The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

Pageant of history

The anniversar­y of the Declaratio­n of Arbroath has been marked in the town since 1947. Gayle Ritchie chats to Anita Walker of the Arbroath Abbey Pageant Society

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Community figures in colourful 14th-Century costume, chain mail, swords, horses, lights and music – it was a spectacle unlike any other. Since 1947, members of the Arbroath Abbey Pageant Society have staged stunning shows enacting the coming into being of the Declaratio­n of Scottish Independen­ce.

The last full performanc­e was in 2005, but a small band of pageant players faithfully come together to play out a pivotal scene from the historic event each year.

The first pageant, in 1947, was run to raise money for the YMCA’s overseas fund. The war may have been over, but many service personnel were still stationed abroad, both in Europe and in unstable outposts of a flagging empire.

Money raised was intended to fund recreation­al facilities for these troops.

As a sea port and industrial centre, and as the site of a naval air station, the YMCA was also active in Arbroath, looking after young male incomers.

For many years, the pageant was held within the abbey ruins and enacted a scene that almost certainly never took place – a great gathering of the barons of Scotland, their king, Robert the Bruce, the Scottish bishops, and the man who for much of the 20th Century was the assumed author of the declaratio­n, Bernard de Linton, the abbot of the Abbey of Aberbrotho­ck (an alternativ­e name for Arbroath).

Anita Walker, a former president of the pageant society, recalls the event as a “colourful and dramatic spectacle which was cleverly produced” and boasting “evocative sound and lighting”.

“It started with an old soldier beyond the high altar telling a story about how we had to fight for freedom,” she muses.

“Men wore chainmail and swords and it was really very rousing.

“It enacted the arrival of Robert the Bruce at the abbey on his horse, his meeting with Abbot Bernard and a display of the famous document newly sealed.

“People took on the roles of soldiers, monks, barons and courtiers, and we had some fantastic men playing Bruce.

“Before the clerical people arrived, there was a little introducto­ry play, completely imagined, often on the trial of William Wallace before he was taken away in chains. Again, we had some good Wallaces. A male voice choir took on the role of monks chanting.”

There are many translatio­ns of the declaratio­n, but the Arbroath Abbey Pageant Society used the Agnes Mure Mackenzie version.

During the annual Pageant Week,

People took on the role of soldiers, monks, barons and courtiers, and we had some fantastic men playing Bruce

performanc­es were done both in daylight and at impressive illuminate­d evening shows.

The society often took the pageant on tour, round castles and historic properties across Scotland.

Thanks to a lack of funds and volunteers, the huge spectacle has not taken place for 15 years.

But Anita says that every year, a small group of society members meet at the abbey gates on April 6 – the anniversar­y of the declaratio­n – to read the special document.

“We do it very quietly – we don’t make a song and dance about it,” she says.

“If anyone is passing, they are welcome to watch, but it’s our own way of marking a special moment in history.

“It’s very sad that we don’t do the pageant on the same scale any more. It used to be a big community thing, full of family members and friends. All my brothers were involved – one played a big part in the 650th anniversar­y – and my great niece still is. A lot of work went into it. The truth is that most young people don’t have the declaratio­n in their hearts. We saw our abbey as our heritage and as our duty to mark April 6.

“We had our time and I’d say the pageant has had its time. Anyone who has been a part of it will never forget it.”

While Anita never played a role in the pageant – most of the acting was done by men – she played a huge part behind the scenes, selling tickets, taking bookings and supporting the spectacle.

Courier business reporter Jim Millar once took on the coveted role of Robert the Bruce.

“The pageant was a real community event that saw people from all walks of life take part,” he recalls.

“The clever use of lighting took the audience back to when Arbroath Abbey was at its peak.

“This, combined with a substantia­l cast in 14th-Century costume and beautifull­y delivered script created an atmosphere in the ruined abbey that made the hair on the back of your head stand up and you could hear a pin drop.

“We may not see it again in its traditiona­l form, but as a production combining theatre and history, it very much stands the test of time.”

Tomorrow’s plans for a pageant procession, organised by the Arbroath 2020 Festival – a six-month programme of events to mark the 700th anniversar­y of the declaratio­n – were cancelled due to the coronaviru­s outbreak.

A horse-led procession of more than 500 people was to have marched from the abbey to Arbroath Harbour, an atmospheri­c re-enactment of the Declaratio­n of Arbroath sailing to France in 1320 led by Robert the Bruce.

Artist Mandy McIntosh had worked with the community to create costumes and designs for the procession, resulting in a veritable feast for the eyes.

The festival has been postponed to next year.

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 ??  ?? Clockwise from top left: Jim Millar as Robert the Bruce; a solemn procession through the atmospheri­c ruins of the abbey in 1966; Bernard de Linton presenting the declaratio­n to the king in 1970; and the costumed procession in 1964.
Clockwise from top left: Jim Millar as Robert the Bruce; a solemn procession through the atmospheri­c ruins of the abbey in 1966; Bernard de Linton presenting the declaratio­n to the king in 1970; and the costumed procession in 1964.
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