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Contents
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Rosslyn Chapel
The Knights Templar
 

Rosslyn Chapel

Rosslyn Chapel is a few minutes drive from Orchard House and is a “must do” during your stay. We have plenty of informative publications and DVD’s which you are welcome to peruse prior to your visit to the chapel.

The Chapel is a beautiful 15th century church in the village of Roslin, designed by William St Clair. The St Clairs were a noble Scottish family which, according to legend, had links with the Scottish Knights Templar.

Already famous for its striking and unusual carvings, which depict Christian imagery of angels and devils alongside pre Christian symbols, such as the Green Man, the chapel has found further notoriety in its starring role in recent best seller and movie, The Da Vinci Code. However, Rosslyn Chapel has long been associated with the Knights Templar, an ancient order going back to the days of the Crusades.

In the 12th century the grand master of the order was married to Katherine St Clair and two of the grand masters in the 13th and 14th centuries were members of the St Clair family. When the order was persecuted by the Pope in the early 14th century, it is said that some of the Knights escaped to Scotland leaving behind their treasure.

http://www.rosslynchapel.org.uk/

After visiting the chapel, why not explore the local area further. The nearby Rosslyn Castle is easily accessed on foot. Please note that entry to the castle is by appointment only but the approach is well worth a picture.

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Roslin_Castle

http://www.mysteriousbritain.co.uk/majorsites/rosslyn2.html

There are also some lovely walks to be had in Roslin Glen Country Park.

http://walking.visitscotland.com/walks/centralscotland/rosewell-roslin-circuit.

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The Knights Templar

If you have an interest in this fascinating mediaeval order of warrior monks or want to find out a bit more then Orchard House is the place to come.

The Knights Templar were a monastic military order formed during the 12th century European crusades to the Holy Land. The Knights Templar became mythologised as guardians of spiritual secrets, such as the Ark of the Covenant and the Holy Grail. Eventually, the wealth the order accumulated put them on a collision course with royalty and Rome.

In 1118 Hugh de Payen and eight companions, under the protection of St Bernard of Clairvaux, visited Jerusalem with a letter of introduction to King Baudoin I of Jerusalem. They announced their intention to found an order of warrior monks whose aim was to protect pilgrims on the road to the Holy Land. The new order took vows of poverty and chastity, and the king granted them quarters within the Temple of Solomon - hence their name Knights of the Temple, or Templar.

Whilst in Jerusalem, in addition to fighting and protecting pilgrims, the knights also excavated under the Temple of Solomon. In the 19th century the Palestine Exploration Fund re-excavated these tunnels and found various Templar items.

Evidence of digging has led to many theories of what they found - the most populist version being that they located the Ark of the Covenant. Champions of this theory point to the pillar at the Templar Cathedral at Chartres, which depicts the Ark in transport. Less prosaic interpretations suggest they found scriptural scrolls, treatises on sacred geometry and details of ancient Judaic-Egyptian wisdom.

De Payen and the knights returned to France in 1127. A year later at the Council of Troyes, the Knights Templar gained legal autonomy, putting them beyond the reach of bishops, kings or emperors and making them responsible to the Pope alone.

templar-1

They were gifted land by pious aristocrats to finance their rapidly growing order. Their wealth grew as they developed commercial interests in mines, quarries and vineyards. They had a fleet that outshone the largest state. But what the Knights Templar did most was build. The classic round Templar church, founded on octagonal geometry, is still regarded as the most obvious example of their building, but many observers see Templar influence in the vast gothic outpouring that occurred throughout the next hundred years.

They set the gold and silver standard for coin weight, and introduced the "note of hand" – a kind of 12th century credit card. Christians at the time were not allowed to charge interest on money, but the Templars got round this by charging "rent". The order quickly became the richest bankers in Europe, lending to kings, princes and influential people across Europe.

King Philip IV of France (1268-1314) was one monarch among many who was heavily in debt to the Knights Templar. The death of the Pope gave the King an opportunity to bribe the incoming Catholic leader and initiate enquiries against the order. They were charged with heresy and on a Friday the 13th, in October 1307, Jacques de Molay, the Grand Master of the Knights Templar, and 60 of his senior knights were arrested in Paris.

Across Europe thousands of Knights Templar were taken into custody. But when King Philip raided the Templar treasure house he found it empty and the fleet gone from Larochelle.

Anyone found sheltering a Templar was under threat of excommunication. At the time Scotland was already excommunicated for Robert the Bruce's involvement in the murder of John "Red" Comyn.

Since Robert the Bruce could not afford to turn away wealthy and powerful allies in his struggle against Edward I, it is not too fanciful to suppose that Scotland may have welcomed the homeless knights. French Masonic ritual seems to indicate that Scotland was designated as the place of refuge for the Templar treasures. It is certainly a matter of fact that their land in Scotland was never seized but was transferred to the Knights of St John for safekeeping.

Some accounts even hold that the Knights Templar may have fought at Bannockburn.

After that they apparently disappeared. Some commentators think that they never truly vanished but went underground. Some think they were quickly assimilated into different orders, such as the freemasonry. They started to re-emerge in the 18th century and today the movement is pan-global.

An international body, Ordo Supremus Militaris Templi Hierosolymilitani, which has an enormous membership in Europe and America, monitors the increasing number of Templar organisations.

Two miles to the north of Orchard House is Rosslyn Chapel with its associations with the Da Vinci Code and which was built by Henry St Clair whose forebearers were Grand Masters of the Knights templar.

Less than three miles to the south of Orchard House is the charming village of Temple which, during the 12th and 13th centuries, was the main Scottish preceptory of the Knights Templar and was known as Balantrodoch (gaelic for land or stead of the warriors).

Temple Church still stands as a ruin with much evidence of the Templars to be found in its architecture and the entrance arch to the Preceptory stands a short distance away.

An intriguing Latin inscription (VAESAC MIHM) high up on the belfry of Temple Church adds to the mystery and intrigue of this wonderful mediaeval chapel which actually predates Rosslyn Chapel.

Orchard House straddles the ancient track connecting Temple and Rosslyn Chapel and in the still of the night it’s not difficult to imagine the Knights Templar with their entourage passing by.

There are numerous mediaeval chapels, abbeys and castles within twenty minutes drive of Orchard House, many with Knights Templar associations.

On the edge of the nearby Pentland Hills is a wood in the shape of the Maltese Cross as used by the Knights Templar. They owned the lands in this area known as Swanston.

The “T” Wood or Templar Wood on the edge of the Pentland Hills. (Clearly visible from the Edinburgh City By-Pass en route to Rosslyn Chapel)

Map showing relationship of Templar Wood, Rosslyn Chapel and Temple Church.

For those who have an interest in sacred geometry in relation to the Knights Templar, it is intriguing to note that the ruins of St Mary’s Chapel near Mount Lothian (which reputedly marked the western entrance to the Templars’ prefecture at Balantradoch) lie in a straight line (North/South) with Rosslyn Chapel and the highest point of Arthur’s Seat.

It is said by some that William Wallace was knighted in St Mary’s Chapel.

We will be happy to advise you on locations and directions to places which may be of interest you and a bit more off the normal tourist routes.

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http://www.skt.org.uk/

http://www.templarhistory.com/scotland.html

http://www.rosslyntemplars.org.uk/

http://www.rosslyntours.co.uk/

http://www.templartrails.co.uk/

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