| Scotland |
| The term as at present used includes the whole northern portion of the Island of |
| Great Britain, which is divided from England by the Cheviot Hills, the River |
| Tweed, and certain smaller streams. Its total area is about 20,000,000 acres, or |
| something over 30,000 square miles; its greatest length is 292 miles, and |
| greatest breadth, 155 miles. The chief physical feature of the country is its |
| mountainous character, there being no extensive areas of level ground, as in |
| England; and only about a quarter of the total acreage is cultivated. The principal |
| chain of mountains is the Grampian range, and the highest individual hill Ben |
| Nevis (4406 feet). Valuable coalfields extend almost uninterruptedly from east to |
| west, on both banks of the Rivers Forth and Clyde. The climate is considerably |
| colder and (except on parts of the east coast) wetter than that of England. The |
| part of Scotland lying beyond the Firths of Forth and Clyde was known to the |
| Romans as Caledonia. The Caledonians came later to be called Picts, and the |
| country, after them, Pictland. The name of Scotland came into use in the |
| eleventh century, when the race of Scots, originally an Irish colony which settled |
| in the western Highlands, attained to supreme power in the country. Scotland |
| was an independent kingdom until James VI succeeded to the English Crown in |
| 1603; and it continued constitutionally separate from England until the |
| conclusion of the treaty of union a century later. It still retains its own Church and |
| its own form of legal procedure; and the character of its people remains in many |
| respects quite distinct from that of the English. Formerly the three prevailing |
| nationalities of the country were the Anglo-Saxon in the south, the Celtic in the |
| north and west, and the Scandinavian in the north-east; and these distinctions |
| can still be traced both in the characteristics of the inhabitants and in the proper |
| names of places. The total population, according to the census Of 1911 is |
| 4,759,521, being an increase of 287,418 in the past decade. The increase is |
| almost entirely in the large cities and towns, the rural population of almost every |
| county, except in the mining districts, having sensibly diminished, owing to |
| emigration and other causes, since 1901. |
| The history of Scotland is dealt with in the present article chiefly in its |
| ecclesiastical aspect, and as such it naturally falls into three great divisions: I. |
| The conversion of the country and the prevalence of the Celtic monastic church; |
| II. The gradual introduction and, consolidation of the diocesan system, and the |
| history of Scottish Catholicism down to the religious revolution of the sixteenth |
| century; III. The post-Reformation history of the country, particularly in |
| connection with the persecuted remnant of Catholics, and finally the religious |
| revival of the nineteenth century. Under these three several heads, therefore, the |
| subject will be treated. |
| I. FIRST PERIOD: FOURTH TO ELEVENTH CENTURY |
| Nothing certain is known as to the introduction of Christianity into Scotland prior |
| to the fourth century. Tertullian, writing at the end of the second, speaks of |
| portions of Britain which the Romans had never reached being; by that time |
| "subject to Christ"; and early Scots historians relate that Pope Victor, about A.D. |
| 203, sent missionaries to Scotland. This pope's name is singled out for special |
| veneration in a very, early Scottish (Culdee) litany, which gives some probability |
| to the legend; but the earliest indubitable evidence of the religious connection of |
| Scotland with Rome is afforded by the history of Ninian, who, born in the |
| south-west of Scotland about 360, went to study at Rome, was consecrated |
| bishop by Pope Siricius, returned to his native country about 402, and built at |
| Candida Casa, now Whithorn, the first stone church in Scotland. He also founded |
| there a famous monastery, whence saints and missionaries went out to preach; |
| not only through the whole south of Scotland, but also in Ireland. Ninian died |
| probably in 432; and current ecclesiastical tradition points to St. Palladius as |
| having been his successor in the work of evangelizing Scotland. Pope Leo XIII |
| cited this tradition in his Bull restoring the Scottish hierarchy in 1878; but there |
| are many anachronisms and other difficulties in the long-accepted story of St. |
| Palladius and his immediate followers, and it is even uncertain whether he ever |
| set foot in Scotland at all. If, however, his mission was to the Scoti, who at this |
| period inhabited Ireland, he was at least indirectly connected with the conversion |
| of Scotland also; for the earliest extant chronicles of the Picts show us how |
| close was the connection between the Church of the southern Picts and that of |
| Ireland founded by St. Patrick. In the sixth century three Irish brother-chieftains |
| crossed over from Ireland and founded the little Kingdom of Dalriada, in the |
| present County of Argyll, which was ultimately to develop into the Kingdom of |
| Scotland. They were already Christians, and with them came Irish missionaries, |
| who spread the Faith throughout the western parts of the country. The north was |
| still pagan, and even in the partly Christianized districts there were many |
| relapses and apostasies which called for a stricter system of organization and |
| discipline among the missionaries. It was thus that, drawing her inspiration from |
| the great monasteries of Ireland, the early Scottish Church entered upon the |
| monastic period of her history, of which the first and the greatest light was |
| Columba, Apostle of the northern Picts. |
| The monastery of Iona, where Columba settled in 563, and whence he carried on |
| his work of evangelizing the mainland of Scotland for thirty-four years, was, under |
| him and his successors in the abbatial dignity, considered the mother-house of |
| all monasteries founded by him in Scotland and in Ireland. Bede mentions that |
| Iona long held pre-eminence over all the monasteries of the Picts, and it |
| continued in fact, all during the monastic period of the Scottish Church, to be the |
| centre of the Columban jurisdiction. It is unnecessary to argue the point, which |
| has been proved over and over again against the views put forward both by |
| Anglicans and Presbyterians, that the Columban church was no isolated |
| fragment of Christendom, but was united in faith and worship and spiritual life |
| with the universal Catholic Church (see as to this, Edmonds, "The Early Scottish |
| Church, its Doctrine and Discipline", Edinburgh, 1906). Whilst Columba was |
| labouring among the northern Picts, another apostle was raised up in the person |
| of St. Kentigern, to work among the British inhabitants of the Kingdom of |
| Strathclyde, extending southward from the Clyde to Cumberland. Kentigern may |
| be called the founder of the Church of Cumbria, and became the first bishop of |
| what is now Glasgow; while in the east of Scotland Lothian honours as its first |
| apostle the great St. Cuthbert, who entered the monastery of Melrose in 650, and |
| became bishop, with his see at Lindisfarne, in 684. He died three years later; and |
| less than thirty years afterwards the monastic period of the Scottish Church |
| came to an end, the monks throughout Pictland, most of whom had resisted the |
| adoption of the Roman observance of Easter, being expelled by the Pictish king. |
| This was in 717, and almost simultaneously with the disappearance of the |
| Columban monks we see the advent to Scotland of the Deicolae, Colidei or |
| Culdees, the anchorite-clerics sprung from those ascetics who had devoted |
| themselves to the service of God in the solitude of separate cells, and had in the |
| course of time formed themselves into communities of anchorites or hermits. |
| They had thirteen monasteries in Scotland, and together with the secular clergy |
| who were now introduced into the country they carried on the work of |
| evangelization which had been done by the Columban communities which they |
| succeeded. |
| From the beginning of the eighth to the middle of the ninth century the political |
| history of Scotland, as we dimly see it today, consists of continual fighting |
| between the rival races of Angles, Picts, and Scots, varied by invasions of Danes |
| and Norsemen, and culminating at last in the union of the Scots of Dalriada and |
| the Pictish peoples into one kingdom under Kenneth Mac Alpine in 844. |
| Ecclesiastically speaking, the most important result of this union was elevation |
| by Kenneth of the church of Dunkeld to be the primatial see of his new kingdom. |
| Soon, however, the primacy was transferred to Abernethy, and some forty years |
| after Kenneth's accession we find the first definite mention of the "Scottish |
| Church", which King Grig raised from a position of servitude to honourable |
| independence. Grig's successors were styled no longer Kings of the Picts, but |
| Kings of Alban, the name now given to the whole country between forth and the |
| Spey; and under Constantine, second King of Alban, was held in 908 the |
| memorable assembly at Scone, in which the king and Cellach, Bishop of St. |
| Andrews, recognized by this time as primate of the kingdom, and styled Epscop |
