AMONG the famous
prisoners that were incarcerated in the dungeons of the Castle was James
Mhor Macgregor of Bohaldie, the eldest son of Rob Roy, the famous chief
of the Macgregors. James had lost his estate for having held a major’s
commission under the Old Pretender. Robin Oig Macgregor, his younger
brother, having conceived the idea that he would make his fortune by
carrying off an heiress—no uncommon thing in the Highlands —procured
James’s assistance, with a band of Macgregors, armed with target,
pistol, and claymore, who came suddenly from the wilds of Arroquhar.
Surrounding the house of Edinbellie, in Stirlingshire, the abode of a
wealthy widow of only nineteen, they seized her, and, muffling her in a
plaid, bore her to the heather-clad hills where Rowardennan looks down
upon the Gareloch and Glenfruin. There she was married to Robin, who
kept her for three months in defiance of several parties of troops sent
to recover her.
From his general
character James Mhor was considered to be a chief instigator of this
outrage \ thus the vengeance of the Crown was directed against him
rather than Robin, who received some leniency on account of his youth.
He was arrested, tried, and found guilty by the Lords of Justiciary, but
in consequence of some doubt, or because of some informality, sentence
of death was delayed until November 1752. As it was believed that an
attempt to rescue him might be made by the Highlanders serving in the
city as caddies, chairmen, and city guards—for Macgregor’s bravery at
Prestonpans, seven years before, had made him popular with the
clansmen—he was removed by a warrant rom the Lord Justice Clerk,
addressed to General Churchill, from the Tolbooth to the Castle, there
to be kept in close confinement till his fatal day arrived. But it came
to pass that on November 16 one of his daughters, a tall and very
handsome girl, disguised herself as a lame old cobbler and obtained
admittance to the prisoner, bearing a pair of newly soled shoes. The
guards in the adjacent corridors heard James Macgregor scolding the
supposed cobbler with considerable asperity for some time for the
indifferent manner in which his work had been executed. Meanwhile they
were exchanging costumes, and at length James came limping forth
grumbling and swearing. An old and tattered greatcoat enveloped him; he
had donned a leather apron, a pair of old shoes, and ribbed stockings. A
red nightcap was drawn to his ears, and a broad hat slouched over his
eyes. He quitted the Castle undetected, and succeeded in leaving the
city. His flight was soon discovered . The city gates were shut, the
fortress searched, and every man who had been on duty was made prisoner.
A court-martial, consisting of thirteen officers, sat for five days in
the old barracks, and its proceedings ended in two officers being
cashiered, the serjeant who kept the key of Macgregor’s room being
reduced to the ranks, and the flogging of a warder. Macgregor escaped to
France, where he died about the time of the French Revolution in extreme
old age. Robin Oig Macgregor was, however, executed in the Grassmarket
in 1754 for the abduction.
On the Bomb Battery, or
King’s Bastion, directly in front of St. Margaret’s Chapel, stands the
giant piece of ordnance known as Mons Meg, a relic of the fifteenth
century, with its great muzzle commanding the fine panorama of the New
Town. In one respect it is similar in construction to some of our modern
weapons \ that is, the metal is welded together in strong coils. It
measures thirteen feet in length and twenty inches in diameter within
the bore, and weighs upward of five tons. It is supposed to be the most
ancient piece of cannon in Europe with the exception of one at Lisbon.
Grant says that not a vestige of proof can be shown for the popular
belief that this gun was forged at Mons; indeed, unvarying tradition,
supported by very strong corroborative evidence, asserts that it was
formed by Scottish artisans, by order of James II, when he besieged the
rebellious Douglases in the castle of Thrieve, in Galloway, in 1455. He
posted his artillery at the Three Thorns of the Carlinwark,1 which still
survives, but the fire proved ineffective, so a smith named M’Kim and
his sons offered to construct a more efficient piece of ordnance. Toward
this the inhabitants of the vicinity contributed each a gaud, or iron
bar. Tradition, Grant goes on to say, never varied, and indicated a
mound near the Three Thorns as the place of the forging. When the road
was made at that spot this mound was discovered to be a mass of cinders
and the iron debris of a great forge. Another story has it that the King
granted to 'Brawny Kim,’ the smith in question, the lands of Mollance—the
contraction of Mollance to ‘Monce’ and his wife’s name c Meg’ suggests
the origin of the name 'Mons Meg.’
