RELATION OF CELTIC CHURCH TO ROMAN CATHOLIC CHURCH
The period begun by the influence
of Queen Margaret (1047-1093), continued by her sons
and their successors on the Scottish throne, and culminating
in the Scottish Reformation of 1560, is that with which
this book deals.
The old Celtic Church of Scotland
was brought to an end by two causes internal
decay and external change. Under the first head,
notice must be taken of the encroachment upon the
ecclesiastic element by the secular, and of the gradual
absorption of the former by the latter. There
was a vitality in the old ecclesiastical organisation,
but it was weakened by the assimilation of the native
Church to that of Rome in the seventh and eighth centuries,
which introduced a secular element among the clergy;
and the frequent Danish invasions, which may be described
as the organised power of Paganism against Scottish
Christianity, grievously undermined its native force.
The Celtic churches and monasteries were repeatedly
laid waste or destroyed, and the native clergy were
compelled either to fly or take up arms in defence;
the lands, unprotected by the strong arm of law, fell
into the hands of laymen, who made them hereditary
in their families, and ultimately nothing was left
but the name of abbacy, applied to the lands, and that
of abbot, borne by a secular lord. Under the second
head external change may be
noted the policy adopted towards the Celtic Church
by the kings of the race of Queen Margaret. It
consisted (1) in placing the Church upon a territorial
in place of a tribal basis, in substituting the parochial
system and a diocesan episcopacy for the old tribal
churches with monastic jurisdiction and functional
episcopacy; (2) in introducing the orders of the Church
of Rome, and founding great monasteries as counter
influences to the Celtic Church; (3) in absorbing
the Culdees or Columban clergy into the Roman system,
by first converting them from secular into regular
canons, and afterwards by merging them in the latter
order. King David especially founded bishoprics
and established cathedrals, equipped with the ordinary
cathedral staff of deans, canons, and other functionaries,
and monasteries equipped with representatives of the
monastic orders. Thus the native Celtic Church,
undermined by internal decay, was extinguished by
external change and a course of aggression which rolled
from St. Andrews until it reached the far-off shores
of Iona. All that remained to speak of its vitality
and beneficence to the people of Scotland consisted
of the roofless walls of an early church, or an old
churchyard with its Celtic cross; the names of the
early pastors by whom the churches were founded, or
the neighbouring wells at the old foundations, dedicated
to their memory; the village fairs, stretching back
to a remote antiquity, and held on the saint’s
day in the Scottish calendar; here and there a few
lay families possessing the church lands as the custodiers
of the pastoral staff or other relics of the founder
of the church, and exercising a jurisdiction over
the ancient “girth” or sanctuary boundary
such as the early missionaries instituted in the days
when might was right, and they nobly witnessed to the
right against the might.
The new policy was connected with
the introduction of the orders of the Roman Catholic
Church, and with the building of cathedrals and abbeys.
This movement commenced with the close of the eleventh
century, and continued to the middle of the sixteenth;
it embraced all the time when the Church of Scotland
was guided by the regime of Rome, although it is to
be recalled that the Scottish Church never ceased to
maintain a native independence its heirloom
from the ancient Celtic Church. This independence,
manifested on important historical occasions throughout
mediaeval times, at last found its national embodiment
in the Reformed Church of 1560.
Scotland was divided into thirteen
diocèses St. Andrews, Glasgow, Dunkeld,
Aberdeen, Moray, Brechin, Dunblane, Ross, Caithness,
Galloway, Lismore or Argyll, the Isles, and Orkney;
but before sketching the history and architecture
of each of the thirteen cathedrals, it will be necessary
to indicate the general features of the various periods
of Scottish architecture itself, as it is of this
movement the structures themselves are all an expression.