All roads lead to Rosslyn

in Pinmapple3 months ago (edited)

Today’s destination: Rosslyn Chapel. This site has been on my bucket list since reading Dan Brown’s 'The Da Vinci Code'. For those who have read the text, you'll gather why the book's core protagonist, Professor Robert Langdon, enticed me into signs, symbols, and stenography… (I even went so far as to take a course at University in Middle Egyptian hieroglyphics! Yes, I'm that kind of nut.)

Although my journey since hasn’t involved a battle between the Priory of Sion and Opus Dei over the possibility of Jesus Christ and Mary Magdalene having had a child together, the lure for unravelling the deeper meanings of objects didn’t leave me. As a painting's conservator, iconography is an additional delight fuelling the art historical element of my treatments. I may not be Robert Langdon, but what I do is still kinda Holmes-ish.

Rosslyn Chapel, Roslin

Rosslyn Chapel, or the collegiate chapel of St. Matthew as it was once known as, was founded in 1446 by Sir William St. Clair. The building was still incomplete at the time of his death in 1484. With provost and prebendaries resigning in 1571 because of the endowments being “taken by force” into secular hands at the influence of the Reformation, it seemed unlikely the building would ever be fully completed or properly cared for. When Cromwell’s troops attacked Rosslyn Castle in 1650, they even stabled their horses inside the Chapel!

It was only during the Victorian period of repair and restoration that Rosslyn Chapel was rededicated and weekly services began again. The 1950s greyish sludge caking the interior walls was a poor attempt to quell the damp. The guide told us that the cementitious slurry was silica fluoride magnesium, applied at a rate of 11b per two galleons of water! Yikes. Prior to this, the green algae that had commandeered the decorative schemes was scrubbed from the stone with stiff brushes doused in a solution of .880 ammonia and water! I mean, thank god for progress in conservation. You wouldn't see these kinds of treatment decisions playing out nowadays. The damage incurred during this restoration led to a major conservation project being undertaken by Rosslyn Chapel Trust in 1995.

A free-standing steel structure was erected to cover the Chapel to enable the stone fabric of the roof vaults to dry outwards, away from the carved interior surfaces. Thermographic scanning was also undertaken to locate areas where the stone was particularly damp. Cracks and delamination were treated in a visually discreet manner, and conservation of the glass windows addressed severe paint loss within the imagery. Overall, the treatment was handled incredibly well. But the expense...! How fortuitous, then, that Rosslyn Chapel came to worldwide prominence in 2003, when Dan Brown released 'the Da Vinci Code'.

The Da Vinci Code > source

In the novel, a murder prompts protagonists Robert Langdon and Sophie Neveu to follow a trail of clues from London up to Scotland. The Chapel becomes a feature point in the quest for the location of the Holy Grail. In the tour, our guide jokingly reminisced that prior to the book being released Roslin was a quiet little village with one gatekeeper minding the property. If you were lucky, he might have given you a slice of shortbread on Sunday during mass. The year 'the Da Vinci Code' was released, however, visitor numbers spiked at 176, 000 – quite alarming for our wee gatekeeper who went from handling a tiny trickle of passer-byes to lines that stretched on for hours. However, despite the negative aspects of tourism, the book and its controversy, the sudden boost in popularity paid for the Chapel’s conservation and continues to cover future preservation plans.

Chapel facade with nooks for roses

Nerd-alert: happy as Larry to be here

Gargoyles on the exterior of the Chapel

The entranceway is flagged by two waterspouts in the form of menacing gargoyles. Although, according to the guidebook, one respectable architectural historian describes them as “jolly”, haha. (** Before I continue, I have to note that I was only able to take a handful of images before being told that photographs inside the chapel are forbidden for preservation purposes. So, do bear that in mind if you decide to visit yourself. I recommend that you buy the official guidebook sold on-site!)

First impressions... When I entered, I felt magnetised to the mystery of the Chapel’s sheer, overwhelming symbolism. Its elaborately carved barrel-vaulted roof is carved into stone ribs displaying four-petalled flowers, multi-lobed leaves, double roses, lilies and stars. Mounted at column tops are dragons, unicorns, lions, and keystones of Sinclair-engrailed crosses.

