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Tonsure

Tonsure (/ˈtɒnʃər/) is the practice of cutting or shaving some or all of the hair on the scalp as a sign of religious devotion or humility. The term originates from the Latin word tonsura (meaning "clipping" or "shearing"[1]) and referred to a specific practice in medieval Catholicism, abandoned by papal order in 1972. Tonsure can also refer to the secular practice of shaving all or part of the scalp to show support or sympathy, or to designate mourning. Current usage more generally refers to cutting or shaving for monks, devotees, or mystics of any religion as a symbol of their renunciation of worldly fashion and esteem.

Roman tonsure (Catholicism)

Tonsure is still a traditional practice in Catholicism by specific religious orders (with papal permission). It is also commonly used in the Eastern Orthodox Church for newly baptised members and is frequently used for Buddhist novices, monks, and nuns. The complete shaving of one's head bald, or just shortening the hair, exists as a traditional practice in Islam after completion of the Hajj and is also practised by a number of Hindu religious orders.

Christianity

 
Celtic stone head from ancient Bohemia (150–50 BC), possibly depicting the form of the later Celtic Christian tonsure

History and development

Tonsure was not widely known in antiquity. Tradition states that it originated with the disciples of Jesus, who observed the Torah command not to shave the hair around the sides of one's head (Leviticus 19:27). There were three forms of tonsure known in the 7th and 8th centuries:

  • The Oriental, which claimed the authority of Saint Paul the Apostle (Acts 18:18) and consisted of shaving the whole head. This was observed in the Eastern churches, including the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Eastern Catholic Churches. Hence Theodore of Tarsus, who had acquired his learning in Byzantine Asia Minor and bore this tonsure, had to allow his hair to grow for four months before he could be tonsured after the Roman fashion, and then ordained Archbishop of Canterbury by Pope Vitalian in 668.
  • The Celtic tonsure, the exact shape of which is unclear from the sources, but in some way involved shaving the head from ear to ear.[2] The shape may have been semicircular, arcing forward from a line between the ears, but another popular suggestion, less borne out in the sources, proposes that the entire forehead was shaved back to the ears.[3] More recently a triangular shape, with one point at the front of the head going back to a line between the ears, has been suggested.[2] The Celtic tonsure was worn in Ireland and Great Britain and was connected to the distinct set of practices known as Celtic Christianity.[4] It was opposed by the Roman tradition, but many adherents to the Celtic tradition continued to maintain the old way well into the 8th and 9th centuries.[5] Some sources have also suggested links between this tonsure and that worn by druids in the Pre-Roman Iron Age.[6][7]
  • The Roman: this consisted of shaving only the top of the head, so as to allow the hair to grow in the form of a crown. This is claimed to have originated with Saint Peter, and is the practice of the Latin Church of the Catholic Church.

Ancient and medieval usage

Eastern Christianity

Clerical tonsure

St. Germanus I, Patriarch of Constantinople from 715 to 730, writes "The double crown inscribed on the head of the priest through tonsure represents the precious head of the chief-apostle Peter. When he was sent out in the teaching and preaching of the Lord, his head was shaved by those who did not believe his word, as if in mockery. The Teacher Christ blessed this head, changed dishonour into honour, ridicule into praise. He placed on it a crown made not out of precious stones, but one which shines more than gold, topaz, or precious stone – with the stone and rock of faith.” In the Eastern Orthodox Church today, priests, deacons, readers, and other tonsured offices do not have their heads shaved. Rather, four locks of hair are clipped from the top of the head in the shape of a cross to mark their obedience to the Church.

Monastic tonsure

St. Germanus I writes "The total tonsuring of the head is in imitation of the holy Apostle James, brother of the Lord, and the Apostle Paul, and of the rest."[8]

Western Christianity

 
St Bartholomew (by Carlo Crivelli, 1473, in the Ascoli Piceno Cathedral)
Clerical tonsure

In the Latin Church of the Catholic Church, "first tonsure" was, in medieval times, and generally through 1972,[9] the rite of inducting someone into the clergy and qualifying him for the civil benefits once enjoyed by clerics. Tonsure was a prerequisite for receiving the minor and major orders. Failing to maintain tonsure was the equivalent of attempting to abandon one's clerical state, and in the 1917 Code of Canon Law, any cleric in minor orders (or simply tonsured) who did not resume the tonsure within a month after being warned by his Ordinary lost the clerical state.[10] Over time, the appearance of tonsure varied, ending up for non-monastic clergy as generally consisting of a symbolic cutting of a few tufts of hair at first tonsure in the Sign of the Cross and in wearing a bare spot on the back of the head which varied according to the degree of orders. It was not supposed to be less than the size of a communicant's host, even for a tonsuratus, someone simply tonsured, and the approximate size for a priest's tonsure was the size of a priest's host. Countries that were not Catholic had exceptions to this rule, especially in the English-speaking world. In England and America, for example, the bare spot was dispensed with, likely because of the persecutions that could arise from being a part of the Catholic clergy, but the ceremonious cutting of the hair in the first clerical tonsure was always required. In accordance with Pope Paul VI's motu proprio Ministeria quaedam of 15 August 1972, "first tonsure is no longer conferred".[9]