To this day the place
where Mons Meg was mounted is called Knock-cannon. Only two of the great
cannonballs were fired from it before the surrender of Thrieve, and both
have been found. The first, according to the New Statistical Account,
was toward the end of the seventeenth century picked out of the castle
well and delivered to Gordon of Greenlaw. In 1841 the tenant of Thrieve
discovered the second when removing a rubbish heap. The balls piled on
either side of the gun in the Castle are believed to be exactly similar
to those found at Thrieve, and are cut out of Galloway granite from a
quarry on Binnan Hill, near the Carlin-wark. The gun has had several
variations in its name. It has been termed ‘ Mounts Meg,’ 'Munch Meg,’
and ‘the great iron murderer, Muckle Meg.’ Near the breech may be seen a
large rent, which was made in 1632, when a salute was being fired in
honour of the Duke of York, afterwards J imes VII. In 1489 it was
employed at the siege of Dumbarton, and at some time when James IV
invaded England it is supposed he took the gigantic weapon with him on a
new stock made at St. Leonard’s Craig and the accounts at the time
mention the amounts paid to those who brought “ hame Monse and the other
artailzerie frae Dalkeith.” Many are the stories of her achievements. A
shot from her, fired from the castle of Dunnottar a mile and a half
distant, is said to have dismasted an English vessel as she was about to
enter the harbour of Stonehaven, but as Mons Meg was never at Dunnottar
this story cannot be true. During the Civil War in 1571 one of her
bullets fell by mistake through the roof of a house in Edinburgh, for
which the tenant had compensation } and whilst the gun was being dragged
from Blackfriars Yard to the Castle two men died of their exertions.
An extract from the
chamberlain’s roll is both amusing and interesting: “To certain pynours
for their labour in the mounting of Mons out of her lair to be shot, and
for finding and carrying of her bullets after she was shot, from Wardie
Muir, to the Castle, 10d.; to the minstrels who played before Mons down
the street [on occasion of her visit to Holy rood], 14s. for 8 ells of
cloth to cover Mons, 9s. 4d.”
In 1758 the gun was
removed by mistake among a number of unserviceable pieces to the Tower
of London, where it was shown till 1829. When George IV visited
Edinburgh in 1822 Sir Walter Scott pointed out to him the spot of Meg’s
former location on the King’s Bastion of the old fortress, and with all
his powerful eloquence pleaded that she might be restored to her
position again. The King gave his word that it should be so, but it was
not till seven years after that national jealousy and similar obstacles
could permit the fulfilment of the royal promise.
The leviathan was landed
at Leith, whence it was escorted back to its old lair on the Castle by
three troops of cavalry and the 73rd Perthshire Regiment, with a band of
pipers to head the procession. Standing alongside this ancient armament
on the King’s Bastion, one’s eyes roam over the buildings in which the
historical incidents that have been narrated took place, and looking
round one cannot fail to see how the ancient Castle formed a nucleus for
the great city which clusters round its base. In spite of all the sieges
which this venerable stronghold has weathered, the devastations to which
it has been subjected by successive conquerors, and, above all, the
total change in its defences consequent on the alterations introduced by
modern warfare, it can still boast of buildings dating further back than
any other in the ancient capital. Some portion of the battlements and
fortifications belong to a period before the siege of 1573, when that
brave soldier and adherent of Queen Mary Stuart, Sir William Kirkaldy of
Grange, surrendered after it had been reduced to a heap of ruins. In a
MONS MEG ON THE BOMB
BATTERY
report furnished to the
Board of Ordnance, from documents preserved in that department, it
appears that in 1574 (only one year after the siege) the governor,
George Douglas, of Parkhead, repaired the walls and built the Half-Moon
Battery on the site of David’s great tower. A small tower, with
crow-stepped gables, built to the east of the draw-well, and forming the
highest point of the fore-wall just north of the Half-Moon Battery, is,
Daniel Wilson says, without doubt a building erected long before
Cromwell’s time, and to all appearance coeval with the battery, but it
is quite obvious that this little tower is older than even Wilson
thought. Considerable portions of the western fortifications of the
parapet wall, the port-holes in the Half-Moon Battery, and the
ornamental coping and embrasures of the north and east batteries are of
much later date.