Rosslyn Chapel interior, looking down main aisle from entranceway

The Chapel is also rich with carvings of the Green Man – a profusion of foliate heads – not unexpected in an area this influenced by the Celtic tradition but still surprising amongst all the biblical references. (The green man symbolised the capacity for great goodness and scope for evil. According to the guidebook, the story of Robin Hood had its origins in this legend, and gypsies from the period would perform it in maytide plays.) It’s no wonder the conspiracy theories are rife. On that note…

Fun fact: when you next watch the 2006 film adaption of 'the Da Vinci Code', starring Tom Hanks and Audrey Tautou, look out for this ultimate clue… Positioned above the entrance to the "crypt" is a Star of David, seamlessly woven into the Chapel's adornments. While it appears very much a part of Rosslyn’s interior, it's actually a fake addition. Dan Brown had to incorporate it into his novel to align with the narrative. And this needed to be offset in the film world. So, with a little craftmanship and spray paint, they attached a fake Star of David to the entrance of the crypt. Inadvertently, this has left a faint black circle on the stone, now affectionately dubbed the “Hollywood Circle”. While not as catastrophic as the impact ‘The Beach‘ had on Phi Phi Leh Island in Thailand, it is nonetheless a tarnish to the overall aesthetic…

Scene still > source

My photograph of the sacristy - minus the props!

Also, all filming of the exterior of Rosslyn Chapel is based off a model, seeing as the site was undergoing conservation with its steel-roofed top at the time. And when Robert and Sophie enter the “crypt”, they walk to a door blocked by a chain - they break and enter a tiny anteroom marked “Private”, otherwise known as... Paramount Pictures, London. Haha! The next few minutes were filmed in a little studio, a mere 323 miles south. But that’s the film world for you!

Chapel interior

There're so many rabbit holes I could explore in this review… Instead, I will leave you with one more tale about the infamous Apprentice Pillar.

According to legend, upon completing his carving of the twelfth pillar – refined, detailed and skilfully construed but plain – the Master Mason was asked by the Founder to construct the thirteenth and final column in imitation of those he’d seen in Jerusalem. This promised to be a harder, gruelling, more challenging task for the Master Mason. Hesitant, he left Scotland, travelling abroad in search of inspiration, leaving in his absence an eager-to-please apprentice.

This young boy, aged twelve or thirteen, picked up a hammer and chisel and carved, in his Master’s stead, the most sumptuously ornate pillar – deemed a perfect marvel of workmanship. The Master, on his return, discovered the exquisite work and was so mad with jealousy he picked up a mallet and struck the boy dead right there in the chapel. Subsequently hanged for his rash and cruel act, an impression of the Master Mason’s face was carved above the chapel’s exit. His eyes strain across the aisle, directly at his apprentice’s pillar… trapped in stone for the rest of eternity, forced to stare at the thing of beauty that led him to his downfall. Opposite him is another face with a cleft scalp, and along from that a mourning woman. These are presumed to be the faces of the young apprentice and his mother.

'Interior of Rosslyn Chapel' by Robert Gibb > source

The finer details have always intrigued me, and I suppose that’s why I was so enraptured by the sacristy. Its walls were enshrined in elaborate schemes of transfigurations, working drawings, and masons’ marks. Masons, unable to sign their names, would mark their work to ensure they were properly remunerated for their labour. One of those signs is captured below.

Working drawings inscribed into sacristy wall

A masons mark

The village of Roslin, the Chapel, Castle, and earldom Rosslyn, derive from the Celtic words: ross – “a rocky promontory” – and lynn - “waterfall”. The glen finds its source high up in the Pentlands near the boundary between Midlothian and Peebleshire. It passes through Carlops, once a village of weavers, through Habbie’s Howe and into the woods surrounding Penicuk. It eventually rejoins the South Esk to enter the Firth of Forth at Musselburgh. I followed this route on my bike last weekend, recorded here by #strava2hive. I hope to make the trip again soon.

The ancient woodlands - a mixed deciduous valley of wood of oak, ash, and elm - is entrancing. There is a reason why centuries of poets and painters alike are drawn here. The ground flora is alive with dog’s mercury, ramsons, golden saxifrage and wood sorrel. It’s magic. Sir Walter Scott’s 'the Lay of the Last Minstrel', capture’s the building’s folklore, architectural wonder and history. Romantic painters like Joseph Mallord and David Roberts were likewise enriched by the surrounds.

Plaque referencing travellers who tarried here awhile

'Rosslyn Castle' by Joseph Mallord > source

I highly recommend you go, with open mind and spritely step. Oh, Rosslyn: with your sealed crypts steeped in legend and motley casts of faces, cushioned in the wild glen… what a wonderful treat you are.

After posting this I’m going to sit back, relax and enjoy a wee pint - appropriately Rosslyn-themed. Because, @monivis, in answer to the question in your latest blogpost, visiting historic sites and ending the day with a quiet beer is just my kind of perfect.

Baron's Gold craft beer, direct from Stewart Brewing

Until next time, Hivers!

