Page:The ecclesiastical architecture of Scotland ( Volume 3).djvu/539

From Wikisource
Jump to navigation Jump to search
This page needs to be proofread.
METHVEN COLLEGIATE CHURCH, Perthshire.[1]

Of the Church of Methven, consecrated by Bishop David de Bernham of St. Andrews on 25th August 1247, nothing now remains.

The Collegiate Church or Provostry of Methven, as it is generally called, was founded in 1433 by Walter Stewart, the aged Earl of Athole. Before this time, King James i. had conferred the liferent of the Earldom of Strathearn upon the Earl of Athole, so that he was the great lord of the district, and was, besides, a son of Robert ii. Three years after the founding of this church he suffered a terrible death, for his supposed connivance in the assassination of James i. in Perth.

What now remains of the church is the north transept, the north wall and gable of which are shown in Fig. 1482. In the Edinburgh Architectural Association Sketch Book[2] a plan of the church is given without any information as to how it was ascertained. Assuming it to be correct, it shows a cross church, having a chancel 40 feet long by 24 feet wide over the walls, with north and south transepts, and a nave of the same width as the chancel, extending for an indefinite length. The north transept extended from the north wall of the church 22 feet, and has a width over the walls of 21 feet, with walls 3 feet thick. The end window, which is the principal feature of the structure, is 6 feet 3 inches wide in the daylight; it has three lights, and the tracery, which is of a flowing pattern, is placed, as usual at this period, in the centre of the thickness of the wall. The mouldings of the jambs, which consist of a double splay, are stopped at the springing of the arch by a continuous impost moulding, and the arch mouldings are of a different section. On the east side of the window there is a bracket with a canopy over for a statue, possibly that of St. Marnoch, the patron saint of Methven.

In a panel on the west side of the window there are traceable the lion rampant of the royal arms, surmounted by a crown.

The gabled crowsteps with which the gable is coped form one of the best examples of that feature, which, however, is a rare one in the churches of this period. The cross on the apex is modern.

The collegiate church was in use as the parish church till 1783, and for long after the Reformation the Presbyterian minister was called "Provest of Methven, and Chaplin of Auldbar," the Church of Auldbar having been granted to Methven on its foundation in 1433.

  1. The history of this church and its provosts, The Provostry of Methven, was written by the late Rev. Thomas Morris, assistant Old Greyfriars', Edinburgh, and privately printed by the late William Smythe, Esq., Methven, 1875. See also Memorials of Angus and Mearns, by Andrew Jervise.
  2. Vol. II. New Series, 1887-1894.