CROSS, and CRUCIFIXION: (Lat. crux, crucis1): The meaning
ordinarily attached to the word cross is that of a figure composed of
two or more lines which intersect, or touch each other transversely.
Thus, two pieces of wood, or other material, so placed in juxtaposition
to one another, are understood to form a cross. It should be noted,
however, that Lipsius and other writers speak of the single upright
stake to which criminals were bound as a cross, and to such a stake the
name of crux simplex has been applied. The usual conception, however, of
a cross is that of a compound figure.Punishment by crucifixion was
widely employed in ancient times. It is known to have been used by
nations such as those of Assyria, Egypt, Persia, by the Greeks,
Carthaginians, Macedonians, and from very early times by the Romans. It
has been thought, too, that crucifixion was also used by the Jews
themselves, and that there is an allusion to it (Deut. xxi. 22, 23) as a
punishment to be inflicted.
Two methods were followed in the infliction of the punishment of
crucifixion. In both of these the criminal was first of all usually
stripped naked, and bound to an upright stake, where he was so cruelly
scourged with an implement, formed of strips of leather having pieces of
iron, or some other hard material, at their ends, that not merely was
the flesh often stripped from the bones, but even the entrails partly
protruded, and the anatomy of the body was disclosed. In this pitiable
state he was reclothed, and, if able to do so, was made to drag the
stake to the place of execution, where he was either fastened to it, or
impaled upon it, and left to die. In. this method, where a single stake
was employed, we have the crux simplex of Lipsius. The other method is
that with which we are more familiar, and which is described in the New
Testament account of the cruci fixion of Jesus Christ. In such a case,
after the scourging at the stake, the criminal was made to carry a
gibbet, formed of two transverse bars of wood, to the place of
execution, and he was then fastened to it by iron nails driven through
the outstretched arms and through the ankles. Sometimes this was done as
the cross lay on the ground, and it was then lifted into position. In
other cases the criminal was made to ascend by a~ladder, and was then
fastened to the cross. Probably the feebleness, or state of collapse,
from which the criminal must often have suffered, had much to do in
deciding this. It is not quite clear which of these two plans was
followed in the case of the crucifixion of Christ, but the more general
opinion has been that He was nailed to the cross on the ground, and that
it was then lifted into position. The contrary opinion, has, however,
prevailed to some extent, and there are representations of the
crucifixion which depict Him as mounting a ladder placed against the
cross. Such representations may, however, have been due to a pious
desire, on the part of their authors, to emphasize the voluntary
offering of Himself as the Saviour of the World, rather than as being
intended for actual pictures of the scene itself. It may be noted,
however, that among the Emblems of the Passion, as they are called, and
which were very favorite devices in the middle ages, the ladder is not
infrequently found in conjunction with the crown of thorns, nails,
spear, &c.
From its simplicity of form, the cross has been used both as a
religious symbol and as an ornament, from the dawn of mans civilization.
Various objects, dating from periods long anterior to the Christian era,
have been found, marked with crosses of different designs, in almost
every part of the old world. India, Syria, Persia and Egypt have all
yielded numberless examples, while numerous instances, dating from the
later Stone Age to Christian times, have been found in nearly every part
of Europe. The use of the cross as a religious symbol in pre-Christian
times, and among non- ii f 1 , Christian peoples, may probably be
regarded as almost universal, and in very many cases it was connected
with some form of nature worship.
Ff0. I. FIG. 2. Two of the forms of the pre-Christian cross which are
perhaps most fre quently met with are the tau cross, so named from its
resemblance to the Greek capital letter T, and the svastika orfylfot i
9~, also called Gammadion owing to its form being that of four Greek
capital letters gamma r placed together. The tau cross is a common
Egyptian device, and is indeed often called the Egyptian cross. The
svastika has a very wide range of distribution, and is found on all
kinds of objects. It was used as a religious emblem in India and China
at least ten centuries before the Christian era, and is met with on
Buddhist cthns and inscriptions from various parts of India. A fine
sepulchral urn found at Shropham in Norfolk, and now in the British
Museum, has three bands of cruciform ornaments round it. The two
uppermost of these are plain circles, each of which contains a plain
cross; the lowest band is formed of a series of squares, in each of
which is a svastika. In the Vatican Museum there is an Etruscan fibula
of gold which is marked with the svastika, but it is a device of such
common occurrence on objects of pre-Christian origin, that it is hardly
necessary to specify individual instances. The cross, as a device in
different forms, and often enclosed in a circle, is of frequent
occurrence on coins and medals of pre-Christian date in France and
elsewhere. Indeed, objects marked with pre-Christian crosses are to be
seen in every important museum.
