Glasgow, Cathedral 1897
Photo ref:
39774

More about this scene
Founded in 1136, on the site of St Mungo's Church of AD543, the Cathedral has gone through many times of peace and of strife. On one door in the Cathedral lead shot can still be seen; it bears witness to the citizens' successful defence against the Reformation zealots who would have destroyed it. The 'Bridge of Sighs' in the foreground leads to the Eastern Necropolis. The Royal Infirmary, designed by Robert and James Adam in 1792, is on the immediate left of the Cathedral. It was there that Lord Joseph Lister first began antiseptic treatment and Dr John Macintyre was the first to use X-rays for diagnosis.
An extract from Around Glasgow Photographic Memories.
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