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Andrew Stewart (bishop of Moray)

Scottish prelate and administrator


Summary

Scottish prelate and administrator

FieldValue
typeBishop
nameAndrew Stewart
titleBishop of Moray
imageAndrew Stewart seal.JPG
churchRoman Catholic Church
seeDiocese of Moray
term1482–1501
predecessorWilliam Tulloch
successorAndrew Forman
consecration1485 x 1487
birth_date1442 x 1445
birth_placeScotland
death_date29 September 1501
death_placeMoray
previous_postDean of Moray

Andrew Stewart (died 1501) was a 15th-century Scottish prelate and administrator.

Biography

Born between 1442 and 1444, he was the son of Joan Beaufort (d. 1445), widow of King James I of Scotland and former Queen-consort, and her second husband, James Stewart, the Black Knight of Lorne. Being a third son, an ecclesiastical career was a natural course, and as early as 1455 Andrew held the positions of Sub-Dean of the diocese of Glasgow and, briefly, Dean of the diocese of Aberdeen. This was because on 7 May 1455, Pope Calixtus III conferred the deanery of Aberdeen, the Glasgow prebendary of Kirkandris and well as canonry of Lincluden and the vicarage of Kilpatrick, both also in the diocese of Glasgow, after the promotion of Andrew de Durisdeer as Bishop of Glasgow. He was unable to retain the Aberdeen deanery, assumed by Richard Forbes in the following year.

These positions were ideal for funding a university education. Andrew was incorporated at the University of Glasgow in 1456, and he is found as a determinant, i.e. having completed his bachelor's degree, at the University of St Andrews in 1462 x 1463. In 1470, he may have been given the position of Provost of the Collegiate church of Lincluden, a position he certainly did hold in 1477.

Andrew's career reached its height when, after the death of Bishop William Tulloch in 1482, he was elected to become the new Bishop of Moray. He received papal provision on 12 August 1482, but was not consecrated until sometime between 22 December 1485 and 24 October 1487. Andrew obtained a papal bull incorporating the provostry of Lincluden into the Moravian episcopal mensa for his lifetime, although this was cancelled in 1488. He was the Keeper of the Privy Seal of Scotland, a position he resigned in early 1483.

For a period he had hopes of becoming Archbishop of St Andrews in the place of William Scheves, but this never transpired. Probably in pursuit of his ambition for St Andrews, he became the most prominent supporter of Alexander Stewart, Duke of Albany, who was attempting to seize the throne of Scotland in this period; this alliance had ended by 1485, when Albany had been defeated, and then killed in a joust in France.

Despite incurring the enmity of King James III of Scotland and the censure of Pope Sixtus IV, Bishop Andrew survived, and was probably reconciled by 1487 when he received consecration. His episcopate is not particularly well documented, but he presided over a general convocation of the canons of Moray late in the year 1487. Andrew is known to have issued a number of episcopal statutes. Among other activities, he was in receipt of a safe-conduct from the English government in May 1497 and was at the Edinburgh parliament of 23 June 1496. King Henry VII of England requested on 5 July 1497 that Bishop Andrew be sent as an emissary to England concerning Perkin Warbeck.

On 13 August 1501 Pope Alexander VI, at the instance of King Louis XII of France, made a reservation of the bishopric of Moray, showing that the Pope believed the see would soon become vacant, and perhaps indicating that Bishop Andrew had contracted some kind of mortal illness. Bishop Andrew did die, on 29 September 1501.

Ancestry

Notes

References

  • Boardman, S. I., "Stewart, James, earl of Buchan (1441/2?–1499/1500)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 retrieved 5 May 2007
  • Brown, M. H., "Joan [Joan Beaufort] (d. 1445)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 retrieved 5 May 2007
  • Dowden, John, The Bishops of Scotland, ed. J. Maitland Thomson, (Glasgow, 1912)
  • Keith, Robert, An Historical Catalogue of the Scottish Bishops: Down to the Year 1688, (London, 1924)
  • Tanner, Roland J., "Stewart, Alexander, duke of Albany (1454?–1485)", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 retrieved 5 May 2007
  • Watt, D.E.R., Fasti Ecclesiae Scotinanae Medii Aevi ad annum 1638, 2nd Draft, (St Andrews, 1969)

before=William Tulloch Bishop of Orkney| after=David Livingston| years=1482–1483}} before= Andrew de Durisdeer | title=Sub-Dean of Glasgow | years=1455–1482 | after= Archibald Whitelaw before= Andrew de Durisdeer | title=Dean of Aberdeen | years=1455–1456 | after= Richard Forbes before= James Stewart | title=Dean of Moray | years=1460–1482 | after= Gavin Vaiche before= James Crichton | title=Provost of Lincluden | years=1470–1488 | after= David Livingston before= William Tulloch | title=Bishop of Moray | years=1482–1501 | after= Andrew Forman

References

  1. His older brother [[James Stewart, Earl of Buchan]], was born in 1441 x 1442, and Joan died in 1445; Boardman, "Stewart, James, earl of Buchan (1441/2?–1499/1500)"; Brown, "Joan [Joan Beaufort] (died 1445)".
  2. Boardman, "Stewart, James, earl of Buchan (1441/2?–1499/1500)"; Brown, "Joan [Joan Beaufort] (d. 1445)"; Dowden, ''Bishops'', p. 163; Keith, ''Historical Catalogue'', p. 245.
  3. Watt, ''Fasti Ecclesiae'', pp. 8, 168.
  4. Dowden, ''Bishops'', p. 163, n. 1.
  5. Watt, ''Fasti Ecclesiae'', p. 8.
  6. He appears to have entered the [[University of Paris]] ''[[Ad eundem degree
  7. Watt, ''Fasti Ecclesiae'', p. 364.
  8. Watt, ''Fasti Ecclesiae'', p. 216.
  9. Dowden, ''Bishops'', p. 164, n. 2; Watt, ''Fasti Ecclesiae'', p. 216.
  10. Dowden, ''Bishops'', p. 163; Watt, ''Fasti Ecclesiae'', p. 364.
  11. Dowden, ''Bishops'', p. 164; Keith, ''Historical Catalogue'', p. 146.
  12. In 1482 he and his two brothers promised 6000 [[ducat]]s of [[gold]] to the city of [[Edinburgh]], "in or the cais of prmocion of the saif reverend fadir [Andrew] to the Archbishoprik of Sanctandrois or quhatsomeuer vther benefice, dignitie, or privilegis".Dowden, ''Bishops'', p. 163.
  13. Dowden, ''Bishops'', p. 164; Tanner, "Stewart, Alexander, duke of Albany (1454?–1485)".
  14. Dowden, ''Bishops'', pp. 164-5.
  15. Dowden, ''Bishops'', p. 164.
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