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Ambrosian Rite

The Ambrosian Rite is a Catholic Western liturgical rite, named after Saint Ambrose, a bishop of Milan in the fourth century, which differs from the Roman Rite. It is used by some five million Catholics in the greater part of the Archdiocese of Milan (excluding Monza, Treviglio and Trezzo sull'Adda), in some parishes of the Diocese of Como, Bergamo, Novara, Lodi, and in the Diocese of Lugano, Canton of Ticino, Switzerland.

A solemn Mass celebrated in the Ambrosian Rite in the church of its patron, Saint Ambrose, Legnano

The Ambrosian Rite has risked suppression at various points in its history. It was reformed after the Second Vatican Council (Pope Paul VI belonged to the Ambrosian Rite, having previously been Archbishop of Milan). In the 20th century, it also gained prominence and prestige from the attentions of two other scholarly Archbishops of Milan: Achille Ratti, later Pope Pius XI, and the Blessed Ildefonso Schuster, both of whom were involved in studies and publications on the rite.

History

 
Diffusion of the Ambrosian Rite

The Church of Milan's own liturgy is named Ambrosian after its patron saint Ambrose.[1] The Ambrosian Rite evolved and developed from the 4th century onwards.[1] There is no direct evidence that the rite was the composition of St. Ambrose, but his name has been associated with it since the 8th century. It is possible that Ambrose, who succeeded the Arian bishop Auxentius of Milan, may have removed material seen as unorthodox by the mainstream church and issued corrected service books which included the principal characteristics distinguishing it from other rites.[2]

According to St. Augustine (Confessiones, IX, vii) and Paulinus the Deacon (Vita S. Ambrosii, § 13), St. Ambrose introduced innovations, not indeed into the Mass, but into what would seem to be the Divine Office, at the time of his contest with the Empress Justina, for the Portian Basilica which she claimed for the Arians. St. Ambrose filled the church with Catholics and kept them there night and day until the peril was past. And he arranged Psalms and hymns for them to sing, as St. Augustine says, "after the manner of the Orientals, lest the people should languish in cheerless monotony"; and of this Paulinus the deacon says: "Now for the first time antiphons, hymns, and vigils began to be part of the observance of the Church in Milan, which devout observance lasts to our day not only in that church but in nearly every province of the West".[2]

From the time of St. Ambrose, whose hymns are well-known and whose liturgical allusions may certainly be explained as referring to a rite which possessed the characteristics of that which is called by his name, until the period of Charlemagne (circ AD 800), there is a gap in the history of the Milanese Rite. However, St. Simplician, the successor of St. Ambrose, added much to the rite and St. Lazarus (438-451) introduced the three days of the litanies (Cantù, Milano e il suo territorio, I, 116). The Church of Milan underwent various vicissitudes and for a period of some eighty years (570-649), during the Lombard conquests, the see was moved to Genoa in Liguria.[2]

In the eighth century, manuscript evidence begins. In a short treatise on the various cursus entitled "Ratio de Cursus qui fuerunt ex auctores" (sic in Cott. Manuscripts, Nero A. II, in the British Museum), written about the middle of the eighth century, probably by an Irish monk in France, is found perhaps the earliest attribution of the Milan use to St. Ambrose, though it quotes the authority of St. Augustine, probably alluding to the passage already mentioned: "There is yet another Cursus which the blessed Bishop Augustine says that the blessed Ambrose composed because of the existence of a different use of the heretics, which previously used to be sung in Italy".[2]

According to a narrative of Landulphus Senior, the eleventh-century chronicler of Milan, Charlemagne attempted to abolish the Ambrosian Rite, as he or his father, Pepin the Short, had abolished the Gallican Rite in France, in favour of a Gallicanized Roman Rite. He sent to Milan and caused to be destroyed or sent beyond the mountain, quasi in exilium (as if into exile), all the Ambrosian books which could be found. Eugenius the Bishop, (transmontane bishop, as Landulf calls him), begged him to reconsider his decision. After the manner of the time, an ordeal, which reminds one of the celebrated trials by fire and by battle in the case of Alfonso VI and the Mozarabic Rite, was determined on. Two books, Ambrosian and Roman, were laid closed upon the altar of St. Peter's Church in Rome and left for three days, and the one which was found open was to win. They were both found open, and it was resolved that as God had shown that one was as acceptable as the other, the Ambrosian Rite should continue. But the destruction had been so far effective that no Ambrosian books could be found, save one missal which a faithful priest had hidden for six weeks in a cave in the mountains. Therefore the Manuale was written out from memory by certain priests and clerks (Landulph, Chron., 10-13). Walafridus Strabo, who died Abbot of Reichenau in 849, and must therefore have been nearly, if not quite, contemporary with this incident, says nothing about it, but (De Rebus Ecclesiasticis, xxii), speaking of various forms of the Mass, says: "Ambrose, Bishop of Milan, also arranged a ceremonial for the Mass and other offices for his own church and for other parts of Liguria, which is still observed in the Milanese Church".[2]

In the eleventh century Pope Nicholas II, who in 1060 had tried to abolish the Mozarabic Rite, wished also to attack the Ambrosian and was aided by St. Peter Damian but he was unsuccessful, and Pope Alexander II his successor, himself a Milanese, reversed his policy in this respect. St. Gregory VII made another attempt, and Le Brun (Explication de la Messe, III, art. I, § 8) conjectures that Landulf's miraculous narrative was written with a purpose about that time. Having weathered these storms, the Ambrosian Rite had peace for some three centuries and a half.[2]

In the first half of the fifteenth century Cardinal Branda da Castiglione, who died in 1448, was legate in Milan. As part of his plan for reconciling Filippo Maria Visconti, Duke of Milan, and the Holy See, he endeavoured to substitute the Roman Rite for the Ambrosian. The result was a serious riot, and the Cardinal's legateship came to an abrupt end. After that, the Ambrosian Rite was safe until the Council of Trent. The Rule of that Council, that local uses which could show a prescription of two centuries might be retained, saved Milan, not without a struggle, from the loss of its Rite, and St. Charles Borromeo though he made some alterations in a Roman direction, was most careful not to destroy its characteristics. A small attempt made against it by a Governor of Milan who had obtained permission from the Pope to have the Roman Mass said in any church which he might happen to attend, was defeated by St. Charles, and his own revisions were intended to do little more than was inevitable in a living rite.[2]

