Background
The original question: How is revocation of a root certificate handled?
My rejected edit
Reasons for editing
If a CA certificate is revoked then it cannot be used
This is not entirely correct as the CA is simply no longer trusted. Intermediate CA which it had approved before revocation date should still be trusted, which can be proved from the timestamp, if available.
The certificates which that CA issued are not revoked: possibly, they may be verifiable with another CA certificate which contains the same key: a CA certificate is like any other certificate, it binds a name with a public key; nothing prevents the existence of several distinct certificates which assert that binding
This is the confusing part. The OP of this answer actually meant a Root CA may delegate trust to an intermediate CA by binding the inter-CA name with the inter-CA's public key.
The OP of the question then asked the followings as the first comment to this answer:
I did not know there was a case where we could have the same public key with multiple certificates.In this case, the public key is the same but I assume the subject dn is different?
This implies the answer was misinterpreted, as the question-OP thought there were multiple entities with the same public key (as in different Subject Distinguished Name).
With these in mind, you will understand my grievance over the rejection on my edit and also the reason for rejecting it.
*I have in fact adhered to the original intent of the answer. My edit shall be broken down to: adding supplementary info (for the timestamp) and rephrasing the answer to clear confusion (on the "same public key").