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Topic: Ambrosian rite


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In the News (Sun 27 May 12)

  
  Ambrosian Rite Officium Parvum - Overview
Structurally, it follows the pattern of the canonical office of the Church of Milan, and the various principles which identify the Ambrosian Rite as its own liturgical entity are clear.
Vespers begins in the classic Ambrosian format, with the Lucernarium, followed by the antiphona in choro, and then the entire hymn, Mysterium Ecclesiae, which, in turn, is followed by a responsorium in choro.
In addition, the Ambrosian Rite includes the Inviolata, which is not found in the other offices, and which was used from the 1st Sunday after Pentecost until the Nativity of the BVM (8 September).
www.kellerbook.com /COMPAR~9.HTM   (0 words)

  
 Ambrosian Liturgy and Rite - Ökumenisches Heiligenlexikon
The district in which the Ambrosian Rite is used is nominally the old archiepiscopal province of Milan before the changes of 1515 and 1819, but in actual fact it is not exclusively used even in the city of Milan itself.
Neale considered that the Ambrosian Rite was a Romanized form of this Hispano-Gallican, or Ephesine, Rite, He never brought much evidence for this view, being generally contented with stating it and giving a certain number of not very convincing comparisons with the Mozarabic Rite (Essays on Liturgiology, ed.
There are evident Gallicanisms in the Ambrosian Rite, but so there are in the present Roman, and the main outlines of the process by which they arrived in the latter are sufficiently certain, though the dates are not.
www.heiligenlexikon.de /CatholicEncyclopedia/Ambrosius_Liturgie_Ritus.html   (7689 words)

  
 The Gallican Rite
He assumes that the Ambrosian Rite is not really Roman, but Gallican, much Romanized at a later period, and that the Giubbio variations of which St. Innocent complained were borrowed from Milan.
Certain of the varying prayers of the Hispano-Gallican Rite have a tendency to fall into couples, a Bidding Prayer, or invitation to pray, sometimes of considerable length and often partaking of the nature of a homily, addressed to the congregation, and a collect embodying the suggestions of the Bidding Prayer, addressed to God.
There was no capital to give laws to the whole country, and the rite developed there variously in various places, so that among the scanty fragments of the service-books that remain there is a marked absence of verbal uniformity, though the main outlines of the services are of the same type.
www.catholicity.com /encyclopedia/g/gallican_rite.html   (9161 words)

  
 Best Music Downloads - Music Sound
Ambrosian chant (also known as Milanese chant) is the liturgical plainchant repertory of the Ambrosian rite of the Roman Catholic Church, related to but distinct from Gregorian chant.
Ambrosian chant is largely defined by its role in the liturgy of the Ambrosian rite, which is more closely related to the northern "Gallic" liturgies such as the Gallican rite and the Mozarabic rite than the Roman rite.
The Symbolum corresponds to the Credo in the Roman rite.
www.music.bestdownload.biz /modules.php?name=Music_Sound-MM&page=Ambrosian_chant.html   (2076 words)

  
 Spartanburg SC | GoUpstate.com | Spartanburg Herald-Journal   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Although at various points in its history the distinctive Ambrosian Rite has risked suppression, it survived after the Second Vatican Council partly because the then Pope, Paul VI was sympathetic, having been the Archbishop of Milan.
The liturgical year of the Ambrosian Rite begins, as elsewhere in the West, with the First Sunday of Advent, but that Sunday, as in the Mozarabic Rite, is a fortnight earlier than in the Roman, so that there are six Sundays in Advent, and the key-day of the beginning of Advent is not St.
The Ambrosian Rite supposes the existence of two cathedrals, the Basilica Major or Ecclesia Æstiva 'summer church', and the Basilica Minor or Ecclesia Hiemalis 'winter church'.
www.goupstate.com /apps/pbcs.dll/section?category=NEWS&template=wiki&text=Ambrosian_rite   (7565 words)

