The Press and Journal (Aberdeen and Aberdeenshire)
Stone of Destiny goes on show in new home
The “fabulous” museum that is the new home of the Stone of Destiny is gearing up to open this weekend after a £27 million redevelopment project.
Perth Museum in the old City Hall opens its doors tomorrow and its centrepiece is the Stone of Destiny, which has returned to Perthshire for the first time in more than 700 years, having originally been kept at nearby Scone.
The museum will also show treasures cared for by Culture Perth and Kinross, with highlights including the 3,000-year-old Carpow logboat, a sword believed to have been given to Bonnie Prince Charlie, Jacobite glassware, and a 17th Century silk doublet.
JP Reid, exhibitions manager at Culture Perth and Kinross, said he is
“delighted” the stone is back in the area.
He told the PA news agency: “It’s immensely significant the stone is back for the first time in 700 years, it’s absolutely intrinsic to this place, to Perth and the area around Perth and Scone.
“Scone was a major royal centre and the use of the stone there is bound up with the story of how Scotland emerges from the kingdom of the Picts and the kingdom of the Scots and the foundation of the early medieval nation effectively, the kingdom of Alba which becomes the kingdom of Scotland, and Scone and Perth are at the heart of that story.
“The stone is the perfect way of telling that because it is amazingly still a live ceremonial object, so we’re immensely excited to have it here.”
The museum’s debut exhibition, Unicorn, will explore the cultural history of Scotland’s national animal from antiquity to the present, with items such as illustrations, manuscripts and tapestries, and loans from museums around the world.
Helen Smout, chief executive of Culture Perth and Kinross, described having the Stone of Destiny as “really special”, and said the collections on show are globally significant and will have appeal both locally and nationally.
She added: “This is a fabulous new museum for Perth, which is an opportunity to display all of the wonderful collections we have here, all of which are nationally recognised as being of significance, so it’s a great opportunity to get more of those on display
and to tell the really rich history that we have here in Perthshire and why we’re so important to Scotland’s history in that wider sense.”
Visitors will have to book time slots to see the Stone of Destiny, which is free to view.
Also known as the Stone of Scone, it was long used in the inauguration of Scottish monarchs. But, in 1296, it was seized by King Edward I of England as war loot and taken to London.
It was built into a Coronation Chair at Westminster Abbey and used in the coronation ceremonies of kings and queens of England and, later, Great Britain after the Scottish and English crowns united in the early 17th Century.
In 1950, a group of students stole it from Westminster Abbey to return it to Scotland in a bid to advance the cause of independence.
It was later found on the site of the High Altar at Arbroath Abbey.
The stone was formally returned to Scotland in 1996 to go on display at Edinburgh Castle.
Last year it was again taken to London for the coronation of King Charles.
Councillor Grant Laing, Perth and Kinross Council leader, said: “Perth Museum will be a landmark attraction that brings Scotland’s history to life and is the culmination of our long-term cultural regeneration vision for Perth.
“It will significantly increase visitors from across the UK and internationally.
“It has created new skills and employment opportunities, and will ignite our sense of civic pride in our beautiful and historic city.”