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  2. Mantilla - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mantilla

    Side angle shot of a blond mantilla. A mantilla is a traditional female liturgical lace or silk veil or shawl worn over the head and shoulders, often over a high hair ornament called a peineta, particularly popular with women in Spain and Latin America. [1]

  3. Head covering for Christian women - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Head_covering_for...

    A headcovering in the Catholic tradition carries the status of a sacramental. [137] [138] Historically, women were required to veil their heads when receiving the Eucharist following the Councils of Autun and Angers. [139] Similarly, in 585, the Synod of Auxerre (France) stated that women should wear a head-covering during the Holy Mass.

  4. Traditionalist Catholicism - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Traditionalist_Catholicism

    Traditional Catholicism is often more conservative in its philosophy and worldview, promoting a modest style of dressing and teaching a complementarian view of gender roles. [3] A minority of Traditionalist Catholics reject the current papacy of the Catholic Church and follow positions of sedevacantism, sedeprivationism, or conclavism.

  5. Religious habit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Religious_habit

    The veil sometimes includes a white underveil as well. The colour of the veil depends as well from the habit of the order and the status of the sister or nun (novices or postulants wear differently coloured veils than the professed sisters and nuns). The coif and veil were common items of clothing for married women in medieval Europe.

  6. Hanging veil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hanging_veil

    Hanging veils and scarves must cover at least from the crown of the head to the bottom of the hair bun. [ 5 ] Women who headcover with the hanging veil wear it throughout the day, with the exception of sleeping, based on Saint Paul 's dictum that Christians are to "pray without ceasing", Saint Paul's teaching that women being unveiled is ...

  7. Veil - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Veil

    The traditional veil in Central Asia worn before modern times was the faranji [97] but it was banned by the Soviet Communists. [98] [99] In Pakistan, upper and middle-class women in towns wear burqas over their normal clothes in public. [100] [101] The burqa is the most visible dress in Pakistan. It is typically a tent-like garment worn over ...

  8. Lenten shrouds - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lenten_shrouds

    The significance of the Lenten shrouds has been explained in a variety of ways. [7] The French liturgist Prosper Guéranger explained that "the ceremony of veiling the Crucifix, during Passiontide, expresses the humiliation, to which our Saviour subjected himself, of hiding himself when the Jews threatened to stone him, as is related in the Gospel of Passion Sunday".

  9. Bridgettines - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bridgettines

    The Bridgettines, or Birgittines, formally known as the Order of the Most Holy Saviour (Latin: Ordo Sanctissimi Salvatoris; abbreviated OSsS), is a monastic religious order of the Catholic Church founded by Saint Birgitta (Bridget of Sweden) in 1344 and approved by Pope Urban V in 1370. [1] [2] They follow the Rule of Saint Augustine. There are ...