curacy$18137$ - traduzione in greco
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curacy$18137$ - traduzione in greco

CLASS OF RESIDENT PARISH PRIEST OR INCUMBENT CURATE WITHIN THE UNITED CHURCH OF ENGLAND AND IRELAND.
Perpetual curacy; Perpetual Curate
  • Charles Dodgson]], perpetual curate of [[All Saints' Church, Daresbury]] in Cheshire; and father of C. L. Dodgson, otherwise known as [[Lewis Carroll]]. All Saints had been created as a perpetual curacy in 1536 out of a chapel-of-ease of nearby [[Norton Priory]].
  • [[Haworth Parsonage]] built in 1774 as the parsonage house for the ancient chapelry of [[Haworth]] in the parish of [[Bradford]], established as a perpetual curacy in 1820, at the appointment of [[Patrick Brontë]]
  • [[Cheltenham Minster, St Mary's]] an ancient parish church appropriated with a vicarage by [[Cirencester Abbey]] and, because unbeneficed at the dissolution in 1539, then continuing with a perpetual curacy  until reunited with its rectory in 1863

curacy      
n. εφημερία, υπεφημερία

Definizione

Curacy
·noun The office or employment of a curate.

Wikipedia

Perpetual curate

Perpetual curate was a class of resident parish priest or incumbent curate within the United Church of England and Ireland (name of the combined Anglican churches of England and Ireland from 1800 to 1871). The term is found in common use mainly during the first half of the 19th century. The legal status of perpetual curate originated as an administrative anomaly in the 16th century. Unlike ancient rectories and vicarages, perpetual curacies were supported by a cash stipend, usually maintained by an endowment fund, and had no ancient right to income from tithe or glebe.

In the 19th century, when large numbers of new churches and parochial units were needed in England and Wales politically and administratively, it proved much more acceptable to elevate former chapelries to parish status, or create ecclesiastical districts with new churches within ancient parishes, than to divide existing vicarages and rectories. Under the legislation introduced to facilitate this, the parish priests of new parishes and districts, were legally perpetual curates.

There were two particularly notable effects of this early 19th-century practice: compared to rectors and vicars of ancient parishes, perpetual curates tended to be of uncertain social standing; and also be much less likely to be adequately paid.

Perpetual curates disappeared from view in 1868, after which they could legally call themselves vicars, but perpetual curacies remained in law until the distinct status of perpetual curate was abolished by the Pastoral Measure 1968.