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  • Sept. 1, 1877
  • Page 20
  • Architectural Jottings.
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The Masonic Magazine, Sept. 1, 1877: Page 20

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Architectural Jottings.

Architectural Jottings .

FOUR WELL-KNOWN ABBEYS .

WE take this interesting paper from the Durham University Journal , and which we eommerid to the notice of our . readers . Though David I , the sainted King of Scotland , was said by some of his successors to have been " a sair saunct for

the croon , " because he had handed over to the monks so many of the royal lands , there is no doubt that herein he showed himself to be , whatever else he was , a " cannie Scot . " His political wisdom in founding a line of monasteries along the

English border has been pointed out by a distinguished countryman of his own in our time , and , in calling attention to it , we cannot do better than quote the following words of the author of " Waverley : ""His possessions in Northumberland

and Cumberland became precarious after the loss of the Battle of the Standard , and since the comparatively fertile valley of Teviotdale was likely to become the frontier of his kingdom , it is probable he wished to secure at least a part of those valuable possessions by jilaeing them in

the hands of the monks , whose property was for a long time respected even amidst the rage of a frontier war . In this manner alone had the king some chance of ensuring protection and security to the cultivation of the soil , and , in fact , for

several ages the possessions of those Abbeys were each a sort of Goshen , enjoying the calm li ght of peace and immunity , while the rest of the country , occujiied b y wild clans and marauding barons , was one dark scene of confusion ,

blood , and unremitted outrage . " But " Time rolls his ceaseless course , " and those Abbeys which some time were each a sort of "Goshen , " are now like unto Ai . Not , however , are they so farmade into ruinous heaps that nothing is

left to tell of their former grandeur or beauty . Everyone knows something about "fair Melrose , " and how it should be viewed ari ght from a poetical standing point . We take leave to think that a fairer scene would be presented to the sight of him who should visit Dryburgh according to the poet ' s directions for

Melrose . It is , however , as archceologists rather than as poets , or lovers of poetry , that some few make pilgrimages to ruined Abbeys , although there are not , probably , many archaeologists in whom the poetic and imaginative faculty is altogether

absent . To those who either do regard or desire to regard such places in a somewhat more scientific spirit than that of the average tourist , it is thought that a few passages from the note-book of one who has recently visited KelsoJedburgh

, , Dryburgh , and Melrose , may not be unaccejitable . The order in which these places are here mentioned is adopted advisedly , with reference to the dates of their foundation , and to their architectural characteristics .

All were founded in the twelfth century , that great abbey-building era , and all owe their foundation to the Scottish king above referred to , so that not Melrose alone , hut any one of the four , may claim to be

" St . David's ruined pile . " Kelso and Jedburgh exhibit , in a very remarkable degree , the unmistakeable features of the styles which prevailed in England as well as in Scotland at the time when they were built . They are Norman

near the ground , and apjrroach through Transitional to something bordering ou Early English as they rise towards the sky . Dryburgh was founded later than the two just named , and contains no work earlier than , late Transitional or Early

English . Melrose was entirely rebuilt in the fifteenth century by an architect whose " freakish " disposition showed itself not only in the tracery of the famous east window , but in almost every detail of his work . Kelso was founded in 1128 , for Reformed Benedictine Monks of the

Tironensian order , so named from Tiron m Picardy , where the order was first established- The dedication , as was usual in Abbeys belonging to this order , was to the Blessed Virgin and St . John , the Beloved Disciple . The existing remains include a considerable portion of the

Church , but little else . The view as we ajiproach by the bridge is one of the finest of its kind in the United Kingdom , and the main feature in it is the tower of the abbey church , with its two remaining sides towards the river , and in its massive

