Published online by Cambridge University Press: 01 January 2020
In September 1507, James IV of Scotland issued a licence to the Edinburgh printers Chepman and Millar to produce, among other books, mass books, manuals, matin books and breviaries ‘efter our awin Scottis use’. This same licence (see Appendix 1) prescribes that these new books be used throughout Scotland and that all imports according to Salisbury use be banned. This Scottish use, therefore, was considered to be a separate entity – but what was it?
1 Edinburgh University Library, MS La III 346, I am grateful to Dr J. T D Hall of the Special Collections Department, Edinburgh University Library, for help in locating this letter See also Brevianum Aberdonense, ed David Laing (Edinburgh, 1855), Preface, x, and Miscellany of the Spalding Club, li, ed James Stuart (Aberdeen, 1842), 364–7Google Scholar
2 Scottish Exhibition of Natural History, Art, and Industry Palace of History, Catalogue of Exhibits (Glasgow, 1911), 1048Google Scholar
3 McRoberts, David, ‘The Medieval Scottish Liturgy Illustrated by Surviving Documents’, Transactions of the Scottish Ecclesiological Society, 15/i (1957), 34–5.Google Scholar
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9 Stuart, John, Third Marquis of Bute, The Arms of the Royal and Parliamentary Burghs of Scotland (Edinburgh, 1897), 61 and 107–8Google Scholar
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12 Charters of the Abbey of Inchcolm, ed David E. Easson and Angus Macdonald (Edinburgh, 1938), 21–2, no XXIIGoogle Scholar
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16 Cowan, Ian B, ‘The Post-Columban Church’, Records of the Scottish Church History Society, 18 (1972–4), 257.Google Scholar
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21 Registrum Episcopatus Aberdonensis, ed Cosmo Innes (Edinburgh, 1845), n, 135Google Scholar
22 Ibid, 137Google Scholar
23 Registrum Capellae Regtae Strivelinensis, ed Charles Rogers, published in same volume as Charles Rogers, History of the Chapel Royal of Scotland (Edinburgh, 1882) Registrum, p 78 (4 November 1505) ‘Item unum uolumen uocatum ordinarium secundum vsum Sarum in pergamino cum penna scriptum’Google Scholar
24 Francis C Eeles, ‘The Inventory of the Chapel Royal at Stirling, 1505’, Transactions of the Scottish Ecclesiological Society, iii (1909–12), 316.Google Scholar
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29 Ibid, 80–1 ‘Cantus alius commendabilis etiam est, ubi litera una intelligitur cum nota, quo in genere sunt missae illius deuotissimi et religiosissimi uiri abbatis sancti Columbae, ordinis nostri totius in Scotia specimen singulare et illius uenerabilis uiri domini Alexandri Patersonen sacrarij Regalis collegij Stirlingen quae non minus deuotionem accedunt, quam bonum delectationem’Google Scholar
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31 Edinburgh University Library, MS 27, f 478v (mutilated)Google Scholar
32 Easson and Macdonald, Charters of the Abbey of Inchcolm, 22–3, no. XXIII.Google Scholar
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34 Ibid., 467 (lib. xv, cap. xxxviii).Google Scholar
35 Laing. Breviarium Aberdonense. pars estiva, f. civ. 36 Ibid.Google Scholar
37 Vir angelice vite angelorum, ibid, f ciivGoogle Scholar
38 Antiphonale Sarisburiense, ed Walter H Frere (Farnborough, 1966), 139Google Scholar
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41 Bruno Stäblein, ‘Zwei Melodien der Altirischen Liturgie’, Musica Scientiae Collectanea Festschrift Karl Gustav Feilerer zum 70 Geburstag, ed Heinrich Huschen (Cologne, 1973), 590–7Google Scholar
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