pallium - translation to γαλλικά
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pallium - translation to γαλλικά

AN ECCLESIASTICAL VESTMENT IN THE CATHOLIC CHURCH: A NARROW BAND, SEEN FROM FRONT OR BACK THE ORNAMENT RESEMBLES THE LETTER Y AND DECORATED WITH SIX BLACK CROSSES
  • [[Pope Benedict XVI]] wearing his second pallium in 2013
  • Gregory I dictating, from a 10th-century manuscript (vestments include a pallium)
  • Sacro Speco Cloister]]
  • [[Pope John Paul II]] vested in the pallium.
  • The pallium of [[Pope John XXIII]], which is the current design, displayed in the museum of the [[Archdiocese of Gniezno]]
  • Development of the pallium
  • [[Pope Benedict XVI]] in his distinctive papal pallium, prior to 2008
  • Raban Maur]] (left), [[Alcuin]] (middle) and Archbishop [[Otgar of Mainz]] (right), wearing the pallium. From a 9th-century manuscript.
  • Portrait of [[Apollinaris of Ravenna]], wearing the pallium. Mosaic at the [[Basilica of Sant'Apollinare in Classe]], Ravenna.

pallium         
n. pallium, pall
pairle      
n. pairle, a device representing the front of an ecclesiastical pallium

Ορισμός

pallium
['pal??m]
¦ noun (plural pallia -l?? or palliums)
1. a woollen vestment conferred by the Pope on an archbishop, consisting of a narrow circular band placed round the shoulders with a short lappet hanging from front and back.
2. a man's large rectangular cloak worn in antiquity.
3. Zoology the mantle of a mollusc or brachiopod.
4. Anatomy the outer wall of the mammalian cerebrum, corresponding to the cerebral cortex.
Derivatives
pallial adjective
Origin
ME: from L., lit. 'cloak, covering'.

Βικιπαίδεια

Pallium

The pallium (derived from the Roman pallium or palla, a woolen cloak; pl.: pallia) is an ecclesiastical vestment in the Catholic Church, originally peculiar to the pope, but for many centuries bestowed by the Holy See upon metropolitans and primates as a symbol of their conferred jurisdictional authorities, and still remains a papal emblem.

In its present (western) form, the pallium is a long and "three fingers broad" (narrow) white band adornment, woven from the wool of lambs raised by Trappist monks. It is donned by looping its middle around one's neck, resting upon the chasuble and two dependent lappets over one's shoulders with tail-ends (doubled) on the left with the front end crossing over the rear. When observed from the front or rear the pallium sports a stylistic letter 'y' (contrasting against an unpatterned chasuble). It is decorated with six black crosses, one near each end and four spaced out around the neck loop. At times the pallium is embellished fore, aft and at the left shoulder with three gold gem-headed (dull) stickpins. The doubling and pinning on the left shoulder likely survive from the (simple scarf) Roman pallium.

The pallium and the omophor originate from the same vestment, the latter a much larger and wider version worn by Eastern Orthodox and Eastern Catholic bishops of the Byzantine Rite. A theory relates origination to the paradigm of the Good Shepherd shouldering a lamb, a common early Christian art image (if not icon); the ritual preparation of the pallium and its subsequent bestowal upon a pope at coronation suggests the shepherd symbolism. However, this may be an explanation a posteriori. The lambs whose fleeces are destined for pallia are solemnly presented at altar by the nuns of the convent of Saint Agnes outside the walls and ultimately the Benedictine nuns of Santa Cecilia in Trastevere weave their wool into pallia.