After his conversion,
Francis of Assisi girded himself with a rough cord in the manner of the poor of his day, and a white cord with three knots came subsequently to form part of the Franciscan habit. According to the
Franciscan historian
Luke Wadding,
Saint Dominic received the cord from Saint Francis when they exchanged their girdles in a sign of friendship. From that day on, Dominic always wore it under his habit out of devotion to his fellow founder. In his bull
Ex supernae dispositionis of 1585, Pope
Sixtus V, a Franciscan, erected the Archconfraternity of the Cord of Saint Francis in honor of Christ's passion, in the
Basilica of St. Francis in
Assisi, enriching it with many indulgences, and conferred upon the
minister general of the
Order of Friars Minor Conventual the power of erecting confraternities of the cord of Saint Francis in the churches of his order and of aggregating them to the archconfraternity at Assisi. Pope Sixtus, in his bull
Divinae caritatis, also granted new
indulgences to the archconfraternity and empowered the
Minister General of the Friars Minor to erect confraternities of the cord of Saint Francis in the churches of his own order, in those places where there were no conventuals. Pope
Paul V, in his bulls
Cum certas and
Nuper archiconfraternitati revoked all spiritual favours hitherto conceded to the archconfraternity and enriched it with new and more ample indulgences. Both these bulls were confirmed by the
brief of Pope
Clement X,
Dudum felicis in 1673.
Pope Benedict XIII in his constitution
Sacrosancti apostolatus of 1724, conceded to the
minister general of the conventuals authority to erect confraternities of the cord of Saint Francis in churches not belonging to his own order in those places where there were no Franciscans. == Archconfraternity of the Cord of Saint Joseph ==