Ecclesiastical chronicle for Scotland . tion. If he was unavoidablyAnother Counter Seal aDsent, his place was taken by the seniorofMaivoisine. TheLe- Bishop. The Conservator, however, had notgendissECRETDJisANCTi Metropolitan powers, as some have opined. The andree. [Melr. Chart.] 0, . , t •? • i , . < -, btate asserted its right to a seat and voice inthese Councils. Few notices of their Meetings have been chron-icled. Between 1237 and 1286, little more than half a Centuryafter the Bull of Honorius III., fifty or sixty Canons sufficed forthe government of the Church of Scotland almost to th


Ecclesiastical chronicle for Scotland . tion. If he was unavoidablyAnother Counter Seal aDsent, his place was taken by the seniorofMaivoisine. TheLe- Bishop. The Conservator, however, had notgendissECRETDJisANCTi Metropolitan powers, as some have opined. The andree. [Melr. Chart.] 0, . , t •? • i , . < -, btate asserted its right to a seat and voice inthese Councils. Few notices of their Meetings have been chron-icled. Between 1237 and 1286, little more than half a Centuryafter the Bull of Honorius III., fifty or sixty Canons sufficed forthe government of the Church of Scotland almost to the Ke-formation. The fewer the Laws, in all times, cases, and places,the more easily are they digested; and, better still, where noLaw is, there is no transgression. A Provincial Council appearsto have been held at Perth, 1st July, 1238. All that is knownof it is that it was attended by four Bishops, four Abbots, anArchdeacon, and a Dean, and that judgment in a Controversybetween the Bishop of Dunblane and the Earl of Menteith was. 154 BISHOPS OF THE SEE OF ST. ANDREWS. sealed in its presence. The Bishops present were Glasgow,Dimkeld, Aberdeen, and Dunblane. The aged Bishop of —the energetic Norman, then lay on his Death-bed.[Stat. Ecc. Scot., Preface, ] Malvoisine Died at his Palace of Inchmurtach, al. Inchmartine,15th July, 1238. This was a country Besidence of the Bishopsof St. Andrews, near where Kenlygreen House now stands, atBoarhills. The ruins were removed and the foundations razedabout a Century ago. He was the first Bishop who was Buriedin the Cathedral Church, the Choir of which was by this timeprobably completed. Sir James Dalrymple says, that he saw aSeal of this Bishop appended to an Indenture in 1237. Afterthe Death of Bishop William, both Clergy and Laity were desir-ous to have Galfkid, Bishop of Dunkeld, placed in the See of ; but the King not consenting to his Translation, XXV. David, 1239-53, Whose Surname is variously e


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