| Alban, solemnly swore to protect the discipline of the Faith and the right of the |
| churches and the Gospel. In the reign of Malcolm I, Constantine's successor, the |
| district of Cumberland was ceded to the Scottish Crown by Edmund of England; |
| and among the very scanty notices of ecclesiastical affairs during this period we |
| find the foundation of the church of Brechin of which the ancient round tower, built |
| after the Irish model, still remains. This was in the reign of Kenneth II (971-995), |
| who added yet another province to the Scottish Kingdom, Lothian being made |
| over to him by King Edmund of England. Iona had meanwhile, in consequence of |
| the occupation of the Western Isles by the Norsemen, been practically cut off |
| from Scotland, and had become ecclesiastically dependent on Ireland. It suffered |
| much from repeated Danish raids, and on Christmas Eve, 986, the abbey was |
| devastated, and the abbot with most of his monks put to death. Not many years |
| later the Norwegian power in Scotland received a fatal blow by the death of |
| Sigurd, Earl of I Orkney, the Norwegian provinces on the mainland passing into |
| the possession of the Scottish Crown. Malcolm II was now on the throne, and it |
| was during his thirty years' reign that the Kingdom of Alban became first known |
| as Scotia, from the dominant race to which its people belonged. With Malcolm's |
| death in 1034 the male line of Kenneth Mac Alpine was extinguished, and he |
| was succeeded by his daughter's son, Duncan, who after a short and inglorious |
| reign was murdered by his kinsman and principal general, Macbeth. Macbeth |
| wore his usurped crown for seventeen years, and was himself slain in 1057 by |
| Malcolm, Duncan's son, who ascended the throne as Malcolm III. It is worth |
| noting that Duncan's father (who married the daughter of Malcolm II) was Crinan, |
| lay Abbot of Dunkeld; for this fact illustrates one of the great evils under which |
| the Scottish Church was at this time labouring, namely the usurpation of abbeys |
| and benefices by great secular chieftains, an abuse existing side by side, and |
| closely connected with, the scandal of concubinage among the clergy, with its |
| inevitable consequence, the hereditary succession to benefices, and wholesale |
| secularization of the property of the Church. These evils were indeed rife in other |
| parts of Christendom; but Scotland was especially affected by them, owing to her |
| want of a proper ecclesiastical constitution and a normal ecclesiastical |
| government. The accession, and more especially the marriage, of Malcolm III |
| were events destined to have a profound influence on the fortunes of the Scottish |
| Church, and indeed to be a turning-point in her history. |
| II. SECOND PERIOD: ELEVENTH TO SIXTEENTH CENTURY |
| The Norman Conquest of England could not fail to exercise a deep and lasting |
| effect also on the northern kingdom, and it was the immediate cause of the |
| introduction of English ideas and English civilization into Scotland. The flight to |
| Scotland, after the battle of Hastings, of Edgar Atheling, heir of the Saxon Royal |
| house, with his mother and his sisters Margaret and Christina, was followed at |
| no great distant date by the marriage of Margaret to King Malcolm, as his |
| second wife. A greatniece of St. Edward the Confessor, Margaret, whose |
| personality stands out clearly before us in the pages of her biography by her |
| confessor Turgot, was a woman not only of saintly life but of strong character |
| who exercised the strongest influence on the Scottish Church and kingdom, as |
| well as on the members of her own family. The character of Malcolm III has been |
| depicted in very different colours by the English and Scottish chroniclers, the |
| former painting him as the severe and merciless invader of England, while to the |
| latter he is a noble and heroic prince, called Canmore (Ceann-mor great head) |
| from his high kingly qualities. All however agree that the influence of his holy |
| queen was the best and strongest element in his stormy life. Whilst he was |
| engaged in strengthening his frontiers and fighting the enemies of his country, |
| Margaret found time, amid family duties and pious exercises, to take in hand the |
| reform of certain outstanding abuses in the Scottish Church. In such matters as |
| the fast of Lent, the Easter communion, the observance of Sunday, and |
| compliance with the Church's marriage laws, she succeeded, with the king's |
| support, in bringing the Church of Scotland into line with the rest of Catholic |
| Christendom. Malcolm and Margaret rebuilt the venerable monastery of Iona, and |
| founded churches in various parts of the kingdom; and during their reign the |
| Christian faith was established in the islands lying off the northern and western |
| coasts of Scotland, inhabited by Norsemen. Malcolm was killed in |
| Northumberland in 1093, whilst leading an army against William Rufus; and his |
| saintly queen, already dangerously ill, followed him to the grave a few days later. |
| In the same year as the king and queen died Fothad, the last of the native |
| bishops of Alban, whose extinction opened the way to the claim, long upheld, of |
| the See of York to supremacy over the Scottish Church a claim rendered |
| more tenable by the strong Anglo-Norman influence which had taken the place of |
| that of Ireland, and by the absence of any organized system of diocesan |
| jurisdiction in the Scottish Church. |
| Edgar, one of Malcolm's younger sons, who succeeded to his father's crown after |
| prolonged conflict with other pretenders to it, calls himself in his extant charters |
| "King of Scots", but he speaks of his subjects as Scots and English, surrounded |
| himself with English advisers, acknowledged William of England as his feudal |
| superior, and thus did much to strengthen the English influence in the northern |
| kingdom. During his ten years' reign no successor was appointed to Fothad in |
| the primacy; but at his death (when his brother Alexander succeeded him as |
| king, the younger brother David obtaining dominion over Cumbria and Lothian, |
| with the title of earl) Turgot became Bishop of St. Andrews, the first Norman to |
| occupy the primatial see. Alexander's reign was signalized by the creation of two |
| additional sees; the first being that of Moray, in the district beyond the Spey, |
| where Scandinavian influence had long been dominant. The see was fixed first at |
| Spynie and later at Elgin, where a noble cathedral was founded in the thirteenth |
| century. The other new see was that of Dunkeld, which had already been the |
| seat of the primacy under Kenneth Mac Alpine, but had fallen under lay abbots. |
| Here Alexander replaced the Culdee community by a bishop and chapter of |
| secular canons. Elsewhere also he introduced regular religious orders to take the |
| place of the Culdees, founding monasteries of canons regular (Augustinians) at |
| Scone and Loch Tay. |
| Even more than Alexander, his brother David, who succeeded him in 1124, and |
| who had been educated at the English Court (his sister Matilda having married |
| Henry I), laboured to assimilate the social state and institutions of Scotland, both |
| in civil and ecclesiastical matters, to Anglo-Norman ideas. His reign of thirty |
| years, on the whole a peaceful one, is memorable in the extent of the changes |
| wrought during it in Scotland, under every aspect of the life of the people. A |
| modern historian has said that at no period of her history has Scotland ever |
| stood relatively so high in the scale of nations as during the reign of this |
| excellent monarch. Penetrated with the spirit of feudalism, and recognizing the |
| inadequacy of the Celtic institutions of the past to meet the growing needs of his |
| people, David extended his reforms to every department of civil life; but it is with |
| the energy and thoroughness with which he set about the reorganization and |
| remodelling of the national church that his name will always be identified. While |
| still Earl of Cumbria and Lothian he brought Benedictine monks from France to |
| Selkirk, and Augustinian canons to Jedburgh, and procured the restoration of the |
| ancient see of Glasgow, originally founded by St. Kentigern. Five other bishoprics |
| he founded after his accession: Ross, in early days a Columban monastery, and |
| afterwards served by Culdees, who were now succeeded by secular canons; |
| Aberdeen, where there had also been a church in very early times; Caithness, |
| with the see at Dornoch, in Sutherland, where the former Culdee community was |
| now replaced by a full chapter of ten canons, with dean, precentor, chancellor, |
| treasurer, and archdeacon; Dunblane, and Brechin, founded shortly before the |
| king's death, and both, like the rest, on the sites of ancient Celtic churches, The |
| great abbeys of Dunfermline, Holyrood, Jedburgh, Kelso, Kinloss, Melrose, and |
| Dundrennan were all established by him for Benedictines, Augustinians, or |
| Cistercians, besides several priories and convents of nuns, and houses belonging |
| to the military orders. To one venerable Celtic monastery, founded by St. |
| Columba, that of Deer, we find David granting a charter towards the end of his |
