Page:The ecclesiastical architecture of Scotland ( Volume 3).djvu/232

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the monument (see Fig. 1133), with what appear like coronets above them, from which Mr. James Drummond[1] gives it as his opinion that the persons represented are James, 4th Lord of Dalkeith, who was created Earl of Morton in 1457, and his wife Johan, third daughter of King James I. The former died about 1498. Mr. Drummond supposes the lady survived her husband, but the Lady Johanna must have died before the year 1490.[2] The facts on which that view is founded are the presence of the royal and Douglas arms impaled, and "the male figure being sculptured with an earl's coronet, to which none of the previous lords of Dalkeith had a right, although they were allied to royalty."[3]

Fig. 1133.—The Collegiate Church of Dalkeith. Monument in Choir.

The monument is in a very dilapidated condition, the base and lower half of the pedestal being buried in earth and rubbish, the accumulation of centuries. The arms on the pedestal (see Fig. 1133) are the same as those already referred to as carved at the heads of the figures. They are repeated on the opposite side of the pedestal, but in inverse order. The canopied work along the top of the pedestal is similar to what is seen surmounting a fragment of royal arms at Dunfermline (see Fig. 218), which fragment may also have been part of a tomb.

  1. Proceedings of the Society of Antiquaries of Scotland, Session 1857-8, p. 25.
  2. Ibid. p. 94.
  3. Ibid. p. 27.