- Source: St Andrews Cathedral
- Source: St Andrew's Cathedral
The Cathedral of St Andrew (often referred to as St Andrews Cathedral) is a ruined cathedral in St Andrews, Fife, Scotland. It was built in 1158 and became the centre of the Medieval Catholic Church in Scotland as the seat of the Archdiocese of St Andrews and the Bishops and Archbishops of St Andrews. It fell into disuse and ruin after Catholic mass was outlawed during the 16th-century Scottish Reformation. It is currently a monument in the custody of Historic Environment Scotland. The ruins indicate that the building was approximately 119 m (390 ft) long, and is the largest church to have been built in Scotland.
History
= Founding and development
=The cathedral was founded to supply more accommodation than the older church of St. Regulus (St. Rule) afforded. This older church, located on what became the cathedral grounds, had been built in the Romanesque style. Today, there remains the square tower, 33 metres (108 feet) high, and the quire, of very diminutive proportions. On a plan of the town from about 1531, a chancel appears, and seals affixed to the city and college charters bear representations of other buildings attached. To the east is an even older religious site, the Church of St Mary on the Rock, the Culdee house that became a Collegiate Church.
Work began on the new cathedral in 1158 and continued for over a century. The west end was blown down in a storm and rebuilt between 1272 and 1279. The cathedral was finally completed in 1318 and featured a central tower and six turrets; of these remain two at the east and one of the two at the western extremity, rising to a height of 30 metres (100 feet). On the 5th of July it was consecrated in the presence of King Robert the Bruce, who, according to legend, rode up the aisle on his horse.
A fire partly destroyed the building in 1378; restoration and further embellishment were completed in 1440.
The cathedral was served by a community of Augustinian Canons, the St Andrews Cathedral Priory, which were successors to the Culdees of the Celtic church.
Greyfriar (Franciscan) and Blackfriar (Dominican) friars had properties in the town by the late 15th century and possibly as late as 1518.
= Abandonment and ruin
=In June 1559 during the Reformation, a Protestant mob incited by the preaching of John Knox ransacked the cathedral; the interior of the building was destroyed. The cathedral fell into decline following the attack and became a source of building material for the town. By 1561 it had been abandoned and left to fall into ruin.
At about the end of the sixteenth century the central tower apparently gave way, carrying with it the north wall. Afterwards large portions of the ruins were taken away for building purposes, and nothing was done to preserve them until 1826. Since then it has been tended with scrupulous care, an interesting feature being the cutting out of the ground-plan in the turf. The principal portions extant, partly Norman and partly Early Scottish, are the east and west gables, the greater part of the south wall of the nave and the west wall of the south transept.
At the end of the seventeenth century some of the priory buildings remained entire and considerable remains of others existed, but nearly all traces have now disappeared except portions of the priory wall and the archways, known as The Pends.
St Rule's Tower
St Rule's tower is located in the cathedral grounds but antedates it, having served as the church of the priory up to the early 12th century. The building was retained to allow worship to continue uninterrupted during the building of its much larger successor. Originally, the tower and adjoining choir were part of the church built in the 11th century to house the relics of St Andrew. The nave, with twin western turrets, and the apse of the church no longer stand. The church's original appearance is illustrated in stylised form on some of the early seals of the cathedral priory. Legend credits St Rule (also known as St Regulus) with bringing relics of St Andrew to the area from their original location at Patras in Greece. Today the tower commands an admirable view of the town, harbour, sea, and surrounding countryside. Built in grey sandstone ashlar, and (for its date) immensely tall (33 m), it is a land- and sea-mark seen from many miles away, its prominence doubtless meant to guide pilgrims to the place of the Apostle's relics. In the Middle Ages a spire atop the tower made it even more prominent. The tower was originally ascended using ladders between wooden floors, but a stone spiral staircase was inserted in the 18th century.
