2012

NS4673 : Old Kilpatrick Parish Church: effigy of a knight

taken 14 years ago, near to Old Kilpatrick, West Dunbartonshire, Scotland

Old Kilpatrick Parish Church: effigy of a knight
Old Kilpatrick Parish Church: effigy of a knight
The effigy is affixed to the western wall of NS4673 : Old Kilpatrick Parish Church. The figure is rather worn, but has a sword hanging from its belt on the (viewer's) right. It was easier to make out the sword in the late nineteenth century.

Note that all of the statements given below regarding the possible identity of the knight are very speculative, and I am not endorsing any of them; they are repeated here only for interest, and for what they reveal about the effigy's previous locations.

The New Statistical Account (1845) observes, presumably with reference to this figure, that "in the church-yard, there is a monumental stone, to which tradition has affixed the name of Saint Patrick. It is, however, the sculptured effigy of an armed knight, and, from the style of execution, of the fourteenth century. It has no inscription, but it may be very plausibly assigned to some one of the knightly race of Colquhoun" (on the Colquhoun family, see NS4673 : Memorial to the Colquhouns of Carcaston, and the books by William Fraser that are referred to at the end of that item).

The stone must previously have been located in the south-eastern corner of the kirkyard (where the NS4673 : Burial place of Stirling of Law is located); Donald MacLeod writes in 1886 (see the first link in this item for references) that "regarding the effigy of a knight in armour lying in Stirling of Law's burying-place, which popular tradition variously connects with St Patrick, a Colquhoun, and a Stirling, we are inclined to doubt all these conjectures. The effigy is said to have been taken out of the church, and our belief is that it was placed there in memory of James Stewart, a noble knight who was foully murdered at Kilpatrick by Alexander Lisle and Robert Boyd about the year 1444. Antiquarians tell us that the style of the armour depicted on the statue is that of the fifteenth century, which further corroborates this opinion".

John Bruce (again, see the link at the top of this item for the reference), writing in 1893, notes that it is impossible to determine whose effigy this is, but says that "possibly it may have been that of a predecessor of the Earl of Lennox, who granted the lands and church of Kilpatrick to Paisley Abbey, and at the same time stipulated a place of interment therein; or perchance that of Somerled, or his son, who were both slain in Renfrew in 1164; or may be one of his chieftains".
Old Kilpatrick Parish Church

The church was built in 1812 on more or less the same spot as its predecessor (the latter was a pre-Reformation church; it was of great age, although the precise period in which it was built is unknown).


Creative Commons Licence [Some Rights Reserved]   © Copyright Lairich Rig and licensed for reuse under this Creative Commons Licence.
Geographical Context: Historic sites and artefacts Religious sites Burial ground, Crematorium Place: Old Kilpatrick other tags: Effigy Click a tag, to view other nearby images.
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Grid Square
NS4673, 119 images   (more nearby 🔍)
Photographer
Lairich Rig   (more nearby)
Date Taken
Saturday, 26 May, 2012   (more nearby)
Submitted
Thursday, 7 June, 2012
Subject Location
OSGB36: geotagged! NS 4633 7308 [10m precision]
WGS84: 55:55.5699N 4:27.6617W
Camera Location
OSGB36: geotagged! NS 4633 7309
View Direction
East-southeast (about 112 degrees)
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Image classification(about): Supplemental image
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