Primate (bishop)

1815

– * Sicily - Palermo – Netherlands - Utrecht Poland * Gniezno - Poland and Grand Duchy of Lithuania - (1418) * Warsaw - Kingdom of Poland 1815-1829 and 1925-1938 Portugal *Braga - Spains, i.e., the Iberian Peninsula Sardinia *Cagliari, (– 1158, 1409–) *Pisa – Sardinia & Corsica (1158–) Scotland *Dunkeld c.

1858

Thus, in 1858, the Holy See granted the Archbishop of Baltimore precedence in meetings of the United States bishops.

1893

Benedict were united under the presidency of an Abbot Primate (Leo XIII, Summum semper, 12 July 1893); but the unification, fraternal in its nature, brought no modification to the abbatial dignity, and the various congregations preserved their autonomy intact.

The powers of the Abbot Primate are specified, and his position defined, in a decree of the Sacred Congregation of Bishops and Regulars dated 16 September 1893.

1911

Soon after, by the norm of the Code of Canon Law of 1917, confirmed in the 1983 Code, the tribunal of second instance for appeals from a metropolitan tribunal is "the tribunal which the metropolitan has designated in a stable manner with the approval of the Apostolic See". The closest equivalent position in the Eastern Churches in 1911 was an Exarch. The Holy See has continued in modern times to grant the title of Primate.

1917

Soon after, by the norm of the Code of Canon Law of 1917, confirmed in the 1983 Code, the tribunal of second instance for appeals from a metropolitan tribunal is "the tribunal which the metropolitan has designated in a stable manner with the approval of the Apostolic See". The closest equivalent position in the Eastern Churches in 1911 was an Exarch. The Holy See has continued in modern times to grant the title of Primate.

1925

– * Sicily - Palermo – Netherlands - Utrecht Poland * Gniezno - Poland and Grand Duchy of Lithuania - (1418) * Warsaw - Kingdom of Poland 1815-1829 and 1925-1938 Portugal *Braga - Spains, i.e., the Iberian Peninsula Sardinia *Cagliari, (– 1158, 1409–) *Pisa – Sardinia & Corsica (1158–) Scotland *Dunkeld c.

1956

With the papal decree Sollicitae Romanis Pontificibus of 24 January 1956 it granted the title of Primate of Canada to the Archbishop of Quebec.

1983

Soon after, by the norm of the Code of Canon Law of 1917, confirmed in the 1983 Code, the tribunal of second instance for appeals from a metropolitan tribunal is "the tribunal which the metropolitan has designated in a stable manner with the approval of the Apostolic See". The closest equivalent position in the Eastern Churches in 1911 was an Exarch. The Holy See has continued in modern times to grant the title of Primate.




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