Difference between revisions of "Indictio Paschalis"

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Indictio Paschalis <ref name="term_44990" />  
 
<p> It was an old custom in the [[Christian]] [[Church]] of the early ages to announce on [[Epiphany]] (q.v.) the days on which [[Easter]] would fall, and this announcement was called the Indictio paschalis; but as on the appointment of the days on which Easter should be observed depended the appointment of the movable feasts, this announcement was called the Indictio festorurns mobilium. The first practices of this kind we find in the [[Alexandrian]] Church, but it soon became general throughout the Christian Church, even by ecclesiastical enactments. Thus the fourth [[Synod]] at [[Orleans]] (Concil. Aurelian. 4, c. 1) ordered its observance, and even the fifth Synod at [[Carthage]] (A.D. 401, Concil. Carthag. 5, Song of [[Solomon]] 7) ordered a written announcement, which was called Epistola paschalis et heortastica. See Bingham, Antiquit. Ecclesiast. 9:85 sq.; Augusti, Handbuch der Christl. [[Archa]] l. 1, 544; Riddle, Christian Antiquities, p. 687. (J. H. W.) </p>
Indictio Paschalis <ref name="term_44990" />
==References ==
<p> It was an old custom in the [[Christian]] Church of the early ages to announce on [[Epiphany]] (q.v.) the days on which [[Easter]] would fall, and this announcement was called the Indictio paschalis; but as on the appointment of the days on which Easter should be observed depended the appointment of the movable feasts, this announcement was called the Indictio festorurns mobilium. The first practices of this kind we find in the [[Alexandrian]] Church, but it soon became general throughout the Christian Church, even by ecclesiastical enactments. Thus the fourth [[Synod]] at [[Orleans]] (Concil. Aurelian. 4, c. 1) ordered its observance, and even the fifth Synod at [[Carthage]] (A.D. 401, Concil. Carthag. 5, Song of [[Solomon]] 7) ordered a written announcement, which was called Epistola paschalis et heortastica. See Bingham, Antiquit. Ecclesiast. 9:85 sq.; Augusti, Handbuch der Christl. Archa l. 1, 544; Riddle, Christian Antiquities, p. 687. (J. H. W.) </p>
 
== References ==
<references>
<references>
<ref name="term_44990"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/cyclopedia-of-biblical-theological-and-ecclesiastical-literature/indictio+paschalis Indictio Paschalis from Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature]</ref>
<ref name="term_44990"> [https://bibleportal.com/encyclopedia/cyclopedia-of-biblical-theological-and-ecclesiastical-literature/indictio+paschalis Indictio Paschalis from Cyclopedia of Biblical, Theological and Ecclesiastical Literature]</ref>
</references>
</references>

Latest revision as of 10:49, 15 October 2021

Indictio Paschalis [1]

It was an old custom in the Christian Church of the early ages to announce on Epiphany (q.v.) the days on which Easter would fall, and this announcement was called the Indictio paschalis; but as on the appointment of the days on which Easter should be observed depended the appointment of the movable feasts, this announcement was called the Indictio festorurns mobilium. The first practices of this kind we find in the Alexandrian Church, but it soon became general throughout the Christian Church, even by ecclesiastical enactments. Thus the fourth Synod at Orleans (Concil. Aurelian. 4, c. 1) ordered its observance, and even the fifth Synod at Carthage (A.D. 401, Concil. Carthag. 5, Song of Solomon 7) ordered a written announcement, which was called Epistola paschalis et heortastica. See Bingham, Antiquit. Ecclesiast. 9:85 sq.; Augusti, Handbuch der Christl. Archa l. 1, 544; Riddle, Christian Antiquities, p. 687. (J. H. W.)

References