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Curia





Encyclopedia results for Curia

  1. Curia

    Other uses Citations missing article January 2010 date February 2010 A curia in early Ancient Rome Roman times was a subdivision of the people, i.e. more or less a tribe, and with a metonymy it came to mean also the meeting place where the tribe discussed its affairs. Etymologically it is derived from the Old Latin term co viria, literally an association of men. This archaic pronunciation note that current scholarship believes that in Classical Latin v is always pronounced as w eventually evolved into the more recognizable word. Roman Republic In the Roman Republic , there were three types of divisions into which the people were organized the curiae , which were based on clans or gens gentes the centuriae , which were military and tribus , local tribes that were voting blocs. ref Lily Ross ... three tribes into ten divisions. Each curia was then further divided into ten decuriae . ref .... ref Each curia was led by a curio , over whom presided the curio maximus . The curia per antonomasia was the Curia Hostilia in Rome , which was the building where the Roman Senate Senate usually ... nobility. Roman Empire By the Imperial period, a curia was any building where local government ... the term started to refer also to the people making up the local administration see curiales . The Curia ... and religious. The fall of the Western Roman Empire ended the secular curia in the West, but not the religious ... After the end of the Roman Empire, the term Curia was used to designate the administrative apparatus of the Roman Catholic Church, and more specifically, the Vatican. Modern usage The term curia ..., 38 50 ref See also Constitution of the Roman Republic Curio maximus Lex curiata de imperio Roman Curia Curia Hostilia Curia Cornelia Curia Julia References Reflist Ancient Rome topics Category Ancient ... Roman law bg ca C ria romana da Curia de Curia et Kuuria es Curia fr Curie Rome antique it Curia storia di Roma he hu Curia no Curia pl Curia pt C ria ro Curia roman ru ...   more details



  1. Curia (disambiguation)

    wiktionarypar curia Curia Curia may refer to in Roman antiquity Curia , one of the ten subdivisions of each of the three Roman tribes. Also of similar divisions in other cities. The building belonging to a Roman curia, serving mainly as its place of worship, see Ancient Roman religion the building of the Roman senate, see Curia Julia the senate of an ancient Italian city other than Rome Christianity Curia Roman Catholic Church , a group of officials who assist in the governance of a particular Church within Roman Catholicism Roman Curia , the administrative apparatus of the Holy See any Ecclesiastical court feudalism the Middle Latin term for a feudal court, see Court royal the Middle Latin term for a court of law, see Legal history medieval taxonomy Curia herb Justicia pectoralis , also known as tilo Ayapana triplinervis , a tropical plant toponymy The Latin name for Chur , Graub nden, Switzerland European Union As CURIA abbreviation also CVRIA for Court of Justice of the European Union . See http www.curia.europa.eu People named Curia Curia wife of Quintus Lucretius circa 60 5 BC , ancient Roman woman who hid her husband Francesco Curia 1538 1610 , Italian painter disambig Category Given names Category Surnames bg el eo Kurio it Curia nl Curia pt C ria ...   more details



  1. Curia Hostilia

    coord 41 53 35 N 12 29 07 E region IT type landmark display title Ancient monuments in Rome name Curia Hostilia label name Curia Hostilia image name Curia Hostilia, Comitium , Rostra and Lapis Niger layout.jpg tekst1 Curia Hostilia in red with the Republican Comitium diagram label x 0.38 label y 0.37 ... type Government building Template Ancient Rome and the fall of the Republic The Curia Hostilia was one of the original senate houses or curia of the Roman Republic. It is believed to have begun ... BC by Lucius Cornelius Sulla during his renovations of the comitium and enlargement of the Curia. History ... concrete fence to keep pedestrians from walking atop it. The Curia Hostilia architecture had changed ... to stroll into the Curia Hostilia to listen to the senators debate. Relatively little is known about the Curia Hostilia. One feature of the Curia that is mentioned in almost all sources is the Tabula Valeria, a painting on the exterior of the Curia s western wall. It depicted the victory of Manius ... ref Another detail that most sources agree on is that the Curia Hostilia was located on the north ... , led up to the Curia s entrance. With regard to the Curia s location, Stambaugh writes, T he Curia Hostilia was built on rising ground so as to dominate the whole space of the Forum Romanum . ref Stambaugh 1988, p. 109 ref Given its prominent place in the Forum, it seems that the Curia Hostilia ... the exterior may well have looked almost exactly the same as the Curia Julia as the classic ... in 80 BC under Lucius Cornelius Sulla to enlarge the curia and accommodate an increase in the number of senators. It was replaced with the Curia Cornelia , located in almost the same space. This structure was in turn replaced by the Curia Julia started by Julius Caesar and finished by Augustus Emperor ... dlib.etc.ucla.edu projects Forum reconstructions CuriaIulia 1 Curia Iulia introduction , Digital Roman Forum http www.livius.org ct cz curia julia.html Livius.org Curia Julia Category 1st century BC architecture ...   more details



