Head | Bishop of Aberdeen |
---|---|
Archdeacon(s) | Archdeacon of Aberdeen |
Known rural deans | Aberdeen, Boyne, Buchan, Garioch, Mar |
First attestation | 1131 x 1132 |
Metropolitan before 1472 | None |
Metropolitan after 1492 | Archbishop of St Andrews |
Cathedral | St Machar's Cathedral |
Dedication | St Machar |
Native dedication | Saint Machar |
Canons | Secular |
Catholic successor | Resurrected 4 March 1878 (see Roman Catholic Diocese of Aberdeen) |
Episcopal successor | Diocese of Aberdeen and Orkney |
The Diocese of Aberdeen was originally believed to be the direct continuation of an 11th-century bishopric at Mortlach in present-day Moray. However, this early date and the first bishops were based on a misinterpretation and reliance on the early charters found in the cartulary of Aberdeen Cathedral. These charters are now known to be false. The first recorded bishop of the diocese was Nectan, mentioned in the Book of Deer around 1132. The earliest direct written evidence of a bishop in Aberdeen appears in a papal bull addressed to Bishop Edward in 1157. This bull acknowledged the existence of his cathedral, discussed the formation of a chapter, and marked the beginning of the diocesan expansion.
The parochial system in Scotland had been developing since the early Middle Ages and saw significant progress under David I. He clarified the rights of the local church in terms of territory and jurisdiction. His reforms ensured that parishioners could support their priests by providing tiends, while local lords retained their rights to build churches and appoint priests. Over time, the lords’ patronage shifted to cathedrals and monasteries, enriching these institutions at the expense of the parishes. The cathedral, with its expanding number of canonries, used the appropriated income to sustain itself. The beneficiary canons had a duty to ensure an income for the parish vicars although the stipends were generally meagre.
Reconstruction of the cathedral began in the late 14th century and extended into the 16th century.
The likely mythic origins of the diocese are found in the cathedral's chartulary which identified the early bishops—Bean, Denortius, Cormac and Nectan—with Mortlach, in present-day Moray. [1] This tradition rests on a series of early charters that are acknowledged to be false. [2] [3] [4] These charters allowed Hector Boece to construct a history that had successive Mortlach bishops, culminating with its fourth prelate, Nectan, who would then move his see to Aberdeen. Beyond his appearance in one of these spurious charters, Nectan is only once documented as bishop of Aberdeen—in a small note (c. 1132) found in the Book of Deer. [5] Nevertheless, Mortlach did possess early ecclesiastical significance. A Papal Bull of 1157 by Pope Adrian IV confirmed the existence of a monasterium at Mortlach along with five attendant churches as part of the diocese of Aberdeen. [5] By the 11th century, this type of organisation was characteristic of Culdee (Céli Dé) settlements—the Culdees resembled communities of secular priests ministering to local populations but directed from the central mother church (the monasterium). [6]
Pope Adrian IV's bull of 1157 also confirmed to Bishop Edward the churches of Aberdeen, St Machar and St Nicholas, together with the town of Old Aberdeen and other lands. [7] [8] The bull authorised bishop Edward to establish a chapter in his cathedral, giving him the choice of introducing regular or secular canons as his clergy but nothing immediately came of this. [9] The lack of a means of funding a fully functioning unit of clerics may have accounted for this. Reforms in the 12th century were partially driven by local landowners who provided churches and priests leading to a diminished importance of mother churches. [10] The strongest stimulus for change took place under the influence of King David I. He introduced an ordinance that guaranteed the rights of the parochial churches and their priests who were to be sustained by the collection of teinds. Consequentially, and particularly in areas of extensive feudal expansion by Anglo-Norman lords (such as in the diocese of Aberdeen), geographically based and viable parochial entities emerged within the diocese. These local lords—with some regard for the hereafter—granted their right of patronage over parish churches to the cathedral or a monastery of their choosing. This, combined with the establishment of new monasteries, considerably impacted upon the Culdee mother churches and pendicle churches. Some were reduced to ordinary parish churches, such as Mortlach and Cabrach, while others, more rarely, transformed into organisations that more closely resembled their former existence. For instance, Monymusk became a house of Augustinian canons regular. [11]
The mechanism for the generation of income for the diocese was now available. The parish churches with their guaranteed income were soon to be the subject of appropriation by the large ecclesiastical corporations—the monasteries and cathedrals. At Aberdeen, the annexation process may have begun as early as Bishop Edward's tenure and increased in line with the development of the chapter. [12] The enlargement was slow with incremental appointments of dignitaries continuing through to the mid-13th century when in 1249 Pope Innocent IV issued a bull to Bishop Peter Ramsay confirming the diocese constitution and a chapter consisting of five dignitaries and eight ordinary canonries all sustained on prebends. [13]
