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Patrick Graham (bishop)

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Bishop of St. Andrews For other men named Patrick Graham, see Patrick Graham (disambiguation).

Patrick Graham
Archbishop of St Andrews
ChurchRoman Catholic Church
ArchdioceseSt Andrews
Appointed15 December 1465
Term ended9 January 1478
PredecessorJames Kennedy
SuccessorWilliam Scheves
Previous post(s)Bishop of Brechin (1463–65)
Personal details
Died1478
Loch Leven, Scotland
ParentsSir William Graham of Kincardine and Lady Mary Stewart

Patrick Graham (died 1478) was a 15th-century Bishop of Brechin and Bishop of St. Andrews; he was also the first Archbishop of St. Andrews.

He was the son of Sir William Graham of Kincardine by Lady Mary Stewart, daughter of King Robert III of Scotland. He was therefore of royal blood, and the half-brother of his predecessor as bishop of St. Andrews, James Kennedy. Before rising to the rank of bishop, Patrick for many years controlled the parish church of Kinneil. Although Patrick paid for the bishopric of Brechin, his election was acknowledged by Pope Pius II, who appointed him to the see sometime before 29 March 1463. However, Patrick was not long bishop of Brechin. On 4 November 1465 Patrick was translated to the bishopric of St. Andrews by Pope Paul II, for which Patrick's proctor, a merchant of Florence called Ricardo de Ricasolis, paid over 3300 gold florins on 29 November the same year.

Patrick became the first Archbishop of St. Andrews when a Bull of Pope Sixtus IV, dated at Rome, 17 August 1472, elevated the bishopric of St. Andrews to archiepiscopal status. Nevertheless, Patrick's individual career was in trouble. The same Pope Sixtus IV ordered an enquiry into Patrick's conduct. He commissioned one John Huseman, Dean of the church of St. Patroclus in Soest in the diocese of Cologne, to investigate charges (of insanity) made against Archbishop Patrick. The result was that Archbishop Patrick was condemned to confine himself to a monastery, residing first at Inchcolm, then Dunfermline, before being imprisoned in Lochleven Castle. He was formally deposed on 9 January 1478 and died later in the year at Loch Leven. He was buried on St. Serf's Inch in Lochleven.

References

  • Dowden, John, The Bishops of Scotland, ed. J. Maitland Thomson, (Glasgow, 1912)
Religious titles
Preceded byGeorge de Schoriswod Bishop of Brechin
1463/1464–1465
Succeeded byJohn Balfour
Preceded byJames Kennedy Bishop of St Andrews
After 17 August 1472,
Archbishop of St Andrews

1465–1478
Succeeded byWilliam Scheves
Academic offices
Preceded byJames Kennedy
Bishop of St Andrews
Chancellor of the University of St Andrews
1465–1478
Succeeded byWilliam Scheves
Archbishop of St Andrews
Bishops and archbishops of St Andrews
Known pre-Norman era bishops
Scoto-Norman era bishops
Pre-Reformation archbishops
Post-Reformation archbishops
Afterwards, see also: Episcopal Archbishops of St Andrews, Bishops of St Andrews, Dunkeld and Dunblane (etc.) & Roman Catholic Archbishops of St Andrews and Edinburgh (etc.)
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