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Patrick Adamson (1537-1592)
Scottish
divine, archbishop of St Andrews, was born at Perth. He studied
philosophy, and took the degree of M.A. at St Andrews. After being
minister of Ceres in Fife for three years, in 1566 he set out
for Paris as tutor to the eldest son of Sir James Macgill, the
clerk-general. In June of the same year he wrote a Latin poem
on the birth of the young prince James, whom he described as serenissimus
princeps of France and England. The French court was offended,
and he was confined for six months. He was released only through
the intercession of Queen Mary of Scotland and some of the principal
nobility, and retired with his pupil to Bourges. He was in this
city at the time of the massacre of St Bartholomew at Paris, and
lived concealed for seven months in a public-house, the aged master
of which, in reward for his charity to a heretic, was thrown from
the roof.
While
in this situation he wrote his Latin poetical version of the book
of Job, and his tragedy of Herod in the same language. In 1572
or 1573 he returned to Scotland, and became minister of Paisley.
In 1575 he was appointed by the General Assembly one of the commissioners
to settle the jurisdiction and policy of the church; and the following
year he was named, with David Lindsay, to report their proceedings
to the earl of Morton, then regent.
In
1576 his appointment as archbishop of St Andrews gave rise to
a protracted conflict with the - Presbyterian party in the Assembly.
He had previously published a catechism in Latin verse dedicated
to the king, a work highly approved even by his opponents, and
also a Latin translation of the Scottish Confession of Faith.
In 1578 he submitted himself to the General Assembly, which procured
him peace for a little time, but next year fresh accusations were
brought against him. He took refuge in St Andrews Castle, where
"a wise woman," Alison Pearson, who was ultimately burned for
witchcraft, cured him of a serious illness.
In
1583 he went as James's ambassador to the court of Elizabeth,
and is said to have behaved rather badly. On his return he took
strong parliamentary measures against Presbyterians, and consequently,
at a provincial synod held at St Andrews in April 1586, he was
accused of heresy and excommunicated, but at the next General
Assembly the sentence was remitted as illegal. In 1587 and 1588,
however, fresh accusations were brought against him, and he was
again excommunicated, though afterwards on the inducement of his
old opponent, Andrew Melville, the sentence was again remitted.
Meanwhile he had published the Lamentations of Jeremiah, and the
book of Revelation in Latin verse, which he dedicated to the king,
complaining of his hard usage. But James was unmoved by his application,
and granted the revenue of his see to the duke of Lennox.
For the rest of his life Adamson was supported by charity; he
died in 1592. His recantation of Episcopacy (1590) is probably
spurious. Adamson was a man of many gifts, learned and eloquent,
but with grave defects of character. His collected works, prefaced
by a fulsome panegyric, in the course of which it is said that
"he was a miracle of nature, and rather seemed to be the immediate
production of God Almighty than born of a woman," were produced
by his son-in-law, Thomas Wilson, in 1619.
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