Since his time the temper of the Milan Church has been most conservative, and the only alterations in subsequent editions seem to have been slight improvements in the wording of rubrics and in the arrangement of the books. The district in which the Ambrosian Rite is used is nominally the old archepiscopal province of Milan before the changes of 1515 and 1819, but actually, it is not exclusively used even in the city of Milan itself. In parts of the Swiss Canton of Ticino, it is used; in other parts, the Roman Rite is so much preferred that it is said that when Cardinal Gaisruck tried to force the Ambrosian upon them the inhabitants declared that they would be either Roman or Lutheran. There are traces also of the use of the Ambrosian Rite beyond the limits of the Province of Milan. In 1132-34, two Augustinian canons of Ratisbon, Paul, said by Bäumer to be Paul of Bernried, and Gebehard, held a correspondence with Anselm, Archbishop of Milan, and Martin, treasurer of St. Ambrose, with a view of obtaining copies of the books of the Ambrosian Rite, so that they might introduce it into their church. In the fourteenth century, the Emperor Charles IV introduced the Rite into the Church of St. Ambrose at Prague. Traces of it, mixed with the Roman, are said by Hoeyinck (Geschichte der kirchl. Liturgie des Bisthums Augsburg) to have remained in the diocese of Augsburg down to its last breviary of 1584, and according to Catena (Cantù, Milano e il suo territorio, 118) the use of Capua in the time of St. Charles Borromeo had some resemblance to that of Milan.[2]

 
An Ambrosian Rite Mass being celebrated in the Church of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary, Legnano

Important editions of the Ambrosian Missal were issued in 1475, 1594, 1609, 1902 and 1954. The last of these was the final edition in the form of the Ambrosian Rite that preceded the Second Vatican Council and is now used mainly in the church of San Rocco al Gentilino in Milan.

Following the guidelines of the Second Vatican Council and the preliminary revisions of the Ordinary of the Mass of the Roman Rite, a new bilingual (Latin and Italian) edition of the Ambrosian Missal was issued in 1966, simplifying the 1955 missal, mainly in the prayers the priest said inaudibly and in the genuflections, and adding the Prayer of the Faithful. The Eucharistic prayer continued to be said in Latin until 1967. The altars were moved to face the people.

When the Mass of Paul VI was issued in 1969, most Ambrosian-Rite priests began to use the new Roman Missal (only omitting the Agnus Dei), the Roman Lectionary, and the General Roman Calendar (with its four-week Advent). The Ambrosian form of administering the other sacraments was for the most part already identical with the Roman. This made it uncertain whether the Ambrosian Rite would survive. But in promulgating the documents of the 46th diocesan synod (1966–1973), Cardinal Archbishop Giovanni Colombo, supported by Pope Paul VI (a former Archbishop of Milan), finally decreed that the Ambrosian Rite, brought into line with the directives of the Second Vatican Council, should be preserved.

Work, still in progress, began on all the Ambrosian liturgical texts. On 11 April 1976 Cardinal Colombo published the new Ambrosian Missal, covering the whole liturgical year. Later in the same year an experimental Lectionary appeared, covering only some liturgical seasons, and still following the Roman-Rite Lectionary for the rest. Minor modifications of the Ambrosian Missal were implemented in 1978, restoring for example the place of the Creed in the Mass, and the new Ambrosian rite for funerals was issued.

The Ambrosian Missal also restored two early-medieval Ambrosian Eucharistic prayers, unusual for placing the epiclesis after the Words of Institution, in line with Oriental use.

In 1984-1985 the new Ambrosian Liturgy of the Hours was published and in 2006 the new Ambrosian rite of marriage. On 20 March 2008 the new Ambrosian Lectionary, superseding the 1976 experimental edition, and covering the whole liturgical year, was promulgated, coming into effect from the First Sunday of Advent 2008 (16 November 2008).[3] It is based on the ancient Ambrosian liturgical tradition and contains in particular, a special rite of light ("lucernarium") and proclamation of the resurrection of Jesus, for use before the Saturday-evening celebration of the Mass of the Sunday, seen as the weekly Easter.[4] Pope John Paul II celebrated Mass in Milan using the Ambrosian Rite in 1983, as did Pope Francis in 2017.

Origin

The Catholic Encyclopedia of 1907 gives three theories of the ancient origin of the rite, none conclusive. The question resolves itself into whether the Ambrosian Rite is archaic Roman or a much-Romanized form of the Gallican Rite.

J. M. Neale and others from the Anglican tradition referred the Hispano-Gallican and Celtic family of liturgies to an original imported into Provence from Ephesus in Asia Minor by St. Irenæus, who had received it through St. Polycarp from St. John the Divine. The name Ephesine was applied to this liturgy, and it was sometimes called the Liturgy of St. John. In support of this theory, Colman, at the Synod of Whitby in 664, attributed the Celtic rule of Easter to St. John. But Neale greatly exaggerated the Romanizing effected by St. Charles Borromeo. W. C. Bishop, however, in his article on the Ambrosian Breviary, takes up the same line as Neale in claiming a Gallican origin for the Ambrosian Divine Office.[2]

Louis Duchesne in his "Origines du culte chrétien" theorizes that the rite was imported or modified from the East, perhaps by the Cappadocian Arian Bishop Auxentius (355-374), the predecessor of St. Ambrose, and gradually spread to Gaul, Spain, and Britain.[2] Jungmann later concluded that "Duchesne's thesis can be accepted in the sense that Milan was the centre from which a Gallican type liturgy took its origin."[5] Here, "Gallican" means a Latin (not Eastern) liturgy somewhat different from that of Rome.[6]

Antonio Maria Ceriani and Magistretti maintain that the Ambrosian Rite has preserved the pre-Gelasian and pre-Gregorian form of the Roman Rite.[2]

Differences from the Roman Rite

Some features of the Ambrosian Rite distinguish it from the Roman Rite liturgy.

Mass

The main differences in the Mass are:[7]

  • The principal celebrant blesses all the readers, not only the deacon.
  • The Gospel is followed by a short antiphon.
  • The Rite of Peace comes before the Presentation of the Gifts.
  • The Creed follows the Preparation of the Gifts, before the Prayer over the Gifts.
  • There are some differences between the First Eucharistic Prayer of the Ambrosian Missal and the Roman Canon, the first in the Roman Missal; but its Eucharistic Prayers II, III, and IV are the same as in the Roman Rite. In addition, the Ambrosian Rite has two proper Eucharistic Prayers, used mainly on Easter and Holy Thursday.
  • The priest breaks the Host and places a piece in the main chalice before the Lord's Prayer, while an antiphon (the Confractorium) is sung or recited.
  • The Agnus Dei is not said.
  • Before the final blessing, the people say Kyrie, eleison ("Lord have mercy") three times.
  • At the end of the Mass, instead of saying "The Mass is ended, go in peace" the priest says simply "Go in peace", to which the people respond "In the name of Christ".
  • The Ambrosian Rite has its own cycle of readings at Mass.
  • Many of the prayers said by the priest during Mass are peculiar to the Ambrosian Rite, which has a particularly rich variety of prefaces.

