impropriator

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impropriator
impropriator (ɪmˈprəʊprɪeɪtə(r)) [agent-n. in L. form, from med. or mod.L. impropriāre or impropriate v.] 1. One to whom a benefice is impropriated; esp. = lay impropriator, a layman in possession of a living or its revenues.1622 T. Scott Belg. Pismire 27 The irreligious Impropriators, who prey vpon... Oxford English Dictionary
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improprietary
† improˈprietary Obs. rare. [A modification of the earlier approprietary, conformed in the prefix to impropriate, -ator, etc.] = impropriator 1.1637 Humphrey tr. St. Ambrose Ep. ded., Your endevours..to induce some improprietaries..to an enlargement of my poore maintenance. Oxford English Dictionary
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Foston, Lincolnshire
The impropriator was the Earl of Dysart, but the tithes (tax income from parishioners derived from their profit on sales, or extraction of produce and wikipedia.org
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impropriatrix
impropriatrix (ɪmˌprəʊprɪˈeɪtrɪks) [fem. in L. form of prec.: see -trix.] A female impropriator; a woman who holds a benefice.1774 Garton Inclos. Act 5 The said Jane Cooke, Impropriatrix of the said rectory. 1801 H. Gwillim Coll. resp. Tithes 1620 Upon a second trial a verdict was found for the impr... Oxford English Dictionary
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Drumcar
William DiUon was impropriator in 1633. The tithes were rented by Henry Usher in 1656. wikipedia.org
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impropriated
imˈpropriated, ppl. a. [f. prec. vb. + -ed1.] 1. Appropriated to some person or thing. ? Obs.1632 Lithgow Trav. i. 21 Italy was called so of Italus, a King in Sicily... The more impropriated names were Hesperia, because it is situate under the evening starre Hesperus: Latium..and ænotria in regard o... Oxford English Dictionary
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Francis Pigott Stainsby Conant
there were also five daughters) of Paynton Pigott Stainsby Conant (d. 1862), of Archer Lodge, Hampshire, and of Banbury, Oxfordshire (of which he was lay impropriator wikipedia.org
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Kelstern
The principal owner of parish land and lord of the manor was Lord Ossington (Evelyn Denison, 1st Viscount Ossington), who was also the impropriator and wikipedia.org
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instituted
instituted, ppl. a. (ˈɪnstɪtjuːtɪd) [f. prec. + -ed1.] 1. Ordained, established, founded.1647 J. Noyes (title) The Temple Measured, or a brief Survey of the Temple Mystical, which is the instituted Church of Christ. 1661 Boyle Style of Script. (1675) 52 An instituted instrument to conveigh revealed ... Oxford English Dictionary
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Baslow and Bubnell
The living is a perpetual curacy; net income, £115; patron, the Duke of Devonshire; impropriator, the Duke of Rutland: the tithes (those on wool and lamb wikipedia.org
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Perpetual curate
Over the years, the arrangement by which the impropriator acted as both patron and paymaster of a perpetual curacy proved liable to break down, especially Tithe and glebe from the locality continued to go to the lay impropriator or diocesan; or in the case of the newer perpetual curacies were retained by wikipedia.org
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grey-coat
ˈgrey-coat One who wears grey clothing; spec. a Cumberland yeoman (see quots. 1837–66).1644 Vicars God in Mount 200 A part of Colonell Ballards Grey-coats..did most singular good service all this fight. 1675 Hodge's Vis. for Monument (1703) 128 in Marvell's Wks. (Grosart) I. 439 We'll part..The spru... Oxford English Dictionary
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Roberts baronets of Bow (1681)
Roberts was a lay impropriator of the Bromley church from 1662, and claimed it to be outside the jurisdiction of the Bishop of London. wikipedia.org
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Clerical Guide or Ecclesiastical Directory
additionally gave the income of the benefice during the year 1831, the available capacity or "church room" for the congregation, and the name of any impropriator wikipedia.org
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Harwell, Nottinghamshire
located, was inclosed in 1760, when the Rectorial tithes were commuted for an allotment of 225 acres, of which William Walton, Esq., of Stockwith, was impropriator wikipedia.org
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