The approach to the
Castle has undergone various alterations from time to time. The
Esplanade as one sees it to-day was formed with the earth removed from
the site of the Royal Exchange, which was commenced in 1753. Previous to
this date the old roadway to the Castle from the 'treves’ on Castle Hill
descended abruptly into the hollow which the Esplanade now covers and
ascended by 'Nova Scotia’ to the Spur, which was a triangular defence
outside and below the steep ascent to the old gateway.
An interesting bird’s-eye
view taken in 573 and printed in the Bannatyne Miscellany represents the
Castle as rising abruptly on the east side this also appears in all the
earlier maps of Edinburgh. The entrance to the fortress appears to have
been by a long flight of steps, and a similar approach is often shown
immediately within the drawbridge. There seems to have been an ancient
and highly ornamental gateway near the guard-room, decorated with
pilasters, with deeply carved mouldings over the arch, and surmounted
with a curious oblong piece of sculpture in high relief showing Mons
Meg, with other ordnance and ancient weapons. This old gateway
unfortunately had to be removed at the beginning of the present century,
as it was too narrow to admit modern carriages and wagons. The present
gateway was erected on its site, and the old carved panels have been
placed in the walls.
The inner gateway to the
west of the one just referred to is an ancient piece of architecture.
Upon the walls of the deeply arched vault, leading into the Argyll
Battery, one can find openings for the two portcullises, also traces of
the hinges of several successive gates that once closed this important
opening. The building immediately over the long vaulted archway is the
Constable Tower or State Prison, which has figured so much in the story
of the Castle. This was the gloomy prison in which both the Marquis and
the Earl of Argyll were confined previous to their execution, and from
which the latter had so romantic an escape, only to be once more dragged
back to await the fatal day. Here it was, too, that the brave adherents
to the House of Stuart suffered the penalty of the law. Inside one will
notice the groove round the vaulted roof where once a portcullis was
lowered to divide the gloomy apartment, with its immensely thick walls
and grated windows overlooking a magnificent panorama of the surrounding
country. The last State prisoners lodged here were Watt and Downie, who
were accused of high treason in 1794. Watt was condemned to death, and
it was intended that he should be executed on the Castle Hill—the place
of execution for traitors—but it was thought this might be looked upon
as indicating fear on the part of the Government, so he was taken to the
Lawn-market and dispatched there in the presence of a great crowd.
The State Prison was
restored by the late Mr. William Nelson, the well-known publisher. The
panel above the lower end of the archway now containing the Scottish
Lion Rampant was recarved after remaining disfigured from the time of
the Commonwealth, when Cromwell ordered its destruction ; the two hounds
on either side are the arms of the Gordons, and these were spared ;
above the royal arms may still be seen the hearts and mullets of the
Douglases. On the left, high up on the wall, is the memorial tablet to
the brave Kirkaldy of Grange, who, as already related, held the Castle
in the interest of Mary Stuart.
Another object of
interest is the Governor’s house, which was probably built in the reign
of Queen Anne, and close by is the Armoury. To the west of these
buildings is the Postern, very near the site of the ancient and
historical one where, as is recorded on a memorial tablet over the
gateway, 4 Bonnie Dundee ’ held his conference with the Duke of Gordon
when on his way to raise the Highland clans for King James, while the
Convention was assembled in the Parliament House and was arranging to
settle the Crown upon William and Mary. It was through here, too, that
the body of the pious Queen Margaret was smuggled whilst Donald Bane and
his band of wild western Highlanders were battering at the gates on the
east side in the hope of capturing young Edgar, the second son of
Malcolm.
On the highest and almost
inaccessible part of the rock overlooking the Old Town, where the smoky
chimneys of the Grassmarket lie two hundred or more feet below, is the
ancient royal palace, forming the south and east sides of a quadrangle
known as the Grand Parade, or Crown Square. The chief portion of the
southern side of the square consists of a large ancient building called
Magne Camere, or Great Hall, erected, according to the Exchequer Rolls,
in 1434. A similar hall, however, some suppose had existed on the spot
at a much earlier date. This was the great ceremonial chamber of the
royal palace in which Parliaments assembled and banquets were held. It
was here that James II of Scotland was proclaimed King, and the
treacherous Crichton and Livingstone entertained the two Douglases at
the fatal c Black Dinner.’ Here also Queen Mary entertained her riotous
nobles with the idea of reconciling them, and James VI feasted the
nobility of both countries. Here the unfortunate Charles held his
coronation banquet, and in 1648 the Marquis of Argyll, in the same hall,
entertained Cromwell and discussed the necessity of taking away the
King’s life. These are but a few of the notable events that took place
within the walls of this ancient hall, which was connected with the
royal palace by a narrow staircase at the east end.
