Bl. Maurus Magnentius Rabanus

 Rabbi and Rabbinism

 Rabbulas

 François Rabelais

 Raccolta

 Human Race

 Negro Race

 Rachel

 Jean Racine

 Matthew Rader

 Florens Radewyns

 Joseph Maria von Radowitz

 Radulph of Rivo

 Pierre Raffeix

 Paul Ragueneau

 Diocese of Ragusa

 Johann Michael Raich

 Marcantonio Raimondi

 Rainald of Dassel

 Prefecture Apostolic of Rajpootana

 Sebastian Râle (Rasle)

 Ven. Ralph Crockett

 Bl. Ralph Sherwin

 Pierre François Xavier de Ram

 Ramatha

 The Rambler

 Jean-Philippe Rameau

 Ramsey Abbey

 Peter Ramus

 Jean-Armand le Bouthillier de Rancé

 James Ryder Randall

 Feast of Our Lady of Ransom

 St. Raphael

 Raphael

 Diocese of Raphoe

 René Rapin

 Raskolniks

 Andreas Räss

 Joseph Rathborne

 Ratherius of Verona

 Rationale

 Rationalism

 Ratio Studiorum

 Diocese of Ratisbon

 Maria Alphonse Ratisbonne

 Maria Theodor Ratisbonne

 Ratramnus

 Georg Ratzinger

 Joseph Othmar Rauscher

 Antonio Ravalli

 Archdiocese of Ravenna

 Josse Ravesteyn

 Gustave Xavier Lacroix de Ravignan

 Henry Augustus Rawes

 Charles Raymbault

 Raymond IV, of Saint-Gilles

 Raymond VI

 Raymond VII

 Raymond Lully

 Raymond Martini

 St. Raymond Nonnatus

 St. Raymond of Penafort

 Raymond of Sabunde

 Odorico Raynaldi

 Théophile Raynaud

 François-Juste-Marie Raynouard

 Reading Abbey

 Reason

 Diocese of Recanati and Loreto

 Rechab and the Rechabites

 Recollection

 Rector

 Rector Potens, Verax Deus

 English Recusants

 Feast of the Most Holy Redeemer

 Knights of the Redeemer

 Redemption

 Redemption in the Old Testament

 Penitential Redemptions

 Redemptoristines

 Redemptorists

 Sebastian Redford

 Francesco Redi

 Augustine Reding

 Red Sea

 Reductions of Paraguay

 Referendarii

 The Reformation

 Reformed Churches

 Reform of a Religious Order

 Cities of Refuge

 Sisters of Our Lady of Charity of the Refuge

 Droit de Regale

 Regalia

 Regeneration

 Papal Regesta

 Archdiocese of Reggio di Calabria

 Diocese of Reggio dell' Emilia

 Diocese of Regina

 Regina Coeli (Queen of Heaven)

 Antonin Reginald

 Reginald of Piperno

 Regino of Prüm

 Regionarii

 Jean-Baptiste Régis

 Pierre Sylvain Régis

 Parochial Registers

 Henri Victor Regnault

 Regulæ Juris

 Regulars

 Reichenau

 August Reichensberger

 Peter Reichensberger

 Reifenstein

 Johann Georg Reiffenstuel

 Archdiocese of Reims

 Synods of Reims

 Reinmar of Hagenau

 Carl von Reisach

 Gregor Reisch

 Relationship

 Duties of Relatives

 Relativism

 Relics

 Religion

 Virtue of Religion

 Religious Life

 Reliquaries

 Remesiana

 St. Remigius

 Remigius of Auxerre

 Remiremont

 Ven. Anne-Madeleine Remuzat

 Abbey of Saint Remy

 The Renaissance

 Eusebius Renaudot

 Théophraste Renaudot

 Guido Reni

 Archdiocese of Rennes

 Gaston Jean Baptiste de Renty

 Renunciation

 Reordinations

 Reparation

 Philip Repington

 Altar of Repose

 Reputation (as Property)