  1. Curia Cornelia

    , Caesar replaced the Curia Cornelia with the Curia Julia which still stands in 44 BC. External links http sights.seindal.dk sight 1192 Curia Cornelia.html Curia Cornelia coord missing Category 1st century ...   more details



  1. Curia Julia

    coord 41 53 34.55 N 12 29 7.45 E type landmark display title Ancient monuments in Rome name Curia Julia label name Curia Julia image name Curia Julia.jpg tekst1 label x 0.38 label y 0.37 location 14 regions ... Julius Caesar type Templum wiki articles Architectural structure Structures Rostra , Curia Hostilia , Curia Julia , Lapis Niger , Felicitas Temple of Felicitas Roman politics Politicians Cicero , Gaius ... structure Structures data2 Rostra , Curia Hostilia , Curia Julia , Lapis Niger header3 label3 ... background ddf below Curia Julia lang la Curia Iulia , lang it Curia Iulia is the third named Curia , or Senate House, in the Ancient Rome ancient city of Rome . It was built in 44 BC when Julius Caesar replaced Faustus Cornelius Sulla senator Faustus Cornelius Sulla s reconstructed Curia Cornelia , which itself had replaced the Curia Hostilia . Caesar did this in order to redesign both spaces ... in 29 BC . ref Claridge 1998, p. 70 ref The Curia Julia is one of only a handful of Roman structures ... Foro in the seventh century and later restoration. History There were many curia during the history of the Roman civilization. Many of them existed at the same time. Curia simply means Meeting House . While the senate met regularly at the curia within the comitium space, there were many other structures ... to enter the sanctified curias of the Senate. The Curia Julia is the third named curia within the comitium ... the curia and the new structure was dedicated to its financial benefactor, Cornelius Sulla . In fact, the structure in the forum today is the second incarnation of Caesar s curia. From 81 to 96 the Curia Julia was restored under Domitian . In 283, this Curia was heavily damaged by a fire, at the time of emperor Carinus . ref Richardson 1992, p. 103 ref From 284 to 305, the Curia was then rebuilt by Diocletian . It is the remnants of Diocletian s building that stands today. In 412, the Curia ... 10, 1923 the Italian government acquired the Curia Julia and the adjacent convent of the Church ...   more details



  1. Magna Curia

    Infobox Historic building name Magna Curia or The Bethlen Castle br Castelul Bethlen image Magna Curia1.JPG caption The front view of Magna Curia map type latitude longitude location town Deva, Romania Deva location country ROU architect client Sigismund B thory , Bethlen G bor engineer construction start date 1582 completion date 1621 date demolished cost structural system style Renaissance , Baroque size Magna Curia Latin language Latin for The Great Court or The Bethlen Castle is a palace located in Deva, Romania Deva , Romania . History In 1582 the hungarian captain Ferenc Geszty, in charge with the Cetatea Deva Deva Castle s garrison, erected a house at the foot of the citadel hill. ref name mek.oszk.hu a cite web title The Ruling Class work History of Transylvania, Volume I, From the Beginnings to 1606 url http mek.oszk.hu 03400 03407 html 114.html page1 717 language accessdate 2008 04 12 ref That house became the residence of Sigismund B thory , general Giorgio Basta , Stephen Bocskay , Gabriel B thory and Gabriel Bethlen . ref name muzeu a cite web title CIMEC Museums and Collections in Romania work url http museum.worldwidesam.net en about info museum.htm language accessdate 2008 04 12 ref Gabriel Bethlen dispose in 1621 the radical transformation of the initial house, the result being Magna Curia palace. The Bethlen Castle was a Renaissance style building, but the subsequent ... 2008 04 12 ref Magna Curia was completely renovated in 2007, with improvements that included ... ref References reflist Images gallery Image Magna Curia1.JPG Magna Curia Palace Image Magna Curia2.JPG Magna Curia Palace Image Magna Curia3.JPG Magna Curia Palace Image Magna Curia4.JPG Magna Curia Palace detaliu deasupra por ii de la intrare Image Magna Curia5.JPG Magna Curia Palace Image Magna Curia6.JPG Magna Curia Palace aripa dreapt Image Magna Curia7.JPG Magna Curia Palace gallery External ... in Romania Hunedoara geo stub Romania struct stub ro Magna Curia ...   more details



