[61] Liturgia Rom. Pont., vol. iii, p. 556; cit. ap. Rock, Church of Our Fathers.
[62] Rationale, III 4.
[63] Printed in Mabillon, Musei Ital., ii, p. 212.
[64] Were it not for this, we might infer from the other passages quoted that the succintorium was simply hung on the ordinary girdle.
[65] Ap. Eusebius, Hist. Eccl., v 24; Migne, Patrol. Graec., xx 493.
[66] Contra Haer., I xxix 4; Migne, Patrol. Graec., xli 396.
[67] In Smith and Cheetham's 'Dictionary of Christian Antiquities,' s.v. mitre.
[68] 'De Corona Militis,' cap. ix. Migne, ii 88.
[69] See fig. 12, p. 97.
[70] Traces of a slight 'bulge' are discernible in a few examples of even so early a date as the fifteenth century. It is well developed in von Brandenburg's effigy, figured on p. 101.