Hugh de Roxburgh
Scottish bishop
Hugh (or Hugo) de Roxburgh (or Hugo Cancellarius) was a late 12th century Chancellor of Scotland and bishop of Glasgow. He was rector of Tullibody and later Archdeacon of St. Andrews.[1] He was elected to the see soon after the death of his predecessor Jocelin. However, it is probable that he was not consecrated, because he died on 10 July 1199, less than four months after his election. He was buried at Jedburgh Abbey.
Political offices | ||
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Preceded by Roger de Beaumont | Chancellor of Scotland 1188–1199 | Succeeded by William de Malveisin |
Religious titles | ||
Preceded by Jocelin | Bishop of Glasgow elect. 1199 | Succeeded by William de Malveisin |
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Bishops and Archbishops of Glasgow
Pre-Reformation Bishops
(c 1055–1492)
(c 1055–1492)
- Magsuen
- John Scotus
- Michael of Glasgow
- John Capellanus
- Herbert of Selkirk
- Enguerrand
- Jocelin
- Hugh de Roxburgh
- William de Malveisin
- Florence of Holland
- Walter Capellanus
- William de Bondington
- Nicholas de Moffat
- John de Cheam
- Nicholas de Moffat
- William Wishart
- Robert Wishart
- Stephen de Dunnideer
- John de Lindsay
- John de Egglescliffe
- John Wishart
- William Rae
- Walter Wardlaw
- Matthew de Glendonwyn
- William de Lauder
- John Cameron
- James Bruce
- William Turnbull
- Andrew de Durisdeer
- John Laing
- George Carmichael
- Robert Blackadder
Pre-Reformation Archbishops
(1492–1560)
(1492–1560)
- Robert Blackadder
- James Beaton (elder)
- Gavin Dunbar
- Alexander Gordon
- James Beaton (younger)
Post-Reformation Archbishops
(1560–1689)
(1560–1689)
- James Beaton (younger)
- John Porterfield
- James Boyd of Trochrig
- Robert Montgomery
- William Erskine
- James Beaton (younger)
- John Spottiswoode
- James Law
- Patrick Lindsay
- Andrew Fairfoul
- Alexander Burnet
- Robert Leighton
- Alexander Burnet
- Arthur Rose
- Alexander Cairncross
- John Paterson
Modern Roman Catholic Archbishops
(1878–present)
(1878–present)
- Charles Eyre
- John Maguire
- Donald Mackintosh
- Donald Campbell
- James Scanlan
- Thomas Winning
- Mario Conti
- Philip Tartaglia
- William Nolan
References
- ^ McClintock, John; Strong, James (1887). Cyclopaedia of Biblical, Theological, and Ecclesiastical Literature (volume II (CO-Z) ed.). New York: Harper. p. 807. Retrieved 22 July 2017.
- Anderson, Alan Orr, Early Sources of Scottish History: AD 500–1286, 2 Vols, (Edinburgh, 1922), vol. ii, p. 305
- Dowden, John, The Bishops of Scotland, ed. J. Maitland Thomson, (Glasgow, 1912), pp. 299–300