Elgin Cathedral, Morayshire, Scotland

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Bax__

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Folks,

I was born about 10mins walk from this place and it took me 31 years to actually visit it! Following copied from UK heritage...

Elgin was not the original site for the seat of Moray, as documentary evidence tells us that bishops were based at various times at Kinneddar, Birnie and Spynie, the latter being moved to after Papal permission was granted in1206. The grant did not necessarily mean the construction of a large stone church, but did provide for the official organisation of the diocese. However, the site at Spynie proved inconvenient for the cathedral and although the Bishop's Palace remained there, permission was granted to move again to Elgin in 1224. Previous Christian activity in Elgin may well have centred round the parish church of St. Giles, as this is where the Pictish carved stone now on display in the cathedral was found. The construction of the new cathedral may have begun just before the official approval came through on the land granted by Alexander II and it was dedicated to The Holy Trinity. A brief mention of a fire at Elgin cathedral in 1270 in a fifteenth century history probably explains why a major rebuilding was begun before the end of the thirteenth century. The church was considerably extended, with the east end embellished with side aisles, doubled in length and increased in height. The picture below shows the remains of this work, together with the octagonal Chapter House added at the same time. Elaborate and beautiful tombs were built in the new side aisles, including that of Bishop John of Winchester (1435-60) and that of the first earl of Huntly, Alexander Gordon, in his robes as lord chancellor of Scotland.

During the Wars of Independence of the late thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries, Elgin seems to have been spared the worst of Edward I, II and III's destructive actions elsewhere, but in 1390, after excommunication by Bishop Bur of Elgin, the cathedral and residences of 18 canons and chaplains was burnt down by Alexander Stewart, Earl of Buchan, also known as the 'Wolf of Badenoch'. As brother of the king, Robert III, Buchan possessed vast lands and power in the north of Scotland, but he abused this power. Bishop Bur obtained redress from the king and repairs commenced. A further attack in 1402, this time by Alexander Macdonald, son of the Lord of the Isles, put back the reconstruction, but work then continued, with a new rose window for the east end and the large central tower over the crossing rebuilt.

The splendid west front, with its rich adornment of carving, was reconstructed by Bishop Columba of Dunbar in the second quarter of the fifteenth century, with the final re-modelling of the Chapter House carried out by Bishop Andrew Stewart at the end of the fifteenth century. This is still an impressive room, with the delicately vaulted ceiling carried on a tall, slim stone pillar. During our visit on a cold and wet September day, Gregorian chant was being played in the Chapter House, which became a calm and spiritual oasis away from the weather outside.

At the Reformation in 1560, Elgin's fate was sealed as the parish church had remained that of St. Giles in the centre of the town of Elgin and the bishop moved there. In 1561, the 'popish' carvings and decorations of the cathedral were removed, with the lead from the roofs and the cathedral bells carted off in 1567-8. Mass was celebrated here as late as 1594, following the battle of Glenlivet, when the Catholic earl of Huntly beat of the Government army. It is said that both Catholic and Protestant services were held at Elgin well into the seventeenth century. However, the fabric of the building had not been maintained and the Choir roof fell down during a gale in 1637. In 1640, the lairds of Innes and Brodie broke up the medieval rood screen for firewood. The final blow came in 1711, when, on Easter Sunday, the great central tower collapsed, taking the majority of the Nave with it.

In the early nineteenth century, earlier architecture, especially ruins, came to be seen in the new light of Romanticism and a cobbler, John Shanks, was appointed as keeper and guide of the cathedral. He single-handedly removed the rubble to reveal the richness of what remained. The soft sandstone of the cathedral has contributed to the gradual erosion of the carvings and mouldings and it is now cared for and repaired by Historic Scotland

How it supposedly looked during it's glory days

Elgin_Cathedral_reconstruct.jpg


Floor plan

Elgin_Cathedral_plan.jpg


During it's fire

Destruction_of_Elgin_Cathedral_by_T.jpg


View from over the river lossie

CathedralLossie.jpg


Tower1.jpg


Cathdral5.jpg


GordonAisle.jpg


GordonAisle2.jpg


Cathedral4.jpg


The Front Door

Cathedral1.jpg


Cathedral2.jpg


Cathedral3.jpg


Seemingly the finest Octagonal Chapter house in Scotland..My Grandfather was one of the local Tradesmen used to restore the roof.

ChapterHouse.jpg


Looking up at the chapter house ceiling

roofofchapterhouse.jpg


Tombs.jpg


Knights Templar Grave Stone

Engraving.jpg


Engraving in the Chapter House

WritingsonWall.jpg


Andy
 
That gravestone is freaky. There is one like that in a graveyard near me, with the skull and the hour-glass.
 
Nice one Bax_ :) Zimbob and I have passed this so many times and commented that it would be a good explore. Nice to see it done. So can you actually get up the towers, or did you have your jetpack on for that aerial shot?:p
 
Yes you can walk to the top of one of the towers they've put a proper viewing platform up. The final flight of steps were too much for the wife, she freaked!

It's a few quid to get in normally I got in for free because we went to see about getting married there. Which we did do (In the chapter house).
 
Nice site
I love ruined abbey's and cathedrals. Theres something about them.
I think my favourite one so far is Tintern Abbey in South Wales.
I visit it regularly just to sit and ponder even though I am not in the slightest bit religious!:p
 
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Cracking pics there mate!

I like alot! The list of places I need to see is getting bigger by the minute! I wish I could get photos of the quality you got there!

Excellent.

BFG
 
Thanks folks,

These were taken mostly with my old Sony Cybershot although a couple are with my Canon Eos 400D. That is still used n Automatic most of the time (Oh the shame of it!:cry:).

Andy
 
beautiful building! my gran and grandad used to live near here, can't remember seeing this though, that was about 8 years ago though :p
 
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