A bishop's hat is known as a miter (also spelled as mitre).
Well -- I believe conclave is all ceremony and ritual. And, since the Bishops meet to decide which of them will become the new Pope -- I believe that makes them ceremonial.
There is no such thing as a ceremonial bishop. A Bishop's headgear is a miter or mitre, depending on your spelling.
The ceremonial hat of a bishop is called a mitre. It is a tall, pointed hat worn during liturgical ceremonies as a symbol of the bishop's authority and office within the Catholic Church.
The bishop's ceremonial hat is called a mitre.
The bishop's ceremonial hat is called a mitre.
The mitre is the tall, pointed ceremonial hat worn by a bishop.
The mitre is the tall, pointed ceremonial hat worn by a bishop.
The mitre is the high, peaked ceremonial hat that is worn by a bishop during the times he is officiating at certain rites that are a part of his ministry.
The mitre is the ceremonial hat worn by a bishop (including the pope) in Catholicism, the Anglican Church and a few other Christian sects.
The bishop has two diagonal cuts for two reasons. First it is to look like a bishop's Mitre, his ceremonial hat which has diagonal sides. The second is to show that the Bishop moves in diagonal directions.
It is called a cope. His tall hat is called a mitre.
The Episcopal Bishop's hat is called a miter. It is the same hat, miter, that a Roman Catholic Bishop wears. Along with the staff he carries, the miter symbolizes the Bishop's authority and position within the church. Otherwise, he (or she) is just a normal everyday person. Bishops do not wear the miter unless in preparation for official church business.
Mitre also spelled Miter. A bishops headwear is called a mitre
The hat worn by the Queen's Guard is called a bearskin hat. It is made of real bearskin and is part of the ceremonial uniform worn by the guards when on duty at royal palaces.