  1. Moderator of the Curia

    A moderator of the Curia Roman Catholic Church curia , under the authority of the Bishop Catholic Church bishop of a diocese in the Catholic Church , coordinates the exercise of the administrative duties and oversees those who hold offices and minister in diocesan administration. He must be a priest. The office has been variously described by whom date November 2010 as equivalent to a chief executive officer CEO or chief operating officer COO . Although the office was first included in the 1983 Code of Canon Law , the concept is much older. The bishop is not required to appoint a moderator of the curia and may exercise the office himself or delegate its functions to others. Usually, the vicar general , or one of them, is appointed to this office. ref name c. 473 cite web url http www.vatican.va archive ENG1104 P1N.HTM title Canon 473 work Code of Canon Law date 1983 publisher The Holy See accessdate 2010 01 19 ref The moderator of the curia is bound with the bishop to the general principle that diocesan structures should always be at the service of the good of souls and that administrative demands should not take precedence over the care of persons. Therefore, he should see that the operation is smooth and efficient, avoiding all unnecessary complexity or bureaucracy, and always directed towards its proper supernatural end. ref name no. 177 cite web url http www.vatican.va roman curia congregations cbishops documents rc con cbishops doc 20040222 apostolorum successores en.html title 177.The Coordination of Different Offices work DIRECTORY FOR THE PASTORAL MINISTRY OF BISHOPS date 2004 publisher The Holy See accessdate 2010 01 19 ref See also Diocesan chancery Catholic Church hierarchy Positions within a diocese at diocesan level References reflist DEFAULTSORT Moderator Of The Curia Category Roman Catholic Church offices Category Canon law Category Ecclesiastical titles ...   more details



  1. Curia regis

    Italic title disputed date December 2008 unreferenced date December 2008 Curia regis is a Latin term meaning royal council or Noble court king s court . England The Curia Regis, in the Kingdom of England , was a council of Tenant in chief tenants in chief those who held lands directly from the King, known as Manorialism manors and ecclesiastic s that advised the king of England on Legislation legislative matters. It replaced its Anglo Saxon predecessor, the Witenagemot , after the Norman conquest of 1066, and eventually developed into the Parliament of England . William the Conqueror brought to England the Feudalism feudal system of his native Normandy . Thus, he granted land to his most important military supporters, who in turn granted land to their supporters, thus creating a social stratification feudal hierarchy . William II was an absolute ruler but often sought the advice of the Curia Regis before making laws. The tenants in chief often struggled with their spiritual counterparts and with the King for power. In 1215, from John of England John they secured Magna Carta , which established that the King may not levy or collect any taxes except the feudal taxes to which they were hitherto accustomed , save with the consent of this council. It was also established that the most important tenants in chief the earl s and the baron s , as well as the ecclesiastics archbishop s, bishop s and abbot s be summoned to the council by personal writs from the Sovereign, and that all others be summoned to the council by general writ s from the sheriff s of their counties. John later repealed ... its modern form. s start s par s bef before Witenagemot br small c. 627 1066 small s ttl title Curia ... Curia Regis Category Latin political phrases Category Norman and Medieval England Category Royal and noble courts de Curia Regis es Curia Regis Inglaterra fr Curia regis Angleterre la Aula regia ja pl Rada kr lewska ru fi Curia Regis uk ...   more details



  1. Francesco Curia

    Francesco Curia 1538 1610 was an Italy Italian painter of the Renaissance period, active mainly in his hometown of Naples . He was a pupil of the painter Giovanni Filippo Criscuolo . Among his pupils were Fabrizio Santafede ref name Cyclopedia1887 Cite book first last year 1887 title Cyclopedia of Painters and Paintings editor John Denison Champlin and Charles Callahan Perkins pages 112 publisher C. Scribner s sons series id url http books.google.com ?id RQYFAAAAYAAJ&pg RA1 PA112&lpg RA1 PA112 authorlink postscript None ref and Ippolito Borghese . He was one of several artists residing in Naples that were influenced by the style of Giorgio Vasari . ref name Porter1993 Cite book first Jeanne Chenault last Porter year 1993 title Parthenope s Splendor Art of the Golden Age in Naples editor pages 64 publisher Penn State Press series isbn 9780915773060 url http books.google.com ?id GgoTlGKceHMC&printsec frontcover PPA64,M1 authorlink postscript None ref References Secondary Sources cite book first James R. last Hobbes year 1849 title Picture collector s manual adapted to the professional man, and the amateur editor pages page 69 publisher T&W Boone id url http books.google.com books?q intitle picture intitle collector s authorlink cite book first Di Majo last Ippolita year 2002 title Francesco Curia. L opera completa The complete work editor Electa Naples pages publisher Electa Napoli series The classic isbn 8851000638 url authorlink location Napoli reflist Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Curia, Francesco ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH 1538 PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH 1610 PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Curia, Francesco Category 1538 births Category 1610 deaths Category People from Naples Category Italian painters Category Neapolitan painters Category Renaissance painters Italy painter 16thC stub fr Francesco Curia ...   more details



