Cracks, Chips and Copies: The Stone of Destiny
Join Sally Foster as she unearths the newly discovered history of the Stone of Scone, learn how the Stone is used and the meanings and discourses that has developed at different places: Scone Palace, Westminster Abbey, Edinburgh Castle and Perth.
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to
o Where
Perth Museum
St John's Place, Perth PH1 5SZ
8 Remote access
No
£ Cost
£Adult: £8.25, Concession £5.50
É Contact
Dr Oisin Plumb
email:
ins@uhi.ac.uk
tel: 01856569300
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Used in the inauguration of medieval Scottish monarchs, later the coronation of English and British monarchs at Westminster Abbey, the Stone of Destiny was returned to Scotland in 1996 and recently well travelled. Join Sally Foster as she unearths the newly discovered history of the Stone of Scone, learn how the Stone is used and the meanings and discourses that has developed at different places: Scone Palace, Westminster Abbey, Edinburgh Castle and Perth. Discover how focussing on social value and authenticity, can lead to an unexpected and original outcome in recognising just how many fragments of the Stone also exist and their significance. Is all of the sacred stone in Perth Museum?
Professor Sally Foster is a Scottish archaeologist and Professor in Heritage and Conservation within Stirling University's History, Heritage, and Politics Division. She specialises in the archaeology of Scotland, particularly focusing on the Picts and their neighbours in the early medieval period. in 2023 she received a British Academy/Leverhulme Trust Senior Research Fellowship for her research study: Authenticity's child: contemporary meanings and future destinies for the 'Stone of Scone'.
In partnership with Perth Museum Culture Perth & Kinross
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