Liturgical year

The main differences in the liturgical year are:

  • Advent has six weeks, not four.
  • Lent starts four days later than in the Roman Rite, so that Ash Wednesday is postponed to a week later than in the Roman Rite, and Carnival continues until "sabato grasso" ("Fat Saturday" in Italian), corresponding to Shrove Tuesday (called "mardi gras", i.e. "Fat Tuesday", in French) in areas where the Roman Rite is used.
  • On Fridays in Lent, Mass is not celebrated and, with a few exceptions, Communion is not distributed.
  • Red, rather than the green used in the Roman Rite, is the standard colour of vestments from Pentecost to the third Sunday of October, and there are other differences in liturgical colours throughout the year.

Other

Other differences are that:

  • The Liturgy of the Hours (also known as the Divine Office or Breviary) is different in structure and in various features.[8][9]
  • The liturgical rites of Holy Week are quite different.
  • The rite of funerals is different.
  • Baptism of infants is done by triple immersion of the head.
  • The thurible has no top cover, and is swung clockwise before the censing of a person or object.[10]
  • Ambrosian deacons wear the stole over the dalmatic and not under it.
  • The Ambrosian cassock, buttoned with only five buttons below the neck, is held with a fascia at the waist, and is worn with a round white collar.
  • Ambrosian chant is distinct from Gregorian chant.
  • Some senior priests (notably Provosts and certain Canons) are entitled to wear vestments commonly associated with bishops, including the mitre.
  • The liturgical burning of the faro (a large cotton sphere suspended in the air, inside the church) on feasts of martyrs.[11]

Early manuscripts

The early manuscripts of the Ambrosian Rite are generally found in the following forms:[2]

  • The "Sacramentary" contains the Orationes super Populum, Prophecies, Epistles, Gospels, Orationes super Sindonem, and Orationes super Oblata, the Prefaces and Post-Communions throughout the year, with the variable forms of the Communicantes and Hanc igitur, when they occur, and the solitary Post Sanctus of Easter Eve, besides the ceremonies of Holy Week, etc., and the Ordinary and Canon of the Mass. There are often also occasional offices usually found in a modern ritual, such as Baptism, the Visitation and Unction of the Sick, the Burial of the Dead, and various benedictions. It is essentially a priest's book, like the Euchologion of the Greeks.
  • The "Psalter" contains the Psalms and Canticles. It is sometimes included with the "Manual".
  • The "Manual" is nearly the complement of the "Sacramentary" and the "Psalter" as regards both the Mass and the Divine Office. It contains for the Divine Office: the Lucernaria, Antiphons, Responsoria, Psallenda, Completoria, Capitula, Hymns, and other changeable parts, except the Lessons, which are found separately. And for the Mass, it contains the Ingressœ, Psalmellœ, Versus, Cantus, Antiphonœ ante and post Evangelium, Offertoria, Confractoria, and Transitoria. The "Manual" often also contains occasional services such as are now usually found in a Ritual.
  • The "Antiphoner" is a Manual with notes.
  • The "Rituale" and "Pontificale" have contents similar to those of Roman books of the same name, though the early Manuscripts are less ample.

Sacramentaries and missals

The following are some of the most noted Manuscripts of the rite:[2]

  • The "Biasca Sacramentary"; Bibl. Ambros., A. 24, bis inf., late ninth or early tenth century. Described by Delisle, "Anc. Sacr.", LXXI, edited by Ceriani in his "Monumenta Sacra et Profana", VIII, the Ordinary is analyzed and the Canon is given in full in Ceriani's "Notitia Lit. Ambr".
  • The "Lodrino Sacramentary"; Bibl. Ambr., A. 24, inf., eleventh century. Delisle, "Anc. Sacr.", LXXII.
  • The "Sacramentary of San Satiro", Milan; treasury of Milan Cathedral; eleventh century. Delisle, "Anc. Sacr.", LXXIII.
  • Sacramentary; treasury of Milan Cathedral; eleventh century. Delisle, "Anc. Sacr.", LXXIV.
  • The "Sacramentary of Armio", near the Lago Maggiore; treasury of Milan Cathedral; eleventh century. Delisle, 'Anc. Sacr.", LXXV.
  • Sacramentary belonging to the Marchese Trotti; eleventh century. Delisle, "Anc. Sacr.", LXXVI.
  • Sacramentary; Bibl. Ambros., CXX, sup., eleventh century. Delisle, "Anc. Sacr.", LXXVII.
  • The "Bergamo Sacramentary"; library of Sant' Alessandro in Colonna, Bergamo; tenth or eleventh century. Published by the Benedictines of Solesmes, "Auctarium Solesmense" (to Migne's Patrologia), "Series Liturgica", I.
  • Sacramentary; treasury of Monza Cathedral; tenth century. Delisle, "Anc. Sacr.", LXV.
  • "Sacramentary of San Michele di Venegono inferiore" (near Varese); treasury of Monza Cathedral; eleventh century. Delisle, "Anc. Sacr.", LXVIII. These two of Monza Cathedral are more fully described in Frisi's "Memorie storiche di Monza", III,75-77, 82-84.
  • "Missale Ambrosianum", of Bedero (near Luino); Bibl. Ambr., D., 87 inf.; twelfth century. Noted by Magistretti in "Della nuova edizione tipica del messale Ambrosiano".

Antiphoner

  • Antiphoner: "Antiphonarium Ambrosianum"; British Museum, Add. Manuscripts, 34,209; twelfth century; published by the Benedictines of Solesmes, with a complete facsimile and 200 pages of introduction by Dom Paul Cagin, in "Paléographie musicale", V, VI.

