Plan of Dunkeld Cathedral
Cut-open
sketch
of the Nave
Interior
of the
Cathedral Nave
West
Elevation
West
Window
|
The
Layout of the Dunkeld Cathedral
The
daily round of services performed by the canons and their vicars
took place in the eastern limb of the cathedral, which contained
the presbytery the area given over to the priests serving
the high altar - together with the choir of the canons and vicars.
At Dunkeld this limb took the shape of an elongated rectangle
articulated by the buttresses which strengthened its walls into
four bays, each with its own large window; it was, as usual, aligned
in an east-west direction, with the altar at the east end.
At a later stage a two-storeyed block was added on the north side
of the eastern limb. This block was built for use as a chapter
house, the business room of the canons. But it probably also served
as a sacristy, in which the clergy prepared for the services and
in which the vestments and many of the items used in the services
would be stored. An upper room above the chapter house would have
served as a treasury, in which the more precious
items provided to enhance the services could be stored with safety.
The services for the lay folk took place in a distinct western
limb of the building, known as the nave. At Dunkeld the nave was
seven bays long, with an aisle running along each side, and it
could certainly accommodate large gatherings when required to
do so. The entrances for the lay people were through the south
and north walls of the nave, the former being the more important
of the two, and there was also a processional entrance at the
centre of the west front. The nave was later augmented by the
addition of a single tower at the west end of the north aisle,
and by a porch placed over the south doorway.
The principal altars for the people would have been placed against
the screen which separated the nave from the canons choir,
the slots for which screen are still visible on the two sides
of the arch at the junction of the nave and choir. The nave would
also have contained a font for baptisms, set near the entrance
and thus symbolising mans entry into the Christian Church,
and a pulpit from which sermons could be preached.
Additional numbers of altars were placed in the aisles. or against
the arcade piers, many of which were provided as the setting for
masses to be said on behalf of the souls of the departed. The
belief in the power of prayers offered for the dead, as a means
of ensuring salvation, was an important element in the faith of
the later middle ages. As a result, all those who could afford
it would leave money to pay for such prayers. Some of the more
wealthy might even provide sufficient funds to endow a succession
of priests to sing masses for them in all perpetuity, and might
enclose a part of the cathedral as a separate chapel in which
these services could be performed. At the east end of the south
aisle of the nave, for example, was the chapel in which Bishop
Robert Cardeny (13981437) placed his tomb, and as with the
choir screen, traces of the slots in which the screens around
this chapel were placed can still be seen in the surrounding piers.
|
|