SKETCH OF SCOTTISH ARCHITECTURE
Architecture is a great stone book
in which nations have recorded their annals, before
the days of the printing-press: have written their
thoughts, expressed their aspirations, and embodied
their feelings as clearly and truly as by any other
form of utterance. We know Egypt as vividly by
its pyramids, the age of Pericles by the Parthenon
of Athens, Imperial Rome by the Flavian Amphitheatre
and the Baths of Caracalla, as from the pages of their
respective literature. The mediaeval cathedrals,
monasteries, and churches are a living record of the
faith and devotion of mediaeval men, who have left
besides them but little else whereby we can know their
aspirations and civilisation; we find in them an expression
of the deepest life that characterised the periods
to which they belong, and a record which, though often
mutilated, and sometimes nearly obliterated, never
deceives. Wherever these architectural creations
are found, there also a voice ought to be heard, telling
what at that spot and at some previous time men thought
and felt; what their civilisation enabled them to
accomplish, and to what state they had attained in
their conception of God. In a very true sense
it can be said that the architecture of a country
is the history of that country, and that the record
of the architecture is the record of its civilisation.
“Mediaeval architecture,”
said Sir Gilbert Scott, “is distinguished from
all other styles as being the last link of the mighty
chain which had stretched unbroken through nearly
4000 years the glorious termination of
the history of original and genuine architecture....
It has been more entirely developed under the influence
of the Christian religion, and more thoroughly carried
out its tone and sentiment, than any other style.
It is par eminence Christian.... Its greatest
glory is the solemnity of religious character which
pervades the interior of its temples. To this
all its other attributes must bend, as it is this which
renders it so pre-eminently suited to the highest uses
of the Christian Church. It was this, probably,
which led Romney to exclaim, that if Grecian architecture
was the work of glorious men, Gothic was the invention
of gods." This architecture was perfected by the
mediaeval builders the round arch in the
twelfth and the pointed arch in the two succeeding
centuries. Its progress was the realisation of
three great aims, towards which the Romanesque architects
were ever striving the perfecting of the
arcuated and vaulted construction, the increase of
the altitude of their proportion, and the general
adding of refinement and delicacy to their details.
Scotland, it has been maintained by
those competent to judge, can show a continuous series
of Christian structures, beginning with the primitive
cells and oratories of the early anchorites, and extending
through all the periods of mediaeval art. It
exemplifies two distinctive phases of artistic development the
first comprising the rise and decline of Celtic Art
in early Christian times, and the second allied to
the various stages of general European culture.
The Celtic churches, round towers, and sculptured
monuments similar to those found in Ireland, are followed
by primitive examples of Norman work, pointing to the
Saxon and Norman influence of the eleventh century,
which produced a complete revolution in the artistic
elements of the country and led to a full development
of the Romanesque or Norman style of architecture a
style similar to the round arched architecture of
other European countries in the twelfth century.
This is manifested chiefly in small parish churches,
but also in large, elaborate buildings, and one cathedral.
The succeeding Gothic styles are also
well represented in Scotland, and exhibit both certain
local peculiarities and a general correspondence with
the arts of the different periods in France and England.
The First Pointed style is represented in Scotland
during the thirteenth century, but owing to the disastrous
situation of the country during the fourteenth century,
the number of “decorated” buildings is
pronounced to be comparatively small. On the
other hand, it is maintained that during the fifteenth
and sixteenth centuries, when the “Perpendicular”
style prevailed in England and the “Flamboyant”
in France, the architecture of Scotland was distinguished
by a style peculiar to the country, in which many
features derived from both the above styles may be
detected. “While the mediaeval architecture
of Scotland thus corresponds on the whole with that
of the rest of Europe, there exists in the ecclesiology
of the country an amount of native development sufficient
to give it a special value as one of the exponents
of the art of the Middle Ages. Its buildings
further contribute largely to the illustration of the
history of the country, by showing in their remains
the condition and growth of its religious ideas and
observances at different epochs, and the manner in
which its civilisation advanced. We observe striking
evidences of the Irish influence in the relics of
the primitive Celtic Church. The Norman and English
influences are clearly traceable up to the invasion
of Edward I., and the political connection with France
and the Netherlands is distinctly observable in the
period of the Jameses."