Enjoy the rest of your weekend!

Live a little.


Disclaimer
Blogger: @actaylor
Photographs: unless otherwise noted, all images were taken by me with an iPhone 8.

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I went to Rossyn Chapel some years ago, and it is one of the most beautiful religious buildings I've been. Sadly I have no photos of it as like you said, photos aren't allowed inside, but I remember I was in awe of the stone carvings inside.

Hi @livinguktaiwan - isn't it special though? 💫 I actually saw your post embedded in the pinmapple map and was going to reach out. Sounds like you had quite the trip through Edinburgh... saw all the highlights! But Rosslyn is so far out of the way - what brought you there?

Yeah, I was nervous the guide would ask me to delete my photos, but fortunately she was very kind - as most Scots are, haha. Did you buy the guidebook, at least? The building is such an extraordinary gem - Tom Hanks is even quoted to have said: "Rosslyn Chapel was all one could imagine or hope for." So, even without images I don't think we'll ever forget how beautiful it is. 😉

I'm so glad my post has led you to Pinmapple, and hope more travel post from you.

That visit to Edinburgh was part of a 3 week tour around UK. After Edinburgh, I drove through Alnwick to Hadrian Wall, and Rosslyn Chapel was on the way. I'm so glad I went, as it was so lovely there.

Sounds like you covered a lot of ground whilst here @livinguktaiwan! ☺️ Oh, would love to see the infamous Hadrian’s Wall. Did you review it, or Alnwick, for pinmapple? So enjoy travel stories. Lots of adventuring and always up for recommendations.

What an experience! It must have been amazing to see in person. So many details 👀

It really was such an experience - after years of longing and anticipation, finally seeing it with my own eyes was incredibly moving. ☺️ And the details! You're right, of course. The guide could have talked us through every inch of carving. At one point she used a laser-beam to highlight a figure of Christ on the cross, gave us a moment, then said: "...Or, is it Jacques de Molay being burned at the stake?" According to Order of the Knight's Templar enthusiasts, the carving represents Philip IV's attempt to officially suppress relapsed heretics. The Chapel is a treasure trove of myth and legend. And the fact that so few records exist over its 600-year-old history... well, that makes room for all forms of interpretation.

Sounds like it was worth the wait. Where I live, the oldest historical sites are less than 200 years old, so I can only imagine what it's like to be in a space more than 3 times that age. Words probably don't do it justice! Especially considering there aren't many official records 🙊.

Nice post @actaylor. I enjoyed reading it, as you have a writing style that holds our interest throughout!

While I have very little experience with the ... "old world" ... what stands out is how ... "old" ... it is! Hahaha ...

Seriously, reading about when the construction of this place began and decades later it not being completed is hard to imagine. Whew, finally got it built ... Wait! Now we have your description of what it takes to keep the effects of how damp it is under control! Incredible ...

Well, we finally make it from the outside to the inside and ... I can't help but see the likeness to Hearst's Castle out in California. It saddened me, when I visited there last, to see the unmistakable decline in it since I had first experienced it 40 years before.

Led me to wonder how much the architects of these places thought about what it was going to take to maintain it. If they ever got it built ...

Keep up the good work! 🙂


P.S. If you are thinking of continuing to write travel-related posts, you will want to make sure that you pin it to their amazing map next time. I think it is one of, if not the single most impressive apps on our Hive blockchain.

Please check into this comment on my latest post. In it, you will find the straightforward steps to follow. If you have any questions, after that, you know where to reach me ... 😉

Thanks @roleerob ☺️ Indeed, it's hard to fathom the passing of so much time...! This'll give you more food for thought: predating the Chapel, the glen was a spiritual site. A series of spirals, concentric circles, serpihs, human forms and a fish head are etched into the sandstone walls of the gorge that follows the crystalline river Esk. Although no scientific surveying has been undertaken, these marks are assumed to date back to Scotland's first settlers - some 8,000 years ago!

I've opened up your link to Hearst's Castle in California and will read it when I come back in from my cycle. 😉 You know how much I enjoy reading your travel posts, so thanks for sharing!

As for the pinmapple map - indeed, like you I think it's a fantastic app! I actually did set the post up to pin, having found some useful instructions online (here). But it doesn't seem to have worked? The code is still imbedded in my post though, so perhaps there's a wait time... Or perhaps I missed something. Maybe @pinmapple or @livinguktaiwan can explain what the next step is from here? 😅

Yes, @actaylor, antiquity has a fascination all of its own. If you will permit me a little ... "humor" ... (yes, I am supposed to have some Scottish heritage), my limited knowledge of Scottish history is reading about the Roman empire extending that far. Under the reign of Julius Caesar, if memory serves ...

