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  2. Clerical collar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clerical_collar

    One outward symbol of this was the adoption of distinctive clerical dress. [9] This had started with the black coat and white necktie which had been worn for some decades. [9] By the 1880s this had been transmuted into the clerical collar, which was worn almost constantly by the majority of clergy for the rest of the period. [9]

  3. Clerical clothing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clerical_clothing

    Increasingly, though, ordinary men's clothing in black, worn with a white shirt and either a black or white cravat, replaced the dress prescribed by the Canons. [10] In the 19th century, it was fashionable among gentlemen to wear a detachable collar which was washed and starched separately from the shirt. Initially, with the detachable collar ...

  4. Religious habit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_habit

    Usually, secular priests wear either a black cassock or an ordinary men's garb in black or another dark color along with a white clerical collar. White cassocks or clothes may be worn in hot climates. Also, a ferraiolo (a kind of cope) could be worn along with the cassock. Priests also traditionally wore a biretta along with the cassock.

  5. Bands (neckwear) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bands_(neckwear)

    Bands are now worn as court dress by judges, King's Counsel, barristers, solicitor advocates, court officials, and as ceremonial/formal dress by certain public officials, university officials and less frequently also by graduands (for example, they are compulsory for male Cambridge graduands, worn with a white bow tie, and optional for women).

  6. Privilège du blanc - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Privilège_du_blanc

    Queen Elena of Italy and Crown Princess Marie-José wearing white garments in the presence of Pope Pius XII at the Quirinal Palace on 27 December 1939.. Le privilège du blanc (pronounced [lə pʁivilɛʒ dy blɑ̃]; "the privilege of the white") is a custom of the Catholic Church that permits certain designated female royalty to wear white clothing (traditionally a white dress and white veil ...

  7. Origins of ecclesiastical vestments - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Origins_of_ecclesiastical...

    Ambrose, Bishop of Milan, wearing a casula over a sticharion (by this time, simply a type of long-sleeved tunic) and a small pectoral cross. The vestments of the Nicene Church, East and West, developed out of the various articles of everyday dress worn by citizens of the Greco-Roman world under the Roman Empire. The officers of the Church ...

  8. Cassock - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cassock

    In the Greek tradition, however, chanters may wear it in church, usually with no inner cassock beneath but directly over secular clothing. The outer cassock should be worn by a priest celebrating a service such as Vespers where the rubrics call for him to be less than fully vested, but it is not worn by any clergy beneath the sticharion. It may ...

  9. Pellegrina - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pellegrina

    Pope Benedict XVI wearing a white pellegrina. The general rule of the Roman Catholic Church is that the pellegrina may be worn with the cassock by cardinals and bishops. [1]In 1850, the year in which Pope Pius IX restored the Catholic hierarchy in England and Wales, he was understood to grant to all priests there the privilege of wearing a replica in black of his own white cassock with ...