Manuals

  • "Manual of Lodrino;" Bibl. Ambr., SH. IV, 44; tenth or eleventh century. Imperfect. Described by Magistretti, "Mon. Vet. Lit. Amb.", II, 18.
  • "Manuale Ambrosianum" belonging to the Marchese Trotti; tenth or eleventh century. Imperfect. Magistretti, "Mon. Vet. Lit. Amb.", II, 19.
  • "Manuale Ambrosianum"; Bibl. Ambr., CIII, sup.; tenth or eleventh century. Imperfect. Magistretti, "Mon. Vet. Lit. Amb.", II, 20.
  • "Manuale Ambrosianum"; from the Church of Cernusco (between Monza and Lecco); Bibl. Ambr., I, 55, sup.; eleventh century. Magistretti, "Mon. Vet. Lit. Amb.", II, 28.
  • "Manuale Ambrosianum"; from the Church of San Vittore al Teatro, Milan; Bibl. Ambr., A, 1, inf.; twelfth century. Magistretti, "Mon. Vet. Lit. Amb.", II, 22.
  • "Manuale Ambrosianum"; from the Church of Brivio (near the Lecco end of the Lake of Como); Bibl. Ambr., I, 27, sup.; twelfth century. Magistretti, "Mon. Vet. Lit. Amb.", II, 30.

Rituals

  • "Liber Monachorum S. Ambrosii"; Bibl. Ambr., XCVI, sup.; eleventh century. Magistretti, "Mon. Vet. Lit. Amb.", II, 33, 79-93.
  • "Rituale Ambrosianum", from the Church of S. Laurentiolus in Porta Vercellina, Milan; Sacrar. Metrop., H. 62; thirteenth century. Magistretti, "Mon. Vet. Lit. Amb.", II, 37, 143-171.
  • Beroldus Novus"; Chapter Library, Milan; thirteenth century. Magistretti, "Mon. Vet. Lit. Amb.", 17, 94-142.
  • "Asti Ritual"; Bibl, Mazarine, 525; tenth century. Described by Gastoué in "Rassegna Gregoriana", 1903. This, though from the old province of Milan, is not Ambrosian, but has bearings on the subject.
  • Ceremonial: "Calendarium et Ordines Ecclesiæ Ambrosianæ"; Beroldus; Bibl, Ambr., I, 158, inf. twelfth century. Published by Magistretti, 1894.

Pontificals

  • "Pontificale Mediolanensis Ecclesiæ"; Chapter Library, Milan; ninth century. Printed by Magistretti, "Mon. Vet. Lit. Amb.", I
  • "Pontificale Mediolanensis Ecclesiæ"; Chapter Library, Milan; eleventh century. Magistretti, "Mon. Vet. Lit. Amb.", 1, 27.
  • "Ordo Ambrosianus ad Consecrandam Ecclesiam et Altare;" Chapter Library, Lucca; eleventh century. Printed by Mercati, "Studi e testi" (of the Vatican Library), 7.

Ambrosian service-books

Some editions of the printed Ambrosian service-books:

  • Missals: (Pre-Borromean) 1475, 1482, 1486, 1488, 1494, 1499, 1505, 1515, 1522, 1548, 1560; (St. Charles Borromeo) 1594; (F. Borromeo) 1609-18; (Monti) 1640; (Litta) 1669; (Fed. Visconti) 1692; (Archinti) 1712; (Pozzobonelli) 1751, 1768; (Fil. Visconti) 1795; (Gaisruck) 1831; (Ferrari) 1902.
  • Breviaries: (Pre-Borromean) 1475, 1487, 1490, 1492, 1507, 1513, 1522, and many others; (St. Charles Borromeo), 1582, 1588; (Pozzobonelli) 1760; (Galsruck) 1841; (Romilli) 1857; (Ferrari) 1896, 1902. Rituals: n. d. circ., 1475 (a copy in Bodlwian), 1645, 1736, 1885.
  • Psalters: 1486, 1555.
  • Ceremonials: 1619, 1831.
  • Lectionary: 1660
  • Litanies: 1494, 1546, 1667.

The editions of the Missals, 1475, 1751, and 1902; Breviaries, 1582 and 1902; Ritual, 1645; both Psalters, both Ceremonials, the Lectionary, and Litanies are in the British Museum.[2]

English translations

  • We Give You Thanks and Praise. The Ambrosian Eucharistic Prefaces. translated by Alan Griffiths, first published by The Canterbury Press, Norwich, (a publishing imprint of Hymn Ancient & Modern Limited, a registered charity) St. Mary's Woods, St. Mary Plain, Norwich, Norfolk. This is an English translation of the two hundred proper prefaces at present used with the Eucharistic prayers of the Ambrosian Rite.
  • The Revised Divine Liturgy According to Our Holy Father Ambrose of Milan (Vols 1 and 2). by Bishop Michael Scotto-Daniello and published by Createspace/Amazon. This is a Missalette and a book of Prefaces for the Ambrosian Rite.
  • , as authorized by the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b Navoni, Marco (2018). "Ambrosian Liturgy". In Hunter, David G.; van Geest, Paul J. J.; Lietaert Peerbolte, Bert Jan (eds.). Brill Encyclopedia of Early Christianity Online. Leiden and Boston: Brill Publishers. doi:10.1163/2589-7993_EECO_SIM_036683. ISSN 2589-7993.
  2. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Jenner 1907
  3. ^ Il Segno: La Parola ogni giorno dell'anno 2008-10-06 at the Wayback Machine.
  4. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-10-06. Retrieved 2008-10-15.
  5. ^ "Ambrosian Rite | Encyclopedia.com". www.encyclopedia.com. Retrieved 2020-05-18.
  6. ^ J. A. Jungmann, The Early Liturgy (Notre Dame, Ind. 1959) 227–237.
  7. ^ Ambrosian Rite Ordinary of the Mass (in Italian)
  8. ^ "Liturgia delle Ore - Cathopedia, l'enciclopedia cattolica". it.cathopedia.org. Retrieved 2020-05-18.
  9. ^ . Archived from the original on 2008-10-11. Retrieved 2008-10-15.
  10. ^ The form of the thurible and the manner in which it is swung can be seen in this video 2008-10-06 at the Wayback Machine
  11. ^ Shawn Tribe. "The Lighting of the "Faro" in the Ambrosian Rite". Novus Motus Liturgicus. from the original on 2010-03-04. Retrieved 26 December 2018.

