Trojrii
■t-BSf
jürjfdidbipni -'©«ér 'ma®y!^férY'antéuaadhl^jKe^) fttch' f&fL" • êohists became
pïades töfrifecè ffliüyifS^e. •
- T h e ' hodfê^fdélïi to havé been entirely-®?i\iy'Q$iNbtf'th r f j-b u t fivCbme
^ o ts f fn g u k f ëxèa\satiöhs''ire'‘ found ' thefe are
èd \zë Wtéms\ ''andyit - isfïik g ly that 'tbfe^'faêr&f »Ways, adjac'ent to fthe
wöodeh relMettee '©f -f6m‘é' dhféïjJ’an.ciwêr e MtewtfcfeJ as< döpbhtc^ïes. of
fto r e s j^ c . tli^ '/o S fs ^M iö g * ^ -dixy^’ for :eomforlah^‘ p tó tó
TKë'-ftibïMs and' ca0ffps*Öffth^-n^tfvês!, afe^tiiffin^ëihediilgy.thelrfröS&nd
•form*, while th o fe ^ ^ ^R om am s'lid fe ^ fe< sth e fq u a rW '
U n ’deh th e 'ü e x t’^ ë ê b 'ït^ o H ltf® * ' 'difficuifkö * Wfëbyer an^gfenMne
rêmaihs alriadS.- The heüfe,*lk n d *eved J?hurch1Mf
ftruSeH fnhwSftJe-work j -and th e J u f e a l ‘monumë'nfs w e fe f«S b k p or
hèaps'leyfiffimés'i!’a ft|k?ilFëbakk!'th'at'‘G te iS ia fe '% ^ ld ‘'hófr’kS;rïfcdSa;tely
êiSbfVé-^iMer^pf^tïdïe’es, and tK^t^eylh' wëre
•buried'finUh?S'-ifadé, bn’Möèr,>'%f-’^
thaf' hliey 'were-r ©bteveyed' ta Hh h p Jï koêj* ïe&fö^rff; andvthéMdépul-
e'bfe^-thöré fhe-wn -of Irifla .and' iNor-sire^iinv kings, 'in rfK b e töpMly
fabulous.'
•* - T o - the -forth -epoch may ‘a^ha^fcï1 f orVt-sjl^piiU
remaining i® Scotland ,* -ffeir 'Bede^fnfe^twipsf' that- Mê8Mn ÏÏS;- A*. D.
715, obtained- 'architeds i ^ n , ’i^ e® rid !, ’abJapf-df WcrcmouthyniO
build a church in b is 'dominions, :pf<#ably at Abterne'thy ;
but t i e "round tower there remaining,- deems of more recent origin.
About the year 830, Unguft II founded t i e church öf St. Andrews;
and the chapel called that of St. Rcgulus, (who feems unknown in the
R oman calendar,) may,'perhaps,) claim even this antiquity. It is (probable
that thefe. fdorSd edifices in Hone wei-e';foonVtf@lfow:ê'd,'b y . the
(erëébiön o f thofe rude, round piles, rwith'otlf any cement, called Piks
I holie s : yet they -may morè p ïip ë rly belong to
The févënfh epoch, when the Danes pnay, i f they choofe, Ihare in
the höhour-èf the efedtion, for facn edifices have, been traced tdjScan-
tt to avia. They -fee-nrto have co-nfifted of a vaft hally. open to the Iky
. in -th e centre, while the cavities in. the wall prefent incommodious re-
ee'ffes for beds, ;&'c. „ Thefe buildings’ a |J remarkable, as.difplaying the
firft'elements of the Gothic, '.caftle ; and the caftle of Goninglburg, in
wSmëmMÉWÈ ' H H I - Ybrk&irè
Yorkshire,'.forms- an eafy tranfiition. The engraved obelilks, found at
Forces* a p d ^ .^ fih e r parts of Scotland, have been afcjribedtothe Danilh
ravagers, -who had not «time fjDr,1f e i ’.ej'p£tiqn;S. ^They are, probably,
irfpnutoenh'Pf figpal events, 'raifedt-by th eM n g on chiefs, and as fome
are &u-n,d in, Scandinavia,, asjrecent as,tfiepjSfteenthp century, it is pro-
J^blb thatfbfariy' o f Ithe vScdW^Jdb*e-KIks, 'are far more modern than is
generally imagined: ./
.Tp.ienum'erate the churches ap<J caftles, ere.dtbd'finee the reign o f
Malcom III, -wompqbp' irjifinitei 'Sbtpe d f the imVfo'fplendid-'churches
fteilpe^tbjeif foundation from Dalvid I','in,'the)twelfth, century.
H istop.
E poc
iVOL. I. X