CANT, ANDREW (159o?-1663), a leader of the Scottish Covenanters. About 1623 the people of Edinburgh called him to be their minister, but he was rejected by James I. Ten years later he was minister of Pitsligo in Aberdeenshire, a charge which he left in 1638 for that of Newbattle in Mid-Lothian. In July of that year he went with other commissioners to Aberdeen in the vain attempt to induce the university and the presbytery of that city to subscribe to the National Covenant, and in the following November sat in the general assembly at Glasgow which abolished episcopacy in Scotland. In 164o he was chaplain to the Scottish army and then settled as minister at Aberdeen. He resigned his charge in 166o. Though a staunch Covenanter, he was a zealous Royalist, and advocated the restoration of the monarchy in the time of the Commonwealth. His son Andrew was principal of Edinburgh university (16 7 5-85).