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The vicarial tithes have been commuted for a rent-charge of £90.
And once vicarial penance in any form was admitted, it proved impossible to keep money out of it.
However the Bullers when they were patrons allowed the curates to have the vicarial tithe.
Justinian transferred some vicarial powers to the governors.
Cornelio L. Matanguihan as the Vicarial representative.
The following year he was named Bishop of Brest, vicarial bishop of the Lithuanian eparchy.
Children of heretics could not inherit, as the stain was vicarial; grandchildren could not hold ecclesiastical benefices unless they successfully denounced someone.
The Epiphany Cathedral at Yelokhovo, Moscow, is the vicarial church of the Moscow Patriarchs.
The parish clergy also serve the sacramental needs of the Appalachian State Catholic Campus Ministry, a vicarial organization for college students within the parish.
In August of the same year he was presented to the vicarage of Amport, the vicarial residence, which he resigned to a friend who died in July 1771.
In 1610 there was only one acre of vicarial glebe, the impropriate rectory being said to have stripped the vicar "stark naked" without glebe, wood, hay or corn.
On 14 January 1896, he was consecrated bishop in St. Isaac's Cathedral in St. Petersburg as vicarial bishop of the Baltic dicastery for the Kamenets-Podol eparchy.
The seat of the vicariate is the town of Bontoc, where the Santa Rita of Cascia Cathedral and the vicarial chancery, known as the Teng-ab Pastoral Complex, are located.
If, in later years, a newly created parish was carved out of a larger rectoral or vicarial parish, the incumbent would be legally a perpetual curate, but would commonly be styled "vicar" in common use.
Since the vicarial direction, in all cases, was coming from the same source - Heaven - and since, presumably, there was no disagreement between the Father and the Son and St Peter, it should have made no difference who was vicar of whom.
Vicarage The modern usage is that of a vicar's dwelling the strict meaning is that of vicarial benefice Villein A Norman term for tenant who was not free, but held his land, usually a virgate, in return for his labour in the Lord of the Manor's demesne.