“The Masonic Magazine: 1877-09-01, Page 20” Masonic Periodicals Online, Library and Museum of Freemasonry, 24 May 2025, django:8000/periodicals/mmg/issues/mmg_01091877/page/20/.
  • List
  • Grid
Title Category Page
Monthly Masonic Summary. Article 1
SONNET. Article 1
OBJECTS, ADVANTAGES, AND PLEASURES OF SCIENCE. Article 2
THE DEATH OF ALEXANDER. Article 6
DEVONSHIRE LODGES PRIOR TO THE "UNION" OF DEC, 1813. Article 7
THE WORK OF NATURE IN THE MONTHS. Article 10
UPBRAID ME NOT. Article 13
THE ADVENTURES OF DON PASQUALE. Article 14
AN OLD-FASHIONED LOVE-SONG. Article 17
WHAT IS THE GOOD OF FREEMASONRY? Article 18
Architectural Jottings. Article 20
MY LORD THE KING; Article 22
ONLY A ROSE. Article 28
Our Archaeological Corner. Article 29
THE TRYST. Article 31
CONTEMPORARY LETTERS ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION. Article 32
PROCLAMATION DU ROI, Article 32
ORDRE DE MARCHE. Article 33
PLAN, Article 34
Untitled Article 35
AFTER THE LAST POPULAR SCIENCE LECTURE. Article 36
TOM HOOD. Article 37
THE VISTA OF LIFE. Article 41
Forgotten Stories. Article 44
NOTES ON LITERATURE, SCIENCE AND ART. Article 46
MR. SPRECHELHEIMER'S MISTAKE. Article 49
DOUBLE ACROSTIC. Article 49
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Note: This text has been automatically extracted via Optical Character Recognition (OCR) software.

Architectural Jottings.

Architectural Jottings .

FOUR WELL-KNOWN ABBEYS .

WE take this interesting paper from the Durham University Journal , and which we eommerid to the notice of our . readers . Though David I , the sainted King of Scotland , was said by some of his successors to have been " a sair saunct for

the croon , " because he had handed over to the monks so many of the royal lands , there is no doubt that herein he showed himself to be , whatever else he was , a " cannie Scot . " His political wisdom in founding a line of monasteries along the

English border has been pointed out by a distinguished countryman of his own in our time , and , in calling attention to it , we cannot do better than quote the following words of the author of " Waverley : ""His possessions in Northumberland

and Cumberland became precarious after the loss of the Battle of the Standard , and since the comparatively fertile valley of Teviotdale was likely to become the frontier of his kingdom , it is probable he wished to secure at least a part of those valuable possessions by jilaeing them in

the hands of the monks , whose property was for a long time respected even amidst the rage of a frontier war . In this manner alone had the king some chance of ensuring protection and security to the cultivation of the soil , and , in fact , for

several ages the possessions of those Abbeys were each a sort of Goshen , enjoying the calm li ght of peace and immunity , while the rest of the country , occujiied b y wild clans and marauding barons , was one dark scene of confusion ,

blood , and unremitted outrage . " But " Time rolls his ceaseless course , " and those Abbeys which some time were each a sort of "Goshen , " are now like unto Ai . Not , however , are they so farmade into ruinous heaps that nothing is

left to tell of their former grandeur or beauty . Everyone knows something about "fair Melrose , " and how it should be viewed ari ght from a poetical standing point . We take leave to think that a fairer scene would be presented to the sight of him who should visit Dryburgh according to the poet ' s directions for

Melrose . It is , however , as archceologists rather than as poets , or lovers of poetry , that some few make pilgrimages to ruined Abbeys , although there are not , probably , many archaeologists in whom the poetic and imaginative faculty is altogether

absent . To those who either do regard or desire to regard such places in a somewhat more scientific spirit than that of the average tourist , it is thought that a few passages from the note-book of one who has recently visited KelsoJedburgh

, , Dryburgh , and Melrose , may not be unaccejitable . The order in which these places are here mentioned is adopted advisedly , with reference to the dates of their foundation , and to their architectural characteristics .

All were founded in the twelfth century , that great abbey-building era , and all owe their foundation to the Scottish king above referred to , so that not Melrose alone , hut any one of the four , may claim to be

" St . David's ruined pile . " Kelso and Jedburgh exhibit , in a very remarkable degree , the unmistakeable features of the styles which prevailed in England as well as in Scotland at the time when they were built . They are Norman

near the ground , and apjrroach through Transitional to something bordering ou Early English as they rise towards the sky . Dryburgh was founded later than the two just named , and contains no work earlier than , late Transitional or Early

English . Melrose was entirely rebuilt in the fifteenth century by an architect whose " freakish " disposition showed itself not only in the tracery of the famous east window , but in almost every detail of his work . Kelso was founded in 1128 , for Reformed Benedictine Monks of the

Tironensian order , so named from Tiron m Picardy , where the order was first established- The dedication , as was usual in Abbeys belonging to this order , was to the Blessed Virgin and St . John , the Beloved Disciple . The existing remains include a considerable portion of the

Church , but little else . The view as we ajiproach by the bridge is one of the finest of its kind in the United Kingdom , and the main feature in it is the tower of the abbey church , with its two remaining sides towards the river , and in its massive

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