St Anna’s Chapel, St Andrews

Dublin Core

Title

St Anna’s Chapel, St Andrews

Description

During the late Middle Ages a chapel dedicated to St Anna (the grandmother of Jesus) stood on the north side of North Street. St Anna’s Chapel was probably a chantry – an institution where one or more priests regularly prayed for the souls of the dead. Chantries, or chaplainries as they were traditionally termed in Scotland, were often part of a larger church, but could be a separate building like St Anna’s. In the early sixteenth century church courts sometimes met in St Anna’s Chapel. Early property records indicate that near the chapel there was area known as ‘St Anna’s Yard’. Shortly after the Reformation the chapel and its revenues were transferred to St Andrews burgh council. By the late 1560s the site of St Anna’s was held by Robert Pont, a leading figure in the Reformed Church of Scotland. The area where the chapel once stood is now covered by the University of St Andrews’ College Gate building.

Source

sacredlandscapesoffife

Contributor

Bess Rhodes

Type

Site

Identifier

75

Date Submitted

21/05/2021

Date Modified

05/21/2021 04:37:15 pm

References

(1) W.E.K. Rankin, The Parish Church of the Holy Trinity St Andrews: Pre-Reformation (Edinburgh, 1955), pp. 50, 69, 114. (2) University of St Andrews Library, B65/1/1, ff. 39v-50v. (3) University of St Andrews Library, B65/23/352.

Extent

cm x cm x cm

Spatial Coverage

current,56.34121634603222,-2.7933796499019086;

Europeana

Europeana Data Provider

St Anna’s Chapel, St Andrews

Europeana Type

TEXT

Site Item Type Metadata

Institutional nature

Building

Prim Media

154

Denomination

Catholic

Citation

“St Anna’s Chapel, St Andrews,” Virtual Museum, accessed April 24, 2025, https://fifecoastalzone.org/omeka/items/show/155.

Embed

Copy the code below into your web page