| reign; but his general policy was to suppress the ancient Culdee establishments, |
| now moribund and almost extinct, and supersede them by his new religious |
| foundations. Side by side with this came the complete diocesan reorganization of |
| the Church, the erection of cathedral chapters and rural deaneries, and the |
| reform of the Divine service on the model of that prevailing in the English Church, |
| the use of the ancient Celtic ritual being almost universally discontinued in favour |
| of that of Salisbury. Two church councils were held in David's reign, both |
| presided over by cardinal legates from Rome; and in 1150 took place, at St. |
| Andrews, the first diocesan synod recorded to have been held in Scotland. David |
| died in 1153, leaving behind him the reputation of a saint as well as a great king, |
| a reputation which has been endorsed, with singular unanimity, alike by ancient |
| chroniclers and the most impartial of modern historians. |
| David's grandson and successor, Malcolm the Maiden, was crowned at Scone |
| the first occasion, as far as we know, of such a ceremony taking place in |
| Scotland. His piety was attested by his many religious foundations, including the |
| famous Abbey of Paisley; but as a king he was weak, whereas England was at |
| that time ruled by the strong and masterful Henry II, who succeeded in wresting |
| from Scotland the three northern English counties which had been subject to |
| David. Malcolm was succeeded in 1165 by his brother William the Lion, whose |
| reign of close on fifty years was the longest in Scottish history. It was by no |
| means a period of peace for the Scottish realm; for in 1173 William, in a vain |
| effort to recover his lost English provinces, was taken prisoner, and only released |
| on binding himself, to be the liegerman of the King of England, and to do him |
| homage for his whole kingdom. During a great part of his reign he was also in |
| conflict with his unruly Celtic subjects in Galloway and elsewhere, as well as |
| with the Norsemen of Caithness. The Scottish Church, too, was harassed not |
| only by the continual claims of York to jurisdiction over her, but by the English |
| king's attempts to bring her into entire subjection to the Church of England. A |
| great council at Northampton in 1176, attended by both monarchs, a papal |
| legate, and the principal English and Scottish bishops, broke up without deciding |
| this question; and a special legate sent by Pope Alexander III to England and |
| Scotland shortly afterwards was not more successful. |
| It was not until twelve years later that, in response to a deputation specially sent |
| to Rome by William to urge a settlement, Pope Clement III (in March, 1188) |
| declared by Bull the Scottish Church, with its nine diocese, to be immediately |
| subject to the Apostolic See. The issue of this Bull, which was confirmed by |
| succeeding popes, was followed, on William subscribing handsomely to Richard |
| Coeur de Lion's crusading fund, by the King of England agreeing to abrogate the |
| humiliating treaty which had made him the feudal of superior of the King of Scots, |
| and formally recognizing the temporal, as well as the spiritual independence of |
| Scotland. William's reign, like that of its predecessors, was prolific in religious |
| foundations, the principal being the great Abbe of Arbroath, a memorial of St. |
| Thomas of Canterbury, with whom the king had been on terms of personal |
| friendship. Even more noteworthy was the establishment of a Benedictine |
| monastery in the sacred Isle of Iona by Reginald, Lord of the isles, whose desire, |
| like that of the Scottish kings was to supersede the effete Culdees in his |
| domains by the regular orders of the Church. In 1200 a tenth diocese was |
| erected that of Argyll, cut off from Dunkeld, and including an extensive territory |
| in which Gaelic was (as it still is) almost exclusively spoken. The Fourth Lateran |
| Council was held in Rome in 1215, the year-after William's death, under the great |
| Pope Innocent III, and was attended by four Scottish bishops and abbots, and |
| procurators of the other prelates; and we fin& the ecclesiastics of Scotland, as of |
| other countries, ordered to contribute a twentieth part of their revenues towards a |
| new crusade, and a papal legate arriving to collect the money. In 1225 the |
| Scottish bishops met in council for the first time without the presence of a legate |
| from Rome, electing one of their number, as directed by with a papal bull, to |
| preside over the assembly with quasi-metropolitan authority and the title of |
| conservator. The Scottish kings were regularly represented at these councils by |
| two doctors of laws specially nominated by the sovereign. |
| The thirteenth century, during the greater part of which (1214-86) the second and |
| third Alexanders wore the crown of Scotland, is sometimes spoken of as the |
| golden age of that country. During that long period, in the words of a modern |
| poet, "God gave them peace, their land reposed"; and they were free to carry on |
| the work of consolidation and development so well begun by the good King David |
| II. Alexander II, indeed, when still a youth incurred the papal excommunication by |
| espousing the cause of the English barons against King John, but when he had |
| obtained absolution he married a sister of Henry III, and so secured a good |
| understanding with England, The occasional signs of unrest among some of his |
| Celtic subjects in Argyll, Moray, and Caithness were met and checked with |
| firmness and success; and this reign with a distinct advance in the industrial |
| progress of the realm, the king devoting special attention to the improvement of |
| agriculture. Many new religious foundations were also made by him, including |
| monasteries at Culross, Pluscardine, Beuly, and Crossraguel; while the royal |
| favour was also extended to the new orders of friars which were spreading |
| throughout Europe, and numerous houses were founded by him both for |
| Dominicans and Franciscans, the friars, however, remaining under the control of |
| their English provincials until nearly a century later. David de Bernham of St. |
| Andrews and Gilbert of Caithness were among the distinguished prelates of this |
| time, and did much for both the material and religious welfare of their dioceses. |
| Alexander III, who succeeded his father in 1249, was also fortunate m the |
| excellent bishops who governed the Scottish Church during his reign, and he, |
| like his predecessors, made some notable religious foundations, including the |
| Cistercian Abbey of Sweetheart, and houses of Carmelite and Trinitarian friars. |
| An important step in the consolidation of the kingdom was the annexation of the |
| Isle of Man, the Hebrides, and other western islands to the Scottish Crown, |
| pecuniary compensation being paid to Norway, and the Archbishop of Trondhjem |
| retaining ecclesiastical jurisdiction over the islands. Nearly all the Scottish |
| bishops attended the general council convoked by Gregory X at Lyons in 1274, |
| which, among other measures levied a fresh tax on church benefices in aid of a |
| new crusade. Boiamund, a Piedmontese canon, went to Scotland to collect the |
| subsidy, assessing the clergy on a valuation known as Boiamund's Roll, which |
| gave great dissatisfaction but nevertheless remained the guide to ecclesiastical |
| taxation until the Reformation. With the death of Alexander in 1286 the male line |
| of his house came to an end, and he was succeeded by his youthful |
| granddaughter, Margaret, daughter of King Eric of Norway. |
| Edward I, the powerful and ambitious King of England, whose hope was the union |
| of the Kingdom of Scotland with his own, immediately began negotiations for the |
| marriage of Margaret to his son. The proposal was favourably received in |
| Scotland; but while the eight-year-old queen was on her way from Orkney, and |
| the realm was immediately divided by rival claimants to the throne, John de Baliol |
| and Robert Bruce, both descended from a brother of William the Lion. King |
| Edward, chosen as umpire in the dispute, decided in favour of Baliol; and relying |
| on his subservience summoned him to support him when he declared war on |
| France in 1294. The Scottish parliament, however entered instead into an |
| alliance with France against England, whose incensed king at once marched into |
| Scotland with a powerful army, advanced as far as Perth, dethroned and |
| degraded Baliol, and returned to England, carrying with him from Scone the |
| coronation stone of the Scottish kings, which he placed in Westminster Abbey, |
| where it still remains. The interposition of Pope Boniface VIII procured a |
| temporary truce between the two countries in 1300; but Edward soon renewed |
| his efforts to subdue the Scotch, putting to death the valiant and patriotic William |
| Wallace, and leaving no stone unturned to carry out his object. He died, however, |
| in 1307; and Robert Bruce (grandson of Baliol's rival) utterly routed the English |
| forces at Bannockburn in 1314, and secured the independence of Scotland. After |
| long negotiations peace was concluded between the two kingdoms, and ratified |
| by the betrothal of Robert's only son to the sister of the King of England. Robert |
| died a few months later, and was succeeded by his son, David II, out of whose |