Appropriation of parish incomes to prebendary canons in the cathedral weakened the parish churches. The cathedral canons, possessing the fruits of both the parsonages and the vicarages, were responsible for appointing vicars to the parishes. Invariably, the vicars were paid meagre pensions and lacked the security of tenure which resulted in inadequately educated clerics to deliver the cure of souls. [14]
By 1488 the cathedral chapter had expanded to 29 canons supported by the income from 54 parish churches and of those, 42 were prebendal, one mensal and 11 held in common. Additionally, 42 other parish churches were appropriated to monasteries and other ecclesiastical foundations, leaving only 4 parishes—Cushnie, Forvie, Tough, and Tyrie—as independent entities. The diocese also included eleven hospitals/almshouses for the poor, aged, or infirm parishioners. The religious Orders were also well represented— a Tironensian priory at Fyvie, a priory for Augustinian canons at Monymusk, and a Cistercian monastery at Deer. Furthermore, the Carmelite, Dominican, Franciscan, and Trinitarian Friars all had houses in Aberdeen itself. [15]
The reconstruction of the cathedral began when Bishop Alexander Kininmund (1355–80), probably nearing the end of his episcopacy, heightened the walls of the west towers and the nave. Bishop Henry Lichton (1422–40) completed what Kininmund had started and established the north transept but left the construction of the central tower incomplete. He was followed by Ingram Lindsay (1441–58) who roofed and paved the nave. Thomas Spens (1457–80) finely furnished the interior and Bishop William Elphinstone completed the central tower begun by Lichton. Elphinstone also commenced the rebuilding of a larger choir. Gavin Dunbar (1518–32) completed the south transept, providing spires for the west towers. Dunbar was also responsible for the armorial-adorned ceiling in the nave, displaying the coat-of-arms of the pontiff, Scottish prelates, and leading European rulers. [16] [nb 1]
The bishop held authority over the cathedral, parish churches, and hospitals. While the monasteries were largely independent of the episcopacy they still required the bishop if any of the brothers needed to be ordained to the priesthood. The monastic houses may occasionally receive patronage from the bishop and chapter.
The development of Aberdeen's chapter was lengthy even though the papal bull of 1157 authorised Bishop Edward to institute a chapter of secular or monastic clerics. The first signs of chapter enlargement became apparent when a cleric designated as a 'canon' witnessed an act by Bishop John (1199–1207). His successor, Bishop Kalder (1207–1228), had many canons acting as members of synodal sittings who confirmed his episcopal edicts with an archdeacon as the senior cleric. Bishop Stirling (1228–1239) continued this system but now this assembly was called a 'chapter' possessing its own seal. A canon was now designated 'treasurer' with the dean still subordinate to the archdeacon. By 1239, Bishop Lamley had been elected at a meeting chaired by the dean although apparently, the archdeacon was still his senior. In c. 1239 a canon had been elevated to the dignity of precentor and then in 1240, a chancellor was now visible. In 1243 at a meeting of the chapter, it was evident that the dean was now the senior canon in the chapter. [18] By 1445, the chapter consisted of 29 canons—the dean, presenter, chancellor, and treasurer were the dignitaries, the archdeacon—no longer a dignitary—and 24 simple canonries made up the remainder. [19] The last canonry to be created was that of the sub-chanter (1527x1534) bringing the total number of canons to 30. Between them, the chapter held 46 appropriated churches in the diocese of Aberdeen and a further 2 in the diocese of Moray. [20]
Under Aberdeen Cathedral's written constitution, the bishop chose the entire chapter with the exception of the dean (decanus). The dean was elected to his position by the chapter after taking the solemn oath of fidelity and to uphold the rights, customs and liberties of the cathedral. He was then installed in the choir and provided with his place in the chapter by the bishop. Canons took an oath of fidelity and obedience to the bishop and the chapter. The authoritative leader of the chapter was the dean and held total control over all who resided in the cathedral environs—this extended not only to the canons but also to the lesser ecclesiastics and servants. Next in importance was the precentor, usually referred to as the chanter (cantor). His responsibilities were to oversee the provision of the music used in the church services, choose the choirboys, see to their education, and employ a suitable song-school tutor. Next in seniority was the chancellor (cancellarius) whose responsibilities included the drafting of the chapter's correspondence and charters, communicating to the chapter the content of incoming letters and instructions that needed attention, and being the custodian of the chapter's library. He also presided over the town's grammar school and selected its teacher. The fourth and last dignity was the treasurer (thesaurarius) whose duties included being the overseer of the church's treasury—items such as gold and silver drinking cups and expensive apparel. He needed to ensure that the church was adequately supplied with everyday needs such as candles, tapers, incense, charcoal, bread and wine for the services, and also mundane things such as mats and bullrushes for floor coverings. [21]