  1. Roman Curia

    Roman Curia also Curia Roman Catholic Church for the building that housed the Roman Senate Curia Julia The Roman Curia is the administrative apparatus of the Holy See and the central governing body of the entire ... of the Roman Curia which, therefore, perform their duties in his name and with his authority for the good ... Office of Bishops in the Church, Christus Dominus Curia in medieval and later Latin usage means noble court court in the sense of royal court rather than court of law . The Roman Curia, then, sometimes ... the Pope in carrying out his functions. The Roman Curia can be loosely compared to cabinets ... Catholic diocese to have its own curia for its administration. For the Diocese of Rome, these functions are not handled by the Roman Curia, but by the Vicariate General of His Holiness for the City ... on the Roman Curia, as such, than other Catholic dioceses throughout the world. Until recently, there still existed hereditary officers of the Roman Curia , holding titles denominating functions that had ... Roman Curia Roman Curia. 2009 . In Encyclop dia Britannica. Retrieved May 18, 2009, from Encyclop dia ... Curia, which is composed only of offices of the Holy See . The following organs or charges, according to the official website of the Holy See, compose the Curia ref http www.vatican.va roman curia The Roman Curia ref The Secretariat of State File PaulVIKennedy.jpg thumb right John F. Kennedy , president ... of State is the oldest dicastery in the Roman Curia, the government of the Roman Catholic Church ... century ref http www.vatican.va roman curia secretariat state documents rc seg st 12101998 profile ... See s activities. The Congregations The Congregation Roman Curia Roman Congregations ref http www.vatican.va roman curia congregations index.htm Congregations ref are a type of dicastery department with a jurisdiction of the Roman Curia, the central administrative organism of the Catholic Church ... for the Doctrine of the Faith ref http www.vatican.va roman curia congregations cfaith documents ...   more details



  1. Curia Regia

    Multiple issues cleanup March 2009 confusing March 2009 The Curia Regia was the supreme court of the Kingdom of Hungary Hungary and Croatia . when date August 2011 Charles VI, Holy Roman Emperor Charles VI in 1723 divided it into two courts the Tabula Septemviralis Court of the seven and the Tabula Regia Iudiciaria Royal Court . The Tabula Regia functioned under a dignitary named the personalis , in the case of prevention, of the elder Baron Court. ref Robert John Weston Evans The Making of the Habsburg Monarchy, 1550 1700 An Interpretation , p. 239, Oxford University Press, 1979 ISBN 0198730853, 9780198730859. ref Tabula Regia Iudiciaria The Tabula Regia was constituted of two prelates, two Barons of the Court, two deputy judge advocates of the Kingdom the vice Palatine Kingdom of Hungary Palatine , the deputy judge advocate of the Curia Regia, four protonotars, four assessors of the Kingdom, four assessors of the archdiocese, four adjunctive assessors. Tabula Septemviralis The Tabula Septemviralis , after 1723, was composed by the Palatine, five Prelates the archbishop of Esztergom and Kalocsa and three bishops , eight magnates and eight nobleman, one Reporter of the mine courts and a recorder. The Tabula Septemviralis solved the appeals on the verdicts of the Tabula Regia and Tabula Banalis . It was the final instance, and in civil cases it was not possible to appeal its verdict, while in criminal cases, the King had the power to grant amnesty or pardon. References reflist Category National supreme courts Hungary Category Kingdom of Hungary ...   more details



  1. Curia (Roman Catholic Church)

    dablink For the Ancient Roman usage, see Curia . In Roman Catholicism , a curia consists of a group of officials who assist in the governance of a particular Church . These curias range from the relatively simple diocesan curia, to the larger patriarchal curias, to the Roman Curia , which is the central .... For example, the Legion of Mary has a rank called the Curia. It stands above the Praesidium but below the Regia . The Curia is responsible for several Praesidia. All of these have now very different functions from the Curia in Roman times, but they keep the name since they are historically descended ..., to the point of actually sitting at the same chair in the same building. So the Curia passed in religious ... Apostolic tradition . Diocesan curia Every diocese and eparchy has a curia, consisting of the chief ... church. This diocesan curia includes the vicar general , who is normally also the moderator of the curia , any episcopal vicar s, the chancellor of the curia, vice chancellors and notaries , and a finance ... Patriarchal curia Patriarchates and Major Archiepiscopates of the Eastern Catholic Churches have an assembly called the Patriarchal Curia, which assists the patriarch or major archbishop in administering the sui juris church. The patriarchal curia is distinct from the diocesan or eparchal curia of the patriarch or major archbishop s diocese or eparchy. The patriarchal curia consists of the permanent ... curia. ref Can. 87 of the 1990 http www.intratext.com IXT ENG1199 P2F.HTM Code of Canons ... and Major Archiepiscopal Curia, the doctoral thesis Patriarchal and Major Archiepiscopal Curia in the Eastern ... in Aug. 2009. Roman Curia The Holy See retains an assembly called the Roman Curia , which assists the Pope in governing the Latin patriarchate and the entire Roman Catholic Church. The Roman Curia includes the Secretariat of State Vatican Secretariat of State , the Congregation Roman Curia Curial Congregations ... references Category Roman Catholic Church organisation it Curia diocesana zh ...   more details



