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Sacramentary - Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia (356 words) |
 | The sacramentary known as "Gregorianum-Hadrianum", which Charlemagne (768-814), wishing to unify the liturgy in his Frankish realm, is said to have got from Pope Hadrian I (772-795) |
 | Sacramentary of Minden or of Bishop Sigebert (1022-1036) |
 | Sacramentary of Abbot Berthold (Abbey of Weingarten) - 1217 |
| Liturgical Books (8968 words) |
 | Thus Sacramentaries contain none of those parts of the Mass, no Lessons, no Introits, Graduals, Offertories and so on, but only the Collects, Prefaces, Canon, all that is strictly the celebrant's part. |
 | As the celebrant is normally supposed to be a bishop, the Sacramentary supplies him with the prayers he wants at ordinations, at the consecration of a church and altar and many exorcisms, blessings, and consecrations that are now inserted in the Pontifical and Ritual. |
 | Besides these three most important Sacramentaries there are other fragments, the "Missale Francorum," written in the seventh or eighth century, the "Ravenna Roll" of doubtful date (sixth to eleventh century?), etc. (see Duchesne, "Origines", pp. |