PARAKLETIKE, PARAKLETIKON: A liturgigical book of the Greek Church which contains hymns, arranged like those in the Oktoechos, according to the eight tones of Greek church music, but differing from the Oktoechos in including hymns
for week days as well as for Sundays. The Parakletike is said to have been developed from the Oktoechm by Theodorus and Josephus of Studion. It was first printed by H. Geraldis at Venice in 1522, and has been edited under the title of Pam kldike etai oktoeehm a rnegale, by A. Idromenos and I. Zerbos (Venice, 1897). (PsrrrPP MEY2R.)
Bmrroa~urar: Brnmbacher, Gechichte, pp. 855 eqq.; W. Christ and M. Paranikas, AntWopta Grxa carminnn
Christianorim Ioeipsio, 1871; P. Meyer Die
Littawur der prieehiecle,~ gird, p. 149, ib. 180M
Paraments THE NEW SCHAFF HERZOG 360
PARAMENTA.
1. Early and Western Church. The General Structure (5 1). Separate Parts (¢ 2). Ambo and Chancel (¢ 3). II. Eastern Church.
II1. Protestant Churches. General Situation (¢ 1). Specific Pieces (¢ 2). Color Symbolism (§ 3).
1. Early and Western Church: By paramentum was meant in the Middle Ages the possessions of the churches in the shape of materials which served in the cultus, including the altar vessels and carpets and hangings. But in the course of time the word became differentiated and carried only the idea of textiles other than vestments.
r. The In the larger and richer churches large General quantities of these materials accumu
Structure. lated, as inventories prove. In archi
tecture the models for the early Church
were found generally in classical antiquity, and
these forms governed the development of the pars,
menta; the entrance first demanded treatment,
then the intercolumnar spaces, then the choir, and
so on, hangings being applied. This was very early.
For the transition to the Middle Ages the Liber pon
tificalis (q.v.) is a rich source, showing, as it does,
that, e.g., Adrian T. assigned to St. Peter's sixty
seven, to St. Paul's seventy two, to S. Maria Mag
giore's forty four altar cloths, carpets, and hang
ings, and to other churches in proportion, the
material being silk, half silk, and linen. The orient
was the source whence these materials were drawn,
the ornamentation being of geometrical figures,
plants, Biblical illustrations, and figures from hagi
ology, while the cross was especially affected. When
architecture emancipated itself from the old models,
adornment with these materials developed; the
choir and the side chapels especially came in for
ornamentation, though on festival occasions nave
and entrance afforded place for carpets and hang
ings, while the Altar (q.v., III.) gave itself easily to
treatment. When these materials were made in the
West, the stuff used was wool or linen, fashioned
upon earlier models, the monastic institutions being
places of manufacture, while later the cities took it
up. In the manufacture embroidery took a large,
sometimes a luxurious part, at first upon oriental
models, but afterward in more independent style.
In the fourteenth century needlework on the Rhine,
in Burgundy, and in Flanders reached its highest
development. While naturally at first the models
used were those from the East, in which the ani
mals employed in decorations (griffin, peacock,
eagle, lion) testified to the derivation, the tendency
to independence was strong; so ornamentation
based upon Scriptural stories, upon ecclesiastical
material, and even drawn from common life, because
usual. Some of the results are impressive, and
follow the lead of Painting (q.v.). The Renaissance,
too, had its influences both in weaving and in
embroidery.
While the decoration of the structure as such was being developed, the individual parts also received attention. Naturally, among these the altar was emphasized. By early custom the altar table
Parables o/ our l"d, L Vale., Mlaburgh, 1eSM lib; b. Goebel, Die Parabeln Jesu, Goths, 1880, Eng. trawl., Edinburgh, 1884; S. D. F. Salmond, Parables of our Lord, ib. 1893; W. H. Thomson, The Parables and their Homes, New York, 1895; B. W. Martin, Practical Studies on the Parables of our Lord, London, 1897; 1. Stoekmeyer, ExeDetische and praktisehe Erkldrunp auspewdhlter Gleichnisse Jesu, ed. B. Stockmeyer, Basel, 1897; C. A. Bugge, Die Haupt Pambeln Jesu, mit edner Einleitunp aber die Methode der Parabeln Ausleyung, Giessen, 1903; C. Ricketts, Parables from the Gospels, New York, 1903; P. Fiebig, Alljftdischs Gleichnisse and die Gleichnisse Jesu, Tiibingen, 1904; G. C. Morgan The Parables of the Kingdom, New York, 1907; and literature on the Life of Christ, and the commentaries on the Gospels.
