Prior of Loch Leven

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The Prior of Loch Leven was the head of lands and of the community Augustinian canons of St Serf's Inch Priory, Loch Leven (aka Portmoak Priory). There was a Scottish Céli Dé (or Culdee) establishment there in the first half of the 12th century, allegedly found by Bruide, son of Dargart, King of the Picts (696–706). When the Augustinian priory was founded in 1150, the Scottish monks were absorbed into the established and those who refused to join were to be expelled. Not all of the priors are known. The most famous prior undoubtedly was the chronicler, Andrew de Wyntoun. Following more than four centuries of Augustinian monastic life and the resignation of the last prior, the protestant king, James VI of Scotland, granted the priory to St Leonard's College, St Andrews.

Contents

[edit] List of known Scottish abbots of St Serf's Inch

  • Ronán, fl. mid-900s
  • Eógan, fl. 1128

[edit] List of known Augustinian priors of Loch Leven

  • Roger, fl. 1183 x 1203-1212 x
  • Simon, fl. 1225-x 1235
  • G. [...?],[1], fl. 1235
  • Laurence, fl. 1268
  • Robert de Montrose, fl. 1386 x 1387
  • David Bell, 1387-1390
  • Thomas Mason, 1388-1389
  • Andrew de Wyntoun, 1390-1421
    • James Biset, 1391-1394
  • John Cameron, 1421
  • Andrew Newton, 1423
  • Robert Horsbruk, 1440-1460
  • David Ramsay, 1462 x 1466
  • Walter Monypenny, 1465-1500
  • John Wylie, 1465
  • Alexander Scrimgeour, 1483
  • Thomas Kynor [Kinnear], 1486
  • David Dickson, 1524-1525
  • Michael Donaldson, 1524 -1525
  • John Winram, 1534
  • David Guthrie, 1544-1558
  • John Winram, 1552-1582

[edit] Notes

  1. ^ Only known by initial. He was definitely the third prior.

[edit] Bibliography

  • Cowan, Ian B. & Easson, David E., Medieval Religious Houses: Scotland With an Appendix on the Houses in the Isle of Man, Second Edition, (London, 1976), p. 93
  • Watt, D.E.R. & Shead, N.F. (eds.), The Heads of Religious Houses in Scotland from the 12th to the 16th Centuries, The Scottish Records Society, New Series, Volume 24, (Edinburgh, 2001), pp. 139-42

[edit] See also


Prelates of Medieval Scotland (post-1100)
Archbishops Glasgow (1492) | St Andrews (1472)
Bishops Aberdeen | Argyll | Brechin | Caithness | Dunblane | Dunkeld | Galloway | Glasgow | Isles (Sodor) | Moray | Orkney | Ross | St Andrews
Abbots Arbroath | Balmerino | Cambuskenneth | Coupar Angus | Crossraguel | Culross | Deer | Dercongal (Holywood) | Dryburgh | Dundrennan | Dunfermline | Fearn | Glenluce | Holyrood | Inchaffray | Inchcolm | Iona | Jedburgh | Kelso (Selkirk) | Kilwinning | Kinloss | Lindores | Melrose | Newbattle | Paisley | Saddell | Scone | Soulseat | Sweatheart | Tongland
Priors Ardchattan | Beauly | Blantyre | Canonbie | Coldingham | Fogo | Fyvie | Inchmahome | Lesmahagow | May (Pittenweem) | Monymusk | Oronsay | Pluscarden | Restenneth | St Andrews | Strathfillan | St Mary's Isle | St Serf's Inch, Loch Leven | Urquhart | Whithorn