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Culross Abbey

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Culross Abbey is a formerCistercianabbey inCulross,Scotland, headed by theAbbot or Commendator of Culross. Part of it is still used as the local parish church by theChurch of Scotland.

Culross Abbey
Monastery information
OrderCistercian
Established1217
Disestablished1589
Mother houseKinloss Abbey
DioceseDiocese of St Andrews
Controlled churchesCrombie; Culross; Tullibole
People
Founder(s)Maol Choluim I, Earl of Fife

History

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The abbey was founded in 1217 byMalcolm I,Mormaer orEarl of Fife, and was first colonised bymonks fromKinloss Abbey. Culross may have been chosen to establish an abbey because this was the birthplace ofSaint Mungo. It is evident that the abbey was built over the earlierPictish church supposedly founded bySaint Serf in the 6th century, as witnessed by the presence in the ruined Cistercian church of early medieval carved stones and from a ninth-century reference to a church of St Serf at Culross (Cuileann Ros) in a Gaelic list of the mothers of various saints.

The original 13th-century abbey wascruciform in plan, without aisles. By the late 15th century thelay brothers had ceased to be part of the monastery, and the abbey community consisted of only 15 choir-monks. The western half of the monastic cloister range was therefore abandoned, and thenave was demolished around 1500, although it is possible that it was about to be rebuilt at the time of the reformation. Thereformation parliament of 1560 outlawed monastic life in Scotland and the monastery was allowed to continue, but was planned to die out naturally with the death of the last monk. In the 1580s the local parish congregation began to worship in the old monastic east end.

In 1613 the heart of Edward Bruce, a son ofEdward Bruce, 1st Lord Kinloss who built Culross Abbey House, was buried in the kirkyard in a silver casket after he was killed in a duel withEdward Sackville.[1]

In 1633 the east end of the abbey church was legally and completely taken over for use as aparish church, while the adjoining buildings fell into decay. In 1642 the northtransept was converted into atomb house by SirGeorge Bruce of Carnock.Alabaster carved effigies of him, his wife, and eight children can still be viewed there today. The abbey was restored in 1823, although many original features were removed, including the transept chapels. Another restoration took place in 1905, by Glasgow architectPeter MacGregor Chalmers,[2] which reinstated the chapels and left the buildings much as they can be seen today. The eastern parts of the church are still in use forworship, and are generally open to the public.

ALey tunnel is said to exist beneath the abbey, and within is said to sit a man in a golden chair waiting to give valuable treasures to anyone who succeeds in finding him. According to one story, many years ago a blind piper decided to try and upon entering at Newgate with his dog he proceeded to search and could be heard playing his pipes as far as the West Kirk, three quarters of a mile away. Eventually the dog emerged into the daylight, however the piper was never seen, or heard of, again.[3]

Current use

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Sir George Bruce monument

The remainingruins of the abbey are now in the care ofHistoric Environment Scotland. The remaining intact part of the Abbey is used by the Church of Scotland as the local parish church. The church contains stained glass in the main east window by the Edinburgh company of Ballantyne & Son, plus several modern stained glass windows.

The Abbey has played host to a number of cultural events, including an inaugural concert byFife Opera.

See also

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References

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  1. ^Lord Stowell, 'Account of the Discovery of the Heart of Lord Edward Bruce at Culross in Perthshire',Archaeologia, vol. 20 (London, 1824), pp. 515-8.
  2. ^"Peter Macgregor Chalmers".www.scottisharchitects.org.uk. Archived fromthe original on 10 August 2020. Retrieved3 June 2021.
  3. ^Beare, Beryl (1996),Scotland. Myths & Legends. Pub. Parragon, Avonmouth.ISBN 0-7525-1694-9. P. 28.

External links

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56°3′29.5″N3°37′32″W / 56.058194°N 3.62556°W /56.058194; -3.62556


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