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Processions took place before the principal Mass every Sunday and on important feasts. These were the most common; other processions could occur at the end of Lauds and Vespers of the Office, especially during the octaves of Christmas and Easter, or to a particular altar on a saint's feast. Usages with regard to processions varied from place to place. Processions on Palm Sunday, for instance, were unique to each church and could be particularly elaborate, often involving movement around a city or town to reenact Christ's entry into Jerusalem. Directions for some processions can be found in a missal; the most extensive information appears in an ordinal. The chants for a procession were proper to the feast. A processional contains the chants sung during the processions on certain
important feasts of the church year, including Christmas , the Purification
of the Virgin Mary, or Candlemas (February 2) , Ash Wednesday, the Adoration
of the Cross on Good Friday, the major litanies (April 25) and Rogations
(during three days before the feast of the Ascension). Processionals began
as small booklets of chants in the tenth and eleventh centuries, but gradually
developed into separate books, while retaining their small size for portability. |