Dunkeld

This is a fountain in a square in the town of Dunkeld, another quaint little Scottish town. It's kind of old (the town and the fountain). I'm not sure that this might not have been an old steeple from the cathedral.
This is the exterior of the ruins of the old Cathedral of St. Andrew's. The place was originally built around the 8th century and rebuilt again and again a few times since. There is part of this place that is still used. Obviously this is not that part.
This is the interior of the ruins of the cathedral. The roof is long gone. It fell into disrepair during the Reformation in Britain. The place is full of graves, as are a lot of the cathedrals over there, but these were a bit older than most.
This is the grave marker for somebody who died a couple of decades before Christopher Columbus sailed across the Atlantic. In other words, it's really, really old.
Here is the tomb of Bishop Robert Cardeny. He was responsible for many improvements to the old building, but it all fell apart anyway. He died in 1437, fourteen years before Columbus was even born.
The interior of the part of the cathedral that is still used today.
This is a considerably smaller chapel in the neighboring hamlet of Little Dunkeld. (Like Dunkeld is a booming metropolis.)  Anyway, you may ask, "Why did you take a picture of this small, insignificant church?" This chapel is where my great-grandfather, Stephen Galloway Duly, was reportedly christened.

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