Sunday, January 11, 2015

January 1633 A.D. Scottish Episcopal Diocese of Edinburgh


January 1633 A.D.  Scottish Episcopal Diocese of Edinburgh

Scottish Episcopal Diocese of Edinburgh

The Bishop of Edinburgh is the Ordinary of the Scottish Episcopal Diocese of Edinburgh.

The see was founded in 1633 by King Charles I. William Forbes was consecrated in St. Giles' Cathedral as its first bishop on 23 January 1634 though he died later that year. The General Assembly of 1638 deposed Bishop David Lindsay and all the other bishops, so the next, George Wishart, was consecrated in 1662 after the Restoration. In 1690 it was Bishop Alexander Rose (1687–1720) whose unwelcome reply to King William III led to the disestablishment of the Scottish Episcopalians as Jacobite sympathisers, and it was he who led his congregation from St. Giles to a former wool store as their meeting house, on the site now occupied by Old Saint Paul's Church.

After the repeal of the penal laws in 1792 and the reuniting of Episcopal and 'Qualified' congregations, the Diocese grew under the leadership of Bishops Daniel Sandford, James Walker, C.H. Terrot and Henry Cotterill. The high point of the 19th Century was the consecration of St Mary’s Cathedral in 1879.

The current Bishop is The Right Revd Dr John Armes. He became Bishop-elect of Edinburgh on 11 February 2012[1] and was consecrated and installed as Bishop on 12 May 2012.[2]

Contents 



List of bishops


http://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/thumb/7/73/John_Dowden.JPG/220px-John_Dowden.JPG

John Dowden, Irish historian of the Scottish church, and bishop of Edinburgh

Church of Scotland bishops.[3][4][5]


Scottish Episcopal Church bishops.[6][7][8]


See also



References




3.       Jump up ^ Keith 1824, An Historical Catalogue of the Scottish Bishops, pp.60–72.

4.       Jump up ^ Scott 1928, Fasti Ecclesae Scoticanae, volume 7, pp.341–343.

5.       Jump up ^ Fryde et al. 1986, Handbook of British Chronology, p. 309.

6.       Jump up ^ Keith 1824, An Historical Catalogue of the Scottish Bishops, pp.524–530.

7.       Jump up ^ Skinner 1818, Annals of Scottish Episcopacy, pp.533–538.

8.       Jump up ^ Bertie 2000, Scottish Episcopal Clergy, p.561.

Bibliography



External links


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