George Haliburton (d. 1715)
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Denomination | Church of Scotland |
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Senior posting | |
See | Diocese of Aberdeen |
Title | Bishop of Aberdeen |
Period in office | 1682–1689 |
Consecration | June 13, 1678 (Brechin) |
Predecessor | Patrick Scougal |
Successor | - |
Religious career | |
Previous bishoprics | Brechin (1678–1682) |
Personal | |
Date of birth | c. 1635 |
Place of birth | Possibly Perthshire |
Date of death | 1715 |
Place of death | Halton, Angus |
George Haliburton (b. c. 1635 – 1715, Halton, Angus) was a Scottish cleric and Jacobite. Haliburton received his education at St Salvator's College, St Andrews, obtaining a Master of Arts on June 12, 1652, and a Doctorate in Divinity in 1673.
Between his two degrees, he was made minister of Coupar Angus in 1659, and was Archdeacon of Dunkeld by the summer of 1663. After obtaining his doctorate, he served as moderator of the Presbytery of Meigle from 1678 until he became Bishop of Brechin, receiving consecration as bishop on June 13, 1678. The latter encompassed the roles of provost and minister of Brechin, but nevertheless George remained minister of Coupar Angus.
On June 22, 1682, Haliburton was selected to move to the larger diocese of Aberdeen, and was translated as Bishop of Aberdeen on July 5, 1682. Unlike most members of the Church of Scotland, Haliburton supported episcopacy, and was an active persecutor of the Quakers. In 1688, after the Glorious Revolution, episcopacy was defeated in Scotland and all Church of Scotland bishops were deprived of their sees, including Haliburton. Haliburton was formally deprived of his bishopric on July 22, 1689.
Haliburton moved to Newtyle parish in Angus, assisting the work of an episcopal minister there until the Church of Scotland forcibly took over control of it in 1698. He then retired to his own residence at nearby Halton, and received a pension in the following year. Haliburton became increasingly sympathetic towards Jacobitism and ordained clergy, working closely with re-established episcopalian bishops and archbishops, though the latter often did not inform him about the secret consecrations of new bishops which were taking place.
He moved to Denhead in 1710. He died at Halton on September 29, 1715. Twenty days earlier he had attended the raising of the standard of the Old Pretender at Fetteresso, the act which initiated the First Jacobite Rising.
[edit] References
- Clarke, Tristram, "Haliburton, George (1635?–1715)", in the Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004 , accessed 23 Feb 2007
- Keith, Robert, An Historical Catalogue of the Scottish Bishops: Down to the Year 1688, (London, 1924)
Religious titles | ||
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Preceded by Robert Laurie |
Bishop of Brechin 1678–1682 |
Succeeded by Robert Douglas |
Preceded by Patrick Scougal |
Bishop of Aberdeen 1682–1689 |
Succeeded by Episcopacy abolished |
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