References

  • Navoni, Marco (1996). Dizionario di Liturgia Ambrosiana (Marco Navoni ed.). Milan. ISBN 88-7023-219-0.
  • Griffiths, Alan (1999). We Give You Thanks and Praise. Canterbury Press. ISBN 1-58051-069-8.
  • A. Ratti / M. Magistretti, Missale Ambrosianum Duplex, Mediolani 1913
  • Missale Ambrosianum iuxta ritum Sanctae Ecclesiae Mediolanensis, ex decreto Sacrosancto OEcumenici Concilii Vaticani II instauratum, auctoritate Ioannis Colombo Sanctae Romanae Ecclesiae Presbyter Cardinalis Archiepiscopi Mediolanensis promulgatum, Mediolani 1981
  • Messale Ambrosiano secondo il rito della santa Chiese di Milano. Riformato a norma dei decreti del Concilio Vaticano II. Promulgato dal Signor Cardinale Giovanno Colombo, arcivescovo di Milano, Milano 1976
  • Messale ambrosiano festivo. Piemme. 1986. ISBN 88-384-1421-1.
  • The Revised Divine Liturgy According to Our Holy Father Ambrose of Milan, Volume I.(2014) Createspace/Amazon ISBN 978-1497509573
  • The Revised Divine Liturgy According to Our Holy Father Ambrose of Milan, Volume II. (2014) Createspace/Amazon ISBN 978-1499652451
Attribution

  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainJenner, Henry (1907). "Ambrosian Liturgy and Rite". In Herbermann, Charles (ed.). Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 1. New York: Robert Appleton Company.

External links

  • Catholic Encyclopedia article
  • Ambrosian Rite resources
  • The Ambrosian Rite (in Italian)
  • Ordinary of the Mass; English Translation published in 1909