A Deanery, sometimes known as an archdeaconry, is a geographical administrative subdivision within a diocese containing its designated parish churches. The Archdeacon had responsibility for the deaneries administration, its parishes, parish churches, chapels and clergy. He was assisted in this by the appointed dean of Christianity (later called rural dean) who was also one of the parochial clergy. His role was to visit each of his churches annually to inspect the internal and external fabric of the building and the propriety of its cleric. [22] [23] In the Aberdeen diocese, there were five deaneries—Aberdeen, Boyne, Buchan, Garioch and Mar. [24]
The expression parochia changed over time from its original meaning in the 12th century of being the territory over which a bishop had authority [nb 2] to its later definition of being a locality that was subject to the ecclesiastic charge of a baptismal church. This shift was complete by the 13th century when parochia and parochia ecclesia became entirely associated with the parish church. [26] The development of the parochial system in Scotland has been attributed to the reforming zeal of King David I and his introduction of Anglo-Norman lords yet it is also true that the process had begun under David's predecessors and the native Scottish aristocracy. Some parochial-type entities that had formed before David's reign remained unaltered under David's reshaping of the ecclesiastical landscape. [27] [28] Importantly, David played a significant role in institutionalising the sustainability of the parish unit. [29] The canonical statutes specified the conditions for parish churches. A church built from new had to be made of stone, glazed and erected and funded by the parishioners while the chancel's construction had to be at the rector's expense. The church had to be consecrated although it appears that this was frequently overlooked. [30] Again, at his own expense, the rector had to equip the church with furniture, a silver chalice, necessary books, altar coverings and candles. Failure to supply these items resulted in the benefices being suspended until compliance. These objects were now the property of the church and had to be left in good condition for the succeeding clergy. [31]
Parish churches were a fundamental resource for large ecclesial establishments such as abbeys and cathedrals. This was achieved by the appropriation of the revenues of the churches to the detriment of the resident rectors, also called parsons. The negative impact of these appropriations led to the parsonage largely being confined to the few independent parishes. The bishop always had to sanction appropriations within his diocese and the recipient of the appropriated parish assumed the obligations and revenues of the parsonage. To ensure that the needs of the parishioners were properly met, the beneficiary needed to establish a vicarage perpetual. This vicar held the rights to some of the fruits of the parish. Despite this, it became normal for these vicarage settlements to become formally part of the appropriation process and the cure of souls was then dispensed either by stipendiary pensioner vicars or parochial chaplains. These lowly clergymen were usually poorly paid and often uneducated. [32]
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Although many hospitals were dependent on monasteries, those within the Aberdeen diocese operated as secular establishments under the bishop's jurisdiction. [127] The benevolent founders of these hospitals imposed specific conditions on their altruism—recipients of care were obligated to offer prayers for the souls of their patron(s) who believed that as a result, they would receive a diminution of their time spent in purgatory. [128] These hospitals adhered to stringent codes of behaviour and, despite being secular in nature, followed the principles of a monastic rule, often that of St. Augustine. [129]
Within the diocese of Aberdeen, a total of eleven hospitals were established. Among these, five were situated in Aberdeen—three in the ecclesiastical burgh of Old Aberdeen, and two in the royal burgh of New Aberdeen in the harbour area. These hospitals served various purposes, specifically, care of:
The Fourth Lateran Council of 1215 prohibited clerics and infirmarers from practising surgery if it included blood-letting but herbal therapies would have likely been available for the use of inmates. There is very little evidence that doctors attended to the needs of the inmates and the emphasis was more on the welfare of the soul than the body. [130] Most hospitals in Scotland were small in terms of inmates and only in a minority of cases did they house more than 20 residents. [131] The last hospital to be built in the diocese of Aberdeen was the almshouse dedicated to St Mary, and founded by Bishop Gavin Dunbar in 1532 and had room for only 12 old men.
