Claude Dablon

 Diocese of Dacca

 André Dacier

 Dagon

 Henri-François Daguesseau

 Vicariate Apostolic of Dahomey

 Adolphus von Dalberg

 John Dobree Dalgairns

 Dalila

 Diocese of Dallas

 William Bede Dalley

 Dalmatia

 Dalmatic

 John Dalton

 Diocese of Damão

 Damaraland

 Damascus

 Pope St. Damasus I

 Pope Damasus II

 Joseph Ferdinand Damberger

 Father Damien (Joseph de Veuster)

 Damietta

 Dan

 Danaba

 Dance of Death

 Dancing

 Enrico Dandolo

 Daniel

 Anthony Daniel

 Book of Daniel

 Charles Daniel

 Gabriel Daniel

 John Daniel

 St. Daniel and Companions

 Daniel of Winchester

 Dansara

 Dante Alighieri

 Ignazio Danti

 Vincenzo Danti

 Maurus Dantine

 Lorenzo Da Ponte

 Georges Darboy

 Dardanus

 Jean Dardel

 St. Darerca

 Antoine-Elisabeth Dareste de la Chavanne

 Darnis

 Joseph-Epiphane Darras

 William Darrell

 Dates and Dating

 Gabriel-Auguste Daubrée

 Daulia

 Georg Friedrich Daumer

 Sir William D'Avenant

 Christopher Davenport

 Diocese of Davenport

 St. David

 Armand David

 Gheeraert David

 King David

 David of Augsburg

 David of Dinant

 David Scotus

 Ven. William Davies

 Dávila Padilla

 Æneas McDonnell Dawson

 George Day

 Sir John Charles Day

 Deacons

 Deaconesses

 Prayers for the Dead

 Dead Sea

 Dean

 Ven. William Dean

 Thomas Dease

 Preparation for Death

 Debbora

 Debt

 Decalogue

 Decapolis

 Adolphe Dechamps

 Victor Augustin Isidore Dechamps

 Decius

 Hans Decker

 Pontifical Decorations

 Decree

 Papal Decretals

 Dedication

 Feast of the Dedication (Scriptural)

 Deduction

 Abbey of Deer

 Defender of the Matrimonial Tie

 Theological Definition

 Definitor (in Canon Law)

 Definitors (in Religious Orders)

 Ernst Deger

 Degradation

 Joseph Deharbe

 St. Deicolus

 Dei gratia Dei et Apostolicæ Sedis gratia

 Deism

 Deity

 Charles De La Croix

 Ferdinand-Victor-Eugène Delacroix

 Hippolyte Delaroche

 Delatores

 Delaware

 Delaware Indians

 Delcus

 Delegation

 François Delfau

 Pietro Delfino

 Jacques Delille

 Ambrose Lisle March Phillipps De Lisle

 Guillaume Delisle

 Philibert de L'Orme

 Bl. Delphine

 Martin Anton Delrio

 Prefecture Apostolic of the Delta of the Nile

 Deluge

 Modeste Demers

 St. Demetrius

 Demetrius

 Demiurge

 Christian Democracy

 Demon

 Demoniacs

 Demonology

 Thomas Dempster

 Pierre Denaut

 Dénés

 Heinrich Seuse Denifle

 St. Denis

 Johann Nepomuk Cosmas Michael Denis

 Joseph Denis

 William Denman

 Denmark

 Jacques-René de Brisay Denonville

 Peter Dens

 Denunciation

 Diocese of Denver

 Denys the Carthusian

 Francesco Denza

 Heinrich Joseph Dominicus Denzinger

 Deo Gratias

 Deposition

 Josquin Deprés

 De Profundis

 Derbe

 Anton Dereser

 Derogation

 Giovanni Battista de Rossi

 Diocese of Derry

 School of Derry

 Paul-Quentin Desains

 Pierre-Joseph Desault

 René Descartes

 Eustache Deschamps

 Nicolas Deschamps

 Desecration

 Desert (in the Bible)

