Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Andrew was incorporated at the University of Glasgow in 1456, and he is found as a determinant, i.e. having completed his bachelor's degree, at the University of St Andrews in 1462 x 1463. [4] He appears to have entered the University of Paris ad eundem in 1465. [4] By 1460, he had become Dean of Moray, while retaining the Glasgow sub-deanery. [6]
Bur suffered at the hands of Alexander Stewart, Earl of Buchan when Stewart burned the cathedral along with the city's two monasteries, the church of St Giles and the hospital Domus Dei. 1397–1406: William de Spynie: Before his consecration by the anti-pope Benedict XIII in 1397, he was the Chantor of Moray. He died on 2 August 1406. 1407–1414
Andrew Stewart (bishop of Moray) (1442–1501), Scottish prelate and administrator Andrew Stewart (bishop of Caithness, died 1517) , Bishop of Caithness and Treasurer of Scotland Andrew Stewart (bishop of Caithness, died 1541) ( c. 1490–1541), Scottish noble and cleric
Alexander Stewart (bishop of Moray) Andrew Stewart (bishop of Moray) David Stewart (bishop) James Stewart (bishop) T. Simon de Tosny; William Tulloch; W.
Other bishops made a lasting impact on the diocese; probably the most important of these was Alexander Bur (1362–1397), who championed the right of the Moray church to retain its property against a ruthless magnate, Alexander Stewart, Earl of Buchan, called the "Wolf of Badenoch". [2] Apparently the see served repeatedly as a stepping stone:
Alexander Stewart (before 1477 – 9 December 1537), who became bishop of Moray. He left illegitimate issue. [citation needed] Andrew Stewart. In 1480, Albany married Anne de la Tour d'Auvergne, daughter of Bertrand VI, Count of Auvergne and of Boulogne and his wife Louise (daughter of Georges de la Trémoille).
Martha Stewart married Andrew Stewart in 1961 but their love eventually boiled over for good. The couple welcomed their daughter, Alexis Stewart, in 1965 before separating in 1987 and officially ...
Andreas de Moravia (or Andrew of Moray) was a 13th-century Scottish bishop.He was a younger son of Hugh de Moravia, [1] from the family of Flemish origin who were lords of Duffus and other areas in the Greater Moray region in this period.