The abbey buildings ([Fig. 622]) consisted originally of a church, having an aisleless choir about 42 feet long by 24 feet wide; a nave, with north aisle, 132 feet in length by 40 feet in width; north and south transepts, measuring from north to south 111 feet, and, including the eastern aisle, 39 feet 6 inches wide; and a great tower at the north-west angle of the nave, measuring about 37 feet 9 inches over the buttresses.
To the south of the nave lay the cloister garth, with its surrounding cloister walk, measuring over all 107 feet by 96 feet. The buildings entering from the east side of the cloister are the best preserved parts of the structure. Adjoining the south transept is the vaulted slype or passage leading to the eastward. Next to it is the chapter house, 49 feet long by 24 feet 3 inches wide; and to the south of the chapter house is a building 55 feet long by 32 feet wide over the walls, which was probably the fratry or day-room of the monks. It is provided with buttresses and windows on the east side. At the north end of this apartment was the day staircase to the dormitory. The west and south sides of the cloistral buildings are now almost reduced to the ruins of a single wall on each side. Some traces of partition walls and buttresses may be observed on the west side, but on the south side only a doorway at the east end can be made out. The refectory doubtless lay, as usual, on this side.
Fig. 624.—Lindores Abbey. Piscina in North Transept.
The monastery was surrounded by a high wall, of which some portions still exist. This wall contains a large entrance archway ([Fig. 623]), with smaller footway at the south-west angle.
Of the church little but the foundation and some portions of the walls survive. The outline of the exterior of the choir, with its buttresses, can be clearly followed, but the interior has been stripped of its ashlar work. A recess on the north side doubtless contained a tomb, and some traces of the sedilia are visible. Two small coffins were found buried in the choir, which are believed to have contained the remains of two children of Earl David, the founder. The position of the east aisle of the transepts can be traced, with its buttresses. The north and south walls of the choir were carried, without openings, across the ends of the transept aisle. The wall in the north transept contains a portion of a double piscina ([Fig. 624]), one basin being scalloped and the other a plain circle. Amongst the most interesting parts of the structure are the foundations and one or two courses of the piers of the crossing. These are well preserved, and show the first pointed mouldings of the responds of the piers on three sides ([Fig. 625]), the mouldings being the same in the piers of the arches which crossed the choir and transept, and also in the arches of the transept aisle. They are all of fine first pointed design. The base of the piers ([Fig. 626]) is also first pointed. A doorway from the north-east angle of the cloister enters the church by the south transept, and not, as usual, by the nave. A considerable part of the south wall of the nave survives. It has small projections at intervals along the south face, which probably carried an arcade. [Fig. 627] shows the section of the bases of the west end of the church and the tower.
Fig. 625.—Lindores Abbey.