[278] Lanfranci, Decreta, sec. 3; Migne, Patr. Lat., cl. 456 et seq. [Cf. Gasquet, Parish Life in Med. England, viii. 171.—Trans.]
[279] Binterim, Denkw., vii. 3, 367 et seqq.; J. Gretser, De Processionibus, 2, 19; Binterim, Geschichte der Konzilien, etc., v. 368. The synod of Cologne in 1452 forbade the Blessed Sacrament to be carried round the church in a monstrance on other days than Corpus Christi (op. cit. vii. 486).
[280] Acta Vetera Eccl. Rotom.; Migne, Patr. Lat., cxlvii. 123.
[281] P. Joerres, Beiträge zur Gesch. des Fronleichnamsfestes; Römische Quartalschrift, 1902, 170 et seq.; Sdralek, Die Strassburger Diözesansynoden, Strassb. theol. Studien, ii. 1, 121.
[282] Hoeynck, Gesch. d. K. Liturgie des Bist. Augsburg, 229 et seq.
[283] Maurel, Ablässe, Paderborn, 1874, 238.
[284] Hoeynck, op. cit. 231. For a description of the Roman use, cf. Migne, Handbuch, 304 et seqq.
[285] The oldest pictorial representation of the Corpus Christi procession is probably that contained in the chronicle of the Council of Constance, by Ulrich of Richental (49 et seqq.). The original MS. is in the Rosgarten Museum at Constance; it is reproduced in No. 158 of the Stuttgart Literar. Verein of 1882 (Photolitographie by H. Bach). It represents the procession as it took place during the council in the year 1415. The monstrance is carried by two ecclesiastics on a sort of small platform.
[286] Cf. Bened. XIV., Institutiones, 30, 206, and the article of P. Norbert, “Ord. Cap.,” in the Katholik for August 1898, 151.
[287] Nilles, De rationibus festorum SS. Cordis Jesu et Pur. Cordis Mariæ libri quattuor, 5th ed., Œniponte, 1885; Nix, art. “Herz Jesu und Mariä” in the Kirchenlexikon, v., 2nd ed., 1921 et seqq.; Bäumer, 525 et seq.