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Les funérailles d Étienne Chevalier

Funeral processin arriving at the church. The coffin is covered with an elaborate red pall. Heures d'Étienne Chevalier (Musée Condé, Chantilly)

A pall (also called mortcloth) is a cloth which covers a coffin at funerals.[1] The word comes from the Latin pallium (cloak), through Old English.[2]

The use of a rich cloth pall to cover the coffin during the funeral grew during the Middle Ages; initially these were brightly coloured and patterned, only later black, and later still white. They were usually then given to the Church to use for vestments or other decorations.[3]

The rules for the pall's colour and use vary depending on religious and cultural traditions. Commonly today palls are pure white, to symbolize the white clothes worn during baptism, and the joyful triumph over death brought about by the Resurrection. The colour is not fixed, though, and may vary with the liturgical season. Traditionally, it is common for the pall, as well as the vestments of the clergy to be black. The pall will often be decorated with a cross, often running the whole length of the cloth from end to end in all four directions, signifying the sovereignty of Christ's triumph over sin and death on the cross.

Funeral of Patriarch Alexy II-3

The funeral of Patriarch Alexy II of Moscow. The patriarchal mandyas is draped over his coffin as a pall.

The pall is placed on the coffin as soon as it arrives at the church, and will remain on the coffin during all of proceedings in the church. If the family members wish to view the deceased, this would normally be done previously at the funeral home before the coffin is brought to the church; but customs will vary from denomination to denomination. The pall will be removed at the graveside, just before the coffin is lowered into the ground. But if the remains are to be cremated, there will be a curtain which the pall-covered coffin will go through, and behind which the pall will be removed.

In the Eastern Orthodox Church the pall often bears a depiction of the cross and instruments of the Passion as well as the text of the Trisagion hymn. Since Orthodox funerals are normally open casket, the pall comes up only to the chest of the deceased. When an Orthodox bishop dies his mandyas (mantle) is used as a pall.

Military funerals often use the nation's flag as a pall. In the United Kingdom, members of the Royal Family or the peerage may use a flag bearing their arms as a pall.

References[]

  1. Wikisource-logo "Pall". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton Company. 1913. http://en.wikisource.org/wiki/Catholic_Encyclopedia_(1913)/Pall. 
  2. pall - Definitions from Dictionary.com
  3. Françoise Piponnier and Perrine Mane; Dress in the Middle Ages; p. 151, Yale UP, 1997; ISBN 0300069065

See also[]

Template:Death-stub

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