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and associate it with the other collegiate churches of Scotland erected in the fifteenth century.
In 1544 the structure suffered much at the hands of the English invaders, who carried off the organ and bells, and burnt the timber work.
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Fig. 1144.—Seton Collegiate Church. Plan.
The stone roof of the choir was removed at some period. The masonry, however, survived, and the edifice has now been roofed in and properly defended from the weather by the late Lord Wemyss, who, along with his Countess, is buried in the choir. The broken tracery of the windows has been renewed by the present Lord Wemyss. The church was designed