56 SomE ANCIENT CHAPELS OF KNAPDALE. 
which is now so dilapidated as to be scarcely traceable, though, 
according to the writer of the Statistical Account of the parish 
of Knapdale, it was intact at the close of the seventeenth century. 
It is about 9 feet in length, and close to its west end is a broken 
«cross, the disk of which has disappeared. This cross, as it 
stands, is about six feet high, with, on its east face, some lattice 
work, and a horseman. The carving on its west face is practi- 
cally worn away. 
The chapel itself is an oblong building, 37 feet 4 inches 
Jong, and 19 feet 11 inches wide, across the east gable. It is 
not strictly rectangular, there being a difference of about ten 
inches in the width of the two gables. Internally, it is divided 
‘into two divisions, the eastern one or chancel being a semi- 
circularly vaulted cell 13 feet 3 inches long and 10 feet 9 inches 
wide. In the east gable, which is over three feet thick, are two 
round-headed and very deeply splayed windows. Excessively 
narrow to begin with, one has been contracted still further, 
evidently at a later date, with a slate slab, through which is 
pierced a very narrow lancet opening. The other window was 
probably similarly fitted, but the slab has disappeared, and the 
window has a somewhat torn appearance. The side walls, except 
where recessed, are about 4 feet 6 inches thick, and in the south 
one is a very deep semi-circularly arched recess, about 4 feet 6 
inches high, in which is the stone coffin mentioned in the account 
I quoted. On the cover is carved the figure of a priest, of which 
the head is awanting. In the north wall are two recesses, not 
quite so deep as the one in the south wall, both 4 feet 3 inches 
wide and 6 feet 3 inches high, semi-circularly arched. The 
eastern one of these has on one side a very small window, which 
originally only 9 inches wide has been contracted with a pierced 
slate similar to the window in the gable, except that the opening 
is slightly cusped. Below this window is a curious little recess, 
extending to within a few inches of the outside face of the wall, 
and about fifteen inches high. The barrel arch covering the 
chapel springs at a height of about 9 feet 3 inches from the 
floor, and is about 14 feet 6 inches high to the crown. The 
entrance to the chancel was originally by a semi-circular arch 
in the west gable, which has been filled in at a later period by 
a wall about 2 feet thick, with a low and narrow flat-headed 
doorway in the centre. On one side of this doorway is a small 
