Fig. 1151.—Seton Collegiate Church. Transept, looking South.
Fig. 1152.—Seton Collegiate Church. View from South Transept, looking North.
(see Figs. [1145] and [1150])). The north and south end windows of the transepts (Fig. [1153]) are peculiar. They are of considerable size, and
Fig. 1153.—Seton Collegiate Church. Transept, from South.
each is divided into two compartments by a large stone mullion built in courses, each compartment being filled with smaller tracery. Several examples of this mode of treating large windows about this period may be mentioned, such as King’s College, Aberdeen; Haddington Church, &c. There is an arched recess under the two large end windows of the north and south transepts (see Figs. [1151] and [1152])), which perhaps at one time contained monuments. A piscina occurs in the east wall of the south transept (Fig. [1154]), and another, supported on three heads, on the north-west pier of the tower. Other monuments in the Renaissance