fbpx
Wikipedia

Walter de Coventre

Walter de Coventre (died 1371 or 1372) was a 14th-century Scottish ecclesiastic. There is no direct evidence of his birthdate, his family, or his family's origin, although he may have come from the region around Abernethy (in modern-day Perth and Kinross), where a family with the name de Coventre is known to have lived. Walter appeared in the records for the first time in the 1330s, as a student at the University of Paris. From there he went on to the University of Orléans, initially as a student before becoming a lecturer there. He studied the arts, civil law and canon law, and was awarded many university degrees, including two doctorates. His studies were paid for, at least partially, by his benefices in Scotland. Despite holding perhaps more than five benefices at one stage, he did not return to Scotland until the late 1350s.

Walter de Coventre
Bishop of Dunblane
Walter's name as written on a charter of 1365:
(dative) domino Waltero dei Gracia Episcopo Dunblanensi

"Lord Walter, by God's grace, Bishop of Dunblane"
ChurchRoman Catholic Church
SeeDiocese of Dunblane
In office1361–1371 or 1372
PredecessorWilliam de Cambuslang
SuccessorAndrew Magnus
Orders
ConsecrationBetween 18 June and 23 August 1361
Personal details
Bornunknown
DiedBetween 27 March 1371 and 27 April 1372
Previous post(s)Dean of Aberdeen (1348–1361)
+ various other benefices (see text)

Following his return to Scotland, Walter soon became Dean of Aberdeen Cathedral. From there he became engaged in high-level ecclesiastical affairs with the Scottish church and political affairs with the Earl of Mar. Sometime before June 1361, the cathedral chapter of Dunblane elected him Bishop of Dunblane. He went to France to secure confirmation from the Pope at Avignon, who authorised his consecration. Walter was bishop for 10 years after returning home to Scotland. Records of his episcopate are thin, but there are enough to allow a modest reconstruction of his activities: he presided over legal disputes, issued a dispensation for an important irregular marriage, attended parliaments, and acted as an envoy of the Scottish crown in England. He died in either 1371 or 1372.

Background edit

 
Portrait of David II, king of the Scots for most of Walter's life

Walter de Coventre was typical of a new class of men in 14th-century Scotland, the university-educated career cleric from the lower nobility.[1] Such men often acquired university education through their family resources, through the patronage of more substantial nobles, or through church influence, particularly support from the pope and his court.[2] Patronage gave access to the resources needed to finance the considerable expense of a 14th-century university education, particularly through the presentation of benefices, gifts of land or income made by the church.[3]

Scotland had no universities in de Coventre's time, requiring travel either to England or Continental Europe to acquire a university education. Continental Europe, particularly France, was the favoured destination, partly because of bad relations between Scotland and England.[4] After their university education, some Scottish graduates chose to remain abroad and teach at a foreign university or to serve the papacy; most returned to Scotland and offered their services to the king, a magnate, or an ecclesiastical institution.[5] The ultimate reward for such services was a bishopric, which brought wealth, prestige, and a "job for life".[6]

Walter de Coventre's life is not well documented. There are no biographies, and no histories or chronicles devote any space to him. His activities can be traced only through a small number of incidental references in legal deeds, church documents and papal records.[7] No modern historian has written a monograph about him, and the most extensive attempt to reconstruct his life in modern literature is a two-page entry in D. E. R. Watt's Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Graduates to A.D. 1410 (1977).[8] James Hutchison Cockburn, in his Medieval Bishop of Dunblane and their Church (1959) devoted seven less extensively sourced pages, but they emphasized the analysis of a few events during de Coventre's episcopate, and the events of his time.[9]

During most of de Coventre's recorded lifetime Scotland was ruled by King David II. Coming to the throne at age five, King David was driven into exile in France at the age of ten. In the 1330s, civil war raged in Scotland as those loyal to David fought Edward Balliol and his English backers.[10] In some sense, the conflict became a side-show of the Hundred Years' War, and David resided at Château Gaillard in northern France for much of his exile, until he could return to Scotland in 1341.[10] In 1346, in response to a plea from France to come to its aid, David led an army into England only to be taken prisoner at Neville's Cross; he remained in captivity until he was ransomed in 1357.[11] David's exile in France corresponded with Walter's own period in that country, prompting one historian to suggest that Walter was part of David's court while both were in northern France, and that Walter subsequently benefited from the relationship.[12]

Biography edit

Origins and personal background edit

James Hutchison Cockburn, a historian of Dunblane's medieval bishops, assumed that Walter's surname derived from the town of Coventry in England.[13] D. E. R. Watt has suggested that the medieval settlement of Coventre or Covintrie near Abernethy in the diocese of Dunblane was the origin of the name.[14]

There is no direct evidence of de Coventre's family, but two other men bearing the name "de Coventre" are known to have been active during Walter's lifetime. A "John de Coventre" is found registered as a student at the University of Paris on 21 January 1331. Before December 1341, when he resigned, John de Coventre held the parish church of Inverarity, Angus, in the diocese of St Andrews.[15] On 7 December 1345, a William de Coventre, also from the diocese of Dunblane, held a canonry and prebends (a cathedral priesthood with stipends) in the diocese of Ross and the Collegiate Church of Abernethy, when he was granted the church of Inverarity that had previously been held by John de Coventre. William thus appears to have succeeded John (and later Walter succeeded William) to all of these benefices.[16]

Watt suggested that all three were brothers, John the first-born, William the second-born, and Walter the youngest of the three.[17] He further suggested that the family was probably closely connected to Margaret de Abernethy, heiress of the old lay abbots and lords of Abernethy.[16] Margaret had patronage over both the church of Abernethy and, as probable owner of the barony of Inverarity, the church there.[18]

Early life edit

Education edit

By Lent, 1333: Bachelor in the Arts
Between 1333 and 1335: Licentiate in the Arts
Between 1333 and 1345: Master in the Arts
Between 1337 and 1345: Licentiate in Civil Law
By October 1349: Doctor in Civil Law
Between 1350 and 1351: Bachelor in Decrees (Canon Law)
Between 1351 and 1359: Doctor of Both Laws (Canon & Civil)

De Coventre received a B.A. under John de Waltirstone from the University of Paris by Lent, 1333.[19] Although he had probably completed a Licentiate in the Arts and a Master of Arts by 1335, because of gaps in the Paris records it is not certain that he was a Master until April 1345.[16]