The death of Christ on a cross necessarily conferred a new
significance on the figure, which had hitherto been associated with a
conception of religion not merely non-Christian, but in its essence
often directly opposed to it. The Christians of early times were wont to
trace, in things around them, hidden prophetical allusions to the truth
of their faith, and such a testimony they seem to have readily
recognized in the use of the cross as a religious emblem by those whose
employment of it betokened a belief most repugnant to their own. The
adoption by them of such forms, for example, as the tau cross and the
svastika or fylfot was no doubt influenced by the idea of the occult
Christian significance which they thought they recognized in those
forms, and which they could use with a special meaning among themselves,
without at the same time arousing the ill-feeling or shocking the
sentiment of those among whom they lived.
It was not till the time of Constantine that the cross was publicly
used as the symbol of the Christian religion. Till then its employment
had been restricted, and private among the Christians themselves. Under
Constantine it became the acknowledged symbol of Christianity, in the
same way in which, long afterwards, the crescent was adopted as the
symbol of the Mahommedan religion. Constantines action was no doubt
influenced by the vision which he believed he saw of the cross in the
sky with the accompanying words ~v ~oi~rc~ vtica, as well as by the
story of the discovery of the true cross by his mother St Helena in the
year 326. The legend is that, when visiting the holy places in
Palestine, St Helena was guided to the site of the crucifixion by an
aged Jew who had inherited traditional knowledge as to its position.
After the ground had been dug to a considerable depth, three crosses
were found, as well as the superscription placed over the Saviours head
on the cross, and the nails with which he had been crucified. The cross
of the Lord was distinguished from the other two by the working of a
miracle on a crippled woman who was stretched upon it. This finding, or
invention, of the holy cross by St Helena is commemorated by a festival
on the 3rd of May, called the Invention of the Holy Cross. The legend
was widely accepted as true, and is related by writers such as St
Ambrose, Rufinus, Sulpicius Severus and others, but it is discounted by
the existence of an older legend, according to which the true cross was
found in the reign of Tiberius, and while St James the Great was bishop
of Jerusalem, by Protonice, the wife of Claudius.
In recent times an attempt has been made to reconcile the two
accounts, by attributing to St Helena the rediscovery of the true cross,
originally found by Protonice, and which had been buried again on the
spot. A change was made in 1895 in the Diario Romano, when the word
Ritrovamento was substituted for that of Invenzione, in the name of the
festival of the 3rd of May. After St Helenas discovery a church was
built upon the site, and in it she placed the greater portion of the
cross. The remaining portion she conveyed to Byzantium, and thence
Constantine sent a piece to Rome, where it is said to be still preserved
in the church of S. Croce in Gerusalemme, which was built to receive so
precious a relic. It is exposed for the veneration of the faithful on
Good Friday, 3rd of May, and the third Sunday in Lent, each year.
Another festival of the holy cross is kept on the 14th of September,
and is known as the Exaltation of the Holy Cross. It seems to have
originated with the dedication, in the year 335, of the churches built
on the sites of the crucifixion and the holy sepulchre. The observance
of this festival passed from Jerusalem to Constantinople, and thence to
Rome, where it appears to have been introduced in the 7th century. By
some it is thought that the feast of the Exaltation of the Cross had its
origin in Constantines vision of the cross in the sky in the year 317,
but whether it originated then, or, as is more generally supposed, at
the dedication of the churches at Jerusalem, there is no doubt that it
was afterwards kept with much greater solemnity in consequence of the
recovery of the portion of the cross St Helena had left at Jerusalem,
which had been taken away in the Persian victory, and was restored to
Jerusalem by Heraclitus in 627. Pope Clement VIII. (1592-1604) raised
the festival of the Exaltation of the Holy Cross to the dignity,
liturgically known as that of a Greater Double.
Before leaving the story of St Helena and the cross, it may be
convenient to allude briefly to the superscription placed over the
Saviours head, and the nails, which it is said that she found with the
cross. The earlier tradition as to the superscription is obscure, but it
would seem that it ought to be considered part of the relic which
Constantine sent to Rome. By some means it was entirely lost sight of
until the year 1492, when it is said that it was accidentally found in a
vault in the church of S. Croce in Gerusalemme at Rome. Pope Alexander
III. published a bull certifying to the truth of this re-discovery of
the relic, and authenticated its character.
