canonicate การใช้
- In 1622 Ulrik received a canonicate at Bremen Cathedral Prince-Bishopric of Cammin failed.
- In 1565 he received the prebend and in the following year he advanced to canonicate.
- Peter and Paul Church, which was combined with a canonicate at St . Vitus Cathedral, Prague.
- Sebastiano received a canonicate at Turin Cathedral in 1520, but he died at Rome on 31 July 1524.
- Thanks to the cardinal, he obtained a canonicate in the cathedral chapter of St Mark's Basilica.
- Pope Benedict XII ( 1334-1342 ) granted him a Canonicate in the Collegiate Church of Sainte-Radegonde in Poitiers.
- On his return from Rome Gerhoh resigned his canonicate, and with his father and two half-brothers joined the Austin canons at Raitenbuch ( 1124 ).
- The known historian Albert Krantz, also serving the city of Hamburg as diplomat, gained a canonicate of the " lector primarius " in 1493.
- One canonicate, called magister scholarum, was in charge of the education at the cathedral school . 1499 served as magister scholarum, was appointed magister scholarum in 1550.
- He was for some time the patron of Jean Froissart : he appointed him his chaplain in 1384 and obtained for him the benefice of Lestines-au-Mont and the canonicate of Chimay.
- On 25 April 1288 Cardinal Matteo Rosso Orsini was granted by Pope Nicholas IV ( Masci ) the Canonicate and Prebendary of Lincoln cathedral, which had been vacated by the death of Pietro Savelli.
- He offered to describe Sweden's earliest history and declared his willingness to praise the Swedish king's victories in Poland in return for a canonicate in Lund but refused to describe the Swedish victories over Denmark.
- Thus the collection of Gratian ( about 1139 ) speaks of canons regular, who make canonical profession, and live in a regular canonicate, in opposition to monks who wear the monastic habit, and live in a monastery.
- Until his death in 1588 his father Frederick II wielded his influence in order to provide his second-born Ulrik with prebendaries within the Holy Roman Empire, such as a canonicate at the administrator in a Lutheran-ruled prince-bishopric.