About this item
Highlights
- Rosslyn Chapel, eight miles south of Edinburgh, Scotland, has captured the imagination of many in recent years.
- About the Author: P.L. Snow was born in 1950.
- 184 Pages
- Architecture, Buildings
Description
About the Book
A collection of stories represented by the carvings at Rosslyn Chapel in ScotlandBook Synopsis
Rosslyn Chapel, eight miles south of Edinburgh, Scotland, has captured the imagination of many in recent years. This extraordinary building, dating from the fifteenth century, has long been a place of pilgrimage for people with widely differing interests, whether historical, architectural or spiritual.
P.L. Snow has for many years been gathering the stories that are represented by the numerous carvings inside and outside the chapel building. Many of the carvings, eroded by the years or damaged by vandalism during the Reformation, have been lovingly restored over time. They are eloquent illustrations of the biblical, historical and legendary tales that they represent.
This book traces themes of transformation and metamorphosis through inward endeavor, and will be fascinating for anyone interested in stories from the beginnings of the world, Ancient Egypt, the Holy Land, Celtic myth and Scottish history.
Review Quotes
'Peter Snow opens up the spiritual treasury of Rosslyn as a medieval storybook for modern times. Eschewing pseudo history, he marries the stories and the symbols to delight and inspire.'
- Donald Smith, Director, Scottish Storytelling Centre
'Picks up on the lore/legend theme in an eloquent celebration of Rosslyn as a place of story. Finely produced - and told - this is a testimony to the continuing power of legend.'
- Scottish Storytelling Centre and Network
'Through giving examples of recent and intersting discoveries about the chapel, Peter Snow points out that it is still 'revealing its secrects'. With its mixture of tales and historical snippets I found A Rosslyn Treasury offered an interesting and entertaining way of learning a great deal about Rosslyn Chapel itself together with the symbology and meaning behind its many carvings.'
- New View
'Rosslyn Chapel exerts an enduring fascination, drawing visitors from all over the world... Yet despite the hype... it retains its romance, this book may be a key as to why... Snow illustrates the story's role as an act of pilgrimage'
- Northern Earth
'The author suggest that this building needs to be understood at three levels: physical, spiritual and divine; this is the meaning of sacred art as a way of raising conciousness to the divine by means of physical manifestation'
- Scientific and Medical Network Review
About the Author
P.L. Snow was born in 1950. He has been a barman, an office clerk, a warehouseman, a social worker, a goat-herd in Corsica and a psychiatric nurse, before becoming a teacher of English and Drama in the Rudolf Steiner School of Edinburgh.