One of the best-kept
secrets of the war, a
plan for Scotland's
Crown Jewels, has
been revealed to
SCOTLAND'S Crown Jewels, the Honours of Scotland, were buried to
escape the clutches of Hitler, it has been discovered during
preparations for a new exhibition at Edinburgh Castle.
Mr Christopher Tabraham, principal inspector of ancient monuments with
Historic Scotland, said yesterday that a well-known tale of Scottish
history was how the Honours were smuggled out of Dunnottar Castle under
the very noses of the English and buried for eight years beneath the
floor of Kinneff Kirk to keep them from Oliver Cromwell.
However, the measures taken to foil Hitler if the Nazis had occupied
Scotland had only now become clear.
When war broke out in 1939, the Honours were packed into their great
oak chest in Edinburgh Castle and covered with sandbags in a cellar
beneath the Crown Room because of the risk of air raids. More serious
measures were called for as the likelihood of a German invasion mounted.
Mr Tabraham and Mr Charles Burnett, Ross Herald of Arms, write in a
new book that on May 12, 1941, the Honours were removed from the chest,
packed into two zinc-lined cases, and buried in separate locations in
the ruins of David's Tower, the medieval tower house entombed beneath
the Half-Moon Battery.
The Crown and the Stewart Jewels were buried beneath the floor of a
latrine-closet, and the Sceptre, Sword of State, Belt, Scabbard and Wand
were concealed in a wall.
Plans indicating the locations were sealed in envelopes and sent in
the utmost secrecy, one each to King George VI; the Secretary of State
for Scotland; the King's and Lords' Treasurer's Remembrancer; and the
Governor-General of Canada.
Hitler, unlike the Lord Protector, never made it to Scotland and when
the war ended the Honours were restored to public display.
Mr Tabraham said yesterday: ''We were taken by surprise when we found
out about the burial during the war. We discovered this in an old
Ministry of Works file which had been closed and sent to the Scottish
Record Office. It came to light when we were doing conservation work on
pieces for the new display.
''I think the people who buried the Honours were confident they could
survive.''
Mr Tabraham was speaking in advance of the #1.5m Honours of the
Kingdom exhibition at Edinburgh Castle which opens today.
The exhibition, with multimedia techniques, tells the story of the
Scottish regalia from the dark ages to the present day by using
colourful tableaux, music, and models.
The Crown Room, the heart of the exhibition, has been improved by new
fibre optic lighting and environmental control to ensure the best
presentation of the regalia. The Crown rests on a new hand-crafted
cushion.
Mr Graeme Munro, director and chief executive of Historic Scotland,
said that the Honours dated from the reigns of James IV and James V.
They were the oldest royal regalia in the British Isles and among the
oldest in Europe.
The Honours as seen today were first used as coronation regalia at the
enthronement of the infant Mary Queen of Scots at Stirling Castle in
1543 and were present at all subsequent coronations until that of
Charles II at Scone in 1651, the last coronation in Scotland.
The Honours were present at sessions of the Scottish Parliament until
March, 1707, when they were laid to rest in the great oak chest, where
Sir Walter Scott discovered them in 1818.
Mr Munro said the opening of the exhibition completed the second phase
of development of visitor services to Edinburgh Castle. Major
expenditure on improvements was planned until at least 1999, by which
time #9m would have been invested.
Edinburgh Castle had almost one million visitors in 1992, and it was
hoped the Honours exhibition would increase the number, he said.
A spokesman for Historic Scotland said that special consideration had
been given to the needs of disabled visitors.
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