 Desertion

 George Deshon

 St. Desiderius of Cahors

 Jean Desmarets de Saint-Sorlin

 Pierre-Jean De Smet

 Hernando de Soto

 Despair

 César-Mansuète Despretz

 Desservants

 Achille Desurmont

 Determinism

 Detraction

 William Detré

 Diocese of Detroit

 Pope St. Deusdedit

 St. Deusdedit

 Cardinal Deusdedit

 Deus in Adjutorium Meum Intende

 Deuteronomy

 Martin Deutinger

 Charles Stanton Devas

 Aubrey Thomas Hunt de Vere

 Devil

 Devil-Worshippers

 Devolution

 Giovanni Devoti

 Clementine Deymann

 Dhuoda

 Diaconicum

 Diakovár

 Dialectic

 Diocese of Diamantina

 Antonino Diana

 Diocese of Diano

 Diario Romano

 St. Diarmaid

 Bartolomeu Dias

 Diaspora

 Pedro Díaz

 Bernal Díaz del Castillo

 Juan Díaz de Solís

 Dibon

 Juan de Dicastillo

 Edward Dicconson

 Ralph de Diceto

 St. Dichu

 Dicuil

 Didache

 St. Didacus

 Didascalia Apostolorum

 Henri Didon

 Didot

 Adolphe-Napoleon Didron

 Didymus the Blind

 Francisco Garcia Diego y Moreno

 Wilhelm Diekamp

 Diemoth

 Abraham van Diepenbeeck

 Melchior, Baron (Freiherr) von Diepenbrock

 Franz Xaver Dieringer

 Dies Iræ

 Johann Dietenberger

 Diether of Isenburg

 Dietrich von Nieheim

 George Digby

 Kenelm Henry Digby

 Sir Everard Digby

 Sir Kenelm Digby

 Diocese of Digne (Dinia)

 Ecclesiastical Dignitary

 Diocese of Dijon

 University of Dillingen

 Arthur-Richard Dillon

 Dimissorial Letters

 Ven. Sir Thomas Dingley

 St. Dinooth

 Diocaesarea

 Diocesan Chancery

 Volume 6

 Diocese

 Dioclea

 Diocletian

 Diocletianopolis

 Diodorus of Tarsus

 Epistle to Diognetus

 Dionysias

 Pope St. Dionysius

 St. Dionysius

 Dionysius Exiguus

 Dionysius of Alexandria

 Dionysius the Pseudo-Areopagite

 Dioscorus

 Dioscurus

 Papal Diplomatics

 Diptych

 Spiritual Direction

 Catholic Directories

 Discalced

 Discernment of Spirits

 Disciple

 Disciples of Christ

 Ecclesiastical Discipline

 Discipline of the Secret

 Religious Discussions

 St. Disibod

 Disparity of Worship

 Dispensation

 Dispersion of the Apostles

 Heinrich von Dissen

 Abbey of Dissentis

 Distraction

 Distributions

 Dithmar

 Dives

 Divination

 Society of Divine Charity

 Institute of the Divine Compassion

 Sisters of Divine Providence

 Daughters of the Divine Redeemer

 Society of the Divine Savior

 Society of the Divine Word

 Procopius Divisch

 Divorce

 Joseph Dixon

 Jan Dlugosz

 Marian Dobmayer

 Martin Dobrizhoffer

 Docetae

 Docimium

 Doctor

 Doctors of the Church

 Christian Doctrine

 Doctrine of Addai

 Dogma

 Dogmatic Facts

 Jean Dolbeau

 Carlo Dolci

 Doliche

 Johann Joseph Ignaz von Döllinger

 Charles Dolman

 Dolores Mission

 Dolphin

 Dome

 Emmanuel-Henri-Dieudonné Domenech

 Domenichino

 Domesday Book

 Domicile

 St. Dominic

 Dominical Letter

 Dominican Republic

 Bl. Giovanni Dominici

 Dominic of Prussia

 Dominic of the Mother of God

 Marco Antonio de Dominis

 Dominus Vobiscum

 Domitian

 Domitiopolis

 Domnus Apostolicus

 Patrick Donahoe

 Donatello

 Donation (1)