Monastic tonsure

Apart from this general clerical tonsure, some Western Rite monastic orders, for example Carthusians and Trappists, employed a very full version of tonsure, shaving the head entirely bald and keeping only a narrow ring of short hair, sometimes called "the monastic crown" (see "Roman tonsure", above), from the time of entrance into the monastic novitiate for all monks, whether destined for service as priests or brothers.

Contemporary practice

Eastern Christianity

 
Clerical tonsure (note the scissors in the bishop's hands) of an Orthodox man in conjunction with ordination to minor orders.

Today in Eastern Orthodoxy and in the Eastern Catholic Churches of Byzantine Rite, there are three types of tonsure: baptismal, monastic, and clerical. It always consists of the cutting of four locks of hair in a cruciform pattern: at the front of head as the celebrant says "In the Name of the Father", at the back of head at the words "and the Son", and on either side of the head at the words "and the Holy Spirit". In all cases, the hair is allowed to grow back; the tonsure as such is not adopted as a hairstyle.

Baptismal tonsure

Baptismal tonsure is performed during the rite of Holy Baptism as a first sacrificial offering by the newly baptized. This tonsure is always performed, whether the one being baptized is an infant or an adult.

Monastic tonsure

Monastic tonsure (of which there are three grades: Rassophore, Stavrophore and the Great Schema), is the rite of initiation into the monastic state, symbolic of cutting off of self-will. Orthodox monks traditionally never cut their hair or beards after receiving the monastic tonsure as a sign of the consecration of their lives to God (reminiscent of the Vow of the Nazirite).

Clerical tonsure

Clerical tonsure is the equivalent of the "first tonsure" in the Latin church. It is done immediately prior to ordination to the minor order of reader but is not repeated at subsequent ordinations.[11] This led to a once common usage that one was, for instance, "tonsured a reader", although technically the tonsure occurs prior to the prayer of ordination within the ordination rite.

Western Christianity

Clerical tonsure

Since the issuing of Ministeria quaedam in 1972,[9] certain institutes have been authorized to use the first clerical tonsure, such as the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter (1988), the Institute of Christ the King Sovereign Priest (1990), and the Personal Apostolic Administration of Saint John Mary Vianney (2001).

Although the tonsure itself is obsolete, the wearing of a skull cap, called a zuchetto, in church to keep the head warm, which the fuller form of clerical tonsure led to, still survives. The zuchetto is worn by the pope (in white), cardinals (in red) and bishops (in purple) both during and outside of formal religious ceremonies. Priests may wear a simple black zuchetto, only outside of religious services, though this is almost never seen except on abbots, who continue to wear the black zuchetto, or abbots of the Order of Canons Regular of Premontre, who wear white. Another congregation of Canons Regular, the Canons Regular of the Lateran, wear a white zuchetto as part of their proper habit. Some priests who held special titles (certain ranks of monsignori and some canons, for instance) formerly wore black zuchettos with red or purple piping, but this too has fallen out of use except in a few, extremely rare cases.

Monastic tonsure

Some monastic orders and individual monasteries[which?] still maintain the tradition of a monastic tonsure. While not required, it is still a common practice of Latin Church friars, such as the Franciscan Missionaries of the Eternal Word.[citation needed] Some references compare the tonsure to the crown of thorns worn by Christ at the crucifixion.[12][13]

Hinduism

 
A baby's first haircut, which is often a head shave, is a common rite of passage in Hinduism. It is called Caula, Chudakarana or Mundana sanskara.[14]

Tonsure is usually the part of three rites of passages in the life of the individual in Hinduism. The first is called Chudakarana (IAST: Cūḍākaraṇa, Sanskrit: चूडाकरण; literally, "rite of tonsure"), also known as choulam, caula, chudakarma, or mundana, marks the child's first haircut, typically the shaving of the head.[15] The mother dresses up, sometimes in her wedding sari, and with the father present, the baby's head is shaved and nails trimmed, washed and dressed in new clothes.[16] Sometimes, a tuft of hair is left to cover the soft spot near the top of the baby's head.[15][16] Both boys and girls typically go through this ceremony, sometimes near a temple or a river, but it is not mandatory in Hinduism.[14]

The significance of Chudakarana rite of passage is the baby's cyclical step to hygiene and cleanliness.[17] The ritual is typically done about the first birthday, but some texts recommend that it be completed before the third or the seventh year.[16] Sometimes, this ritual is combined with the rite of passage of Upanayana, initiation to formal schooling.[15][16]

