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  1. Patron The person or body owning an advo wson (i.e. right to present a priest to a benefice) who may be a private individual or a corporation (ecclesiastical or lay ). Plurality The holding of two or more separate benefices by one incumbent .

  2. Who is/are your patron(s)? If you do not know who your patron is this can be found by consulting the patronage register which is maintained by the Diocesan Registrar. It lists the patrons and contact addresses for all patrons of each benefice. This is a public document open to inspection so there are no GDPR issues of confidentiality.

  3. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › BeneficeBenefice - Wikipedia

    Nomination or presentation on the part of the patron of the benefice is thus the first requisite in order that a clerk should become legally entitled to a benefice. The next requisite is that he should be admitted by the bishop as a fit person for the spiritual office to which the benefice is annexed, and the bishop is the judge of the sufficiency of the clerk to be so admitted.

  4. Apr 3, 2015 · How did "Matron" and "Patron" come to mean different things? Matron: (3) a woman serving as a guard, warden, or attendant for women or girls, as in a prison. Patron: (6) Ecclesiastical. a person who has the right of presenting a member of the clergy to a benefice. They both ultimately came from Latin mater and pater, didn't they?

  5. According to canon law, a patron is one who builds or maintains an ecclesiastical benefice. If church revenues constitute a benefice, then anyone donating the land, building the church, or...

  6. The person(s) possessing the right to make a presentation to a benefice. The patron could be a private individual, a lay corporation (such as the mayor and corporation of a borough), an ecclesiastical corporation (such as a dean and chapter of a cathedral) or a collegiate body (such as an Oxford or Cambridge college or a school such as Eton ...

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  8. By the right of patronage (ius patronatus) is understood a determinate sum of rights and obligations entailed upon a definite person, the patron, especially in connection with the assignment and administration of a benefice; not in virtue of his hierarchical position, but by the legally regulated grant of the Church, out of _: gratitude towards ...

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