[57] See Castellated and Domestic Architecture, Vol. I. p. 90, and Vol. III. p. 72.
[58] Castellated and Domestic Architecture, Vol. III., Introduction.
[59] Muir, Old Church Architecture of Scotland, p. 67.
[60] Castellated and Domestic Architecture, Vol. V., p. 130.
[61] See [Introduction, p. 8.]
[62] Characteristics, p. 141.
[63] Ibid. p. 142.
[64] For a further example of a primitive church and cells, see the Brough of Deerness, described by Sir H. Dryden in the following pages. It will be observed that the simple oblong church, with door in west end and one window in east end, is surrounded with a number of ruins of stone huts, which were no doubt the dwellings of the monastic family of the establishment; while near the land side are the remains of the cashel or fortification of the platform.
[65] Notes, p. 35.
[66] Ibid. p. 272.