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Origin and history of tonsure
tonsure(n.)
late 14c., "a ritual shaving of the head or a part of it," especially upon being received into clerical orders, also in reference to the part of the head so shaved; from Anglo-French tonsure (mid-14c.), Old French tonsure "ecclesiastical tonsure; sheep-shearing" (14c.), from Latin tonsura "a shearing, clipping," from tonsus, past participle of tondere "to shear, shave, clip, crop" (from PIE *tend-, from root *tem- "to cut").
In Middle English also used of haircuts and beard-trimmings, also of clipped coins. The verb, "clip or shave the head of," as an ecclesiastic, is attested from 1706 (implied in tonsured). Related: Tonsuring. Tonsor ("barber") is attested as a surname from mid-13c.
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