ambrosian, rite, this, article, about, current, form, form, this, rite, used, before, vatican, traditional, catholic, western, liturgical, rite, named, after, saint, ambrose, bishop, milan, fourth, century, which, differs, from, roman, rite, used, some, five, . This article is about the current form of Ambrosian Rite For the form of this Rite used before the Vatican II see Traditional Ambrosian Rite The Ambrosian Rite is a Catholic Western liturgical rite named after Saint Ambrose a bishop of Milan in the fourth century which differs from the Roman Rite It is used by some five million Catholics in the greater part of the Archdiocese of Milan excluding Monza Treviglio and Trezzo sull Adda in some parishes of the Diocese of Como Bergamo Novara Lodi and in the Diocese of Lugano Canton of Ticino Switzerland A solemn Mass celebrated in the Ambrosian Rite in the church of its patron Saint Ambrose Legnano The Ambrosian Rite has risked suppression at various points in its history It was reformed after the Second Vatican Council Pope Paul VI belonged to the Ambrosian Rite having previously been Archbishop of Milan In the 20th century it also gained prominence and prestige from the attentions of two other scholarly Archbishops of Milan Achille Ratti later Pope Pius XI and the Blessed Ildefonso Schuster both of whom were involved in studies and publications on the rite Contents 1 History 2 Origin 3 Differences from the Roman Rite 3 1 Mass 3 2 Liturgical year 3 3 Other 4 Early manuscripts 4 1 Sacramentaries and missals 4 2 Antiphoner 4 3 Manuals 4 4 Rituals 4 5 Pontificals 4 6 Ambrosian service books 5 English translations 6 See also 7 Notes 8 References 9 External linksHistory EditFurther information Ambrosian hymns Diffusion of the Ambrosian Rite The Church of Milan s own liturgy is named Ambrosian after its patron saint Ambrose 1 The Ambrosian Rite evolved and developed from the 4th century onwards 1 There is no direct evidence that the rite was the composition of St Ambrose but his name has been associated with it since the 8th century It is possible that Ambrose who succeeded the Arian bishop Auxentius of Milan may have removed material seen as unorthodox by the mainstream church and issued corrected service books which included the principal characteristics distinguishing it from other rites 2 According to St Augustine Confessiones IX vii and Paulinus the Deacon Vita S Ambrosii 13 St Ambrose introduced innovations not indeed into the Mass but into what would seem to be the Divine Office at the time of his contest with the Empress Justina for the Portian Basilica which she claimed for the Arians St Ambrose filled the church with Catholics and kept them there night and day until the peril was past And he arranged Psalms and hymns for them to sing as St Augustine says after the manner of the Orientals lest the people should languish in cheerless monotony and of this Paulinus the deacon says Now for the first time antiphons hymns and vigils began to be part of the observance of the Church in Milan which devout observance lasts to our day not only in that church but in nearly every province of the West 2 From the time of St Ambrose whose hymns are well known and whose liturgical allusions may certainly be explained as referring to a rite which possessed the characteristics of that which is called by his name until the period of Charlemagne circ AD 800 there is a gap in the history of the Milanese Rite However St Simplician the successor of St Ambrose added much to the rite and St Lazarus 438 451 introduced the three days of the litanies Cantu Milano e il suo territorio I 116 The Church of Milan underwent various vicissitudes and for a period of some eighty years 570 649 during the Lombard conquests the see was moved to Genoa in Liguria 2 In the eighth century manuscript evidence begins In a short treatise on the various cursus entitled Ratio de Cursus qui fuerunt ex auctores sic in Cott Manuscripts Nero A II in the British Museum written about the middle of the eighth century probably by an Irish monk in France is found perhaps the earliest attribution of the Milan use to St Ambrose though it quotes the authority of St Augustine probably alluding to the passage already mentioned There is yet another Cursus which the blessed Bishop Augustine says that the blessed Ambrose composed because of the existence of a different use of the heretics which previously used to be sung in Italy 2 According to a narrative of Landulphus Senior the eleventh century chronicler of Milan Charlemagne attempted to abolish the Ambrosian Rite as he or his father Pepin the Short had abolished the Gallican Rite in France in favour of a Gallicanized Roman Rite He sent to Milan and caused to be destroyed or sent beyond the mountain quasi in exilium as if into exile all the Ambrosian books which could be found Eugenius the Bishop transmontane bishop as Landulf calls him begged him to reconsider his decision After the manner of the time an ordeal which reminds one of the celebrated trials by fire and by battle in the case of Alfonso VI and the Mozarabic Rite was determined on Two books Ambrosian and Roman were laid closed upon the altar of St Peter s Church in Rome and left for three days and the one which was found open was to win They were both found open and it was resolved that as God had shown that one was as acceptable as the other the Ambrosian Rite should continue But the destruction had been so far effective that no Ambrosian books could be found save one missal which a faithful priest had hidden for six weeks in a cave in the mountains Therefore the Manuale was written out from memory by certain priests and clerks Landulph Chron 10 13 Walafridus Strabo who died Abbot of Reichenau in 849 and must therefore have been nearly if not quite contemporary with this incident says nothing about it but De Rebus Ecclesiasticis xxii speaking of various forms of the Mass says Ambrose Bishop of Milan also arranged a ceremonial for the Mass and other offices for his own church and for other parts of Liguria which is still observed in the Milanese Church 2 In the eleventh century Pope Nicholas II who in 1060 had tried to abolish the Mozarabic Rite wished also to attack the Ambrosian and was aided by St Peter Damian but he was unsuccessful and Pope Alexander II his successor himself a Milanese reversed his policy in this respect St Gregory VII made another attempt and Le Brun Explication de la Messe III art I 8 conjectures that Landulf s miraculous narrative was written with a purpose about that time Having weathered these storms the Ambrosian Rite had peace for some three centuries and a half 2 In the first half of the fifteenth century Cardinal Branda da Castiglione who died in 1448 was legate in Milan As part of his plan for reconciling Filippo Maria Visconti Duke of Milan and the Holy See he endeavoured to substitute the Roman Rite for the Ambrosian The result was a serious riot and the Cardinal s legateship came to an abrupt end After that the Ambrosian Rite was safe until the Council of Trent The Rule of that Council that local uses which could show a prescription of two centuries might be retained saved Milan not without a struggle from the loss of its Rite and St Charles Borromeo though he made some alterations in a Roman direction was most careful not to destroy its characteristics A small attempt made against it by a Governor of Milan who had obtained permission from the Pope to have the Roman Mass said in any church which he might happen to attend was defeated by St Charles and his own revisions were intended to do little more than was inevitable in a living rite 2 Since his time the temper of the Milan Church has been most conservative and the only alterations in subsequent editions seem to have been slight improvements in the wording of rubrics and in the arrangement of the books The district in which the Ambrosian Rite is used is nominally the old archepiscopal province of Milan before the changes of 1515 and 1819 but actually it is not exclusively used even in the city of Milan itself In parts of the Swiss Canton of Ticino it is used in other parts the Roman Rite is so much preferred that it is said that when Cardinal Gaisruck tried to force the Ambrosian upon them the inhabitants declared that they would be either Roman or Lutheran There are traces also of the use of the Ambrosian Rite beyond the limits of the Province of Milan In 1132 34 two Augustinian canons of Ratisbon Paul said by Baumer to be Paul of Bernried and Gebehard held a correspondence with Anselm Archbishop of Milan and Martin treasurer of St Ambrose with a view of obtaining copies of the books of the Ambrosian Rite so that they might