  1. Disciplinary Commission of the Roman Curia

    The Disciplinary Commission of the Roman Curia is the principal disciplinary body within the Roman Curia . Until 2010 the president of the Pontifical Council for Legislative Texts headed the office. Presidents of the Disciplinary Commission of the Roman Curia Rosalio Castillo Lara , S.D.B. 5 October 1981 1990 Vincenzo Fagiolo 29 December 1990 1997 Mario Francesco Pompedda 1997 16 November 1999 Juli n Herranz Casado 3 December 1999 11 May 2010 Giorgio Corbellini 11 May 2010 Use dmy dates date September 2010 DEFAULTSORT Disciplinary Commission Of The Roman Curia Category Roman Curia RC stub de Disziplinarkommission der r mischen Kurie id Komisi Disiplin Kuria Romawi it Commissione disciplinare della Curia Romana pl Komisja Dyscyplinarna Kurii Rzymskiej pt Pontif cia Comiss o Disciplinar da C ria Romana ru ...   more details



  1. History of the Roman Curia

    Roman Catholicism size large In its long and eventful history, the Roman Curia has repeatedly undergone organizational changes. At first, the Latin term curia, of Etruscan origin, means a subdivision of the tribe, then the deliberation room of the Senate and then the Senate itself. Like every bishop, the pope was surrounded by a college of priests. The college met regularly to form councils to lead his diocese. Its function also extended a calling to the universal Church, and for matters relating to it, the Pope surrounded himself with other bishops around Rome to hear their advice. Gradually, these consistories took an almost permanent presence the word curia is first used in the Church by a papal document in 1089, during the reign of Pope Urban II . Meetings were held three times a week under Pope Innocent III .Outside the presbyteries, which dealt with general topics, the pope set up specialized committees of Cardinal Catholicism Cardinals on particular topics. These commissions, first in temporary mandate, became more and more important and stable. Gradually, consistories lost their effectiveness and started to look like meetings apparatus. The real work was done within the congregations ... of the Papal States in central Italy . While the Pope was sovereign of that region, the Curia ... power . The Curia was from then on dedicated in practice entirely to the Pope s ecclesiastical ... was created. The Curia has continued to devote itself exclusively to ecclesiastical affairs, and a Vatican City Administration distinct body , not considered part of the Curia, was established for the governance ... of the Roman Curia History of the Roman Catholic Church History of the Roman Canon History ... Regarding the current state of the Roman Curia Roman Catholic Church Pope , head of the Roman Curia Roman Curia Pope Paul VI s reform of the Roman Curia Catholicism collapsed History of the Roman Catholic Church uncollapsed Christian History collapsed Category Roman Curia ...   more details



  1. Iura novit curia

    Iura novit curia is a Latin language Latin legal maxim expressing the principle that the court knows ... Iura novit curia means that the court alone is responsible for determining which law applies to a particular ... most wide reaching form, the principle of iura novit curia allows the court to base its decision ... journal last Brooker first Douglas date 30 October 2005 title Va Savoir The Adage Jura Novit Curia ... raised by the court itself. ref name Brooker 8 Because a wide application of iura novit curia may conflict ... 2005 title Va Savoir The Adage Jura Novit Curia in Contemporary France journal bepress Legal Series ... The principle of iura novit curia may be subject to exceptions. For instance, courts may be required ... law countries in particular, the rule is iura aliena non novit curia , i.e., judges may not rely ... to Mattias Derl n , it has traditionally been claimed that jura novit curia applies in civil law system ... systems is deemed to know the law jura novit curia or curia novit legem it must apply the appropriate ... commentator, perhaps the most spectacular feature of English procedure is that the rule curia novit ... Civil law courts, iura novit curia notwithstanding, may not exceed the limits of the case ... Ibid, par. 34 35. ref The common law s lack of the rule of iura novit curia therefore has some relevance ... Ibid, par. 34. ref In international law Iura novit curia is widely applied by international court ... is sometimes quoted as jura novit curia , iura noscit curia , curia iura novit , curia novit legem or variants thereof. ref name Derl n 314 It is sometimes misspelled as iuris novit curia or iura novat curia . References Ibid date October 2010 reflist Category Latin legal terms Category Civil procedure bg Iura novit curia ca Iura novit curia cs Iura novit curia de Da mihi factum, dabo tibi ius es Iura novit curia gl Iura novit curia it Iura novit curia la Iura novit curia ru Iura novit curia sk Jura novit curia sl Iura novit curia sv Jura novit curia ...   more details



