Fiction over fact Pseudohistory |
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How it didn't happen |
Rosslyn Chapel is a Scottish medieval church tenuously (and probably inaccurately) linked with the Knights Templar and Holy Grail mythology.
The chapel is located in the village of Roslin (sometimes Rosslyn or Roslyn) a few miles outside Edinburgh. Roslin is also home to the Roslin Institute (part of the University of Edinburgh), which produced the first animal to be successfully cloned from an adult somatic cell, Dolly the Sheep, in 1996.
Rosslyn Chapel was founded by William Sinclair (or St Clair) close to Roslin Castle, home of the Sinclair family, and building commenced in 1456.
The most prominent myth associated with the chapel is the Knight Templar/Holy Grail/Masonic nonsense. It roughly goes along the lines of:
Other theories include that the Sinclair (St Clair) family are descendants of Jesus.[note 1] Of course.
As you can imagine the reaction of professional historians is basically "why do people believe all this crap?".[1]
There are two other sites in the east of Scotland with supposed Templar connections: the village of Temple in Midlothian and the Isle of May
at the mouth of the Firth of Forth. They are sometimes considered to find a mystical triangle, at the centre of which is a tiny island called The Lamb, which some (e.g. Uri Geller) claim has connections with ancient Egyptian royalty.[2][3] This can be taken as seriously as anything else Uri Geller has ever said.
Unsurprisingly, the myths connecting Rosslyn Chapel to the Holy Grail and the Knights Templar were plundered and promoted by conspiracy theory-loving thriller novelist Dan Brown, who featured a, hmm, imaginative portrayal of the chapel's role in his best-selling book The Da Vinci Code (2003).
Following the success of the novel, and especially the 2006 Hollywood movie adaptation, which included climactic scenes filmed on location at the chapel, numbers of visitors at the chapel shot up,[4] and enough money was passing through the tills at the ticket office and gift shop to continue funding much-needed repairs, as well as expansion of tourist facilities at the site.
The Da Vinci Code phenomenon has also prompted all kinds of tie-in woo, connecting Rosslyn Chapel to medieval mysticism and magic in one way or another. A few examples include the following:
Much of the interior of Rosslyn Chapel is adorned with elaborate stonework. In addition to a horned Moses,[7] it contains carvings that look somewhat like ears of corn (maize, which according to conventional history arrived in Europe after 1492).[8][9]
According to some sources,[10] this is because William Sinclair's grandfather, Henry Sinclair, travelled to Nova Scotia in 1398 with a Venetian navigator and a Norse crew (his title of Earl of Orkney made him a vassal of the King of Norway) . And presumably brought back some corn (or at least a description thereof).
This may or may not have had something to do with hiding the Holy Grail.[11]
Spiral carving around pillars supposedly depicts a double helix revealing the structure of DNA, indicating knowledge of science not discovered until hundreds of years after the chapel's construction.[12] However, studying the photos shows that the column actually has a quadruple helix with one strand at each corner, not a double helix. A twisted pillar, known as a Solomonic or barley-sugar pillar, is an architectural feature that was common in High Gothic buildings in western Europe, as well as several classical Greek and Roman examples and an old association with the Temple of Solomon in Jerusalem.[13][14][15]
Another even sillier theory claims that Rosslyn Chapel is one of a number of stargates which aliens use to visit the earth, bringing knowledge of maize and DNA.[16] Rosslyn is sometimes included in the "Falkirk Triangle", an area of supposed UFO activity around Bonnybridge in central Scotland.[17] However if you extend the triangle to cover Rosslyn, this area includes Edinburgh airport, one of the busiest in the UK, and most of Scotland's population, so there is little surprise it contains most of Scottish UFO sightings.