Bishop Robert Blackadder was consecrated in 1484. We have already met with this prelate in connection with Jedburgh Abbey and Edrom Church. In his time the see was erected into an archbishopric. A building in continuation of the south transept, called Blackadder’s Aisle, was partly erected by him, but was never carried higher than the ground story or crypt. This archbishop was the last occupant of the see who added much to the adornments of the cathedral. He founded altarages, and erected two altars, on which his arms and initials are carved, in front of the rood screen.
Towards the middle of the sixteenth century, it became apparent that the end of the episcopal reign was approaching. Archbishop James Beaton first withdrew all the treasures and valuables from the cathedral into the bishop’s castle; but, finding himself and them insecure there, he retired to France, taking with him what valuables he could, and also the records of the see from the earliest period. The latter were deposited in the Scots College in Paris, and at the time of the French Revolution they were partially saved by the Abbé Macpherson, and sent back to Scotland.
These records have now been published by the Maitland Club under the title of Registrum Episcopatus Glasguensis, with a valuable introduction by the editor, Professor Cosmo Innes.
The cathedral is situated on steep ground sloping eastwards towards the Molindinar Burn, which here runs through a narrow valley on its way southward to the Clyde, which is only a short distance off. Opposite the cathedral, on the eastern bank of the burn, there rises a steep conical hill, now a many-monumented cemetery, from which fine bird’s-eye views of the building may be obtained. The surroundings of the edifice have changed many times since it was built. Till after the Reformation there stood at the west end of the cathedral the Bishop’s Palace, a great fortress covering some acres of ground; but of its many buildings, walls, and towers not a shadow is left. The manses of the prebends have likewise disappeared, and even the Molindinar Burn is buried as a sewer deep below the present surface of the valley. The cathedral is surrounded by the old churchyard, a large open space free from houses, and the structure can thus be well seen on all sides.
Fig. 567.—St. Mungo’s Cathedral. View from West, showing Western Adjuncts, now removed.[63]
Although built at different dates, the edifice has a very homogeneous appearance, and might easily be mistaken at first sight for a building of one period. The structure has a gaunt and stern aspect, and greatly wants some salient features to break its rigid outline. Such features existed till about the middle of this century in the shape of two projecting adjuncts at the west end ([Fig. 567]), the one on the north side being a tower crowned with a pointed roof, and the other, called the consistory house, being a lower building, which finished like a pele tower with a crow-stepped roof and a cape house. These structures have now been removed.