The second rite of passage in Hinduism that sometimes involves tonsure is at the Upanayana, the sanskara marking a child's entry into school.[18]

Another rite of passage where tonsure is practiced by Hindus is after the death and completing the last rites of an immediate family member, that is father, mother, brother, sister, spouse or child. This ritual is regionally found in India among male mourners, who shave their heads as a sign of bereavement.[19] Until a few decades ago, many Hindu communities, especially the upper castes, forced widows to undergo the ritual of tonsure and shun good clothes and ornaments, in order to make them unattractive to men.[20]

According to Jamanadas, tonsure was originally a Buddhist custom and was adopted by Hinduism.[21] However, Pandey and others trace the practice to Sanskrit texts dated to have been composed before the birth of Buddha, which mention tonsure as a rite of passage.[14][16]

Buddhism

In Buddhism, tonsure is a part of the rite of pabbajja and also a part of becoming a Bhikkhu (monk) or Bhikkhuni (nun). This involves shaving the head and face. This tonsure is renewed as often as required to keep the head cleanly shaven.

Judaism

The purification process of the metzora (one afflicted with tzaraath) involved the ritual shaving of the metzorah's entire body except for the afflicted locations.[22]

In an effort to distinguish themselves from ancient practices of tonsure associated with idolatry, by doing the inverse, Orthodox Jewish males do not shave the corners of their beards or scalps with straight blades, as described in Leviticus 19:27.

See also the custom of Upsherin, celebrating a boy's first haircut at the age of three.

Islam

Sunni

Partial tonsure is forbidden in Islam. Muhammad forbade shaving one's hair on some parts of the head while letting it grow on other parts, as in tonsure. However, shaving the head entirely is allowed. The proscription is detailed in the hadith.

عَنِ ابْنِ عُمَرَ أَنَّ رَسُولَ اللَّهِ – صلى الله عليه وسلم – نَهَى عَنِ الْقَزَعِ

From Ibnu 'Umar (he says), the Prophet – peace be upon him – forbids the Qoza‘ (i.e. shaving hair on some parts of the head while let it grow on other parts). Hadith Bukhori V/2214 no.5577 about Al-Qoza‘, and Hadith Muslim III/1675 no.2120, about the Proscription of Al-Qoza‘)[non-primary source needed]

عَنِ ابْنِ عُمَرَ رَأَى النَّبِي صَلَّى الله عَلَيهِ وَسَلَّمَ صَبِياًً قَدْ حلقَ بَعْضَ شَعْرٍ رَأسَه وَ تركَ بَعْضاً فقال: اَحلِقْهُ كُلَّهُ أَوْ دَعْهُ كُلَّهُ

From Ibnu 'Umar (he says), the Prophet – peace be upon him – saw a boy whose head shaven on some parts and let the hair grow on other parts. Then, the Prophet commands, "Shave the head entirely or let the hair grow entirely" Hadith Ahmad II/88, Hadith Abu Dawud no. 4195, and Hadith An-Nasa-i no.5048)[non-primary source needed]

Secular European

Merovingians

Among the Merovingians, whose rulers were the "long-haired kings",[23] the ancient custom remained that an unsuccessful pretender or a dethroned king would be tonsured. Then he had to retire to a monastery, but sometimes this lasted only until his hair grew back.[24] Thus Grimoald the Elder, the son of Pippin of Landen, and Dagobert II's guardian, seized the throne for his own son and had Dagobert tonsured, thus marking him unfit for kingship,[25] and exiled.[26]

Byzantine Empire

The practice of tonsure, coupled with castration, was common for deposed emperors and their sons in Byzantium from around the 8th century, prior to which disfigurement, usually by blinding, was the normal practice.[27]