PARABOLANOI: A brotherhood at Alexandria in the fifth oenturv devntad to tha enm of tha %&L
was covered with white linen, which fell with a greater or a lesser margin over the edge. This overhang easily lent itself to decoration either by embroidery or in the weaving. In the development of the cloth covering of the altar s. Separate there was by the Middle Ages the
Parts. greatest advance, in the larger struc
tures the materials being very rich
silks or cloth of gold, often richly figured. The gen
eral development was away from the early simplicity,
and the structure itself of the altar and its appurte
nances changed so that t6re were costly additions in
the way of shelves and suspended parts made of gold
or silver plate or leaf, adorned even with precious
stones. In connection with these the hangings took
on new importance and magnificence, were used
often to set off the other decorations, and were
hung between the pillars and at the sides. For the
holding of the hangings framework of wood or iron
was often employed. Present liturgical prescrip
tions of the Roman Catholic Church, which have
their antecedents in the Middle Ages, require three
linen altar cloths, two cover the altar table, while
the third covers the entire altar and falls nearly to
the foot. Upon the stone lies the chrismal, serving
really as a protection for the other cloths. The
service of the altar further requires the palla cor
Porcalis, a linen cloth about twenty three inches
square, used by the priest after the consecration of
the bread to spread the latter upon and after to
wrap it up. While it was formerly used also for the
cup, the latter has now its own covering, the palla
calicis, from which is to be distinguished the velum
calicis which conceals the cup till the beginning of
the offertory. Other pieces which have been em
ployed were the Palls dominicalis and the purifica
torium, the latter'a fine linen cloth for cleansing the
cup.
In the Ambo and Chancel (qq.v.) the readingdesk was adorned with a narrow piece of cloth which hung down in front, in festal seasons the ornamentation was more elaborate. But in early and medieval times ambo and chan
3. Ambo eel were decorated rather with plas
and Chancel. tic material. In the early Church, as
baptism was generally of adults and
by immersion, the baptismal font was naturally
enclosed by hangings; if the baptistery had col
umns about it, the hangings were suspended be
tween the columns. The episcopal chair lent itself
in festal seasons to this kind of adornment, espe
cially after the thirteenth century when its position
was changed. In the Middle Ages there was in use
a large curtain shutting off the choir from the nave
during fasting seasons, often ornamented with
scenes from the passion. Carpets were a direct in
heritance from early times and were used in the
choir, and these were until a late period brought
from the East or patterned after oriental models.
The Western Church lacked prescriptions regard
ing all these adornments, and freedom in materials,
color, and design was therefore exercised. The free
dom of the early Middle Ages in all these matters
has vanished before the growing restrictions of
liturgical directions, with the result that a certain
monotony has come in. This has in recent times,
creation and the Paradise, found much that was derogatory of God, Paradise was a picture of the human soul, in which flourish the seeds of Christian virtues; or a picture of heaven, wherein the " trees " represent the angels, and the " rivers " the outgoings of wisdom and other virtues. He did not, however, deny a literal Paradise; he only sought in allegory the harmonization of the Mosaic and New Testament conceptions. To Ambrose, the Pauline Paradise was the Christian soul. He also distinguished between the literal and the Pauline Paradise.
In the second place, Paradise was interpreted mystically. The Mosaic and the New Testament ,nn,nann*.o*.;nna of 'P. ,I; n e;Ae..,.a ;.7....
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