Tour Scotland 4K Winter travel video, with Scottish music, of the Cathedral ruins and graveyard burial ground on ancestry, genealogy, family history visit to St Andrews, Fife. The Cathedral of St Andrew is a historical church in St Andrews, Fife, Scotland, which was the seat of the Bishops, later Archbishops, of St Andrews from its foundation in 1158 until it fell into disuse after the Reformation. It is currently a ruined monument in the custody of Historic Scotland. The ruins indicate the great size of the building at 350 feet. The cathedral was founded to supply more accommodation than the older church of St. Regulus. Saint Andrew was a Galilean fisherman before he and his brother Simon Peter became disciples of Jesus Christ. He was crucified by the Romans on an X-shaped cross at Patras in Greece and, hundreds of years later, his remains were moved to Constantinople and then, in the 13th century, to Amalfi in southern Italy where they are kept to this day. Officially, the Scottish winter runs from the 21st of December through to the 20th March.
All photographs are copyright of Sandy Stevenson, Tour Scotland, and may not be used without permission.
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