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ Charlton T. Lewis. "tōnsūra". An Elementary Latin Dictionary. Retrieved August 8, 2015.
  2. ^ a b McCarthy, Daniel (2003). "On the Shape of the Insular Tonsure" (PDF). Celtica. 24: 140–167. Retrieved June 18, 2009.
  3. ^ McCarthy, pp. 147–150
  4. ^ McCarthy, p. 140.
  5. ^ McCarthy
  6. ^ Churchill, Winston S., "A History of the English Speaking Peoples The Birth of Britain", Book 1, "The Island Race", 1956, Dodd, Mead and Company, New York, p. 55
  7. ^ Carver, 2009
  8. ^ St. Germanus:69
  9. ^ a b c [1] "motu proprio", Retrieved 2011-08-14
  10. ^ Canon 136 par 3, 1917 Code of Canon Law
  11. ^ In the West, the minor orders were those of porter, lector, exorcist and acolyte, and the major orders were subdiaconate, diaconate and priesthood, with the rank of bishop usually being considered a fuller form of priesthood. In the East, the minor orders are those of reader and subdeacon, (and, in some places, acolyte); the orders of doorkeeper (porter) and exorcist (catechist) now having fallen into disuse.
  12. ^ O'Reilly, Jennifer (19 June 2019). Early Medieval Text and Image Volume 2: The Codex Amiatinus, the Book of Kells and Anglo-Saxon Art. Routledge. p. 83. ISBN 978-1-000-00872-2.
  13. ^ Sherrow, Victoria (2006). Encyclopedia of Hair: A Cultural History. Greenwood Publishing Group. p. 272. ISBN 978-0-313-33145-9.
  14. ^ a b c Rajbali Pandey (2013), Hindu Saṁskāras: Socio-religious Study of the Hindu Sacraments, 2nd Edition, Motilal Banarsidass, ISBN 978-8120803961, pp. 94–100.
  15. ^ a b c Mary McGee (2007), "Samskara", in The Hindu World (Editors: Mittal and Thursby), Routledge, ISBN 978-0415772273, pp. 342–343.
  16. ^ a b c d e PV Kane, Samskara, Chapter VI, History of Dharmasastras, Vol. II, Part I, Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute, pp. 260–265
  17. ^ Rajbali Pandey (2013), Hindu Saṁskāras: Socio-religious Study of the Hindu Sacraments, 2nd Edition, Motilal Banarsidass, ISBN 978-8120803961, pp. 94–95
  18. ^ Jörg Gengnagel and Ute Hüsken (2005), Words and Deeds: Hindu and Buddhist Rituals in South Asia, Otto Harrassowitz Verlag, ISBN 978-3447051521, pp. 204–205.
  19. ^ Deborah Weymont and Tina Rae (2006), Supporting Young People Coping with Grief, Loss and Death, SAGE Publications, ISBN 978-1412913126, p. 75
  20. ^ Reddy, P. Adinarayana, ed. (2004). Problems of widows in India (1st ed.). New Delhi: Sarup & Sons. pp. 42, 119, 124–130. ISBN 978-8176254793.
  21. ^ K. Jamanadas (1991). Tirupati Balaji was a Buddhist Shrine. Sanjivan Publications. The traditional custom of tonsures performed at Tirumalai as religious ceremony can not be viewed upon as a custom of the Brahmanic [Hindu] religion.
  22. ^ Mishnah Nega'im 2:4
  23. ^ Gregory of Tours' reges criniti
  24. ^ Gregory of Tours, History of the Franks, II.41.
  25. ^ J. Hoyaux, "Reges criniti: chevelures, tonsures et scalps chez les Mérovingiens," Revue belge de philologie et d'histoire, 26 (1948)]; J. M. Wallace-Hadrill, The Long-Haired Kings and Other Essays (London, 1962:154ff).
  26. ^ See also Conrad Leyser, "Long-haired kings and short-haired nuns: writing on the body in Caesarius of Arles", Studia patristica 24 1993.
  27. ^ Byzantium, John Julius Norwich, Viking Press, 1988.

Bibliography

  • Beda Venerabilis (1896). Venerabilis Baedae Historiam ecclesiasticam gentis Anglorum, Historiam abbatum, Epistolam ad Ecgberctum, una cum Historia abbatum auctore anonymo, ad fidem codicum manuscriptorum denuo recognovit. Charles Plummer (ed.). Oxonii: e typographeo Clarendoniano.
  • Archbishop Averky. . Liturgics (by Archbishop Averky, d. 1976). Archived from the original on 2011-07-26. Retrieved 2011-08-20.
  • Saint Germanus of Constantinople (715–730). Meyendorff, Fr. John (ed.). St. Germanus of Constantinople on the Divine Liturgy. Crestwood, NY: St. Vladimir's Seminary Press (published 1984). ISBN 0-88141-038-1.
  • McCarthy, Daniel (2003). "On the Shape of the Insular Tonsure" (PDF). Celtica. 24: 140–167. Retrieved June 18, 2009.
  • Robinson, Nalbro Frazier (1916). Monasticism in the Orthodox Churches. Milwaukee, WI: Young churchman Company. ISBN 0-404-05375-0.
  • Sokolof, Archpriest Dimitrii (1899). Manual of the Orthodox Church's Divine Services. Jordanville, New York: Holy Trinity Monastery (published 2001). ISBN 0-88465-067-7.
  • The Great Book of Needs: Expanded and Supplemented (Volume 1): The Holy Mysteries (v. 1). South Canaan, Pennsylvania: Saint Tikhon's Seminary Press. 2000. ISBN 1-878997-56-4.

