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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: THE-TOO |
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TONSURE (Lat. tonsura, from tondere, to shave) , a religious observance in the Roman Catholic and Orthodox Eastern Churches, consisting of the shaving or cutting part of the hair of the head as a sign of dedication to special
standing
bishop
hair , and Jerome deprecates both long and closely cropped hair. According to Prudentius (IIepur. xiii. 30) it was customary for the hair to be cut short at ordination. Paulinus of Nola (c. 490) alludes to the tonsure as in use among the (Western) monks; from them the practice quickly spread to the clergy. For Gaul about the year 500 we have the testimony of Sidonius Apollinaris (iv. 13), who says that Germanicus the bishop
The earliest instance of an ecclesiastical precept on the subject occurs in can. 41 of the Council of Toledo (A.n. 633) : " omnes clerici, detonso superius capite toto, inferius solam circuli coronam relinquant." Can. 33 of the Quinisext council (692) requires even singers and readers to be tonsured. Since the 8th century three tonsures have been more or less in use, known respectively as the Roman, the Greek and the Celtic. The first two are sometimes distinguished as the tonsure of Peter and the tonsure of Paul. The Roman or St Peter's tonsure prevailed in France, Spain and Italy. It consisted in shaving the whole head, leaving only a fringe of hair supposed to symbolize the crown of thorns. Late
drawn
minor order. From the 7th century, however, children were tonsured without ordination, and later on adults anxious to escape secular jurisdiction were often tonsured without ordination. Till the loth century the tonsure could be given by priests or even by laymen, but its bestowal was gradually restricted to bishops and abbots.End of Article: TONSURE (Lat. tonsura, from tondere, to shave) If you wish, you can link directly to this article.
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