Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Annates (/ ˈ æ n eɪ t s / or / ˈ æ n ə t s /; [1] Latin: annatae, from annus, "year") [2] were a payment from the recipient of an ecclesiastical benefice to the collating authorities.
Clergy had to pay a portion of their first year's income (known as annates) [1] and a tenth of their revenue annually thereafter. Originally, the money was paid to the papacy , but Henry VIII 's 1534 statute diverted the money to the English Crown as part of his campaign to pressure the Pope into granting him an annulment of his marriage with ...
This payment was called both Annates and First Fruits. A less agricultural sort of First Fruits ( primitiae in Latin) is the "Primice" as it is called in some languages, that is, the First Mass said by a newly ordained priest; it is customarily celebrated with special magnificence, and even, despite the literal meaning of "First Mass", repeated ...
The annates were, along with the supremacy over the church in England, reserved to the Crown, and the English crown now took all revenue charged for the appointment of bishops. The Act of First Fruits and Tenths transferred the taxes on ecclesiastical income from the pope to the Crown.
Annas served officially as High Priest for ten years (AD 6–15), when at the age of 36 he was deposed by the procurator Valerius Gratus.Yet while having been officially removed from office, he remained as one of the nation's most influential political and social individuals, aided greatly by the fact that his five sons and his son-in-law Caiaphas all served at sometime as High Priests. [4]
Therefore, Stanford Lehmberg postulates that the Lords Spiritual probably objected to the King retaining annates. [7] A new bill dealing with the annates was introduced into the House of Lords on 27 February and passed it on 9 March and was approved in the Commons a week after. Parliament thus passed this Act, which ended all annates.
Ananias son of Nedebeus (Hebrew: חנניה בן נדבאי Ḥananyá ben Nadváy "…(son of) the philanthropist") was a high priest who according to the Acts of the Apostles presided during the trials of the apostle Paul at Jerusalem and Caesarea . Josephus calls him "Ananias ben Nebedeus". He officiated as high priest from about 47 to 58.
The concordat also stipulated annates and other matters. [4] In 1663, the College of Sorbonne solemnly declared that it admitted no authority of the pope over the king's temporal dominion, his superiority to a general council or infallibility apart from the Church's consent. [5]