  
 Reference.com/Encyclopedia/Ambrosian Rite
Although at various points in its history the distinctive Ambrosian Rite has risked suppression, it survived after the Second Vatican Council partly because the then Pope, Paul VI was sympathetic, having been the Archbishop of Milan.
The Liturgical Year of the Ambrosian Rite begins, as elsewhere in the West, with the First Sunday of Advent, but that Sunday, as in the Mozarabic Rite, is a fortnight earlier than in the Roman, so that there are six Sundays in Advent, and the key-day of the beginning of Advent is not St.
The Ambrosian Rite supposes the existence of two cathedrals, the Basilica Major or Ecclesia Æstiva 'summer church', and the Basilica Minor or Ecclesia Hiemalis 'winter church'.
www.reference.com /browse/wiki/Ambrosian_Rite   (7540 words)

  
 Beneventan chant at AllExperts
Beneventan chant is a liturgical plainchant repertory of the Roman Catholic Church, used primarily in the orbit of the southern Italian ecclesiastical centers of Benevento and Montecassino, distinct from Gregorian chant and related to Ambrosian chant.
It was officially supplanted by the Gregorian chant of the Roman rite in the 11th century, although a few Beneventan chants of local interest remained in use.
As in the Ambrosian rite, a threefold Kyrie was sung to a simple melody following the Gloria, but this was not analogous to the more complex Kyrie of the Gregorian repertory.
en.allexperts.com /e/b/be/beneventan_chant.htm   (870 words)

  
 Christian liturgy - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
The eastern was heavily influenced by the use of the iconostasis, a large wall with doors in front of the altar, while the western church was seen as assimilating many of the pious practices of the pagans it had converted in northern Europe.
The Council of Trent called for a standardized western rite and created a system for printing missals which would have to be used by every congregation unless their rite was at least 200 years old.
In the West, these rites included the Dominican, the Ambrosian rite, and the Mozarabic rite.
www.daveproxy.co.uk /cgi-bin/nph-proxy.cgi/010110A/687474703a2f2f656e2e77696b6970656469612e6f72672f77696b692f43687269737469616e5f6c697475726779   (1836 words)

  
 An overview of the Rites of the Catholic Church   (Site not responding. Last check: )
As Vicar of the universal Church, the Pope is shepherd of the rites of the West and the East.
The eastern rites which have a separate code of canon law, are completely equal in dignity with the rites of the West.
All the rites of the Catholic Church are of equal dignity and equally valid.
www.mncuf.org /rites.htm   (1603 words)

  
 Latin Rite - Article about Latin Rite
The Latin Rite designates the particular Church, within the Catholic Church, which developed in western Europe and northern Africa, when Latin was the language of education and culture, and so also of the liturgy.
Some treat the term "Roman Catholic" as synonymous with "Latin Rite", a usage not found in official documents of the Catholic Church itself, such as the encyclicals ''Divini illius Magistri'' and ''Humani generis'', in which "Roman Catholic Church" means the whole Catholic Church without distinction.
The Latin Rite (in the first-mentioned sense) is distinguished from others not only by the use of the aforementioned liturgies, but also by customs, practices and Canon law distinct from those of the Eastern Churches.
www.yawiki.org /proc/Latin_Rite   (410 words)

  
 The Mass of the Western Rites - Chapter 5
This use secms particular to the church at Milan.[3] The Ambrosian rite has also preserved an old form of prayer, the "preces" or litanies, which are translated almost literally from the Greek.[4] This is found, with a few variations, in the Missal of Stowe (Chap.
On this point, then, this rite was different from that of Rome, in which the Diptychs were recited in the middle of the Canon, and where the Kiss of Peace was given at Communion; but it does agree with the Gallican, Mozarabic, and Eastern liturgies.
that the Ambrosian liturgy is derived from an ante-Gregorian Roman liturgy.
www.maternalheart.org /cabrol/cabrol5.htm   (2950 words)

  
 The Gallican Rite   (Site not responding. Last check: )
While any ritual approved by the bishop may be used, officially, worship in the Diocese of Rumney Marsh is conducted according to the Gallican Rite: the "forgotten child" from a family of four Rites that developed in Western Europe alongside the Roman (Latin) Liturgy.
It was suppressed in deference to the Roman Rite with which it shared the use of Latin as the language of worship.
While a true Western Liturgy, the Gallican Rite is highly influenced by the worship tradition of the Eastern [Orthodox] Church.
mysite.verizon.net /resqdbce/id26.html   (532 words)