Location | Name | Category | Founded | Closed | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aberdeen | Aberdeen (Unnamed) | Leperhouse | bef. 1333 | 1574x1661 | For female and male lepers. The Regent ordered the burgh council to collect rents on lands owned by the hospital to allow repairs to the building and roof, on 18 August 1574. By 1661, the house was ruinous and the lands were sold to King's College in 1718 [132] |
Aberdeen | St Anne | Almshouse For the poor | Before 1519 | c. 1550 | For poor women, situated at Footdee. Chapel added in 1519. Also, land owned by the house was referred to in the mid-16th century. [132] |
Aberdeen | St Mary | Almshouse For the elderly | 23 February 1532 | After 1786 | Founded by Bishop Gavin Dunbar for 12 old men. Mention of the appointment of a master of the house 18 May 1573. Still in existence in 18th century. [133] |
Aberdeen | St Peter | Almshouse For the sick | Before 1179 | After 1541 | Founded by Bishop Mathew (1172–99) for 'infirm bretheren'—in 1256 mention of the 'sisters living therein' is made. In 1427, the house is partially suppressed by Bishop Hendry due to malpractice by its masters. The inhabitants were still being cared for in 1541 [37] |
Aberdeen | St Thomas the Martyr | Almshouse For the poor and the sick | 28 May 1459 | After 1660 | For the poor and infirm, with a master. Recorded that the bedesmen received payment in 1596-7 and that two inmates were admonished in 1606 [37] |
Banff | Banff (Unnamed) | Leperhouse | Before 1544 | Before 1590 | Located near the vicar's glebe and the Carmelite monastery. It was already closed by 2 March 1590 [134] |
Cullen | Cullen (Unnamed) | Almshouse Purpose unknown | before 1543 | undated | Mentioned in the foundation charter of the collegiate church of St Mary (1543). An unidentified bedehouse is noted in 1611 which may have been pre-Reformation in origin. Other bedehouses recorded are all post-reformation [135] |
Kincardine O'Neil | St Mary | Almshouse For the poor | Before 1231 (confirmed 1234) | Before 1330 | Founded by Thomas Durward and confirmed by his son Alan Durward on 3 March 1234 [136] |
Newburgh | Monkshome | Almshouse For the poor | c.1261 | Founded by Alexander Comyn, Earl of Buchan for six poor men, with a chaplain. Monks from the Abbey of Deer stayed there [137] | |
Rathven | St Peter | Leperhouse | 1224-6 | In one form or another to 1859 | Founded by John Byseth (Bisset) for 7 lepers, with a chaplain and a servant. Became a prebend of Aberdeen Cathedral in 1445. Despite this, three bedesmen were still supported. In 1536, three prebends were restored to the hospital allowing it to refurbish the building to its original condition. The hospital continued even though its vicarage was appropriated to Cullen Collegiate Church in 1543. The hospital survived the Reformation and changed its use to the care of the poor and continued through until the 19th century when its last bedesman died in 1859 [56] |
Turriff | St Mary and St Congan | Almshouse For the poor | 1273 | ?1412 | Founded by Alexander Comyn, Earl of Buchan, 6 February 1273 and staffed by a master and 6 chaplains. The care was for 13 poor people. Following the extinction of the Comyn line of earls, the earldom fell to John Stewart who allowed the hospital with its income to become a prebend of Aberdeen Cathedral in 1412. No arrangement was made for the hospital's furtherance and may by that time have already closed. [138] |
During the late Middle Ages, the bishop was given powers of visitation and correction over the religious houses within his jurisdiction. Despite this, some monastic orders sought and were granted exemption from diocesan audits while others submitted themselves to the bishop's scrutiny. In the Aberdeen diocese, since the Cistercians, Templars, Hospitallers and all of the Friar orders were exempt, the bishop's visitation would have only applied to the houses at Monymusk and Fyvie. [139] [140] The bishop also interacted with monasteries in other limited ways. Generally, monks were not clerics but laymen so for a monastic community to function, it needed the bishop to ordain enough of its numbers into holy orders to provide for its liturgical and sacramental needs. Only the bishop could consecrate monastery churches and chapels and bless the altars with the necessary ecclesiastical utensils. Also since many parish churches in the diocese were annexed to monasteries these appropriations had to be confirmed by the bishop who then needed to ensure that the monasteries continued to provide adequate vicarage provision for the cure of souls. [141]