 Masses of Requiem

 Rerum Creator Optime

 Rerum Deus Tenax Vigor

 Rerum Novarum

 Papal Rescripts

 Reservation

 Reservation of the Blessed Sacrament

 Reserved Cases

 Ecclesiastical Residence

 Lorenzo Respighi

 Responsorium

 Restitution

 Resurrection

 Congregation of the Resurrection

 Alfred Rethel

 Congregation of the Retreat of the Sacred Heart

 Retreats

 Cardinal Jean-François-Paul-Gondi de Retz

 Johannes Reuchlin

 Alfred von Reumont

 Edmond Reusens

 Reuss

 Volume 14

 Revelation

 Private Revelations

 Revocation

 English Revolution of 1688

 French Revolution

 Rex Gloriose Martyrum

 Rex Sempiterne Cælitum

 Anthony Rey

 William Reynolds

 Prefecture Apostolic of Rhætia

 Rhaphanæa

 Joseph Gabriel Rheinberger

 Rhesæna

 Rhinocolura

 Rhithymna

 Rhizus

 Giacomo Rho

 Rhode Island

 Alexandre de Rhodes

 Rhodes

 Rhodesia

 Rhodiopolis

 Rhodo

 Rhosus

 Rhymed Bibles

 Rhythmical Office

 Pedro de Ribadeneira

 Andrés Pérez De Ribas

 Diocese of Ribeirao Preto

 Jusepe de Ribera

 Ricardus Anglicus

 Nicholas Riccardi

 Lorenzo Ricci

 Matteo Ricci

 Giovanni Battista Riccioli

 Edmund Ignatius Rice

 Richard

 Richard I, King Of England

 Charles-Louis Richard

 Richard de Bury

 François-Marie-Benjamin Richard de la Vergne

 St. Richard de Wyche

 Bl. Richard Fetherston

 Richard of Cirencester

 Richard of Cornwall

 Richard of Middletown

 Richard of St. Victor

 Ven. William Richardson

 Bl. Richard Thirkeld

 Bl. Richard Whiting

 Armand-Jean du Plessis, Duke de Richelieu

 Richer

 Diocese of Richmond

 Ricoldo da Monte di Croce

 Tillmann Riemenschneider

 Cola di Rienzi

 Diocese of Rieti

 Abbey of Rievaulx

 Caspar Riffel

 Ven. John Rigby

 Nicholas Rigby

 Right

 St. Rimbert

 Council of Rimini

 Diocese of Rimini

 Diocese of Rimouski

 Rings

 Giovanni Battista Rinuccini

 Alexis-François Rio

 Diocese of Riobamba

 Prefecture Apostolic of Rio Negro

 Juan Martínez de Ripalda

 Diocese of Ripatransone

 Marquess of Ripon

 Richard Risby

 William Rishanger

 Edward Rishton

 St. Rita of Cascia

 Rites

 Rites in the United States

 Ritschlianism

 Joseph Ignatius Ritter

 Ritual

 Ritualists

 Luke Rivington

 José Mercado Rizal

 Andrea della Robbia

 Luca di Simone della Robbia

 St. Robert

 Robert of Arbrissel

 Robert of Courçon

 Robert of Geneva

 Robert of Jumièges

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 St. Robert of Molesme

 St. Robert of Newminster

 Robert Pullus

 Ven. John Roberts

 James Burton Robertson

 Ven. Christopher Robinson

 William Callyhan Robinson

 Juan Tomás de Rocaberti

 Rocamadour

 Angelo Rocca

 St. Roch

 Jean-Baptiste-Donatien de Vimeur, Count de Rochambeau

 Ancient See of Rochester

 Diocese of Rochester

 Rochet

 Désiré Raoul Rochette

 Daniel Rock

 Diocese of Rockford

 Diocese of Rockhampton

 Rococo Style

 Diocese of Rodez

 Alexandre Rodrigues Ferreira

 Alonso Rodriguez

 Joao Rodriguez

 Bartholomew Roe

 Diocese of Roermond

 Rogation Days

 Roger

 Roger Bacon

 Ven. Roger Cadwallador

 Roger of Hoveden

 Roger of Wendover

 Peter Roh

 Rohault de Fleury

 Réné François Rohrbacher

 Francisco de Rojas y Zorrilla

 John Gage Rokewode

 Rolduc

 Hermann Rolfus

 Richard Rolle de Hampole

 Charles Rollin

 Rolls Series

 Thomas Rolph

 Roman Catechism

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 Roman Catholic Relief Bill

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 St. Romanos

 Constitutio Romanos Pontifices

 The Roman Rite

 Epistle to the Romans

 Sts. Romanus

 Pope Romanus

 Rome

 Juan Romero

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 Romulus Augustulus

 St. Ronan

 Pierre de Ronsard

 Rood

 Johann Philipp Roothaan

 William Roper

 Rorate Coeli

 Salvatore Rosa

 St. Rosalia

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 Alberico de Rosate

 Roscelin

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 Diocese of Roseau

 William Starke Rosecrans

 St. Roseline

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 Rosicrucians

 August Roskoványi

 Rosmini and Rosminianism

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 Diocese of Ross

 School of Ross

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 Cosimo Rosselli

 Bernardo de Rossi

