Skip to content
Home
Favourites
0
Advanced search
Shopping cart
0
Register
Log in
Images of Edinburgh
Browse map
Area A - Z
Browse by date
Exhibitions
Current exhibition
All exhibitions
Collections
About the collections
Browse by theme
Subject A - Z
The image library for the collections of Edinburgh Libraries and Museums and Galleries
Images of Edinburgh
Browse map
Area A - Z
Browse by date
Exhibitions
Current exhibition
All exhibitions
Collections
About the collections
Browse by theme
Subject A - Z
Subject matches "Soldiers" or its children
Back to search results
Exhibiting Regalia of Scotland to Archduke Maximilian
Skene, James, 1818, Watercolour
Item
of 814
Exhibiting Regalia of Scotland to Archduke Maximilian
Exhibiting Regalia of Scotland to Archduke Maximilian
Add to favourites
Share
Item record
About this image
Related
Location
Category
Library Item
Item no
638
Title
Exhibiting the ancient Regalia of Scotland to the Archduke Maximilian
Description
Many soldiers stand in a dark barrel vaulted room. A sentry stands outside with a rifle. The entrance is closed with a metal lattice-work gate. Another soldier with breeches stands on the inside with his hand on the gate. the room is lit by candlelight. In the centre of the room is a table with a red cloth, a red cushion and golden coloured emblems of state. A man with a moustache and blue jacket is holding a crown in his hands. One man wears a yellow cloak.
Artist / maker
Skene, James
Date
1818
Size
17 x 23 cm.
Type
Watercolour
Location
Edinburgh and Scottish Collection
James Skene, as a close friend of Sir Walter Scott, was familiar with the quest for the Scottish regalia. He provides a vivid account in his journal, Reekiana. Following the Act of Union in 1707, the Scottish regalia had been deposited with "due form and solemnity" somewhere in Edinburgh castle "but the place where they were understood to be kept had been forgotten"(1). Scott had explained the circumstances to the then Prince Regent (later George IV) who promptly established a Royal Commission to search the castle. On 5th February 1818, the commission proceeded to discharge this duty "with considerable misgiving as to the probable success of the undertaking", but in a moment of pure theatre, they happened upon the regalia in "a room in the old Tower which had not been opened in the memory of man". Skene contines: "Someone instantly shouted from the window 'The Regalia are found'...a shout arose little short of simultaneous, and was born to the distant quarters like the sound of rolling thunder"(2) . The water colour drawing is dated 1818 and refers to the visit of the Archduke Maximilian (1782-1863), a prominent member of the Austrian Royal family, who had distinguished himself during the Napoleonic Wars. On 12th November, in the company of the Lord Advocate, the Archduke visited Parliament House, where he is recorded as sitting to the right of the Lord President and Lord Justice Clerk in the First and Second Divisions (Scotland's highest appellate courts) and visiting the Advocates Library and the Signet Library. Later the "illustrious stranger" was taken to the Castle to view the newly discovered Scottish regalia "which he had expressed a wish of seeing"(3). As Skene is not listed amongst those present at the Archduke's visit to the castle, the watercolour drawing is probably conjectural. The regalia were formerly opened to the public on 26th May 1819.
(1) James Skene, Reekiana, 1836, Edinburgh 30
(2) Skene, Reekiana, 30
(3) Caledonian Mercury, 14th November 1818
Exhibitions with this item
Other views of this item
Related images
Related subjects
Architecture
>
Architectural features
>
Gates
Homes
>
Residential buildings
>
Castles and palaces
People
>
Military activities
>
Soldiers
Places
>
Scotland
>
Edinburgh
More like this
Rights and purchasing
Option
Price
Digital File
Electronic file 72 dpi JPEG
£7.32
(inc. VAT 20%)
Add
Digital File
Electronic File 300 dpi TIFF
£37.20
(inc. VAT 20%)
Add
You can view and use digital images for personal and educational use. For more information, read our
policy on image use
.
If you wish to use our images for commercial use, please
contact us
.