Alexander Monro (educator)
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Alexander Monro (1648–1698) was the
Life
Monro was fourth son of Isobel, daughter of Robert Munro, 6th of Coul, 5th of Balconie, and her husband, Hugh Munro, 4th laird of Fyresh. He was the first of his branch of the family to spell his name Monro as opposed to Munro. He studied for the Church at
He was ordained as a minister in the Church of Scotland in 1673, and on 7 April 1673 he was admitted to the second charge in Dunfermline, housed in Dunfermline Abbey. On 26 March 1676 he was translated to Kinglassie in Fife and on 26 April 1678 was translated to the parish of Wemyss. He resigned before March, 1683 having been nominated as Professor of Divinity at St Mary's College, St Andrews by the then Chancellor Archbishop James Sharp of St Andrews. From 1682 to 1685 he was Principal of the University of St Andrews. In February 1682 he was awarded an honorary Doctor of Divinity (DD) by the University of St Andrews.
On 9 December 1685 Alexander Monro was appointed Principal of the
On 20 September 1690 he was formally deprived of his Principalship by the Committee of Visitors (which had been appointed by Act of Parliament in July 1690 with wide-ranging powers while visiting Universities, Colleges and Schools). The reason given was his disapproval of the Revolution Settlement (see Glorious Revolution) as a nonjuror. In addition he was accused of Socinianism and Arminianism. After his resignations in 1690 he acted as a minister for an Episcopalian congregation in Edinburgh for about two years. Subsequently, he moved to London in 1691, living in or near Swallow Street. He died in London in 1698, aged 50.
Works
Monro wrote a work in defence of his faith called An Enquiry into the New Opinions (chiefly) Propagated by the Presbyterians of Scotland; Together with some Animadversions on a Late Book entitled 'A defense of the Vindications of the Kirk'; in a Letter to a Friend at Edinburgh. This prompted his successor as Principal of the University of Edinburgh, Gilbert Rule, to respond with a book called The Good Old Way Defended.
Family
Monro married firstly Anna Logan on 6 May 1673; she came from Aberdour in Fife and died on 16 May 1674 a few weeks after childbirth. Together they had one daughter, Anna Monro; born 19 March 1674 in Dunfermline, died 1688.[1]
Monro married secondly Marion Collace on 11 April 1676 at Inverkeithing. She was the daughter, it is believed, of Rev. Andrew Collace, who served as minister of Garvoch (1615), of St Cyres (1617), and of Dundee (1635–39). She survived her husband by 17 years, remaining in London. Their children were
- Elizabeth Monro; born 26 June 1677; married her cousin Capt. George Papley.
- David Monro; born 1679, in Wemyss manse; died young.
- Bethlem Hospital).
- Margaret, James' twin
- Five daughters dying in infancy or early youth and all before 1690.
References
- ^ Fasti Ecclesiae Scoticanae; by Hew Scott
Sources
- History of the Munros of Fowlis by Alexander Mackenzie, privately published, 1898, Inverness. A copy of this book was in the library of the University of Edinburgh.