St Giles' Church, Elgin

St Giles' Church is a Church of Scotland church situated in the centre of Elgin, Moray, in north-east Scotland. It is Elgin's original parish church. [2]

St Giles' Church, Elgin
St Giles church in the centre of Elgin, Moray
Religion
AffiliationProtestantism
Governing bodyChurch of Scotland
Location
LocationElgin, Moray
St Giles' Church, Elgin is located in Scotland
St Giles' Church, Elgin
Location in Scotland
Geographic coordinates57°38′55″N 3°18′55″W / 57.6487°N 3.3153°W / 57.6487; -3.3153
Architecture
Architect(s)Archibald Simpson (current building)[1]
TypeChurch
StyleGreek Revival (current building)[1]
Completed1828 (current building),[1] ≥1390 (second building), ≤9th century (original building)

The current building was built between 1825 and 1828 and designed in a Greek Revival style by architect Archibald Simpson.[1] It has been a Category A listed building since 1971.[3]

The previous kirk, demolished in 1826

The first record of a church on the site is a charter from William the Lion, dating from between 1187 and 1189, granting St Giles' to the Bishop of Moray, though the discovery of the 9th century Elgin Pillar in the area of the churchyard in 1823 suggests that the medieval church may have had a much earlier predecessor. [4] St Giles' was restored after being burned by Alexander Stewart, the "Wolf of Badenoch", in 1390. The nave was rebuilt after its vaulted stone roof collapsed in 1679.[4] Burials in the churchyard ceased in the early 17th century. Cartloads of human bones were removed in 1826, either transferred to the graveyard of Elgin Cathedral or mixed with soil and spread on fields around the burgh, while gravestones were used to pave the High Street.[5]

References

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  1. ^ a b c d "St Giles Church, High Street, Elgin". Moray Historic Environment Record. Aberdeenshire Council. 2020. Retrieved 25 April 2021.
  2. ^ "Elgin, High Street, St Giles' Church Of Scotland". Canmore. Historic Environment Scotland. Retrieved 25 April 2021.
  3. ^ "High Street, St Giles' Church (Church of Scotland)". Historic Environment Portal. Historic Environment Scotland. Retrieved 25 April 2021.
  4. ^ a b Hall et al. 1999, p. 815.
  5. ^ Hall et al. 1999, p. 816.

Bibliography

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