When, after the Union in
1707, the Castle ceased to be used as a royal residence the Hall fell
into disrepair. Subsequently it was divided into floors and partitioned
off into rooms for the accommodation of the soldiers. It was also used
for many years as the military hospital, and the writer remembers the
time when convalescents used the square as a recreation ground. Some
years later the authorities, under the pressure of antiquarians, took
steps to ascertain the original condition of the building.
By some good fortune, in
1883, Colonel Gore Booth, of the Royal Engineers, discovered a staircase
communicating with the hall from the dungeons underneath. This aroused
curiosity, and Lord Napier and Ettrick, with Colonel Gore Booth,
examined the upper floors and the original roof above the ceiling, and
found the rafters and cross-pieces, which stand in their original
position, in good preservation. On the upper floor the carved timbers of
the ancient roof were apparent, descending through the modern ceiling
and resting probably on their proper supports below the level of the
floor. Only one of these supports, however, was visible in the
staircase, and it consisted of a stone corbel sculptured with a fine
female head, and adorned on the sides with thistles boldly wrought. Mr.
William Nelson, who had already restored the State Prison, undertook the
restoration of the Banqueting Hall. The architect, in his examination of
the fabric, after the flooring and partitions had been removed,
discovered that the Hall had been re-roofed about sixty years after the
date of its erection. He found that the main timbers of the roof were
supported by stone corbels embedded in the modern flooring. These
corbels remain as they were found. Two of them bear heads which
represent James IV and his Queen Margaret. The others are carved with
cherubs, and fleurs-de-lis shields bearing the royal Scottish arms
surmounted by a crown, lion head, and emblems of plenty. There are
shields on three of the corbels bearing the initials J. R. (Jacobus
under an arabic figure four in its old form, which resembles a St.
Andrew’s cross with a bar along the top. The corbels are carved with the
design of the thistle and rose on either side, emblematic of the
Scottish King and his Tudor Queen; on the faces of two are cut the same
decoration. One has the monogram I.H.S., and in the centre a cross said
to represent King James’s connexion with the Church as a canon of the
Cathedral of Glasgow. The great timber roof of the Hall is just as it
was centuries ago. The timbers terminate at the foot with carved
shields, on which are emblazoned the armorial bearings of the governors
and constables of the old fortress from 1107 to 1805.
The beautiful windows
lighting the north and south sides were restored, and bear colour
designs of the arms of Scottish sovereigns from the time of Malcolm
Canmore, 1057, to James VI. On a small window in the west gable appear
the royal arms of Scotland. Opposite to this is the original c luggie ’
or eyelet of the private stair leading to the royal palace already
referred to. The 6 luggie ’ has been covered with a wrought-iron grille.
Through it a listener on the stair could see and hear what was taking
place in the Hall. The old fireplace was discovered amongst a heap of
modern masonry, but it was in such a state of dilapidation that it had
to be reconstructed, and now makes a fine if rather large centre-piece
at the east gable. It is of massive design, decorated with carved shafts
supporting a richly carved and moulded lintel and stone canopy. The
projecting angles have corbels beautifully carved with classical figures
representing 'The Chase,’ 'Music,’ 'Feasting,’ and 'Law.’ These corbels
support emblematical figures suggested by Dunbar’s poem of 'The 'Tkrissill
and the Rois, written in honour of the marriage of James IV to Princess
Margaret, and represent c May,’ 'Flora,’ 'Aurora,’ and 'Venus.’
And as the bits full soune
ofcherarchy
The fowl is song throw confort of the licht;
The birdis did with oppin vocis cry,
O luvaris fo, away thow dully nycht,
And welcum Day that confortis every wicht;
Haill May, ha ill Flora, haill Aurora schene,
Hail I Princes Nature, haill Venus luvis quene.
The walls are covered in
their lower parts with carved oak panelling, like that employed on the
gallery and screen, and above are hung in artistic groups the arms and
armour which were brought from the old Armoury and also from the Tower
of London. These old weapons, which date from the sixteenth century
comprise such pieces as blunderbusses, Highland targets and pikes of
various designs from the field of Culloden, Lochaber axes, Highland
flint-lock pistols, and fine suits of steel armour.
