- in
Roman Catholic canon law,
which was
largely inspired by
Roman law.
Apparitors (sometimes
called summoners)
continued to
serve as
officers in ecclesiastical...
- as a
mechanism to make a
greater profit for the
church court. Finally,
apparitors of the
ecclesiastical court would ensure the
appearance of ecclesiastical...
- say Virgil's
father was a potter, but most say he was an
employee of an
apparitor named Magius,
whose daughter he married.
According to
Phocas and Probus...
- a
civil servant but not hold
higher magistracies (see, for instance,
apparitor and scriba),
serve as
priests of the
emperor or hold any of the other...
-
person who
practices evocation, the act of
summoning a
supernatural agent Apparitor, or summoner, an
officer of an
ecclesiastical court Summoner (Wicca),...
- (1937). "The
Apparitor and Chaucer's Summoner". Speculum. 12 (1): 46. doi:10.2307/2848660. JSTORĀ 2848660. S2CIDĀ 164063320. The
apparitor [or summoner]...
-
engineer (praefectus fabrum), or a
praefect architectus armamentarius of the
apparitor status group (a
branch of the
Roman civil service). He is
mentioned in...
-
personalities and intricacies.
Still yet,
Herodian could have been an
apparitor, a
scribe or an
attendant to the emperor. This
would be suiting, for he...
- he
drafted the
Emperor Nero's
replies to petitions. He is
mentioned as
apparitor Caesarum,
which means that he was some sort of
servant of the Imperial...
- cohortales); the
diminutive cohortalinus became a
generic term (like
apparitor) for non-cadre
clerks in a high dignitary's
officium (mainly administrative...