The exact date of the Society's foundation is unknown, as many records were destroyed in a fire at the city's Record Office in 1721. Their earliest written record refers to a member named Alexander Paip, a member admitted in 1549, but the foundation of the
University of Aberdeen by
Bishop Elphinstone as a School of Law in 1495 suggests there was a local legal community before then. Outside of the Society's own records the earliest known reference was in a pardon signed by
James VI and I in 1588 which refers to Patrick Cheyne an "Advocate in Aberdeen", who had been a member of the Society since 1570. In 1633 the Sheriff Principal passed an act designating sixteen "ordinary advocates and procurators of the court" as the only persons entitled to conduct judicial proceedings. Thereafter, this body controlled the admission of applicants to legal practice. As a result, those seeking to join the legal profession were required to be Members of the Society, until the Law Agents (Scotland) Act 1873 removed the exclusive right of Society Members to appear in the local courts. The Society was granted its first
Royal charter in 1774 by
George III, who granted a second in 1799. A third was granted by
Queen Victoria in 1862. In 1782 the Society agreed in a General Meeting that classes in Scots Law should be taught in Aberdeen, rather than requiring aspiring legal practitioners to travel to Edinburgh. After some time, arrangements were made for a lecturer from the Society to conduct classes in 'Scotch' law. The
University of Aberdeen later commended the Society's role in protecting the study of Law through the 19th century; stating the Faculty of Law there may have ceased to exist if not for the Society of Advocates' efforts. The Society's library was founded in 1787 and now holds a remarkable collection of legal volumes, though the oldest book in its collection is
Henry Savile's Rerum Anglicarum scriptores post Bedam (London, 1596). Like many professions, the practice of law in Scotland was traditionally restricted to men. While the
Sex Disqualification (Removal) Act 1919 removed this barrier, it wasn't until 1962 that the first female Member of the Society, Elizabeth Barnett of the firm A C Morrison & Richards, was admitted. In 2011, Elizabeth J W Mackinnon was elected to lead the Society as its first female President. In 1996, as part of the Spring issue of the Aberdeen University Review, the Society's then Executive Secretary and Librarian, Dorothea Bruce, published a brief history of the Society. == Use of the title Advocate in Aberdeen ==