1. NORMAN ARCHITECTURE
The Abernethy Round Tower, the Priory
of Restennet, Forfarshire, and St. Regulus’
or St. Rule’s Church, St. Andrews, illustrate
the transition from Celtic to Norman architecture.
The dates of the Irish round towers extend from
the ninth to the twelfth century, and the Abernethy
Tower is regarded on historical grounds by Dr. Skene
as belonging to the period about 870 A.D.; the upper
windows and doorway are either additions of the twelfth
century, or, as this was an early Irish house in Scotland,
may illustrate what has been asserted, that in Ireland
a form of Romanesque was introduced before the Anglo-Saxon
Invasion. At any rate, the tower is a combination
of Celtic and Norman work. As to Restennet, the
present choir is a First Pointed structure. David
I. founded there an Augustinian Priory, which Malcolm
IV. made a cell of the Abbey of Jedburgh. The
tower is the only one of the square towers which has
very marked features of a pre-Norman character.
The building above the second story is probably fifteenth-century
work. St. Regulus’ Church is treated pp.
17-19.
The twelfth century was in Scotland
as elsewhere the great church-building period, and
the number of churches in the south and east that
reflect the Norman movement is very large. All
the large ones were conventual. Parish churches
of the period are generally small and aisleless the
most of them being single oblong chambers, with an
eastern chancel, sometimes with an eastern apse, and
occasionally with a western tower. Towards the
close of the period, the ornament became very elaborate,
especially in the arched heads of doorways. A
common feature was the arcade running round the walls
below the windows, either in the exterior, interior,
or both; the caps and arches are generally carved
elaborately and richly with ornaments, the chevron
or zig-zag enrichment being a characteristic feature.
The windows are always single and simple in detail.
Some of the towers connected with
such churches are amongst the earliest instances of
Norman work which survive; they are simple in design,
square on plan, and are carried up, without break or
buttress, to the parapet, where they are finished
with a gable roof, forming the saddle-back arrangement
still preserved in the Muthill Tower. The break
in the height is formed by string courses, which mark
the unequal stories. A small wheel-stair usually
leads to the top, and the doorway is occasionally
several feet from the ground. Such are the leading
features that can be traced in the buildings connected
with the period.
2. SCOTTISH TRANSITION STYLE
The term “transition”
is by general agreement reserved for the architecture
of the end of the twelfth century, when the Norman
style gradually gave place to the first pointed Gothic
style. In England this period extends from about
1180 to 1200; in Scotland it extends considerably
into the thirteenth century. The characteristics
of the style are the gradual introduction of the pointed
arch and its use along with some of the decorative
features of the Norman style. “The pointed
arch shows the advent of the new style, but the ornaments
of the old style continue to linger for a time.
The first pointed style was not complete till these
old ornaments were abandoned, and the more vigorous
enrichments of the new style were introduced.
The other constructive features of the Norman style
gradually changed at the same time as the arch.
The buttresses by degrees assumed the projecting form
of the first pointed style, and the pinnacles and
spires of the latter style were in course of time
introduced."
3. SCOTTISH FIRST POINTED PERIOD
“The pointed Gothic style which
had its origin in the north of France about the middle
of the twelfth century appeared in England about 1170,
but can scarcely be said to have reached Scotland till
after the close of the twelfth century.... The
pointed arch, for example, although generally adopted,
did not entirely displace, as it had done in the south,
the round form of the Normans, a feature which, especially
in doorways, continued to be employed not only in
the thirteenth century, but throughout the whole course
of Gothic art in Scotland. In other respects
the thirteenth century style in this country corresponds
very closely with that of England. Its features
are however, generally speaking, plainer and the structures
are smaller."
“This new departure sprung from
the necessity which arose for the invention of an
elastic system of vaulting which should admit of all
the arches, forming vaults over spaces of any form
or plan, being carried to the same height at the ridge.
This requirement led to the introduction of the pointed
arch in the vaulting, and from that departure it soon
spread to all the other arched features of the architecture."
