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  2. Clerical collar - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clerical_collar

    [7] [4] It was mandatory for U.S. Catholic priests starting in 1884. [11] In the 1960s, many clergy who lived in countries where Catholicism was the dominant religion also began to wear the clerical collar rather than the soutane or cassock.

  3. Clerical clothing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Clerical_clothing

    Clerical clothing is non-liturgical clothing worn exclusively by clergy.It is distinct from vestments in that it is not reserved specifically for use in the liturgy.Practices vary: clerical clothing is sometimes worn under vestments, and sometimes as the everyday clothing or street wear of a priest, minister, or other clergy member.

  4. Liturgical colours - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Liturgical_colours

    The symbolism of violet, blue, white, green, red, gold, black, rose, and other colours may serve to underline moods appropriate to a season of the liturgical year or may highlight a special occasion. There is a distinction between the colour of the vestments worn by the clergy and their choir dress , which with a few exceptions does not change ...

  5. 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.

  6. Biretta - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Biretta

    Priests in monastic and mendicant religious orders that have their own habits (Benedictines, Franciscans, Dominicans, etc.) do not generally wear birettas: in most circumstances, even liturgical, the monastic hood took the place of the biretta. Canons Regular generally do—for instance the canons of the Order of Prémontré wear a white biretta.

  7. 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 ...

  8. Zucchetto - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Zucchetto

    the pope's zucchetto is white; [14] members of religious orders with white habits (e.g., Norbertines) also may wear a white zucchetto made of wool. [8] those worn by cardinals are scarlet; those of archbishops, bishops, territorial abbots and territorial prelates are amaranth; non-territorial abbots, priests and deacons wear a black zucchetto.

  9. Origins of ecclesiastical vestments - Wikipedia

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

    St Augustine said that to wear talares et tunicas manicatas was a disgrace among the ancient Romans, but that in his own day it was no longer so considered in the case of persons of good birth. [3] The tunica was originally of white wool, but in the 3rd century it began to be made of linen, and from the 4th century was always of linen. [4]