Welcome

Please feel free to browse our Web Site and if you would like to contact us E-mail:- lasramblasramblers@aol.co.uk

Google+



Tuesday, 26 May 2015

Pre Ceilidh promenade in Orphir

Las Ramblas have a rest from the Music, Dancing & Alcohol that are compulsory during Orkney Folk Festival and take in a short walk in Orphir.
St Andrew missed the Hamnavoe in Scrabster Marion, Linda, Kay, Jill, Neil, Sam, Kevin, Bruce,  Sally & Captain Haddock head out to the Earl's Bu without him.
 
Earl's Bu And Church, Orphir
In the Orkneyinga Saga, under the year 1136, is an account of a great Yule feast given by Earl Paul at his bĂș, or residence, at Orphir. It runs: ‘There was a large drinking-hall; the door was near the east gable on the southern wall, and a magnificent church stood before the hall door, and one had to go down to the church  from the hall.’ The remains of that ‘magnificent church’, dedicated to St Nicholas, survive to this day.The church was circular, which was highly unusual. So far as we know, the only other round church built in medieval Scotland was at Roxburgh near the English Border, but that no longer exists.The circular line of the nave wall at Orphir may still be seen, whilst the semi-circular, stone-vaulted apse is still intact. A round-arched window in the east wall of the apse brought light onto the altar, the seating of which remains. The nave would also have had a vaulted ceiling with a central skylight.
Circular churches were inspired by the rotunda of the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem. That church was visited by many Western pilgrims and crusaders after the First Crusade of 1099. They included Earl Hakon Paulsson of Orkney, who travelled to Jerusalem to atone for ordering the death of Earl Magnus on Egilsay in about 1116.
St Nicholas Church, at Orphir, was probably built by him soon after his return.
Beside the church lie the excavated remains of a large building. It cannot be dated with certainty, but it may have been Earl Paul’s ‘drinking hall’, which the saga writer describes as having ‘many large ale vessels’. He adds that ‘opposite the outer door was the stofa [heated sitting room]’.
The Route
Neil, Linda, Sam, Marion, Jill Sally at the remains of St Nicholas Church
while Kay chases after Captain Haddock 
Striding Out
Grey Skies
Haddock requires a short rest
Tree's in Orkney!!!
Kay, Marion & Jill admire the Thicket
Orcadian Cataract
Neil lives up to his name
Multi-coloured Bluebells
Time to head over to Harray Hall for a Dashing White Sergeant. 


No comments:

Post a Comment