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Topic: Papal Fanon


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In the News (Wed 16 Dec 09)

  
  Fanon
But it is certain that as early as the end of the twelfth century the fanon was worn solely by the pope, as is evident from the express statement of Innocent III (1198-1216).
The present usage, according to which the pope is vested, in addition to the fanon, with an amice under the alb, did not appear, at the earliest, until the close of the Middle Ages.
Late in the Middle Ages it was made of white silk, as is shown by the inventory of the year 1295 of the papal treasure, as well as by numerous works of art; the favourite ornamentation was one of narrow stripes of gold and of some colour, especially red, woven into the silk.
www.catholicity.com /encyclopedia/f/fanon.html   (573 words)

  
 Ring of the Fisherman - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
During the rite of papal inauguration or papal coronation the Camerlengo ceremonially slips the ring on the left fourth finger of the new pope.
Upon a papal death, the Ring of the Fisherman is ceremonially crushed in the presence of other cardinals by the Camerlengo, using a silver hammer.
A letter written by Pope Clement IV to his nephew Peter Grossi in 1265 includes the earliest known mention of the Ring of the Fisherman, used for sealing all private correspondence by pressing the ring into red sealing wax melted onto a folded piece of paper or envelope.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Ring_of_the_Fisherman   (446 words)

  
 Fanon - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Fanon (fiction), elements which are not in the official canon of a fictional world but are widely believed to be or treated as if they were canonical.
Papal Fanon, a silk vestment with red and gold stripes worn by the pope.
The writer, Frantz Fanon, a preeminent thinker on the issue of decolonization.
en.wikipedia.org /wiki/Fanon   (137 words)

  
 Conclave Encyclopedia Article, Description, History and Biography @ 209.197.89.145   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
A papal election is the method by which the Roman Catholic Church fills the office of Bishop of Rome, whose incumbent is known as the Pope, the head of the Church.
Gregory VII was the last to submit to the interference of the Holy Roman Emperors; the breach between him and the Holy Roman Empire caused by the Investiture Controversy led to the abolition of the Emperor's role.
The Secretary of the College of Cardinals, the Master of Papal Liturgical Celebrations, two Masters of Ceremonies, two officers of the Papal Sacristy and an ecclesiastic assisting the Dean of the College of Cardinals are also admitted to the conclave.
209.197.89.145 /encyclopedia/Conclave   (5558 words)

  
 Rxpress - Pallium - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
For his formal inauguration Pope Benedict XVI reverted to an earlier form of the pallium, from a period when it and the omophorion were virtually identical.
It is wider than the modern pallium although not as wide as the modern omophorion, made of wool with fl silk ends, and decorated with five red crosses, three of which are pierced with pins, symbolic of Christ's five wounds and the three nails.
At present only the Pope and metropolitan archbishops wear the pallium, and a metropolitan has to receive the pallium before exercising his office in his ecclesiastical province, even if he was previously metropolitan elsewhere.
www.rxpresspharmacy.com /wiki/index/Pallium   (436 words)

  
 About Vatican Palace   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
The Apostolic Palace, also called the Papal Palace or the Palace of the Vatican, is the official residence of the Pope in the Vatican City.
The palace is a complex of buildings, comprising the Papal Apartment, the Roman Catholic church's government offices, a handful of chapels, the Vatican Museum and the Vatican library.
After the final overthrow of the Papal States in 1870, the King of Italy confiscated that palace in 1871, making it the king's official residence; after the abolition of the Italian monarchy in 1946, it became the president's residence.
70.84.119.226 /~puresear/PSWiki/index.php?title=Vatican_Palace   (157 words)