introduce it into their church In the fourteenth century the Emperor Charles IV introduced the Rite into the Church of St Ambrose at Prague Traces of it mixed with the Roman are said by Hoeyinck Geschichte der kirchl Liturgie des Bisthums Augsburg to have remained in the diocese of Augsburg down to its last breviary of 1584 and according to Catena Cantu Milano e il suo territorio 118 the use of Capua in the time of St Charles Borromeo had some resemblance to that of Milan 2 An Ambrosian Rite Mass being celebrated in the Church of the Nativity of the Blessed Virgin Mary Legnano Important editions of the Ambrosian Missal were issued in 1475 1594 1609 1902 and 1954 The last of these was the final edition in the form of the Ambrosian Rite that preceded the Second Vatican Council and is now used mainly in the church of San Rocco al Gentilino in Milan Following the guidelines of the Second Vatican Council and the preliminary revisions of the Ordinary of the Mass of the Roman Rite a new bilingual Latin and Italian edition of the Ambrosian Missal was issued in 1966 simplifying the 1955 missal mainly in the prayers the priest said inaudibly and in the genuflections and adding the Prayer of the Faithful The Eucharistic prayer continued to be said in Latin until 1967 The altars were moved to face the people When the Mass of Paul VI was issued in 1969 most Ambrosian Rite priests began to use the new Roman Missal only omitting the Agnus Dei the Roman Lectionary and the General Roman Calendar with its four week Advent The Ambrosian form of administering the other sacraments was for the most part already identical with the Roman This made it uncertain whether the Ambrosian Rite would survive But in promulgating the documents of the 46th diocesan synod 1966 1973 Cardinal Archbishop Giovanni Colombo supported by Pope Paul VI a former Archbishop of Milan finally decreed that the Ambrosian Rite brought into line with the directives of the Second Vatican Council should be preserved Work still in progress began on all the Ambrosian liturgical texts On 11 April 1976 Cardinal Colombo published the new Ambrosian Missal covering the whole liturgical year Later in the same year an experimental Lectionary appeared covering only some liturgical seasons and still following the Roman Rite Lectionary for the rest Minor modifications of the Ambrosian Missal were implemented in 1978 restoring for example the place of the Creed in the Mass and the new Ambrosian rite for funerals was issued The Ambrosian Missal also restored two early medieval Ambrosian Eucharistic prayers unusual for placing the epiclesis after the Words of Institution in line with Oriental use In 1984 1985 the new Ambrosian Liturgy of the Hours was published and in 2006 the new Ambrosian rite of marriage On 20 March 2008 the new Ambrosian Lectionary superseding the 1976 experimental edition and covering the whole liturgical year was promulgated coming into effect from the First Sunday of Advent 2008 16 November 2008 3 It is based on the ancient Ambrosian liturgical tradition and contains in particular a special rite of light lucernarium and proclamation of the resurrection of Jesus for use before the Saturday evening celebration of the Mass of the Sunday seen as the weekly Easter 4 Pope John Paul II celebrated Mass in Milan using the Ambrosian Rite in 1983 as did Pope Francis in 2017 Origin EditThe Catholic Encyclopedia of 1907 gives three theories of the ancient origin of the rite none conclusive The question resolves itself into whether the Ambrosian Rite is archaic Roman or a much Romanized form of the Gallican Rite J M Neale and others from the Anglican tradition referred the Hispano Gallican and Celtic family of liturgies to an original imported into Provence from Ephesus in Asia Minor by St Irenaeus who had received it through St Polycarp from St John the Divine The name Ephesine was applied to this liturgy and it was sometimes called the Liturgy of St John In support of this theory Colman at the Synod of Whitby in 664 attributed the Celtic rule of Easter to St John But Neale greatly exaggerated the Romanizing effected by St Charles Borromeo W C Bishop however in his article on the Ambrosian Breviary takes up the same line as Neale in claiming a Gallican origin for the Ambrosian Divine Office 2 Louis Duchesne in his Origines du culte chretien theorizes that the rite was imported or modified from the East perhaps by the Cappadocian Arian Bishop Auxentius 355 374 the predecessor of St Ambrose and gradually spread to Gaul Spain and Britain 2 Jungmann later concluded that Duchesne s thesis can be accepted in the sense that Milan was the centre from which a Gallican type liturgy took its origin 5 Here Gallican means a Latin not Eastern liturgy somewhat different from that of Rome 6 Antonio Maria Ceriani and Magistretti maintain that the Ambrosian Rite has preserved the pre Gelasian and pre Gregorian form of the Roman Rite 2 Differences from the Roman Rite EditSome features of the Ambrosian Rite distinguish it from the Roman Rite liturgy Mass Edit The main differences in the Mass are 7 The principal celebrant blesses all the readers not only the deacon The Gospel is followed by a short antiphon The Rite of Peace comes before the Presentation of the Gifts The Creed follows the Preparation of the Gifts before the Prayer over the Gifts There are some differences between the First Eucharistic Prayer of the Ambrosian Missal and the Roman Canon the first in the Roman Missal but its Eucharistic Prayers II III and IV are the same as in the Roman Rite In addition the Ambrosian Rite has two proper Eucharistic Prayers used mainly on Easter and Holy Thursday The priest breaks the Host and places a piece in the main chalice before the Lord s Prayer while an antiphon the Confractorium is sung or recited The Agnus Dei is not said Before the final blessing the people say Kyrie eleison Lord have mercy three times At the end of the Mass instead of saying The Mass is ended go in peace the priest says simply Go in peace to which the people respond In the name of Christ The Ambrosian Rite has its own cycle of readings at Mass Many of the prayers said by the priest during Mass are peculiar to the Ambrosian Rite which has a particularly rich variety of prefaces Liturgical year Edit The main differences in the liturgical year are Advent has six weeks not four Lent starts four days later than in the Roman Rite so that Ash Wednesday is postponed to a week later than in the Roman Rite and Carnival continues until sabato grasso Fat Saturday in Italian corresponding to Shrove Tuesday called mardi gras i e Fat Tuesday in French in areas where the Roman Rite is used On Fridays in Lent Mass is not celebrated and with a few exceptions Communion is not distributed Red rather than the green used in the Roman Rite is the standard colour of vestments from Pentecost to the third Sunday of October and there are other differences in liturgical colours throughout the year Other Edit Other differences are that The Liturgy of the Hours also known as the Divine Office or Breviary is different in structure and in various features 8 9 The liturgical rites of Holy Week are quite different The rite of funerals is different Baptism of infants is done by triple immersion of the head The thurible has no top cover and is swung clockwise before the censing of a person or object 10 Ambrosian deacons wear the stole over the dalmatic and not under it The Ambrosian cassock buttoned with only five buttons below the neck is held with a fascia at the waist and is worn with a round white collar Ambrosian chant is distinct from Gregorian chant Some senior priests notably Provosts and certain Canons are entitled to wear vestments commonly associated with bishops including the mitre The liturgical burning of the faro a large cotton sphere suspended in the air inside the church on feasts of martyrs 11 Early manuscripts EditThe early manuscripts of the Ambrosian Rite are generally found in the following forms 2 The Sacramentary contains the Orationes super Populum Prophecies Epistles Gospels Orationes super Sindonem and Orationes super Oblata the Prefaces and Post Communions throughout the year with the variable forms of the Communicantes and Hanc igitur when they occur and the solitary Post Sanctus of Easter Eve besides the ceremonies of Holy Week etc and the Ordinary and Canon of the Mass There are often also occasional offices usually found in a modern ritual such as Baptism the Visitation and Unction of the Sick the Burial of the Dead and various benedictions It is essentially a priest s book like the Euchologion of the Greeks The Psalter contains the Psalms and Canticles It is sometimes