Andrew witnessed, as a vassal of King Edward III of England, Edward Balliol’s resignation of all rights to the Scottish crown at Roxburgh on 20 January 1356.[8]
King Robert III gave to the abbey the wealthy properties of the nuns of Southberwick in compensation for the destruction of the abbey by Richard II in 1385.[9]
Last abbot to have his provision without challenge and first documentary evidence of alienation of abbey property.[10]
John (IV) Crawford
1477–1482
James III
Papal confirmation of his appointment in 1477. He tried to regain some of the properties alienated by his predecessor.[11]
Hugh Douglas
1477x1482
James III
Challenged Crawford\’s abbacy in 1477 and was successful in gaining provision to the abbey but then was expelled from the convent. In 1482 Douglas counter-challenged Crawford but in that same year and before the claim could be heard, Crawford died. Douglas thereby successfully gained the abbacy but then he died before the bulls of provision could be produced.[11]
Lidderdale was a secular canon and received the provision in September 1482 on condition that within 3 months he would become a Premonstratensian. He resigned in October in favour of Thomas Hay.[11]
Thomas (IV) Hay
1482
James III
Hay was unable to secure the abbacy and Lidderdale stayed in position.[11]
John (V) Fenton
1483
James III
A group of canons elected Fenton, a Dryburgh canon, arguing that Lidderdale had failed to adopt the Premonstratensian habit. He was soon imprisoned by the followers of David Dinac.[11]
David (II) Dinac
1483
James III
Managed to hold the abbacy for a few months but the provision was rejected by the pope in favour of John Fenton. Nothing is known thereafter of Fenton and it appears that Lidderdale continued in office until December 1508 when he was deprived of the abbey; he did, however, receive a pension from the abbey\’s income. The canons elected David Finlayson and nominated him to James IV.[12]
David (III) Finlayson
1509
James IV
King James IV did not approve the appointment. Instead, Andrew Forman became the first commendator of the abbey.[13]
Pluralist and diplomat. Received the temporalities of the abbey in August 1516 and died in 1518.[14]
David Hamilton
1519–1523
James V
Was bishop of Argyll (1497–1523) and had tried to obtain the commend of Glenluce Abbey in a protracted appeal at Rome. Hamilton had formerly given up his claim by 1519 when he was provided to Dryburgh.[15]
Nominated by King James V in November 1539 but provision only granted in 1541 presumably due to the dispute of provision with Robert Waucope. Waucope was a secular cleric in the archbishopric of Armagh and prosecuted his claim to the abbacy of Dryburgh until his appointment as archbishop of Armagh in 1545. King James refused to allow him to the temporalities of the abbey.[17]
Succeeded his father as Lord Erskine, and later awarded the Earldom of Mar. John resigned the commend in 1556 to David Erskine, an illegitimate son of his brother, Robert. Later served as Regent of Scotland, September 1571 – 29 October 1572.[17]
Responsible for large-scale alienation of the abbey lands, David Erskine was also Commendator of Inchmahome, as well as one of James VI’s four preceptors or tutors. Involved in the Raid of Ruthven when the young King James was kidnapped, he was forced to flee to England following the failure of the Gowrie regime, forfeiting the commend of Dryburgh to William Stewart of Caverston in 1584, and that of Inchmahome to Henry Stewart. Received back into favour by James in 1585, his forfeitures were returned to him. He oversaw the end of Dryburgh Abbey as a working monastery; records show that though there were canons at the abbey in 1581, these had all died by 1600. In 1604, he resigned the commend of Dryburgh to his relative Henry Erskine, Master of Cardross, the son of John Erskine, Earl of Mar.[18]
Although the lands had all been transferred into the Lordship of Cardross, Erskine retained the title until his death in 1628.[19]
Notes
^ abCampbell, Archibald Lawrie, Annals of the Reigns of Malcolm and William, Kings of Scotland, A.D. 1153 – 1214, p. 219
^Liber S. Marie de Dryburgh, Bannatine Club, Edinburgh, 1847, p. xii
^Fawcett, Richard & Oram, Richard, Dryburgh Abbey, Stroud, 2005, p. 16
^Liber S. Marie de Dryburgh, Bannatyne Club, Edinburgh, 1847, p. xiii
^Fawcett, Richard & Oram, Richard, Dryburgh Abbey, Stroud, 2005, p. 20
^Fawcett, Richard & Oram, Richard, Dryburgh Abbey, Stroud, 2005, p. 22
^Liber S. Marie de Dryburgh, Bannatine Club, Edinburgh, 1847, p. xiv
^Fawcett, Richard & Oram, Richard, Dryburgh Abbey, Stroud, 2005, p. 25
^Liber S. Marie de Dryburgh, Bannatine Club, Edinburgh, 1847, p. xv
^Fawcett, Richard & Oram, Richard, Dryburgh Abbey, Stroud, 2005, p. 29
^ abcdeFawcett, Richard & Oram, Richard, Dryburgh Abbey, Stroud, 2005, p. 30
^Fawcett, Richard & Oram, Richard, Dryburgh Abbey, Stroud, 2005, pp. 30, 31
^Fawcett, Richard & Oram, Richard, Dryburgh Abbey, Stroud, 2005, p. 31
^ abFawcett, Richard & Oram, Richard, Dryburgh Abbey, Stroud, 2005, pp. 31, 32
^Fawcett, Richard & Oram, Richard, Dryburgh Abbey, Stroud, 2005, pp. 32, 33
^Fawcett, Richard & Oram, Richard, Dryburgh Abbey, Stroud, 2005, p. 33
^ abFawcett, Richard & Oram, Richard, Dryburgh Abbey, Stroud, 2005, p. 35
^ abFawcett, Richard & Oram, Richard, Dryburgh Abbey, Stroud, 2005, p. 36
^Fawcett, Richard & Oram, Richard, Dryburgh Abbey, Stroud, 2005, p. 37
Bibliography
Campbell, Archibald Lawrie, Annals of the Reigns of Malcolm and William, Kings of Scotland, A.D. 1153 – 1214
Fawcett, Richard & Oram, Richard, Dryburgh Abbey, Stroud, 2005 ISBN0-7524-3439-X
Spottiswood, Liber S. Marie de Dryburgh, Bannatine Club, Edinburgh, 1847
Watt, D.E.R. & Shead, N.F. (eds.), The Heads of Religious Houses in Scotland from the 12th to the 16th Centuries, The Scottish Records Society, New Series, Volume 24, (Edinburgh, 2001), p. 58-62