 Donation (2)

 Donation of Constantine

 Donatists

 Donatus of Fiesole

 Peter Donders

 Thomas Dongan

 Andrew Donlevy

 St. Donnan

 Georg Raphael Donner

 Ferdinand-François-Auguste Donnet

 Juan Francesco Maria de la Saludad Donoso Cortés

 Pope Donus

 Dora

 Abbey of Dorchester

 Pierre Doré

 Andrea Doria

 Matthias Döring

 Thomas Dorman

 Bernard Dornin

 St. Dorothea

 Anne Hanson Dorsey

 Dorylaeum

 Dositheans

 Pierre-Herman Dosquet

 Giovanni Dossi

 Douai

 Douay Bible

 Doubt

 Gavin Douglas

 Stephen Doutreleau

 Dove

 George Dowdall

 James Dowdall

 Dower

 Religious Dower

 Diocese of Down and Connor

 Thomas Downes

 Downside Abbey

 Doxology

 James Warren Doyle

 John Doyle

 Richard Doyle

 David Paul Drach

 Drachma

 Blossius Æmilius Dracontius

 Augusta Theodosia Drane

 Interpretation of Dreams

 Jeremias Drechsel

 Dresden

 Lebrecht Blücher Dreves

 Drevet Family

 Francis Anthony Drexel

 Johann Sebastian von Drey

 Diocese of Dromore

 St. Drostan

 Clemens August von Droste-Vischering

 Druidism

 Gabriel Druillettes

 John C. Drumgoole

 Ven. Robert Drury

 Drusilla

 Drusipara

 Jean Druys

 Gaspar Druzbicki

 Druzes

 Dryburgh Abbey

 John Dryden

 Dualism

 Archdiocese of Dublin

 Guillaume Dubois

 Jean-Antoine Dubois

 John Dubois

 Louis-Guillaume-Valentin Dubourg

 St. Dubric

 Archdiocese of Dubuque

 Fronton du Duc

 Charles Dufresne Du Cange

 Duccio di Buoninsegna

 Philippine-Rose Duchesne

 Ven. James Duckett

 Phillippe-Charles-Jean-Baptiste-Tronson Du Coudray

 Francis Bennon Ducrue

 Beda Franciscus Dudik

 Duel

 Sir Charles Gavan Duffy

 Jean-Baptiste Duhamel

 Daniel Greysolon, Sieur Du Lhut

 Dulia

 Diocese of Duluth

 Jean-Baptiste Dumas

 Francisco Dumetz

 Hubert-André Dumont

 Charles Dumoulin

 William Dunbar

 St. Dunchadh

 Abbey of Dundrennan

 Diocese of Dunedin

 Abbey of Dunfermline

 Dungal

 Martin von Dunin

 Diocese of Dunkeld

 Bl. John Duns Scotus

 St. Dunstan

 Felix-Antoine-Philibert Dupanloup

 Jacques-Davy Duperron

 Louis Ellies Dupin

 Pierre-Charles-François Dupin

 Peter Stephen Duponceau

 Antoine Duprat

 Baron Guillaume Dupuytren

 François Duquesnoy

 Narcisco Duran

 Durand Ursin

 William Durandus

 William Durandus, the Younger

 Durandus of Saint-Pourçain

 Durandus of Troarn

 Archdiocese of Durango (Durangum)

 Archdiocese of Durazzo

 Elisha John Durbin

 Albrecht Dürer

 Ancient Catholic Diocese of Durham (Dunelmum)

 Durham Rite

 School of Durrow

 Duty

 Jean Duvergier de Hauranne

 Ludger Duvernay

 Antoon Van Dyck

 Robert Dymoke

 St. Dympna

 Dynamism

Diptych


(Or diptychon, Greek diptychon from dis, twice and ptyssein, to fold).

