in 1592 Popes used to bless the sword and the hat on every
Christmas Eve. The blessing took place just before the
matins in a simple ceremony conducted by the pope either in one of the private chapels of the papal palace or in the
sacristy of
St. Peter's Basilica. The pope, vested in an
alb,
amice,
cincture and white
stole, blessed both items held before him by a kneeling
chamberlain by reciting a short prayer, the earliest form of which is attributed to
Sixtus IV (r. 1471–1481). Then, the pope sprinkled the sword and hat with
holy water and incensed them thrice before putting on a
cappa (a long train of crimson silk) and proceeding to the basilica. If the person whom the pope intended to award with the blessed sword and hat was present, he was invested with them immediately. Dressed in a
surplice over his secular robes, the recipient was brought before the pope, who addressed him with Sixtus IV's brief
Solent Romani pontifices, explaining the symbolism of the gift. It ended with the following words: :"[...] we appoint you, holy prince, as another sword of the Holy See, which has, we declare by this fine gift, a most devout son in you, and also by this hat we declare that you are a fortification and bulwark to protect the holy Roman Church against the enemies of the Faith. Therefore, may your hand remain firm against the enemies of the Holy See and of the name of Christ, and may your right hand be lifted up, intrepid warrior, as you remove them from the earth, and may your head be protected against them by the Holy Spirit, symbolized by the pearly dove, in those things deemed worthy by the Son of God, together with the Father and the Holy Spirit. Amen." The sword was then girded over the recipient's surplice and he was dressed in a white cope. The morse of the cope was fastened on his right shoulder so as to free his arm for drawing the sword later in the ceremony. The prince kissed the pope's hand and slipper as a sign of obeisance and, with his sword and hat, joined the procession to the basilica. During the matins, the recipient sang the fifth lesson, beginning with the words
In quo conflictu pro nobis inito, taken from the
homily of
Saint Leo. An exception was made for emperors, who sang the seventh lesson, which begins with a quote from the Biblical account of the
Census of Quirinius,
Exiit edictum a Caesare Augusto ut describeretur universus orbis ("In those days a decree went out from Emperor
Augustus that all the world should be registered";
Luke 2:1), deemed more appropriate because of the imperial connection. Before singing the lesson, the prince removed his hat and handed it to his servant, then unsheathed the sword, struck it against the ground three times, then brandished it in the air, again three times, and replaced it in the scabbard. As the matins ended, the recipient took leave of the pope and returned to his residence in Rome, preceded by a
man-at-arms carrying the blessed sword and hat, and followed by cardinals, prelates, papal chamberlains, ambassadors to the
Holy See, friends and retinue. If the prospective honouree was absent at the ceremony, the sword and hat, after being blessed, were carried by the chamberlain before the cross in the procession and placed on the
epistle side of the altar in the basilica. The gifts were then dispatched by the pope by a special emissary to present them to their intended recipient in a ceremony '''' (outside of the Holy See). The protocol was modelled on that prescribed for bestowing the golden rose outside Rome. The emissary, entrusted with the sword and hat, instructed about the proper protocol, equipped with the pope's letter to the honouree, as well as a
safe conduct pass, set out with a small retinue, usually in the spring following the blessing ceremony. When the emissary was within a
day's journey from his destination, the recipient was expected to send forth a delegation to escort the emissary to his lodgings. The papal brief was delivered to the prince who then had to choose the venue and date of the ceremony. Typically, the ceremony took place on a Sunday or a major feast day in a cathedral or the major church of the town. A
solemn mass was celebrated either by the emissary or by a local bishop or abbot indicated by the pope. The pope's letter was solemnly read during the mass, following which the prince received the blessed sword and hat from the hands of the celebrant. When the ceremony was over, the recipient returned to his residence in a procession, as it would happen in Rome. == Recipients ==