- William (Bishop of Dunblane)
infobox bishopbiog
name = William
religion=Roman Catholic Church
See =Diocese of Dunblane
Title =Bishop of Dunblane
Period = 1284–1291 × 1296
consecration =December 18 ,1284
Predecessor =Robert de Prebenda
Successor = Alpín
post =Abbot of Arbroath | ordination =
bishops =
date of birth = Probably early to mid 1200s
place of birth = unknown
date of death = 1291 × 1296
place of death = unknownWilliam
O. Tiron. (died early 1290s) was a late 13th century Tironensianabbot andbishop in theKingdom of Scotland . He appears in the extant sources for the first time onApril 25 ,1276 ; he isAbbot of Arbroath .Watt, "Heads of Religious Houses", p. 4.] According to the "Scotichronicon", the work of the 15th century historianWalter Bower , William's predecessor Adam de Inverlunan had died in 1275, so William probably became abbot in either that year or in 1276.William was abbot until 1284, when he was elected to be
Bishop of Dunblane . [Watt & Murray, "Fasti Ecclesiae", p. 100; Watt, "Heads of Religious Houses", p. 4.] The abbots of Arbroath were "ex officio" canons ofDunblane Cathedral , and the bishopric in this period rotated between full-time Dunblane canons and "ex officio" canons such as the abbots of Arbroath. [Cockburn, "Medieval Bishops", pp. 82, 95.] The election was apparently unanimous, and William set off to obtain confirmation at thepapal curia ; after going through the formality of resigning his rights to the bishopric to the Pope, he received papal provision, and onDecember 18 ,1284 , he was consecrated by Cardinal Ordonius,Bishop of Tusculum . [Cockburn, "Medieval Bishops", p. 82; Dowden, "Bishops", p. 199; Watt & Murray, "Fasti Ecclesiae", p. 100.]During William's time as Bishop of Dunblane, a conflict of patronage arouse with
Inchaffray Abbey . After thevicar ofStrogeith Richard de Stirling had died, theEarl of Strathearn , Maol Íosa III, used his influence to get William to appoint Roger de Legerwood to the vacant vicarage. Though of English extraction, Roger was Maol Íosa'schaplain , and the Bishop appointed him to the vicarage in the belief or desire that it was the bishopric's place to do so. Hugh,Abbot of Inchaffray , however, bombarded the episcopal court with legal deeds in order to prove that Inchaffray's rights were superior. OnSeptember 21 ,1287 , atArbroath , the Bishop publicly admitted the superiority of Inchaffray's rights, and in the following week a final agreement was reached atKenmore . William backed down to Inchaffray's claims, but the abbot of Inchaffray appointed Legerwood anyway.For all this, see Cockburn, "Medieval Bishops", p. 83.]In 1291,
Pope Nicholas IV granted William permission to take oaths from everyone in his diocese regarding the property belonging to churches. Movable and unmovable goods, altars, lands, etc, were all valued, in order to facilitate the repayment of debts owed to the church; particularly in relation to unpaid funeral charges. The Pope also ordered Bishop William to ensure that his own property was left to the church; the former complained of the "evil custom" whereby the Earls of Strathearn would take the property of all deceased bishops.William's episcopate was contemporaneous with the onset on the
First War of Scottish Independence . As "Guillame Evesque de Dunblain" he was one of the many great figures of the Kingdom who had confirmed theTreaty of Salisbury at theBirgham assembly in 1290. OnJuly 12 ,1291 , he gave an oath of fealty to the English king. [Cockburn, "Medieval Bishops", p. 83; Dowden, "Bishops", pp. 199-200.] The bishop was probably one of the forty commissioners chosen by John de Balliol to make his case for the Scottish throne to KingEdward I of England ,June 5 ,1292 [Dowden, "Bishops", p. 200.] William did not live long enough to take any great role in the warfare that brewed up later in the decade, after 1296, as he does not appear again in any contemporary record. He probably died in either 1294 or 1295, as the election of his successor Alpín fell sometime afterMay 4 ,1295 , but beforeOctober 16 ,1296 , when Alpín was consecrated as bishop. [Watt & Murray, "Fasti Ecclesiae", p. 100.]Notes
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