PriestCassock is considered to a principle
solemn garment. A Roman style Priest cassock often has a series of buttons down
the front – sometimes thirty-three (symbolic of the years of the life of
Jesus). The ordinary Roman cassock worn by Catholic clerics (as distinct from
that worn as choir dress) is black except in tropical countries, where because
of the heat it is white and usually without shoulder cape (pellegrina).
Coloured piping and buttons are added in accordance with rank: purple for
chaplains of His Holiness; amaranth red for bishops, protonotaries apostolic
and Honorary Prelates; and scarlet red for cardinals.
A band cincture or sash, known also as a
fascia, may be worn with the priest cassock.
The Instruction on the dress of prelates specifies that the two ends that hang
down by the side have silk fringes, abolishing the sash with tassels. A black
faille fascia is worn by priests, deacons, and major seminarians, while a
purple faille fascia is used by bishops, protonotaries apostolic, honorary
prelates, and chaplains of His Holiness, when wearing a priest cassock with
coloured trim. A black watered-silk fascia is permitted for priests attached to
the papal household, a purple watered-silk fascia for bishops attached to the
papal household (for example, Apostolic Nuncios), and a scarlet watered-silk
fascia for cardinals. The Pope wears a white watered-silk fascia, with his coat
of arms on the ends.
Pope Benedict XVI in white cassock (sometimes
though unofficially called a simar) with pellegrina and fringed white fascia.In
choir dress, chaplains of His Holiness wear their purple-trimmed black cassocks
with a cotta, but bishops, protonotaries apostolic, and honorary prelates use
(with a cotta or, in the case of bishops, a rochet and mozzetta) cassocks that
are fully purple (this purple corresponds more closely with a Roman purple and
is approximated as fuchsia) with scarlet trim, while those of cardinals are
fully scarlet with scarlet trim. Cardinals have the additional distinction of
having both choir cassock sleeves and the fascia made of scarlet watered-silk.
The cut of the choir cassock is still a Roman-cut or French-cut Priest cassock.
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