Everything about Holyrood Abbey totally explained
Holyrood Abbey is a ruined
Augustinian Abbey in
Edinburgh,
Scotland. The abbey (which is sited in the grounds of the Royal
Palace of Holyroodhouse, which it predates) was built in 1128 at the order of King
David I of Scotland.
Etymology of name
"Rood" is an old word for "cross", usually meaning the crucifixion cross of
Jesus; thus the name is equivalent to "Holy Cross." A legend relates that King David I got into difficulties hunting in the woods and was saved by a stag with an illuminated cross between its horns, then vowed to build a church on the spot. The name is more commonly pronounced as
Holly-rood as well as the less commonly used
Holy-rood.
The legend of the founding of the Abbey
In 1127, while King David I was hunting in forests near Edinburgh, he suddenly found himself in danger from the antlers of a
hart. Two brothers, Johannes and Gregan from the Barony of
Crawford in Upper Strathclyde, saved the King. Grateful, he knighted the brothers and founded Holyrood Abbey the following year. From that day forward, that branch of the Crawford family adopted the crest of a buck's head erased with a cross of gold between the antlers to commemorate the founding of the Abbey. This family also adopted the motto
Tutum Te Robore Reddam for "Our strength will give you safety." This crest was adopted by
Clan Crawford after 1700 when this branch of the family ascended to the Chiefship through marriage into the existing Chief's lineage.
Usage and ruin
Since the fifteenth century, it has been the site of many royal coronations and marriage ceremonies. It also suffered from a number of attacks. During "
The Rough Wooing" by
Henry VIII of England,
Edward Seymour as Earl of Hertford plundered the abbey in 1544, then as Protector Somerset led a raid causing great damage to the buildings. King
James VII established a College of Jesuits in Holyroodhouse and had the Abbey converted in May 1688 to become a Roman Catholic chapel for the
Order of the Thistle, with the Protestant congregation being moved to the new
Kirk of the Canongate, then in November of that year when the
Glorious Revolution brought in
William III of Orange the people of Edinburgh broke in to plunder the kirk and the royal burial vaults. In 1691 the Kirk of the Canongate replaced the Abbey as the local parish church. Restoration work included the roof of the abbey being rebuilt in 1758, but the roof collapsed in a hurricane in 1768, leaving it as it currently stands, a ruin.
Holyrood Abbey Church (Dalziel Place, Edinburgh)
There is still a
Church of Scotland congregation named
Holyrood Abbey, however this congregation uses a late-
Victorian church building at Dalziel Place (with Dalziel pronounced
dee-ell – because of the letter
yogh) at the junction of Marionville Road and London Road, some distance from the old Holyrood Abbey. The church building was opened in December 1900 as
Abbeyhill United Free Church.
Following the
Disruption of 1843 in the Church of Scotland, part of the congregation of the
Kirk of the Canongate left to form
Holyrood Free Church. A new building was constructed in front of the Palace of Holyroodhouse. This congregation united with Abbeyhill United Free Church in 1915, henceforth using the Dalziel Place church buildings. The
United Free Church of Scotland united with the
Church of Scotland in 1929, the congregation henceforth being known as Holyrood Abbey Church. The building was extensively upgraded in 2006-2007.
Today, the Holyrood Abbey Church of Scotland congregation is well-known in Edinburgh for its Conservative Evangelical theology and tradition of
expository preaching, developed by the Reverend James Philip MA (the congregation's former
minister 1958-1997). Mr Philip was a friend of the Rev William Still, minister at
Gilcomston South Church in Aberdeen from 1945 until 1997, the pioneer of expository preaching in the
Church of Scotland. The current minister is the Rev Philip Hair BD. See:
Holyrood Abbey Church website
The former Holyrood United Free Church building adjacent to the Palace was used for many years as a storeroom, but in 2003 was extensively renovated and reopened as "
The Queen's Gallery" for art exhibitions from the
Royal Collection.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Holyrood Abbey'.
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