Location | Category | Order | Founded | Secularised / Suppressed | Notes|- |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Aberdeen | Priory | Carmalite | c. 1273 | 1560–83 | Known as the White Friars. A mendicant order relying on charity for funding [142] |
Aberdeen | Priory | Dominican | 1230–49 | 1560–87 | Known as the Black Friars. A mendicant order relying on charity for funding [143] |
Aberdeen | Priory | Franciscan (Observants) | 1469 | 1559 | Known as the Grey Friars. A mendicant order relying on charity for funding [144] |
Aberdeen | Priory | Trinitarian | Before 1274 | Before 1561 | Known as the Red Friars. These were not a mendicant order in that they were allowed to accept endowments [145] |
Deer | Abbey | Cistercian | 1219 | 1587 | A Gaelic 12th century tradition gives Deer as an early monastic settlement and although grants of lands were being provided to an existing religious community from around 1000 to 1150, it is likely that this was a community of secular priests. [146] A daughter house of Kinloss, it was founded by William Comyn, Earl of Buchan in 1219 but monks may have been present before that. The last monk-abbot, John Innes, resigned on 2 May 1543 and Robert Keith, brother of William Keith, Earl Marischal became the commendator-abbot at his provision on 11 May 1544. Following his death on 12 June 1551 his nephew, also Robert Keith received the commandatorship at his provision on 15 October 1552. The secularisation has complete when Keith, now Lord Altrie, received the abbey and properties at its erection into a temporal lordship in 1587 [147] |
Fyvie | Priory | Tironensian | in or before 1285 | unknown | Founded by Reginald le Chen. On 18 October 1285, his brother Bishop Henry le Chen [148] confirmed the grant of the lands of Ardlogy to the abbey of Arbroath and the monks of that monastery already 'dwelling in the religious house built in the land of Ardlogie'. In 1325, the abbot of Arbroath called on the prior to ensure compliance with monastic regulation, and in 1451 a papal letter characterises the house as 'non-conventual'. Arbroath Abbey finally took back control of the priory when Pope Julius II reannexed the priory to the abbey on 14 February 1507 [149] |
Maryculter | Preceptory | (1) Knights Templar (2) Knights Hospitallers | (1) Founded by Walter Byset, 1221–36 (2) Following the suppression of the Knights Templar, c. 1309, the house came to the Knights Hospitallers | (1) Suppressed 1309 (2) annexed to the Hospitaller's Commandery of Torphichen, 1513 | For the dispute between Kelso Abbey and the Knights Templar, see Aberdeen Deanery, Parishes of Maryculter and Peterculter, above [150] |
Monymusk | Priory | Augustinian canons | before 1245 | 1617 | The community of Céli Dé, also referred to as Culdees, received grants of lands and revenue during the 12th century. Gilchrist, Earl of Mar (d. 1203) established the monastery at Monymusk towards the end of the 12th century. Before 19 May 1245 the clerics had transformed themselves into canons regular when Pope Innocent IV referred to them as the 'prior and convent of Monymusk of the order of St Augustine'. After this, almost nothing further is known regarding the monastery until the mid-16th century when the building is described as 'ruinous'. In 1549–50, its occupants were a prior and 4 canons and the last recorded surviving member was on 13 August 1534. On the death of the last pre-Reformation prior, John Elphinstone, on 2 May 1543, the crown gifted the priory to the post-Reformation parson of Monymusk, John Hay in March 1562. After Hay's death, the commendatorship was provided to Alexander Forbes in August 1574. The control of the priory remained with the Forbes family until 1617 when it was annexed to the diocese of Dunblane [151] |
The Bishop of Aberdeen was the ecclesiastical head of the Diocese of Aberdeen, one of Scotland's 13 medieval bishoprics, whose first recorded bishop is an early 12th-century cleric named Nechtan. It appears that the episcopal seat had previously been at Mortlach (Mòrthlach), but was moved to Aberdeen during the reign of King David I of Scotland. The names of three bishops of Mortlach are known, the latter two of whom, "Donercius" and "Cormauch" (Cormac), by name only. The Bishop of Aberdeen broke communion with the Roman Catholic Church after the Scottish Reformation. Following the Revolution of 1688, the office was abolished in the Church of Scotland, but continued in the Scottish Episcopal Church. A Roman Catholic Diocese of Aberdeen was recreated in 1878.