  
 [No title]   (Site not responding. Last check: )
In the Ambrosian Rite, the link is a prayer leading directly to the Words of Institution, which begin with the characteristic Western form, Qui pridie quam pateretur ("Who on the day before He suffered"); the Roman Rite also of the same type as the Ambrosian but slightly different in form.
Both expressions were combined in one in the Roman Rite, and this combination is found also in the Ambrosian Rite as given in the De Sacramentis, and in both cases repeated at the consecration of the wine as well as of the bread.
Probably, too, the example of the Eastern Rites transferring the intercessions from the early part of the Liturgy of the faithful to the Anaphora and the fact that the diptychs were also recited in the Anaphora (and in their case probably from the first) had some influence on it all..
www.reu.org /public/theological/litstd3.txt   (18901 words)

  
 Latin Rite at AllExperts
Latin Rite, in the singular and accompanied, in English, by the definite article ("the Latin Rite"), designates the particular Church, within the Catholic Church, which developed in western Europe and northern Africa, when Latin was the language of education and culture, and so also of the liturgy.
It is also called the Western Church, distinct from the Eastern Rite Churches, whose liturgies use the languages dominant in their areas at the time of their formation or a modern language such as Arabic.
Celibacy is obligatory for Latin-Rite priests, though in the Eastern Rites ordination to priesthood (but not to the episcopate) may be conferred on married men.
en.allexperts.com /e/l/la/latin_rite.htm   (448 words)

  
 Ambrosian Liturgy
He rejects entirely the Ephesine supposition, and considers that the Orientalisms which he recognizes in the Hispano-Gallican Rite are of much later origin than the period of St.
Irenæus, and that it was from Milan as a centre that a rite, imported or modified from the East, perhaps by the Cappadocian Arian Bishop Auxentius (355-374), the predecessor of St. Ambrose, gradually spread to Gaul, Spain, and Britain.
CERIANI, Notitia Liturgiœ; Ambrosianœ ante sæculum XI medium (Milan, 1895); Preface to MAGISTRETTI'S Monumenta Veteris Liturgiœ; Ambrosianœ, (Milan, 1897); Pt.
www.traditionalcatholic.net /Tradition/Mass/Ambrosian_Liturgy.html   (7758 words)

  
 The Rite of Christian Initiation of Adults
Within the Catholic Church, there are a number of rites such as the Ambrosian rite, the Byzantine, the Alexandrian or Coptic, the Syriac, the Armenian, the Maronite, and Chaldeans rites.
In the Eastern rites the Christian initiation of infants also begins with Baptism followed immediately by Confirmation and the Eucharist, while in the Roman rite it is followed by years of "catechesis" (instruction in the Catholic Faith) before being completed later by Confirmation and the Eucharist, the summit of their Christian initiation.
The first is the "Rite of Sending." This rite consists of a celebration during which time, with a blessing, the parish priest sends forth the candidates and the catechumens to the Bishop for the "Rite of Election" that will take place on the First Sunday of Lent.
www.catholicdoors.com /courses/rcia.htm   (3548 words)

  
 Ambrosian Breviary - Part I
It includes the Mass, Sacraments and, of course, The Ambrosian Rite has also had influence on the Roman Rite's new Liturgy of the Hours, and certainly was a model and inspiration for some of the short breviaries.
The Ambrosian breviary contains the Milanese form of the divine office, and it is this text and structure that relates to the "short breviary" study.
The Ambrosian Rite has also had influence on the Roman Rite's new Liturgy of the Hours, and certainly was a model and inspiration for some of the short breviaries.
www.kellerbook.com /7AMBRO~1.HTM   (0 words)

  
 Eastern Rite Catholic Churches Information
The term Eastern Rites may refer to the liturgical rites used by many ancient Christian Churches of Eastern Europe, the Middle East, and India that, while being part of the Catholic Church in full communion with Rome, are distinct from the Latin Rite or Western Church.
For instance, the one Byzantine liturgical rite is used by several distinct Eastern autonomous Churches, each of which, such as the Ukrainian Rite or the Melkite Rite, is called a Rite in the second sense.
On the other hand the one Latin Rite (Rite in the second sense) uses several liturgical rites: not only the majority Roman Rite, but also the Ambrosian Rite, the Mozarabic Rite, and others.
www.bookrags.com /wiki/Eastern_Rite_Catholic_Churches   (2670 words)

