- Bernard of Kilwinning
infobox bishopbiog
name = Bernard
religion=Roman Catholic Church
See =Diocese of the Isles
Title =Bishop of the Isles
Period = 1327 x 1328–1331
consecration =June 26 xNovember 12 ,1328
Predecessor = Gillebrìghde MacGilleFhaolain
Successor = Thomas de Rossy
post = Abbot of Kilwinning (x 1296–1296 x 1305)Chancellor of Scotland (1306 x 1308–1328)Abbot of Arbroath (1310–1328) | ordination =
bishops =
date of birth = unknown
place of birth = uncertain
date of death = c. 1331
place of death = Buried inKilwinning Abbey Bernard (died c. 1331) was a
Tironensian abbot , administrator andbishop active in late thirteenth- and early fourteenth-century Scotland, during theFirst War of Scottish Independence . He first appears in the records already established asAbbot of Kilwinning in 1296, disappearing for a decade before re-emerging asChancellor of Scotland thenAbbot of Arbroath .A senior figure in the administration of Scotland during the 1310s and 1320s, he is widely said by modern writers to have drafted the
Declaration of Arbroath , and although there is no direct evidence for this, he nevertheless probably played a role. By early 1328, his service to the king had earned him a bishopric – the bishopric of the Isles – a position he held for three or four years before his death in 1331.Abbot of Kilwinning
The name "Bernard abbe de Kilwynin" (abbot of Kilwinning) occurs on the
Ragman Rolls ,August 28 ,1296 , and he is recorded again in a document ofMelrose Abbey on December 25. [Watt & Shead, "Heads of Religious Houses", p. 127.] Bernard is unrecorded asabbot of Kilwinning after this year, but it is possible that he was ejected fromKilwinning Abbey by the English king in one of the following years, probably retiring to another Tironensian monastery,Arbroath Abbey . [Duncan, "Bernard (d. 1330/31)"; Watt & Shead, "Heads of Religious Houses", p. 127.] A document dated 1296 x 1305, names one otherwise unknown Roger as Abbot of Kilwinning, meaning that Bernard had ceased to hold this position by 1305 at the latest. [Watt & Shead, "Heads of Religious Houses", p. 127.]Although once regarded as a historical dead-end, it is now established that this Bernard was the same Tironensian who was later
Chancellor of Scotland ,Abbot of Arbroath andBishop of the Isles . Since 1726, Bernard had been erroneously identified withBernard de Linton ,parson ofMordington , a name which occurs only in the Ragman Rolls. ProfessorA. A. M. Duncan first argued that Bernard of Arbroath was the same as Bernard of Kilwinning, rather than Bernard de Linton, in 1988, [Duncan, "Acts", pp. 198–203.] and has since been accepted by other historians. [Barrow, "Robert Bruce", p. 362, n. 59; Watt & Murray, "Fasti Ecclesiae", p. 262; Watt & Shead, "Heads of Religious Houses", pp. 5, 127.]Chancellor of Scotland & Abbot of Arbroath
From 1308, Bernard appears in the charters of Robert I,
King of the Scots , as "Dom Bernard the Chancellor". [Dowden, "Bishops", p. 282, n. 1; Duncan, "Bernard (d. 1330/31)".] It was in 1308 that Robert finally got full control over the province ofAngus , where Arbroath Abbey is located.Duncan, "Bernard (d. 1330/31)".] The Abbot of Arbroath at the time, John de Angus, appears to have been an English appointee, and was subsequently ejected from office. [Duncan, "Bernard (d. 1330/31)"; Watt & Shead, "Medieval Religious Houses", p. 5.] OnNovember 1 ,1309 , John de Angus was "released" from the responsibility of his office by theBishop of St Andrews , though he retainedHaltwhistle asrector , a parish church inTynedale ,Northumberland , which belonged to the abbey.Watt & Shead, "Medieval Religious Houses", p. 5.]Bernard was elected as the new abbot sometime in 1310, probably by August. John de Angus continued to be styled "Abbot of Arbroath" in English sources, though he became a Scottish prisoner in 1312 and was holding Haltwhistle from the
