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TONSURE ( See also: Roman Catholic and Orthodox Eastern Churches, consisting of the shaving or cutting See also: part of the hair of the See also: head as a sign of dedication to See also: special service
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The reception of the tonsure in these churches is the initial ceremony which marks See also: admission to orders and to the rights and privileges of clerical See also: standing
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It is administered by the See also: bishop with an appropriate ritual
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Candidates for the rite must have been confirmed, be adequately instructed in the elements of the Christian faith, and be able to read and write
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Those who have received it are bound (unless in excentional circumstances) to renew the mark, consisting of a See also: bare circle on the See also: crown ofthe head, at least once a See also: month, otherwise they forfeit the privileges it carries
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The practice is not a See also: primitive one; See also: Tertullian simply advises Christians to avoid vanity in dressing their.hair, and See also: Jerome deprecates both long and closely cropped hair
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According to Prudentius (IIepur. xiii
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30) it was customary for the hair to be cut See also: short at ordination
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Paulinus of See also: Nola (c
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490) alludes to the tonsure as in use among the (Western) monks; from them the practice quickly spread to the See also: clergy
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For See also: Gaul about the See also: year 500 we have the testimony of Sidonius See also: Apollinaris (iv
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13), who says that Germanicus the bishop had his hair cut " in rotae speciem."
The earliest instance of an ecclesiastical precept on the subject occurs in can
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41 of the Council of Toledo (A.n . 633) : " omnes clerici, detonso superius capite toto, inferius solam circuli coronam relinquant." Can . 33 of the Quinisext council (692) requires even singers and readers to be tonsured . Since the 8th century three tonsures have been more or less in use, known respectively as the Roman, theSee also: Greek and the See also: Celtic
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The first two are sometimes distinguished as the tonsure of See also: Peter and the tonsure of See also: Paul
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The Roman or St Peter's tonsure prevailed in See also: France, See also: Spain and See also: Italy
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It consisted in shaving the whole head, leaving only a fringe of hair supposed to symbolize the crown of thorns
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See also: Late in the See also: middle ages this tonsure was lessened for the clergy, but retained for monks and friars
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In the Eastern or St Paul's tonsure the whole head was shaven, but when now practised in the Eastern See also: Church this tonsure is held to be adequately shown when the hair is shorn close
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In the Celtic tonsure (tonsure of St
See also: John, or, in contempt, tonsure of
See also: Simon Magus) all the hair in front of a See also: line See also: drawn over the top of the head from ear to ear was shaven (a fashion See also: common among the See also: Hindus)
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The question of the Roman or Celtic tonsure was one of the points in dispute in the early See also: British Church, settled in favour of the Roman fashion at the Council of See also: Whitby (664)
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The tonsure at first was never given separately, and even See also: children when so dedicated were appointed readers, as no one could belong to the clerical See also: state without at least a minor See also: order
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From the 7th century, however, children were tonsured without ordination, and later on adults anxious to escape secular jurisdiction were often tonsured without ordination . Till the loth century the tonsure could be given by priests or even by laymen, but its bestowal was gradually restricted to bishops and abbots . |
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