Page:The ecclesiastical architecture of Scotland ( Volume 3).djvu/505

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ST. ANDREW'S CHURCH, Peebles.

Rather less than a quarter of a mile west from the Cross Church there stands the tower of St. Andrew's Church. It has been so completely restored or transformed by the late Dr. Chambers, that it is now of no interest whatever as a specimen of the ancient architecture of Scotland. A view of the tower as it appeared at the end of the eighteenth century will be found in the Antiquities of Scotland by Captain Grose; and on the Ordnance Map there is a plan of the church, from which it may be gathered that the tower was a western one, in a similar position to that of the Cross Church. The plan shows a nave measuring about 75 feet long by 40 feet wide, and a choir about 50 feet long, having apparently a building of some kind, either an aisle or chapel, along the north side. The total length of the building was about 140 feet.

The Church of St. Andrew at Peebles was consecrated by Bishop Jocelin of Glasgow in 1195.[1] St. Andrew's was the parish church of Peebles.

In 1543 this church was made Collegiate. In 1548 it was burned down by the English, and never rebuilt. Captain Grose says that all the arches of the doors and windows were semicircular.



ABERUTHVEN CHURCH, Perthshire.


A ruined church situated near the village of the same name, about two and a half miles east from Auchterarder. The walls are almost entire, except part of the south one, which has been knocked down to give room

Fig. 1435.—Aberuthven Church. Plan.

for a mausoleum of the Montrose family, bearing the inscription "John Adam—fecet 1736."

The church (Fig. 1435) measures, externally, 65 feet 2 inches by 21 feet 9 inches. Its only architectural features are a seventeenth century

  1. Caledonia, Vol. II. p. 942.