The title and office existed in the bureaucracy of the
Christianised Roman Empire at the Imperial Court, where the college of imperial notaries were governed by a
primicerius. From the usage in the Emperor's representative in the West, the
Exarch of Ravenna, the post and title was applied in the increasingly complicated bureaucracy of the
Papal curia in Rome. There were
notarii attached to all the
episcopal see, whence they passed into use in the royal chanceries. All these
notarii were in
minor orders. As the
ex officio head of the papal chancery, the
primicerius of the notaries was an important personage. During a vacancy of the papal chair, he formed part of the interim government, and a letter in 640 is signed (the pope being elected but not yet consecrated) by one "Johannes,
primicerius and serving in the place of the holy apostolic see". There were formerly
apostolic notaries and even
apostolic prothonotaries commissioned by papal letters, whose duty it was to receive documents in connection with
benefices, foundations, and donations in favor of churches, the wills of clerics and other affairs to which the ecclesiastical hierarchy was an interested party. The title no longer exists; the only ecclesiastical notaries at present are the officials of the Roman and episcopal
curiae. ==Prothonotaries==