St Vigeans

There is no record of his having visited what is now Scotland, but followers of his cult may have founded a monastery among the Picts at St Vigeans as early as the 8th century.

Most of the stones were recovered from the parish church, into whose walls they had been incorporated as building rubble during the Middle Ages, during 19th-century 'restoration' work.

A monastic context for the St Vigeans' sculptures is suggested by some of the stones showing representations of clerics and patristic scenes.

Built of the local red sandstone, it was a large and impressive example of a Scottish medieval parish kirk.

[4] The old village of St Vigeans consisted of a single street of red sandstone cottages flanking the foot of the church mound.

The 17th-century bridge across the Brothock Burn