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LIMINA APOSTOLORUM , an ecclesiastical See also: term used to denote See also: Rome, and especially the See also: church of St
See also: Peter and St See also: Paul
.
A Visitatio Liminum might be undertaken ex voto or ex lege
.
The former, visits paid in accordance with a vow, were very frequent in the See also: middle ages, and were under the See also: special See also: protection of the See also: pope, who put the See also: ban upon any who should molest pilgrims " who go to Rome for See also: God's See also: sake." The question of granting dispensations from such a vow gave rise to much canonical legislation, in which the papacy had finally to give in to the bishops
.
The visits demanded by See also: law were of more importance
.
In 743 a See also: Roman See also: synod decreed that all bishops subject to the metropolitan see of Rome should meet personally every See also: year in that city to give an account of the See also: state of their dioceses
.
See also: Gregory VII. included in the See also: order all metropolitans of the Western Church, and See also: Sixtus V
.
(by the bull See also: Romanus See also: Pontifex, Dec
.
20, 1584) ordered the bishops of See also: Italy, Dalmatia and See also: Greece to visit Rome every three years; those of See also: France, See also: Germany, See also: Spain and See also: Portugal, Belgium, Hungary, Bohemia and the See also: British Isles every four years; those from the rest of See also: Europe every five years; and bishops from other continents every ten years
.
Benedict XIV. in 1740 extended the summons to all abbots, provosts and others who held territorial jurisdiction
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