Arthur's Seat: Journeys and Evocations
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About this ebook
Stuart McHardy
Stuart McHardy is a writer, storyteller and lecturer. His interest in Scotland's past has led him to re-evaluate the role of the oral tradition in gaining a clearer picture of our history. He believes that while history is written by winners, story flourishes amongst history's survivors. He was Director of the Scots Language Resource Centre from 1993 to 1998 and is a founder member and past president of the Pictish Arts Society. An experienced broadcaster Stuart McHardy has long been interested in Scotland's musical traditions, playing music professionally since his teens. He lives in Edinburgh.
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Arthur's Seat - Stuart McHardy
Introduction
From whatever direction you approach Arthur’s Seat you gain a different perspective. No two viewpoints are alike. This is partly because the hill called Arthur’s Seat is itself part of a triple peak, set within a wider system of ridges, crags and valleys which slope in long overlapping lines from the main summit towards the Firth of Forth. The geologists describe this as a Crag and Tail, formed through volcanic activity succeeded by glaciers and erosion.
While these may be the physical causes of what we see, their effect is a complex visual artwork that can be viewed in the round; landscape, painting and sculpture is on exhibit in 360 degrees. Added to this are ever changing perspectives of imagery in motion, sometimes in sunlight, sometimes through shifting mists, sometimes veiled by driving rain, and occasionally mantled by eerie white snow. By night the hill may be no more than a dark shadow, or it may be luminous in moonlight, or wanly lit by distant stars.
Ritual fires and signal beacons have blazed on the hill through millennia, while recently maliciously fired whin-bushes have snaked red burns through the black. But the present mood is more subdued; in 2012 Arthur’s Seat becomes a remarkable platform for NVA’s Speed of Light, a fusion of innovative public art and sporting endeavour. The runners of the Speed of Light project have borne glowing light packs to weave subtle patterns of illumination generated by their own movement. Forming part of the 2012 Edinburgh International Festival, Speed of Light is a new visual interpretation of the Hill fuelled by the energy of the 2,000 runners. In this way, Art itself becomes layered and underlayed with nature’s own arts.
Angus Farquhar, Creative Director of Speed of Light, has dreamt of creating a work for this particular location for over 20 years.
‘I have wanted to create a work on Arthur’s Seat since I moved back to Scotland in 1989, so it has occupied a special place in my imagination. Living in London for ten years, I travelled back north for holidays, work and to visit family and realised that I was being emotionally affected by the change in landscape and that particularly higher ground seemed to lead to a rise in feelings of empathy and belonging to that place. I grew up in Edinburgh and to almost all people who have lived there for some time; the mountain has a special place in their hearts or minds.’
The Speed of Light programme extends across seven of Edinburgh’s key festivals resulting in newly commissioned works, programmes of discussion, lectures and workshops investigating human endurance, and the relationship of movement to landscape.
Preparations for Speed of Light have involved story-filled walks hosted by the Scottish International Storytelling Festival, and glimpses of Speed of Light, and its place in the unfolding landscape, will be captured within Arthur’s Seat: Journeys and Evocations. At the moment of the project’s realisation, this timely publication draws our close attention to the site itself, and through the form of the walk, follows the pathways of the hill, illuminating the wealth of histories, literature, myths and folklore embedded within Arthur’s Seat and its environs.
In this book you can follow a series of journeys through stories, folklore and poetry. Each shed their own kind of illumination on Arthur’s Seat, and gives you space to form your personal impressions and experiences of this rich living landscape.
Holyrood Gateway
There are many gateways into the royal park which surrounds Arthur’s Seat, but the best approach is by Holyrood. At the foot of Edinburgh’s Royal Mile, the ruins of Holyrood Abbey sit beside and within the Palace of Holyroodhouse. More recently, the spectacular Scottish Parliament designed by Enrico Miralles has been added to the Holyrood configuration.
The common factor is the way each of these successive iconic buildings relates to the park. The Abbey still longs for peace and seclusion; the Palace hugs its enclosure in the same way that royal prerogative once shut off the whole park as a game reserve for their Majesties’ pleasure; the Parliament building is the one that reaches out towards the natural contours of the park with landscaped intention. This echoes the way in which the Palace gardens once extended beyond formal enclosures into orchards and vegetable beds, and, finally, the King’s Meadow.
These expansive plantings were the creation of Marie de Guise and her daughter Mary Queen of Scots, who emulated and perhaps surpassed the royal French gardens of the Loire at Chenonceau or Blois. The level ground beyond the present palace wall is a reminder of this intermediate realm between wild nature and the institutions of church or state. In recent times this space has been used as a parade ground or tented village for major public events. Enrico Miralles’ parliament design explicitly links government and landscape. In Scotland, everything is defined to some extent by the mountains, sea, and unresting skies above.
St Margaret’s Well
Turning left by the Palace car park, St Margaret’s Well is reached by the low path on the far side of the main park road. Still in a medieval well house, the waters flow but are screened off by a metal grille. The park is full of natural springs and underground streams. Their plentiful supply caused as many problems with the excavation of the Scottish Parliament foundations as the benefits they once supplied to the numerous breweries which existed around Holyrood from the time of the Augustinian monks onwards.
St Margaret was a royal refugee, originally from Hungary and then from the Saxon Court of England. Educated under the saintly and learned influence of Edward the Confessor, Margaret fled northwards by sea after the Battle of Hastings in 1066. With her she brought a precious relic, a fragment of Calvary’s Cross embedded in an exquisite ebony crucifix – the holy rood.
Whether by accident or design, Margaret’s ship sought refuge from the storms in the Firth of Forth, landing near the then royal capital of Dunfermline. Malcolm King of Scots, who himself had been a refugee at the English Court, came to welcome Margaret and offer her sanctuary. The result was a royal marriage and six children from which most of the subsequent monarchs of Scotland and England came to be descended. Margaret was later canonised because of her untiring work to feed and educate the poor and her assistance to refugees and prisoners of war. In the words of the canonisation address, preserved in the Vatican,
Torn from home, you embrace another
You became Queen and Mother,
The Glory of Scots,
Your crown a Crown of charity,
Your way, the Royal Way of the Cross.
However, there are more levels to the well itself than even Margaret’s own rich story which gives Holyrood its name. It was known in medieval times as the Rood Well, but the well house itself was moved here much later from St Triduana’s Well. This was an important medieval healing shrine, which can still be visited at St Margaret’s Church in nearby Restalrig.
Triduana, sometimes known as Modwenna or Medwana, was an Irish princess who fled to Galloway in Scotland to escape the attentions of an unwelcome suitor. Like many highborn women in the early Christian period, she wanted to live the life of an anchorite