| reign of forty years ten were spent, during his youth, in France, and eleven in |
| exile in England, where he was taken prisoner when invading the dominions of |
| Edward III. During the wars with England, and the long and inglorious reign of |
| David, the church and people suffered alike. Bishops forgot their sacred |
| character, and appeared in armour at the head of their retainers; the state of both |
| of clergy and laity, was far from satisfactory and contemporary chronicles were |
| full of lamentations at the degeneracy of the times. Some excellent bishops there |
| were during the fourteenth century, notably Fraser and Lamberton of St. |
| Andrews, the former of whom was chosen one of the regents of the kingdom, |
| while Lamberton completed the noble cathedral of St. Andrews. Bishop David of |
| Moray, a zealous patron of learning, is honoured as the virtual founder of the |
| historic Scots College in Paris. A proof that religious zeal was still warm is |
| afforded by the first foundation in Scotland, at Dunbar, of a collegiate church, in |
| 1342, precursor of some forty other establishments of the same kind founded |
| before the Reformation. |
| David II died childless, and the first of the long line of Stuart kings now ascended |
| the throne in the person of Robert, son of Marjorie (daughter of Robert Bruce) and |
| the High Steward. During Robert's reign of nineteen years there was almost |
| continual warfare with the English on the Border, France on one occasion |
| sending a force to help her Scottish ally against their common enemy. Robert |
| was succeeded in 1390 by his son Robert III, in whose reign Scotland suffered |
| more from its own turbulent barons than from foreign foes. Robert, Duke of |
| Albany, the king's brother, himself wielded almost royal power, imprisoned and (it |
| was said) starved to death the heir-apparent to the throne; and when the king |
| died in 1466, leaving his surviving son James a prisoner in England, Albany got |
| himself appointed regent, and did his best to prevent the new king's return to |
| Scotland. The years of Albany's dictatorship, which coincided with the general |
| unrest in Christendom due to a disputed papal election, were not prosperous |
| ones for the Scottish Church. Spiritual authority was weakened, and the |
| encroachments of the State on the Church became increasingly serious. A |
| collection of synodal statutes of St. Andrews, however, of this date which has |
| come down to us shows that serious efforts were being made by the church |
| authorities to cope with the evils of the time; and the long alliance with France of |
| course brought the French and Scottish churches into a close connection which |
| was in many ways advantageous, although one effect of it was that Scotland, like |
| France, espoused the cause of the antipopes against the rightful pontiffs. The |
| young king, James I, was at length released from England in 1424, after twenty |
| years' captivity, returned to his realm; immediately showed himself a strong and |
| gifted monarch. He condemned Albany and his two sons to death for high |
| treason, took vigorous steps to improve and encourage commerce and trade, and |
| evinced the greatest interest in the welfare of religion and the prosperity of the |
| Church. The Parliament of 1425 directed a strict Inquisition into the spread of |
| Lollardism or other heresies, and the punishment of those who disseminated |
| them; and James also personally urged the heads of the religious orders in his |
| realm to see to a stricter observance of their rule and discipline. The king sent |
| eight high Scottish ecclesiastics to Basle to attend the general council there; but |
| in the midst of his plans of reform he was assassinated at Perth in February, |
| 1436. |
| King James's solicitude as to the spread of heresy in Scotland was not without |
| cause; for early in his reign preachers of the Wyclifite errors had come from |
| England, prominent among them being John Resby, who was sentenced to death |
| and suffered at Perth in 1407. The Scottish Parliament passed a special act |
| against Lollardism in 1425; and Paul Crawar, an emissary from the Hussites of |
| Bohemia, who appeared in Scotland on a proselytizing mission in 1433, suffered |
| the same fate as Resby. An oath to defend the Church against Lollardism was |
| taken by all graduates of the new University of St. Andrews, the foundation of |
| which was a notable event of this reign. It was formally confirmed in 1414 by |
| Pedro de Luna, recognized by the Scottish Church at that time as Pope |
| Benedict XIII. Scotland was the last state in Christendom to adhere to the |
| antipope, and only in 1418 declared her allegiance to the rightful pontiff, Martin V. |
| The year before his death James received a visit from the learned and |
| distinguished AEneas Sylvius Piccolomini, who afterwards became Pope Pius II. |
| About the same time the new Diocese of the Isles was erected, being severed |
| from that of Argyll; and the bishops of the new see fixed their residence at Iona. |
| The new king, James II, had a long minority, during which there were constant |
| feuds among his nobles; but he developed at manhood into a firm and prudent |
| ruler, and he was fortunate in having as an adviser Bishop Kennedy of St. |
| Andrews, one of the wisest and best prelates who ever adorned that see. |
| James's early death, owing to an accident, in 1460, was doubly unfortunate, as |
| his son and successor James III was a prince of far weaker character, unable to |
| cope with the turbulent barons, some of whom broke out into open revolt, |
| seducing the youthful heir to the throne to join them. Active hostilities followed, |
| and James was murdered by a trooper of the insurgent army in 1488. The |
| disturbances of his reign had their effect on the Scottish Church, in which |
| abuses, such as the intrusion of laymen into ecclesiastical positions, the deprival |
| suffered by cathedral and monastic bodies of their canonical rights, and the |
| baneful system of commendatory abbots, flourished almost unchecked. New |
| religious foundations there were, chiefly of the orders of friars; and the diocesan |
| development of the Church was completed by the withdrawal of the See of |
| Galloway from the jurisdiction of York, and those of Orkney and the Isles from |
| Norway. This act of consolidation formed part of the provisions of an important |
| Bull of Sixtus IV, dated 1472, erecting the See of St. Andrews into an |
| archbishopric and metropolitan church for the whole realm, with twelve suffragan |
| sees dependent on it. York and Trondhjem, of course, protested against the |
| change; but it seemed to be equally unwelcome in Scotland. The new |
| metropolitan, Archbishop Graham, found king, clergy, and people all against him; |
| he was assailed by various serious charges, and finally deprived of his dignities, |
| degraded from his orders, and sentenced to lifelong imprisonment in a |
| monastery. His successor in the archbishopric, William Sheves, obtained a Bull |
| from Innocent VIII appointing him primate of all Scotland and legatus natus, with |
| the same privileges as those enjoyed by the Archbishop of Canterbury. |
| The protest of the See of Glasgow was followed by a Bull exempting that see |
| from the jurisdiction of the Primate, but in 1489 a law was passed declaring the |
| necessity of Glasgow's being erected into an archbishopric. In 1492 the pope |
| created the new archbishopric, assigning to it as suffragans the Sees of Dunkeld, |
| Dunblane, Galloway, and Argyll. Two years later we hear of the arrest and trial of |
| a number of Lollards in the new archdiocese; but they seem to have escaped |
| with an admonition. From 1497 to 1513 the primatial see was occupied |
| successively by a brother and a natural son of King James IV. The latter, who |
| was nominated to the primacy when only sixteen, fell with his royal father and |
| the the flower of the Scottish nobility at Plodden in 1513. Foreman, who |
| succeeded him as archbishop, was an able and zealous prelate; but by far the |
| most distinguished Scottish bishop at this period was the learned and holy |
| William Elphinstone, Bishop of Aberdeen 1483-1514, and founder of Aberdeen |
| University in 1494. |
| In 1525 the Lutheran opinions seem first to have appeared in Scotland, the |
| parliament of that year passing an act forbidding the importation of Lutheran |
| books. James V was a staunch son of the Church, and wrote to Pope Clement |
| VII in 1526, protesting his determination to resist every form of heresy. Patrick |
| Hamilton a commendatory abbot and connected with the royal house, was tried |
| and condemned for teaching false doctrine, and burned at St. Andrews in 1528; |
| but his death, which Knox claims to have been the starting-point of the |
| Reformation in Scotland, certainly did not stop the spread of the new opinions. |
| James, whilst showing himself zealous for the reform of ecclesiastical abuses in |
| his realm, resisted all the efforts of his uncle Henry VIII of England to draw him |
| over to the new religion. He married the only daughter of the King of France in |
| 1537, much to Henry's chagrin; but his young wife died within three months. |
| Meanwhile his kingdom was divided into two opposing parties one including |
| many nobles, the queen-mother (sister of Henry VIII), and the religiously |