included with the Manual The Manual is nearly the complement of the Sacramentary and the Psalter as regards both the Mass and the Divine Office It contains for the Divine Office the Lucernaria Antiphons Responsoria Psallenda Completoria Capitula Hymns and other changeable parts except the Lessons which are found separately And for the Mass it contains the Ingressœ Psalmellœ Versus Cantus Antiphonœ ante and post Evangelium Offertoria Confractoria and Transitoria The Manual often also contains occasional services such as are now usually found in a Ritual The Antiphoner is a Manual with notes The Rituale and Pontificale have contents similar to those of Roman books of the same name though the early Manuscripts are less ample Sacramentaries and missals Edit The following are some of the most noted Manuscripts of the rite 2 The Biasca Sacramentary Bibl Ambros A 24 bis inf late ninth or early tenth century Described by Delisle Anc Sacr LXXI edited by Ceriani in his Monumenta Sacra et Profana VIII the Ordinary is analyzed and the Canon is given in full in Ceriani s Notitia Lit Ambr The Lodrino Sacramentary Bibl Ambr A 24 inf eleventh century Delisle Anc Sacr LXXII The Sacramentary of San Satiro Milan treasury of Milan Cathedral eleventh century Delisle Anc Sacr LXXIII Sacramentary treasury of Milan Cathedral eleventh century Delisle Anc Sacr LXXIV The Sacramentary of Armio near the Lago Maggiore treasury of Milan Cathedral eleventh century Delisle Anc Sacr LXXV Sacramentary belonging to the Marchese Trotti eleventh century Delisle Anc Sacr LXXVI Sacramentary Bibl Ambros CXX sup eleventh century Delisle Anc Sacr LXXVII The Bergamo Sacramentary library of Sant Alessandro in Colonna Bergamo tenth or eleventh century Published by the Benedictines of Solesmes Auctarium Solesmense to Migne s Patrologia Series Liturgica I Sacramentary treasury of Monza Cathedral tenth century Delisle Anc Sacr LXV Sacramentary of San Michele di Venegono inferiore near Varese treasury of Monza Cathedral eleventh century Delisle Anc Sacr LXVIII These two of Monza Cathedral are more fully described in Frisi s Memorie storiche di Monza III 75 77 82 84 Missale Ambrosianum of Bedero near Luino Bibl Ambr D 87 inf twelfth century Noted by Magistretti in Della nuova edizione tipica del messale Ambrosiano Antiphoner Edit Antiphoner Antiphonarium Ambrosianum British Museum Add Manuscripts 34 209 twelfth century published by the Benedictines of Solesmes with a complete facsimile and 200 pages of introduction by Dom Paul Cagin in Paleographie musicale V VI Manuals Edit Manual of Lodrino Bibl Ambr SH IV 44 tenth or eleventh century Imperfect Described by Magistretti Mon Vet Lit Amb II 18 Manuale Ambrosianum belonging to the Marchese Trotti tenth or eleventh century Imperfect Magistretti Mon Vet Lit Amb II 19 Manuale Ambrosianum Bibl Ambr CIII sup tenth or eleventh century Imperfect Magistretti Mon Vet Lit Amb II 20 Manuale Ambrosianum from the Church of Cernusco between Monza and Lecco Bibl Ambr I 55 sup eleventh century Magistretti Mon Vet Lit Amb II 28 Manuale Ambrosianum from the Church of San Vittore al Teatro Milan Bibl Ambr A 1 inf twelfth century Magistretti Mon Vet Lit Amb II 22 Manuale Ambrosianum from the Church of Brivio near the Lecco end of the Lake of Como Bibl Ambr I 27 sup twelfth century Magistretti Mon Vet Lit Amb II 30 Rituals Edit Liber Monachorum S Ambrosii Bibl Ambr XCVI sup eleventh century Magistretti Mon Vet Lit Amb II 33 79 93 Rituale Ambrosianum from the Church of S Laurentiolus in Porta Vercellina Milan Sacrar Metrop H 62 thirteenth century Magistretti Mon Vet Lit Amb II 37 143 171 Beroldus Novus Chapter Library Milan thirteenth century Magistretti Mon Vet Lit Amb 17 94 142 Asti Ritual Bibl Mazarine 525 tenth century Described by Gastoue in Rassegna Gregoriana 1903 This though from the old province of Milan is not Ambrosian but has bearings on the subject Ceremonial Calendarium et Ordines Ecclesiae Ambrosianae Beroldus Bibl Ambr I 158 inf twelfth century Published by Magistretti 1894 Pontificals Edit Pontificale Mediolanensis Ecclesiae Chapter Library Milan ninth century Printed by Magistretti Mon Vet Lit Amb I Pontificale Mediolanensis Ecclesiae Chapter Library Milan eleventh century Magistretti Mon Vet Lit Amb 1 27 Ordo Ambrosianus ad Consecrandam Ecclesiam et Altare Chapter Library Lucca eleventh century Printed by Mercati Studi e testi of the Vatican Library 7 Ambrosian service books Edit Some editions of the printed Ambrosian service books Missals Pre Borromean 1475 1482 1486 1488 1494 1499 1505 1515 1522 1548 1560 St Charles Borromeo 1594 F Borromeo 1609 18 Monti 1640 Litta 1669 Fed Visconti 1692 Archinti 1712 Pozzobonelli 1751 1768 Fil Visconti 1795 Gaisruck 1831 Ferrari 1902 Breviaries Pre Borromean 1475 1487 1490 1492 1507 1513 1522 and many others St Charles Borromeo 1582 1588 Pozzobonelli 1760 Galsruck 1841 Romilli 1857 Ferrari 1896 1902 Rituals n d circ 1475 a copy in Bodlwian 1645 1736 1885 Psalters 1486 1555 Ceremonials 1619 1831 Lectionary 1660 Litanies 1494 1546 1667 The editions of the Missals 1475 1751 and 1902 Breviaries 1582 and 1902 Ritual 1645 both Psalters both Ceremonials the Lectionary and Litanies are in the British Museum 2 English translations EditWe Give You Thanks and Praise The Ambrosian Eucharistic Prefaces translated by Alan Griffiths first published by The Canterbury Press Norwich a publishing imprint of Hymn Ancient amp Modern Limited a registered charity St Mary s Woods St Mary Plain Norwich Norfolk This is an English translation of the two hundred proper prefaces at present used with the Eucharistic prayers of the Ambrosian Rite The Revised Divine Liturgy According to Our Holy Father Ambrose of Milan Vols 1 and 2 by Bishop Michael Scotto Daniello and published by Createspace Amazon This is a Missalette and a book of Prefaces for the Ambrosian Rite The Divine Liturgy of St Ambrose as authorized by the Russian Orthodox Church Outside of Russia See also EditAmbrosians Rite of the NivolaNotes Edit a b Navoni Marco 2018 Ambrosian Liturgy In Hunter David G van Geest Paul J J Lietaert Peerbolte Bert Jan eds Brill Encyclopedia of Early Christianity Online Leiden and Boston Brill Publishers doi 10 1163 2589 7993 EECO SIM 036683 ISSN 2589 7993 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n Jenner 1907 Il Segno La Parola ogni giorno dell anno Archived 2008 10 06 at the Wayback Machine Video of the rite Archived from the original on 2008 10 06 Retrieved 2008 10 15 Ambrosian Rite Encyclopedia com www encyclopedia com Retrieved 2020 05 18 J A Jungmann The Early Liturgy Notre Dame Ind 1959 227 237 Ambrosian Rite Ordinary of the Mass in Italian Liturgia delle Ore Cathopedia l enciclopedia cattolica it cathopedia org Retrieved 2020 05 18 Breviarium Ambrosianum Archived from the original on 2008 10 11 Retrieved 2008 10 15 The form of the thurible and the manner in which it is swung can be seen in this video Archived 2008 10 06 at the Wayback Machine Shawn Tribe The Lighting of the Faro in the Ambrosian Rite Novus Motus Liturgicus Archived from the original on 2010 03 04 Retrieved 26 December 2018 References EditNavoni Marco 1996 Dizionario di Liturgia Ambrosiana Marco Navoni ed Milan ISBN 88 7023 219 0 Griffiths Alan 1999 We Give You Thanks and Praise Canterbury Press ISBN 1 58051 069 8 A Ratti M Magistretti Missale Ambrosianum Duplex Mediolani 1913 Missale Ambrosianum iuxta ritum Sanctae Ecclesiae Mediolanensis ex decreto Sacrosancto OEcumenici Concilii Vaticani II instauratum auctoritate Ioannis Colombo Sanctae Romanae Ecclesiae Presbyter Cardinalis Archiepiscopi Mediolanensis promulgatum Mediolani 1981 Messale Ambrosiano secondo il rito della santa Chiese di Milano Riformato a norma dei decreti del Concilio Vaticano II Promulgato dal Signor Cardinale Giovanno Colombo arcivescovo di Milano Milano 1976 Messale ambrosiano festivo Piemme 1986 ISBN 88 384 1421 1 The Revised Divine Liturgy According to Our Holy Father Ambrose of Milan Volume I 2014 Createspace Amazon ISBN 978 1497509573 The Revised Divine Liturgy According to Our Holy Father Ambrose of Milan Volume II 2014 Createspace Amazon ISBN 978 1499652451Attribution This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Jenner Henry 1907 Ambrosian Liturgy and Rite In Herbermann Charles ed Catholic Encyclopedia Vol 1 New York Robert Appleton Company External links EditCatholic Encyclopedia article Ambrosian Rite resources The Ambrosian Rite in Italian Ordinary of the Mass English Translation published in 1909 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ambrosian Rite amp oldid 1126250432, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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