  1. Hereditary officers of the Roman Curia

    Unreferenced date March 2007 The Roman Curia Roman Court or Papal Curia was reformed by the Papal bull Bull Pontificalis Domus of 1969 . This abolished the role of the old Roman nobility at the Papal Court with the exception of the position of Prince Assistants to the Papal Throne Prince Assistant to the Papal Throne . These titles such as the Grand Master of the Sacred Apostolic Hospice , Marshal of the Sacred Conclave , etc. are now purely honorary though still hereditary . This position had been shared jointly by the Princes Orsini and Colonna , but the former was deprived by Pius XII after obtaining a divorce and the title was conferred upon House of Torlonia Prince Torlonia, Prince of Fucino, Canino and Musignano of the Torlonia Family. The Prince Assistants are representatives of the Roman nobility, who serve at the feet of the Throne immediately next to the Cardinal Deacon who stands to the right of the Pope. They alternate office during their lifetimes and no one can substitute for them. Their principal function is to serve on the occasion of official visits by a Head of state . The reforms of 1969 also changed the names and abolished the differing categories of Secret Chamberlains of the Cape and Sword to Gentlemen of His Holiness . Other offices were abolished altogether, but office holders were reassigned. Office holders Great officers Prince Assistants to the Papal Throne hereditary Marco Torlonia, 6th Prince of Civitella Cesi Prince Don Marcantonio Colonna, Prince and Duke of Paliano, Duke of Mariano Marshal of the Holy Roman Church and the Sacred Conclave non hereditary Sigismondo Chigi Prince Don Sigismondo Chigi Albani della Rovere , Prince of the Holy Roman Empire, Prince of Farnese, Campagnano, and Soriano, Duke of Ariccia and Formello Grand Master of the Sacred ... Prefecture of the Pontifical Household DEFAULTSORT Hereditary Officers Of The Roman Curia Category Roman Curia ru ...   more details



  1. Congregation (Roman Curia)

    Unreferenced date December 2010 Roman Curia A congregation is a type of dicastery department with a jurisdiction of the Roman Curia , the central administrative organism of the Catholic Church . Each Congregation is led by a prefect, who is a Cardinal Catholicism Cardinal . Until recently, a non cardinal appointed to head a congregation was styled as pro prefect until he was made cardinal in a consistory . This practice has recently been abandoned. History and functioning Certain curial departments have been organized by the Holy See at various times to assist it in the transaction of those affairs which canonical discipline and the individual interests of the faithful bring to Rome. Of these the most important are, without doubt, the Roman Congregations Sacr Cardinalium Congregationes , as is evident from the mere consideration of the dignity of their membership, comprising cardinals who are officially the chief collaborators of the sovereign pontiff in the administration of the affairs of the Universal Church, though Cardinals have not always participated in the administration of ecclesiastical affairs in the same way. The Roman Congregations originated in the necessity, felt from the beginning, of studying the questions submitted for pontifical decision, in order to sift the legal questions arising and to establish matters of fact duly. This work, at first entrusted to the papal ... organization of these departments of the Curia, which since then have rendered such great services ... VI implemented many of the changes called for in the Curia with his Constitution Regimini Ecclesiae ... of the Curia with the norms established by the 1983 Code of Canon Law and the early drafts of what ... of the Roman Curia to provide opinions, either singly or collectively, for particular issues when ... links http www.vatican.va roman curia congregations The Roman Curia Congregations http www.newadvent.org ... Curia Romana nl Congregatie Curie pt Congrega o C ria Romana ru sr ...   more details