 Pellegrino Rossi

 Gioacchino Antonio Rossini

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 Sacra Romana Rota

 Heinrich Roth

 David Rothe

 Diocese of Rottenburg

 Rotuli

 Archdiocese of Rouen

 Synods of Rouen

 Adrien Rouquette

 Jean-Baptiste Rousseau

 Benedetto da Rovezzano

 Stephen Rowsham

 The Royal Declaration

 Pierre-Paul Royer-Collard

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 Peter Paul Rubens

 Rubrics

 William Rubruck

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 Thierry Ruinart

 Juan de Ruiz de Alarcón y Mendoza

 Antonio Ruiz de Montoya

 Diego Ruiz de Montoya

 Rumania

 Karl Friedrich Rumohr

 St. Rupert

 Rusaddir

 Rusicade

 Ruspe

 Charles Russell

 Charles William Russell

 Richard Russell

 Russia

 St. Rusticus of Narbonne

 Book of Ruth

 Ruthenian Rite

 Ruthenians

 Henry Rutter

 Diocese of Ruvo and Bitonto

 Bl. John Ruysbroeck

 John Ruysch

 Abram J. Ryan

 Patrick John Ryan

 Henry Ignatius Dudley Ryder

 Theodore James Ryken

Rood


(Anglo-Saxon Rod, or Rode, "cross"), a term, often used to signify the True Cross itself, which, with the prefix Holy, occurs as the dedication of some churches — e.g. Holyrood Abbey, in Scotland. But more generally it means a large crucifix, with statues of Our Lady and St. John, usually placed over the entrance to the choir in medieval churches. These roods were frequently very large, so as to be seen from all parts of the church, and were placed either on a gallery, or screen, or on a beam spanning the chancel arch. Roods are also occasionally found sculptured outside churches, as at Sherborne and Romsey, and on churchyard and wayside crosses. As to the antiquity of the rood in the church, there is no certain evidence. The silver crucifix set up in the middle of St. Peter's at Rome by Leo III, in 795, is sometimes claimed as an early example, but there is nothing to prove that this was a rood in the medieval sense. By the thirteenth or fourteenth century, however, the great rood or crucifix had become a common feature in almost every church of Western Christendom, and the addition of the figures of Sts. Mary and John, in allusion to John, xix, 25, came in about the fifteenth. Numerous examples still remain, both in England and elsewhere. They were usually of wood, richly carved, painted or gilded, with foliated or crocketed sides, and with the arms of the cross terminating either in fleurs-de-lys or in emblazoned medallions of the symbols of the four evangelists.

Rood-lights were kept burning before the rood in medieval times, consisting either of a wick and oil in a cresset, or rood- bowl, or of a taper on a pricket in the centre of a mortar of brass, lattern, or copper. During the whole of Lent, except at the procession of Palm Sunday, the Rood was covered with a veil (rood-cloth), which in England was either violet or black, and often was marked with a white cross. When the rood was exceptionally large or heavy, its weight was sometimes taken partly by wrought-iron rood-chains depending from the chancel arch, which were generally of elaborate design; the staples to which they were fixed may still be seen in some churches from which the rood itself has been removed — e.g. at Cullompton, England. The rood, however, striking and prominent as it was intended to be, was often eclipsed by the rood-screen over which it was placed. The precise origin of the screen and its connection with the rood is somewhat obscure, and apparently varied in different churches. The custom of screening off the altar is very ancient, and emphasizing, as it did, the air of mystery surrounding the place of sacrifice, was possibly a survival of Judaism; but the placing of a screen, more or less solid, between the chancel and nave — i.e. between clergy and people — must have originated from practical rather than from symbolic reasons, and was probably an attempt to secure privacy and comfort for those engaged in the work of the choir, more especially at times when there was no congregation present. This was certainly the case with the heavy closed screens, usually of stone, in the large conventual and collegiate churches, where the long night offices would have been impossible in winter without some such protection.

