The other issue that the duplications create is that they set up an apparent hierarchy of things that should have a person's liturgical attention (and participation) at any point
I have no interest in implementing such things unless they carry Rome's express approval (and rather wish that the attitude across the board was geared towards allowing Rome to regulate the rites, which has been with Rome since Trent... perhaps having learned from the lessons of the 1970s that lobbying and campaigns do not produce particularly good fruits).
Here's a 9th-century example that I sometime refer to, Troyes 522:Here is a Missale from 1301-1400 A.D. Plenty of others are available some of them very similar to an Altar Missal for say 1950.
Dare we add to this list the alteration of the Missal texts to bring them into conformity with the Vulgate? The Pius X/Solesmes chant reforms? The Pius XII Holy Week reforms? We tend to underestimate the effects of technology: the printing press, electric lighting, microphones and amplification. Extensive, immediate liturgical changes just weren't possible in the manuscript days.Increasingly, it appears to me that the silent duplications of the Roman Rite are a kind of historical accident, very much a product of their time, perhaps best put in the same archival box as the Medicean chant reforms, the bowdlerising of the Office hymns and (dare I say) the Pius XII Psalter.
Due respect for one of the proverbial ancestors may mean less or no respect for one of the others!
Palestrina was lauded and mentioned by name in articles on sacred music published by the Holy See
Did all religious orders complain? Did every separate house of the Benedictines complain? How did this effect Sarum and all the other Uses that were gradually abandoned by the 18th century?Bringing things together (somewhat):
1. The forced introduction of duplications into the rites of the religious orders suggests this was a later development in the Roman Rite (and not welcomed universally).
Was this a uniform prohibition? Did it affect Sarum? How many local Uses were affected?2. The evidence of a prior prohibition against commencing the Canon in the Medieval period suggests that the practice was apparently introduced and not original.
I don't think this makes any sense.3. While the absence of evidence is not evidence of absence in relation to the Roman Rite, given the common origins of the rites of the religious orders, one might draw the inference that the developments in the Roman Rite that were forced upon the other liturgies were not a common, universally-held-to-be logical or necessarily organic(!) development.
The Trent Missal was the Ancient Missal of the Canons of Rome, unless someone can find the Rubrics they used we have no idea one way of the other.I certainly don’t think it is productive to begin a discussion about this from a presumptive position that Trent pruned and otherwise simplify ratified the existing rubrical practices;
tomjaw, the evidence you seek is set out nearly in the article on the Sanctus in the Catholic Encyclopedia (including the relevant sources).
The scanty state of our knowledge about the early Roman Mass ...
I do not know that it is entirely accurate to say that the Trent Missal is the Ancient Missal of the Canons of Rome
As to the updating of liturgical texts to conform to the Vulgate, I am unsure what the rationale could have been. Surely some of the textual sources of the rites predate the Vulgate?
Historians are an interesting group, they tell us all about the past from a collection of sources that have survived, they tell us things that are one discovery from being shown to be false. They also see to forget that only a minority of material has survived and we have no idea if it is representative.
As for Adrian Fortescue, the book he is most famous for is mainly the work of J.B. O'Connell, who had to do some major corrections.
. . . or otherwise he had no taste whatsoever.
I do not understand this assertion. The Pian Psalter produced by Bea while he was a professor at the Pontifical Biblical Institute, was granted optional use in the Breviary in 1945 by PiusXII, it was never used at Mass AFAIK. JohnXXIII was not a fan,and it was allowed to fade away quietly.The Propers for the last century use the Cardinal Bea translation...
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