Online Encyclopedia

PATRON

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V20, Page 935 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PATRON  , a word of which the various meanings in

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European
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languages are derived and transferred from that of the
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Lat. patronus, whose position in
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Roman law and antiquities is treated below (PATRON AND CLIENT) . The most general application of the word in these transferred senses is that of an influential supporter or
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protector . The earliest use of the word in
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English appears to have been in the
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special ecclesiastical sense of the holder of an
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advowson, the right of presentation to a benefice . From this meaning is deduced that of the person in whom lies the right of presenting to public offices, privileges, &c., still surviving in the title of the Patronage Secretary of the
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Treasury in
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Great Britain . From the earliest Christian times the saints took the place of the pagan tutelary deities (Di tutelares) and were in this capacity called tutelares or patron, patron-saints . To them churches and other sacred buildings are dedicated, and they are regarded as the protectors and guardians of countries, towns, professions, trades and the like . Further, a person may have a patron-saint, usually the one on or near whose festival he has been born, or whose name has been taken in
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baptism . A full list of saints, with the
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objects of the
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peculiar patronage of each, is given in M . E . C . Walcott's Sacred Archaeology (1868) .

End of Article: PATRON
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