  1. Curia (wife of Quintus Lucretius)

    Image Laudatio Turiae.jpg 300px thumb center fragment of Laudatio Turiae br Praise of Turia Curia or Turia or Thuria ca. 60 BC &ndash 5 BC was a Roman woman from the Curio family. Life She was the wife of Quintus Lucretius Vespillo for 40 years, whom she married sometime between 49 BC and 42 BC. She was from a wealthy family as was her husband. They had no children. She so dedicated to her husband that when she couldn t produce children, she offered to grant Quintus a divorce. He did not accept it and they remained married for the rest of their lives. Turia was known for helping their female relatives that became of marrying age with financial assistance and other things as needed for their new marriage. These relatives otherwise would not have had these advantages that she provided the young brides. Her loyalty and devotion to her husband was so rare that the other outlawed rebellions who had been proscribed by the triumvirs found themselves in disagreeable places, barely managing to escape inconceivable tortures, while Lucretius was safe in their bedroom in the arms of his gracious wife. She even went to extraordinary means playing the role of a woman that lost her husband in a battlefield someplace and he never returned. She would dress in old ragged clothing and be in unkept appearance. She even would put on a sad face with tearful eyes. This made everyone believe she lost her husband and he was nowhere to be found. ref Valerius Maximus, Memorable Deeds and Sayings 6.7.1 3.L ref Epitaph Her husband writes in an epitaph on a large tombstone called Laudatio Turiae of her qualities, Why should I mention your domestic virtues, your loyalty, obedience, affability, reasonableness, industry in working wool, religion without superstition, sobriety of attire, modesty of appearance? To this he adds that she was entirely devoted to the family structure and even avenged her parent ... Baltimore, 1992 DEFAULTSORT Curia Category Ancient Roman women Category 1st century BC Romans Category ...   more details



  1. Curia advisari vult

    Curia advisari vult is a Latin legal term meaning the court wishes to consider the matter literally, the court wishes to be advised , a term Judgment law Reserved judgment reserving judgment until some subsequent day. It often appears in case reports, abbreviated as Cur. adv. vult , or sometimes c.a.v. or CAV , when the bench takes time for deliberation after hearing counsel s submissions. ref Jonathan Law and Elizabeth A. Martin cur. adv. vult in A Dictionary of Law 2009 Oxford University Press . ref ref William C. Cochran 1888 Students Law Lexicon A Dictionary of Legal Words and Phrases p 82. ref In the case under consideration, the effect of the order is that nothing is adjudged and the Court will relist the matter to deliver judgment but may hear further argument. ref J. A. Guy The Origins of the Petition of Right Reconsidered 1982 25 2 The Historical Journal pp 289 312 fn 15 p 293. ref The court remains seized of jurisdiction and may make further Interlocutory interlocutory orders , for example, to prevent a party from dealing with an asset which may be the subject of litigation or may be sold in satisfaction of a judgment debt counsel remain under the duty to the court not to withhold relevant law and, if counsel becomes aware of a relevant authority, must seek to relist the matter for further argument. ref G. E. Dal Pont Lawyers Professional Responsibility 3rd ed. 2006 Sydney p 382. ref If the case is being used as a precedent, a decision given after an adjournment may be given more weight than a decision given orally immediately at the close of argument Latin ex tempore . ref Phillip Kenny & Steve Wilson The Law Student s Handbook 2007 Oxford University Press p 22. ref ref Peter M. Tiersma The Textualization of Precedent 2007 82 Notre Dame Law Review 1187 at p 1208 ref The term was not used in the reports of the House of Lords. Instead, an expression such as Their Lordships took time to consider , or Their Lordships took time for consideration will be found. ref ...   more details



  1. Curia (ancient Roman meeting house)

    A Curia in ancient Rome came to be known as any building designated or built specifically as a place of meeting by either the senate or any political organization. Originally the term referred to the comitia curiata, the thirty original ethnic subdivisions of Curia or, Roman people, who assembled into the curiat assembly within Comitium space near the Roman forum . There have been a number of Curia houses built specifically for the senate, as well as other buildings of a similar nature. The most famous of these Curia, aside form the Curia Julia the only surviving Roman Senate building in the city is the Curia of the Theatre of Pompey , where Julius Caesar was murdered. After his death the structure was burned by an angry mob and then converted into a latrine. DEFAULTSORT Curia Ancient Roman Meeting House Category Roman Forum ...   more details



  1. Pope Paul VI's reform of the Roman Curia

    Pope Paul VI s reform of the Roman Curia , in response to the altered needs of the Holy See and the Catholic Church as a whole, was achieved principally, but not solely, by his general reorganization of the Curia with the apostolic constitution http www.vatican.va holy father paul vi apost constitutions documents hf p vi apc 19670815 regimini ecclesiae universae lt.html Regimini Ecclesiae universae of 15 August 1967. The Pope s aim, in effecting these changes, was to implement the desire expressed by the Second Vatican Council that the departments of the Roman Curia be reorganized and better adapted to the needs of the times, regions, and rites especially as regards their number, name, competence and peculiar method of procedure, as well as the coordination of work among them. ref http www.vatican.va archive hist councils ii vatican council documents vat ii decree 19651028 christus dominus en.html Decree Christus Dominus , 9 ref Implementation of this desire led to numerous alterations in each of the fields that the Council indicated, as indicated in the following examples. Number Some departments were suppressed, but the total number was increased, even before Regimini Ecclesiae universae , by the creation of the Pontifical Council for the Laity Council of the Laity , the three Secretariats Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity that for Christian Unity , Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue that for non Christians and that for Dialogue with Non Believers, the last of which has since been fused with the more recently founded Pontifical Council for Culture and the Central Statistics Office. ref Regimini Ecclesiae universae , sixth introductory paragraph ref New bodies largely taking over functions previously carried out, sometimes in less coordinated ... Originally, only cardinals were members of the congregations of the Curia. Pope Paul VI decreed that the members .... ref Regimini Ecclesiae universae , 17 ref References Reflist Category Roman Curia Category Pope ...   more details



