The Annates were transferred to the crown; never more was an English bishop to receive his pallium from Rome.
Paulinus was made bishop of Eboracum, now York, which pope Honorius on sending a pallium raised to a second metropolitanate.
Boniface had immediately submitted a report, answered by sending him the archiepiscopal pallium with a commission as papal legate in the German lands to found bishoprics and consecrate bishops.
The pope sent him what he sought and besides the pallium with archiepiscopal rights over the whole Saxon and British church.
Two of the prelates designate, however, refused to accept the pallium offered by pope Zacharias, A.
The Pallium was a cloak, generally worn by the Greeks, both men and women, freemen and slaves, but particularly by philosophers.
He laid aside likewise his usual exercises of riding and arms; and quitting the Roman habit, made use of the Pallium and Crepida [314].
The bishops and priests of the Celtic school who clung to the old usages were probably still wearing the pallium when Augustine came to Kent.
In 732 Boniface was made archbishop, received a pallium from Rome, and was encouraged by the new pope Gregory III.
Gregory gave the pallium to Vergilius, bishop of the ancient city of Arles, and with it the position of papal vicar within the kingdoms of Burgundy, Austrasia, and Aquitaine.
Wrapped in a pallium that partially concealed his sacred robes, the young Apaecides surveyed the disciple of that new and mysterious creed, to which at one time he had been half a convert.
The altar was bare, the golden pallium which covered it, gone.
The Pallium is more fully described to be a kind of upper Robe that covered the whole Body, made fast on the right Shoulder with a Fibula or Clasp.
The following letter was written in 595 in reply to a letter from Vigilius, bishop of Arles, asking for the pallium (DCA, art.
The relation of the vicariate to the papacy and also to the royal power is indicated by the fact that the pallium is given in response to the request of the king.
We have also sent a pallium which thy fraternity will use within the Church for the solemnization of mass only.
Backing, swinging my clubbed rifle, I retreated, but I tripped across one of the taut pallium wires, and in an instant the hideous birds were on me, and the bone in my forearm snapped like a pipestem at a blow from their wings.
Pallium is that new metal, a thread of which, drawn out into finest wire, will hold a ton of iron suspended.
Accordingly, in 1139, Malachy set out from Ireland with the purpose of soliciting from the pope the pallium (the token of archiepiscopal subjection to Rome) for the archbishop of Armagh.
Ireland, though the pope refused to grant the pallium until it had been unanimously applied for "by a general council of the bishops, clergy and nobles.
Peter, himself grasping the keys, gives to Leo the pallium of an archbishop, to Charles the banner of the Christian army.
He is dressed in an alb and choir-cope, and solemnly carries the Pallium enclosed in a costly vessel either of gold or of silver.
On reaching the church the Pallium is reverently laid on the high altar.
Did he receive the Pallium from Rome, sent by special Papal messengers?
The pallium is the sign of episcopal jurisdiction.
They are sent by the chapter of St. John Lateran, and their wool is afterwards used to make the pallium of the pope, which is consecrated before it is worn, by being deposited in a golden urn upon the tomb of St. Peter.
Pontius threw his pallium over the chiton he commonly wore at his work and went forward to meet the sovereign of the world, whose arrival had been announced to him in the prefect's letter.
Keraunus without listening to his daughter, and as he settled the folds of his pallium he growled "Arsinoe!
He boasted that at last Israel, after destroying the golden calves at Dan and Bethel, was again united to Judah, and in Rome bestowed the pallium upon the first Latin patriarch of Constantinople.
The arms of this archbishopric are the same as those of Armagh, only with five crosses charged on the pallium instead of four.
The arms of the episcopal sees have no attribute at all similar to the charge of the pallium in the coat of an archbishop, and are merely so many different coats of arms.
Azure, an episcopal staff argent, ensigned with a cross patee or, surmounted by a pallium of the second, edged and fringed or, charged with four crosses formee fitchee sable.
In this connection it is interesting to observe that the Archbishops of York anciently used the pallium in lieu of the official arms now regularly employed.
He is clothed in a pale yellow tunic, over which is worn a purplepallium with a white border.
The King now supposed that Anselm would receive the pallium at his royal hands, which the prelate warily refused to accept.
This favor, being bought by potent arguments, was granted unwisely, and the pallium was sent to William with the greatest secrecy.
The whole duchy named Lanfranc as his successor; but he declined the post, and was himself sent to Rome to bring the pallium for the new archbishop John, a kinsman of the ducal house.
Lanfranc doubtless refused the see of Rouen only because he was designed for a yet greater post in England; the subtlest diplomatist in Europe was not sent to Rome merely to ask for the pallium for Archbishop John.
In regard to this matter long opinions were uttered by each side, which were finally settled by admitting SeƱor Guerrero after he swore to present himself with the bulls and pallium within a year.