Please note that the content of this book primarily consists of articles available from Wikipedia or other free sources online. Pages: 101. Chapters: Mass, Mass of Paul VI, Mozarabic Rite, Gallican Rite, Celtic Rite, Traditional Ambrosian Rite, African Rite, Eucharist in the Catholic Church, East Syrian Rite, Pre-Tridentine Mass, Byzantine Rite, Dominican Rite, Antiochene Rite, Magnificat, Carmelite Rite, Sarum Rite, Lamb of God, Papal Mass, List of Catholic rites and churches, Versus populum, Pro multis, Roman Rite, Anglican Use, Durham Rite, Pastoral Provision, Emergency baptism, Embolism, Malankara Rite, Holy Qurbana of Addai and Mari, Aquileian Rite, Sine populo, Ad orientem, Leonine Prayers, Bination, Orate fratres, Benedictine Rite, Fraction, Mysterium fidei, Book of Divine Worship, Extraordinary form of the Roman Rite, Vimpa, Norbertine Rite, Romano-German Pontifical, Alexandrian Rite, Indian masses, Mass of the Catechumens, Mass of the Presanctified, Use of Hereford, Missa Sicca, Mass-penny. Excerpt: The Gallican Rite is a historical sub-grouping of the Roman Catholic liturgy in western Europe; it is not a single rite but actually a family of rites within the Western Rite which comprised the majority use of most of Christianity in western Europe for the greater part of the 1st millennium AD. The rites were first developed in the early centuries as the Syriac-Greek rites of Jerusalem and Antioch and were first translated into Latin in various parts of the Roman West. By the 5th century, it was well established in Gaul. Ireland too is known to have had a form of this Gallican Liturgy mixed with Celtic customs. The rites can be considered part of what is now the Western branch of the Catholic Church. Today, a rite of this family is still in use in the Archdiocese of Lyon, France. The name Gallican Rite is given to the rite which prevailed in Gaul from the earliest times of which we have any information until about the middle or end of the eighth century. Th...