| disaffected among his subjects, secretly supporting Henry's schemes and the |
| advance of the new opinions; the other, comprising the powerful and wealthy |
| clergy, several peers of high rank, and the great mass of his still Catholic and |
| loyal subjects. Severe measures continued against the disseminators of |
| Lutheranism, many suffering death or banishment; and there were not wanting |
| able and patriotic counsellors to stand by the king, notable among them being |
| David Beaton, whom we find in France negotiating for the marriage of James to |
| Mary of Guise in 1537, and himself uniting the royal pair at St. Andrews. Beaton |
| became cardinal in 1538 and Primate of Scotland a few weeks later, on the death |
| of his uncle James Beaton, and found himself the object of Henry VIII's jealousy |
| and animosity, as the greatest obstacle to that monarch's plans and hopes. |
| Henry's anger culminated on the bestowal by the pope on the King of Scots of |
| the very title which he had himself received from Leo X; open hostilities broke out, |
| and shortly after the disastrous rout of the Scotch forces at Solway Moss in 1542 |
| James V died at Falkland, leaving a baby daughter, Mary Stuart, to inherit his |
| crown and the government of his distracted country. |
| James V's death was immediately followed by new activity on the part of the |
| Protestant party. The Regent Arran openly favoured the new doctrines, and many |
| of the Scottish nobles bound themselves, for a money payment from Henry VIII, |
| to acknowledge him as lord paramount of Scotland. Beaton was imprisoned, a |
| step which resulted in Scotland being placed under an interdict by the pope, |
| whereupon the people, still in great part Catholic, insisted on the cardinal's |
| release. Henry now connived at, if he did not actually originate, a plan for the |
| assassination of Beaton, in which George Wishart, a conspicuous Protestant |
| preacher was also mixed up. Wishart was tried for heresy and burned at St. |
| Andrews in 1546, and two months later Beaton was murdered in the same city. |
| Arran, who had meanwhile reverted to Catholicism, wrote to the pope deploring |
| Beaton's death, asking for a subsidy toward the war with England. The |
| Protestants held the Castle of St. Andrews, among them being John Knox; and |
| the fortress was only recovered by the aid of a French squadron. Disaffection and |
| treachery were rife among the nobles, and the English Protector Somerset, |
| secure of their support, led an English army over the border, and defeated the |
| Scottish forces with great loss at Pinkie in 1547. |
| A few months later the young queen was sent by her mother, Mary of Guise, to |
| France, which remained her home for thirteen years. The French alliance enabled |
| Scotland to drive back her English invaders; peace was declared in 1550, Mary of |
| Guise appointed regent in succession to the weak and vacillating Arran, entering |
| on office just as a Catholic queen, Mary Tudor, was ascending the English |
| throne. Arran's half-brother, John Hamilton, succeeded Beaton as Archbishop of |
| St. Andrews, James Beaton soon after being appointed to Glasgow, while the |
| See of Orkney was held by the pious, learned, and able Robert Reid, the virtual |
| founder of Edinburgh University. The primate convoked a provincial national |
| council in Edinburgh in 1549, at which sixty ecclesiastics were present. A series |
| of important canons was passed at this council, as well as at a subsequent one |
| assembled in 1552, one result being the publication in the latter year of a |
| catechism intended for the instruction of the clergy as well as of their flocks. |
| From 1547 to 1555 John Knox was preaching Protestantism in England, Geneva, |
| and Frankfort, and the new doctrines made little headway in Scotland. In 1555, |
| however, he returned to Edinburgh, and started his crusade against the ancient |
| Faith, meeting with little molestation from the authorities. He went back to |
| Geneva in the following year; but his Scottish friends and supporters, |
| emboldened by his exhortations, subscribed in December, 1557, the Solemn |
| League and Covenant, for the express object of the overthrow of the old religion. |
| Angered by the execution of Walter Mylne for heresy in 1558, the lords of the |
| Congregation (as the Protestant party was now styled) demanded of the Queen |
| Regent authorization for public Protestant service. Mary laid the petition before a |
| provincial council which met in 1559, and which, while declining to give way to |
| the Protestant demands, passed many excellent and salutary enactments, |
| chiefly directed against the numerous and crying abuses which had too long |
| been rampant in the Scottish Church. But no conciliar decrees could avert the |
| storm about to burst over the realm. |
| Knox returned to Scotland in 1559, and inaugurated the work of destruction by a |
| violent sermon which he preached at Perth. There and elsewhere churches and |
| monasteries were attacked and sacked. Troops arrived from France to assist the |
| regent in quelling the insurgent Protestants, while in April, Elizabeth, invaded |
| Scotland both by land and sea in support of the Congregation. The desecration |
| and destruction of churches and abbeys went on apace; and in the midst of |
| these scenes of strife and violence occurred the death of the queen regent, in |
| June, 1560. Less than a month later, a treaty of peace was signed at Edinburgh, |
| the King and Queen of Scots (Mary had married in 1558 Francis, Dauphin of |
| France), granting various concession to the Scottish nobles and people. In |
| pursuance of one of the articles of the treaty, the parliament assembled on 1 |
| August, though without any writ of summons from the sovereign. Although the |
| treaty had specially provided that the religious question at issue should be |
| remitted to the king and queen for settlement, assemblage voted for adoption, as |
| the state religion, of the Protestant Confession of Faith; four prelates and five |
| temporal peers alone dissenting. three further statutes respectively abolished |
| papal jurisdiction in Scotland, repealed all former statutes in favour of the |
| Catholic Church, and made it a penal offense, punishable by death on the third |
| conviction, either to say or to hear Mass. All leases of church lands granted by |
| ecclesiastics subsequent to March, 1558, were declared null and void; and thus |
| the destruction of the old religion in Scotland, as far as the hand of man could |
| destroy it, was complete. No time or opportunity was given to the Church to carry |
| out that reform of prevalent abuses which was foreshadowed in the decrees of her |
| latest councils. As in England the greed of a tyrannical king, so in Scotland the |
| cupidity of a mercenary nobility, itching to possess themselves of the Church's |
| accumulated wealth, consummated a work which even Protestant historians have |
| described as one of revolution rather than of reformation. |
| III. THIRD PERIOD: SIXTEENTH CENTURY TO THE PRESENT DAY |
| It does not belong to this article to trace the development of the doctrines and |
| discipline of the new religion which supplanted Catholicism in Scotland in 1560 |
| (see ESTABLISHED CHURCH OF SCOTLAND). The aim of the Reformers was to |
| stamp out every outward vestige of the ancient Faith before the return of the |
| Catholic queen, now a widow; and the demolition of churches and monasteries |
| continued unabated during 1561. In August of that year Mary arrived in |
| Edinburgh, and was warmly welcomed by her subjects; but it was only with the |
| greatest difficulty that she obtained toleration for herself and her attendants to |
| practice their religion, anti-Catholic riots being of frequent occurrence. The few |
| Catholic nobles, mostly belonging to the north, found themselves more and more |
| withdrawn from Catholic life, while the prelates and clergy were in constant |
| personal danger. Some champions of the Faith there still were, notably Ninian |
| Winzet and Quintin Kennedy, ready to risk life and liberty in the public defence of |
| their faith; and Mary herself did all in her power to cultivate relations with the Holy |
| See. Her ambassador in France was Archbishop Beaton of Glasgow. Pius IV |
| sent her the Golden Rose in 1561, and dispatched Nicholas of Goulda, a Jesuit, |
| as nuncio to Scotland in the same year. Only one bishop ventured to receive the |
| papal envoy, who sent to Rome a pitiful report of the religious condition of |
| Scotland. Mary's marriage to Darnley, a Catholic noble, who was proclaimed |
| King of Scots, afforded a fresh pretext to the disaffected Protestant lords to |
| intrigue against the throne; and headed by Moray, the queen's own half-brother, |
| they openly revolted against her. Their armed rising was unsuccessful, but their |
| murderous plots continued, and Rizzio, Mary's confidential secretary, and her |
| husband Darnley were both murdered within less than a year's interval, The |
| seizure of Mary's person by Bothwell, her husband's assassin, and her |
| subsequent marriage to him, belong to her personal history. |
| A month after her marriage Mary was imprisoned by her traitorous subjects at |
| Lochleven, and a few weeks later, in July, 1567, she was forced to sign her |
