Article

Our friend in the north: the origins, evolution and appeal of the cult of St Duthac of Tain in later Middle Ages

Details

Citation

Turpie T (2014) Our friend in the north: the origins, evolution and appeal of the cult of St Duthac of Tain in later Middle Ages. Scottish Historical Review, 93 (1), pp. 1-28. https://doi.org/10.3366/shr.2014.0197

Abstract
St Duthac of Tain was one of the most popular Scottish saints of the later middle ages. From the late fourteenth century until the reformation devotion to Duthac outstripped that of Andrew, Columba, Margaret and Mungo, and Duthac's shrine in Easter Ross became a regular haunt of James IV (1488-1513) and James V (1513-42). Hitherto historians have tacitly accepted the view of David McRoberts that Duthac was one of several local saints whose emergence and popularity in the fifteenth century was part of a wider self-consciously nationalist trend in Scottish religious practice. This study looks beyond the paradigm of nationalism to trace and explain the popularity of St Duthac from the shadowy origins of the cult to its heyday in the early sixteenth century.

Journal
Scottish Historical Review: Volume 93, Issue 1

StatusPublished
Publication date30/04/2014
Date accepted by journal01/09/2012
URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1893/19998
PublisherEdinburgh University Press
ISSN0036-9241

People (1)

People

Dr Tom Turpie

Dr Tom Turpie

Lecturer, History