- The
Orarion (Gr****: ὀράριον; Slavonic: орарь, orar) is the
distinguishing vestment of the
deacon and
subdeacon in the
Eastern Orthodox Church, Oriental...
-
liturgical napkin called an
orarium (cf. orarion) very
similar to the sudarium. In fact, in many
places the
stole is
called the
orarium. Therefore, it is linked...
- the pope (see the
mosaic image of
Honorius I).
About the same time the
orarium, or stole,
becomes fixed in
liturgical use. The main
development and definition...
- the handkerchief.
Emperor Aurelian substituted the
waving of
napkins (
orarium) that he had
distributed to the
Roman people for the toga flapping. In...
- –
large waxflower Chamelaucium micranthum (Turcz.)
Domin Chamelaucium orarium N.G.Marchant
Chamelaucium pauciflorum (Turcz.) Benth.
Chamelaucium repens...
-
piece of
clothing akin to a scarf. In the Latin-speaking
empire the term
ōrārium came to
replace sūdārium
during the
Augustan age. This
piece of
cloth when...
-
Large waxflower C.
micranthum (Turcz.)
Domin C.
naviculum C.
oenanthum C.
orarium C.
pauciflorum (Turcz.) Benth. C.
paynterae C.
psammophilum C.
repens C...
-
afterwards reinstated, he is to
receive back stole, ring and
crosier (
orarium,
anulum et baculum). St.
Isidore of Seville, at
about the same period,...
- neck. The
sudarium may be the
precursor to the focale. In late antiquity,
orarium (Gr**** orarion)
might be
synonymous with focale, as in the description...
- (S****a & Carolin) Hershk.
Rumicastrum opertum (Obbens) Hershk.
Rumicastrum orarium (Obbens) Hershk.
Rumicastrum papillatum (S****a)
Carolin Rumicastrum pentavalve...