Whoever it was leading the Roman army managed to get across England. And then started up into Scotland. Well ... They didn't get very far ... 🫡 The result was Hadrian's wall. Having "stirred up the highlanders" or whatever the details might have been so long ago, they needed to keep them at bay while they settled back down! Hahaha ...

so ends roleerob's "brief" history of Scotland ... 😂


Upon reading you had pinned this post on the Pinmapple map, I noted there was a notification on the Pinmapple server in Discord, where livinguktaiwan has this to say:

"please note Hive SQL was hacked yesterday. You won't receive any notifications from Pinmapple when you pin your post on the map till it is back up. In the mean while you can still continue to post in the Pinmapple community and pin to the map, and we shall be curated manually on a limited basis"

Very sad to find that out this morning. But, it provides an explanation for why I did not see the pinned notification on your post, prompting my little bit of help ...


Keep up the good work, my Scottish friend. I'll look forward to reading your SSC (Saturday Savers Club) post, if you are still wanting to participate, as shanibeer got her weekly post out yesterday, instead of this morning. As a result, you should have received a notification, as you are now on her list!

Hahaha!! 😂 But that doesn't surprise me at all - the Scottish may be sweet on the outside but unruly within. They were mere tribes during Roman times... but still had enough ferocity in them to frighten the Roman legions!! Very honourable, resilient people, too. "The birth-place of Valour, the country of Worth"... That Hadrian's wall was built for protection - hahaha. If only René Goscinny had followed Asterix and Obelix up with a second series based in Scotland. I'm so delighted to hear you have Scottish roots! I see that might be where the good humour comes from. 😉

And as for the pinmapple map... righto! But would explain it. Thanks for looking into this, @roleerob. Ah, you've been such an amazing help, truly. That must be the problem - sad news though it is. Hopefully the backlog is manageable... I imagine it'll be a lot of work to do sort through all the pins manually...

Regarding SSC: of course! Eek, I let that slip this weekend. I read yours - some interesting points were made. I'll put some time aside to create my SSC post in the coming days... definitely want to participate! (I even experimented with my first EDSD exchange, after your helpful prompts 😌) Briefly saw shanibeer's warm welcome and have been meaning to respond. No, I'll remember to put some time aside for a post. Thanks for the reminder! Until next time, my friend from the foothills of Wyoming!

Just looking and seeing the nice payout showing so far on your great work here, @actaylor, I am happy for you! I know how much effort goes into the creation of posts like this one, so it will hopefully provide you some encouragement!


Yes, well, I held back on "showing off" my broad knowledge base of Scottish history, as I have also watched "Rob Roy" and "Brave Heart!" What else do we need to know? Hahaha ... 🫡


Very good. I'll look forward to reading your 1st SSC post, once you are ready to publish it.

Until then, take care! 👋


P.S. The payout from posts like this one go a long way toward helping us achieve our savings goals, if "salted away" into savings and, ultimately, investing. My own approach is to leave the payout default at 50% HBD and 50% HP. Once claimed, the HP just goes to steadily building your "stake" (while generating its own "interest") on our Hive blockchain. The HBD portion is what I then use for the many other savings and investment opportunities available to us "in here."

I know!! 💫☺️ I'm amazed. Grinning - feeling very lucky @roleerob. Definitely encouraged to continue writing.

And you very much held off! Haha! Braveheart is the ultimate indoctrination into Scottish lore. 😅 I have yet to see "Rob Roy" myself, but Liam Neeson's word is gospel. He could teach anyone anything.

Sounds like a good plan for me, too! Ah! This world is such fun. Until the next time --

🌄 Good morning (here)! ☕ Glad to see my sense of humor ... "made it across" ... 😉

On this ...

"Sounds like a good plan for me, too!"

... I would like to take pains to ensure you feel no obligation to do so. Lots of good input out there. Which of course varies ... And you tend to feel like you are being pulled in different directions ...

You should always feel free to do what you deem best.


For a little more on why I have made the choices I have provided to you, here is the latest weekly update on EDS:

https://peakd.com/@eddie-earner/eds-income-token-weekly-report-109

Chock full of useful info ... To help you or anyone reach a well-informed decision ...

Hope your new week is off to a great start!

the building looks very beautiful and full of history, I really like to see that place

Oh, @aquagelas - it really really is. I highly recommend a trip there. Roslin is a lovely village too, so if you do want to spend a decent amount of time in the Chapel, glen, and surrounds, I encourage you to rent a room nearby... stay awhile...like Sir Walter Scott and James Boswell did all those centuries ago.