Bishop of Durham by 1313. After his blessing as abbot, Bernard traveled to theKingdom of Norway to negotiate an agreement with the Norwegian king. He returned in February 1312, and onOctober 29 ,1312 Norwegian ambassadors met King Robert atInverness in royalMoray , and agreed to theTreaty of Inverness . The treaty involved a renewal of theTreaty of Perth , and resolution of earlier tit-for-tat acts of hostility against each other, like the seizing of goods from Scottish merchants in Norway and the kidnapping by the Scots of the Steward of Orkney. [Barrow, "Robert Bruce", p. 201.]The fifteenth-century Lowland Scottish chronicler
Walter Bower attributed to Abbot Bernard a poem inLatin about theBattle of Bannockburn , from which Bower quoted many lines. [Shead et al., "Scotichronicon", pp. 360–5.] It may however have come from another Arbroath monk, as Bower appears to hint elsewhere. Bernard has been widely credited since the eighteenth-century as the author of theDeclaration of Arbroath , a document from his period as Abbot of Arbroath. [Barrow, "Robert Bruce", p. 308; Duncan, "Bernard (d. 1330/31)".] Professor A. A. M. Duncan doubts this however, arguing that "the skilled use of the papal cursus in that text points rather to a professional rhetorician". ProfessorG. W. S. Barrow thought that Alexander de Kininmund (Kinninmonth) was a more likely candidate, on similar reasoning to Duncan. [Barrow, "Robert Bruce", p. 308.]Bernard's name was certainly on the Declaration of Arbroath, and as chancellor he certainly had some role. He held this administrative office throughout his time as Abbot of Arbroath, until his election as Bishop of the Isles by 1328. He would have had a significant role in royal government and the issue of charters, and many royal acts are dated by Bernard's whereabouts. His role as chancellor appears to have been used for the benefit of his abbey with nine of the sixteen royal charters extant from the period 1312–3 having the abbey as the beneficiary.
Bishop of the Isles
The years of service offered by Bernard were rewarded in the winter of 1327/8, when he was advanced to the bishopric of the Isles, a bishopric King Robert had reserved for his own patronage back in 1324.Watt & Murray, "Fasti Ecclesiae", p. 262.] This election likely occurred between
November 9 ,1327 andJanuary 14 ,1328 . [Watt & Murray, "Fasti Ecclesiae", p. 262; the former date is the date of the last document in which Bernard is styled simply "abbot" and the latter date is the date of the first document in which he was styled "bishop-elect".] The office of chancellor, and the accompanying salary of 200 marks, was resigned by Bernard later in the year, probably onApril 3 ,1328 . King Robert assigned Bernard £ 100 towards the expenses of his election, and was granted the grain tithes from the lands of the church of Abernethy, for seven years, to complement the meagre income of the diocese of the Isles. [Dowden, "Bishops", p. 281.]He was consecrated between
June 26 , andNovember 12 ,1328 , perhaps in Norway, where the see's metropolitan, theArchbishop of Trondheim , resided. [Dowden, "Bishops", p. 282; Watt & Murray, "Fasti Ecclesiae", p. 262.] Bernard's election was not straight-forward as some the "canons ofSnizort ", the seat of the diocese, had elected a different successor, Cormac "Cormacii". Cormac's representatives were inBergen in July 1331, and persuaded the Archbishop of Trondheim to order an examination of the election. They were ultimately unsuccessful, as no confirmation is attested. Despite this success, Bernard's episcopate was not long-lasting, as he had died byJune 10 ,1331 . Although the last notice of Bernard in any contemporary document dates to 1328, it is very likely he died in 1331, as the "Chronicles of Mann " said he was bishop during four different years. [Munch & Goss, [http://www.isle-of-man.com/manxnotebook/manxsoc/msvol22/p101.htm "Chronica regum Manniae", vol. i ] ; Watt & Murray, "Fasti Ecclesiae", p. 262] The "Chronicles of Mann" further notes that he was buried at Kilwinning Abbey, his original monastery and the location where he first rose through the ranks. [Munch & Goss, [http://www.isle-of-man.com/manxnotebook/manxsoc/msvol22/p101.htm "Chronica regum Manniae", vol. i ] .]Notes
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