It's simply called a clerical collar or Roman collar.
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Catholic AnswerPriests do not wear "cardboard collars", I assume that you are referring to the white collar that you see under their black collar. Originially (and up until recently, I don't know if you can still get them) this was a white linen collar exactly like the ones that men used to wear when collars were detachable. They were fastened on with collar buttons, the only difference was that the clerical collars were worn backwards with the opening in the back. In days gone by, the clergy would just wear this white collar put on backwards above a black shirt - the "tab" that you commonly see came into existence because when a priest wore a cassock, it had a standup black collar with a small opening in the front which showed about an inch or so of the white collar. That look became popular right before Vatican Council II, and now clerical shirts are even made with the black stand-up part to leave only an inch or so of the white collar showing. The linen was starched heavily, just as regular men's collars were. Nowadays, most priests wear plastic collars as they stand up and don't have to be ironed and starched as the old ones did. (Not that old, I remember wearing the starched linen collars in the seminary, and I'm not sixty yet!)it is called the Roman Collar and is a sign of being a servant,tracing back to slave, or servant,collars
Clerical collar
Most priests wear a Roman collar in public, not a turtle neck.
Yes, they generally do.
A vicar's neck wear is called a clerical collar or a dog collar. It is a distinctive type of collar worn by clergy members in various Christian denominations.
Catholics and Episcopalians are the only two denominations that call clergy "priests". Nearly ALL priests can and do wear street clothes when they are not working. This includes summer attire of shorts, shirt, sneakers/tennis shoes or sandals; and winter clothing of pants, shirt, and dress shoes. Episcopalians have female priests, so they also wear dresses, or skirts and blouses. When working, priests wear a black shirt, and black pants / slacks. )Episcopal priests also wear light blue shirts.) The black or blue shirt can be worn with a full band white collar or others prefer a tab collar that fits only in the front of the shirt. Over top of that, Catholic priests may wear a cassock or alb over the black attire and full collar. In services, priests wear a variety of different vestments over their black street clothing. Very colorful and symbolic vestments are worn for certain church holidays and to match the liturgical calendar. For example, purple is often worn for Easter.
In men's formal wear a stiff pleated collar is called a Imperial/Poke collar
The collar is called a Tony or Guido collar available at Guido fashions.
According to Father John Hardon, S.J. in his Modern Catholic Dictionary, Catholic priests are required to wear distinctive ecclesiastical garb (in the Western Church this is black cassock indoors and a clerical collar and suit for outdoors.) The Church's legislation about priests wearing a garb that distinguishes them from the laity is mandatory.
What pets wear around their necks is called a collar.
In the early days of the Christian Church, priests wore the same clothes as the rest of society. As fashions changed, the apparel of priests did not and as a result became more distinctive. They wanted to stand apart from other people so the faithful would know them as representatives of the Church. By the sixth century, the black robe ("cassock" or "soutane") became standard dress for priests not because it was a sign of mourning but because it represented the priests' withdrawal from from the whirling glamour of society. The white collar (from the Latin word 'collare' - collar), frequently called a 'dog collar' began to be worn from the eighteenth century onwards and is representative of Jesus as 'the Light of the world' and also His resurrection.
They wear Vestments while conducting the Divine Liturgy and the Sacraments.
That is an Elizabethan collar, sometimes shortened to e-collar, and also called a space collar.
The collar that vicars wear is a clerical collar, not a dog collar. Dog collar is just a crude nickname. The clerical collar is also sometimes referred to as a Roman collar.