Publisher's Synopsis
Excerpt from The Brus: From a Collation of the Cambridge and Edinburgh Manuscripts
It is certain that, at the period of these safe conducts, the Archdeacon of Aberdeen was not a mere youth, promoted prematurely to an ecclesi astical office while incapable of discharging its duties. In 1357, the year of the earliest of his passports, J ohn, Archdeacon of Aberdeen, was named by the Bishop of his diocese one of his three proxies to attend that im portant national Council, which voted the large funds for the ransom of David from his English prison. We must conclude, then, that in 1357, J ohn Barbour, a Scotchman of no noble family, holding a dignity and judicial othee in the Church, and attending Parliament as a proxy for his Bishop, was a man of mature age; and yet he appears then to have begun, and to have continued for eleven years, a course of study in foreign uni versities, - an advantage which his own country could not yet a?'ord him.
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