The church is dedicated to the 6th century saint,
St Blane, and this gives its name to the settlement: dunblane meaning hill of St Blane. The church also had an altar to
St Laurence. The oldest surviving part of the church is the lower four storeys of the tower which date from around 1100AD. The upper two storeys of the tower date from around 1500. The cathedral was once the seat of the
bishops of Dunblane (also sometimes called 'of
Strathearn'), until the abolition of
bishops after the
Glorious Revolution in 1689. There are remains of the vaults of the
episcopal palace to the south of the cathedral. Technically, it is no longer a
cathedral, as there are no bishops in the Church of Scotland, which is a
Presbyterian denomination. After the abolition of prelacy, the
choir became the parish church but the nave fell out of use, and its roof had fallen in by about 1600. It contains the graves of
Margaret Drummond of
Stobhall, a mistress of King
James IV of Scotland and her two sisters, all said to have been poisoned. Unusually, the building is owned by
the Crown, and is looked after by
Historic Scotland rather than the church governance; there is no entrance charge. The building is largely 13th century in date, though it incorporates an originally freestanding bell-tower (like the example at
Muthill) of 11th century date on its south side. This tower was increased in height in the 15th century, a change clearly visible in the colour of the stonework, and in the late Gothic style of the upper storey's windows. The choir dates from the 13th century and has a long vaulted chamber which served as
chapter house and
sacristy on its north side. The choir contains the mural tomb of the cathedral's founder,
Bishop Clement. Many of the 15th century choir stalls, commissioned by Bishop Ochiltre have carved
misericords (including one with an unusual depiction of a bat), are preserved within the choir. Further, more elaborate, canopied stalls, commissioned by Bishop Chisholm, are preserved at the west end of the nave. Dunblane has the largest surviving collection of medieval Scottish ecclesiastical woodwork after
King's College Chapel, Aberdeen. Some detached fragments are displayed in the town's museum. The cathedral was restored in the late 19th century under the control of Rev Alexander Ritchie DD, who commissioned architect
Robert Rowand Anderson to oversee the works, with these works completed by Sir
Robert Lorimer in 1912. On 13 June 2024, the charge of Dunblane Cathedral became a union with the parishes of
Kilmadock and
Kincardine-in-Menteith to become Dunblane Cathedral, Kilmadock and Blair Drummond Church. ==Stained glass==