(Redirected from Gilla Aldan of Whithorn)'Gille Aldan' or 'Gilla Aldan' (Gaelic: "Servant of Saint Aldwin[e]") of
Whithorn, was a
native Galwegian who was the first
Bishop of the resurrected
Bishopric of Whithorn or
Galloway. He was the first to be consecrated by the
Archbishop of York, who at that time was
Thurstan. The re-creation of the Bishopric suited both the ruler of Galloway,
Fergus, and the
Archbishop, who had few
suffragans and needed more in order to maintain his independence from
Canterbury.
We have the record of a mandate by
Pope Honorius II, dating to December in
1128, confirming that Gille Aldan should seek consecration from Thurstan. Richard Oram argues that the creation of the Bishopric of Whithorn probably encouraged the wrath and enmity of Bishop
Wimund of the
Isles, who seems to have regarded the area as his natural area of authority.
William of Newburgh records that Wimund made an attack on another Bishop in order to extort tribute. If Oram is correct, and his victim was in fact Gilla Aldan, then this attack would make perfect sense, as Wimund's See was the obvious loser out of the deal done between Fergus and York.
Gilla Aldan's name is recorded for the last time in
1151, when he was told by
Pope Eugene III to give homage to the new Archbishop of York,
Henry Murdac. We know that Gille Aldan was dead by
1154, because in that year his successor
Christian was consecrated.
Reference
★ Oram, Richard, ''The Lordship of Galloway'', (Edinburgh, 2000), pp. 164-76