He moved on to study civil law at the University of Orléans, and by 24 March 1337, he was serving as the proctor of the Scottish Nation in Orléans.[16] By 7 December 1345, he had received a Licentiate in Civil Law.[20] On 20 December 1348 he was at Avignon as an envoy of his university, and while there he obtained a grace regarding his own benefice holding from Pope Clement VI.[16] On 7 October 1349, Pope Clement granted an indult to Walter allowing him to be absent from his cure while he continued his studies at Orléans.[21]

He may already have been a Doctor of Civil Law by that point, because in the following year, on 22 November 1350, he is found as such acting as the Regent of Orléans presenting a candidate for licence.[16] Having studied civil law for the highest qualification available, de Coventre moved on to canon law. By 28 March 1351, he possessed a Bachelorate in Decrees (canon law).[16] This was perhaps why on 16 April 1353, he obtained from Pope Innocent VI another grace for himself.[16] Precisely when he obtained his doctorate is unclear, but he was D. U. J. (doctor utriusque juris), Doctor of Both Laws, by 4 September 1359.[16]

Benefices edit

1345 (or before) until 1361: Ross canonry and prebend
1345 (or before) until between 1348 and 1351: Abernethy canonry and prebend
1345: Failed provision to Archdeaconry of Dunblane
1348–1361: Deanery of Aberdeen
1351–1353: Failed provision to a St Andrews benefice
1352–1361: Dunkeld canonry and prebend
1353: Failed provision to Moray canonry and prebend
c. 1353–1361: Inverarity parish (St Andrews)

Walter's first known benefices were a canonry (with prebend) in the Collegiate Church of Abernethy and a prebend in the diocese of Ross, northern Scotland, which he was holding by 12 April 1345. None of these benefices, neither parish nor office, are known by name.[16] While Walter would retain his Ross benefice until becoming Bishop of Dunblane, he lost his Abernethy benefice at some point between 20 December 1348 and 28 March 1351. During that period he obtained another unnamed prebend in exchange for the Abernethy prebend.[16] Walter is only the second known canon of Abernethy Collegiate Church.[22]

On 12 April 1345, he was granted a canonry in the diocese of Dunkeld with expectation of a prebend, but does not appear to have obtained this in practice, although he did obtain a different Dunkeld canonry with prebend on 12 May 1352.[16] This he retained until his consecration as Bishop of Dunblane in 1361.[16] Walter also obtained a fourth prebend in this period. He had been pursuing a benefice in the diocese of St Andrews, and while he was granted this on 28 March 1351, the grant was still not effective by 16 April 1353, when he was granted a prebend in the diocese of Moray instead.[16] This was not effective either, but Walter did eventually obtain a St Andrews diocese benefice, namely the church of Inverarity in Angus, which had become vacant on the death of its incumbent, William de Coventre, probably Walter's older brother.[23] On 7 December 1345, Walter was appointed (provided) as Archdeacon of Dunblane, his most substantial benefice to date, but the appointment does not appear to have been carried through.[24]

Walter obtained one more benefice during this period. On 20 December 1348, he was made Dean of Aberdeen Cathedral, a high-ranking office which Walter was not technically eligible to hold without a papal grace, being only a sub-deacon in orders.[25] The deanery had been made vacant by the death of the long-serving Gilbert Fleming. Although in July the Pope had given it as an extra prebend for Annibald de Ceccano, Cardinal Bishop of Tusculum, this had been cancelled by 20 December, when it was given to Walter instead.[26]

These benefices provided an income without the obligation to perform any pastoral services. Their revenues were assigned to pay for his studies, leaving poorly paid vicars to carry out the pastoral work.[13] Walter remained as a teacher and official at Orléans, perhaps without returning to Scotland at all, until the late 1350s, by when he would have been absent from his native country for more than 25 years.[27] In an Aberdeen document dated 12 July 1356, it was noted that he was still absent from his post.[27]

Bishop of Dunblane edit

 
A 19th-century map of the diocese of Dunblane and its surrounding dioceses. Abernethy, although physically separate from most of the rest of the diocese of Dunblane, was nevertheless part of that diocese.

Return to Scotland and episcopal election edit

Walter cannot be traced back in Scotland with certainty before his appearance as a witness to a charter of Thomas, Earl of Mar, on 9 July 1358. He may have returned a year earlier, as a document dated sometime between November 1357 and April 1359 records him in the sheriffdom of Forfar (royal demesne in Angus) assisting a justice ayre. He appears again on 4 September 1359, witnessing another charter of Earl Thomas at the latter's residence of Kildrummy Castle.[27]

Following the death in 1361 of William de Cambuslang, Bishop of Dunblane, Walter was elected by the Dunblane cathedral chapter to be the new bishop.[28] On his election, Walter possessed no benefices in the diocese, and had had none since giving up his Abernethy prebend a decade before. However, it was probably the diocese of his birth, and he had almost become archdeacon of the diocese in 1345.[8]

Walter, bishop-elect, travelled to the papal court at Avignon, and was provided (appointed) as bishop by Pope Innocent on 18 June 1361.[29] The papal letter of provision expressed displeasure that the chapter (by electing) and Walter (by accepting the election) were ignoring a previous papal reservation of the bishopric. Pope Innocent quashed the election, but nevertheless agreed to appoint (provide) Walter to the bishopric.[30]

Walter may have been consecrated soon after, probably by 23 August. It was on that date that he presented a roll of petitions to the Pope on behalf of several Scotsmen, including Michael de Monymusk, future Bishop of Dunkeld.[31] On 20 September, Bishop Walter made a "promise of services" to the papacy, the first payment of which was delivered to Avignon in 1363 by Walter's proctor.[16]

Early episcopate edit

 
A document confirming the surrender of deeds by Naomhán Mac Eóghainn and his wife, which Walter oversaw

Walter had returned to Scotland by 30 June 1362, when his presence is attested at Partick near Glasgow. The document in which Walter is mentioned recorded that William Rae, Bishop of Glasgow, along with his cathedral chapter, agreed to put a dispute to arbitration.[32]

The remainder of his episcopate is not well documented. His only surviving episcopal deed was issued at Abernethy on 8 February 1365.[33] The deed authorised the reduction of canons at Abernethy Collegiate Church from ten to five, adding the consent of the patroness Margaret, Countess of Angus. These details are also recorded in a papal letter to the Bishop of St Andrews in 1373:

Recently a petition of the secular Prior and Chapter [of Abernethy] for confirmation described how the [Collegiate] Church was founded by lay patrons for a prior and five canons. At a later date some of the patrons were eager to augment its rents, and the number of canons was hopefully raised to ten. No such augmentation took place, and because of wars, fires and ruin the Prior and Chapter were brought to straits. Bishop Walter, therefore, with the assent of the patrons and King David, reduced the canons to five.[34]

The changes were confirmed by the Pope on 31 October 1375, several years after Bishop Walter's death.[35]

A document of Inchaffray Abbey, preserved in the original (as opposed to a later copy), recorded that Bishop Walter had been involved in settling a dispute involving Inchaffray, an abbey which lay in his diocese. Inchaffray's dispute was with Naomhán Mac Eóghainn (Nevin MacEwen) and his wife Mairead (Mariota).[36] Under Abbot Symon de Scone, previous Abbot of Inchaffray, the abbey had given some lands in exchange for 40 marks to Mairead's father Maol Mhuire (Malmoran) of Glencarnie.[37]

Under the new abbot, Abbot John, the abbey sought the return of those lands. The case appears to have gone to Bishop Walter's consistorial court, which he held at the chapel of Innerpeffry. Here Naomhán and Mairead agreed to accept a payment of 40 marks in exchange for returning the documents of ownership given to them by the abbot and for acknowledging the abbey's ownership. The couple pledged to honour the agreement by swearing an oath on the chapel's Gospels.[38] The case then proceeded to a hearing held under Robert Stewart, Earl of Strathearn and High Steward of Scotland (later King Robert II), at Perth, where the couple were forced under the threat of severe penalties to swear again never to renew their claim.[39] The decision was sealed by the witnesses, including Bishop Walter, at a Perth church on 30 November 1365.[40]

Final years edit

On 13 March 1366, Walter was commissioned by the papacy to authorise dispensation for the irregular marriage between John Stewart, Earl of Carrick (much later King Robert III) and Annabella Drummond.[41]

Bishop Walter attended at least five meetings of the Scottish national parliament during his episcopate. He was present at the Scone parliament of 27 September 1367, which discussed royal revenues and relations with the English crown.[42] He was also present at the Scone parliament of June 1368,[27] and the Perth parliament of 6 March 1369; the latter discussed royal business, relations with the Kingdom of England and the Kingdom of Norway, and law and order in the Scottish Highlands. Robert Stewart, Thomas, Earl of Mar, Uilleam III, Earl of Ross, and other Highland lords, were ordered to impose greater control in their regions.[43] Bishop Walter took part in two parliamentary committees, the first a clerical committee devoted to general business, and the second a judicial committee authorised to review earlier legal judgments in the kingdom.[44]

The parliament's discussions on Anglo-Scottish relations preceded peace negotiations later in the year, at which Bishop Walter was one of the Scottish envoys. There was some urgency behind the matter, in view of the impending end to the five-year Anglo-Scottish truce agreed by King Edward III of England on 20 May 1365.[45] King David travelled to London, where he resided in May and June, in order to take part in the negotiations. Walter and the rest of the embassy, which included four other bishops, were in London by June 1369, the month in which Edward agreed to a new truce. When it was ratified by the Scots at Edinburgh on 20 July, Bishop Walter was again present, as a witness.[46]

Walter attended the Perth parliament of 18 February 1370, and was named as one of the members of a special committee "for the deliberation concerning the consideration of common justice".[47] He is mentioned for the last time swearing fealty to the new king, Robert II, at his accession parliament at Scone on 27 March 1371.[48] Walter de Coventre must have died later in 1371 or in very early 1372, because on 27 April 1372, the Pope appointed Andrew Magnus to the vacant bishopric of Dunblane.[49]

