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Deaconry may refer to : a Deacon's status and/or his clerical ministry; a Cardinal-deaconry, the titular church of a Cardinal-deacon This page was last edited on 28 ...
The term deaconry refers to the office of a deacon or the trade guild under a deacon. The most famous holder of this title was Deacon Brodie, who was a cabinet-maker and president of the Incorporation of Wrights and Masons as well as being a Burgh councillor of Edinburgh but at night led a double life as a burglar.
The title was established as cardinal-deaconry (i.e. for a cardinal-deacon) on 18 February 2012. (Portuguese) Cardinal-deacon Manuel Monteiro de Castro (18 February 2012 – present) Sources and external links
Active freemasonry existed throughout the Dutch East Indies (now: Indonesia) from 1762 to 1962. The first lodge in Asia "La Choisie" was founded in Batavia by Jacobus Cornelis Mattheus Radermacher (1741–1783). In July 1772, Abraham van der Weijden established the Lodge La Fidele Sinceritie in Batavia. [1]
The church of S. Eugenio was established as a Deaconry for a Cardinal Deacon by Pope John XXIII on 12 March 1960. [1] The following have been Cardinal Deacons of S. Eugenio: Antonio Bacci (31 Mar 1960 – 20 Jan 1971) Umberto Mozzoni (5 Mar 1973 – 7 Nov 1983) Paul Joseph Jean Poupard (25 May 1985 – 29 Jan 1996). Appointed, Cardinal-Priest ...
[a] [3] A cardinal may request that he be transferred to another titular church in a consistory; in addition, when a cardinal deacon opts to become a cardinal priest (usually after ten years), he may request either that his deaconry be elevated pro hac vice ('for this occasion') to a title or that he be transferred from his deaconry to a vacant ...
On December 19, 1583, he opted for the deaconry of Sant'Angelo in Pescheria. [1] He participated in the papal conclave of 1585 that elected Pope Sixtus V. [1] The new pope named him Governor of Montis Castelli Tudertini in 1585. [1] On January 7, 1587, Cardinal Guastavillani opted for the deaconry of Sant'Eustachio. [1]
Dioscorus (died 14 October 530) was a deacon of the Alexandrian and the Roman church from 506. In a disputed election following the death of Pope Felix IV, the majority of electors picked him to be pope, in spite of Pope Felix's wishes that Boniface II should succeed him.