As regards the nails, a question has arisen whether there were three
or four. In the earliest pictures of the Crucifixion the feet are shown
as separately nailed to the cross, but at a tater period they are
crossed, and a single nail fixes them. In the former case there would be
four nails, and in the latter only three. Four is the number generally
accepted, and it is said that one was cast by St Helena into the sea,
during a storm, in order to subdue the waves, another is said (but the
legend cannot be traced far back) to have been beaten out into the iron
circlet of the crown of Lombardy, while the remaining two are reputed to
be preserved among the relics at Milan and Trier respectively.
The employment of the cross as the Christian symbol has been so
manifold in its variety and application, and the different forms to
which the figure has been adapted and elaborated are so complex, that it
is only possible to deal with the outline of the subject.
We learn from Tertullian and other early Christian writeis of the
constant use which the Christians of those days made 0k the sign of the
cross. Tertullian (Dc Cor. Mu, cap. iii.) says:
At each journey and progress, at each coming in and going out, at the
putting on of shoes, at the bath, at meals, at the kindling of lights,
at bedtime, at sitting down, whatsoever occupation engages us, we mark
the brow with the sign of the cross. With so frequent an employment of
the sign of the cross in their domestic life, it would be strange if we
did not find that it was very frequently used in the public worship of
the church. The earliest liturgical forms are comparatively late, and
are without rubrics, but the, allusions by different writers in early
times to the ceremonial use of the sign of the cross in the public
services are so numerous, and so much importance was attached to it,
that we are left in. no manner of doubt on the point. St Augustine,
indeed, speaks of the sacraments as not duly ministered if the use of
the sign of the cross were absent from their ministration (Horn. cxviii.
in S. Joan.). Of the later liturgical use of the sign of the cross there
is little need to speak, as a reference to the service books of the
Greek and Latin churches will plainly indicate the fre~quency of, and
the importance attached to, its employment. Itsoccasional use is
retained by the Lutherans, and in the Church of England it is authori
tatively used at baptism, and at the sacring or anointing of the
sovereign at the coronation. -
Passing from the sign to the material figures of the cross, a very
usual classification distinguishes three main forms:
(1) the crux immissa, or capitata t (fig. 3) known also as the Latin
cross, or if each limb is of the same length, + (fig. 4) as the Greek
cross; (2) the crux decussata, formed like the letter X, and (3) the
crux commissa or tau cross, already mentioned. It was on a crux immissa
that Christ is believed to have been crucified. The crux decussata is
known as St Andrews cross, from the traditioo that St Andrew was F put
to death on a cross of that form. The FIG. 3. 1G. 4crux commissa is
often called St Anthonys cross, probably only because it resembles the
crutch with which the great hermit is generally depicted. -
The cross in one form or other appears, appropriately, on the flags
and ensigns of many Christian countries. The English cross of St George
is a plain red cross on a white ground, the Scottish cross of St Andrew
is a plain diagonal white cross on a blue ground, and the Irish cross of
St Patrick is a plain diagonal red cross on a white ground. These three
crosses are combined in the Union Jack (see FLAG).
The cross has also been adopted by many orders of knighthood. Perhaps
the best known of these is the cross of the knights of Malta. It is a
white cross of eight points on a black ground (fig. 5) and is the proper
Maltese cross, a name which is often wrongly applied to the cross pate
(fig. 6). The knights of the Garter use the cross of St Iii I -
George, as do those of the order of St Michael and St George, the
knights of the Thistle use St Andrews cross, and - FIG FIG 6
those of St Patrick the cross of St Patrick charged with a shamrock
leaf. The cross of the Danish order of the Dannebrog (fig. 7) affords a
good example of this use of the cross. It is in form a white cross pate,
superimposed upon a red one of the same form, and is surmounted by the
royal cipher and crown, and has upon its surface the royal cipher
repeated, and the legend, or motto, Gud og Kongen = God and the King.
(For crosses of monastic orders see COSTUME.) -
Akin to the crosses of knightly orders are those which figure as
charges on coats of arms. The science of heraldry evolved a wonderful
variety of cross-forms during the period it held sway in the middle
ages. The different forms of cross used in heraldry are, in fact, so
numerous that it is only the larger works on that subject which attempt
to record them all.
For such crosses see HERALDRY.
In the middle ages the cross form, in one way or another, was
predominant everywhere, and was introduced whenever opportunity offered
itself for doing so. The larger churches were planned on its outline, so
that the ridge line of their roofs proclaimed it far and wide. This was
more particularly followed in the north of Europe, but when it was first
introduced is not ~1IJD 1 quite certain. All the ancient cathedral
churches of England and Wales are cruciform in plan, except Llandaff.
