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Dunfermline
Abbey
Situated
at the centre of Dunfermline in W Fife, Dunfermline Abbey stands
on a ridge that falls steeply on the south and west to the course
of the Tower Burn which flows through Pittencrieff Park. The original
Benedictine priory was founded in the 1070s by Queen Margaret
on the site of an earlier chapel of the Celtic Church and in 1128
her son David I extended the building and increased its status
by making it an abbey. The western part of the present building
is the nave of the Abbey church built by David I between 1128
and 1150. The eastern end, with the tower bearing the words 'King
Robert the Bruce', is the new parish kirk that was built on part
of the ruins of the old abbey in 1818-21. In medieval times the
abbey became a major ecclesiastical centre and was the burial
place of several Scottish monarchs including Malcolm Canmore,
his wife Queen Margaret and Robert the Bruce whose tomb was rediscovered
in 1818. Queen Margaret was canonized in 1250 and a chapel and
shrine were built at the east end and centre of the abbey. Subsequently
in 1303, the abbey was destroyed by Edward I of England who recognised
the significance of the site as a focal point of Scottish nationalism.
The adjacent royal palace of Dunfermline grew out of the guest
house of the abbey after its closure during the Reformation and
was given as a wedding present to Anne of Denmark by her husband
James VI in 1589. Prior to the Union of the Crowns in 1603 Anne
of Denmark stayed here from time to time, and in 1600 her son,
later to become Charles I, was born here. Today there is a Dunfermline
Abbey and Visitor Centre.
If
you would like to visit this area as part of a highly personalized
small group tour of my native Scotland please e-mail me:
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