Hispano-Gallican Rite
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Hispano-Gallican Rite
The term "Celtic Rite" is applied to the Catholic Liturgical Rites, various liturgical rites used in Celtic Christianity in Great Britain, Britain, Ireland and Brittany and the Monastery, monasteries founded by St. Columbanus and Catald, Saint Catald in France, Germany, Switzerland, and Italy during the early middle ages. The term is not meant to imply homogeneity; instead it is used to describe a diverse range of liturgical practices united by lineage and geography. The Welsh church Before the 8th century AD there were several Christian rites in Western Europe. Such diversity of practice was often considered unimportant so long as Rome's primacy was accepted. Gradually the diversity tended to lessen so that by the time of the final fusion in the Charlemagne, Carolingian period the Roman Rite, its Ambrosian Rite, Ambrosian variant, and the Hispano-Gallican Mozarabic Rite were practically all that were left. British bishops attended the Council of Arles (314), Council of Arle ...
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