| abdication, and virtually ceased to be Queen of Scotland. Her baby son, James |
| VI, was hurriedly crowned at Stirling, and in August, Moray, now regent, returned |
| to Scotland from Paris, where he had been in communication with the French |
| Protestant leaders. The penal laws against Catholics were how enforced with |
| fresh severity, the Bishop of Dunblane and many other ecclesiastics being |
| heavily fined, and in some cases outlawed for exercising their ministry. Moray's |
| first parliament renewed and ratified all the ecclesiastical enactments of 1560; |
| but his efforts to conclude an alliance with England and with France were alike |
| unsuccessful. He was confronted with a strong body of nobles adherent to the |
| cause of Mary, who by their aid escaped from her prison; but in May, 1568, her |
| forces were defeated by those of the regent at Langside, and the unfortunate |
| queen fled over the border to English soil, which she was not to quit till her tragic |
| death nineteen years later. The regent, after the abortive conferences at York and |
| Westminster dealing with the charges against his sister, returned to Scotland, |
| and continued, with the support of the general assembly of the Kirk, his severe |
| measures against the Catholics. Every indignity short of death was inflicted on |
| the priests who were apprehended in various parts of the kingdom; but whilst |
| intriguing to obtain possession of the queen's person, Moray was suddenly |
| himself cut off by the bullet of an assassin. Lennox, who succeeded him as |
| regent, proved a vigorous antagonist of Mary's adherents; and one of the foremost |
| of these, Archbishop Hamilton, was hanged at Stirling after a mock trial lasting |
| three days. Robert Hay, chosen to succeed him by the few remaining members |
| of the chapter, was never consecrated and the primatial see remained |
| unoccupied by a Catholic prelate for upwards of three centuries. Mar succeeded |
| Lennox as regent, and Morton followed Mar, being chosen on the very day of |
| John Knox's, death (24 Nov., 1572). The iron hand of both pressed heavily on the |
| Catholics, and we find, the Privy Council publishing in 1574 a list of outlaws, |
| including several bishops, any dealing with whom is forbidden under pain of |
| death. All Papists cited before the civil tribunals are to be required to renounce |
| their religion, subscribe to Presbyterianism, and receive the Protestant |
| communion. The persecution at home had had the effect of driving many |
| distinguished Scottish Catholics to the continent. Paris, had been since 1560 the |
| residence of Archbishop Beaton of Glasgow, and of the able and learned Bishop |
| John Leslie of Ross, both devoted friends and counsellors of Queen Mary. |
| The hopes that the young King James, who had been baptized and crowned with |
| Catholic rites, might grow up in the religion of his ancestors, were destroyed by |
| his signing in 1581 a formal profession of his adherence to Protestantism and |
| detestation of Popery. This did not prevent him from entering into personal |
| communication later with Pope Gregory XIII, when he thought his throne in |
| danger from the ambition of Queen Elizabeth. He promised at the same time |
| conciliatory measures towards his Catholic subjects, and affected solicitude for |
| his unfortunate mother; but he never made any practical efforts to obtain her |
| release, and her cruel death in 1586 seemed to leave him singularly callous; |
| though he attempted to appease the Catholic nobles, in their deep indignation at |
| Mary's execution, by restoring Bishop Leslie of Ross to his former dignities, and |
| appointing Archbishop Beaton his ambassador in France. There was at this time |
| a distinct reaction in favour of Catholicism in Scotland, and a number of |
| missionaries, both secular and religious, were labouring for the preservation of |
| the Faith. The Kirk, of course, took alarm and urged on the king the adoption of |
| the severest measures for the suppression of every vestige of Catholicism. |
| James himself headed an armed expedition against the disaffected Catholic |
| nobles of the north in 1594, and after one severe rebuff put Huntly and Erroll, the |
| Catholic leaders, to flight. They left Scotland forever in 1595, and thenceforward |
| Catholicism a political force to be reckoned with, may be said to have been |
| extinct in Scotland. A large proportion of the people still clung tenaciously to |
| their ancient beliefs, and strenuous efforts were made, in the closing years of the |
| sixteenth century, to provide for the spiritual want of what was now a missionary |
| country. In 1576 Dr. James Cheyne had founded a college to educate clergy for |
| the Scotch Mission, at Tournai; and after being transferred to Pont-à-Mousson, |
| Douai, and Louvain, it was finally at Douai. The Scots College at Rome was |
| founded by Pope Clement VIII in 1600; and there was also a Scots College in |
| Paris, dating from 1325, while the Scots abbeys at Ratisbon and Würzburg |
| likewise became after the Reformation the nursery of Scottish missionaries. |
| In 1598 the secular clergy in Scotland were placed under the jurisdiction of |
| George Blackwell, the newly appointed archpriest for England. Many devoted |
| Jesuits were labouring in Scotland at this time, notably Fathers Creighton, |
| Gordon, Hay, and Abercromby, of whom the last received, into the Catholic |
| Church Anne of Denmark, the queen of James VI, probably in 1600, and made |
| other distinguished converts. James's succession to the Crown of England in |
| 1603, on the death of Queen Elizabeth, gave him much new occupation in |
| regulating ecclesiastical matters in his new kingdom, and also in introducing, in |
| the teeth of bitter opposition, the Episcopalian system into Scotland. Pope |
| Clement wrote to the king in 1603, urging him to be lenient and generous towards |
| his Catholic subjects, and after long delay received a civil but vaguely-worded |
| reply. James's real sentiments, however, were shown by his immediately |
| afterwards decreeing the banishment of all priests from the kingdom, and |
| returning to the pope the presents sent to his Catholic queen. The remainder of |
| his reign, as far as his Catholic subjects were concerned, was simply a record of |
| confiscation, imprisonment, and banishment, inflicted impartially; and one |
| missionary, John Ogilvie, suffered death for his Faith at Glasgow in 1615. The |
| negotiations for the marriage of James's heir, first to a daughter of Spain, and |
| then to Henrietta Maria of France, occasioned a good deal of communication |
| between Rome and the English Court, but brought about no relaxation in the |
| penal laws. In 1623 William Bishop was appointed vicar Apostolic for England |
| and Scotland; but the Scotch Catholics were afterwards withdrawn from his |
| jurisdiction, and subjected to their own missionary prefects. James VI died in |
| 1625, after a reign which had brought only calamity and suffering to the Catholics |
| of his native land. |
| The thirty-five years which elapsed between the succession of Charles I and the |
| restoration of his son Charles II, after eleven years of Republican government, |
| were perhaps the darkest in the whole history of Scottish Catholicism. Charles I |
| sanctioned the ruthless execution of the penal statutes, perhaps hoping thus to |
| reconcile the Presbyterians to his unwelcome liturgical innovations; and his |
| policy was continued by Cromwell, apparently out of pure hatred of the Catholic |
| religion. Every effort was made to extirpate Catholicism by the education of |
| children of Catholics in Protestant tenets; an the imprisonment and petty |
| persecution of the venerable Countess of Abercorn showed that neither age nor |
| the highest rank was any protection to the detested Papists. Queen Henrietta |
| Maria, whom Pope Urban VIII urged to intervene on behalf of the Scotch |
| Catholics, was powerless to help them, though a few instances of personal |
| clemency on the part of Charles may be attributable to her influence. Meanwhile |
| the Presbyterians laboured to destroy not only what was left of the shrines and |
| other buildings of Catholic times, but to uproot every Catholic observance which |
| still survived. In the height of the persecution we find steps taken in Rome to |
| improve the organization of the Catholic body in Scotland; and in 1653 the |
| scattered clergy were incorporated under William Ballantyne as prefect of the |
| mission. They numbered only five or six at that date, the missionaries belonging |
| to the religious orders being considerably more numerous, and including Jesuits, |
| Benedictines, Franciscans, and Lazarists. Missionaries from Ireland were also |
| labouring on the Scotch mission, and a college for the education of Scots clergy |
| had been opened at Madrid in 1633, and was afterwards moved to Valladolid, |
| where it still flourishes. |
| Charles II, who succeeded his father in 1660, was undoubtedly well-disposed |
| personally towards Catholics and their Faith, but his Catholic subjects in |
| Scotland enjoyed little more indulgence under the episcopate restored by him in |
| that country than they had done under the Presbyterians. The odious separation |
| of children from their parents for religious reasons continued unabated; and in the |
| districts of Aberdeenshire especially, where Catholics were numerous, they were |