  
 Gallican Rite
Mgr Duchesne, and his "Origines de culte chritien", has finally disposed of the possibility of so complicated a rite as the Gallican having so early an origin as the second century.
He assumes that the Ambrosian Rite is not really Roman, but Gallican, much Romanized at a later period, and that the Giubbio variations of which St.
Duschene shows in his excellent analysis of both rites (Origines du culte chritien), that at a time when the Roman Rite of Consecration was exclusively funerary and contained little else but the deposition of the relics, as shown in the Ordines in the St. Amand MS.
www.traditionalcatholic.net /Tradition/Mass/Gallican_Rite.html   (9172 words)

  
 CNP Articles - The Easter Triduum in 17th-century Milan
In the Ambrosian Rite on Good Friday, there are two major liturgical services during the day — one in the morning, the other in the afternoon.
But then as a deacon chants the Exsultet, the Church's ecstatic hymn of exultation for the victory of her Divine Spouse, the paschal candle is lit, together with two other candles; and later, toward the end of this song, all the other lamps and torches are kindled.
When the baptismal rites are completed, the celebrant, vested in a white cope, goes to the repository and brings the Blessed Sacrament back to the high altar, signaling the beginning of the Mass proper.
www.canticanova.com /articles/easter/art671.htm   (1655 words)

  
 Gallican Rite - OrthodoxWiki
Various rites within the greater Gallican family have claimed various specific lineages, such as an origin from the Alexandrine rite of St. Mark for the Churches of Aquilea and Milan, or origins from the Ephesine rite of St. John the Divine for the Churches of Gaul, Iberia, and Brittania.
Many Gallican texts survive, but the survival of the rite is primarily in the Toledan rite (also called Mozarabic, Isidorian, Old Spanish or Gothic by some liturgical scholars), and secondarily in its influence upon the present Roman and Anglican rites (called Gallo-Roman), and as a component of the Ambrosian rite of Milan.
The rite has been used by communities under the Church of Russia, the Russian Orthodox Church Abroad, the Church of Romania, and the Coptic Patriarchate of Alexandria.
orthodoxwiki.org /index.php?title=Gallican_Rite&redirect=no   (742 words)

  
 The Ambrosian Rite
He was unsuccessful and the Ambrosian rite continued to be used until the late fifteenth century, when there was yet another attempt to abolish it.
This attempt, too, failed, and the Ambrosian rite continued to be used until the council of Trent in the mid-sixteenth century.
There are several substantial differences between the Roman rite and the Ambrosian rite, particularly in the church calendar.
www.suite101.com /article.cfm/church_history/64494   (0 words)

  
 The Catholic Life   (Site not responding. Last check: )
Their product was a composite rite, made up of the Gothic rite which Duchesne tells us was so leavened with orientalism as to be practically an oriental rite, and the ancient Roman rite, a composite rite, representative of the worship of all Christendom.
Rather, the normal rite of the West since the eleventh century is "the Western Rite," a composite rite, representative of the worship of all Christendom.
For example, the Creed, the Gloria, the Offertory prayers, and the lavabo were all Transalpine contributions to this Western rite and it is noteworthy that the introduction of the creed at Rome was synchronous with this supersession in the eleventh century of the ancient Roman rite by the reformed Gothic rite.
anglicanhistory.org /usa/congress/4/02.html   (2758 words)

  
 Save the Date - Ambrosiana at Harvard: New Sources of Milanese Chant - Houghton Library - Harvard College Library   (Site not responding. Last check: )
The Ambrosian liturgy and its music, practiced in and around medieval Milan, is the only one of several regional practices not to have been suppressed during the Carolingian urge to uniformity that swept away so many dialects of chant in the interest of imposing the universal Roman liturgy and the chant now known as Gregorian.
To the extent that these older practices can be recovered and studied, we can have a clearer picture of the early-medieval cultural landscape, and a better sense of the aesthetic variety of medieval music.
Conference sessions will consider the Houghton manuscripts as physical objects as well as place them in their urban and historical contexts, and in the musical and ecclesiastical context of Milan, of Italy, and of medieval Europe.
hcl.harvard.edu /libraries/houghton/ambrosiana.html   (365 words)

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