Page:The ecclesiastical architecture of Scotland ( Volume 3).djvu/486

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above them. These windows have a broad double splay on the exterior of the jambs and arches.

One round-headed and cusped window survives in the south wall close to the east end (Fig. 1412), and the Plan shows that there has been another window adjoining, but it is now built up. The west end wall (Fig. 1413)

Fig. 1411.—Keith Church. Interior of East End.

contains a single small pointed window, evidently of a late date. So far as can now be ascertained from the building the east end or chancel is comparatively ancient, probably of the beginning of the sixteenth century, and the remainder has been rebuilt not long after the Reformation.

A good seventeenth century monument is erected against the south wall (see Fig. 1412).