Page:The ecclesiastical architecture of Scotland ( Volume 3).djvu/468

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the cross ribs are introduced as ornaments on the surface, a common arrangement in late work. The ribs of the apse spring from two vaulting shafts rising from corbels, the caps of which have shields bearing the Hepburn arms (on a chevron a rose between two lions rampant). The chevron is still distinguishable. From the threefold repetition of these arms, it is supposed that this chapel was erected by Prior Hepburn, as a memorial and, perhaps, a burial chapel. The responds at the entrance, with their caps and other details, are of the third pointed period, and correspond with the date when the chapel was erected. A row of plain corbels, visible over the main arch, doubtless supported the roof of the principal nave of the church.



THE CHURCH OF ST. LEONARD'S COLLEGE, St. Andrews, Fifeshire.


In the middle of the thirteenth century the Hospitium or Guest Hall of St. Leonard's was founded by Prior John White, for the reception of pilgrims and visitors to St. Andrews. Some remains of the Guest Hall

Fig. 1389.—Church of St. Leonard's College, St. Andrews. Plan.

have recently been excavated in the ground eastward from St. Leonard's Church, from which it appears that it was a hall with central nave and two side aisles. The building was afterwards converted into a nunnery. In 1512 it was appropriated for a college.