- Andrew Cant
:"This article refers to the Scottish
covenanter . For other people called Andrew Cant, including his son of the same name, seeAndrew Cant (disambiguation) "Andrew Cant (1590 - 1663) was aPresbyterian minister and leader of the ScottishCovenanters . About 1623 the people ofEdinburgh called him to be their minister, but he was rejected by James I. Ten years later he was minister ofPitsligo inAberdeenshire , a charge which he left in 1638 for that ofNewbattle inMidlothian . In July of that year he went with other commissioners toAberdeen in the vain attempt to induce the university and the presbytery of that city to subscribe theNational Covenant , and in the following November sat in the general assembly atGlasgow which abolishedepiscopacy in Scotland. In 1640 he was chaplain to the Scottish army and then settled as minister at Aberdeen. Though a stanch Covenanter, he was a zealous Royalist, preaching before Charles I in Edinburgh, and stoutly advocating the restoration of the monarchy in the time of the Commonwealth. Cant's frequent and bitter attacks on various members of his congregation led in 1660 to complaints laid before the magistrates, in consequence of which he resigned his charge. His son Andrew was principal ofEdinburgh University (1675 - 1685).References
*1911
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