Crown of Scotland

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Crown's modern usage: The Crown of Scotland at the opening of the Scottish Parliament Building at Holyrood in 2004.  The Crown is carried on a cushion by the Duke of Hamilton.
The Crown's modern usage: The Crown of Scotland at the opening of the Scottish Parliament Building at Holyrood in 2004. The Crown is carried on a cushion by the Duke of Hamilton.

The Crown of Scotland was made in its modern form for King James V of Scotland in 1540. It is part of the Honours of Scotland, the oldest set of royal regalia in the United Kingdom.

[edit] Manufacture

The crown manufactured for James V was refashioned from an older, lighter, damaged crown by the royal goldsmith, John Mosman in 1540. It has two arches (or four half-arches), on which a golden monde sits, topped off by a cross.

It is made mainly of gold and contains 22 gemstones and 20 precious stones taken from the older crown. It weighs 1.64 kg (3 lb 10 oz).

[edit] Usage

The crown was first worn by James V to the coronation of his second wife, Mary of Guise as queen consort at Holyrood Abbey, Edinburgh, in the year of its manufacture. It was subsequently used in the coronations of the child monarchs Mary, Queen of Scots in 1543, and her son James VI in 1567. It was used for Scottish coronations of Charles I in 1633 and Charles II in 1651. No subsequent Scottish monarchs were crowned.

The Crown of Scotland is featured on the Cap Badge of the Royal Regiment of Scotland.
The Crown of Scotland is featured on the Cap Badge of the Royal Regiment of Scotland.

Having destroyed the ancient English Crown Jewels, Oliver Cromwell sought to destroy the Honours of Scotland but the Honours were buried in a secret location until the Protectorate fell and the monarchy was restored in 1660.

In the absence of a resident Scottish monarch after James VI had inherited the throne of England, the Honours were taken to sittings of the Parliament of Scotland to symbolise the sovereign's presence and the Royal Assent to legislation.

After the Act of Union of 1707, which merged the Kingdom of Scotland and the Kingdom of England to form the Kingdom of Great Britain the Honours were locked away in Edinburgh Castle where they remained all but forgotten in a chest until 1818. Since 1819 they have been on display in the Crown Room of Edinburgh Castle.

The crown was formally brought to the first meeting of the modern Scottish Parliament in 1999.

[edit] External links


Crowns Imperial Crown of Austria
European & World Crowns

Crown of Bavaria | Crown of Christian IV (Denmark) | Crown of Christian V (Denmark) | Crown of Charlemagne (France) | Crown of Empress Eugenie (France) | Crown of Frederick I (Prussia) | Crown of Louis XV (France) | Crown of Napoleon (France) | Crown of Norway | Crown of Elisabeta (Romania) | Crown of Maria (Romania) | Crown of Wilhelm II (Prussia) | Crown of St. Stephen (Hungary) | Crown of St. Wenceslas (Czech lands) | Crown of the Polish Kingdom (Poland) | Kiani Crown (Iran/Persia) | Imperial Crown of Austria | Imperial Crown of Brazil | Imperial Crown of the Holy Roman Empire | Imperial Crown of Mexico | Imperial Crown of Russia | Iron Crown of Lombardy | Monomakh's Cap (Muscovy) | Royal Crown of Serbia | Royal Crown of Spain | Steel Crown of Romania | Pahlavi Crown (Iran/Persia) | Papal Tiara


English, Scottish & British Crowns (by chronology)

Crown of Scotland | St. Edward's Crown | Crown of Mary of Modena | State Crown of George I | Crown of Frederick, Prince of Wales | Coronation Crown of George IV | Crown of Queen Adelaide | Imperial State Crown | Small diamond crown of Queen Victoria | Crown of Queen Alexandra | Crown of George, Prince of Wales | Crown of Queen Mary | Imperial Crown of India | Crown of Queen Elizabeth | Crown of Charles, Prince of Wales


See also: Coronation | Crown Jewels | Heir Apparent | Heir Presumptive | King | Monarchy | Queen | Regalia | Royal Family
Crown Jewels

Austrian Crown Jewels | British Crown Jewels | Bavarian Crown Jewels | Bohemian Crown Jewels | Danish Crown Regalia | Dutch Royal Regalia | French Crown Jewels | German Crown Jewels | Greek Crown Jewels | Hungarian Crown Jewels | Imperial Regalia of the Holy Roman Empire | Iranian Crown Jewels | Honours of Scotland | Honours of Wales | Irish Crown Jewels | Imperial Regalia of Japan | Nigerian Royal Regalia | Norwegian Royal Regalia | Polish Crown Jewels | Portuguese Crown Jewels | Prussian Crown Jewels | Romanian Crown Jewels | Russian Crown Jewels | Serbian Crown Jewels | Spanish Crown Jewels | Swedish Royal Regalia | Thai Royal Regalia|

In other languages