Notes edit

  1. ^ Grant, Independence and Nationhood, pp. 96–7.
  2. ^ Brown, Black Douglases, p. 195.
  3. ^ Barrell, "Papal Provisions", p. 218; Cockburn, Medieval Bishops, pp. 104–5; Grant, Independence and Nationhood, p. 97.
  4. ^ Brown & Boardman, "Survival and Revival", p. 91.
  5. ^ See Watt, Dictionary, passim, for details and individual examples.
  6. ^ A detailed survey, although regarding 12th- and 13th-century England, but still relevant, can be found in Bartlett, England under the Norman and Angevin Kings, pp. 377–412.
  7. ^ See sources listed in Watt, Dictionary, pp. 114–5.
  8. ^ a b Watt, Dictionary, pp. 114–5.
  9. ^ Cockburn, Medieval Bishops, pp. 104–11.
  10. ^ a b Webster, "David II".
  11. ^ Oram, Kings and Queens pp. 118, 120.
  12. ^ Penman, David II, p. 53.
  13. ^ a b Cockburn, Medieval Bishops, p. 105.
  14. ^ Watt, Dictionary, p. 114; see also Cowan, Parishes, p. 3.
  15. ^ Watt, Dictionary, pp. 113–4.
  16. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Watt, Dictionary, p. 114; the Ross and Abernethy benefices are uncertain because they are not known by name, but the unique combination cannot very likely be down to coincidence.
  17. ^ Watt, Dictionary, pp. 113, 114, 115.
  18. ^ Watt, Dictionary, pp. 114, 115.
  19. ^ Cockburn, Medieval Bishops, p. 105; Dowden, Bishops, p. 204, n. 2; Watt, Dictionary, p. 114.
  20. ^ Dowden, Bishops, p. 204, n. 2; Watt, Dictionary, p. 114.
  21. ^ Cockburn, Medieval Bishops, p. 105; Dowden, Bishops, p. 204, n. 2; Watt, Dictionary, pp. 114, 115.
  22. ^ Cowan & Easson, Medieval Religious Houses, p. 215.
  23. ^ See Watt, Dictionary, s.v. "Coventre, William de", for details.
  24. ^ Watt & Murray, Fasti Ecclesiae, p. 117.
  25. ^ Cockburn, Medieval Bishops, p. 105; Watt & Murray, Fasti Ecclesiae, p. 9.
  26. ^ Watt & Murray, Fasti Ecclesiae, p. 9.
  27. ^ a b c d Watt, Dictionary, p. 115.
  28. ^ Watt & Murray, Fasti Ecclesiae, p. 101.
  29. ^ Cockburn, Medieval Bishops, p. 104; Dowden, Bishops, pp. 203–4; Watt, Dictionary, p. 114; Watt & Murray, Fasti Ecclesiae, p. 101.
  30. ^ Cockburn, Medieval Bishops, p. 104; Dowden, Bishops, p. 204.
  31. ^ Watt, Dictionary, p. 114; Watt & Murray, Fasti Ecclesiae, p. 101.
  32. ^ Innes (ed.), Registrum Episcopatus Glasguensis, vol. i, no. 299, pp. 265–8; Watt, Dictionary, p. 115
  33. ^ Cockburn, Medieval Bishops, p. 106; Watt, Dictionary, p. 115.
  34. ^ Quoted in Cockburn, Medieval Bishops, p. 106.
  35. ^ Cockburn, Medieval Bishops, p. 106; Cowan & Easson, Medieval Religious Houses, p. 213.
  36. ^ Latin document can be found at Lindsay et al., Charters, Bulls and Other Documents, no. 135, pp. 127–30, with English abstract at pp. 231–2; an analysis of the case can be found in Cockburn, Medieval Bishops, pp. 108–10.
  37. ^ Lindsay et al., Charters, Bulls and Other Documents, p. 127; .Cockburn, Medieval Bishops, p. 110.
  38. ^ Lindsay et al., Charters, Bulls and Other Documents, pp. 127–8; Cockburn, Medieval Bishops, pp. 108–9.
  39. ^ Lindsay et al., Charters, Bulls and Other Documents, pp. 128–30; Cockburn, Medieval Bishops, p. 109.
  40. ^ Cockburn, Medieval Bishops, p. 108.
  41. ^ Cockburn, Medieval Bishops, p. 111.
  42. ^ Brown, et al., Scone, Parliament, 1367/9/1, in RPS, Date accessed: 2 March 2008; Watt, Dictionary, p. 115.
  43. ^ Brown, et al., Perth, Parliament, 1369/3/5, in RPS, Date accessed: 2 March 2008; Watt, Dictionary, p. 115.
  44. ^ Brown, et al., Perth, Parliament, 1369/3/5, in RPS, Date accessed: 2 March 2008.
  45. ^ Penman, David II, pp. 337, 381.
  46. ^ Cockburn, Medieval Bishops, p. 111; Penman, David II, pp. 384–5; Watt, Dictionary, p. 115; Penman omits Walter from the list of bishops in London, but Cockburn and Watt include him.
  47. ^ RPS, 1370/2/3. Date accessed: 2 March 2008; Watt, Dictionary, p. 115.
  48. ^ Cockburn, Medieval Bishops, p. 111; Dowden, Bishops, p. 204; Watt, Dictionary, p. 115; Watt & Murray, Fasti Ecclesiae, p. 101.
  49. ^ Dowden, Bishops, p. 204; Watt, Dictionary, p. 115; Watt & Murray, Fasti Ecclesiae, p. 101; he was said in papal documents to have "died outside the curia".

References edit

  • Barrell, A. D. M. (1999), "Papal Provisions in Scotland in the Fourteenth and Early Fifteenth Centuries", in Crawford, Barbara E. (ed.), Church, Chronicle and Learning in Medieval Scotland: Essays Presented to Donald Watt on the Completion of the Publication of Bower's Scotichronicon, Edinburgh: Mercat Press, pp. 215–25, ISBN 1-84183-001-1
  • Bartlett, Robert (2000), England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings, 1075–1225, New Oxford History of England, Oxford: Clarendon Press, ISBN 0-19-925101-0
  • Boardman, Stephen (1996), The Early Stewart Kings: Robert II and Robert III, 1371–1406, The Stewart Dynasty in Scotland Series, East Linton: Tuckwell Press, ISBN 1-898410-43-7
  • Borthwick, Alan R.; MacQueen, Hector L. (1999), "'Rare Creatures for their Age': Alexander and David Guthrie, Graduate Lairds and Royal Servants", in Crawford, Barbara E. (ed.), Church, Chronicle and Learning in Medieval Scotland: Essays Presented to Donald Watt on the Completion of the Publication of Bower's Scotichronicon, Edinburgh: Mercat Press, pp. 227–33, ISBN 1-84183-001-1
  • Brown, Michael (1998), The Black Douglases: War and Lordship in Late Medieval Scotland, 1300–1455, East Linton: Tuckwell Press, ISBN 1-86232-036-5
  • Brown, Michael; Boardman, Steve (2005), "Survival and Revival: Late Medieval Scotland", in Wormald, Jenny (ed.), Scotland: A History, Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 77–106, ISBN 0-19-820615-1
  • Cockburn, James Hutchison (1959), The Medieval Bishops of Dunblane and their Church, Dunblane: Society of Friends of Dunblane Cathedral
  • Cowan, Ian B.; Easson, David E. (1976), Medieval Religious Houses: Scotland With an Appendix on the Houses in the Isle of Man (2nd ed.), London and New York: Longman, ISBN 0-582-12069-1
  • Cowan, Ian B. (1967), The Parishes of Medieval Scotland, Scottish Record Society, vol. 93, Edinburgh: Neill & Co. Ltd
  • Dowden, John (1912), Thomson, John Maitland (ed.), The Bishops of Scotland : Being Notes on the Lives of All the Bishops, under Each of the Sees, Prior to the Reformation, Glasgow: James Maclehose and Sons
  • Grant, Alexander (1984), Independence and Nationhood: Scotland, 1306–1469, The New History of Scotland, vol. 3, London: Edward Arnold, ISBN 0-7131-6309-7
  • Innes, Cosmo Nelson, ed. (1843), Registrum Episcopatus Glasguensis; Munimenta Ecclesie Metropolitane Glasguensis a Sede Restaurata Seculo Incunte Xii Ad Reformatam Religionem, vol. i, Edinburgh: The Bannatyne Club
  • Lindsay, William Alexander; Dowden, John; Thomson, John Maitland, eds. (1908), Charters, Bulls and Other Documents relating to the Abbey of Inchaffray Chiefly from the Originals in the Charter Chest of the Earl of Kinnoull, Publications of the Scottish History Society, Volume 56, Edinburgh: T. and A. Constable
  • Oram, Richard, ed. (2001), The Kings and Queens of Scotland, Stroud, Gloucestershire: Tempus Publishing Ltd, ISBN 0-7524-1991-9
  • Penman, Michael (2004), David II, 1329–71, Edinburgh: Tuckwell Press Ltd / John Donald, ISBN 0-85976-603-9
  • The Records of the Parliaments of Scotland to 1707 On-line database prepared by the Scottish Parliament Project of the University of Saint Andrews. Cited as RPS, with date.
  • Watt, D. E. R. (1977), A Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Graduates to A.D. 1410, Oxford: Clarendon Press, ISBN 0-19-822447-8
  • Watt, D. E. R.; Murray, A. L., eds. (2003), Fasti Ecclesiae Scotinanae Medii Aevi ad annum 1638, The Scottish Record Society, New Series, Volume 25 (Revised ed.), Edinburgh: The Scottish Record Society, ISBN 0-902054-19-8, ISSN 0143-9448
  • Webster, Bruce (2004), "David II (1324–1371), king of Scots", Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, retrieved 2 March 2008

