- William Elphinstone
William Elphinstone (
1431 -October 25 ,1514 ), Scottishstatesman ,Bishop of Aberdeen and founder of theUniversity of Aberdeen .He was born in
Glasgow , and educated at theUniversity of Glasgow , taking the degree of M.A. in 1452. After practising for a short time as alawyer in the church courts, he was ordained apriest , becomingrector of St. Michael's Church,Trongate , Glasgow, in 1465. Four years later he went to continue his studies at theUniversity of Paris , where he became reader in Canon law, and then, proceeding toOrléans , became lecturer in the university there.Before 1474 he had returned to Scotland, and was made
Rector of the university, and official of the see of Glasgow. Further promotion followed, but soon more important duties were entrusted to Elphinstone, who was made Bishop of Ross in 1481. He was a member of theParliament of Scotland , and was sent byJames III of Scotland on diplomatic errands toLouis XI of France andEdward IV of England . In 1483 he was appointedBishop of Aberdeen , although his consecration was delayed for four years; and he was sent on missions toEngland , both before and after the death ofRichard III of England in 1485.Although he attended the meetings of
parliament with great regularity he did not neglect his episcopal duties, and maintained the fabric of thecathedral . Early in 1488 he was madeLord High Chancellor , but on the king's death in the following June he vacated this office, and retired to Aberdeen. As adiplomat , his services were quickly required by the new king,James IV of Scotland , in whose interests be visited the kings of England and France, and the German king,Maximilian I, Holy Roman Emperor .Having been made
Keeper of the Privy Seal of Scotland in 1492, and having arranged a dispute between the Scots and the Dutch, the bishop's concluding years were mainly spent in the foundation of the University of Aberdeen. Thepapal bull was obtained in 1494, and theroyal charter which made Aberdeen the seat of a university is dated 1498. A small endowment was provided by the king, and the university, modelled on that of Paris and intended principally as a school of law, soon became the most famous and popular of the Scots seats of learning, a result which was largely due to the wide experience and ripe wisdom of Elphinstone and of his friend,Hector Boece , the first rector. The building of the college of the Holy Virgin in Nativity, now King's College, was completed in 1506, and the bishop also rebuilt the choir of his cathedral, and built a bridge over the River Dee. Continuing to participate in public affairs he opposed the policy of hostility towards England which led to theBattle of Flodden in September 1513. He died inEdinburgh .Elphinstone was partly responsible for the introduction of
printing into Scotland, and for the production of the "Breviarium Aberdonense". He may have written some of the lives in this collection, and gathered together materials concerning thehistory of Scotland ; but he did not, as some have thought, continue the "Scotichronicon", nor did he write the "Lives of Scottish Saints".References
*
Hector Boece , "Murthiacensium et Aberdonensium episcoporum vitae", edited and translated by J. Moir (Aberdeen, 1894)
* "Fasli Aberdonenses", edited by C. Innes (Aberdeen, 1854)
*Alexander Gardyne , "Theatre of Scottish Worthies and Lyf of W. Elphinston", edited by David Laing (Aberdeen, 1878).
*1911
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