Practical Information
(General Remarks to Section 'P')


4
 
Section P of the table contains Eastertide beginning with the 1st Vespers on Easter-Day and leading up to the end of the Pentecost Octave. This period shows a great many peculiarities and local characteristics both with regard to distribution and material, and even the performance itself (consuetudines) had undergone changes in the course of centuries. In fact the arrangement of the liturgical books is rather different in this section. All these factors would make the comparison extremely difficult, if not impossible, unless we accept the existence of a unified system against which the identities as well as the divergencies of the local customs can be weighed. This normalized form is based on the actual correspondences; the varying usage and repertory of the individual rites and sources can be demonstrated by means of the additional numbers in the table and also by the commentaries.
The numbering of Sundays applied in the table differs from the medieval custom which started either at the dominica in octava or at the dominica post octavam. For the sake of clear arrangement our tables follow the present-day usage: Easter-Day will be the 1st Sunday, the feast of Whit-Sunday the eighth.
Easter-DayOn Easter-Day the 1st Vespers is replaced by a single antiphon to Psalm 116 and by another to the Magnificat which is attached to the end of the Easter Vigil. The structure of the Compline is also irregular on this eve.
The Matins of this Sunday consists, according to the cursus saecularis, of one Nocturn only which has three antiphons and three responsories. At Lauds on this day and during the whole week the Gradual and the Alleluia of the Mass are sung after the psalms, and the Hour ends with the Benedictus (and Oratio). All other parts are omitted. During this week the Little Hours are also restricted to the psalms and the Oratio.
Vesperae baptismalesOn the other hand, Vespers is celebrated in a special extended form during the whole week, following the ancient traditions of the basilics of Rom (Vesperae baptismales). The Hour begins with Kyrie, then the 1st to 3rd psalms of the Vespers are sung. The first part closes with the Gradual and the Alleluia of the Mass, the Magnificat and Oratio, after which a procession goes to the baptistry accompanied by a processional antiphon in most churches where the rest of the vesperal psalms and some other chants are performed (varying in the different rites, e. g. a 2nd Alleluia, a 2nd Magnificat, a versicle and orationes). Then the community returns to the choir singing another processional antiphon, and a versicle + oratio finish the ceremony. This rite is repeated with alternating psalms, antiphons and the verses of the Gradual and Alleluia during the whole week.
Compline and
Pro octava Offices
Following the Vespers the table presents the order of the Compline for the whole week, and then all the variable parts of the pro octava Offices. The Saturday liturgy differs, however, from that of the other days, and in many places the regular order of Eastertide is introduced on that day.
Paschal Sunday OfficeThe order of the paschal Sunday Office is a crux for all who wish to interpret the medieval choirbooks. In principle the medieval churches had two possibilities: either to introduce a three-Nocturn form at Matins or, what was more frequent, to create a one-Nocturn variant. The other Hours could follow in their own way and the weekdays could agree with the Sunday arrangement. After about 1000 a new usage was, however, introduced in many churches at a different time and in a different form each: on Sundays the Office and the Mass of Easter-Day were repeated while the Proper of Sundays was transferred to the next Monday. By doing so the following characteristic situation emerged for these days: on Saturdays the 1st Vespers was sung, made up of the elements of Eastertide and Easter-Day; the Sunday itself repeated the liturgy of Easter-Day in most parts (occasionally enlarged by some items omitted there, e. g. the hymn). The Vespers on Sunday evening played a double role being the last part of the previous Office and at the same time the overture to the actual Sunday Office celebrated on Monday. The Sunday Office followed on Monday and was closed by a third Vespers. The liturgical weekdays started only on Tuesday and thus the number of weekdays decreased. Taking these changes and variations into consideration the number of combinations was rather high and different in the various rites.
If we wish to compare the sources in real terms, we have to create order in the tables. The first is to declare that the majority of the medieval sources (at least those written in the 12th or 13th centuries and later) prescribe the Office of Easter-Day for Sundays. However, in the Sunday lines we give the Proper of Sundays, although this was sung on Mondays). The 1st Vespers follows here in the usual form while the 2nd Vespers must be sung twice: first on Sunday evening then on Monday. If there is any difference between the two days' celebration we have to add two antiphons for Magnificat. What is beyond this scheme will be recordered in the additional lines of the table or in the notes and commentaries.
After the 1st Vespers the schedule of the Compline is presented for the whole Eastertide, while the ferial form/forms of the Easter season come after the 2nd Vespers.
ResponsoriesAnother problem is that the responsories attached to the scriptura occurrens appear on D2 (transposed to Monday). The distribution of these responsories is different according to the structure of the Matins (1- or 3-Nocturn scheme) and the number of responsories retained. At any rate, it is a common rule that the surplus responsories (above 3 or 9 respectively) are to be sung on weekdays. The local traditions vary in defining the week when the first cycle ('Historia de Apocalypsi') was to be replaced by the second one ('Historia de libro Psalmorum'). Thus we are compelled to separate the two sets of responsories from the order of weeks and to present the first cycle before the day of D2 and the latter before D4 (albeit it was actually imposed according to local usage). The individual solutions can be interpreted along the lines of this normalized form by the means of commentaries and notes.
Benedictus and Magnificat antiphons The pieces of a third layer of in tempore paschali are connected with individual Sundays: they are the antiphons of the Benedictus and the Magnificat, taken mainly from the words of the daily Gospels. The number of the pieces in each set is higher than necessary and the surplus items are sung during the next week. There are two possibilities for listing them: either distributed among the various days (in which case it is rather difficult to compare the rites) or enumerated after the Sunday antiphons. We will follow this second method even if the given source did otherwise.
The three days before Ascension (dies Rogationum) may have had their own antiphons for Benedictus as it appears from the tables.
AscensioThe feast of Ascension (6f5 in the tables) was celebrated with three-Nocturn Matins in some churches and with a one-Nocturn form in others. In the latter case the N2-N3 were shifted to the following days of the Octave. We have chosen to present the material in the three- Nocturn scheme and to explain the actual practice in the commentaries. The Proper antiphons for the various days of the Octave appear in the table according to the succession of days if the distribution is clear, or in one group if the distribution is optional or impossible to determine.
PentecostesWhit Sunday was celebrated with a one-Nocturn Matins everywhere. The additional responsories were introduced during the Octave. On days f2 to f4 some space has been left blank for new items while the reorganization of the already known chants between the remaining days will be clarified in the commentary. On Whit Sunday (and also on Ascension Day in some places) the antiphons of the Lauds reappear at Vespers with certain additions or changes, therefore some place has been left blank for introducing new items into the tables.
The Octave of Pentecost generally ends on Saturday. The ancient practice of celebrating the eighth day on next Sunday left, however, its traces on the liturgical order of some traditions or sources. Whenever they are characteristic of the rite we include them in the tables. If they are devices of certain individual sources they will be registered in the notes.
 
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