External links

  •   The dictionary definition of tonsure at Wiktionary
  •   Media related to Tonsure at Wikimedia Commons
  • The Tonsure of Peter, of Paul, and of John by Dr. Taylor Marshall
  • The Form of the Celtic Tonsure II. An Examination of Original Documents on the Question of the Form of the Celtic Tonsure
  • On the Shape of the Insular Tonsure
  • (Russian Orthodox)

tonsure, practice, cutting, shaving, some, hair, scalp, sign, religious, devotion, humility, term, originates, from, latin, word, tonsura, meaning, clipping, shearing, referred, specific, practice, medieval, catholicism, abandoned, papal, order, 1972, also, re. Tonsure ˈ t ɒ n ʃ er is the practice of cutting or shaving some or all of the hair on the scalp as a sign of religious devotion or humility The term originates from the Latin word tonsura meaning clipping or shearing 1 and referred to a specific practice in medieval Catholicism abandoned by papal order in 1972 Tonsure can also refer to the secular practice of shaving all or part of the scalp to show support or sympathy or to designate mourning Current usage more generally refers to cutting or shaving for monks devotees or mystics of any religion as a symbol of their renunciation of worldly fashion and esteem Roman tonsure Catholicism Tonsure is still a traditional practice in Catholicism by specific religious orders with papal permission It is also commonly used in the Eastern Orthodox Church for newly baptised members and is frequently used for Buddhist novices monks and nuns The complete shaving of one s head bald or just shortening the hair exists as a traditional practice in Islam after completion of the Hajj and is also practised by a number of Hindu religious orders Contents 1 Christianity 1 1 History and development 1 2 Ancient and medieval usage 1 2 1 Eastern Christianity 1 2 1 1 Clerical tonsure 1 2 1 2 Monastic tonsure 1 2 2 Western Christianity 1 2 2 1 Clerical tonsure 1 2 2 2 Monastic tonsure 1 3 Contemporary practice 1 3 1 Eastern Christianity 1 3 1 1 Baptismal tonsure 1 3 1 2 Monastic tonsure 1 3 1 3 Clerical tonsure 1 3 2 Western Christianity 1 3 2 1 Clerical tonsure 1 3 2 2 Monastic tonsure 2 Hinduism 3 Buddhism 4 Judaism 5 Islam 5 1 Sunni 6 Secular European 6 1 Merovingians 6 2 Byzantine Empire 7 See also 8 References 8 1 Notes 8 2 Bibliography 9 External linksChristianity Edit Celtic stone head from ancient Bohemia 150 50 BC possibly depicting the form of the later Celtic Christian tonsure History and development Edit Tonsure was not widely known in antiquity Tradition states that it originated with the disciples of Jesus who observed the Torah command not to shave the hair around the sides of one s head Leviticus 19 27 There were three forms of tonsure known in the 7th and 8th centuries The Oriental which claimed the authority of Saint Paul the Apostle Acts 18 18 and consisted of shaving the whole head This was observed in the Eastern churches including the Eastern Orthodox Church and the Eastern Catholic Churches Hence Theodore of Tarsus who had acquired his learning in Byzantine Asia Minor and bore this tonsure had to allow his hair to grow for four months before he could be tonsured after the Roman fashion and then ordained Archbishop of Canterbury by Pope Vitalian in 668 The Celtic tonsure the exact shape of which is unclear from the sources but in some way involved shaving the head from ear to ear 2 The shape may have been semicircular arcing forward from a line between the ears but another popular suggestion less borne out in the sources proposes that the entire forehead was shaved back to the ears 3 More recently a triangular shape with one point at the front of the head going back to a line between the ears has been suggested 2 The Celtic tonsure was worn in Ireland and Great Britain and was connected to the distinct set of practices known as Celtic Christianity 4 It was opposed by the Roman tradition but many adherents to the Celtic tradition continued to maintain the old way well into the 8th and 9th centuries 5 Some sources have also suggested links between this tonsure and that worn by druids in the Pre Roman Iron Age 6 7 The Roman this consisted of shaving only the top of the head so as to allow the hair to grow in the form of a crown This is claimed to have originated with Saint Peter and is the practice of the Latin Church of the Catholic Church Ancient and medieval usage Edit Eastern Christianity Edit Clerical tonsure Edit St Germanus I Patriarch of Constantinople from 715 to 730 writes The double crown inscribed on the head of the priest through tonsure represents the precious head of the chief apostle Peter When he was sent out in the teaching and preaching of the Lord his head was shaved by those who did not believe his word as if in mockery The Teacher Christ blessed this head changed dishonour into honour ridicule into praise He placed on it a crown made not out of precious stones but one which shines more than gold topaz or precious stone with the stone and rock of faith In the Eastern Orthodox Church today priests deacons readers and other tonsured