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The
Medieval Diocese
The
eleventh-century decline in the Scottish Church is well seen
in the state of affairs at Dunkeld, but the first half of the
twelfth century saw a great effort at renewal. As part of this
effort a system of territorial bishoprics was developed, and
the first of such bishops at Dunkeld may have taken office in
about 1114. Nevertheless, the new order could not be introduced
overnight, and for some time there continued to be a community
of clergy here of the older style known as Culdees (which probably
means servants of God).
A bishop was the cleric in charge of the ecclesiastical affairs
of a very defined geographical area known as a diocese. In Scotland,
for a variety of reasons, the boundaries of these dioceses could
be very complicated, and those of Dunkeld, St Andrews, Dunblane
and Brechin were elaborately intermeshed.
Dunkeld even had detached territories along the shores of the
Firth of Forth. Several thirteenth-century bishops seem to have
felt more fondness for the security of the island abbey of Inchcolm
in the Firth of Forth, which was such an outlying part of their
diocese, than for their own cathedral, and chose it as their
last resting place. Perhaps this was because the community of
canons of Inchcolm had originally been destined for its own
cathedral, and was only established on Inchcolm when there proved
to be difficulties in ousting the existing community of Culdees
at Dunkeld.
Initially the main part of the diocese of Dunkeld stretched
across to the west coast, but at some date between 1183 and
1189 the western part was separated off to form the distinct
diocese of Argyll. The mid-fifteenth century chronicler Walter
Bower, who was an abbot of Inchcolm, said this was done at the
request of Bishop John Scot (1183-1203) who felt unable to help
the Gaelic-speaking part of his flock. But it is perhaps more
likely that the division was engineered by King William the
Lion who was irritated that John had not been his own choice
for bishop.
Return
To Dunkeld Cathedral
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