Gavin Dunbar (bishop of Aberdeen)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Gavin Dunbar
Bishop of Aberdeen
ChurchRoman Catholic
DioceseAberdeen
In office1518–1532
PredecessorAlexander Gordon
SuccessorWilliam Stewart
Orders
Consecration20 February 1519
Personal details
Died10 March 1532
St Andrews, Scotland
BuriedSt Machar's Cathedral
Previous post(s)Archdeacon of St Andrews
Dean of Moray

Gavin Dunbar (died 1532) was a 16th-century bishop of Aberdeen. He was the son of Sir Alexander Dunbar of Westfield, near Elgin and Elizabeth Sutherland, apparently a daughter of Alexander Sutherland, Laird of Duffus. Gavin Dunbar, Archbishop of Glasgow, was his nephew.

Life[edit]

He was born in Westfield, near Elgin around 1455.[1]

Stained glass window to Gavin Dunbar, St Machar's Cathedral
The grave of Bishop Gavin Dunbar, St Machar's Cathedral

In 1475 he received a master's degree from the University of St Andrews, and went on to become Dean of Moray by, if not before, 1487. In 1500 he was clerk of the Register, and in 1504 King James IV presented him archdeacon of the diocese of St Andrews. In 1507 Gavin was sent on a diplomatic mission to Louis XII of France with Antoine d'Arces[2] They sailed on the Treasurer, but on his return the ship was wrecked and he was captured on the orders of Henry VII of England. He was returned to Scotland, arriving at Edinburgh by November 1508.[3] He became bishop when he was provided to the see of Aberdeen in 1518. He was consecrated the following year. He set about major rebuilding and extension of St Machar's Cathedral.

Seal of Bishop Gavin Dunbar.

Dunbar's career saw the creation of a huge number of minor ecclesiastical establishments, including two chaplaincies in Elgin Cathedral, a hospital in the Chanonry, Old Aberdeen and an altar dedicated to St Katherine in the Aberdeen Cathedral. To the cathedral, Bishop Dunbar added many structures, including the new south transept. Dunbar was famous for his wisdom and knowledge of the Arts.

Portrait and plaque to Gavin Dunbar in St Machar's Cathedral

He died at St Andrews on 10 March 1532, and was buried in the south transept of St Machar's Cathedral in Old Aberdeen. Due to curtailment of the church the actual grave is now external, within an enclosure made of the original lower eastern walls. A partial replica has been made internally but is not the grave.

References[edit]

  1. ^ "Gavin Dunbar, Bishop of Aberdeen". 20 November 2023.
  2. ^ Accounts of the Lord High Treasurer of Scotland, vol. 3 (Edinburgh, 1901), pp. lxvi–lxvii, 334, 338, 347.
  3. ^ Norman Macdougall, James IV (Tuckwell: East Linton, 1997), p. 255.
  • Dowden, John, The Bishops of Scotland, ed. J. Maitland Thomson, Glasgow, (1912)
  • Ray McAleese, Bishop Gavin Dunbar: Nobleman, Statesman, Catholic Bishop, Administrator and Philanthropist. ed. by Walter R. H. Duncan, Friends of St Machar, Occasional Publications, Series 2, No. 7 (Aberdeen: Friends of St Machar, 2013), pp. 40.
Political offices
Preceded by Keeper of the Great Seal of Scotland
1525–1558
Succeeded by
Religious titles
Preceded by Bishop of Aberdeen
1518/9–32
Succeeded by