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THE
TEMPLARS AND THE ARTICHOKE
"This building,
I believe, may be pronounced unique, and I am confident it will be found
curious, elaborate and singularly interesting." So stated Rosslyn Chapel's
entry in the 1812 edition of Architectural Antiquities of Britain, but
the description still held true on my visit today. Located a few miles
outside Edinburgh, down a small, bumpy lane, the building of this small
chapel has altogether involved three continents, 1,000 years and one very
significant artichoke. But exactly how it came to be built is an X-Files-style
conundrum that has been entertaining the over-educated for centuries.
Almost entirely
covered with scaffolding (restoration is in progress) and shielded by
strong wintry sunlight, it was difficult to decipher anything of the building
from the outside. As we stepped into the cool, dark interior, we were
hit by an overwhelming blur of ornate masonry. Every inch of this solid
stone structure seemed to be chiseled, carved or otherwise embellished.
As our eyes gradually adjusted to the gloom, we realised that these were
not mere decorations, but complex pieces of a fathomless puzzle.
One arch
supported a relief of the Seven Deadly Sins, shown in excruciating detail.
Another featured the Dance of Death and, nearby, a pedestal held an angel
clutching the heart of Robert the Bruce. The roof was covered with stars
and flowers and elsewhere we made out elephants, compasses, knights on
horseback, dragons, stonemasons, five-pointed stars, six-pointed stars,
an angelic orchestra (complete with bagpiper) and plenty of Green Man
motifs. Plus, er, an artichoke. In other words, symbols that relate to
almost everyone from ancient Egyptians, Celts, and Templars to Jews, Christians
and Masons. Rosslyn Chapel must be one of the most compelling buildings
on earth.
To even
begin to understand Rosslyn, you have to go back about 900 years to the
time of the Crusades. As waves of Christians tried to take Jerusalem from
the Muslims, various groups of knights organised themselves into Orders
to aid the cause. In 1118, nine energetic aristocrats founded the Order
of the Poor Soldiers of Christ and the Temple of Solomon (commonly known
as the Templars, after Simon Templar - The Saint), a name that related
to their headquarters beside the ruins of King Solomon's temple.
The Pope
declared the Templars were to be under no authority but his own, and for
the next 200 years the Order's seductive combination of privilege and
adventure swelled both their ranks and their power. But they were suspected
of being more than just warriors for Christ. Some thought that they were
searching King Solomon's temple for relics and manuscripts that would
help them understand the "hidden magic" of Judaism. Others believed they
were the military arm of an even more covert Order, the Prieuré de Sion.
Adding fuel
to these fears, the secretive Templars moved into banking and began lending
money to some of Europe's top rulers. But, by October 1307, they had made
one enemy too many and one of their main debtors, the French King Philip
the Fair, ordered all 15,000 or so Templars in France to be arrested.
Many of the leaders were executed for heresy and Templar property was
given over to another order, the Knights Hospitaler (also known as the
Knights of Malta).
Before the
arrests, some of the Templars are thought to have burnt their record books,
left the country and filled a reported 18 ships with treasure. Many of
the survivors (and possibly the treasure) are supposed to have found their
way to Scotland. Cue Prince Henry StClair, Lord of Shetland, Lord Chief
Justice of Scotland, Admiral of the Sea, Duke of Oldenburg, Baron of Rosslyn,
Prince of Orkney and a few other things. Prince Henry had more connections
than a Lego set. And he was descended from both Templars and a couple
of Prieuré de Sion Grand-masters. If his blood was any bluer, Picasso
would have used it for paint.
According
to one story, Prince Henry was conscripted by the remaining Templars to
find them a new home. The Muslims had cut off trade routes to the east,
so Prince Henry headed west. In the Faroe Islands, he is said to have
run into some shipwrecked Venetian sailors and, with them, sailed even
further west, past Iceland and Greenland to Drogio, in North America.
It is possible. The year was 1398, well over 100 years before Columbus
reached the New World but still 400 years after the Vikings arrived in
Newfoundland. Some believe Prince Henry made the trip to update an old
Templar map of the region (his grandson is rumoured to have told his in-laws,
one of whom was the wife of Christopher Columbus, about the journey).
Whether true or not, Prince Henry is thought to have spent winter in Nova
Scotia and then returned to the Scottish Isles, where he was killed. The
Templars didn't move to Nova Scotia.
In 1446,
Prince Henry's other grandson, Sir William, decided to build a chapel
incorporating the range of influences on his life. The Crusades, the Templars,
the voyage to North America, you name it.
Designs
were first carved in wood and then chiselled in stone. Masons from across
Europe were brought to work on the grand project and some thought the
project was all a cover to allow the remaining Templars (many of whom
had morphed into Freemasons) to move to Scotland.
After 40
years, with Sir William dead, the work stopped and Rosslyn Chapel was
left incomplete. But what remains is astounding. Carved into the walls
are scenes from the Crusades, angels in Masonic poses, plants from North
America (which hadn't been "discovered" yet), a symbolic, Masonic artichoke
and a thousand other secrets for conspiracy-spotters to drool over.
Some theorists
insist that the Templar treasures are hidden in the crypt and pillars
of Rosslyn Chapel, but that just adds to the intrigue. The current Earl
refuses to investigate. In a fitting postscript to the Architectural Antiquities
of Britain entry, he describes Rosslyn as "the hinterland between history
and fable".
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Eating Out In Butaritari
Havana School Daze
Kuwait Mirror House
Maltese Knights
Snorkeling With Salmon
Templars and Artichokes
Japan Sloth Club |
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