The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Tiny fragment of Scottish history could fetch £3,000

AUCTION: A 1.4cm piece of the Stone of Destiny will go on sale in Edinburgh

- GEORGE MAIR

A small fragment of the Stone of Destiny, used for centuries in the coronation of monarchs, could fetch up to £3,000 at auction in Edinburgh this month.

The 1.4cm piece was taken by stonemason Robert Gray, who repaired the historic Stone after it was removed from Westminste­r Abbey by Scottish nationalis­ts in 1950.

Gray, who died in 1975, and the lawyer Ian Hamilton left the Stone at Arbroath Abbey four months later to be returned, although Gray would never reveal if the stone that returned south was the genuine article.

The framed fragment will go under the hammer at Lyon & Turnbull’s Sale of Scottish Silver and Applied Arts on August 15, along with a letter of authentici­ty.

The letter, hand signed “Robert Gray A.T, T.P City of Glasgow”, states: “This is to certify that the small piece of Sandstone... was taken from the Stone of Destiny when it was being repaired by me in March, 1951.”

Legend has it the Stone of Destiny – also known as the Stone of Scone – was used by Jacob as a pillow when he dreamt of Jacob’s Ladder, described in the Book of Genesis in the Bible.

It arrived in Scone, Perthshire, via Ireland in around 800AD and was used for nearly 500 years as a coronation stone for Scottish monarchs.

A powerful symbol of Scottish monarchy, it was taken by England’s King Edward I to Westminste­r Abbey in London in 1296 and built into his own throne.

It has been used for the crowning of British kings and queens ever since.

On Christmas Eve in 1950, the stone was snatched from Westminste­r by four Scottish students.

It was damaged in the process and given to stonemason Gray, a co-founder of the National Party of Scotland in 1928, to repair.

Gray and Hamilton, who was one of the four who repatriate­d the Stone, left the historic object on the altar at Arbroath on April 11 1951 and it was returned to Westminste­r.

Last used for the coronation of Queen Elizabeth II in 1953, the artefact was permanentl­y returned to Scotland in 1996.

It now resides along with the Scottish Crown Jewels in the Crown Room at Edinburgh Castle.

 ??  ?? The Stone of Destiny now resides in Edinburgh Castle next to the Scottish Crown Jewels.
The Stone of Destiny now resides in Edinburgh Castle next to the Scottish Crown Jewels.

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