The artistic skill and ingenuity of the medieval designer has
produced cross designs of endless variety, and of singular FIG. ~.Cr~ssof
the elegance and beauty. Some of the most beautiful of these designs are
the gable crosses of the old churches. Fig. 8 shows the west gable cross
of Washburn church, Worcestershire; fig. 9 that of the nave of Castle
Acre church, Norfolk; and fig. 10 the east gable cross of Hethersett
church in that county. They may be taken as good examples of a type of
cross which is often of great beauty, but it is oveflooked, owing to its
bad position for observation.
Other architectural crosses, of great beauty of design, are those
which occur on the grave slabs of the middle ages. Instances of a
plainer type occur in Saxon times, but it was not till after the 11th
century that they were fashioned after the intricate and beautiful
designs with which our ancient churches are, as a rule, so plentifully
supplied. Sometimes these crosses are incised in the slab, and almost as
often they are executed in low relief. The long shaft of the cross is
most commonly plain, but there are a very large number of instances in
which this is not so, and in which branches, with leaf designs, are
thrown FIG. 8. FIG. 9. FIG. 10.
out at intervals the entire length of the shaft. In some cases the
shaft rises from a series of steps at its base, and in such a case the
name of a Calvary cross is applied to it. Fig. II, from Stradsett
church, Norfolk, and fig. 12 from Bosbury church, Herefordshire, are
good examples of the designs at the head of sepulchral crosses. Often,
by the side of the cross, an emblem or symbol is placed, denoting the
calling in life of the person commemorated. Thus a sword is placed to
indicate a knight or soldier, a chalice for a priest, and so forth; but
it would be travelling beyond the scope of this article to enter into a
discussion as to such symbols.
Of upright standing crosses, the Irish and lona types are well known,
and their great artistic beauty and elaboration and excellence of
sculpture are universally recognized. These crosses are sometimes spoken
of as Runic Crosses and the interlacing knotwork design with which many
of them are ornamented FIG. II. FIG. 12.
is also at times spoken of as Runic. This is an erroneous application
of the word, and has arisen from the fact that some of these crosses
bear inscriptions in Runic characters. Standing crosses, of different
kinds, were commonly set up in every suitable place during the middle
ages, as the mutilated bases and shafts still remaining readily testify.
Such crosses were erected in the centre of the market place, in the
churchyard, on the village green, or as boundary stones, or marks to
guide the traveller. Some, like the Black Friars cross at Hereford, were
preaching stations, others, like the beautiful Eleanor crosses at
Northampton, Geddington and Waltham, were commemorative hi character Of
these latter crosses, which marked the places where the funeral
procession of Queen Eleanor halted, there were originally ten or more,
erected between 1241 and 1294. They were placed at Lincoln, Northampton,
Stony Stratford, Woburn, Dunstable, St Albans, Waltham and London
(Cheapside and Charing Cross). The cross at Geddingtou dL~crs in outline
from those at Northampton and Waltham, and it is not recorded on the
roll of accounts for the nine others, all of which are mentioned, but
there is no real doubt that it commemorates the resting of the coffin of
the queen in Geddington church on its way from Harby. These crosses,
like the Black Friars cross at Hereford, are elaborate architectural
erections, and very similar to them in this respect are the beautiful
market crosses at Winchester, Chichester, Salisbury, Devizes, Shepton
Mallet, Leighton Buzzard, &c. Of churchyard crosses, as distinguished
from memorial crosses in churchyards, one only is believed to have
escaped in a perfect condition the ravages of time, and the fanaticism
of the past. It stands in the churchyard of Somerby, in Lincolnshire
(Tennysons birthplace), and is a tall shaft surmounted by a pedimented
tabernacle, on one side of which is the crucifixion, and on the other
the figure of the Virgin and Child. Churchyard crosses may have been
used as occasional preaching stations, for reading the Gospel in the
Palm Sunday procession, and generally for public proclamations, made
usually at the conclusion of the chief Sunday morning service, much in
the same way that market crosses were used on market days as places for
proclamations in the towns.