offices do not have their heads shaved Rather four locks of hair are clipped from the top of the head in the shape of a cross to mark their obedience to the Church Monastic tonsure Edit St Germanus I writes The total tonsuring of the head is in imitation of the holy Apostle James brother of the Lord and the Apostle Paul and of the rest 8 Western Christianity Edit St Bartholomew by Carlo Crivelli 1473 in the Ascoli Piceno Cathedral Clerical tonsure Edit In the Latin Church of the Catholic Church first tonsure was in medieval times and generally through 1972 9 the rite of inducting someone into the clergy and qualifying him for the civil benefits once enjoyed by clerics Tonsure was a prerequisite for receiving the minor and major orders Failing to maintain tonsure was the equivalent of attempting to abandon one s clerical state and in the 1917 Code of Canon Law any cleric in minor orders or simply tonsured who did not resume the tonsure within a month after being warned by his Ordinary lost the clerical state 10 Over time the appearance of tonsure varied ending up for non monastic clergy as generally consisting of a symbolic cutting of a few tufts of hair at first tonsure in the Sign of the Cross and in wearing a bare spot on the back of the head which varied according to the degree of orders It was not supposed to be less than the size of a communicant s host even for a tonsuratus someone simply tonsured and the approximate size for a priest s tonsure was the size of a priest s host Countries that were not Catholic had exceptions to this rule especially in the English speaking world In England and America for example the bare spot was dispensed with likely because of the persecutions that could arise from being a part of the Catholic clergy but the ceremonious cutting of the hair in the first clerical tonsure was always required In accordance with Pope Paul VI s motu proprio Ministeria quaedam of 15 August 1972 first tonsure is no longer conferred 9 Monastic tonsure Edit Apart from this general clerical tonsure some Western Rite monastic orders for example Carthusians and Trappists employed a very full version of tonsure shaving the head entirely bald and keeping only a narrow ring of short hair sometimes called the monastic crown see Roman tonsure above from the time of entrance into the monastic novitiate for all monks whether destined for service as priests or brothers Contemporary practice Edit Eastern Christianity Edit Clerical tonsure note the scissors in the bishop s hands of an Orthodox man in conjunction with ordination to minor orders Today in Eastern Orthodoxy and in the Eastern Catholic Churches of Byzantine Rite there are three types of tonsure baptismal monastic and clerical It always consists of the cutting of four locks of hair in a cruciform pattern at the front of head as the celebrant says In the Name of the Father at the back of head at the words and the Son and on either side of the head at the words and the Holy Spirit In all cases the hair is allowed to grow back the tonsure as such is not adopted as a hairstyle Baptismal tonsure Edit Baptismal tonsure is performed during the rite of Holy Baptism as a first sacrificial offering by the newly baptized This tonsure is always performed whether the one being baptized is an infant or an adult Monastic tonsure Edit Monastic tonsure of which there are three grades Rassophore Stavrophore and the Great Schema is the rite of initiation into the monastic state symbolic of cutting off of self will Orthodox monks traditionally never cut their hair or beards after receiving the monastic tonsure as a sign of the consecration of their lives to God reminiscent of the Vow of the Nazirite Clerical tonsure Edit Clerical tonsure is the equivalent of the first tonsure in the Latin church It is done immediately prior to ordination to the minor order of reader but is not repeated at subsequent ordinations 11 This led to a once common usage that one was for instance tonsured a reader although technically the tonsure occurs prior to the prayer of ordination within the ordination rite Western Christianity Edit Clerical tonsure Edit Since the issuing of Ministeria quaedam in 1972 9 certain institutes have been authorized to use the first clerical tonsure such as the Priestly Fraternity of Saint Peter 1988 the Institute of Christ the King Sovereign Priest 1990 and the Personal Apostolic Administration of Saint John Mary Vianney 2001 Although the tonsure itself is obsolete the wearing of a skull cap called a zuchetto in church to keep the head warm which the fuller form of clerical tonsure led to still survives The zuchetto is worn by the pope in white cardinals in red and bishops in purple both during and outside of formal religious ceremonies Priests may wear a simple black zuchetto only outside of religious services though this is almost never seen except on abbots who continue to wear the black zuchetto or abbots of the Order of Canons Regular of Premontre who wear white Another congregation of Canons Regular the Canons Regular of the Lateran wear a white zuchetto as part of