(Redirected from St Giles Cathedral)
St. Giles' Cathedral from the front

The 1992 Reiger organ of St. Giles'
A prominent feature of the
Edinburgh skyline, 'St. Giles' Cathedral' or the 'High Kirk of Edinburgh' is a
Church of Scotland place of worship decorating the midpoint of the
Royal Mile with its highly distinctive hollow-crown tower. The church has been one of Edinburgh's religious focal points for approximately 900 years. Today it is sometimes regarded as the mother church of
Presbyterianism.
[1]
St. Giles was only a
cathedral in its formal sense (ie. the seat of a bishop) for two periods during the 17th century (1635-38 and 1661-1689), when
episcopalianism, backed by the
Crown, briefly gained ascendancy within the Kirk (see
Bishops Wars). In the
mediaeval period, prior to the
reformation, Edinburgh had no cathedral as the
royal burgh was part of the
Diocese of St Andrews, under the
Bishop of St Andrews whose episcopal seat was
St Andrew's Cathedral. For most of its post-
reformation history the Church of Scotland has not had bishops, diocese, or cathedrals. As such, the use of the term Cathedral today carries no practical meaning. The "
high kirk" title is older, being attested well before the building's brief stint as a cathedral.
It is the Church of Scotland
parish church for part of
Edinburgh's Old Town. Five services are held every Sunday, as well as daily services and special services for state and civic occasions. The current
Minister (since 1973) of St. Giles' is the Very Reverend Dr
Gilleasbuig Macmillan.
As the name implies, it is dedicated to
St. Giles, who was the
patron saint of cripples and
lepers and a very popular saint in the
Middle Ages. The oldest parts of the building are four massive central pillars, dating from 1120. Over the years many chapels were added, greatly enlarging the church and leaving it rather irregular in plan. Extensive work was done after its was established as a
collegiate church in 1466, and by the middle of the 16th century (before the
Reformation) there were about fifty altars in the church.
St. Giles has both some of the best, and some of the least attractive,
stained glass windows in
Scotland, dating from the 19th and 20th centuries (none survives from the medieval period).
The most well known windows include the: Victorian Windows, Burne-Jones Window,
North Window, and the
Burns Window.
The Victorian windows were commissioned by Sir
William Chambers,
Lord Provost of Edinburgh, who spearheaded the (extremely intrusive) restoration of St. Giles in 1872.
Until this time St. Giles had, since shortly after the Reformation, consisted of several churches within the main edifice, divided by walls and with galleries inserted into the vaults. The restoration reunified the church into a single space. Tragically, an obsession with a barren 'symmetry' led to the actual demolition of parts of the kirk (notably on the south side, where a number of chapels had been added piecemeal during the late Middle Ages). The exterior of the building, except for the tower and crown spire, was refaced in bland grey sandstone ashlar and standardised 'Gothic' ornament alien to Scottish medieval architecture, which paid scant heed to the original, strikingly individual, appearance of the church. Much of the unique character and historic interest of St. Giles (undisputably one of
Scotland's most important - and prominent - historic buildings) were thus recklessly destroyed in a 'restoration' chiefly notable for combining ignorance with arrogance. The contrast with a recent (late 20th century) sensitive restoration of the crown spire, which included the regilding of various pinnacles and ornaments, could not be more marked. Happily, the interior of the church retains more of its ancient character, including a wealth of carved ornament, though the walls and vaults have been only partially replastered. The dark stone rubble of the 'scraped' parts of the walls, which were never meant to be seen by the medieval builders, makes the inside needlessly dark (detestably so on overcast days).
The cost of the stained glass windows was underwritten by the Lord Provost and other donors. The Edinburgh firm of Ballantine & Son was commissioned for the work.
The windows form a continuous narrative over seven windows starting in the north east corner and finishing on the north-west side.
One of the last windows of this plan depicts
St. Andrew, the patron saint of Scotland, holding his cross with, on either side of him, St. Columba and King David (erroneously labeled
St. David).
St. Andrew wears a flowing peacock-blue cassock and his features are modeled after prominent Edinburgh physician James Jamieson. Unusually, this window was funded by a grateful patient who insisted that St. Andrew bore the features of the good doctor.
Below St. Andrew are depicted St. Giles, with his hind, and St. Cuthbert.
The dedication beneath the St. Andrew window states: James Jamieson Fellow of the Royal College of Surgeons Edinburgh and Elder of the Kirk, born 1841, in Bowden, and died 1903.
The Thistle Chapel (1911, by
Robert Lorimer) is the chapel of
The Most Ancient and Most Noble Order of the Thistle, Scotland's foremost Order of Chivalry. It is a small, but exquisite, chapel with carved and painted fittings of extraordinary detail. The Order, which was founded by
James VII in 1687, consists of the monarch and 16 knights. The knights are the personal appointment of the crown, and are normally Scots who have made a significant contribution to national or international affairs. Knights have included
Sir Alec Douglas-Home,
Lord Mackay of Clashfern and
Sir Fitzroy MacLean.
On Sunday
23 July 1637 efforts by King
Charles I to impose
Anglican services on the Church of Scotland led to the
Book of Common Prayer revised for Scottish use being introduced in St Giles'. Rioting in opposition began when Dean John Hanna began to read from the new Book of Prayer, legendarily initiated by the market-woman or street-seller
Jenny Geddes throwing her stool at his head. The disturbances led to the
National Covenant and hence the
Bishops' Wars; the first part of the
Wars of the Three Kingdoms, which included the
English Civil War. In the late 17th century a
carillon was made for the cathedral by
James Meikle. On the day in 1707 that the
Treaty of Union was signed to merge the
Parliament of Scotland with the
Parliament of England and create the
Kingdom of Great Britain, the carilloner in St Giles rang the bells in the tune ''Why should I be so sad on my wedding day?''
[2]
Its many monuments and memorials, as well as its sheer size and location, have made it a very popular tourist attraction, drawing special notice during the annual
Edinburgh Festival, which centres on the Royal Mile. Notable monuments include those to
James Graham,
Marquess of Montrose (1612-50), his enemy
Archibald Campbell, 1st
Marquess of Argyll (1607-61) and
Robert Louis Stevenson (1850-94).

St Giles' Cathedral on the Edinburgh Old Town skyline
Notes
1. www.stgilescathedral.org.uk
2. Notes by John Purser to CD ''Scotland's Music'', Facts about Edinburgh.
See also
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Church of Scotland
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List of Church of Scotland parishes
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Edinburgh
★
Royal Mile
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St. Giles
External links
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St. Giles' Cathedral website
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St. Giles' Cathedral Independent article and photographs
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St. Giles' at ''Undiscovered Scotland''
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St. Giles' at ''About Britain''
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St. Giles' at ''The Capital Scot''
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EdinPhoto
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The Churches of Edinburgh at ''ElectricScotland.com''
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Edinburgh Architecture - The Royal Mile