Tripti Joshi (Editor)

Adam de Darlington

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Church
  
Roman Catholic Church

Successor
  
Andrew

Consecration
  
April 8, 1275

Predecessor
  
Alan de St Edmund

Died
  
1296, Siena, Italy

In office
  
1296

Role
  
Bishop of Caithness

See
  
Diocese of Caithness

Name
  
Adam Darlington


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Bishop of Ross (elect) (1292 × 1295) Precentor of Ross (fl. 1255 × 1271)

Adam de Darlington [Derlingtun] (died 1296) was a 13th-century English churchman based in the Kingdom of Scotland. Adam's name occurred for the first time in a Moray document datable between 1255 and 1271, where he was named as the Precentor of Fortrose Cathedral. He seems to have been introduced into the diocese of Ross, along with others from the north-east of England, by Bishop Robert de Fyvie, who may have been descended from the area.

After the death of Bishop Robert, sometime between 17 November 1292 and 18 November 1295, two elections were conducted by the cathedral chapter of Ross: one elected Precentor Adam and the other elected Thomas de Dundee. Darlington travelled to the papal curia, but on or before 18 November, resigned his right to Dundee.

He did however obtain a bishopric, becoming Bishop of Caithness. On 26 April 1296, as Precentor of Ross he was provided to the Caithness diocese, vacant since the death of Alan de St Edmund in 1291, and consecrated by Hugh Aycelin, Cardinal-Bishop of Ostia. He was not to be bishop long however, perhaps not even long enough to visit his new bishopric. He died at Siena some time before 17 December 1296, when Andrew, Abbot of Coupar Angus, was provided to the now vacant see of Caithness.

References

Adam de Darlington Wikipedia