. Bishop Hepburn's armour is the one on the bottom left. After the death of
Alexander Stewart,
Bishop of Moray and
Commendator of Scone, Patrick was given crown nomination to succeed to both positions on 1 March 1538. He was provided by the Papacy on 14 June, on the condition he should resign the commend of
St Andrews Cathedral Priory. Hepburn's episcopate is remembered as notorious for the dilapidation with which his dominions suffered. A huge percentage of his diocese was leased out, and in 1547
Scone Abbey itself went on a 19-year lease to one John Erskine of Dun. Meanwhile, Bishop Hepburn enjoyed an extravagant lifestyle. As early as 1529, when Hepburn was Commendator-Prior of St Andrews, Alexander Alesius, a
canon of this Hepburn's own priory was preaching against Hepburn's ungodly lifestyle. Nevertheless, Bishop Hepburn did play an important part in Scottish politics of the 1540s and 1550s. Though he was part of the
privy council of the Governor of Scotland,
James Hamilton,
Earl of Arran (after 1548,
Duke of Châtellerault), he nevertheless opposed Arran's wish to have the young
Mary, Queen of Scots, put in English custody. In this he was supporting the staunchly anti-Protestant Cardinal
David Beaton. The Bishop of Moray was in attendance at the provincial council of the Scottish church in 1549, an attempt to reform the church internally without abandoning links with
Rome. He was present at the burnings of Protestant heretics/martyrs in 1550 and 1558. ==Hepburn and the Reformation==