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Diocese of Dunkeld

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Head
  
Bishop of Dunkeld

First attestation
  
865 x 1114

Dedication
  
Columba

Archdeacon(s)
  
Archdeacon of Dunkeld

Metropolitan before 1472
  
None

Cathedral
  
Dunkeld Cathedral

Diocese of Dunkeld

Known rural deans
  
Angus (Rattray); Atholl; Drumalban; Fife & Fothriff; Lothian; Strathearn

Metropolitan after 1492
  
Archbishop of Glasgow (until 1515) Archbishop of St Andrews (after 1515)

Novena day 2 diocese of dunkeld


The Diocese of Dunkeld was one of the 13 historical dioceses of Scotland preceding the abolition of Episcopacy in 1689.

Contents

History

It is thought that the diocese was constituted as far back as the middle of the ninth century. The first occupant was styled Bishop of Fortriu, the name by which the kingdom of the northern Picts was then known. This bishop was also styled Abbot of Dunkeld, perhaps holding jurisdiction, formerly enjoyed by Iona, over the other Columban monasteries in Scotland.

The new bishopric appears to have included a great part of what afterwards became the Diocese of Argyll, and retained its jurisdiction over various churches representing old Columban foundations. There were thirty-five bishops of Dunkeld from its foundation until the suppression of the Catholic hierarchy during the Protestant Reformation in the sixteenth century.

The pre-Reformation cathedral, situated in the Perthshire town of Dunkeld, was erected between 1220 and 1500. After the Reformation the cathedral fell partly into ruins, although the choir is used for Presbyterian worship.

Despite the Reformation and the hostility of the new Church of Scotland to bishops, episcopacy was not finally abolished until 1689, although there had been a temporary abolition from 1638 until the beginning of the 1660s. The diocese was restored by the Catholic Church (with a different boundary), on 4 March 1878, by Pope Leo XIII. The new Roman Catholic Diocese of Dunkeld is one of the suffragan sees of the archiepiscopal province of St. Andrews and Edinburgh, and includes the counties of Perth, Angus, Clackmannan, Kinross, and the northern part of Fife. The diocesan cathedral, now dedicated to Saint Andrew rather than Columba, is located in Dundee, the residence of the great majority of the Catholics of the modern diocese. The cathedral chapter, erected in 1895, consists of a provost and eight canons.

Deanery/ies of Angus (or Rattray)

  1. Abernyte
  2. Auchterhouse
  3. Fern
  4. Menmuir
  5. Tealing

Deanery of Atholl and Drumalban

  1. Alyth
  2. Ardeonaig
  3. Auchtergaven
  4. Bendochy
  5. Blair (now Blair Atholl)
  6. Cargill
  7. Clunie
  8. Dull
  9. Dunkeld Cathedral
  10. Fortingall
  11. Dunkeld, Holy Trinity
  12. Inchcadin (now Kenmore)
  13. Killin
  14. Kilmaveonaig
  15. Kinclaven
  16. Lethendy
  17. Little Dunkeld
  18. Logie Allochie (now Lagganallachy)
  19. Logiebride
  20. Logierait
  21. Lude
  22. Lundeiff (now Kinloch)
  23. Meigle
  24. Melginch (now St. Martins)
  25. Moneydie
  26. Moulin
  27. Rannoch (or Killichonen)
  28. Rattray
  29. Redgorton
  30. Ruthven
  31. Strathardle (now or Kirkmichael)
  32. Struan
  33. Weem

Deanery of Fife and Fothriff

  1. Aberdour
  2. Auchtertool
  3. Crombie
  4. Dalgety
  5. Fithkil (now Leslie)
  6. Rosyth
  7. Saline
  8. Strathmiglo

Deanery of Lothian

  1. Abercorn
  2. Aberlady
  3. Bunkle
  4. Cramond
  5. Preston

Deanery of Strathearn

  1. Aberdalgie
  2. Alva
  3. Crieff
  4. Dollar
  5. Forgrund (or Forgandenny)
  6. Lecropt
  7. Madderty
  8. Muckersie
  9. Tibbermore

References

Diocese of Dunkeld Wikipedia