewandung, p. 548). 2 For the evolution of these rules see Braun, op. cit. pp. 546 seq.embroidered border, and usually decorated in the middle with a cross or a sword (the " sword of the Spirit," which it is supposed to symbolize) ; sometimes, however, the space within the border is embroidered with pictures. It is worn only by bishops and the higher clergy, and derives its name from the fact that it hangs down over the knee (yovv). It is worn on the right side, under the phelonion, but when the sakkos is worn instead of the phelonion, by metropolitans, &c., it is attached to this. The epigonation, like the maniple, was originally a cloth held in the hand; a fact sufficiently proved by the ancient name i'yxelprov (xsip, hand), which it retained until the 12th century. For convenience' sake this cloth came to be suspended from the girdle on the right side, and is thus represented in the earliest extant paintings (see Braun, p. 552). The name epigonation, which appears in the latter half of the 12th century, probably marks the date of the complete conventionalizing of the original
See J.Braun, S. J.,Die liturgische Gewandung (Freiburg im Breisgau, 1907), pp. 515-561, and the bibliography to VESTMENTS. End of Article: MANIPLE (Lat. manipulus, from minus, hand, and plere, to fill) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
<a href="http://jcsm.org/StudyCenter/Encyclopedia/MAL_MAR/MANIPLE_Lat_manipulus_from_min.html"> MANIPLE (Lat. manipulus, from minus, hand, and ... </a> |
|
|
(Previous) MANING, FREDERICK EDWARD (1812-1883) |
(Next) MANIPUR |
|
Sponsored Advertisements