  
 The Lutheran Church - Missouri Synod - Christian Cyclopedia
The winner announces what name he will bear as pope, is given a fisherman's ring,* is robed in papal vestments, and the cardinals adore him.
Papal titles include Pontifex* maximus, Vicar* of Christ, Servant of the servants of God.
Other traditional insignia include the falda (white flowing robe with a train), subcinctorium (in the form of a maniple [see Vestments, Clerical], pendent from the girdle on the right side), fanon (similar to a short cape), sedia gestatoria (portable chair), and tiara (triple crown; not a liturgical insignia).
www.lcms.org /ca/www/cyclopedia/02/display.asp?t1=p&t2=o   (3809 words)

  
 religion: christianity: denominations: catholicism: reference: catholic-encyclopedia: f: Page 2 Spirit And Sky
A suffragan see of the Province of Boston; comprises the counties of Bristol, Barnstable, Dukes, and Nantucket, with the towns of Marion, Mattapoisett and Wareham in Plymouth county, Massachusetts.
A name given to certain apocryphal papal letters contained in a collection of canon laws composed about the middle of the ninth century by an author who uses the pseudonym of Isidore Mercator, in the opening preface to the collection.
A perversion of truth originating in the deceitfulness of one party, and culminating in the damage of another party.
www.spiritandsky.com /religion/christianity/denominations/catholicism/reference/catholic-encyclopedia/f/more2.html   (461 words)

  
 Basilica di San Giovanni in Laterano @ HockeyLiving.com   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
During the Avignon papacy, the Lateran Palace and the basilica began to decline.
An apse lined with mosaics and open to the air still preserves the memory of one of the most famous halls of the ancient palace, the "Triclinium" of Pope Leo III, which was the state banqueting hall.
The porticoes were frescoed, probably not dating further back than the twelfth century, commemorating the Roman fleet under Vespasian, the taking of Jerusalem, the Baptism of the Emperor Constantine and his "Donation" of the Papal States to the Church.
www.hockeyliving.com /info/Basilica_di_San_Giovanni_in_Laterano   (1638 words)

  
 Articles - Papal Coronation   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
The Papal Coronation was a six-hour ceremony in which a new pope was crowned as head of the Roman Catholic Church and sovereign of Vatican City (and before 1870, head of state of the Papal States).
A three-tiered Triple Tiara or Papal Tiara was used in the ceremony, and the new pope would take the papal oath.
Nowhere was it stated what form that 'inauguration of a pontificate' would take; both a papal inauguration and a papal coronation technically could be used to inaugurate (ie, ceremonially begin) a pontificate: both ceremonies had been described in the past using such a term.
winacea.com /articles/Papal_coronation   (777 words)

  
 Liturgical Vestments, Catholic, Protestant, Anglican, Episcopalian, Lutheran,
The fascia was originally worn because of the loose-fitting nature of the cassock, functioning as a cincture, and was required for use with the cassock by Pope Urban VIII in 1624.
fanon: "A shoulder-cape worn by the pope alone, consisting of two pieces of white silk ornamented with narrow woven stripes of red and gold; the pieces are nearly circular in shape but somewhat unequal in size and the smaller is laid on and fastened to the larger one.
The earliest known concession of the mitre to the ruler of a monastic house is that made to Abbot Egelsinus of St. Augustine's, Canterbury, in 1603.
www.geocities.com /Athens/Forum/1611/hautepriestcouturevestments.html   (6874 words)

  
 Vestments of Catholic Priests and Bishops - ReligionFacts
The maniple (mappula, manipulus, fanon) is a narrow strip of material similar to the stole (see below), worn over the left forearm or upper arm; formerly, the ends hung down freely, now, however, they are sewed together.
By cardinals this vestment and the rochet are worn only in the churches from which they take their titles, except at Rome during a papal vacancy or at con claves.
From the first vespers of the Ascension during the hot season he wears one of red satin except on vigils or penitential occasions, when the material is of red serge or camlet.
www.religionfacts.com /christianity/things/vestments_priest.htm   (2804 words)

