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  #29 (permalink)  
Old 11th August 2008, 20:04
Polwarth Polwarth is offline
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We'll keep a welcome in the hillside..

Oh, no... that's the Welsh!

Glad you had a good time. I'm off to the Tattoo this Friday, for my sins. I was calculating that I've attended almost thirty of them over the years. D amned visitors!
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  #30 (permalink)  
Old 19th November 2008, 16:38
jet57 jet57 is offline
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Hello everyone,

This is my first post. I noted a great deal of interest in Roslyn Chapel.
William Sinclair was a well traveled man, therefore most of what he constructed reflected his experiences. At the time Roslyn was built, it was known that if people prayed for you after death, you went to heaven. It then became fassionable for the great estates to have collegate churches on their grounds: Sinclair's was easily the most ornate. There are a number of these churches in a forty square mile area from that site. (I'm qutoing that statistic from memory...). Many masons, including the curator of the Grand Lodge museum in Edinburgh, also an author, have toured Rosyln and been told by the guides, that if they do not see the masonic clues - they must not be masons..

So, it really is a tourist thing, and sells books, ala Da Vince. It's a fund raiser; like a cave somewhere. Very nice, but not really "authentic".

Regards
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  #31 (permalink)  
Old 21st November 2008, 09:59
Polwarth Polwarth is offline
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Originally Posted by jet57 View Post
Hello everyone,

This is my first post. I noted a great deal of interest in Roslyn Chapel.
William Sinclair was a well traveled man, therefore most of what he constructed reflected his experiences. At the time Roslyn was built, it was known that if people prayed for you after death, you went to heaven. It then became fassionable for the great estates to have collegate churches on their grounds: Sinclair's was easily the most ornate. There are a number of these churches in a forty square mile area from that site. (I'm qutoing that statistic from memory...). Many masons, including the curator of the Grand Lodge museum in Edinburgh, also an author, have toured Rosyln and been told by the guides, that if they do not see the masonic clues - they must not be masons..

So, it really is a tourist thing, and sells books, ala Da Vince. It's a fund raiser; like a cave somewhere. Very nice, but not really "authentic".

Regards

It's not JUST a 'tourist' thing - church services are still held in the Chapel.
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  #32 (permalink)  
Old 21st November 2008, 10:27
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ScotSites ScotSites is offline
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Originally Posted by jet57 View Post
So, it really is a tourist thing, and sells books, ala Da Vince. It's a fund raiser; like a cave somewhere. Very nice, but not really "authentic".
What a totally pathetic and uneducated comment! First of all, most old churches are a tourist thing nowadays, but as Polwarth says this chapel is still in use as a church! Secondly, The Da Vinci Code made the chapel more famous than it already was so the benefit went from the book to the chapel, not the other way around! Thirdly, of course its a fund raiser... without funds the building would have to be left to fall apart or be sold off (and then probably be converted in to something else). I'm not sure about your cave comment... I've not heard of many of them that are used to raise funds for anything! Finally, how can you even possibly think its not really "authentic"? Have you even been there and seen it? Or even read anything about the building and its history? My guess is that you haven't!
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  #33 (permalink)  
Old 21st November 2008, 15:27
jet57 jet57 is offline
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Roslyn

Sorry if I offended anyone. I have read a great deal about it. I have been to Scotland, and elected not to visit the chapel based on what I know. (Perhaps next time).
Caves are great geographic sites that people visit that raise money for a park or the organization that owns it. The chapel today is being misrepresented in the view of many, so when I say a "tourist thing" that's what I'm referrring to. I'm glad to know however that services are still held there.
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