The ancient Honours of Scotland - the crown, sceptre
and sword of state - are on view in the Crown Room. One of the most romantic of
the stories attached to the ancient crown jewels of Scotland concerns the
manner of their rediscovery in 1818.
It was known that, at the Treaty of Union in 1707,
when the old Scots Parliament was dissolved for ever (`the end of an auld
sang'), the Scottish Regalia had been deposited within Edinburgh Castle. No
more appropriate resting-place for these revered relics of Scotland's
sovereignty could have been found. As the years passed, there were disturbing
rumours that the ancient regalia had been quietly removed to London.
Eventually, largely by the intercession of that
super-patriot Sir Walter Scott, authority was obtained from the Prince Regent
(later George IV) in 1818 to make a search of the castle. In an oak chest
within what is now the Crown Room, with Scott among the spectators, there was
found the precious regalia, including the crown that had been made in the time
of the great Bruce. Scott's emotions have been recorded by the historian James
Grant: `The joy was therefore extreme when, the ponderous lid having been
forced open ... the regalia were discovered lying at the bottom covered with
linen cloths, exactly as they had been left in 1707.'
Today the ancient symbols of sovereignty are on
permanent display to the people in that same room, where they saw the light of
day once more almost two centuries ago. As one gazes upon the gleaming crown,
sceptre and sword of state, it is not difficult to conjure up the drama of some
earlier chapters of that `auld sang'.
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