Burials
= In the cathedral
=Roger de Beaumont (bishop) (d. 1202)
William Wishart (d. 1279)
William de Lamberton (1328, on the north side of the high altar)
William Fraser (bishop of St Andrews) (1297, his heart was buried in the wall of the church by his successor, William de Lamberton)
William de Landallis (1385, in the church's vestry)
James Kennedy (bishop) (1465, in a magnificent tomb which he had caused to be built in St Salvator's Chapel, the ruins of which are still visible)
Andrew Forman (d. 1521)
= Cathedral burial ground
=Very Rev John Adamson DD
John Anderson, Principal of St Leonards College
Rev Alexander Anderson (1676-1737) son of above
Rev Prof George Buist DD
Robert Chambers
Rev Prof George Cook DD FRSE
Rev Prof John Cook DD FRSE
Rev Prof William Crawford DD father of Thomas Jackson Crawford
Sir Robert Anstruther Dalyell
Prof James Donaldson (classical scholar)
Adam Ferguson
Andrew Forman
Rev Prof James Gillespie
Rev Prof Thomas Gillespie, Professor of Humanity
Robert Haldane (mathematician)
Thomas Halyburton
Matthew Forster Heddle
George Hill (minister)
Prof Henry David Hill
Rev Prof James Hunter
Prof Thomas Jackson FRSE
David Miller Kay, military hero, author and missionary
Prof Peter Redford Scott Lang, mathematician
Rev Prof John McGill LLD, translator of the Old Testament
Norman MacLeod (The Wicked Man)
Young Tom Morris
Old Tom Morris
William Henry Murray
Rev Francis Nicoll DD Principal of St Salvator's College, St Andrews
Hugh Lyon Playfair
Rev James Playfair (minister) (memorial only)
Lt Col Sir Robert Lambert Playfair LLD, soldier and author
Prof Alexander Roberts
Allan Robertson
Rev Professor Daniel Robertson DD (1755-1817)
Rev Prof Samuel Rutherford
Saint Andrew (partial remains)
Very Rev Robert Small (1732-1808) Moderator in 1791
William Spalding (writer)
Very Rev Prof Alexander Stewart DD Principal of St Andrews University in 1915, Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland in 1911
Rev Prof John Trotter
Alexander Watson, Provost of St Andrews
Major John and Lady Catherine Whyte-Melville (the large monument in the far corner of the churchyard)
Prof William Wright (orientalist)
= Eastern Cemetery
=Col Robert Hope Moncrieff Aitken, Victoria Cross recipient
Fr George Angus, first Roman Catholic priest in St. Andrews since the Reformation
Warington Baden-Powell, founder of the Sea Scouts
Wilhelmina Barns-Graham
Prof John Birrell
Andrew Kennedy Hutchison Boyd
Sir Napier Burnett
Sir Guy Colin Campbell
Reginald Fairlie
Cicely Hilda Farmer, novelist
William Lewis Ferdinand Fischer, FRS
James Ross Gillespie, architect
Sir James Heriot-Maitland
Sir John Home
Andrew Kirkaldy (golfer)
Vice-Admiral Dashwood Fowler Moir, famed for his actions in the Battle of Jutland and who lost his life protecting the Atlantic Convoy
Charles Metcalfe Ochterlony, 2nd baronet Ochterlony
James Bell Pettigrew
Lyon Playfair, Baron Playfair
William Smoult Playfair
Prof Thomas Purdie FRS
Andrew Maitland Ramsay LLD FRSE
Prof David George Ritchie
Prof John Tulloch
Charles Wordsworth
See also
St Andrews Cathedral Priory
St Andrews Sarcophagus
The Way of St Andrews
References
External links
Historic Environment Scotland. "St Andrews Cathedral and Priory and adjacent ecclesiastical remains (SM13322)".
La Catedral de San Andrés, Escocia [Saint Andrews Cathedral, Scotland]
St. Andrew's Cathedral, or the Cathedral Church of St. Andrew, may refer to:
In Australia:
St Andrew's Cathedral, Sydney
In Canada:
St. Andrew's Cathedral (Victoria, British Columbia)
In England:
Rochester Cathedral, before 1642
Wells Cathedral, otherwise the Cathedral Church of St Andrew, Wells
In France:
Avranches Cathedral, destroyed in early 19th century
Bordeaux Cathedral, dedicated to St Andrew
In Greece:
St Andrew's Cathedral, Patras
In Japan:
St. Andrew's Cathedral, Tokyo
St. Andrew's Cathedral (Yokohama)
In the Philippines:
St. Andrew's Cathedral, Parañaque
In Russia:
Saint Andrew's Cathedral, Kronstadt
Saint Andrew's Cathedral (Saint Petersburg)
In Scotland:
St Andrew's Cathedral, Aberdeen
St Andrew's Cathedral, Dundee
St Andrew's Cathedral, Glasgow
St. Andrew's Cathedral, Inverness
St Andrew's Cathedral, St Andrews
In Singapore:
St Andrew's Cathedral, Singapore
In Spain:
Cathedral of St Andrew and St Demetrius
In Ukraine:
St. Andrew's Cathedral, Kyiv
In the United States:
Cathedral of St. Andrew (Little Rock, Arkansas)
Cathedral Church of Saint Andrew (Honolulu), Hawaii
St. Andrew's Cathedral (Silver Spring, Maryland)
Cathedral of Saint Andrew (Grand Rapids, Michigan)
St. Andrew's Cathedral (Jackson, Mississippi)
St. Andrew's Cathedral, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania
See also
St. Andrew's Church (disambiguation)
Saint Andrew Parish (disambiguation)
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Katedral Dundee
- Balai Kota Sydney
- Katedral Hobart
- Katedral Edinburgh
- Katedral Lismore
- Peti mati Santo Kutbertus
- Keuskupan Galloway
- Katedral Aberdeen
- James Lawson (pendeta)
- Jaksa Agung Hawaii
- St Andrews Cathedral
- St Andrews
- St Andrew's Cathedral
- St Andrew (disambiguation)
- St Andrews Cathedral Priory
- Archbishop of St Andrews and Edinburgh
- Way of St Andrews
- Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St Andrews and Edinburgh
- University of St Andrews
- St Andrew's Cathedral, Singapore