| treated as rigorously as ever. We have detailed reports of this period both from |
| the prefect of the clergy, Winster, and from Alexander Leslie, sent by |
| Propaganda in 1677 as Visitor to the Scottish mission. Their view of the religious |
| situation was far from encouraging; but fresh hopes were raised among the |
| Catholics eight years later by the accession of a Catholic king, James II, who at |
| once suspended the execution of the penal laws declaring himself in favour of |
| complete liberty of conscience. He opened a Catholic school at Holyrood, |
| restored Catholic worship in the Chapel royal, and gave annual grants to the |
| Scots College abroad and to the secular and regular missionaries at home. But |
| the Catholics had hardly time to enjoy this respite from persecution, when their |
| hopes were dashed by the Revolution of 1688, which drove James from the |
| throne. William of Orange, notwithstanding his promises of toleration, did nothing |
| to check the fanatical fury which now assailed the Catholics of England and |
| Scotland. The scattered clergy of the north found themselves in a more difficult |
| position than ever; and this perhaps induced Pope Innocent XII in 1694 to |
| nominate a vicar Apostolic for Scotland in the person of Bishop Thomas |
| Nicholson. His devoted labours are manifest from the reports which he addressed |
| to Propaganda; but neither during the reign of William and Mary, nor of Anne, |
| who succeeded in 1702, was there the slightest relaxation in the penal laws or |
| their application. The Union of England and Scotland in 1707 made no change in |
| this respect; and the first Jacobite rising, in 1715, entailed fresh sufferings on the |
| Scottish Catholics, who were so virulently persecuted that they seemed in |
| danger of total annihilation. |
| Bishop Nicholson had obtained the services of a coadjutor, James Gordon, in |
| 1705, and the devotion of the two prelates to their difficult duties was unbounded. |
| In spite of the penal laws, Catholics were still numerous in the North and West, |
| speaking chiefly the Gaelic language; and in 1726 it was decided to appoint a |
| second vicar Apostolic for the Highlands, Hugh Macdonald being chosen. During |
| his vicariate occurred the ill-fated rising of Charles Edward Stuart, the final failure |
| of which, consequent on the disastrous battle of Culloden, brought fresh |
| calamities on the Highland Catholics. The Highland clans were proscribed and |
| more than a thousand persons were deported to America, Catholic chapels were |
| destroyed, and priests and people prosecuted with the utmost severity. To the |
| suffering of the Catholics under the first two Georges from their enemies without, |
| was added the misfortune of dissensions within the fold. Regular and secular |
| missionaries were at variance on the question of jurisdiction; and there is |
| abundant evidence that the Scottish Church at this period was tainted with the |
| poison of Jansenism, the Scots College in Paris being especially affected. Every |
| means was taken by the Holy See to secure the orthodoxy of the Scottish |
| clergy, who continued however for many years to be divided into the so-called |
| liberal party, trained in France, and the more strictly Roman section, for the most |
| part alumni of the Scots College at Rome. By far the most prominent of the latter |
| was the illustrious Bishop George Hay, the chief ecclesiastical figure in the |
| history of Scottish Catholicism during the latter part of the eighteenth century. |
| Bishop Hay's life has been dealt with elsewhere, and it will suffice to say here |
| that his episcopate lasted from within a few years of the accession of George III |
| almost to the close of the long reign of that monarch. He saw the fanatical |
| outburst caused in Scotland by the English Catholic Relief Bill of 1777, when |
| Edinburgh and Glasgow were the scenes of outrage and pillage worthy of the |
| blackest days of the penal laws; and he also saw in 1793 the Catholics of |
| Scotland released by Parliament from the Most oppressive of those laws, though |
| still liable to many disabilities. He did much to improve the condition and status |
| of the Scots Colleges in Paris and Rome, which from various causes had fallen |
| into a very unsatisfactory state; and his devotional and controversial writings won |
| him repute beyond the limits of Scotland. During his long vicariate the Scottish |
| Catholics, whose numbers had greatly fallen after the disastrous Jacobite rising |
| of 1745, only very gradually increased. They numbered probably some 25,000 |
| souls in 1780; and of these, it was stated, not more than twenty possessed land |
| worth a hundred pounds a year. In 1800, seven years after the passing of the |
| Relief Bill, the faithful were estimated to number 30,000, ministered to by three |
| bishops and forty priests, with twelve churches. Six or seven of the priests were |
| émigrés from France. With the cessation of active persecution, a good many new |
| churches were erected throughout the country, and at the same time the |
| Catholic population was augmented by a large influx of Irish. In 1827 Pope Leo XII |
| added a new vicariate to the Scottish mission, which was now divided into the |
| Eastern, Western, and Northern Districts. By this time the Catholic population |
| had increased to 70,000, including fifty priests, with over thirty churches and |
| about twenty schools. The concession to Catholics of civil and political liberty by |
| the Emancipation Act of 1829 was preceded and followed in Scotland, as in |
| England, by disgraceful exhibitions of bigotry and intolerance, although many |
| prominent Scotsmen, including Sir Walter Scott, were entirely in its favour. |
| The immediate result of the salutary measure of 1829 was the rapid extension |
| and development of the Church in Scotland. A new ecclesiastical seminary was, |
| by the generosity of a benefactor, established at Blairs, near Aberdeen; the first |
| convent of nuns since the Reformation was founded in 1832, in Edinburgh; and in |
| Glasgow alone the number of Catholics mounted up from a few scores to 24,000. |
| Prominent among the bishops of Scotland during the first half of the nineteenth |
| century was James Gillis, who was nominated as coadjutor for the Eastern |
| District in 1837, the first year of the reign of Queen Victoria, and laboured |
| indefatigably as administrator and preacher for nearly thirty years. The wave of |
| conversions from Anglicanism which originated in the Tractarian movement in the |
| Church of England was felt also in Scotland, where several notable converts were |
| received during Bishop Gillis's episcopate, and several handsome churches were |
| built, and new missions established, through their instrumentality. Many new |
| schools were also erected, and more than one convent founded, under the |
| zealous prelate, and in the Western District the progress of Catholicism was not |
| less remarkable. Bishop Andrew Scott, who was appointed to the mission of |
| Glasgow in 1805 and died as vicar Apostolic in 1846, saw during the interval the |
| Glasgow Catholics increase from one thousand to seventy thousand souls; and |
| his successors, Bishops Murdoch and Gray, were witnesses of a similar |
| increase, and did much to multiply churches, missions, schools, and Catholic |
| institutions throughout the vicariate. While in the sparsely-inhabited region |
| included in the Northern Vicariate there was not, during this period, the same |
| remarkable numerical increase in the faithful as in the more populous parts of |
| Scotland, the work of organization and development there also went on steadily |
| and continuously. |
| During the thirty years' pontificate of Pius IX the question as to the advisability of |
| restoring to Scotland her regular hierarchy was from time to time brought forward; |
| but it was not until the very close of his reign that this important measure was |
| practically decided on at Rome, partly as the result of the report of Archbishop |
| Manning, as Apostolic Visitor to the Scottish Church, on certain grave |
| dissensions between Irish and Scottish Catholics which had long existed in the |
| Glasgow district. Pius IX did not live to carry out his intention; but the very first |
| official act of his successor Leo XIII was to reerect the Scottish hierarchy by his |
| Bull "Ex Supreme Apostolatus apice", dated 4 March, 1878. Thus reestablished, |
| the hierarchy was to consist of two archbishoprics: St. Andrews and Edinburgh, |
| with the four suffragan sees of Aberdeen, Argyll and the Isles, Dunkeld, and |
| Galloway; and Glasgow, without suffragans. The exotic religious body styled the |
| Scottish Episcopal Church immediately published a protest against the adoption |
| of the ancient titles for the newly-erected sees; but the papal act roused no |
| hostile feeling in the country at large, and was generally and sensibly recognized |
| as one which concerned no one except the members of the Catholic body. They |
| on their side welcomed with loyal gratitude a measure which restored to the |
| Church in Scotland the full and normal hierarchical organization which properly |
| belongs to her, and which might be expected to have the same consoling results |
| as have followed a similar act in England, Holland, Australia, and the United |
