PropertyValue
rdf:type
rdfs:label
  • Stole
  • Stole
rdfs:comment
  • Stoles are part of the Vestment set and can be found by doing level 2 Treasure Trails or level 3 Treasure Trails. Each is aligned with a different god: Guthix, Saradomin, Zamorak, Zaros, Bandos and Armadyl. Stoles are equipped in the neck slot and require 60 Prayer. All stoles provide a prayer bonus of +10.
  • A stole is a vestment worn by various holders of certain of offices. In the series, it has been shown as primarily a symbol of offices held by women, such as the Amyrlin Seat, the Panarch of Tarabon and the Queen of Andor. The Keeper of the Chronicles also wears a stole as a trapping of her office. Typically the stole is a wide, flat strip of silk, worn over a dress, hanging from the behind the wearer's neck to trail down the front of her torso. Thus far, all of the stoles mentioned have been worn by women.
  • Actor David Naughton is the brother of James Naughton, co-lead actor on the series.
  • Een Stole, of meervoud Stoles, behoren tot een onderdeel uit de Vestment set die verkrijgbaar is als beloning van de Treasure Trails level 3. Elke stole behoort tot een verschillende god. Zo zijn er Guthix, stole en Zamorak stoles. God stoles worden gedragen in de amulet slot en kunnen alleen gedragen worden voor spelers met een Prayer van 60 of hoger. Het geeft op het moment de hoogste prayer bonus voor de amulet slot.
  • The word stole derives via the Latin stola, from the Greek στολή (stolē), "garment", originally "array" or "equipment". The stole was originally a kind of shawl that covered the shoulders and fell down in front of the body; on women they were often very large indeed. After being adopted by the Church of Rome about the seventh century (the stole having also been adopted in other locals prior to this), the stole became gradually narrower and so richly ornamented that it developed into a mark of dignity. Nowadays, the stole is usually wider and can be made from a wide variety of material.
owl:sameAs
dcterms:subject
store
  • 1000
low
  • 1000
Tradeable
  • Yes
  • Ja
Quest
  • No
  • Nee
dbkwik:darkscape/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:nl.runescape/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:oldschoolrunescape/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:planet-of-the-apes/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:planetoftheapes/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:religion/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:rune-scape/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:runescape/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
dbkwik:wackypedia/property/wikiPageUsesTemplate
Last
Actor
Name
First
Members
  • Yes
  • Ja
Died
  • Unknown
high
  • 1500
Continuity
Gender
  • Male
Race
Born
  • Unknown
abstract
  • Stoles are part of the Vestment set and can be found by doing level 2 Treasure Trails or level 3 Treasure Trails. Each is aligned with a different god: Guthix, Saradomin, Zamorak, Zaros, Bandos and Armadyl. Stoles are equipped in the neck slot and require 60 Prayer. All stoles provide a prayer bonus of +10.
  • A stole is a vestment worn by various holders of certain of offices. In the series, it has been shown as primarily a symbol of offices held by women, such as the Amyrlin Seat, the Panarch of Tarabon and the Queen of Andor. The Keeper of the Chronicles also wears a stole as a trapping of her office. Typically the stole is a wide, flat strip of silk, worn over a dress, hanging from the behind the wearer's neck to trail down the front of her torso. Thus far, all of the stoles mentioned have been worn by women.
  • Actor David Naughton is the brother of James Naughton, co-lead actor on the series.
  • Een Stole, of meervoud Stoles, behoren tot een onderdeel uit de Vestment set die verkrijgbaar is als beloning van de Treasure Trails level 3. Elke stole behoort tot een verschillende god. Zo zijn er Guthix, stole en Zamorak stoles. God stoles worden gedragen in de amulet slot en kunnen alleen gedragen worden voor spelers met een Prayer van 60 of hoger. Het geeft op het moment de hoogste prayer bonus voor de amulet slot.
  • The word stole derives via the Latin stola, from the Greek στολή (stolē), "garment", originally "array" or "equipment". The stole was originally a kind of shawl that covered the shoulders and fell down in front of the body; on women they were often very large indeed. After being adopted by the Church of Rome about the seventh century (the stole having also been adopted in other locals prior to this), the stole became gradually narrower and so richly ornamented that it developed into a mark of dignity. Nowadays, the stole is usually wider and can be made from a wide variety of material. There are many theories as to the "ancestry" of the stole. Some say it came from the tallit (Jewish prayer mantle), because it is very similar to the present usage (as in the minister puts it on when he or she leads in prayer) but this theory is no longer regarded much today. More popular is the theory that the stole originated from a kind of liturgical napkin called an orarium (cf. orarion) very similar to the sudarium. In fact, in many places the stole is called the orarium. Therefore it is linked to the napkin used by Christ in washing the feet of his disciples, and is a fitting symbol of the yoke of Christ, the yoke of service. The most likely origin for the stole, however, is to be connected with the scarf of office among Imperial officials in the Roman Empire. As members of the clergy became members of the Roman administration, see Constantine I and Christianity, they were granted certain honors, one specifically being a designator of rank within the imperial (and ecclesiastical) hierarchy. The various configurations of the stole (including the pallium or the omophorion) grew out of this usage. The original intent, then was to designate a person as belonging to a particular organization and to denote their rank within their group, a function which the stole continues to perform today. Thus, unlike other liturgical garments which were originally worn by every cleric or layman, the stole was a garment which was specifically restricted to particular classes of people based on occupation.
is Roles of