A diptych is a sort of notebook, formed by the union of two tablets, placed one upon the other and united by rings or by a hinge. These tablets were made of wood, ivory, bone. or metal. Their inner surfaces had ordinarily a raised frame and were covered with wax, upon which characters were scratched by means of a stylus. Diptychs were known among the Greeks from the sixth century before Christ. They served as copy-books for the exercise of penmanship, for correspondence, and various other uses. The Roman military certificates, privilegia militum, were a kind of diptych. Between the two tablets others were sometimes inserted and the diptych would then be called a triptych, polyptych, etc. The term diptych is often restricted to a highly ornamented type of notebooks. They were generally made out of ivory with carved work, and were sometimes from twelve to sixteen inches in height. In the fourth and fifth centuries a distinction arose between profane and ecclesiastical (liturgical) diptychs, the former being frequently given as presents by high-placed persons. It was customary to commemorate in this way one's elevation to a public office, or any event of personal importance, e.g. a marriage. The consuls, on the day of the installation, were wont to offer diptychs to their friends and even to the emperor. Those presented to the latter often had a border of gold and were quite large. Their tablets often exhibited on a central plate the portrait of the sovereign, surrounded by four other plates. The (undated) Barberini ivory at the Louvre is thus constructed and once served as an ecclesiastical diptych (see below). Some believe it to be the binding of a books offered to the emperor. Strzygowski holds it to be of Egyptian origin and thinks that the portrait is that of Constantine the Great, defender of the Faith. The oldest dated consular diptych is that of Probus (406); it is kept in the treasury of the cathedral of Aosta, Piedmont. The latest is that of the Eastern consul, Basilius (541), one tablet of which is at the Uffizi Museum in Florence and the other at the Brera in Milan. The Theodosian Code (384) forbade the offering of ivory diptychs to any but the regular (i.e. not honorary) consuls. The tablet at the Mayer Museum in Liverpool, bearing the image of Marcus Aurelius (d. l80), is prior to this enactment. The consular diptychs are recognizable by their inscriptions or by the figure of the consul which they bear. On the diptych of Boetius at Brescia (487) and several others of the same type the consul is clad in a trabea (a kind of toga); he holds in his left hand the scipio (consular sceptre) and in his right the mappa circensis, or white cloth which he used to wave as the signal for the games in the circus. These games (ludi) or other liberalities offered to the people by the consul were frequently represented on the tablets of the diptychs.

