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Visitor numbers to historic Rosslyn Chapel double thanks to Da Vinci Code

By: Derek Miller

Article Word Count: 522 words  [Comments (0)]
Total Views: 10 Views





According to the Scotsman Newspaper of Wednesday January 4th,


visitors to the historic Rosslyn Chapel, situated 7 miles south


of the Scottish capital, Edinburgh, have almost doubled in the


past year. This increase in interest has been due to Dan Brown's


best selling novel the "Da Vinci Code". , Brown's book was


first published . in early 2004 and has since sold more than


17,000,000 copies worldwide. The subsequent and eagerly awaited


film of the book directed by Ron Howard and starring Hollywood


mega box office name Tom Hanks is scheduled to hit your screens


in May of this year. The film crews have already completed


filming in the nearby village of Rosslin. They in fact did it


last summer, but the numbers of visitors will be swelled once


more by the movie which is sure to be a blockbuster.





Some claim Rosslyn Chapel to be one of the most mysterious


places in Scotland which has more than its fair share of mist


shrouded castles and haunted houses. The Chapel was built by Sir


William St. Clair, the Prince of Orkney in 1446. This tapestry


in stone is a construction which seems by its dimension to have


been intended to be much larger than it is. Rosslyn Chapel


provides the backdrop for the conclusion of Brown's novel


because of its connection to the Knight's Templar. This order,


founded in 1118, which was shortly after the First Crusade. The


principal function of this order of Knights was to defend the


holy city of Jerusalem. However, some believe that the Knights


Templar had an even more important function and that was to act


as guardians of the Holy Grail.





History tells us that these knights were wiped out in 1307, when


they were arrested to a man on a charge of heresy and put to the


sword. The real reason for this extermination was attached more


to the secular rather than the spiritual world. The order of


knights had grown extremely rich as a result of their crusading


duties and had started offering banking services to the wealthy


of Europe. King Philip IV of France had asked the knights for a


loan to finance his wars, but they thought him a bad risk and


refuse. This was a very bad decision as Philip the Fair,


insulated and angry decided to wreak his revenge. This he did,


with Papal help as the Pope had just recently moved to Avignon.


The Knights were destroyed and Philip enriched himself by


seizing their lands and assets. Clearly the business of banking


was a dangerous affair in those far off days. Dan Brown's book


contends that the Knights were not completely destroyed and


survive to this day. I wonder if he is right.





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