  1. Stalinist show trial of the Kraków Curia

    propaganda. Church in Poland following the so called Trial of the Krak w Curia . Photo exibit ... regarding the Trial of the Curia. The Resolution was signed by 53 members, some of whom went on to become ... Metropolitan Curia. We, the members of Krak w branch of the Polish Writers Union, meeting on 8 February ...   more details



  1. SCDF

    SCDF may refer to Singapore Civil Defence Force South Coast Design Forum Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith Sacred Congregation for the Doctrine of the Faith , a Congregation Roman Curia Congregation of the Roman Curia . disambig ...   more details



  1. Pontifical Council

    Roman Curia The Pontifical Councils are a group of several mid sized agencies, each led by a Cardinal or archbishop as president, which are part of the larger organization called the Roman Curia . The Roman Curia is charged with helping the Pope in his governance and oversight of the Roman Catholic Church . The Pontifical Councils are Pontifical Council Cor Unum Pontifical Council for Culture Pontifical Council for Interreligious Dialogue Pontifical Council for Justice and Peace Pontifical Council for Promoting Christian Unity Pontifical Council for the Family Pontifical Council for the Laity Pontifical Council for the Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerants Pontifical Council for Migrants and Itinerant Peoples Pontifical Council for the Pastoral Care of Health Care Workers unref date August 2010 Category Roman Curia es Consejos pontificios fr Conseil pontifical it Pontifici consigli nl Pauselijke Raad ...   more details



  1. Cardinals over 80 in Papal conclave, 2005

    Bernardin Gantin , Prefect Emeritus of Bishops, Roman Curia St phanos II Ghattas , Congregation ... Emeritus of Oriental Churches, Roman Curia Paul Joseph Pham Dinh Tung , Archbishop Emeritus of H ... of Clergy, Roman Curia Nasrallah Pierre Sfeir , Maronite Patriarch of Antioch, Lebanon Paul Shan ..., Roman Curia Fiorenzo Angelini , President Emeritus of Pastoral Assistance to Health Care Workers, Roman Curia Lorenzo Antonetti , President Emeritus of Administration of the Patrimony of the Apostolic See, Roman Curia Giovanni Canestri , Archbishop Emeritus of Genova, Italy Giuseppe Caprio , President Emeritus of Prefecture for the Economic Affairs of the Holy See, Roman Curia Giovanni Cheli , President Emeritus of Pastoral Care of Migrants and Itinerant Peoples, Roman Curia Georges Cottier ... Emeritus of Social Communications, Roman Curia Roger Etchegaray , President Emeritus of Justice and Peace, Roman Curia Angelo Felici , President Emeritus of Ecclesia Dei , Roman Curia Carlo Furno ... Innocenti , Prefect Emeritus of Clergy, Roman Curia Antonio Mar a Javierre Ortas , Salesians of Don Bosco SDB , Prefect Emeritus of Divine Worship and the Discipline of the Sacraments, Roman Curia ... Curia Paul Mayer , Order of Saint Benedict OSB , President Emeritus of Ecclesia Dei , Roman Curia Dino Monduzzi , Prefect Emeritus of Prefecture of the Papal Household, Roman Curia Stanislaw Nagy , Congregation ... , Archivist Emeritus of Vatican Secret Archives , Roman Curia Giovanni Saldarini , Archbishop Emeritus ... Silvestrini , Prefect Emeritus of Oriental Churches, Roman Curia Tom pidl k , SJ, Cardinal Deacon of S. Agata de Goti Alfons Stickler , SDB, Archivist Emeritus of Vatican Secret Archives , Roman Curia ... Mohilev, Belarus Jozef Tomko , Prefect Emeritus of Evangelization of Peoples, Roman Curia Ersilio ..., Mexico Edouard Gagnon , Society of Saint Sulpice PSS , President Emeritus of Family, Roman Curia ... Emeritus of Promoting Christian Unity, Roman Curia Edward Bede Clancy Edward Clancy , Archbishop ...   more details




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