Elgin Cathedral, a historic ruin in Elgin, Moray, northeast Scotland, was dedicated to the Holy Trinity. It was established in 1224 on land granted by King Alexander II and stood outside the burgh of Elgin, close to the River Lossie. It replaced the cathedral at Spynie located 3 kilometres (2 mi) to the north, which was served by a small chapter of eight clerics. By 1226, the new and developing cathedral was staffed with 18 canons, a number that increased to 23 by 1242. A damaging fire in 1270 led to significant enlargement. It remained unscathed during the Wars of Scottish Independence but suffered extensive fire damage in 1390 when attacked by Robert III's brother Alexander Stewart, Earl of Buchan, also known as the Wolf of Badenoch. In 1402, the cathedral precinct faced another incendiary attack by the Lord of the Isles followers.
Clement was a 13th-century Dominican friar who was the first member of the Dominican Order in Britain and Ireland to become a bishop. In 1233, he was selected to lead the ailing diocese of Dunblane in Scotland, and faced a struggle to bring the bishopric of Dunblane to financial viability. This involved many negotiations with the powerful religious institutions and secular authorities which had acquired control of the revenue that would normally have been the entitlement of Clement's bishopric. The negotiations proved difficult, forcing Clement to visit the papal court in Rome. While not achieving all of his aims, Clement succeeded in saving the bishopric from relocation to Inchaffray Abbey. He also regained enough revenue to begin work on the new Dunblane Cathedral.
Historical treatment of David I and the Scottish church usually emphasises King David I of Scotland's pioneering role as the instrument of diocesan reorganisation and Norman penetration, beginning with the bishopric of Glasgow while David was Prince of the Cumbrians, and continuing further north after David acceded to the throne of Scotland. As well as this and his monastic patronage, focus too is usually given to his role as the defender of the Scottish church's independence from claims of overlordship by the Archbishop of York and the Archbishop of Canterbury.
Henry de Lichton [de Lychtone, Leighton] was a medieval Scottish prelate and diplomat, who, serving as Bishop of Moray (1414–1422) and Bishop of Aberdeen (1422–1440), became a significant patron of the church, a cathedral builder, and a writer. He also served King James I of Scotland as a diplomat in England, France, and Italy.
John de Winchester was a 15th-century English cleric who distinguished himself as an administrator and bishop in Scotland. Winchester was a student of canon law from 1418, graduating with a bachelorate in 1421.
Elisaeus Adougan was a late 14th century and early 15th century Scottish Catholic cleric.
Thomas de Buittle [Butil, Butill, Butyll, Butyl, Bucyl] was a Scottish prelate, clerk and papal auditor active in the late 14th and early 15th centuries. Probably originating in Galloway, Scotland, Thomas took a university career in canon law in England and France, before taking up service at the court of Avignon Pope Benedict XIII. He obtained a number of benefices in the meantime, including the position of Archdeacon of Galloway, and is the earliest known and probably first provost of the collegiate church of Maybole. The height of his career came however when the Pope provided him to the bishopric of Galloway, a position he held from 1415 until his death sometime between 1420 and 1422.
