at St. Aspais Church,
Melun, France 's hairshirt cilice (16th century). The tsar wanted to die like a monk. There is some evidence, based on analyses of both clothing represented in art and preserved skin imprint patterns at
Çatalhöyük in Turkey, that the usage of the cilice predates written history. This finding has been mirrored at
Göbekli Tepe, another
Anatolian site, indicating the widespread manufacturing of cilices. Ian Hodder has argued that "self-injuring clothing was an essential component of the Catalhöyük culturo-ritual entanglement, representing 'cleansing' and 'lightness'." In Biblical times, it was the
Jewish custom to wear a hairshirt (sackcloth) when "mourning or in a public show of repentance for sin" (Genesis 37:34, 2 Samuel 3:31, Esther 4:1). As such, adherents of many
Christian denominations have worn sackcloth to repent,
mortify the flesh or as a
penance, especially for sins relating to lavishly adorning oneself (cf. 1 Peter 3:3, 1 Timothy 2:9). Cilices have been used for centuries in the
Catholic Church as a mild form of bodily penance akin to
fasting.
Thomas Becket was wearing a hairshirt when he was
martyred,
St. Patrick reputedly wore a cilice,
Charlemagne was buried in a hairshirt, and
Henry IV, Holy Roman Emperor and King of Germany, famously wore one in the
Walk to Canossa during the
Investiture Controversy. Prince
Henry the Navigator was found to be wearing a hairshirt at the time of his death in 1460.
St. Francis of Assisi,
St. Ignatius of Loyola,
St. Thomas More In the
Discalced Carmelite convent of St. Teresa in Livorno, Italy, members of
Opus Dei who are celibate (about 30% of the membership), and the
Franciscan Brothers and Sisters of the Immaculate Conception continue an
ascetic use of the cilice. According to
John Allen, an American Catholic writer, its practice in the Catholic Church is "more widespread than many observers imagine". Some high church Anglicans, including
Edward Bouverie Pusey, wore hairshirts as a part of their spirituality. ==In popular culture==