Sedia gestatoria: Perbedaan antara revisi

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== Sejarah ==
[[Takhta]] seremonial ini digunakan untuk menandu para paus saat memasuki dan meninggalkan [[Basilika Santo Yohanes Lateran]] dan [[Basilika Santo Petrus]] bilamana menghadiri upacara-upacara kepausan. Pemakaian ''sedia gestatoria'', yang telah menjadi bagian tak terpisahkan dari upacara-upacara kepausan selama hampir satu [[milenium]] ini, diduga berasal dari kebiasaan di [[Kekaisaran Romawi Timur|Kekaisaran Bizantium]] untuk menandu para kaisar Bizantium dengan cara dan sarana yang serupa, namun banyak pula sumber rujukan yang menunjukkan bahwa tradisi ini mungkin berasal upacara-upacara yang berkaitan dengan kepemimpinanpara pemimpin [[Kekaisaran Romawi|Imperium Romawi]] kuno.
 
<!--ItTakhta wasini useddigunakan indalam the solemn ceremonies of theupacara-upacara [[PapalPenobatan Coronationpaus|coronationpenobatan]] ofpaus baru sampai upacara-upacara itu tidak alagi newdilaksanakan. popeSelain untilitu, thekursi enthronementini ceremonyjuga wasdigunakan abandoneddalam altogetherarak. It also was used for solemn entries of the pope to St. Peter's or to public consistories. In the first case, three bundles of [[tow]] were burnt before the newly elected pontiff, who sits on the ''sedia gestatoria'', while a master of ceremonies says: "''Pater Sancte, [[sic transit gloria mundi]]''" (Holy Father, so passes the glory of the world). The custom of carrying the newly elected pope, and formerly in some countries, a newly elected bishop to his church, can be traced back centuries and is comparable with the Roman use of the ''[[curule chair|sella curulis]]'', on which newly elected [[consul]]s were carried through the city.<ref>{{CathEncy|wstitle=Sedia Gestatoria}}</ref>
 
[[Magnus Felix Ennodius]], [[Bishop of Pavia]], records in his "Apologia pro Synodo", ''Gestatoriam sellam apostolicae confessionis'',<ref>Migne (1882), ''[[Patrologia Latina]]'', LXIII, 206; "Corpus Script. eccl.", VI, Vienna, at 328</ref> alluding to the [[Chair of Saint Peter|Cathedra S. Petri]], still preserved in the choir of St. Peter's at Rome. This is a portable wooden armchair, inlaid with ivory, with two iron rings on each side.