Architecture, which had hitherto been confined to the
monasteries, was now undertaken by laymen, and while
the great monasteries were either rebuilt or founded,
the cathedrals mostly belong to this period. To
these attention was chiefly devoted, and the number
of parish churches constructed was comparatively small.
This partly arose from the large number of parish
churches built during the Norman period. In Scotland
the cathedrals of St. Andrews, Dunblane, Glasgow (the
choir and crypt), Elgin, Brechin, Dunkeld, Caithness,
the choir of St. Magnus in Orkney and Galloway belong
in whole or in part to this epoch.
4. SCOTTISH MIDDLE POINTED OR DECORATED PERIOD
The period from 1214 to 1286 comprised
the first pointed work in Scotland. The country
was during the time prosperous, and is believed to
have been more wealthy than at any time till after
the Union with England. The disputed succession
after the death of Alexander III. gave Edward I. the
opportunity of asserting his claims to the Scottish
throne; war followed, and with it poverty and barbarism.
“The first note of contest,” says Dr.
Joseph Robertson, “banished every English priest,
monk, and friar from the northern realm. Its termination
was followed by the departure of those great Anglo-Norman
lords the flower of the Scottish baronage who,
holding vast possessions in both countries, had so
long maintained among the rude Scottish hills the generous
example of English wealth and refinement. Then
it was that De la Zouche and De Quincy, Ferrars and
Talbot, Beaumont and Umfraville, Percy and Wake, Moubray
and Fitz-Warine, Balliol and Cumyn, Hastings and De
Coursi, ceased to be significant names beyond the
Tweed either perishing in that terrible
revolution or withdrawing to their English domains,
there to perpetuate in scutcheon and pedigree the
memory of their rightful claims to many of the fairest
lordships of Albany, and to much of the reddest blood
of the north." This had a twofold consequence to
architecture. Comparatively few buildings arose
in the north, and these were in a smaller scale.
And England now becoming an hereditary enemy, no longer
supplied models for the churches north of the Tweed,
which received the impress of France. In England
the First Pointed was succeeded about 1272 by the
Middle Pointed or Decorated, which swayed for about
a century, being succeeded by the Third Pointed or
Perpendicular, whose reign, beginning about 1377, ended
with the Reformation. The Decorated style did
not reach Scotland till it had passed away in England,
and the Scottish representatives of the style are
scanty in number and late in date. When the country
revived after the long struggle with England, and
building began towards the close of the fourteenth
or the beginning of the fifteenth century, few new
works were undertaken, energy and resources were concentrated
on the rebuilding or completion of the edifices that
had been destroyed or left unfinished. This period,
along with the Third Pointed in Scotland, is regarded
as the work of native architects.
5. SCOTTISH THIRD OR LATE POINTED PERIOD
The Middle Pointed passed by a gentle
gradation into the Late Pointed style, and it is difficult
to say when the one ceased and the other began.
Yet there are some characteristics of the Third Pointed
which are peculiar to it and render it a distinct
epoch. The large churches are nearly all restorations,
and no new churches of great size were undertaken.
The Scottish churches are usually smaller in size than
the English ones, and consist of single compartments
without aisles. The east end frequently terminates
with a three-sided apse a feature which
owes its origin to the Scottish alliance and intercourse
with France. The leading and distinguishing feature
is, however, the vaulting the pointed barrel
vault being almost universally employed. The windows
of these churches are necessarily low, so as to allow
the point of the arch-head to come beneath the spring
of the main vault. The buttresses are generally
somewhat stunted. The windows are almost always
pointed, and contain simple tracery derived from the
earlier styles. The doorways are generally of
the old round-headed form, with late foliage and enrichments.
Porches are occasionally introduced, and coats of arms
are commonly carved on shields of the period, and
are useful in determining the dates of portions of
the buildings. Towers were generally erected or
intended, and are somewhat stunted, finished with short
spires, having small dormer windows inserted in them.
Monuments are of frequent occurrence, and are frequently
placed in arched and canopied recesses. Richly
carved sacrament-houses are occasionally introduced,
and perhaps some of the good carving may be due to
the French masons who were numerous in Scotland during
the reigns of James IV. and James V. The structures
of the period were either parish or collegiate churches.