Ecclesiastical chronicle for Scotland . Nearly the same as Bishop Tweed and ^ ^ ^ Andrews Kennedys. I he upper niche contains . a representation of the Holy Trinity— to its former state. The request a figure of God the Father sitting, WOuld probably have been granted, showing His Crucified Son, and the -i-i-j. ii n ^^ -it -> Third Person in the form of a Dove. had xt llot beei1 followed by a second The Shields exhibit the Arms of the request, ere the former one hadFamily of Graham: the dexter bears scarcely reached the Vatican, from on a chief engrailed three escallop .-, 0 -, -, T7-. ., .


Ecclesiastical chronicle for Scotland . Nearly the same as Bishop Tweed and ^ ^ ^ Andrews Kennedys. I he upper niche contains . a representation of the Holy Trinity— to its former state. The request a figure of God the Father sitting, WOuld probably have been granted, showing His Crucified Son, and the -i-i-j. ii n ^^ -it -> Third Person in the form of a Dove. had xt llot beei1 followed by a second The Shields exhibit the Arms of the request, ere the former one hadFamily of Graham: the dexter bears scarcely reached the Vatican, from on a chief engrailed three escallop .-, 0 -, -, T7-. ., . shells, within a double tressure flow- the fickle ^g Paying that a pai- ered and counter-flowered; the sinister tisail of England—Gavill Douglas, bears the plain Coat of Arms. [Charter the Translator of Virgil—might bein S. Salvators College. AD. , . ,,. , „°r,, ° made Archbishop oi bt. Andrews, Metropolitan and Primate of Scotland. York was not the only Metropolitan Church which deemed its rights invaded by this new. 224 AKCHBISHOPS OF THE SEE OF ST. ANDREWS. pre-eminence of St. Andrews. The Sees of the Sudreys and theOrkneys—the Southern and the Northern Islands—were subjectedto its authority, although both had been Suffragans of the Arch-bishop of Nidaros or Drontheim—the Metropolitan of Sudreys or the Isles had been so long released from Norserule, had become so thoroughly Scotch, that there seems to havebeen no thought of now reclaiming their spiritual Orkney was in a very different position. Only four yearshad passed since its civil dominion had been transferred in pledge,not in property, to the King of Scots; its people still spoke theNorse tongue, followed the Norse laws; the Bishop who ruledat Kirkwall had sworn fealty at Copenhagen to the reigning Kingof Denmark; his Predecessor had given suit and presence at theCoronation of the King of Norway at Opslo. Such a See wasnot to be relinquished without a murmur; and more th


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Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1860, bookidecclesiasticalch01gord