Bishop of Orkney
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The Bishop of Orkney was the ecclesiastical head of the Diocese of Orkney, one of thirteen medieval bishoprics within the territory of modern Scotland. It included both Orkney and Shetland. It was based for almost all of its history at St. Magnus' Cathedral, Kirkwall.
The bishopric appears to have been suffragan of the Archbishop of York (with intermittent control exercised by the Archbishop of Hamburg-Bremen) until the creation of the Archbishopric of Trondheim (NiĆ°aros) in 1152. Although Orkney itself did not become politically part of Scotland until 1468, the Scottish kings and political community had been pushing for control of the islands for centuries. The see, however, remained under the nominal control of Trondheim until the creation of the Archbishopric of St. Andrews in 1472, when it became for the first time an officially Scottish bishopric. The Bishopric of Orkney ceased to exist after the Scottish Reformation, but in 1878 the Catholic Church re-established the bishopric system, and Orkney came under the resurrected and reformatted Diocese of Aberdeen. An Anglian bishopric encompassing Orkney was created in 1865, as the Bishopric of Aberdeen and Orkney.
[edit] List of known bishops of Orkney
Tenure | Incumbent | Notes |
---|---|---|
fl. 1043x1072 | Thorulf | Sent as bishop to Iceland, Greenland and Orkney, by Archbishop Adalbert of Hamburg. |
fl. 1043x1072 | Adalbert | Sent as bishop to Iceland, Greenland and Orkney, by Adalbert, Archbishop of Hamburg. |
cons. 1073 | Radulf | |
cons. x1108 | Roger | |
cons. 1102(?) | William the Old | |
cons. x1114 | Radulf Novellus | He was consecrated by Thomas, Archbishop of York. There is no evidence that Radulf ever took possession of his see, nor that he ever visited Orkney. |
bp. 1168x | William (II.) | |
fl. 1188x1194 | Bjarni | |
bp. 1223 | Jofreyrr | |
post. 1247; cons. 1248 | Henry (I.) | |
cons. 1270 | Peter | |
cons. 1286 | Dolgfinnr | |
cons. 1310 | William (III.) | |
bp. x1369 | William (IV.) | |
el. 1382 (?); prov. 1384 | Robert Sinclair | The Avignon bishop, in contrast to John, the candidate of the Roman Pope. The doubling of bishops was a product of the Western Schism. His election drew hesitancy from the Avignon Pope Clement VII, but had been confirmed by January 27th, 1384. He was translated to the Bishopric of Dunkeld sometime before March, 1391. |
el. 1382 (?); prov. 1384 | John | The Roman bishop. He was elected by the cathedral chapter. His election was declared null and void by Pope Urban VI, but the latter provided him to the see in 1384. Pope Boniface IX translated him to the Bishopric of Greenland. |
trans. 1394 | Henry (II.) | Second Roman bishop. Previously Bishop of Greenland, he exchanged bishoprics with Bishop John. |
prov. 1396 | John of Colchester | The third Roman bishop of the Western Schism. He had been a monk of Colchester. He appears as "Johannes Anglus, bishop of Orkney" in the Union Treaty of Kalmar. |
prov. x1408 | Alexander Vaus | Second Avignon bishop. Provided by Pope Benedict XIII, but was not consecrated within the canonical time. He was translated to the Bishopric of Caithness in 1414. |
prov. 1415 | William Stephen | Third Avignon bishop, provided by Pope Benedict XIII. He was translated to the Bishopric of Dunblane in 1419. |
prov. 1418 | Thomas de Tulloch | Fourth Roman bishop. He was accepted by both sides after the recognition of the "Roman" Popes by the Scottish king. |
prov. 1461 | William de Tulloch | |
prov. 1477 | Andrew Pictoris | |
coadj. 1500; bp. 1503x | Edward Stewart | |
coadj. 1524 | John Beynstoun | |
prov. 1526 | Robert Maxwell | |
prov./cons. 1541 | Robert Reid | |
prov. 1559; cons. 1559x1560 | Adam Bothwell | He became a Protestant, and in 1568 exchanged the temporalities of the see (which went to Robert Stewart, 1st Earl of Orkney) for Holyrood Abbey. He died in 1593, still styling himself "Bischop of Orkney, Commendatair of Halyrudhous". |
prov. 1605; cons. 1611 | James Law | Became Archbishop of Glasgow. |
trans. 1615 | George Graham | Translated from Bishopric of Dunblane. |
[edit] References
- Dowden, John, The Bishops of Scotland, ed. J. Maitland Thomson, (Glasgow, 1912)