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Medieval Art and Architecture in the Diocese of St.Andrews

Higgitt, John(Edited by)
Part of the The British Archaeological Association conference transactions series
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The wealth of St. Andrew's diocese, the richest in medieval Scotland, was reflected in its ecclesiastical art and architecture.

Religious changes in the sixteenth century led to the ruin of the cathedral and monastic houses and to the stripping of churches.

Much important, although often fragmentary, architecture still remains; and there are significant if tantalising survivals of the furnishings.

This volume consists of papers on the history of the medieval diocese, on the cult of St Andrew, on the eleventh to thirteenth century churches of St Andrews, Dunfermline and Arbroath as well as on facades and piers and distinctively Scottish architecture of the later Middle Ages.

Other papers deal with Romanesque sculpture, sixteenth-century woodwork, the metalwork of the university maces of St Andrews and an altarpiece by Hugo van der Goes and there are surveys of the surviving stained glass and floor tiles of the diocese.

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Product Details
W.S. Maney & Son Ltd
0901286435 / 9780901286437
Hardback
01/12/1994
United Kingdom
140 pages, 130 halftone plates, line illustrations, 1 plan
Professional & Vocational/Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly/Undergraduate Learn More