Wrong (as so often):
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Faculty_of_Advocates
[/i]'The Faculty of Advocates is a constituent part of the College of Justice and is based in Edinburgh.'[/i]
The word "college" has a few meanings so you can't assume it means it is the same as an educational establishment similar to one of hundreds of colleges or universities in the UK.
Created in 1532, the role of the College of Justice was to be a permanent body to administer justice in Scotland. It may be said to consist of the Supreme Courts judges (senators), Faculty of Advocates, writers to the signet (a society of solicitors), solicitors to the Supreme Courts, macers (the court officer who carried a mace before the judges) and Supreme Courts staff.
These bodies serve a different purpose from universities - the College of Justice deals with deciding on and administering important legal matters that affect how the country is run and which therefore potentially impacts the lives of a few million people.
The Faculty of Advocates as part of the College of Justice, is the single professional body that regulates and disciplines Advocates (the Scottish equivalent of barristers) which puts it in a different category from one of hundreds of colleges and universities for students and academics. You need to be a member of the Faculty of Advocates to practise professionally as an Advocate in Scotland.
So I don't see how the Dean of the Faculty of Advocates can be equated with a dean in one of many universities or colleges. The Dean, as head of the professional body, presumably knows what he is talking about when it comes to disciplinary and potentially criminal offences such as Contempt of Court, especially since he linked to the legislation - Contempt of Court Act 1981 (again see my reply #667 on this thread).
The word "college" in this case is derived from the ancient Roman collegium - a "body, guild, corporation united in colleagueship; of magistrates, praetors, tribunes, priests, augurs; a political club or trade guild".[5] Thus a college was a form of corporation or corporate body, an artificial legal person (body/corpus) with its own legal personality, with the capacity to enter into legal contracts, to sue and be sued.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/College