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Reference

Date 2001

Event ID 928597

Category Documentary Reference

Type Reference

Permalink http://canmore.org.uk/event/928597

Until the 18th century there were remains of chapels dedicated to St Brendan and St Columba to the W of the bay, and Christ Chapel (NF19NW 1), near the village, survived as a thatched drystone building measuring about 7.3m by 4.3m (i). This probably stood in the present burial-ground, an oval revetted enclosure situated 220m N of the innermost point of Village Bay and a few metres N of the village street (ii). Two cross-marked stones re-used in nearby buildings probably came from the chapel-site.

(1) Slab re-used in the surround of the E window of house 16, which was built in 1860-1 (NF 0990 9930). It stands 160m WSW of the burial-ground and Sands, who saw the stone in re-use in 1875, recorded that it came from there (iii). It measures 0.61m in length and tapers from 0.42m near the top to 0.24m above the foot. It bears an incised Latin cross, 0.29m by 0.19m, with an expanded foot to the shaft. An incised frame, 0.38m by 0.27m, gives the effect of an outline cross with hollow centre.

(K Williamson and J M Boyd 1963, 144 and fig.; M Harman 1979, 254-8; G P Stell and M Harman 1988, fig.19A(b); M Buchanan 1995, fig.12a on p.2; Harman 1997, fig.30 on p.68).

Footnotes:

(i) M Martin 1934, 443-5; K Macaulay 1764, 70-1; M Harman 1979, 254-8; G P Stell and M Harman 1988, 17; Harman 1997, 66-9.

(ii) The burial-ground, whose wall dates from the second quarter of the 19th century, measures 25m from E to W by 16m (plan in Harman 1997, fig.29 on p.67), and its perimeter of about 70m is comparable with the 'hundred paces' given for the circumference of the churchyard by Macaulay (loc.cit.).

(iii) J Sands 1878, 82.

M Harman 1979, 254-8; G P Stell and M Harman 1988, fig.19A(a); Buchanan 1995, fig.12a on p.2; Harman 1997, fig.30 on p.68; I Fisher 2001.

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