Online Encyclopedia

ANDREW CANT (159o?-1663)

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 207 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ANDREW CANT (159o?-1663)  , a leader of the Scottish
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Covenanters . About 1623 the
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people of
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Edinburgh called him to be their minister, but he was rejected by James I . Ten years later he was minister of Pitsligo in
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Aberdeenshire, a charge which he
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left in 1638 for that of Newbattle in
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Mid-
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Lothian . In
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July of that
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year he went with other commissioners to Aberdeen in the vain attempt to induce the university and the
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presbytery of that city to subscribe the
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National Covenant, and in the following November sat in the general assembly at
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Glasgow which abolished episcopacy in Scotland . In 164o he was
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chaplain to the Scottish army and then settled as minister at Aberdeen . Though a stanch Covenanter, he was a zealous Royalist,preaching before Charles I. in Edinburgh, and stoutly advocating the restoration of the monarchy in the time of the
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Commonwealth . Cant's frequent and bitter attacks on various members of his congregation led in 166o to complaints laid before the magistrates, in consequence of which he resigned his charge . His son Andrew was
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principal of Edinburgh University (1675–1685) .

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