Léot of Brechin

Scottish abbot
The basics

Quick Facts

IntroScottish abbot
PlacesUnited Kingdom Scotland
isCleric Abbot
Work fieldReligion
Gender
Male
The details

Biography

Léot's name as it appears in the Book of Deer.

Léot of Brechin is the first known Abbot of Brechin. He appears in three charters. The first of these is a Scoto-Latin charter recorded in the notitiae on the Book of Deer, a charter which explicitly dates to "the eighth year of the reign of David" (1131) which styles him "Léot ab Brecini". The second of these is a charter of King David I of Scotland, dated by Archibald Lawrie to 1150, granting the lands of "Nithbren" and "Balcristin" to Dunfermline Abbey, where he is called "Leod abbate de Breichin". The third of these is a charter granted by King David to the church of St. Mary of Haddington dating to 1141 mentions a "Leod de Brechin".

He was almost certainly the father of the first known Bishop of Brechin, Samson.

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