dicastery
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]From Ancient Greek δικαστήριον (dikastḗrion, “court, tribunal”), from δίκη (díkē, “right, custom, judgement”).
Noun
[edit]dicastery (plural dicasteries)
- A ministry or department of the Roman Curia of the Holy See, whether administrative or ecclesiastical.
- 2022 March 21, Andrea Gagliarducci, “Praedicate evangelium: Things you might have missed in the new Vatican constitution”, in Catholic News Agency[1], Denver: EWTN News, retrieved 2022-03-25:
- The dicastery will continue to oversee the appointment of bishops in the mission territories. … There is no longer a distinction between congregations and pontifical councils because all the Vatican’s main departments are now defined as dicasteries.
- A judicial body of the ancient Athenian state, made up of dicasts.
- 1910, William Stearns Davis, A Day in Old Athens[2]:
- The better cause has conquered; and there is at least this advantage to the Athenian legal system, there will be no appeal nor tedious technicalities before a "higher court." The verdict of the dicastery is final.
Derived terms
[edit]Translations
[edit]administrative body of the Vatican
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judicial body of Athens
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