chasuble

chasuble
chasubled, adj.
/chaz"yeuh beuhl, -euh beuhl, chas"-/, n. Eccles.
a sleeveless outer vestment worn by the celebrant at Mass.
[1250-1300; < F < LL casubla, unexplained var. of casula hooded cloak, L: little house (see CASA, -ULE); r. ME chesible < AF < LL]

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▪ ecclesiastical garb
      liturgical vestment, the outermost garment worn by Roman Catholic priests and bishops at mass and by some Anglicans and Lutherans when they celebrate the Eucharist. The chasuble developed from an outer garment worn by Greeks and Romans called the paenula or casula (“little house”), a conical or bell-shaped cloak made from a semicircular piece of cloth sewn partially up the front with an opening left for the head.

      Worn by both laity and clergy until the 6th century, the chasuble gradually developed into a specifically ecclesiastical vestment. It was draped in different ways but not structurally altered until the 15th century, when the use of heavy brocades and other stiff materials led to the reduction of material over the arms until it resembled a highly decorated tabard. In the 19th and 20th centuries attempts have been made to restore the draped effect of the early chasuble, but various styles are still used.

      In the Eastern churches, the equivalent vestment is the phelonion (phenolion), worn exclusively by priests.

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Universalium. 2010.

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  • chasuble — [ ʃazybl ] n. f. • 1138; bas lat. °casubula, de casula « manteau à capuchon » 1 ♦ Vêtement sacerdotal en forme de manteau à deux pans, que le prêtre revêt par dessus l aube et l étole, pour célébrer la messe. Chasuble brodée. 2 ♦ Par ext.… …   Encyclopédie Universelle

  • Chasuble — • Called in Latin casula planeta or pænula, and in early Gallic sources amphibalus, the principal and most conspicuous Mass vestment, covering all the rest Catholic Encyclopedia. Kevin Knight. 2006. Chasuble     Chasuble …   Catholic encyclopedia

  • chasuble — CHASUBLE. subst. fém. Ornement que le Prêtre met par dessus l Aube et l Étole pour célébrer la Messe. Chasuble de camelot, de damas, de toile d or, etc. Mettre la chasuble. ter la chasuble …   Dictionnaire de l'Académie Française 1798

  • chasuble — CHASUBLE. s. f. Ornement que le Prestre met par dessus l aube pour celebrer la Messe. Chasuble de camelot, de damas, de toile d or &c. mettre la chasuble. oster la chasuble …   Dictionnaire de l'Académie française

  • Chasuble — Chas u*ble, n. [F. chasuble, LL. casubula, cassibula, casula, a hooded garment, covering the person like a little house; cf. It. casupola, casipola, cottage, dim of L. casa cottage.] (Eccl.) The outer vestment worn by the priest in saying Mass,… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • chasuble — c.1300, cheisible, from O.Fr. chesible (12c., Mod.Fr. chasuble), from M.L. casubla, from L.L. *casubula, unexplained alteration of L. casula a little hut, dim. of casa cottage, house (see CASINO (Cf. casino)), used by c.400 in transferred sense… …   Etymology dictionary

  • chasuble — ► NOUN ▪ a sleeveless outer vestment worn by a priest when celebrating Mass. ORIGIN Latin casubla, from casula hooded cloak or little cottage …   English terms dictionary

  • chasuble — [chaz′ə bəl, chas′ə bəl; chaz′yəbəl, chas′yəbəl] n. [OFr < ML casubla, casula, hooded garment; prob. < L casula, dim. of casa, hut, cottage: see CASINO] a sleeveless outer vestment worn over the alb by priests at Mass …   English World dictionary

  • Chasuble — A Roman or fiddleback chasuble The chasuble is the outermost liturgical vestment worn by clergy for the celebration of the Eucharist in Western tradition Christian Churches that use full vestments, primarily in the Roman Catholic, Anglican and… …   Wikipedia

  • Chasuble — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Chasuble (homonymie). Une chasuble au XVe siècle …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Chasuble — Cha|su|ble [ʃa zybl̩ , frz.: ʃa zybl, engl.: tʃæzjʊbl], das; s, s [engl. chasuble = Messgewand < frz. chasuble < spätlat. casu(b)la, ↑ Kasel]: ärmelloses Überkleid für Frauen nach Art einer Weste. * * * Cha|su|ble [ʃa zybl̩, frz.: ʃa zybl,… …   Universal-Lexikon

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