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Encyclopedia > Andrew of Wyntoun

Andrew of Wyntoun (?1350-?1420), author of a long metrical history of Scotland, called the Orygynale Cronykil of Scotland, was a canon regular of St Andrews, and prior of St Serf's in Lochieven.


He wrote the Chronicle at the request of his patron, Sir John of Wemyss, whose representative, Mr Erskine Wemyss of Wemyss Castle, Fife, possesses the oldest extant manuscript of the work. The subject is the history of Scotland from the mythical period (hence the epithet "original") down to the accession of James I in 1406. The earlier books are of no historical value, but the later have in all outstanding matters stood the test of comparison with contemporary records. The philological interest is great, for few works of this date, and no other of like magnuitude, are extant in the vernacular.


The text is preserved in eight manuscripts, of which three are in the British Library, the Royal (17 D xx.), the Cottonian (Nero D. xi.) and the Lansdowne (197); two in the Advocates' library, Edinburgh (1923 and 1924), one at Wemyss Castle (u.s.); one in the university library at St Andrews, and one, formerly in the possession of the Boswells of Auchinleck, later the property of Mr John Ferguson, Duns, Berwickshire. The first edition of the Chronicle (based on the Royal manuscript) was published by David Macpherson in 1795, the second by David Laing, in the series of "Scottish Historians" (1872). Both are superseded by the elaborate edition by Mr Amours for the Scottish Text Society (1906).


This article incorporates text from the public domain 1911 Encyclopędia Britannica.






  Results from FactBites:
 
§15. Andrew of Wyntoun’s "Orygynale Cronykil". V. The Earliest Scottish Literature. Vol. 2. The End of the ... (939 words)
Andrew of Wyntoun, who wrote his chronicle in Barbour’s couplet and in the Scottish tongue, was an older contemporary of Walter Bower.
Wyntoun would not have been the child of his age and training did not the early part of his history contain many marvels.
When Wyntoun arrives at the Christian dispensation and the era of the saints, it is only natural that he should dwell with satisfaction on the achievements of St. Serf, to whom his own priory was dedicated.
Andrew of Wyntoun (554 words)
He is conjectured to have been related to Alan of Wyntoun, who married the heiress of Seton, and is now represented by the Earl of Eglinton and Winton.
He became a canon-regular of the priory of St. Andrews, and before 1395 was appointed prior of the ancient monastery of Lochleven, in Kinross-schire, which was a subject house of St. Andrews for upwards of four hundred years (see LOCHLEVEN).
Andrew Lang credits Wyntoun with "a trace of the critical spirit, displayed in his wrestlings with feigned genealogies"; but Æneas Mackay does him more justice in pointing out that he understands the importance of chronology, and is, for the age in which he wrote, wonderfully accurate as to dates.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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