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    Rosslyn (book)

    Rosslyn Chapel and Castle near Edinburgh have long exerted a powerful magnetism and mystery for people all over the world. Andrew Sinclair’s new history of Rosslyn spans its history over 2,000 years, from the Trojan War to King Arthur’s Camlann and the Crusades, and through Bannockburn and Culloden to the present day.

    The flamboyant Gothic church became a third Temple of Solomon for the Knights Templar, under the patronage of the St Clairs of Rosslyn. In the eighteenth century the Templars supported the Jacobite cause, and after the final defeat at Culloden, moved their radical Scots Lodges to America and France, where they played a powerful part in the revolutions in both countries.

    This book offers an enthralling trail through the rich tapestry of events witnessed by Rosslyn over the centuries. Andrew Sinclair, himself descended from Prince Henry St Clair, who could have taken the Templar treasure from the original vaults beneath Rosslyn Chapel to the medieval Newport Tower, Rhode Island, explores – and sometimes explodes – the many myths and misinterpretations that have grown up around Rosslyn, as the fortunes of the Sinclair family declined and the Church and Castle fell into ruin.

    Andrew Sinclair is a leading novelist, historian and film-maker.


    Customer Reviews

    modern fables
    Chris Brown

    This book is yet another rev-vamping of tired myths of modern origin. In the 18th century one Richard Hay wrote a series of romantic tales connecting Templars, Rober the Bruce and Roslin chapel. There is no connection whatsoever, Hay was merely writing what we would call a historical novel. Sinclair's new book is no more valuable in historical terms than 'Holy Blood and Holy Grail', 'The Da Vinci Code' or 'Noddy goes to the Sea-side'. The damage doen to Scottish History by Baigent, Leigh, Sincalir etc. is incalculable. If there is a more useless and fraudulent title on the shelves of bookshops I'm glad to say I have not encountered it. The Publishers ougth to be ashamed of themselves. CB
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    Rosslyn (book)

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