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Dunblane,
Scotland
Dunblane,
in Perthshire, is situated on the left bank of Allan Water, a
tributary of the Forth, 5 miles North by West of Stirling. It
is a place of great antiquity, with narrow streets and old-fashioned
houses. The leading industry was the manufacture of woollens.
The cathedral is situated by the side of the river, and was one
of the few ecclesiastical edifices that escaped injury at the
hands of the Reformers.
The
first church is alleged to have been erected by Blane, a saint
of the 7th century, but the cathedral as founded by David I. in
1141, and almost entirely rebuilt about 1240 by Bishop Clemens.
Excepting the tower, which is Early Norman and was probably incorporated
from the earlier structure, the building is of the Early Pointed
style. It consists of a nave (130 ft. long, 58 ft. wide, 50ft.
high), aisles, choir (80 ft. long by 30 ft. wide), chapter-house
and tower. Ruskin considered that there was nothing so perfect
in its simplicity as the west window, the design of which resembles
a leaf.
After
the decline of episcopacy the building was neglected for a long
period, but the choir, which contains some carved oak stalls of
the 16th century, was restored in 1873, and the nave roofed and
restored in 1892-1895, under the direction of Sir Rowand Anderson,
the architect. From the time of the Reformation the choir had
been used as the parish church, but since its restoration the
whole cathedral has been devoted to this purpose. The new oak
roof is emblazoned with the arms of the Scottish and later British
monarchs, and of the old earls of Strathearn. Several members
of the families of Strathearn and Strathallan were buried in the
cathedral, and three stones of blue marble in the floor of the
choir are supposed to mark the graves of Lady Margaret Drummond
(b. 1472), mistress of James IV., and her two sisters, daughters
of Lord Drummond, who were mysteriously poisoned in 1501. An ancient
Celtic cross, 6 1/2 ft. high, stands in the northwestern corner
of the nave. Robert Leighton was the greatest of the bishops of
Dunblane, and held the see from 1661 to 1670. The library of 1500
volumes which he bequeathed to the clergy of the diocese is housed
in a building with an outside stair, standing near the cathedral,
and the Bishops Walk by the river also perpetuates his memory.
Of the bishops palace only a few ruins remain.
The
battlefield of Sheriffmuir is about 2 1/2 miles East of the town.
A mile and a half South of Dunblane is the estate of Keir which
belonged to Sir William Stirling-Maxwell, the historian and art
critic. The duke of Leeds derives the title of one of his viscounties
from Dunbiane.
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