Over such screens was a loft or gallery (rood-loft), which, according to some authorities, was used for the reading of the Epistle or Gospel, certain lections, the pastorals of bishops, the Acts of councils, and other like purposes. The episcopal benediction was also sometimes pronounced, and penitents absolved, from the loft, and in some churches of France the paschal candle stood there. The Blessed Sacrament was exposed on the loft in Lyons cathedral and, according to De Moleon, similarly also at Rouen in the eighteenth century. The loft likewise frequently provided convenient accommodation for the organs and singers. In large monastic churches it was called the pulpitum and was separate from the rood-screen supporting the rood, the latter being placed westward of the pulpitum; but in secular cathedrals and parish churches there does not seem to have been usually a separate rood-screen, the rood, in such cases, being either on or over the pulpitum itself. In France the rood-loft was called the jube, which seems to imply that it was used liturgically for the reading of lessons and the like. A gallery or loft corresponding to the medieval jube was not unknown in the early Church, but there is no satisfactory evidence to show that it was surmounted by a rood. Thiers, taking Sens cathedral as his example, suggests that the loft began merely as a sort of bridge connecting the two ambos on either side of the chancel arch, and that it was gradually made more spacious as it proved useful for other purposes. This could only have been so, however, in the smaller churches where there was no pulpitum, unless perhaps it was itself the origin of the pulpitum.

In smaller parish churches it seems probable that the loft was originally only a convenience for reaching the rood-lights, and that its obvious suitability for other uses caused its enlargement and elaboration. Nothing, however, can be stated with absolute certainty. Many of these medieval screens, both with and without lofts, remain to the present day, in spite of the iconoclasm of the Reformation period. Notable screens that may be mentioned as typical examples are at Cawston, Ranworth, Southwold, Dunster, and Staverton in England; at Troyes, Albi, St-Fiacre-le-Faouet, and St-Etienne-du-Mont, Paris, in France; at Louvain and Dixmude in Beligium; at Lubeck in Germany. Some are constructed of stone, and some of the later ones of metal-work, but they are mostly of wood and usually consist of close panelling below — often decorated with painted figures of saints — and open screenwork above, supporting tracery and richly carved cornices and crestings. In England they were generally lavishly coloured and gilded. In some instances they extend across the aisles of the church as well. In England, also, the rood frequently stood not on or near the screen and loft, but on a separate transverse beam called the rood-beam, which was similarly carved and gilded. There were sometimes other beams also, besides that supporting the rood, like those at St. David's, between the choir and sanctuary, and Lincoln beyond the high altar, on which stood lights and reliquaries. Corbels, or stone brackets in English churches — e.g., Worcester cathedral - often indicate the position of the rood-beam before its removal in the sixteenth century. Leading up to the rood-loft were the rood-stairs, many of which still remain even where the loft itself has been destroyed. In England these stairs were generally enclosed in the wall separating chancel from nave, but in other countries they often constituted an architectural feature with elaborate tracery, as at Rouen (since destroyed), Strasburg, St-Etienne-du-Mont, and La Madeleine at Troyes.

In churches where there were both pulpitum and rood- screen the latter usually had two doors, and between them was placed, on the western side, the rood-altar, which, in monastic churches, often served as the parish altar, the parishioners being accommodated in the nave. This was the case in almost all the monastic cathedrals and greater abbeys of England, and the altar, being immediately under the great rood, was dedicated to the Holy Cross, except at Durham, where it was called the Jesus altar, and at St. Albans, where the dedication was to St. Cuthbert. The latter still remains in situ as the parish altar. In Munster cathedral and at Lubeck, in the hospital church, there were three altars, with the two doors of the screen between them. In smaller churches, with no separate pulpitum, but only a rood-screen with a central doorway, there was usually an altar on either side of the door, but it is doubtful whether these can strictly be termed rood-altars. It seems probable that in some cases the rood-altar was on the loft itself, instead of beneath — e.g., at Litchfield, Lyons, and St- Maurice, Vienne. In some old lofts drains have been found which may possibly be the remains of the piscinas for such altars. The daily parish Mass said at the altar on or under the rood-screen, was called the rood Mass, though occasionally this term is used to signify merely the Mass of one or other of the feasts of the Holy Cross.

A few other terms used in connection with the rood may here be briefly explained. The rood-arch was the arch separating chancel from nave, under which the rood and rood-screen were usually situated. A rood-door was either the central door of a rood- screen or one of the two doors on either side of the rood-altar. Rood-gallery was another term for rood-loft. The rood-gap was the space under the chancel arch, partially occupied by the rood. The rood-saints were the figures of Sts. Mary and John on either side of the rood; rood-steps, the steps leading up from the nave into the chancel, under or immediately before the rood-screen. Rood-steeple, or rood-tower, was a name sometimes given to the central tower of a church at the intersection of nave and chancel with the transepts, as at Durham, Notre-Dame, Paris, and Lincoln. At the last-named place the name has since been corrupted into "Broad Tower."

G. CYPRIAN ALSTON