Edward [Ēadweard, Eadward, Édouard, Étbard] was a 12th-century prelate based in Scotland.
He occurs in the records for the first time as Bishop of Aberdeen in a document datable to some point between 1147 and 1151.
Edward witnessed charters of Kings David I, Máel Coluim IV and William the Lion.
Bishop Edward was the recipient of a Bull, dated 10 August 1157, of Pope Adrian IV, confirming the possessions of the diocese of Aberdeen and authorising the bishop to appoint at his own discretion either monastic or secular canons to staff his cathedral.
His name, Edward, may indicate an Anglo-Norman or even an Anglo-Saxon origin, though this cannot be taken with certainty, as the name was associated with the saintly and famous Normanised English King Edward the Confessor, and had been the name of a son of King Máel Coluim III mac Donnchada.