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Alexander Vaus

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Alexander Vaus
Bishop of Galloway
ChurchRoman Catholic Church
SeeDiocese of Galloway
In office1422–1450
PredecessorThomas de Buittle
SuccessorThomas Spens
Previous post(s)Bishop of Orkney (unconsecrated);
Bishop of Caithness
Precentor of Dornoch Cathedral;
Archdeacon of Caithness
Orders
Consecrationbefore 16 July 1380
Personal details
Bornunknown
Probably Scotland
Diedunknown, though after 1450

Alexander Vaus [Vause, de Vaus] (died after 1450) was a late 14th century and 15th century Scottish prelate. Said to have been the younger son of one Patrick Vaus (died 1392), he apparently held "church livings" in Galloway as early as 1421.[1]

He is found in possession of the precentorship of Dornoch Cathedral, seat (cathedra) of the diocese of Caithness, when a papal mandate from Avignon Pope Benedict XIII, 25 July 1398, authorised his appointment as Archdeacon of Caithness:

To William de Gerland and Thomas de Edname, canons of Caithness, and the official of Caithness. Mandate to collate Alexander Vause, of noble birth, precentor of Caithness, to the archdeaconry of Caithness, a non-elective, non-major dignity with cure, value not exceeding 30 merks sterling, vacant because John de Innes had held it for more than a year without being raised to the priesthood, and without dispensation, and still unlawfully detains it at present; notwithstanding that Alexander is known to hold the said precentorship, which, however, on his peaceful assecution to the archdeaconry he is to demit.[2]

He may have held this archdeaconry for as many as nine years,[3] until he was provided as Bishop of Orkney by Pope Benedict XIII sometime between the date of the above letter and 7 November 1408, probably close to the latter date.[4]

It is not clear if he ever obtained possession of the bishopric of Orkney, being opposed by the nominee of the Roman pope, probably John Pak of Colchester, and by the King of Norway with Orkney's metropolitan, the Archbishop of Trondheim.[5] A letter from the Avignon pope, dated 12 February 1408, granted faculty to Alexander to be consecrated as Bishop of Orkney by three other bishops, "without prejudice to the archbishop of Nidaros to whom Orkney is accustomed to be subject".[6] Alexander does not appear to have been consecrated by the time he was provided, on 4 May 1414, to the bishopric of Caithness.[7]

Alexander received from the Pope an indult for local consecration, dated 22 January 1415,[8] and although the act of consecration itself is unrecorded, he was certainly consecrated by 16 January 1419, when he appeared for the first time as full bishop in a Melrose Abbey document.[9] He was Bishop of Caithness for around eight years, before being translated again, on 4 December 1422, to become Bishop of Galloway.[10] His translation occurred while Alexander was present at the papal see, following the death of Bishop Thomas de Buittle.[11]

Alexander was told by the papacy to take the oath of fealty to the Pope Martin V in the presence of the Bishop of Glasgow and the Bishop of Dunkeld.[12] He held the bishopric of Galloway for nearly twenty-eight years. Little of Vaus' activities as Bishop of Galloway, like any of the sees that he held are particularly well documented. He witnessed a charter of Margaret, Duchess of Touraine and Countess of Douglas, at "Treyff", on 26 November 1426, and on 22 September 1429.[11] He attended the Perth parliament of 10 March 1430.[11] He is found again in the Register of the Great Seal on 24 July and again on 6 September 1444.[11] He resigned the see to Thomas Spens on 8 January 1450.[13] The later historian Hector Boece related that Bishop Vaus had gone to a great deal of effort to enable Spens to succeed him.[11] Vaus seems to have lived for some time after his voluntary resignation of the see of Galloway, as it was said by Boece that Spens refrained from being styled as lord or bishop in the presence of the elderly Vaus.[11]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ Dowden, Bishops, p. 244.
  2. ^ McGurk (ed.), Calendar of Papal Letters, p. 88; see also Watt, Fasti Ecclesiae, pp. 65, 71.
  3. ^ Watt, Fasti Ecclesiae, pp. 71, 252.
  4. ^ McGurk (ed.), Calendar of Papal Letters, p. 166; Watt, Fasti Ecclesiae, p. 252.
  5. ^ Watt, Fasti Ecclesiae, p. 252.
  6. ^ McGurk (ed.), Calendar of Papal Letters, p. 170; the Archbishop of Nidaros (Trondheim) was allied to the Roman, rather than the Avignon pope.
  7. ^ Watt, Fasti Ecclesiae, pp. 60, 252.
  8. ^ McGurk (ed.), Calendar of Papal Letters, p. 309.
  9. ^ Watt, Fasti Ecclesiae, p. 60.
  10. ^ Watt, Fasti Ecclesiae, pp. 60, 131.
  11. ^ a b c d e f Dowden, Bishops, p. 368.
  12. ^ Dowden, Bishops, pp. 244–5, 368.
  13. ^ Watt, Fasti Ecclesiae, p. 131.

References

[edit]
  • 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., Fasti Ecclesiae Scotinanae Medii Aevi ad annum 1638, 2nd Draft, (St Andrews, 1969)
Religious titles
Preceded by
John Derling
Precentor of Caithness
1368× –1398
Succeeded by
Alexander de Sutherland
Preceded by
John de Innes
Archdeacon of Caithness
1398– ×1407
Succeeded by
Alexander Barber
Preceded by Bishop of Orkney (Avignon)
1398 × 1407–1414
Succeeded by
Preceded by Bishop of Caithness
1414–1422
Succeeded by
Preceded by Bishop of Galloway
1422–1450
Succeeded by