From the timbers of the
roof are suspended the colours which belonged to the old Scottish
regiments, and they form an interesting part of the exhibition, for some
of the regiments are now extinct, and these relics are all that is left
of them. They include the colours of the old Midlothian Regiment of
1775, the Inverness Local Militia, 3rd Regiment, 1775, t^le Galloway
Light Infantry (embroidered in silk in the centre of which is the Lion
Rampant of Scotland, surrounded by a three-quarter Union wreath and
crown, with the motto, Senes Callatus Callovidive sub hoc signo vinces),
the Ayrshire Riflemen, the Linlithgowshire Local Regiment, the 9th
Battalion Royal Veterans, the Dumbartonshire, the Fifeshire, the
Roxburgh and 4th Lanark Highlanders, the Haddingtonshire and 4th
Lanarkshire, the 2nd East Royal Perthshire, the and and 3rd Edinburgh
Local Militia, the Kincardineshire, Forfarshire, 5th Aberdeenshire, and
the Royal Perth and Edinburgh Highlanders. Most of these colours, some
of which are the King’s as well as the regimental, are of the period of
George III.
At the east end, in front
of the great fireplace, stands the modern gun-carriage which not only
bore the remains of Queen Victoria from Osborne to Cowes, but also did
similar duty in the funeral procession of King Edward VII. From the
windows the view can hardly be surpassed. Immediately below are the old
houses of the Grassmarket and the West Port, rapidly disappearing,
beyond which rise the new buildings of Edinburgh’s Art School. Slightly
farther to the east rise the fine towers of George Heriot’s Hospital, a
lasting monument to the jeweller to James VI who left his fortune for
the benefit of the orphans of burgesses and freemen, and in the distance
is Blackford Hill, whence Sir Walter Scott pictured Marmion’s view of
Edinburgh:
Still on the spot Lord
Marmion stay'd
For fairer scene he ne'er survey'd.
W^hen sated with the martial show
That peopled all the plain below,
The wandering eye could o'er it go
And mark the distant city glow
With gloomy splendour red;
For on the smoke- wreaths, huge and slow,
That round her sable turrets flow,
The morning beams were shed,
And tinged them with a lustre proud,
Like that which streaks a til under- cloud.
Such dusky grandeur clothed the height,
JJ^here the huge Castle holds its state,
And all the steep slope down,
IVhose ridgy back heaves to the sky,
Piled deep and massy, close and highy
Mine own romantic town!
On the south-east is the
ancient castle of Craigmillar, where the Stuarts so many times
sojourned, and on the west the towers of Merchiston Castle, where lived
Sir Archibald Napier, Master of the Mint to James VI. Between these two
landmarks is the great expanse of the Burgh Muir, where the gallant
armies met preparatory to their long march to meet the English invaders,
and James III and IV from these same windows watched their standard of
the Scottish Lion, c the Ruddy Lion,’ unfurled and pitched in the famous
'Bore Stane.’
To the east and
south-east of the quadrangle we have the royal palace wherein have dwelt
kings and queens in all their splendour as far back, perhaps, as Malcolm
'Greathead,’ and there built in the wall is still the mystery which no
one seeks to decipher—and could not if he wished. Near the top of the
main building is a sculptured stone shield, which has suffered more,
perhaps, from the disciples of Cromwell than from the weather, with the
Lion Rampant surmounted by a crown, and over the doorway a stone tablet
with the cipher of Mary and Darnley carved in high relief on a scroll
with the '1566’ which commemorates the birth of the Prince whose fortune
was to unite England and Scotland under one Crown. Within is the room in
which he was born, once beautifully panelled, but abused in later years
by being turned into a canteen for the soldiers, who loafed in the very
chairs that the unfortunate Queen sat in. The antechamber is hung with
portraits and old engravings, one of which is of Mary Stuart when
Dauphiness of France, a copy by Sir John Watson Gordon from the original
in Dunrobin Castle by Farino, the Italian painter. It is supposed to
have been painted shortly after her marriage with Francis, when only
sixteen. Another portrait is of James VI, a copy from one painted by
Jacobus Jansen which is in the possession of the Hays of Dunse Castle \
the picture here was presented by the Right Hon. Lady Monson. There is
another portrait of Queen Mary which has been copied from the Bodleian
Library at Oxford, and a print by Lizars from the painting by Sheriff
representing the Queen’s escape from Loch Leven. This recalls the fact
that Queen Mary once planted a thorn tree on the island j it was cut
down in 1847, after casting its shadows on the castle for nearly three
hundred years. A piece of this tree has been presented by Sir Graham
Montgomery, and it now lies in the little room.
