St Clement's Church, Rodel, Harris, Scotland.

St Clement's Church, Rodel, Harris, Scotland. Stock Photo
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Image details

Contributor:

Lars Ørstavik / Alamy Stock Photo

Image ID:

G17D7G

File size:

24.1 MB (1.1 MB Compressed download)

Releases:

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Dimensions:

3300 x 2550 px | 27.9 x 21.6 cm | 11 x 8.5 inches | 300dpi

Date taken:

24 July 2012

Location:

Rodel, Harris, Scotland

More information:

St Clement's Church (Scottish Gaelic: Tùr Chliamhainn, meaning Clement's Tower) is a fifteenth-century church in Rodel, Harris, Scotland, built for the Chiefs of the MacLeods of Harris. It is dedicated to Pope Clement I. It is sometimes known as Eaglais Roghadail or Rodal Church. The church was built using local Lewisian gneiss rock. Its ground plan is cruciform and there is a tower at the west end, accessible through a door at the west end of the nave and a set of stone staircases and wooden ladders. The choir and the sanctuary with the high altar, which used to be separated by the nave by a wooden screen, are located at the opposite east end of the church. In the transepts leading off from the nave on both sides, there are additional chapels, the entrance door points nord and leads to nave. The architectural style is essentially that of 1520 to 1550. In 1528, Alasdair Crotach MacLeod, 8th Chief, prepared for himself a magnificent wall tomb on the south side of the choir - possibly the finest medieval wall tomb in Scotland, being crowned by an arch and ornated by carvings of biblical design. The 9th Chief, Alasadair or Alexander's son William, had his grave prepared in the south wall of the nave in 1539. In the south transept, there is a third grave probably (Wikipedia)