- Alexander de Kylwos
infobox bishopbiog
name = Alexander de Kylwos
religion=Roman Catholic Church
See =Diocese of Ross
Title =Bishop of Ross
Period = 1371–1398
consecration =May 9 ,1371 ×March 6 ,1372
Predecessor = Alexander Stewart
Successor =Alexander de Waghorn
post =Chancellor of Ross (1333 × 1350–1350)
Dean of Ross (1350–1368 × 1370)Dean of Moray (1368 × 1370–1371) | ordination =
bishops =
date of birth = unknown
place of birth = unknown
date of death =July 6 ,1398
place of death =Alexander de Kylwos (died 1398) - written alternatively as Frylquhous, Kylquos, and a variety of other forms [Including "Kylquhous", "Colqhos", "Culchwos", "Culchoyse" and "Kylwhaus".] - was a Scottish churchman and prelate active in the second half of the 14th century. He is known to have held senior positions in three bishoprics, and senior offices in two, before being elected and appointed
Bishop of Ross in 1371. Though his episcopate is relatively obscure, he seems to have spent almost all of it inside or around his province, was closely associated with William III and Euphemia I, successive rulers of Ross, and was an associate of the famousAlexander Bur ,Bishop of Moray , during the latter's struggle with Alexander Stewart, the son of the King later known by the nickname "Wolf of Badenoch".Early life
He may take his name from Kilwhiss near
Auchtermuchty inFife . [Dowden, "Bishops", p. 215, n. 1; Watt, "Dictionary", p. 315.] His family is obscure, but it is known that during his time asBishop of Ross , probably in the 1390s, he brought one John de Kylwos - clearly a relative - into his diocese, as theSubdean . [Watt, "Dictionary", p. 315; Watt, "Fasti Ecclesiae", p. 281.] Alexander was certainly born in or more likely a good period before the year 1326, because he is known to have been a priest in 1350, the minimum age for which was 24 years old.Watt, "Dictionary", p. 315.]Kylwos' first appearance in history occurred on
April 30 ,1350 , when he added his seal to acharter of William III, Earl of Ross; here he is the elect Dean of the Ross. [Watt, "Dictionary", p. 315; Watt, "Fasti Ecclesiae", pp. 272, 277.] On this date Alexander was styled "Master", indicating that he had already completed many years of university education, though when and where is a mystery.The papal confirmation for his election to the deanery, dated
September 9 , indicates that he had previously been theChancellor of the diocese of Ross; is not known how long he had held the chancellorship of the diocese, and unfortunately no previous chancellor can be traced later than 1333. [Watt, "Fasti Ecclesiae", p. 277.]Alexander's next appearance is on
September 18 ,1357 , atRosemarkie , when he was appointed as theproctor of the Rosscathedral chapter responsible for ensuring the payment of their contribution to theransom of KingDavid II of Scotland . [Watt, "Dictionary", pp. 315-6.] At some point between June 1361 and August 1362 he is found fulfilling some arrears to King David's Chamberlain on account of the ransom.Watt, "Dictionary", p. 316.]On
December 13 ,1366 , he was attending a statute-passing meeting of the chapter ofAberdeen Cathedral , and here it becomes known that he held acanonry andprebend in thediocese of Aberdeen . [Watt, "Dictionary", pp. 315, 316.]He attended the parliament at Scone on
September 27 ,1367 , as proctor of Alexander Stewart, Bishop of Ross, and remained behind as part of a small representative committee elected to finish off some parliamentary business. By December 1368, he was the papal chamber's sub-collector in Scotland, deputising toWilliam de Greenlaw ,Archdeacon of St Andrews . [Watt, "Dictionary", pp. 246, 314; Watt, "Fasti Ecclesiae", p. 306.]On
December 7 ,1368 , he was provided asDean of Moray , and instructed to resign the deanery of Ross and his Aberdeen canonry upon obtaining possession. For some reason, perhaps because of administrative confusion, onDecember 11 the papacy also provided one Thomas de Harcars to the deanery of Moray, but it is Kylwos alone who obtained possession, being found in such byDecember 19 ,1370 . [Watt, "Dictionary", pp. 255, 315; Watt, "Fasti Ecclesiae", p. 219.]Bishop of Ross
On
