Commonitory
Commonitorium originally means in Latin a short piece of paper that is given or sent to someone to remind them of a duty or a promise. This resulted in the following meanings:
- Commonitorium (request) , request to an official in the late ancient Roman Empire
- Commonitorium sacrum , document with an order from the Roman emperor to an official
- Commonitorium (power of attorney) , in the Roman Empire a power of attorney from an owner to collect money
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Commonitorium (church) , in the old church the name for a concise antiheretical exposition of contentious contents of the church faith
- Commonitorium (Vincent de Lérins) , theological writing from the 5th century
- Commonitorium (Orientius) , poem by Orientius from the 5th century