External links edit

  • Scottish Parliament Project (2007–2015), Records of the Parliaments of Scotland to 1707, St Andrews, retrieved 8 March 2015{{citation}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link).
Catholic Church titles
Preceded by
Gilbert Fleming /
Annibald de Ceccano (provision cancelled)
Dean of Aberdeen
1348–1361
Succeeded by
Preceded by Bishop of Dunblane
1361–1371 or 1372
Succeeded by

walter, coventre, died, 1371, 1372, 14th, century, scottish, ecclesiastic, there, direct, evidence, birthdate, family, family, origin, although, have, come, from, region, around, abernethy, modern, perth, kinross, where, family, with, name, coventre, known, ha. Walter de Coventre died 1371 or 1372 was a 14th century Scottish ecclesiastic There is no direct evidence of his birthdate his family or his family s origin although he may have come from the region around Abernethy in modern day Perth and Kinross where a family with the name de Coventre is known to have lived Walter appeared in the records for the first time in the 1330s as a student at the University of Paris From there he went on to the University of Orleans initially as a student before becoming a lecturer there He studied the arts civil law and canon law and was awarded many university degrees including two doctorates His studies were paid for at least partially by his benefices in Scotland Despite holding perhaps more than five benefices at one stage he did not return to Scotland until the late 1350s Walter de CoventreBishop of DunblaneWalter s name as written on a charter of 1365 dative domino Waltero dei Gracia Episcopo Dunblanensi Lord Walter by God s grace Bishop of Dunblane ChurchRoman Catholic ChurchSeeDiocese of DunblaneIn office1361 1371 or 1372PredecessorWilliam de CambuslangSuccessorAndrew MagnusOrdersConsecrationBetween 18 June and 23 August 1361Personal detailsBornunknownDiedBetween 27 March 1371 and 27 April 1372Previous post s Dean of Aberdeen 1348 1361 various other benefices see text Following his return to Scotland Walter soon became Dean of Aberdeen Cathedral From there he became engaged in high level ecclesiastical affairs with the Scottish church and political affairs with the Earl of Mar Sometime before June 1361 the cathedral chapter of Dunblane elected him Bishop of Dunblane He went to France to secure confirmation from the Pope at Avignon who authorised his consecration Walter was bishop for 10 years after returning home to Scotland Records of his episcopate are thin but there are enough to allow a modest reconstruction of his activities he presided over legal disputes issued a dispensation for an important irregular marriage attended parliaments and acted as an envoy of the Scottish crown in England He died in either 1371 or 1372 Contents 1 Background 2 Biography 2 1 Origins and personal background 2 2 Early life 2 2 1 Education 2 2 2 Benefices 2 3 Bishop of Dunblane 2 3 1 Return to Scotland and episcopal election 2 3 2 Early episcopate 2 3 3 Final years 3 Notes 4 References 5 External linksBackground edit nbsp Portrait of David II king of the Scots for most of Walter s life Walter de Coventre was typical of a new class of men in 14th century Scotland the university educated career cleric from the lower nobility 1 Such men often acquired university education through their family resources through the patronage of more substantial nobles or through church influence particularly support from the pope and his court 2 Patronage gave access to the resources needed to finance the considerable expense of a 14th century university education particularly through the presentation of benefices gifts of land or income made by the church 3 Scotland had no universities in de Coventre s time requiring travel either to England or Continental Europe to acquire a university education Continental Europe particularly France was the favoured destination partly because of bad relations between Scotland and England 4 After their university education some Scottish graduates chose to remain abroad and teach at a foreign university or to serve the papacy most returned to Scotland and offered their services to the king a magnate or an ecclesiastical institution 5 The ultimate reward for such services was a bishopric which brought wealth prestige and a job for life 6 Walter de Coventre s life is not well documented There are no biographies and no histories or chronicles devote any space to him His activities can be traced only through a small number of incidental references in legal deeds church documents and papal records 7 No modern historian has written a monograph about him and the most extensive attempt to reconstruct his life in modern literature is a two page entry in D E R Watt s Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Graduates to A D 1410 1977 8 James Hutchison Cockburn in his Medieval Bishop of Dunblane and their Church 1959 devoted seven less extensively sourced pages but they emphasized the analysis of a few events during de Coventre s episcopate and the events of his time 9 During most of de Coventre s recorded lifetime Scotland was ruled by King David II Coming to the throne at age five King David was driven into exile in France at the age of ten In the 1330s civil war raged in Scotland as those loyal to David fought Edward Balliol and his English backers 10 In some sense the conflict became a side show of the Hundred Years War and David resided at Chateau Gaillard in northern France for much of his exile until he could return to Scotland in 1341 10 In 1346 in response to a plea from France to come to its aid David led an army into England only to be taken prisoner at Neville s Cross he remained in captivity until he was ransomed in 1357 11 David s exile in France corresponded with Walter s own period in that country prompting one historian to suggest that Walter was part of David s court while both were in northern France and that Walter subsequently benefited from the relationship 12 Biography editOrigins and personal background edit James Hutchison Cockburn a historian of Dunblane s medieval bishops assumed that Walter s surname derived from the town of Coventry in England 13 D E R Watt has suggested that the medieval settlement of Coventre or Covintrie near Abernethy in the diocese of Dunblane was the origin of the name 14 There is no direct evidence of de Coventre s family but two other men bearing the name de Coventre are known to have been active during Walter s lifetime A John de Coventre is found registered as a student at the University of Paris on 21 January 1331 Before December 1341 when he resigned John de Coventre