Anonymous ID: 36f878 Aug. 3, 2025, 5:05 a.m. No.23419555   🗄️.is 🔗kun

>>23419511

>Cancellarius

 

I had a team of doctors bring in a world renowned cancer specialist to explain to me what cancer is. He stated that cancer is when rogue cells from one organ attack the cells of another organ. So I asked him then why doesn't the pancreas or other organs show signs of another organ growing on it? Why don't we see a lung, skin, or mouth growing on those organs? Years later after the patient died from other nefarious causes they forgot to put cancer on the death report. Can a student studying for a doctor ever become one if they say in the class that cancer is lie and used to target individuals? Would they ever graduate or and receive their first $10k weekly paycheck? Of course not, and you all know it.

 

Cancellarius is a Latin term that refers to a variety of roles, primarily related to administrative, legal, or clerical functions. Historically, it originated from the term "cancelli," which described lattice-work placed before a window, door, or tribunal.

This led to the occupation of a cancellarius, which originally signified a porter who stood at the latticed or grated door of the emperor's palace.

According to the Historia Augusta, the emperor cancellarii were legal scribes or secretaries who sat within the lattice-work which protected the tribunals of the judges from the crowd. The chief scribe in Constantinople was eventually invested with judicial power, and from this office came the modern "chancellor".

The term "cancellarius" is also used to refer to a chancellor, scrivener, or notary.

In England, the Lord Chancellor is the highest judicial officer who presides over the House of Lords and is a member of the Cabinet.

 

In the context of the Roman Catholic Church, a Cancellarius is a position whose primary task is to decode modern witchcraft. Aureolus Izzard is the only known character to have held this position.

The name is derived from the Cancellarii, a latticework placed before a window, a doorway, the tribunal of a judge, or any other place. It became a metonym for officials that stood at the latticed or grated door of the emperor's palace. Moreover, the chief scribe or secretary was called Cancellarius.

 

The term "cancellarius" is also used in the context of medieval administrative practices, where the title of cancellarius was gaining ground and was increasingly applied to the head of the chancery.

The Roman cancellarii, minor legal officials who stood by the cancellus, or bar, separating the tribune from the public