Besides the great
Banqueting Hall there was another much smaller one in the fortress, for
among items of the High Treasurer’s accounts we find, in 1516, “For
flooring the Lord’s Hall in David’s Tower, 10s.”
Some parts of the palace
are supposed to have been designed by Sir James Hamilton of Finnart, who
was architect to James V. A semi-octagonal tower of some height gives
access to the strongly vaulted bombproof room, once totally dark, in
which the Regalia were so long kept in obscurity. The room is now well
lighted, and the beautiful Crown of Scotland and the insignia of royal
office are exhibited to the visitor in a great grille. The window in the
wall facing the square was enlarged in 1848, and the ceiling panelled in
oak with shields in bold relief. Two barriers close the room, one a
grated door of gigantic strength like a portcullis.
In this same building
Queen Mary’s mother, the Catholic Mary of Guise, died in 1560, and,
having been refused funeral rites by the Protestant clergy, the body, it
will be remembered, was here allowed to lie for some considerable time
before it was removed to France.
Down in the depths are
the double tier of vaulted dungeons, secured by great iron gates and
heavy chains. It was in one of these that Kirkcaldy of Grange buried his
brother David Melville; also it was here that the poor French prisoners,
forty of whom slept in each chamber, were kept captive in the dim light
which came from the small loophole, which was then strongly guarded by
three ranges of iron bars. The north side of the quadrangle consists of
barrack-rooms, erected about the middle of the eighteenth century, and
occupying the site of an ancient church. The block was built from the
materials of the old building, which was of unknown antiquity. This is
described by Maitland as a very long and large ancient church, which,
from its spacious dimensions, was evidently not only built for the use
of the garrison, but for the service of the neighbouring inhabitants
before St. Giles’ Church was erected for their accommodation. The great
font and many beautifully carved stones were found built into the walls
of the barrack-rooms during some alterations. It was supposed to have
been built after the death of the pious Margaret, and dedicated to St.
Mary. It is mentioned by King I )avid I in his Holyrood charter as 'the
church of the capital of Edinburgh,” and is once more mentioned as such
in the charter of Alexander III and in several papal bulls, and the
“paroche kirk within the said Castell ” is distinctly referred to by the
Presbytery of Edinburgh in 1595. In 1753 it was divided into three
floors and used as a store for tents, cannon, and other munitions of
war. Near the old Postern is the site of the old butts, connected to the
garrison buildings by a winding stair. The rock at this part is defended
bv the western wall, Butes or Butts Battery, and a turret named the
Queen’s Post, which some people think stands near the site of St.
Margaret’s Tower.
From the ancient postern
gate there is an ascent by steps behind the banquette of the bastions to
Mylne’s Mount, named after the master gunner, where there is a cradle
for a bale-fire, which could be seen from Fife and Stirling. The
fortifications are built in an irregular way, with occasional strong
stone turrets, and embrasures which are in readiness for mounting sixty
pieces of ordnance. “The Old Castle Company” was a corps of Scottish
soldiers raised in January 1661, and formed a permanent part of the
garrison until 1818, when they were incorporated in one of the thirteen
veteran battalions embodied in that year, along with the ancient guard
of Mary of Guise which garrisoned the castle of Stirling.
The Castle has a claim on
the Canongate churchyard as a burial-place for its soldiers, as it is
within the parish of Holyrood, but repeatedly during the sieges and
blockades the dead have been buried within the walls. In 1745 nineteen
soldiers and three women, it is believed, were laid to rest on the
summit of the rock, near to St. Margaret’s Chapel. The chapel, by the
way, originally built by the pious Queen during her residence in the
Castle, was for some time entirely lost sight of as an oratory, having
been converted into a powder magazine ; but happily in 1853 the old
relic was once more restored to its more sacred uses. It is not only the
most ancient chapel in the country, but the smallest. |