  
 COLONIAL DISCOURSE SINCE CHRISTOPHER COLUMBUS
Hidden under the discourse were such economic imperatives as the need to access the riches of the East, a superior society by all yardsticks, and such political urgencies as the need to provide opportunities for junior sons without inheritance and for losers among the ruling elites of feudal society.
Suddenly, the "wretched of the earth" (Fanon, 1966) and those who embraced their cause had at their disposal a coherent, totalizing ideological discourse, Marxism, which they could use to oppose effectively the equally coherent, totalizing discourse of colonialism.
Marxist socialist discourse proclaimed the universality of the workers' cause; it was, therefore, a transnational and transracial ideology, calling for the liberation of all human beings from domination and exploitation.
www.csusm.edu /spanish/undergradcenter/colonialdiscoursesincechristoph.htm   (6001 words)

  
 Arizona Institute for Public Life   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Fanon, a fl French trained psychiatrist, was writing on his experiences in Algeria and the eight-year revolution there against French colonialism.
Fanon's discourse is mostly on the use of violence, and therefore an important reflection even today, maybe especially today.
Living in those communities, clergy, having done their political and economic analysis of what was happening to poor families, had empathy with the outbreaks, which came from a result of the enormous gap between the world as it is and the world that people wanted.
www.azinstitute.org /churchbib.html   (15066 words)

  
 Papal Oath - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
The Papal Oath is an oath by which, according to some Traditionalist Catholics, the popes of the Catholic Church swore, during their Papal Coronation, never to innovate or change anything that has been handed down to them.
Later editions have been able to take into account not only the oldest surviving manuscript, which is preserved in the Vatican and is described on the website of the Vatican Secret Archives, but also two other manuscripts of slightly later date, which were rediscovered, one in 1889, the other in 1937.
It then fell into disuse and was soon forgotten and lost, until a manuscript containing it was discovered in the seventeenth century.
www.vacilando.org /_cliextra/baghdadmuseumorg/includepage.php?title=Papal_oath&action=edit   (993 words)

  
 Rxpress - Vestment - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Papal tiara - formerly worn by the Pope at his coronation; it has fallen out of use but may be revived at any time when the reigning Pontiff wishes.
This is strictly speaking not a vestment but an item of regalia since it was never worn for services with the exception of the blessing Urbi et Orbi.
Fanon - formerly worn by the Pope during solemn Pontifical High Mass.
www.rxpresspharmacy.com /wiki/index/Vestment   (1392 words)

  
 Dappled Photos: The Papal Fanon
The fanon is a Mass vestment worn only by the Pope during Solemn High Mass.
While no longer an obligatory part of papal vesture, the fanon was never abolished, as the photograph of John Paul II wearing it demonstrates.
Pope Pius XI is seen upon his throne in the Sistine Chapel, facing the viewer during the ordination Mass of a new bishop.
dappledphotos.blogspot.com /2005/08/papal-fanon.html   (244 words)

  
 What happens when the Pope dies? | Catholic-Pages.com
Our eyes turn to the Vatican for a peek into the ancient ceremonies soon to be relived, the ceremonies surrounding the death and burial of the pope: the calling of the Conclave of Cardinal-Electors and the installation of the successor to the See of Peter.
The Papal Household had made all the necessary preparations, and the Cardinal-Secretary of State, the Prefect of the Papal Household, and other senior officials of his court were present at his bedside when he entered eternity.
The body was dressed in state with the red and gold chasuble and the fanon of white silk and gold thread.
www.catholic-pages.com /pope/papal-funeral.asp   (2404 words)

  
 Googer - South Africa's BEST Search Engine   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
Since medieval times the Holy See has been recognized as a legal personality under international law.
After the Italian takeover of the Papal States in 1870, there was some uncertainty among jurists as to whether the Holy See, without territorial sovereignty, could continue to act as an independent personality in international matters.
The State of the Vatican City was created by the Lateran treaties in 1929 to "insure the absolute and visible independence of the Holy See" and "to guarantee to it an indisputable sovereignty in international affairs" (quotes from the treaty).
www.googer.co.za /encyclopedia.php?title=Holy_See   (739 words)

