Procurator
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
A procurator is the incumbent of any of several current and historical political or legal offices. Such an office is often called a procuracy or procuratorate. The term procurator derives from the Latin and generally means one who has care of something in place of another. Hence, in canon law, a procurator acts as a sort of agent for a party in a case (as distinguished from an advocate or lawyer), and in some institutions like colleges and seminaries the procurator is effectively the business, supply, buildings, and/or grounds manager.
Procurator may, more specifically, refer to the following:
- Legal procurator - one of the legal professions in Malta;
- Promagistrate - a number of different magistrates appointed in the Roman Republic by the Senate;
- Procurator fiscal - the local public prosecutor in Scotland;
- Procurator General - formal title of the United Kingdom Treasury Solicitor;
- Procurator to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland - chief counsel to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland;
- Procurator (office) - any number of historical officers charged with representing individuals and groups in legislative assemblies or courts of law;
- Teutonic procurator - a function in the Monastic State of the Teutonic Knights.
- Public Procurator- a position in current and former communist states, analogous to both detective and public prosecutor
- Roman Procurators of Iudaea Province, 44-132 AD
- Russian procurator - An office created by Peter The Great of Russia in an effort to bring the Russian Orthodox Church more under his control.