<P> Neither the Second Vatican Council nor the subsequent revision of the Roman Missal abolished Latin as the liturgical language of the Roman Rite: the official text of the Roman Missal, on which translations into vernacular languages are to be based, continues to be in Latin, and Latin can still be used in the celebration . The term "Latin Mass" is sometimes applied to such celebrations, which in some places are part of the normal Sunday schedule . </P> <P> Historically speaking, "Latin Mass" can be applied also to the various forms of Pre-Tridentine Mass from about the year 190 of Pope Victor, when the Church in Rome changed from Greek to Latin . </P> <P> Latin liturgical rites other than the Roman Rite have used Latin, and in some cases continue to do so . These include the Ambrosian Rite and the Mozarabic Rite . Some priests and communities continue to use non-Roman - Rite liturgies that have been generally abandoned, such as the Carmelite Rite and the Dominican Rite, celebrating them in Latin . Celebration in Latin of such rites is sometimes referred to as "Latin Mass". </P> <P> A Traditionalist Catholic periodical in the United States is entitled The Latin Mass, the Journal of Catholic Culture and Tradition . </P>

When did the catholic mass change from latin