held the parish church of Inverarity Angus in the diocese of St Andrews 15 On 7 December 1345 a William de Coventre also from the diocese of Dunblane held a canonry and prebends a cathedral priesthood with stipends in the diocese of Ross and the Collegiate Church of Abernethy when he was granted the church of Inverarity that had previously been held by John de Coventre William thus appears to have succeeded John and later Walter succeeded William to all of these benefices 16 Watt suggested that all three were brothers John the first born William the second born and Walter the youngest of the three 17 He further suggested that the family was probably closely connected to Margaret de Abernethy heiress of the old lay abbots and lords of Abernethy 16 Margaret had patronage over both the church of Abernethy and as probable owner of the barony of Inverarity the church there 18 Early life edit Education edit By Lent 1333 Bachelor in the Arts Between 1333 and 1335 Licentiate in the Arts Between 1333 and 1345 Master in the Arts Between 1337 and 1345 Licentiate in Civil Law By October 1349 Doctor in Civil Law Between 1350 and 1351 Bachelor in Decrees Canon Law Between 1351 and 1359 Doctor of Both Laws Canon amp Civil De Coventre received a B A under John de Waltirstone from the University of Paris by Lent 1333 19 Although he had probably completed a Licentiate in the Arts and a Master of Arts by 1335 because of gaps in the Paris records it is not certain that he was a Master until April 1345 16 He moved on to study civil law at the University of Orleans and by 24 March 1337 he was serving as the proctor of the Scottish Nation in Orleans 16 By 7 December 1345 he had received a Licentiate in Civil Law 20 On 20 December 1348 he was at Avignon as an envoy of his university and while there he obtained a grace regarding his own benefice holding from Pope Clement VI 16 On 7 October 1349 Pope Clement granted an indult to Walter allowing him to be absent from his cure while he continued his studies at Orleans 21 He may already have been a Doctor of Civil Law by that point because in the following year on 22 November 1350 he is found as such acting as the Regent of Orleans presenting a candidate for licence 16 Having studied civil law for the highest qualification available de Coventre moved on to canon law By 28 March 1351 he possessed a Bachelorate in Decrees canon law 16 This was perhaps why on 16 April 1353 he obtained from Pope Innocent VI another grace for himself 16 Precisely when he obtained his doctorate is unclear but he was D U J doctor utriusque juris Doctor of Both Laws by 4 September 1359 16 Benefices edit 1345 or before until 1361 Ross canonry and prebend 1345 or before until between 1348 and 1351 Abernethy canonry and prebend 1345 Failed provision to Archdeaconry of Dunblane 1348 1361 Deanery of Aberdeen 1351 1353 Failed provision to a St Andrews benefice 1352 1361 Dunkeld canonry and prebend 1353 Failed provision to Moray canonry and prebend c 1353 1361 Inverarity parish St Andrews Walter s first known benefices were a canonry with prebend in the Collegiate Church of Abernethy and a prebend in the diocese of Ross northern Scotland which he was holding by 12 April 1345 None of these benefices neither parish nor office are known by name 16 While Walter would retain his Ross benefice until becoming Bishop of Dunblane he lost his Abernethy benefice at some point between 20 December 1348 and 28 March 1351 During that period he obtained another unnamed prebend in exchange for the Abernethy prebend 16 Walter is only the second known canon of Abernethy Collegiate Church 22 On 12 April 1345 he was granted a canonry in the diocese of Dunkeld with expectation of a prebend but does not appear to have obtained this in practice although he did obtain a different Dunkeld canonry with prebend on 12 May 1352 16 This he retained until his consecration as Bishop of Dunblane in 1361 16 Walter also obtained a fourth prebend in this period He had been pursuing a benefice in the diocese of St Andrews and while he was granted this on 28 March 1351 the grant was still not effective by 16 April 1353 when he was granted a prebend in the diocese of Moray instead 16 This was not effective either but Walter did eventually obtain a St Andrews diocese benefice namely the church of Inverarity in Angus which had become vacant on the death of its incumbent William de Coventre probably Walter s older brother 23 On 7 December 1345 Walter was appointed provided as Archdeacon of Dunblane his most substantial benefice to date but the appointment does not appear to have been carried through 24 Walter obtained one more benefice during this period On 20 December 1348 he was made Dean of Aberdeen Cathedral a high ranking office which Walter was not technically eligible to hold without a papal grace being only a sub deacon in orders 25 The deanery had been made vacant by the death of the long serving Gilbert Fleming Although in July the Pope had given it as an extra prebend for Annibald de Ceccano Cardinal Bishop of Tusculum this had been cancelled by 20 December when it was given to Walter instead 26 These benefices provided an income without the obligation to perform any pastoral services Their revenues were assigned to pay for his studies leaving poorly paid vicars to carry out the pastoral work 13 Walter remained as a teacher and official at Orleans perhaps without returning to Scotland at all until the late 1350s by when he would have been absent from his native country for more than 25 years 27 In an Aberdeen document dated 12 July 1356 it was noted that he was still absent from his post 27 Bishop of Dunblane edit nbsp A 19th century map of the diocese of Dunblane and its surrounding dioceses Abernethy although physically separate from most of the rest of the diocese of Dunblane was nevertheless part of that diocese Return to Scotland and episcopal election edit Walter cannot be traced back in Scotland with certainty before his appearance as a witness to a charter of Thomas Earl of Mar on 9 July 1358 He may have returned a year earlier as a document dated sometime between November 1357 and April 1359 records him in the sheriffdom of Forfar royal demesne in Angus assisting a justice ayre He appears again on 4 September 1359 witnessing another charter of Earl Thomas at the latter s residence of Kildrummy Castle 27 Following the death in 1361 of William de Cambuslang Bishop of Dunblane Walter was elected by the Dunblane cathedral chapter to be the new bishop 28 On his election Walter possessed no benefices in the diocese and had had none since giving up his Abernethy