Definition of Consuetudinaries. Meaning of Consuetudinaries. Synonyms of Consuetudinaries

Here you will find one or more explanations in English for the word Consuetudinaries. Also in the bottom left of the page several parts of wikipedia pages related to the word Consuetudinaries and, of course, Consuetudinaries synonyms and on the right images related to the word Consuetudinaries.

Definition of Consuetudinaries

Consuetudinaries
Cussuetudinary Cus`sue*tu"di*na*ry, n.; pl. Consuetudinaries. A manual or ritual of customary devotional exercises.

Meaning of Consuetudinaries from wikipedia

- custom or customs in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Custom, customary, or consuetudinary may refer to: Convention (norm), a set of agreed, sti****ted or generally...
- vincit communem legem (custom overrules the common law); see also: Consuetudinary. consummatum est It is completed. The last words of Jesus on the cross...
- "what has always been done and accepted by law". Customary law (also, consuetudinary or unofficial law) exists where: a certain legal practice is observed...
- Consuetudines monasticae, Volumes 1-2, 1900–1905. A collection of Benedictine consuetudinaries. In Latin. E. Martène, De antiquis Ecclesiæ ritibus. A collection of...
- Aragonese justice and decision-making system was based on Pyrenean consuetudinary law, the King was considered primus inter pares ('first among equals')...
- 1199–1200. The new king upheld their institutional system issued from the consuetudinary law prevalent in Basque and Pyrenean territories. This limited self-government...
- gathered together after his time, divided roughly into two parts: the "Consuetudinary" (Rolls Series, 1–185, and in Rock, vol. III, 1–110), styled "De Officiis...
- vincit communem legem (custom overrules the common law); see also: Consuetudinary. consummatum est It is completed. The last words of Jesus on the cross...
- of a Benedictine abbot in medieval times is thus prescribed by the consuetudinary of Abingdon. The newly elected abbot was to put off his shoes at the...
- were freed and purchased by family members or allied whites. It was a consuetudinary act in Spanish America; it allowed the appearance of a large po****tion...