their proper habit Some priests who held special titles certain ranks of monsignori and some canons for instance formerly wore black zuchettos with red or purple piping but this too has fallen out of use except in a few extremely rare cases Monastic tonsure Edit Some monastic orders and individual monasteries which still maintain the tradition of a monastic tonsure While not required it is still a common practice of Latin Church friars such as the Franciscan Missionaries of the Eternal Word citation needed Some references compare the tonsure to the crown of thorns worn by Christ at the crucifixion 12 13 Hinduism EditMain article Sanskara rite of passage A baby s first haircut which is often a head shave is a common rite of passage in Hinduism It is called Caula Chudakarana or Mundana sanskara 14 Tonsure is usually the part of three rites of passages in the life of the individual in Hinduism The first is called Chudakarana IAST Cuḍakaraṇa Sanskrit च ड करण literally rite of tonsure also known as choulam caula chudakarma or mundana marks the child s first haircut typically the shaving of the head 15 The mother dresses up sometimes in her wedding sari and with the father present the baby s head is shaved and nails trimmed washed and dressed in new clothes 16 Sometimes a tuft of hair is left to cover the soft spot near the top of the baby s head 15 16 Both boys and girls typically go through this ceremony sometimes near a temple or a river but it is not mandatory in Hinduism 14 The significance of Chudakarana rite of passage is the baby s cyclical step to hygiene and cleanliness 17 The ritual is typically done about the first birthday but some texts recommend that it be completed before the third or the seventh year 16 Sometimes this ritual is combined with the rite of passage of Upanayana initiation to formal schooling 15 16 The second rite of passage in Hinduism that sometimes involves tonsure is at the Upanayana the sanskara marking a child s entry into school 18 Another rite of passage where tonsure is practiced by Hindus is after the death and completing the last rites of an immediate family member that is father mother brother sister spouse or child This ritual is regionally found in India among male mourners who shave their heads as a sign of bereavement 19 Until a few decades ago many Hindu communities especially the upper castes forced widows to undergo the ritual of tonsure and shun good clothes and ornaments in order to make them unattractive to men 20 According to Jamanadas tonsure was originally a Buddhist custom and was adopted by Hinduism 21 However Pandey and others trace the practice to Sanskrit texts dated to have been composed before the birth of Buddha which mention tonsure as a rite of passage 14 16 Buddhism EditThis section needs expansion You can help by adding to it March 2018 In Buddhism tonsure is a part of the rite of pabbajja and also a part of becoming a Bhikkhu monk or Bhikkhuni nun This involves shaving the head and face This tonsure is renewed as often as required to keep the head cleanly shaven Judaism EditThe purification process of the metzora one afflicted with tzaraath involved the ritual shaving of the metzorah s entire body except for the afflicted locations 22 In an effort to distinguish themselves from ancient practices of tonsure associated with idolatry by doing the inverse Orthodox Jewish males do not shave the corners of their beards or scalps with straight blades as described in Leviticus 19 27 See also the custom of Upsherin celebrating a boy s first haircut at the age of three Islam EditSunni Edit Partial tonsure is forbidden in Islam Muhammad forbade shaving one s hair on some parts of the head while letting it grow on other parts as in tonsure However shaving the head entirely is allowed The proscription is detailed in the hadith ع ن اب ن ع م ر أ ن ر س ول الل ه صلى الله عليه وسلم ن ه ى ع ن ال ق ز ع From Ibnu Umar he says the Prophet peace be upon him forbids the Qoza i e shaving hair on some parts of the head while let it grow on other parts Hadith Bukhori V 2214 no 5577 about Al Qoza and Hadith Muslim III 1675 no 2120 about the Proscription of Al Qoza non primary source needed ع ن اب ن ع م ر ر أ ى الن ب ي ص ل ى الله ع ل يه و س ل م ص ب يا ق د حلق ب ع ض ش ع ر ر أس ه و ترك ب ع ضا فقال ا حل ق ه ك ل ه أ و د ع ه ك ل ه From Ibnu Umar he says the Prophet peace be upon him saw a boy whose head shaven on some parts and let the hair grow on other parts Then the Prophet commands Shave the head entirely or let the hair grow entirely Hadith Ahmad II 88 Hadith Abu Dawud no 4195 and Hadith An Nasa i no 5048 non primary source needed Secular European EditMerovingians Edit Among the Merovingians whose rulers were the long haired kings 23 the ancient custom remained that an unsuccessful pretender or a dethroned king would be tonsured Then he had to retire to a monastery but sometimes this lasted only until his hair grew back 24 Thus Grimoald the Elder the son of Pippin of Landen and Dagobert II s guardian seized the throne for his own son and had Dagobert tonsured thus marking him unfit for kingship 