Ecclesiastical chronicle for Scotland . dManse; the Canons to have thegreat Tithes of corn, wool, lambs,rents, mills, live-stock, togetherwith bequeatlwd corpses.—BishopBishop Frazers Seal has a Bishop Frazer desires the Dean of LothianVested, holding his Staff, with the Fam- to institute Robert, Chaplain ofily Arms of Frazer underneath, and the TT -,-,., . ,, -rT. P Circumscription s. wni, fhaseb dei Haddington, into the Vicarage of gka. scottory En. The background is Linlithgow, instead of the former richly emblazoned with Roses, which y^^ wllQ had obtained another constitute the Frazer Arms


Ecclesiastical chronicle for Scotland . dManse; the Canons to have thegreat Tithes of corn, wool, lambs,rents, mills, live-stock, togetherwith bequeatlwd corpses.—BishopBishop Frazers Seal has a Bishop Frazer desires the Dean of LothianVested, holding his Staff, with the Fam- to institute Robert, Chaplain ofily Arms of Frazer underneath, and the TT -,-,., . ,, -rT. P Circumscription s. wni, fhaseb dei Haddington, into the Vicarage of gka. scottory En. The background is Linlithgow, instead of the former richly emblazoned with Roses, which y^^ wllQ had obtained another constitute the Frazer Arms. -r> n k -^ - ^^r> -^ i n , Benefice, ±286. Dated atInchmurtach. [Reg. Prior. St. Andr.; Lyons History, vol. ii.,p. 301.] In 1296, the Bishop of St. Andrews pronouncedSentence of Deprivation against 26 English Clergy Beneficed inhis Diocese, agreeable to the Statutes of the Scottish the earliest ages down to the present, a gulph of separation,or caste, has ever existed between the English, Irish, and Scotch. WILLIAM FRAZER. 175 Churches, the one regarding the other not only as alien, but asheterodox, thereby ignoring the Churchs Catholicity. [ Scot., p. 276.] King John Baliol sent this Bishop, together with three otherpersons, into France, to treat about a Marriage for his son, PrinceEdward, in 1295 [Dipl. et Numism., c. 421; but whether he everreturned home again seems to be uncertain, since it is related,that having retired into France, that he might not be an eye-witness to the calamities of his country (caused by the 14 rivalclaimants of the Crown of Scotland), he fellinto a languishing distemper, and Died atCarteville, 13 Kal. Septembris, 1297. [For-dwi.] His Body was Buried in the Churchof the Friars-Predicant in Paris, but hisHeart, enclosed in a very rich box, wasafterwards brought over into Scotland, byhis immediate Successor, Bishop Lamberton,and entombed in the wall of the CathedralChurch of St. Andrews, between the Tombsof Bishops


Size: 1261px × 1982px
Photo credit: © The Reading Room / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bo, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1860, bookidecclesiasticalch01gord