Little St Mungo's Chapel

Little St Mungo's Chapel (or, Kirk) was a church in Gallowgate, Glasgow, Scotland. Other names were St Mungo's Beyond the Walls, in the Fields, and Without the Walls. The epithets served to distinguish it from Glasgow Cathedral, also dedicated to St Mungo, the city's patron saint; the chapel was located beyond Gallowgate (or, East) Port, the eastern gate in the city walls. Around the year 600, St Kentigern (another name for St Mungo) returned to Glasgow from exile in Wales. He preached in the open air to King Redrath and his chiefs and people. In one account, he spoke from a small elevation called Dowhill. In another, the crowd could not hear him, but the ground miraculously upheaved itself to form Dowhill. The chapel was built on Dowhill in 1500 by David Cunningham, archdeacon of Argyll and provost of the Collegiate Church of Hamilton, who endowed it with lands and rents. It was surrounded by a churchyard (Scots: kirkyard). Some trees which stood around it were called St Mungo's Trees, and a well by it St Mungo's Well. The well survived into the 20th century. The churchyard was enclosed by a substantial stone wall (Scots: dyke) with "boles". A ground plan of the by-then long-gone chapel and churchyard was published in 1872. It includes a measurement, from which it can be roughly estimated that the chapel was 53 ft × 23 ft (16.2 m × 7.0 m) and the churchyard 95 ft × 79 ft (29 m × 24 m). Chapel and churchyard then disappear from public record until 1593. Some years before, they had come into the possession of Archibald Lyon, a prosperous merchant; they now passed into the ownership of the Provost and Magistrates (predecessors of the modern Glasgow City Council), who ordered that the chapel be repaired and turned into a hospital for the poor. It may have suffered damage during the anti-clerical zeal of the Scottish Reformation. The intention may have been to create a place outside the city for the seclusion of lepers and victims of plague. The building seems to have been last mentioned in 1603, but then disappears from the record; although the graveyard continued to be used for burials until the early 18th century. By the middle of that century, the site was overgrown, and said to be eerie, possibly haunted, and best avoided at night. In 1754, the Provost and Magistrates decided that the site should be utilised for a modern coaching inn. Robert Tennent contracted to build one, cleared the site, and in 1755 opened the Saracen's Head Inn; which was the premier inn in Glasgow for some 30 years.

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486 m

Tron Theatre

Le Tron Theatre est un théâtre situé à Glasgow, en Écosse. Il est établi au coin de Trongate et de Chisholm Street, dans ce qui était autrefois la collégiale Notre-Dame et Sainte-Anne (en) dans le quartier de Merchant City à Glasgow. Son clocher se dresse toujours à côté du théâtre.
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495 m

Monument Nelson

Le Nelson Monument est un obélisque commémoratif construit en 1806 en l'honneur du vice-amiral Horatio Nelson, construit l'année suivant sa mort à la bataille de Trafalgar. Il est situé sur Glasgow Green, un parc public historique de Glasgow, en Écosse. Il mesure 44 mètres de haut, et son socle carré est entouré de balustrades en fonte.
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559 m

Glasgow Women's Library

Glasgow Women's Library (ou GWL) est une bibliothèque publique créée par des femmes en 1991, pour des femmes et sur l'histoire des femmes à Glasgow, en Écosse.
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609 m

Glasgow Green

Glasgow Green est un parc public de Glasgow, sur la rive nord de la Clyde. Il s'agit du plus ancien parc de la ville puisqu'il remonte au XVe siècle. Il a accueilli certains des premiers matches de football quand ce sport a commencé à se développer. Le tout premier match de l'histoire des Rangers s'y est déroulé en 1872. Il est bordé par Templeton on the Green, l'ancienne usine de tapis James Templeton & Co. On y trouve également l'obélisque érigé en 1806 à la gloire de l'amiral Nelson. Portail des espaces verts Portail de Glasgow
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672 m

Albert Bridge (Glasgow)

L'Albert Bridge est un pont routier qui enjambe la rivière Clyde à Glasgow, en Écosse, près de Glasgow Green. Le pont a ouvert en 1871. Il relie Saltmarket au centre-ville à Crown Street au sud de la ville. Il est un monument classé de catégorie A et porte le nom de l'époux de la reine Victoria, le prince Albert.