  
 CATHOLIC ENCYCLOPEDIA: Vestments
When Amalarius wrote his treatise, "De officiis ecclesiasticis" at the beginning of the ninth century, eleven garments were included among liturgical vestments: amice, alb, cingulum, maniple, stole, tunic, dalmatic, chasuble, sandals, pontifical stockings, and the pallium.
In the time of Innocent III the liturgical vestments numbered seventeen, the fanon, that is the papal amice, not being included among these.
Protestants have claimed that the development of the priestly dress in the third period was due to the formulation of the dogma of Transubstantiation.
www.newadvent.org /cathen/15388a.htm   (3024 words)

  
 open book: Don't Step on my Red Pope Shoes
If he does, the fanon would seem to be the natural accompaniment, and the tunicles of course, as can be seen ib the wonderful picture from Santa Cecilia of the late Pope posted on the Holy Whapping site.
I would especially hope that Pope Benedict wears the red tabarro and papal velvet hat with the gold strings that the late Holy Father used to be seen in regularly at the start of his pontificate.
Posted by: carrie ryckman at Apr 25, 2005 8:00:16 AM The historical colors of the Holy See are actually gold and red (a festal variation on white and red); it is only in the post-Napoleonic age that this was switched to white and yellow/gold.
amywelborn.typepad.com /openbook/2005/04/dont_step_on_my.html   (3936 words)

  
 Middle East Open Encyclopedia: Papal Coat of Arms   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
All recent popes' coats of arms contained the image of the papal tiara.
The papal coat of arms traditionally features a gold and silver key, representing the power to bind and to loose on earth (silver) and in heaven (gold).
Iraq Museum International always displays the most recent published revision of the source article, Papal Coat of Arms; all previous versions may be viewed here.
www.baghdadmuseum.org /ref?title=Papal_Coat_of_Arms   (297 words)

  
 Liturgical Vestments, Catholic, Protestant, Anglican, Lutheran, High Priest's garments, ephod,
Vestment designers practice the same name-dropping of who was wearing what when, but instead of naming the rich and famous, it's the Pope, cardinals, and bishops and the events are papal tours, special Masses, and the canonizing of saints.
fanon (see amice) (The fanon is a vestment reserved for the Pope during a pontifical Mass.
Such instances might be a papal audience, a state dinner, the acceptance of personal honors, parades, press conferences, banquets, or any other event that would call for white or fl-tie."
www.geocities.com /Athens/Forum/1611/vestmentsofpriests.html   (4943 words)

  
 hp_fictalk: HP fanfic discussion and review
Pick a hp fanon author (someone who's written enough, so we have a sense of her tone, style, and preferred themes) and tell me what famous author this fanon writer reminds you of.
This doesn't mean that the fanon writer's stories have to exactly parallel the "classic" author's novels, in terms of plot or content.
It just means that there is something about the fanon writer's work that reminds you of famous author X. painless_j, when I proposed this meme to her, was a little afraid that I might offend someone, by comparing her to a writer that perhaps wasn't a favorite of hers.
www.livejournal.com /community/hp_fictalk   (2952 words)

  
 The Cornell Society for a Good Time   (Site not responding. Last check: 2007-10-09)
In his latest comments to the papal household, though, he urged them to forget the idea of limbo and told them that the fate of unbaptized infants is no different than the fate of the Holy Innocents.
Limbo has never come under a strict papal judgment, to the best of my knowledge, and this is probably the case for good reason.
It is a part of speculative theology which doesn't seem to necessitate (or, perhaps, be susceptible to) a papal statement in confirmation of its existence.
cornell-catholic-circle.blogspot.com   (9176 words)

  
 Tarpley V5
He sponsored St. Ignatius of Loyola and secured papal approval for the creation of the Society of Jesus as an official order of the Church.
Sarpi was the main Venetian propagandist in the struggle against the papacy during the time of the papal interdict against Venice in 1606.
The SEC launched the career of Franz Fanon, author of the Wretched of the Earth, whose ideas form a justification for terrorism.
www.abjpress.com /tarpv5.html   (11141 words)

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