prebend a decade before However it was probably the diocese of his birth and he had almost become archdeacon of the diocese in 1345 8 Walter bishop elect travelled to the papal court at Avignon and was provided appointed as bishop by Pope Innocent on 18 June 1361 29 The papal letter of provision expressed displeasure that the chapter by electing and Walter by accepting the election were ignoring a previous papal reservation of the bishopric Pope Innocent quashed the election but nevertheless agreed to appoint provide Walter to the bishopric 30 Walter may have been consecrated soon after probably by 23 August It was on that date that he presented a roll of petitions to the Pope on behalf of several Scotsmen including Michael de Monymusk future Bishop of Dunkeld 31 On 20 September Bishop Walter made a promise of services to the papacy the first payment of which was delivered to Avignon in 1363 by Walter s proctor 16 Early episcopate edit nbsp A document confirming the surrender of deeds by Naomhan Mac Eoghainn and his wife which Walter oversaw Walter had returned to Scotland by 30 June 1362 when his presence is attested at Partick near Glasgow The document in which Walter is mentioned recorded that William Rae Bishop of Glasgow along with his cathedral chapter agreed to put a dispute to arbitration 32 The remainder of his episcopate is not well documented His only surviving episcopal deed was issued at Abernethy on 8 February 1365 33 The deed authorised the reduction of canons at Abernethy Collegiate Church from ten to five adding the consent of the patroness Margaret Countess of Angus These details are also recorded in a papal letter to the Bishop of St Andrews in 1373 Recently a petition of the secular Prior and Chapter of Abernethy for confirmation described how the Collegiate Church was founded by lay patrons for a prior and five canons At a later date some of the patrons were eager to augment its rents and the number of canons was hopefully raised to ten No such augmentation took place and because of wars fires and ruin the Prior and Chapter were brought to straits Bishop Walter therefore with the assent of the patrons and King David reduced the canons to five 34 The changes were confirmed by the Pope on 31 October 1375 several years after Bishop Walter s death 35 A document of Inchaffray Abbey preserved in the original as opposed to a later copy recorded that Bishop Walter had been involved in settling a dispute involving Inchaffray an abbey which lay in his diocese Inchaffray s dispute was with Naomhan Mac Eoghainn Nevin MacEwen and his wife Mairead Mariota 36 Under Abbot Symon de Scone previous Abbot of Inchaffray the abbey had given some lands in exchange for 40 marks to Mairead s father Maol Mhuire Malmoran of Glencarnie 37 Under the new abbot Abbot John the abbey sought the return of those lands The case appears to have gone to Bishop Walter s consistorial court which he held at the chapel of Innerpeffry Here Naomhan and Mairead agreed to accept a payment of 40 marks in exchange for returning the documents of ownership given to them by the abbot and for acknowledging the abbey s ownership The couple pledged to honour the agreement by swearing an oath on the chapel s Gospels 38 The case then proceeded to a hearing held under Robert Stewart Earl of Strathearn and High Steward of Scotland later King Robert II at Perth where the couple were forced under the threat of severe penalties to swear again never to renew their claim 39 The decision was sealed by the witnesses including Bishop Walter at a Perth church on 30 November 1365 40 Final years edit On 13 March 1366 Walter was commissioned by the papacy to authorise dispensation for the irregular marriage between John Stewart Earl of Carrick much later King Robert III and Annabella Drummond 41 Bishop Walter attended at least five meetings of the Scottish national parliament during his episcopate He was present at the Scone parliament of 27 September 1367 which discussed royal revenues and relations with the English crown 42 He was also present at the Scone parliament of June 1368 27 and the Perth parliament of 6 March 1369 the latter discussed royal business relations with the Kingdom of England and the Kingdom of Norway and law and order in the Scottish Highlands Robert Stewart Thomas Earl of Mar Uilleam III Earl of Ross and other Highland lords were ordered to impose greater control in their regions 43 Bishop Walter took part in two parliamentary committees the first a clerical committee devoted to general business and the second a judicial committee authorised to review earlier legal judgments in the kingdom 44 The parliament s discussions on Anglo Scottish relations preceded peace negotiations later in the year at which Bishop Walter was one of the Scottish envoys There was some urgency behind the matter in view of the impending end to the five year Anglo Scottish truce agreed by King Edward III of England on 20 May 1365 45 King David travelled to London where he resided in May and June in order to take part in the negotiations Walter and the rest of the embassy which included four other bishops were in London by June 1369 the month in which Edward agreed to a new truce When it was ratified by the Scots at Edinburgh on 20 July Bishop Walter was again present as a witness 46 Walter attended the Perth parliament of 18 February 1370 and was named as one of the members of a special committee for the deliberation concerning the consideration of common justice 47 He is mentioned for the last time swearing fealty to the new king Robert II at his accession parliament at Scone on 27 March 1371 48 Walter de Coventre must have died later in 1371 or in very early 1372 because on 27 April 1372 the Pope appointed Andrew Magnus to the vacant bishopric of Dunblane 49 Notes edit Grant Independence and Nationhood pp 96 7 Brown Black Douglases p 195 Barrell Papal Provisions p 218 Cockburn Medieval Bishops pp 104 5 Grant Independence and Nationhood p 97 Brown amp Boardman Survival and Revival p 91 See Watt Dictionary passim for details and individual examples A detailed survey although regarding 12th and 13th century England but still relevant can be found in Bartlett England under the Norman and Angevin Kings pp 377 412 See sources listed in Watt Dictionary pp 114 5 a b Watt Dictionary pp 114 5 Cockburn Medieval Bishops pp 104 11 a b Webster David II Oram Kings and Queens pp 118 120 Penman David II p 53 a b Cockburn Medieval Bishops p 105 Watt Dictionary p 114 see also Cowan Parishes p 3 Watt Dictionary pp 113 4 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Watt Dictionary p 114 the