Annates also annual monies (annates, annats)
Levy in cash, which in former times clergymen had to pay to the pope for a certain period (often half the income of a year) upon transfer to an ecclesiastical office (prebend; prepend) endowed with a fixed, regular income. – Through the centuries, the annates (along with the palliative money) formed the financial basis for the work of the church leadership in Rome; in this respect, they were a forerunner of today’s corporate levy (the charging of the ruling company for services rendered to the dependent company). – See indulgence money, absentee money, abatement, confession money, benefit money, dispensation money, cathedral money, church money, offering money, palliative money, St. Peter’s pence, procuration money, seminary money, levy, vocations money.
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