| States. |
| If the "second spring" of Catholicism in Scotland has been less fruitful and less |
| remarkable than in the countries just named, Scottish Catholics have |
| nevertheless much to be thankful for, looking back through the past thirty years |
| to what has been done in the way of growth, development, better equipment, and |
| more perfect organization. Between 1878 and 1911 the number of priests, |
| secular and regular, working in Scotland has increased from 257 to 555; of |
| churches, chapels, and stations, from 255 to 394; of congregational schools from |
| 157 to 213, of monasteries from 13 to 26, and of convents from 21 to 58. The |
| Catholic population, reckoned to number in 1878 about 38,000 souls, has |
| increased to fully 520,000. Of these only some 25,000, including the |
| Gaelic-speaking inhabitants of the Western Highlands and islands, and of the |
| Diocese of Aberdeen, are of purely Scottish descent, the other dioceses |
| comprising a comparatively small number of Catholics of Scottish blood. The rest |
| of the Catholics of Scotland, including at least 375,000 people in the single |
| archdiocese of Glasgow are either themselves entirely Irish by birth and race or |
| descended from recent immigrants from Ireland into Scotland. Glasgow also |
| harbours, of course, a considerable but fluctuating body of foreign Catholics; and |
| a certain number of Catholic Poles and Lithuanians are always employed in the |
| coal-fields and iron-works of central Scotland. But it would probably be within the |
| mark to estimate the Irish element in the Catholic population north of the Tweed |
| as amounting to between 90 and 95 per cent of the whole; and its tendency is to |
| increase rather than to diminish. |
| The education of clergy for the Scottish mission is carried on at Blairs College, |
| Aberdeen (number of students, 80); at St. Peter's College, near Glasgow (32), |
| and at the Scots Colleges at Rome (33), and at Valladolid (14). There are also a |
| few Scottish Students at the College of Propaganda at Rome; and 20 more, on |
| French foundation-burses, were being educated in 1911 at the Ecole supérieure |
| de Théologie at the College of Issy, near Paris. Good secondary schools for boys |
| are conducted by the Jesuits at Glasgow, and by the Marist Brothers at Glasgow |
| and Dumfries; and there are excellently equipped boarding-schools for girls at |
| Aberdeen, Edinburgh, and elsewhere, under religious of various orders. The |
| Sisters of Notre Dame are in charge of a fine training college for teachers just |
| outside Glasgow; and a hospital at Lanark is managed by the Sisters of Charity, |
| as well as a large orphanage for destitute children. The Nuns of the Good |
| Shepherd, the Sisters of Nazareth, and the Little Sisters of the Poor carry on |
| their works of charity and beneficence with zeal and success, being largely |
| helped by kindly Protestants; and many Protestant parents entrust their |
| children's education to the teaching orders of the Catholic Church. In the larger |
| centres of population there is still a good deal of sectarian bitterness, fomented |
| of course by the members of Orange and similar societies; but on the whole |
| religious animosities have greatly died down in recent times, and in those |
| districts of the Highlands where Catholics are most numerous, they live as a rule |
| on terms of perfect amity with their Presbyterian neighbours. The public |
| elementary schools of Scotland are controlled and managed by the school |
| boards elected by the rate-payers of each parish; and Government grants of |
| money are made annually not only to these schools, but also to other schools |
| (including those under Catholic management) which, in the words of the Act of |
| Parliament of 1872, are "efficiently contributing to the secular education of the |
| parish or burgh in which they are situated". The amount of the grant is conditional |
| on the attendance and proficiency of the scholars, the qualifications of the |
| teachers, and the state of the schools; and the schools are liable to be inspected |
| at any time by inspectors appointed by the Crown on the recommendation of the |
| Scotch Education Department, and empowered to ascertain that the conditions |
| necessary for obtaining the government grant have been fulfilled. No grant is |
| made in respect of religious instruction; but such instruction is sanctioned and |
| provided for in the code regulating the scheme of school work, parents being, |
| however, at liberty to withdraw their children from it if they please. No complete |
| statistics are available as to the total number of children in the Catholic |
| elementary schools; but in the Archdiocese of Glasgow and the Diocese of |
| Galloway, which together comprise fully four-fifths of the Catholic population of |
| the country, 66,482 children were presented in 1910 for religious examination. |
| Besides the elementary schools, what are known as "higher grade schools" also |
| receive government grants in proportion to their efficiency, special additional |
| grants being made to such schools in the six Highland counties. |
| With regard to the legal disabilities under which Scottish Catholics still lie, |
| notwithstanding the Emancipation Act of 1829, it is unnecessary, as the |
| provisions of that act apply to Scotland equally with England, to do more than |
| refer to the article ENGLAND SINCE THE REFORMATION. The only specifically Scottish office |
| from which Catholics are debarred by statute is that of Lord High Commissioner to the General |
| Assembly of the Established Church an office which no Catholic, of course would desire to hold. |
| The clauses in the Act of 1829 providing for the "gradual suppression and final prohibition" of |
| religious order so men have in practice remained a dead letter; but they have in Scotland, as in |
| England, the effect of seriously restricting the tenure and disposition of their property by religious |
| communities. All trusts and bequests in favour of religious orders are void in law; and the members |
| of such orders can hold property only as individuals. The English statutes (of Henry VIII and Edward |
| VI) invalidating bequests made to obtain prayers and Masses, on the ground that these are |
| "superstitious uses", do not apply either to Ireland or to Scotland; and it is probable the Scottish |
| courts would recognize the validity of such bequests, as the Irish Courts undoubtedly do. (See Lilly |
| and Wallis's "Manual of the Law specially affecting Catholics", London, 1893.) |
| I. Celtic Period: INNES, Critical Essay on the Ancient Inhabitants of Scotland (London, 1729); |
| SKENE, Celtic Scotland (Edinburgh, 1876-80); IDEM, Chronicles of the Picts and Scots (Edinburgh, |
| 1861); LOGAN, The Scottish Gael (Inverness, s. d.); ANDERSON, Scotland in Early Christian Times |
| (Edinburgh, 1881); WILSON, Archaeology and Prehistoric Annals of Scotland (Edinburgh, 1851); |
| CAMERON, Reliquioe Celtioe (Inverness, 1892) MACLAGAN, Religio Scotica (Edinburgh, 1909); |
| EDMONDS, The Early Scottish Church, its Doctrine and Discipline (Edinburgh, 1906); DOWDEN, |
| The Celtic Church in Scotland (London, 1894); LEAL, The Christian Faith in Early Scotland |
| (London, 1885). |
| II. Middle Ages: FORDUN (with BOWER'S continuation), Scotichronicon, ed. GOODALL (Edinburgh, |
| 1759); LESLIE, De Origine, moribus et rebus gestis Scotorum (Rome, 1678); SINCLAIR, Statistical |
| Account of Scotland (Edinburgh, 1791); THEINER, Vetera monumenta Hibernorum atque Scotorum |
| historiam illustrantia, 1216-1547 (Rome, 1864); WALCOTT, The Ancient Church Scotland (London, |
| 1874); WYNTOUN, Orygynale Chronykil of Scotland (Edinburgh, 1872-79); Concilia Scotioe |
| (Edinburgh, 1868); GORDON, Scotichronicon (including KEITH'S Catalogue of Scottish Bishops |
| (Glasgow, 1867); INNES, Sketches of Early Scotch History (Edinburgh, 1861); the publications of |
| the Scottish Text Society (Edinburgh) are of great value; and many episcopal registers and |
| cartularies of the Scottish abbeys have been printed by the Bannatyne, Maitland, Spottiswoode, |
| and other societies. |
| III. General, including modern, history: BURTON, Hist. of Scotland to 1746 (Edinburgh, 19876); |
| Hist. of Scotland, to the Union (Edinburgh, 1879) LANG, Hist of Scotland, to 1745 (Edinburgh, |
| 1900-07) HUME BROWN, Hist. of Scotland (Cambridge, 1902); BELLESHEIM, History of the |
| Catholic Church in Scotland (Edinburgh, 1887-90) vol IV has valuable appendices, with reports to |
| Propaganda on the state of Scottish Catholics under the penal laws; GRUB, Ecclesiastical Hist of |
| Scotland (Edinburgh, 1861) from an Episcopalian point of view, but impartially written; WALSH, |
| Hist. of the Catholic Church of Scotland (Glasgow, 1874), a useful compilation; FORBES-LEITH, |
| Narratives of Scottish Catholics under Mary and James VI (Edinburgh, 1885); IDEM, Memoirs of |
| Scottish Catholics, 17th and 18th centuries (London, 1909); DAWSON, The Catholics of Scotland, |
| 1593-1852 (London, 1890). |
| D.O. HUNTER-BLAIR |
| Transcribed by Jeffrey L. Anderson |
| The Catholic Encyclopedia, Volume XIII |
| Copyright © 1912 by Robert Appleton Company |
| Online Edition Copyright © 1999 by Kevin Knight |
| Nihil Obstat, February 1, 1912. Remy Lafort, D.D., Censor |
| Imprimatur. +John Cardinal Farley, Archbishop of New York |