or Burser, (Burarius), is used in middle-age writers for a treasurer or cash-keeper. In this sense we meet with burfars of colleges. Conventual burfars were officers in monasteries, who were to deliver up their account yearly on the day after Michaelmas. The word is formed from the Latin burfa, whence also the English word purse; hence also the officer, who in a college is called burfar, in a ship is called purser.
Bursars, or Burfers, (Burfarii), also denote those to whom stipends are paid out of a burfe or fund appointed for that purpose.
BURSARIA.