In its modern form in
Western Christianity, the mitre is a tall folding
cap, consisting of two similar parts (the front and back) rising to a peak and sewn together at the sides. Two short
lappets always hang down from the back.
History The
camelaucum (
Greek:
καμιλαύκιον,
kamilaukion), the headdress that both the mitre and the
papal tiara stem from, was originally a cap used by officials of the Imperial
Byzantine court. "The tiara [from which the mitre originates] probably developed from the
Phrygian cap, or frigium, a conical cap worn in the Graeco-Roman world. In the 10th century the tiara was pictured on papal coins." Other sources say the tiara developed the other way around, from the mitre. In the late Empire it developed into the closed type of Imperial
crown used by
Byzantine Emperors (see illustration of
Michael III, 842–867). Worn by a bishop, the mitre is depicted for the first time in two miniatures of the beginning of the eleventh century. The first written mention of it is found in a
Bull of
Pope Leo IX in the year 1049. By 1150 the use had spread to bishops throughout the West. In the
Church of England, the mitre fell out of use after the Reformation, but was restored in the late 19th and early 20th centuries as a result of the
Oxford Movement, and is now worn by most bishops of the
Anglican Communion on at least some occasions. In
The Episcopal Church of the United States, the first Presiding Bishop,
Samuel Seabury, wore a mitre as early as 1786. The mitre is also worn by bishops in a number of Lutheran churches, for example the
Evangelical Lutheran Church of Latvia, the
Church of Sweden, and the
Lutheran Church in Great Britain.
Use In the
Catholic Church, ecclesial law gives the right to use the mitre and other pontifical insignia (crosier, pectoral cross, and ring) to
bishops,
abbots, cardinals, and those canonically equivalent to diocesan bishops who do not receive episcopal ordination, such as married
Ordinaries of the
Anglican ordinariates, who are not able to be raised to the episcopacy. The principal celebrant presents the mitre and other pontifical insignia to a newly ordained bishop during the
Rite of Ordination of a Bishop and to a new abbot during the Rite of Blessing of an Abbot. In the case of a person who is canonically equivalent to a diocesan bishop but does not receive episcopal ordination, this presentation normally occurs during a public installation as the ordinary of his jurisdiction. Catholic ecclesial law also permits former Anglican bishops received into full communion and subsequently ordained to the order of presbyter in the Catholic Church to obtain permission to use pontifical insignia as a mark of recognition of their previous ministry (they also may be admitted to the national or regional episcopal conference with status equivalent to that of retired Catholic bishops), but former Anglican bishops typically have not requested permission to use pontifical insignia under this provision. Before 2nd Vatican Council the right to wear
pontificalia used to be granted as an honor to dignitaries (or even all canons) of chapters and sometimes also to individual priests. Three types of mitres are worn by Roman Catholic clergy for different occasions: • The
simplex ('simple', referring to the materials used) is made of undecorated white linen or silk and its white lappets traditionally end in red fringes. It is worn most notably at funerals,
Lent, on
Good Friday and by concelebrant bishops at a
Mass. Traditionally the mitre simplex worn by popes has a golden border. Cardinals in the presence of the Pope wear a mitre of white linen damask. • The
auriphrygiata is of plain gold cloth or white silk with gold, silver or coloured embroidered bands; when seen today it is usually worn by bishops when they preside at the celebration of the sacraments. • The
pretiosa ('precious') is decorated with precious stones and gold and worn on the principal Mass on the most solemn Sundays (except in Lent) and feast days. This type of mitre is rarely decorated with precious stones today, and the designs have become more varied, simple and original, often merely being in the liturgical colour of the day. The proper colour of a mitre is always white, although in liturgical usage white also includes vestments made from gold and silver fabrics. The embroidered bands and other ornaments which adorn a mitre and the lappets may be of other colours and often are. On all occasions, an
altar server may wear a shawl-style
veil, called a
vimpa, around the shoulders when holding the bishop's mitre.
Heraldry In
ecclesiastical heraldry, a mitre was placed above the shield of all persons who were entitled to wear the mitre, including abbots. It substituted for the
helm of military arms, but also appeared as a
crest placed atop a helmet, as was common in German heraldry. In the Anglican Churches, the Church of Sweden, and the Lutheran Church of Finland, the mitre is still placed above the arms of bishops instead of the
ecclesiastical hat. In the Roman Catholic Church, the use of the mitre above the shield on the personal arms of clergy was suppressed in 1969, and is now found only on some corporate arms, like those of dioceses. Previously, the mitre was often included under the hat, and even in the arms of a cardinal, the mitre was not entirely displaced. In heraldry the mitre is always shown in
gold, and the lappets (
infulae) are of the same colour. It has been asserted that before the reformation, a distinction was used to be drawn between the mitre of a bishop and an abbot by the omission of the infulae in the abbot's arms. In England and France it was usual to place the mitre of an abbot slightly in profile. With his
inauguration as pope,
Benedict XVI broke with tradition and replaced the
papal tiara even on
his papal coat of arms with a papal mitre (containing still the three levels of 'crowns' representing the powers of the
papacy in a simplified form) and
pallium. Prior to Benedict XVI, each pope's coat of arms always contained the image of the papal tiara and St. Peter's crossed keys, even though the tiara had fallen into disuse, especially under popes
John Paul I and
John Paul II. Pope
Paul VI was the last pope to date to begin his papal reign with a formal coronation in June 1963. However, as a sign of the perceived need for greater simplification of the papal rites, as well as the changing nature of the papacy itself, he abandoned the use of his tiara in a dramatic ceremony in Saint Peter's Basilica during the second session of
Vatican II in November 1963. However his 1975
Apostolic Constitution made it clear the tiara had not been abolished: in the constitution he made provision for his successor to receive a coronation. Pope John Paul I, however, declined to follow Paul VI's constitution and opted for a simpler
papal inauguration, a precedent followed by his four successors. Pope John Paul II's 1996 Apostolic Constitution left open several options by not specifying what sort of ceremony was to be used, other than that some ceremony would be held to inaugurate a new pontificate. File:Coat of arms of Andorra.svg|
Coat of arms of Andorra includes the bishop's mitre on the top left. File:Mitra simplex Gamarelli 2008-28-07.jpg|Mitre
simplex traditional style: White
damask with its white lappets ending in red fringes. File:Visita di Papa Benedetto XVI a Genova - 2008-05-18 - Primo piano di Benedetto XVI.jpg|
Benedict XVI wearing a
pretiosa: elaborately embroidered mitre. File:Coat of arms of Benedictus XVI.svg|
Papal Arms of Pope Benedict XVI. The
papal tiara was replaced with a bishop's mitre. ==Eastern Christianity==