Of the ecclesiastical use of the sign of the cross mention has
already been made, and it is desirable to mention briefly one or two
instances of the ecclesiastical use of the cross itself. From a fairly
early period it has been the prerogative of an archbishop or
metropolitan, to have a cross borne before him within the limits of his
province. The question urged between the archbishops of Canterbury and
York about the carrying of their crosses before them, in each others
province, was a fruitful source of controversy in the middle ages. The
archiepiscopal cross must not be confused with the crozier or pastoral
staff The latter, which is formed with a crook at the end, is quite
distinct, and is used by archbishops and bishops alike, who bear it with
the left hand in processions, and when blessing the people. The
archiepiscopal cross, on the contrary, is always borne before the
archbishop, or during the vacancy of the archiepiscopal see before the
guardian of the spiritualities sede vacante. The bishop of Dol in
Brittany, of ordinary diocesan bishops, alone possessed the privilege of
having a cross borne before him in his diocese. Good illustrations of
the archiepiscopal cross occur on the monumental brasses of Archbishop
Waldehy, of York (1397), at Westminster Abbey, and of Archbishop Cranley,
of Dublin (1417) in New College chapel, Oxford.
The custom of carrying a cross at the head of an ecclesiastical
procession can be traced back to the end of the 4th century. The cross
was originally taken from the altar, and raised on a pole, and so borne
before the procession. Afterwards a separate cross was provided for
processions, but in poor churches, where this was not the case, the
altar cross continued to be used till quite a late period. A direction
to this effect occurs as late as 1829, in the Rituel published for the
diocese of La Rochelle in that year. In England altar crosses were not
very usual in the middle ages.
As a personal ornament the cross came into common use, and was
usually worn suspended by a chain fiom the neck. A cross of this kind,
of very great interest and beauty, was found about 1690, on the breast
of Queen Dagmar, the wife of Waldemar II., king of Denmark (d. 1213). It
is of Byzantine design and workmanship, and is of enamelled gold (fig.
13 shows both sides of it) ; on one side is the Crucifixion, and on the
other side the half figure of our Lord in the centre, with the Virgin
and St John the Evangelist on. either side, and St Chrysostom and St
Basil above and below. From the way in which such crosses were worn,
hanging over the chest, they are called pectoral crosses. At the present
day a pectoral cross forms part of the recognized insignia of a Roman
Catholic bishop, and is worn by him over his robes, but this official
use of the pectoral cross is not ancient, and no instance is known of it
in England before the Reformation.
Other architectural crosses, of great beauty of design, are those
which occur on the grave slabs of the middle ages. Instances of a
plainer type occur in Saxon times, but it was not till after the 11th
century that they were fashioned after the intricate and beautiful
designs with which our ancient churches are, as a rule, so plentifully
supplied. Sometimes these crosses are incised in the slab, and almost as
often they are executed in low relief. The long shaft of the cross is
most commonly plain, but there are a very large number of instances in
which this is not so, and in which branches, with leaf designs, are
thrown FIG. 8. FIG. 9. FIG. 10.
out at intervals the entire length of the shaft. In some cases the
shaft rises from a series of steps at its base, and in such a case the
name of a Calvary cross is applied to it. Fig. II, from Stradsett
church, Norfolk, and fig. 12 from Bosbury church, Herefordshire, are
good examples of the designs at the head of sepulchral crosses. Often,
by the side of the cross, an emblem or symbol is placed, denoting the
calling in life of the person commemorated. Thus a sword is placed to
indicate a knight or soldier, a chalice for a priest, and so forth; but
it would be travelling beyond the scope of this article to enter into a
discussion as to such symbols.
Of upright standing crosses, the Irish and lona types are well known,
and their great artistic beauty and elaboration and excellence of
sculpture are universally recognized. These crosses are sometimes spoken
of as Runic Crosses and the interlacing knotwork design with which many
of them are ornamented FIG. II. FIG. 12.
is also at times spoken of as Runic. This is an erroneous application
of the word, and has arisen from the fact that some of these crosses
bear inscriptions in Runic characters. Standing crosses, of different
kinds, were commonly set up in every suitable place during the middle
ages, as the mutilated bases and shafts still remaining readily testify.
