Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
A traditional black biretta. The biretta (Latin: biretum, birretum) is a square cap with three or four peaks or horns, sometimes surmounted by a tuft. Traditionally the three-peaked biretta is worn by Christian clergy, especially Roman Catholic clergy, as well as some Lutheran and Anglican clergy.
The square academic cap, graduate cap, cap, mortarboard [1] (because of its similarity in appearance to the mortarboard used by brickmasons to hold mortar [2]) or Oxford cap [3] is an item of academic dress consisting of a horizontal square board fixed upon a skull-cap, with a tassel attached to the centre.
An Anglican priest delivers a homily, dressed in choir habit with Canterbury cap. The Canterbury cap is a square cloth hat with sharp corners. It originated in the Middle Ages, and is commonly found in the Anglican Communion, as well as in the Catholic Church where it is used by Anglican Ordinariate clergy.
Student cap: A cap worn by university students in various European countries. Sun hat: A hat which shades the face and shoulders from the sun. Tam o' Shanter: A Scottish wool hat originally worn by men. Taqiyah: A round fabric cap worn by Muslim men. Tengkolok: A traditional Malay, Indonesian and Bruneian male headwear.
Players from a Houston, Texas, area high school football team were shown in a video hitting their opponents with belts in the handshake line after a victory last Friday.
Skufia: A soft-sided cap worn by monastics or awarded to clergy as a mark of honor. Kamilavka: A stiff hat worn by monastics or awarded to clergy as a mark of honor. Apostolnik: A veil worn either by nuns, either alone or with a skufia. Epanokamelavkion: A veil extending over the back, worn with the kamilavka by all monastics and bishops.
More: Texas football coach Steve Sarkisian: Portal helps, but recruiting high schools still key Even though Hightower has his hands full as an NFL coach, he still keeps tabs on the UT program.
An Anglican priest delivers a homily, dressed in choir habit with Canterbury cap An Anglican priest in choir dress: cassock, surplice and tippet. The dark red of his academic hood can be seen on his shoulders. An Anglican bishop in choir dress: purple cassock, rochet, red chimere and cuffs, tippet, and pectoral cross.