Robert was a 13th-century prelate based in the Kingdom of Scotland. He was successively Archdeacon of Ross and Bishop of Ross; he is the second Robert to have held the bishopric of Ross.
John Fraser [also, more commonly then, Frisel or Frisell] was a late medieval Scottish prelate. Born about 1429, or 1430 if later tradition can be believed, with strong connections to the burgh of Linlithgow, Fraser held a variety of high-level ecclesiastical positions in Scotland, including being the first Dean of Restalrig collegiate church before becoming Bishop of Ross in 1497, a position he held until his death in 1507.
Thomas Hay was a 15th-century Scottish prelate. A canon of the diocese and cathedral of Aberdeen, on the translation of William Elphinstone from Bishop of Ross to Bishop of Aberdeen, Hay was provided as Elphinstone's successor in Ross, this occurring on 16 May 1483. He was probably the Thomas Hay who held the Aberdeen prebend of Turriff.
Roger was a churchman based in the 14th century Kingdom of Scotland, and active as Bishop of Ross from 1325 until 1350. Before attaining this position, Roger was a canon of Abernethy; it is possible that Roger was an Augustinian, because it is often thought that Abernethy did not become a collegiate church until some time after 1328, after the marriage of the Abernethy heiress to the Earl of Angus; this however is not certain, as the exact details of Abernethy's transition from being an Céli Dé abbey to an Augustinian priory to a secular college are only vaguely understood.
Albin was a 13th-century prelate of the Kingdom of Scotland. A university graduate, Albin is known for his ecclesiastical career in the diocese of Brechin, centred on Angus in east-central Scotland.
Laurence de Ergadia was a thirteenth-century Scottish bishop. Probably from the MacDougall kindred of Argyll, Laurence had become a Dominican friar and presumably university graduate before being elected Bishop of Argyll, an election which took place sometime between 1262 and 1264. Although the election was quashed by the Pope in 1264, the Pope gave him a fresh provision to the bishopric. Laurence appears intermittently in the records during his three and a half decade episcopate, but his activities in his own diocese are badly recorded. He died as Bishop of Argyll sometime in either 1299 or 1300.
Walter de Coventre was a 14th-century Scottish ecclesiastic. There is no direct evidence of his birthdate, his family, or his family's origin, although he may have come from the region around Abernethy, where a family with the name de Coventre is known to have lived. Walter appeared in the records for the first time in the 1330s, as a student at the University of Paris. From there he went on to the University of Orléans, initially as a student before becoming a lecturer there. He studied the arts, civil law and canon law, and was awarded many university degrees, including two doctorates. His studies were paid for, at least partially, by his benefices in Scotland. Despite holding perhaps more than five benefices at one stage, he did not return to Scotland until the late 1350s.
The Church of St Mary on the Rock or St Mary's Collegiate Church, was a secular college of priests based on the seaward side of St Andrews Cathedral, St Andrews, just beyond the precinct walls. It is known by a variety of other names, such as St Mary of the Culdees, Kirkheugh and Church of St Mary of Kilrymont.
Fortrose Cathedral was the episcopal seat (cathedra) of the medieval Scottish diocese of Ross in the Highland region of Scotland near the city of Inverness. It is probable that the original site of the diocese was at Rosemarkie, but by the 13th century the canons had relocated a short distance to the south-west, to the site known as Fortrose or Chanonry. According to Gervase of Canterbury, in the early 13th century the cathedral of Ross was manned by Céli Dé (culdees).
Kincardine O'Neil Hospital was founded in the 13th century in the village of Kincardine O'Neil in Scotland. Almost certainly it served as a traveler's inn and as a hospice for elderly and "poor" men. The hospital was situated adjacent to a bridge over the River Dee and may have been a chantry for the early Bishops of Mortlach. Remains of a building can be seen abutted to the Auld Parish Church in Kincardine O'Neil. This building may have been a later or second hospital. It is also possible that these ruins may have been part of St Erchard's Church - a.k.a. St Marys' or the Auld Kirk.
Hospitals in medieval Scotland can be dated back to the 12th century. From c. 1144 to about 1650 many hospitals, bedehouses and maisons Dieu were built in Scotland.
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