Churches
Although I'm not at all religious I can appreciate work done by those that are.
At the west end of Princes Street in Edinburgh is the Church of St John the Evangelist.
Dunfermline Palace is a ruined former Scottish royal palace. Dunfermline was a favourite residence of many Scottish monarchs including Malcolm III, David II and James I.
The west door of Dunfermline Abbey on a spring morning. Dunfermline was the capital of Scotland in the early middle ages and the abbey is the burial place of several Scottish kings.
Vicarsford Cemetery Chapel is the memorial chapel for the Leng family, built between 1895 and 1897 by local architect Thomas Martin Cappon. It has a tall, steeply pitched roof which is clad in copper which has weathered to create a striking green colour.
St Andrews Cathedral was begun around 1160 and was complete by the late 14th century. At one time St Andrews was the most important see in Scotland.
Dunfermline Abbey was a large medieval Benedictine abbey in the county of Fife, Scotland. It founded in 1128 by King David I of Scotland, but the monastic establishment was based on an earlier foundation dating back to 1058. It was sacked in 1560 during the Scottish Reformation and permitted to fall into disrepair.
St Magnus Cathedral in Kirkwall, the main town of Orkney, an island off the north coast of mainland Scotland. It is the most northerly cathedral in the United Kingdom, an example of Romanesque architecture built for the bishops of Orkney when the islands were ruled by the Norse Earls of Orkney. Construction began in 1137, and it was added to over the next 300 years.