There is less certainty concerning the diptychs of officials other than consuls, e.g. praetors, quaestors, etc. The diptych of Rufius Probianus V.C. (i.e. vir clarissimus) vicarius urbis Romae, in the Berlin Museum, is the most precious relic of this class, and probably dates from the end of the fourth century. Among the diptychs of private individuals that of Gallienus Concessus, discovered at Rome on the Esquiline, exhibits only the name of its owner. Others were richly ornamented and reproduced often some of the masterpieces of ancient art. Thus on a diptych in the Mayer Museum, Liverpool, are seen Aesculapius and Telesphorus Hygieia, and Amor. The most beautiful of the profane diptychs was carved at the time of a marriage between the Symmachi and the Nicomachi (392 to 394, or 401). It represents on each leaf (one of which is at the South Kensington Museum and the other, in a very damaged condition, at Cluny) a woman performing a sacrifice. Many of the profane diptychs were preserved in the treasuries of the churches, where they were eventually used for liturgical purposes or enshrined in bookbindings or in goldsmith work. The diptych of Boetius, among others bears on the interior, some liturgical texts and religious paintings, attributed to the seventh century. The Liege diptych of the consul Anastasius (517), one leaf of which is at Berlin and the other at South Kensington, bears an inscription of forty-two lines and the prayer Communicantes from the Canon of the Mass. Another of the same consul (in the BibliothèqueNationale, Paris) has a list of the bishops of Bourges. At the cathedral of Monza, Lombardy, a diptych represents in the dress of consuls king David and St. Gregory the Great. It is perhaps an ancient consular diptych, transformed in the eighth or ninth century; according to some it appears to be of ecclesiastical origin. Many carved diptychs reproduced purely religious subjects. On a diptych in the treasury of Rouen cathedral the figure of St. Paul is exactly the same as that on a sarcophagus in Gaul. A diptych leaf in the treasury of Tongres was evidently influenced by the carvings on the cathedra of St. Maximinus at Ravenna, and seems to have belonged to an ancient episcopal see. Certain diptychs with religious subjects, e.g. the Holy Sepulchre and the holy women at the Tomb of Christ (Milan), an angel (British Museum), probably date from the fourth or fifth century. Diptych leaves divided into five compartments have generally served as a cover for copies of the Gospels. The diptychs, though often clumsily executed, are important for the history of sculpture, there being a good number of them extant, and several being accurately dated. At different periods in the Middle Ages numerous diptychs or triptychs of ivory were made, to serve as little devotional panels.

The liturgical use of diptychs offers considerable interest. In the early Christian ages it was customary to write on diptychs the names of those, living or dead, who were considered as members of the Church a signal evidence of the doctrine of the Communion of Saints. Hence the terms "diptychs of the living" and "diptychs of the dead." Such liturgical diptychs varied in shape and dimension. Their use (sacrae tabulae, matriculae, libri vivorum et mortuorum) is attested in the writings of St. Cyprian (third century) and by the history of St. John Chrysostom (fourth century), nor did they disappear from the churches until the twelfth century in the West and the fourteenth century in the East. In the ecclesiastical life of antiquity these liturgical diptychs served various purposes. It is probable that the names of the baptized were written on diptychs, which were thus a kind of baptismal register. The "diptychs of the living" would include the names of the pope, bishops, and illustrious persons, both lay and ecclesiastical, of the benefactors of a church, and of those who offered the Holy Sacrifice. To these names were sometimes added those of the Blessed Virgin, of martyrs, and of other saints. From such diptychs came the first ecclesiastical calendars and the martyrologies. The "diptychs of the dead" would include the names of persons otherwise qualified for inscription on the diptychs of the living, e.g. the bishops of the community (also other bishops), moreover priests and laymen who had died in the odour of sanctity. It is to this kind of diptychs that the later necrologies owe their origin. Occasionally special diptychs were made to contain only the names of a series of bishops; in this way arose at an early date the episcopal lists or catalogues of occupants of sees. Whatever their immediate purpose the liturgical diptychs admitted only the names of persons in communion with the Church; the names of heretics and of excommunicated members were never inserted. Exclusion from these lists was a grave ecclesiastical penalty; the highest dignity, episcopal or imperial, would not avail to save the offender from its infliction. The content of the diptychs was read out, either from the ambo (q. v.) or from the altar by a priest or a deacon. In this respect a variety of customs obtained in different churches and at different periods, sometimes the diptychs were simply laid on the altar during Mass, and when read publicly, such reading did not always occur at the same stage of the Mass. The order of which traces are now seen in the Roman Canon of the Mass was the fixed usage of the Roman Church as early as the fifth century. In that venerable document a long passage after the Sanctus corresponding to the ancient recitation of the diptychs of the living; it contains, as is well known, mention of those for whom the Mass is offered, of the pope, of the bishop of the diocese, of the Blessed Virgin, and of several saints. At Easter and at Pentecost the Hanc igitur furnished a proper occasion to mention the names of the newly baptized, now mentioned only as a body. Finally the recitation of the "diptychs of the dead" is still recalled by the Memento which for the consecration.

R. Maere.