Ross and Abernethy benefices are uncertain because they are not known by name but the unique combination cannot very likely be down to coincidence Watt Dictionary pp 113 114 115 Watt Dictionary pp 114 115 Cockburn Medieval Bishops p 105 Dowden Bishops p 204 n 2 Watt Dictionary p 114 Dowden Bishops p 204 n 2 Watt Dictionary p 114 Cockburn Medieval Bishops p 105 Dowden Bishops p 204 n 2 Watt Dictionary pp 114 115 Cowan amp Easson Medieval Religious Houses p 215 See Watt Dictionary s v Coventre William de for details Watt amp Murray Fasti Ecclesiae p 117 Cockburn Medieval Bishops p 105 Watt amp Murray Fasti Ecclesiae p 9 Watt amp Murray Fasti Ecclesiae p 9 a b c d Watt Dictionary p 115 Watt amp Murray Fasti Ecclesiae p 101 Cockburn Medieval Bishops p 104 Dowden Bishops pp 203 4 Watt Dictionary p 114 Watt amp Murray Fasti Ecclesiae p 101 Cockburn Medieval Bishops p 104 Dowden Bishops p 204 Watt Dictionary p 114 Watt amp Murray Fasti Ecclesiae p 101 Innes ed Registrum Episcopatus Glasguensis vol i no 299 pp 265 8 Watt Dictionary p 115 Cockburn Medieval Bishops p 106 Watt Dictionary p 115 Quoted in Cockburn Medieval Bishops p 106 Cockburn Medieval Bishops p 106 Cowan amp Easson Medieval Religious Houses p 213 Latin document can be found at Lindsay et al Charters Bulls and Other Documents no 135 pp 127 30 with English abstract at pp 231 2 an analysis of the case can be found in Cockburn Medieval Bishops pp 108 10 Lindsay et al Charters Bulls and Other Documents p 127 Cockburn Medieval Bishops p 110 Lindsay et al Charters Bulls and Other Documents pp 127 8 Cockburn Medieval Bishops pp 108 9 Lindsay et al Charters Bulls and Other Documents pp 128 30 Cockburn Medieval Bishops p 109 Cockburn Medieval Bishops p 108 Cockburn Medieval Bishops p 111 Brown et al Scone Parliament 1367 9 1 in RPS Date accessed 2 March 2008 Watt Dictionary p 115 Brown et al Perth Parliament 1369 3 5 in RPS Date accessed 2 March 2008 Watt Dictionary p 115 Brown et al Perth Parliament 1369 3 5 in RPS Date accessed 2 March 2008 Penman David II pp 337 381 Cockburn Medieval Bishops p 111 Penman David II pp 384 5 Watt Dictionary p 115 Penman omits Walter from the list of bishops in London but Cockburn and Watt include him RPS 1370 2 3 Date accessed 2 March 2008 Watt Dictionary p 115 Cockburn Medieval Bishops p 111 Dowden Bishops p 204 Watt Dictionary p 115 Watt amp Murray Fasti Ecclesiae p 101 Dowden Bishops p 204 Watt Dictionary p 115 Watt amp Murray Fasti Ecclesiae p 101 he was said in papal documents to have died outside the curia References editBarrell A D M 1999 Papal Provisions in Scotland in the Fourteenth and Early Fifteenth Centuries in Crawford Barbara E ed Church Chronicle and Learning in Medieval Scotland Essays Presented to Donald Watt on the Completion of the Publication of Bower s Scotichronicon Edinburgh Mercat Press pp 215 25 ISBN 1 84183 001 1 Bartlett Robert 2000 England Under the Norman and Angevin Kings 1075 1225 New Oxford History of England Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 0 19 925101 0 Boardman Stephen 1996 The Early Stewart Kings Robert II and Robert III 1371 1406 The Stewart Dynasty in Scotland Series East Linton Tuckwell Press ISBN 1 898410 43 7 Borthwick Alan R MacQueen Hector L 1999 Rare Creatures for their Age Alexander and David Guthrie Graduate Lairds and Royal Servants in Crawford Barbara E ed Church Chronicle and Learning in Medieval Scotland Essays Presented to Donald Watt on the Completion of the Publication of Bower s Scotichronicon Edinburgh Mercat Press pp 227 33 ISBN 1 84183 001 1 Brown Michael 1998 The Black Douglases War and Lordship in Late Medieval Scotland 1300 1455 East Linton Tuckwell Press ISBN 1 86232 036 5 Brown Michael Boardman Steve 2005 Survival and Revival Late Medieval Scotland in Wormald Jenny ed Scotland A History Oxford Oxford University Press pp 77 106 ISBN 0 19 820615 1 Cockburn James Hutchison 1959 The Medieval Bishops of Dunblane and their Church Dunblane Society of Friends of Dunblane Cathedral Cowan Ian B Easson David E 1976 Medieval Religious Houses Scotland With an Appendix on the Houses in the Isle of Man 2nd ed London and New York Longman ISBN 0 582 12069 1 Cowan Ian B 1967 The Parishes of Medieval Scotland Scottish Record Society vol 93 Edinburgh Neill amp Co Ltd Dowden John 1912 Thomson John Maitland ed The Bishops of Scotland Being Notes on the Lives of All the Bishops under Each of the Sees Prior to the Reformation Glasgow James Maclehose and Sons Grant Alexander 1984 Independence and Nationhood Scotland 1306 1469 The New History of Scotland vol 3 London Edward Arnold ISBN 0 7131 6309 7 Innes Cosmo Nelson ed 1843 Registrum Episcopatus Glasguensis Munimenta Ecclesie Metropolitane Glasguensis a Sede Restaurata Seculo Incunte Xii Ad Reformatam Religionem vol i Edinburgh The Bannatyne Club Lindsay William Alexander Dowden John Thomson John Maitland eds 1908 Charters Bulls and Other Documents relating to the Abbey of Inchaffray Chiefly from the Originals in the Charter Chest of the Earl of Kinnoull Publications of the Scottish History Society Volume 56 Edinburgh T and A Constable Oram Richard ed 2001 The Kings and Queens of Scotland Stroud Gloucestershire Tempus Publishing Ltd ISBN 0 7524 1991 9 Penman Michael 2004 David II 1329 71 Edinburgh Tuckwell Press Ltd John Donald ISBN 0 85976 603 9 The Records of the Parliaments of Scotland to 1707 On line database prepared by the Scottish Parliament Project of the University of Saint Andrews Cited as RPS with date Watt D E R 1977 A Biographical Dictionary of Scottish Graduates to A D 1410 Oxford Clarendon Press ISBN 0 19 822447 8 Watt D E R Murray A L eds 2003 Fasti Ecclesiae Scotinanae Medii Aevi ad annum 1638 The Scottish Record Society New Series Volume 25 Revised ed Edinburgh The Scottish Record Society ISBN 0 902054 19 8 ISSN 0143 9448 Webster Bruce 2004 David II 1324 1371 king of Scots Oxford Dictionary of National Biography retrieved 2 March 2008External links editScottish Parliament Project 2007 2015 Records of the Parliaments of Scotland to 1707 St Andrews retrieved 8 March 2015 a href Template Citation html title Template Citation citation a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Catholic Church titles Preceded byGilbert Fleming Annibald de Ceccano provision cancelled Dean of Aberdeen1348 1361 Succeeded byMichael de Monymusk Preceded byWilliam de Cambuslang Bishop of Dunblane1361 1371 or 1372 Succeeded byAndrew Magnus Portals nbsp Biography nbsp Catholicism nbsp Scotland Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Walter de Coventre amp oldid 1182953714, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.