释义 |
‖ scoloc Hist.|ˈskɒləʊk| Also scoloch, scolog. [OIrish scolóc, f. scol school; cf. mod.Irish scológ, scalóg farmer, rustic, and scallag (though these may be of different origin).] (See quots.) Cf. Reg. Dunelm. De Cuthberti Vita (Surtees), p. 179: Clerici illi..qui Pictorum lingua Scollofthes cognominantur.
1852J. Robertson in Spalding Club Miscell. V. Pref. App. 56 Three offices or grades of a scholastic kind—the Scolocs, the Master of the Schools, and the Ferleiginn—obtained in the ancient Scottish Church. Ibid. 59 The Lord Bishop protested..that the heir of every Scolog (‘cujuslibet Scolgi’, ‘cuius Scolagij’) should enter to his heritage by inquest and seisin. 1873Burton Hist. Scot. (ed. 2) I. 399 Researches through the records show that among the Culdees there was a grade of churchman—the humblest, apparently—who was called the scholar. In the Pictish language, as we are told, he was called Scoloch. 1888W. Lockhart Ch. Scot. 13th c. 122 There had been..a deadly feud between two Scolocs or Scologs (clerici scholares). |