Such crosses were erected in the centre of the market place, in the
churchyard, on the village green, or as boundary stones, or marks to
guide the traveller. Some, like the Black Friars cross at Hereford, were
preaching stations, others, like the beautiful Eleanor crosses at
Northampton, Geddington and Waltham, were commemorative hi character Of
these latter crosses, which marked the places where the funeral
procession of Queen Eleanor halted, there were originally ten or more,
erected between 1241 and 1294. They were placed at Lincoln, Northampton,
Stony Stratford, Woburn, Dunstable, St Albans, Waltham and London (Cheapside
and Charing Cross). The cross at Geddingtou dL~crs in outline from those
at Northampton and Waltham, and it is not recorded on the roll of
accounts for the nine others, all of which are mentioned, but there is
no real doubt that it commemorates the resting of the coffin of the
queen in Geddington church on its way from Harby. These crosses, like
the Black Friars cross at Hereford, are elaborate architectural
erections, and very similar to them in this respect are the beautiful
market crosses at Winchester, Chichester, Salisbury, Devizes, Shepton
Mallet, Leighton Buzzard, &c. Of churchyard crosses, as distinguished
from memorial crosses in churchyards, one only is believed to have
escaped in a perfect condition the ravages of time, and the fanaticism
of the past. It stands in the churchyard of Somerby, in Lincolnshire (Tennysons
birthplace), and is a tall shaft surmounted by a pedimented tabernacle,
on one side of which is the crucifixion, and on the other the figure of
the Virgin and Child. Churchyard crosses may have been used as
occasional preaching stations, for reading the Gospel in the Palm Sunday
procession, and generally for public proclamations, made usually at the
conclusion of the chief Sunday morning service, much in the same way
that market crosses were used on market days as places for proclamations
in the towns.
Of the ecclesiastical use of the sign of the cross mention has
already been made, and it is desirable to mention briefly one or two
instances of the ecclesiastical use of the cross itself. From a fairly
early period it has been the prerogative of an archbishop or
metropolitan, to have a cross borne before him within the limits of his
province. The question urged between the archbishops of Canterbury and
York about the carrying of their crosses before them, in each others
province, was a fruitful source of controversy in the middle ages. The
archiepiscopal cross must not be confused with the crozier or pastoral
staff The latter, which is formed with a crook at the end, is quite
distinct, and is used by archbishops and bishops alike, who bear it with
the left hand in processions, and when blessing the people. The
archiepiscopal cross, on the contrary, is always borne before the
archbishop, or during the vacancy of the archiepiscopal see before the
guardian of the spiritualities sede vacante. The bishop of Dol in
Brittany, of ordinary diocesan bishops, alone possessed the privilege of
having a cross borne before him in his diocese. Good illustrations of
the archiepiscopal cross occur on the monumental brasses of Archbishop
Waldehy, of York (1397), at Westminster Abbey, and of Archbishop Cranley,
of Dublin (1417) in New College chapel, Oxford.
The custom of carrying a cross at the head of an ecclesiastical
procession can be traced back to the end of the 4th century. The cross
was originally taken from the altar, and raised on a pole, and so borne
before the procession. Afterwards a separate cross was provided for
processions, but in poor churches, where this was not the case, the
altar cross continued to be used till quite a late period. A direction
to this effect occurs as late as 1829, in the Rituel published for the
diocese of La Rochelle in that year. In England altar crosses were not
very usual in the middle ages.
As a personal ornament the cross came into common use, and was
usually worn suspended by a chain fiom the neck. A cross of this kind,
of very great interest and beauty, was found about 1690, on the breast
of Queen Dagmar, the wife of Waldemar II., king of Denmark (d. 1213). It
is of Byzantine design and workmanship, and is of enamelled gold (fig.
13 shows both sides of it) ; on one side is the Crucifixion, and on the
other side the half figure of our Lord in the centre, with the Virgin
and St John the Evangelist on. either side, and St Chrysostom and St
Basil above and below. From the way in which such crosses were worn,
hanging over the chest, they are called pectoral crosses. At the present
day a pectoral cross forms part of the recognized insignia of a Roman
Catholic bishop, and is worn by him over his robes, but this official
use of the pectoral cross is not ancient, and no instance is known of it
in England before the Reformation.
rhe custom appears to have taken rise in the 16th century on the
continent. It was not unusual to wear cruciform reliquaries, as objects
of personal adornment, and such a reliquary was found on the body of St
Cuthbert, when his tomb was opened in 1827, but it was placed under, and
not over his episcopal vestments, and formed no part of his bishops
attire. The custom FIG. 13.Dagmar Cross.
or wearing a pectoral cross over ecclesiastical robes has, curiously
enough, been copied from the comparatively modern Roman Catholic usage
by the Lutheran bishops and superintendents in Scandinavia and Prussia;
and in Sweden the cross is now delivered to the new bishop, on hi,s
installation in office, by the archbishop of Upsala, together with the
mitre and crozier. Within the last generation the use of a pectoral
cross, worn over their robes as part of the insignia of the episcopal
office, has been adopted by some bishops of the Church of England, but
it has no ancient sanction or authority.