Palatine - meaning and definition. What is Palatine
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What (who) is Palatine - definition

HIGH-LEVEL OFFICIAL ATTACHED TO IMPERIAL OR ROYAL COURTS IN EUROPE SINCE ROMAN TIMES
Palatine Cardinal; Palatine Cardinals; Palatine cardinal; Cardinal secretary of Memorials; Primicerius defensorum; Secundicerius defensorum; Palatinus
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Palatine         
·noun A palatine bone.
II. Palatine ·noun The Palatine hill in Rome.
III. Palatine ·adj Of or pertaining to the palate.
IV. Palatine ·adj Of or pertaining to a palace, or to a high officer of a palace; hence, possessing royal privileges.
V. Palatine ·noun One invested with royal privileges and rights within his domains; a count palatine. ·see Count palatine, under 4th Count.
palatine         
palatine1 ['pal?t??n, -t?n]
¦ adjective chiefly historical (of an official or feudal lord) having local authority that elsewhere belongs only to a sovereign.
?(of a territory) subject to such authority.
Origin
ME: from Fr. palatin(e), from L. palatinus 'of the palace'.
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palatine2 Anatomy ['pal?t??n, -t?n]
¦ adjective relating to the palate or the palatine bone.
¦ noun (also palatine bone) each of two bones within the skull forming parts of the eye socket, the nasal cavity, and the hard palate.
Origin
C17: from Fr. palatin(e), from L. palatum 'palate'.
Palatine         
A palatine or palatinus (in Latin; plural palatini; cf. derivative spellings below) is a high-level official attached to imperial or royal courts in Europe since Roman times.

Wikipedia

Palatine

A palatine or palatinus (in Latin; plural palatini; cf. derivative spellings below) is a high-level official attached to imperial or royal courts in Europe since Roman times. The term palatinus was first used in Ancient Rome for chamberlains of the Emperor due to their association with the Palatine Hill. The imperial palace guard, after the rise of Constantine I, were also called the Scholae Palatinae for the same reason. In the Early Middle Ages the title became attached to courts beyond the imperial one; one of the highest level of officials in the papal administration were called the judices palatini. Later the Merovingian and Carolingian dynasties had counts palatine, as did the Holy Roman Empire. Related titles were used in Hungary, Poland, Lithuania, the German Empire, and the County of Burgundy, while England, Ireland, and parts of British North America referred to rulers of counties palatine as palatines.

Examples of use of Palatine
1. Karen Ernst, a mother of three in Palatine, Ill., likes the new approach.
2. Panella said there were at least two houses on the Palatine where the emperor was known to have lived.
3. The call centre operates out of the Sant‘Anastasia al Palatino (St Anastasia of the Palatine) Church close to the famous Circus Maximus in the heart of Rome.
4. Excavations on the Palatine in recent decades have turned up wonders such as another renewed Augustus‘ house, including two rooms with frescoes of masked figures and pine branches.
5. The Palatine is honeycombed with ruins, from the eighth century B.C. remains of Rome‘s first huts to a medieval fortress and Renaissance villas.