Ciborium

views updated May 17 2018

CIBORIUM

A word of which the etymology is disputed, was the name given in early times to a pillared canopy, of Byzantine origin, erected over the altar. In the late Middle Ages it was applied to a small sacrament house with a gabled top in which the Blessed Sacrament was reserved. Finally, in the 16th century, it was used to designate the vessel in which the Blessed Sacrament was reserved for the Communion of the faithful. This vessel is but a developed form of the pyx, which, in the 13th century, acquired a foot under the cylindrical container. At first the ciborium was small, containing but a few consecrated hosts for the sick. After the Council of Trent, Communion of the faithful became less infrequent, and was given from previously consecrated Hosts kept in the tabernacle. The ciborium then had to be made larger, and was given the shape of a cup, often with a conical lid.

Bibliography: j. braun, Das chrisliche Altargerät (Munich 1932).

[c. w. howell/eds.]

ciborium

views updated May 18 2018

ci·bo·ri·um / səˈbôrēəm/ • n. (pl. -bo·ri·a / -ˈbôrēə/ ) 1. a receptacle shaped like a shrine or a cup with an arched cover, used in the Christian Church for the reservation of the Eucharist.2. a canopy over an altar in a church, standing on four pillars.

ciborium

views updated May 14 2018

ciborium (pl. ciboria). Fixed canopy over a Christian altar, usually supported on four columns. It resembles an inverted cup, or the vessel in which the Eucharist is Reserved, with its domed cover, so the canopy itself has a similar domed top. Compare baldacchino.

ciborium

views updated Jun 11 2018

ciborium a receptacle shaped like a shrine or a cup with an arched cover, used in the Christian Church for the reservation of the Eucharist. Also, a canopy over an altar in a church, standing on four pillars. Recorded from the mid 16th century, the word comes via medieval Latin from Greek kibōrion ‘seed vessel of the water lily or a cup made from it’; it is probably also influenced by Latin cibus ‘food’.