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Kirkwall,
Scotland

Kirkwall,
in the Orkney Islands, received its first charter from James III.
in 1486, but the provisions of this instrument being disregarded
by such men as Robert (d. 1592) and Patrick Stewart (d. 1614),
1st and 2nd earls of Orkney, and others, the Scottish parliament
passed an act in 1670 confirming the charter granted by Charles
II. in 1661. The prime object of interest is the cathedral of
St Magnus, a stately cruciform red sandstone structure in the
severest Norman, with touches of Gothic. It was founded by Jarl
Rognvald (Earl Ronald) in 1137 in memory of his uncle Jarl Magnus
who was assassinated in the island of Egilshay in 1115, and aftei-wards
canonized and adopted as the patron saint of the Orkneys.
The
remains of St Magnus were ultimately interred in the cathedral.
The church is 234 ft. long from east to west and 56 ft. broad,
71 ft. high from floor to roof, and 133 ft. to the top of the
present spirethe transepts being the oldest portion. The choir
was lengthened and the beautiful eastern rose window added by
Bishop Stewart in 1511, and the porch and the western end of the
nave were finished in 1540 by Bishop Robert Reid. Saving that
the upper half of the original spire was struck by lightning in
1671, and not rebuilt, the cathedral is complete at all points,
but it underwent extensive repairs in the r9th century. The disproportionate
height and narrowness of the building lend it a certain distinction
which otherwise it would have lacked. The sandstone has not resisted
the effects of weather, and much of the external decorative work
has perished. The choir is used as the parish church. The skellat,
or fire-bell, is not rung now.
The
church of St Olaf, from which the town took its name, was burned
down by the English in 1502; and of the church erected on its
site by Bishop Reid the greatest building the Orkneys ever had
little more than the merest fragment survives. Nothing remains
of the old castle, a fortress of remarkable strength founded by
Sir Henry Sinclair (d. 1400), earl and prince of Orkney and 1st
earl of Caithness, its last vesdges having been demolished in
1865 to provide better access to the harbour; and the earthwork
to the east of the town thrown up by the Cromwellians has been
converted into a battery of the Orkney Artillery Volunteers. Adjoining
the cathedral are the ruins of the bishops palace, in which King
Haco died after his defeat at Largs. The round tower, which still
stands, was added in 1550 by Bishop Reid. It is known as the Mass
Tower and contains a niche in which is a small effigy believed
to represent the founder, who also endowed the grammar school.
To
the east of the remains of the bishops palace are the ruins of
the earls palace, a structure in the Scottish Baronial style,
built about 1600 for Patrick Stewart, 2nd earl of Orkney, and
on his forfeiture given to the bishops for a residence. Tankerness
House is a characteristic example of the mansion of an Orkney
laird of the olden time.
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