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・ Andreas Christou
・ Andreas Chronis
・ Andreas Chyliński
・ Andreas Claussen
・ Andreas Cleyer
・ Andreas Constantinou
・ Andreas Cornelius
・ Andreas Cratander
・ Andreas Creusen
・ Andreas Dackell
・ Andreas Dahl
・ Andreas Dahlström
・ Andreas Dahlström (ice hockey b. 1991)
・ Andreas Dahlén
・ Andreas de Escobar
Andreas de Moravia
・ Andreas de Nole
・ Andreas de Silva
・ Andreas de Vega
・ Andreas Decker
・ Andreas Deja
・ Andreas Delfs
・ Andreas Demetriou
・ Andreas Derleth
・ Andreas Dibowski
・ Andreas Diebitz
・ Andreas Dietziker
・ Andreas Dippel
・ Andreas Dittmer
・ Andreas Divus


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Andreas de Moravia : ウィキペディア英語版
Andreas de Moravia

Andreas de Moravia (or Andrew of Moray) was a 13th-century Scottish bishop. He may have been from the "de Moravia" family of Flemish origin who were lords of Duffus and other areas in the Greater Moray region in this period. In the time of Bishop Bricius' episcopate (1203–1222), there was a man called "Andreas" who was rector of the church of St. Peter at Duffus, and this may well have been this Andreas. He may also have been a native Scot.
Andreas was elected as Bishop of Ross in 1213. However, he refused to accept the election, and obtained the consent of Pope Innocent III to resign this position. The reasoning can only be speculated. In 1222 though, Andreas did accept election when, after the death of Bricius the same year, he was elected Bishop of Moray. Andreas was still bishop-elect on 12 May 1223, when he is called "bishop-elect" in a papal letter; however, by 10 April 1224, he is being styled "bishop", putting the date of his consecration somewhere between these two dates.
One of Andreas' first acts as bishop must have been to submit a request to the Pope asking to move the seat (Latin: ''cathedra'') of the bishopric from Spynie to Elgin, for on 10 April 1224, the Pope sent Andreas his permission. Andreas' greatest legacy would be Elgin Cathedral, where all medieval bishops of Moray would have their cathedral (although the bishops themselves kept Spynie Palace as their chief personal residence.) On 19 July 1224, the foundation stone of the new Elgin Cathedral was ceremoniously laid with completion sometime after 1242. Andreas, as head of one of Scotland's more important bishoprics, also played a role in Scotland's larger political and religious life. For instance, he witnessed charters of king Alexander II and was the principal consecrator of William de Bondington as Bishop of Glasgow.
A letter from Pope Gregory IX, dated to 13 April 1231, instructs the dean and chapter of Moray that elections to the bishopric should be free. This suggests that the clergy of Moray had some reason to fear Bishop Andreas death, and that perhaps Andreas was ill. No death occurred for another decade, because the bishop died late in the year 1242. He was buried in the south side of the choir under a large blue marble stone.〔Keith, ''Historical Catalogue'', p.138.〕
==Notes==


抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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