25 and exiled 26 Byzantine Empire Edit The practice of tonsure coupled with castration was common for deposed emperors and their sons in Byzantium from around the 8th century prior to which disfigurement usually by blinding was the normal practice 27 See also EditBede Buddhism Chariton the Confessor 3th 4th c compiled the Office of the Monastic Tonsure Head shaving List of hair styles Male pattern hair loss Monasticism Mundan ceremony Nun Religious order Rule of St Benedict Queue hairstyle SikhaReferences EditNotes Edit Charlton T Lewis tōnsura An Elementary Latin Dictionary Retrieved August 8 2015 a b McCarthy Daniel 2003 On the Shape of the Insular Tonsure PDF Celtica 24 140 167 Retrieved June 18 2009 McCarthy pp 147 150 McCarthy p 140 McCarthy Churchill Winston S A History of the English Speaking Peoples The Birth of Britain Book 1 The Island Race 1956 Dodd Mead and Company New York p 55 Carver 2009 St Germanus 69 a b c 1 motu proprio Retrieved 2011 08 14 Canon 136 par 3 1917 Code of Canon Law In the West the minor orders were those of porter lector exorcist and acolyte and the major orders were subdiaconate diaconate and priesthood with the rank of bishop usually being considered a fuller form of priesthood In the East the minor orders are those of reader and subdeacon and in some places acolyte the orders of doorkeeper porter and exorcist catechist now having fallen into disuse O Reilly Jennifer 19 June 2019 Early Medieval Text and Image Volume 2 The Codex Amiatinus the Book of Kells and Anglo Saxon Art Routledge p 83 ISBN 978 1 000 00872 2 Sherrow Victoria 2006 Encyclopedia of Hair A Cultural History Greenwood Publishing Group p 272 ISBN 978 0 313 33145 9 a b c Rajbali Pandey 2013 Hindu Saṁskaras Socio religious Study of the Hindu Sacraments 2nd Edition Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120803961 pp 94 100 a b c Mary McGee 2007 Samskara in The Hindu World Editors Mittal and Thursby Routledge ISBN 978 0415772273 pp 342 343 a b c d e PV Kane Samskara Chapter VI History of Dharmasastras Vol II Part I Bhandarkar Oriental Research Institute pp 260 265 Rajbali Pandey 2013 Hindu Saṁskaras Socio religious Study of the Hindu Sacraments 2nd Edition Motilal Banarsidass ISBN 978 8120803961 pp 94 95 Jorg Gengnagel and Ute Husken 2005 Words and Deeds Hindu and Buddhist Rituals in South Asia Otto Harrassowitz Verlag ISBN 978 3447051521 pp 204 205 Deborah Weymont and Tina Rae 2006 Supporting Young People Coping with Grief Loss and Death SAGE Publications ISBN 978 1412913126 p 75 Reddy P Adinarayana ed 2004 Problems of widows in India 1st ed New Delhi Sarup amp Sons pp 42 119 124 130 ISBN 978 8176254793 K Jamanadas 1991 Tirupati Balaji was a Buddhist Shrine Sanjivan Publications The traditional custom of tonsures performed at Tirumalai as religious ceremony can not be viewed upon as a custom of the Brahmanic Hindu religion Mishnah Nega im 2 4 Gregory of Tours reges criniti Gregory of Tours History of the Franks II 41 J Hoyaux Reges criniti chevelures tonsures et scalps chez les Merovingiens Revue belge de philologie et d histoire 26 1948 J M Wallace Hadrill The Long Haired Kings and Other Essays London 1962 154ff See also Conrad Leyser Long haired kings and short haired nuns writing on the body in Caesarius of Arles Studia patristica 24 1993 Byzantium John Julius Norwich Viking Press 1988 Bibliography Edit Beda Venerabilis 1896 Venerabilis Baedae Historiam ecclesiasticam gentis Anglorum Historiam abbatum Epistolam ad Ecgberctum una cum Historia abbatum auctore anonymo ad fidem codicum manuscriptorum denuo recognovit Charles Plummer ed Oxonii e typographeo Clarendoniano Archbishop Averky Liturgics Liturgics by Archbishop Averky d 1976 Archived from the original on 2011 07 26 Retrieved 2011 08 20 Saint Germanus of Constantinople 715 730 Meyendorff Fr John ed St Germanus of Constantinople on the Divine Liturgy Crestwood NY St Vladimir s Seminary Press published 1984 ISBN 0 88141 038 1 McCarthy Daniel 2003 On the Shape of the Insular Tonsure PDF Celtica 24 140 167 Retrieved June 18 2009 Robinson Nalbro Frazier 1916 Monasticism in the Orthodox Churches Milwaukee WI Young churchman Company ISBN 0 404 05375 0 Sokolof Archpriest Dimitrii 1899 Manual of the Orthodox Church s Divine Services Jordanville New York Holy Trinity Monastery published 2001 ISBN 0 88465 067 7 The Great Book of Needs Expanded and Supplemented Volume 1 The Holy Mysteries v 1 South Canaan Pennsylvania Saint Tikhon s Seminary Press 2000 ISBN 1 878997 56 4 External links Edit The dictionary definition of tonsure at Wiktionary Media related to Tonsure at Wikimedia Commons The Tonsure of Peter of Paul and of John by Dr Taylor Marshall The Form of the Celtic Tonsure II An Examination of Original Documents on the Question of the Form of the Celtic Tonsure On the Shape of the Insular Tonsure Clerical Tonsure Russian Orthodox Baptismal tonsure Clerical tonsure Monastic tonsure Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Tonsure amp oldid 1143290557, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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