Kinneff Church
We
started an early morning with a visit to Kinneff Church, south of
Stonehaven and down a winding farm road to the church and Old Manse. The
weather was beautiful and again, the proximity to the North Sea made
everything special.
Photo
1: The Old Church, Kinneff - from a postcard available from the church
for a small donation
Photo
2: The English translation of the Rev. Grainger's epitaph:
Behold the spot where
Grainger's ashes lie,
Who from besieged Dunottar safe conveyed
The insignia of Scotland's royalty.
And in this hallowed ground in secret laid,
Where now he rests himself, heaven shall bestow
Meet recompense on such desert as his;
He who his country's honour saved below,
Now wields a sceptre in the realms of bliss.
Photo
3: Grainger's tomb in the Old Church, Kinneff, in exactly the place
where the Honours of Scotland were buried.
Photo 4: Another view of
the back of the Old Church, Grainger's tomb, and some of the displayed
items.
Kinneff Church
Information
KINNEFF Old Church is always associated with one of the best known episodes in Scottish history. As Cromwell's army advanced into Scotland in 1651, Parliament ordered the Honours of Scotland to be removed to Dunnottar Castle for safety. The
Scepter and Sword of State had been presented to James IV in 1494 and 1507 by Popes Alexander VI and Julius II respectively. The Crown almost certainly dates from before 1540 when it was remodeled by order of James V. It had last been worn at the coronation of Charles II at Scone in 1651.
In September 1651 Dunnottar was
besieged by Cromwell's forces, and the garrison commander, George Ogilvy of Barras,
realized that its capture was imminent. To save the Regalia, his wife and Mrs. Grainger, wife of the parish minister of Kinneff, devised a plan to smuggle them to safety. The most popularly known version of how this was done tells that Mrs. Grainger, bringing bundles of flax from the Castle, had the Crown concealed under her apron and the
Scepter disguised as a staff. Another tale relates that the Crown Jewels were lowered down the Castle Rock to an old fish wife or servant girl who "on pretence of gathering tangles" on the seashore, carried them off, "hid under dulse" in here creel.
The Regalia were given into the charge of the Rev. James Grainger, the best known of all the Kinneff Old Church ministers, while General Overton and his successors were
besieging the fortress of Dunnottar to obtain possession of them. It was by Mr. Grainger and his wife that, wrapped in linen cloths, the "Honours Three" were safely buried at night under the clay floor of the ancient church.
Let James Grainger speak for himself in his account of this secret disposition, dated 31st March, 1652, and given to the Countess Marischall.
"For the crown and sceptre I raised the pavement stone just before the pulpit, in the night tyme, and digged under it one hole, and layed down stone just as it was before, and removed the mould that remained, that none would have dicerned the stone to havce been raised at all. The sword again, at the west end of the church, among some common saits that stand there, I digged down in the ground betwixt the twa foremost of these saits, and laid it down within the case of it, and covered it up, as that removing the superfluous mould it could not be discerned by any body; for it shall please God to call me by death before they be caled for, your Ladyship will find them in that place.
Every three months Mr. & Mrs. Grainger dug up the Regalia at night to air them before a fire to preserve them from damp and injury. So did the Honours remain hidden for nine stormy years during the Commonwealth while an English army searched in vain. When the castle fell, the Ogilvy were imprisoned and, although Mrs. Osilvy died a captive, the secret of the whereabouts of the Regalia was kept. At the Restoration in 1660 the Honours were returned to Charles II and placed in Edinburgh Castle. When the Scottish
Parliament was dissolved in 1707, they were locked in a chest in the Crown Room where they remained, forgotten, until in October, 1817, Sir
Walter Scott obtained royal permission for a search to be made for them. On February 4th, 1818, the Honours were restored to the people of Scotland and have been on view ever since in Edinburgh Castle, where thousands throng to see them.
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