Bailiff, Jurats and Rectors still sit in this undifferentiated Parliament, to which has been added a slightly more democratic element however, nine Deputies being elected by the Ratepayers of the whole Island.
One of the Rectors spoke of it as "most judicious and consolatory, especially considering that room had been given for the exercise of opposite feelings.
His congregation groaned under the necessity of paying taxes to support the rectors of three neighboring parishes.
A number of the early rectors of Truro were welcome guests at Mt.
This is now laid as an obligation on those rectors of missions who have by recent legislation become parochi, on all Sundays and holidays, including the suppressed feasts.
His rectors were Baglione da Perugia and Guglielmo da Scesi, who, with Cerrettieri Bisdomini, were the persons with whom he consulted on public affairs.
Upon this therectors and all the Venetian party, fled to the fortress of San Felice.
To the two ancient rectors they added an executor, or sheriff, who, with the Gonfaloniers, was to aid in repressing the insolence of the nobility.
And in completing the same bad system, both without the city and within, he appointed six rectors for the country, who beat and plundered the inhabitants.
In the register of Tetcott he made the following entry in Latin, which is here given in translation:-- “Of the Rectors who preceded me I know almost nothing.
Perhaps other rectors were told of on this missing leaf.
The Bridgewater burgesses were lay rectors of the church.
Deans and Canons and Rectors and Vicars and Curates had no place upon it.
Possibly, it is something of the same feeling that subordinates the sermons to the looks of rectors of fashionable churches.
The rectors passed to the full front; the parish clerks fell to the extreme rear.
It will remove, if necessary, the deans of faculty, and will propose to us the removal of the rectors of Universities.
The pupils of the Normal School selected by rectors not belonging to the University from whence they were sent, have the same privilege of option, on giving similar notice.
The head master of the Normal School will hold the same rank, and exercise the same prerogatives, with the rectors of the Universities.
Archdeaconry of Richmondshire, compiled a list of five rectors who had served the parish of Grasmere before the Reformation; but no searcher has followed up his efforts.
Previous rectors had drawn the tithes of the parish, and pocketed the large margin that remained, after the stipends of the worthy curates who did their work had been paid.
With him the long record of absentee rectors was broken.
Their goods, we decree, shall be taken away entirely and recovered to the fisc, and likewise rectors of provinces are to be punished if they neglect to punish for these crimes.
Let the rectors of provinces, officials, and provincials know that if they permit these things to be done, they themselves will be punished, as well as those who do them.
The ministers and rectors of the south of England called a convention and sent a petition to the Archbishop of Canterbury, to request Parliament to pass a law prohibiting the Mormons from preaching in the British dominions.
In this petition the rectorsstated that one Mormon missionary had baptized fifteen hundred {119} persons, mostly members of the English Church, during the past seven months.
A glance at the lists of incumbents of benefices in any good county history will reveal the fact that rectors of parishes were often only deacons, sub-deacons, or acolytes.
It is clear that a considerable number of priests were required to perform the duties of the numerous parishes whose rectors were absent or in minor orders, who seem to have been called parochial chaplains.
Besides the rectors and vicars of parishes, there was another class of beneficed clergymen in the middle ages, who gradually became very numerous, viz.
But we must turn to our researches into the humbler life of the country rectorsand vicars.
Thus in the replies of the rectors of Berkshire to the papal legate, in 1240 A.
The Archbishop of Paris entered the hall of the Convention, accompanied by a formal procession of his vicars, and several of the rectors of the city parishes.
The result was that a large number of the greatest offices of the Church were served by deputy; the details of diocesan work were done by suffragans, archdeacons performed their duties by officials, rectors by parish chaplains.
Whether any act as rectors or vicars who have not been instituted by the bishop.
Many in the hands of absentee and pluralist rectors were similarly served by parish chaplains.
The Saxon rectors were also lords of the manor; they were married men, and the rectory, together with the manor, descended from father to son.
Of the rural benefices many were in the hands ofrectors in minor orders who employed chaplains at such stipends as they could agree with them to accept.
Whether anyrectors make a bargain with their annual priests (cum sacerdotibus annuis) that, besides the stipend received from the rector, they may receive annualia and tricennalia from others.
Whether any rectors or vicars or priests are very illiterate (enormiter illiterati).
To the rectors or vicars belong all other things according to various ordinances, viz.
As for the priests they were secularized, and in many places were welcomed by the bishops as rectors or professors in colleges and seminaries.
Rectors seek to enrich their colleges in every way.
The rectors were invited to Brussels, and assured that they would be treated with respect, allowed to retain private property and be granted proper maintenance.
At the same hour, also by command of the Pope, other distinguished prelates and ecclesiastics gave notice of the Brief to the various Jesuit rectors in Rome.
Here Gerson gratified his rancor against his old opponent, loudly berating him for having taught falsely at Paris, Heidelberg, and Cologne, and the rectors of the two latter universities corroborated the accusations.
The Rectors of the city, together with 300 of the most distinguished burghers upon horseback, and a crowd of well-born ladies on foot, went out to meet him on February 9.
We further order that the Fieschi palace in Vialata be razed to the ground and we give authority to the rectors of the city to destroy also all other houses belonging to the Fieschi family, if they shall deem it of public utility.
That position belongs to Trinity College, Cambridge, who are also rectors of the church, by the gift of their earliest founder, Hervey de Stanton, Chancellor to Edward the Second.
In vain did councils decree year after year that they should bear no arms; rectors (as we have seen in Chapter VIII.
The above list will hopefully give you a few useful examples demonstrating the appropriate usage of "rectors" in a variety of sentences. We hope that you will now be able to make sentences using this word.