The Courier & Advertiser (Perth and Perthshire Edition)

Bloody chapter in history could shine spotlight on Perth

grave: Academics launch bid to find remains of King James I of Scotland

- Perth office chief rePorter twitter: @c-rBUrDGe

Violent events can change the path of history – Archduke Franz Ferdinand’s wrong turn in the streets of Sarajevo in 1914 is perhaps the best-known example – but another assassinat­ion, closer to home, changed Scotland forever.

In the 1400s the Royal Burgh of Perth was a centre of government and church and well on its way to becoming the capital of Scotland until a bloody murder altered the course of history.

Had James I of Scotland outwitted his pursuers as he fled through the city’s sewers, Perth could have developed into the centre of commerce and legislatio­n it seem destined for.

The savage stabbing of King James I was a pivotal moment when royal interest in Perth was lost, and never regained.

The bloody chapter could, however, yet bring fame and fortune to Perth if an enduring mystery can be solved.

On the 580th anniversar­y of the murder, academics and archaeolog­ists gathered in Perth to launch a bid to find the unfortunat­e monarch’s grave.

It is known an opulent tomb was constructe­d in the Charterhou­se in the city for the king and his widow, but all evidence was swept away during the Reformatio­n and the exact location lost in the mists of time.

Now, clues from dusty documents, ground-penetratin­g radar and archaeolog­ical test pits will be combined in the search for the royal remains.

Whatever the outcome it is likely that much more will be learned about an important period in Perth’s past, with plans to use the evidence for a digital “virtual reconstruc­tion” of the Charterhou­se complex.

The discovery of Richard III under a car park in Leicester proves such hunts can succeed, but the project team must be praying James I isn’t languishin­g under the Chinese takeaways, tyre and exhaust business or the bus station which now cover large sections of the search area.

The savage stabbing of King James I was a pivotal moment when royal interest in Perth was lost, and never regained

 ??  ?? King James VI Hospital in Perth and King James I, who was murdered 580 years ago.
King James VI Hospital in Perth and King James I, who was murdered 580 years ago.
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