May 9 ,1371 , Alexander was given papal provision to the bishopric of Ross following the death of Bishop Alexander Stewart. [Watt, "Fasti Ecclesiae", p. 268.] Alexander Steward is found to have been alive for the last time onFebruary 4 , though the date of his death afterwards in not known. [Watt, "Dictionary", p. 511.] The letter of provision byPope Gregory IX was addressed to Kylwos as "elect of Ross", and describes how following Bishop Stewart's the chapter of Ross had elected Kylwos in ignorance of the pope's previous reservation of the see; the election was declared void, but on account of the chapter's expressed will he nevertheless provided Kylwos to the see. [Dowden, "Bishops", pp. 215-6; the course of events described is rather common in the period.]It is probable that he did travel to
Avignon to obtain this confirmation of his election and to receive consecration, as no Bishop of Ross was available to attend the coronation of Robert II at Scone and following parliament onMarch 27 . He is first known to have been a consecrated bishop onMarch 6 ,1372 , though no document records the date on which his consecration took place. [Watt, "Fasti Ecclesiae", p. 268.] A promise of his "services" was made onMay 22 ,1371 , part of which were paid through William de Greenlaw, acting as proctor, onSeptember 2 ,1372 ; another part was paid onApril 15 ,1374 , this time throughAdam de Tyninghame , future Bishop of Aberdeen.Kylwos was back in Scotland in 1372, attending Robert II's Scone parliament of
March 6 , and then the Scone parliament of April 3/4, 1373. [Dowden, "Bishops", p. 216; Watt, "Dictionary", p. 316.] Kylwos was afterwards very little involved in national affairs, largely confining himself to activities which concernedRoss and his diocese there; thus, despite being bishop for a quarter of a century, documentation of his episcopate is weak.He is found witnessing a "Moray Registrum" charter at Nigg on
October 21 ,1375 . A papal mandate ofOctober 3 ,1379 , mentions a dispute between Bishop Alexander and one of his canons, John de Carralle, authorising the dispute to be settled by the Bishop of Moray.Burns (ed.), "Papal Letters", p. 32] The dispute also involved theBishop of St Andrews ,William de Landallis , two priests, and two laymen from thediocese of St Andrews and thediocese of Brechin ; the dispute involved revenues from the prebend of "Colyroden" (i.e.Cullicudden ) inRoss and the church of "Mockard" (i.e.Muckhart ) inSt Andrews dioceses, though the exact details at issue are not revealed.He witnessed a charter of
Euphemia I, Countess of Ross and her husbandWalter Leslie atTain onNovember 26 ,1380 , another atElgin onAugust 18 ,1381 , and yet another atDingwall in March 1382. OnFebruary 7 ,1382 , he was at Montrose inAngus and is recorded, along withAlexander Bur , Bishop of Moray, adding his seal to a document which transferred the lands of Abernethy,Strathspey , into the hands of Alexander Stewart,Lord of Badenoch andEarl of Buchan .He is found again over seven years later, at
Inverness , onOctober 27 ,1389 , witnessing a settlement between Alexander Bur and the titularEarl of Moray , John de Dunbar. He is found once more with Alexander Bur, onNovember 2 that year, commanding Alexander Stewart, Earl of Buchan, to take back Euphemia, to whom Stewart had been nominally married. He was at Scone onDecember 2 ,1390 , on Bur's behalf demanding that King Robert III deliver justice after Buchan had burned downElgin Cathedral , the seat of Bur's Moray bishopric.The remainder of Kylwos' last decade as Bishop of Ross is obscure. He is mentioned in a papal mandate, dated
March 31 ,1396 , in relation to his grant of the subdeanery to John de Kylwos. [McGurk (ed.), "Papal Letters", pp. 61-2.] According to the "Calendar of Fearn", he died onJuly 6 ,1398 . [Dowden, "Bishops", p. 216; Watt, "Dictionary", p. 316; Watt, "Fasti Ecclesiae", p. 268.] The bishopric of Ross was said to have been reserved, once again, as a papal benefice during Kylwos' episcopate. [McGurk (ed.), "Papal Letters", p. 89]Notes
References
* Burns, Charles (ed.), "Papal Letters to Scotland of Clement VII of Avignon, 1378—1394", (Edinburgh, 1976)
* Dowden, John, "The Bishops of Scotland", ed. J. Maitland Thomson, (Glasgow, 1912)
* McGurk, Francis (ed.), "Calendar of Papal Letters to Scotland of Benedict XIII of Avignon, 1394-1419", (Edinburgh, 1976)
* Watt, D. E. R., "A Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Graduates to A. D. 1410", (Oxford, 1977)
* Watt, D. E. R., "Fasti Ecclesiae Scotinanae Medii Aevi ad annum 1638", 2nd Draft, (St Andrews, 1969)
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