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Tour Aberdeen
Map
of this area
The
"Granite City" lies between the Don and the Dee, backed by a rich
agricultural hinterland and facing the North Sea which has given
her a new role, that of Offshore Capital of Europe. Art gallery
focuses on 18th to 20th-century painting and sculpture. Provost
Skene's House, built 1545, has fine painted ceilings and local
museum. Science and technology discovery centre.
Twin burghs
The present city developed from two separate fishing villages
on the Dee and Don. By the 12C Old Aberdeen was the seat of an
episcopal see with an ever increasing secular community outside
its cathedral precincts. The cathedral city acquired burgh status
in the 12C, and in the late 15C Bishop Elphinstone founded a university.
The second distinct burgh grew up around the king's castle (13C)
to become an active trading centre based on coastal and Baltic
trade. While the Reformation brought ruin and stagnation to Old
Aberdeen, the city centre continued to prosper, acquired its own
university (f 1593) and by the late 17C had started to break out
of its medieval bounds.
The Granite City
Following Edinburgh and Perth. Aberdeen implemented its own plan
for expansion with the laying out of Union and King Streets (1801).
The native architect Archibald Simpson (1790-1847) was responsible
for giving the city much of its present character by his masterly
use of Aberdeen granite as a building material. He gave his buildings
a simplicity and dignity fully in keeping with the nature of the
stone. The streets were lined with dignified public buildings
(Medical Hall. 29 King Street 1818-20, Assembly Rooms now the
Music Hall, Union Street 1822) and there were imaginative private
ventures such as the Athenaeum and a successful design for the
Clydesdale Bank at the Union and King Street corner site. Simpson's
rival John Smith was also responsible for some fine buildings
at the time. Until the middle years of the 20C Aberdeen continued
to be built in granite, giving its townscape a rare homogeneity,
though few of its later suburbs can match the harmony of Simpson's
essay in town planning centred on Bon Accord Square. Terrace and
Crescent to the southwest of the city centre.
Maritime Past
The tradition of shipbuilding has always been strong in Aberdeen
as o the yards produced vessels for whaling and line fishing.
Then came that age of international fame, the clipper ship era
when the city's boatyards specialised in fast sailing ships. With
the legendary and graceful tea clippers. Stornoway, Chrysolite
and Thermopylae. Britain gained supremacy in the China tea trade.
Wooden clippers gave way to composite and finally iron built vessels
in the 1870s. Sail yielded to steam. Throughout, the local shipbuilding
industry remained to the fore and continues today as an important
aspect of the city's economy, although now geared to the oil industry.
The earliest fisheries included whaling (1752-1860s) and line
fishing. Aberdeen became a fishing port with the herring boom
(1875-96) and by 1900 had converted to trawling: it remains Scotland's
premier white fishing port. The decline in trawling has in some
way been counteracted by the increase in oil activities.
Old Aberdeen
Old
Aberdeen became a burgh of barony in 1489 under the patronage
of the bishops and retained its separate burghal identity until
1891. Today, the quarter stretching from King's College Chapel
to St Machar's Cathedral, is part of a conservation area where
the old burgh's essential character has been well retained. The
medieval streets - College Bounds (6). High Street. Don Street
and the Chanonry - are now bordered by a variety of single and
double storey cottages, and some more substantial detached mansions;
a happy mix.
St
Machar's Cathedral
The twin spires of St Machar's have long been one of Old Aberdeen's
most famous landmarks. Its highly individual style - so very Scottish
- reflects the nature of the granite building material. The present
edifice, which dates from the 14C and 15C. overlooks the haughlands
of the Don. According to legend, the original Celtic (c 580) settlement
was established by St Machar slightly to the west so as to overlook
the "crook" of the Don and comply with instructions from St Columba.
When the bishopric was transferred from Mortlach. now Dufftown.
to St Machar's in 1131. a programme of rebuilding was undertaken.
The present building is the nave as finally completed in the 15C.
The cathedral's most distinctive feature, is immediately impressive
for the austerity and strength of its unusual design, where the
role of the doorway is reduced to a minimum. Buttressed and crenellated
towers, topped by tapering sandstone spires, flankthe majestic
seven-light window. The whole is devoid of decorative details.
Move round past the south porch (entrance) to the east end. The
church was truncated at the transept crossing when the choir was
demolished at the Reformation and further shortened in 1688 when
the central tower and spire collapsed, destroying the transepts.
Here are to be found the tombs of two of the bishop builders:
in the north transept that of Bishop Henry Leighton (1422-40)
- his effigy is inside the cathedral - and in the south, now glazed
over, that of Bishop Gavin Dunbar (1518-32).
Interior - Take binoculars to examine the heraldic ceiling. Enter
by the south porch. A majestically simple but effective interior
is the setting for this 16C heraldic ceiling attributed to the
enterprising Bishop Gavin Dunbar. The flat, coffered oak ceiling
is decorated with 48 brightly tinctured coats of arms arranged
in three rows of 16 each running from east to west. Ingeniously
designed, this unique ceiling presents a vision of the European
scene around 1520 and a strong assertion of Scottish nationalism.
The central axis representing the Holy Church, until then the
traditional unifying force in Europe, is headed by the arms of
Pope Leo X followed by other ecclesiastical arms. The absence
of York and Trondheim is significant. On the right are the King
of Scots (closed crown) and his nobles while on the left, headed
by the Holy Roman Emperor, are the other Kings of Christendom.
The King of England comes fourth after his fellow monarchs of
France. Scotland's traditional ally, and Spain.
The
stained glass is all 19C and 20C: the west window with cusped
round arches and the Bishops Window (third from east end in the
south aisle) 1913. an early example of Douglas Strachan's work
showing the three great builder bishops, are noteworthy.
Brig o'Balgownie - Approach via Don Street. This early 14C bridge,
one of Aberdeen's most important medieval buildings, is set astride
the Don. The single span bridge with its pointed Gothic arch has
cobbled approaches and a defensive kink at the south end. Further
downstream is the Bridge of Don, by Aberdeen's first city architect.
John Smith, with modifications by Thomas Telford (1827-30). The
cost of building was financed by its illustrious neighbour's 17C
maintenance fund.
Overview
of Aberdeen.
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