St. Andrews
The ancient city on Scotland's east coast has been a place of
pilgrimage for centuries. Legend claims that the bones of St Andrew were brought
from Patras in Greece by a monk called Regulus in about AD 390. Historical
evidence tends to lean more heavily towards the relics arriving in the
possession of a bishop fleeing from England almost 400 years later.
Yet their presence in the city which took his name brought pilgrims from all
parts of the known world. St Andrew became the patron saint of Scotland and the
city grew in size, prestige and wealth. As early as 1123 the famous stretch of
linksland which had been left by the receding waters of the North Sea was
granted by King David I to the bishops who controlled St Andrews. Through a
series of charters and confirmations the rights of local citizens to the links
have been protected ever since.
The country's oldest university was founded here in 1413 and golf was believed
to be a popular sport at that time. Certainly it was taxing the minds and bodies
of the local population by 1457 when King James II banned the game by act of the
Scottish Parliament because archery practice, which was necessary to the defence
of the realm, was being neglected.
By the beginning of the 16th century the population had grown to 14,000 and at
times of religious and commercial festivals more than 300 ships would fill the
small harbour and crowd St Andrews Bay. Local golfers shared the links with
monarchs, ambassadors, bishops and university academics. Mary Queen of Scots and
James VI were both visitors to the town.
Yet the reformation stripped St Andrews of its religious significance, the
university was in danger of being moved to Perth and the cathedral once attended
by Robert the Bruce lay in ruins when the Society of St Andrews Golfers, later
to become the Royal and Ancient Golf Club, was formed in 1754.
Within a century the fortunes of the ancient city had been restored and its
reputation as the Home of Golf firmly established. Today it attracts pilgrims of
a sporting rather than religious nature, all of them intent on playing the
world's oldest surviving golf course.