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Detail of slype. Digital image of AY 531

SC 798475

Description Detail of slype. Digital image of AY 531

Date 28/9/1941

Collection Records of the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Scotland (RCAHMS), Edinbu

Catalogue Number SC 798475

Category On-line Digital Images

Copy of AY 531

Scope and Content Crossraguel Abbey, South Ayrshire, from west-south-west This view from the west-south-west was taken in the mid-20th century, looking along the inner parlour, or slype, which connects the cloister, in the foreground, to the inner court. The stone benches were provided for the monks to rest. The ruins in the background are what is left of the kitchen. The last monks of Crossraguel Abbey were still living there in 1592, and must have been among the last pre-Reformation monks in Scotland. Ralegh Radford identified some small cells as 'sheltered housing' for old men not in orders who lived in the community as paying guests, known as corrodiars. Crossraguel Abbey was founded in 1244 by monks from the Cluniac Abbey of Paisley, after Paisley had tried to hold on to land given by Earl Duncan of Carrick in about 1200. It was never a large or particularly prosperous abbey, but the remains are unusually complete. Source: RCAHMS contribution to SCRAN.

External Reference Emergency Survey

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/collection/798475

File Format (TIF) Tagged Image File Format bitmap

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