Projecting Dynastic Majesty: State Ceremony in the Reign of Robert Bruce

Following the murder of his rival John Comyn on 10 February at Greyfriars in Dumfries, and the crisis this act incited, Robert the Bruce’s inaugural ceremony took place at Scone in late March 1306. Much about this ceremony is speculative; however, subsequent retrospective legitimisation of the Bruce...

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Main Author: Lucinda Dean
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Scottish Studies Foundation 2015-07-01
Series:International Review of Scottish Studies
Online Access:https://www.irss.uoguelph.ca/index.php/irss/article/view/3042
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spelling doaj-23292af403e74136bb42bb84c29d33122020-11-25T03:37:45ZengScottish Studies FoundationInternational Review of Scottish Studies1923-57551923-57632015-07-014010.21083/irss.v40i0.30421808Projecting Dynastic Majesty: State Ceremony in the Reign of Robert BruceLucinda Dean0University of StirlingFollowing the murder of his rival John Comyn on 10 February at Greyfriars in Dumfries, and the crisis this act incited, Robert the Bruce’s inaugural ceremony took place at Scone in late March 1306. Much about this ceremony is speculative; however, subsequent retrospective legitimisation of the Bruce claims to the royal succession would suggest that all possible means by which Robert’s inauguration could emulate his Canmore predecessors and outline his right to rule on a level playing field with his contemporaries were amplified, particularly where they served the common purpose of legitimising Robert’s highly questioned hold on power. Fourteenth-century Scottish history is inextricably entwined in the Wars of Independence, civil strife and an accelerated struggle for autonomous rule and independence. The historiography of this period is unsurprisingly heavily dominated by such themes and, while this has been offset by works exploring subjects such as the tomb of Bruce and the piety of the Bruce dynasty, the ceremonial history of this era remains firmly in the shadows. This paper will address three key ceremonies through which a king would, traditionally, make powerful statements of royal authority: the inauguration or coronation of Bruce; the marriage of his infant son to the English princess Joan of the Tower in 1328, and his extravagant funeral ceremony in 1329. By focusing thus this paper hopes to shed new light on the ‘dark and drublie days’ of fourteenth-century Scotland and reveal that glory, dynastic majesty and pleasure were as central to the Scottish monarchy in this era as war and political turbulence.https://www.irss.uoguelph.ca/index.php/irss/article/view/3042
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lucinda Dean
spellingShingle Lucinda Dean
Projecting Dynastic Majesty: State Ceremony in the Reign of Robert Bruce
International Review of Scottish Studies
author_facet Lucinda Dean
author_sort Lucinda Dean
title Projecting Dynastic Majesty: State Ceremony in the Reign of Robert Bruce
title_short Projecting Dynastic Majesty: State Ceremony in the Reign of Robert Bruce
title_full Projecting Dynastic Majesty: State Ceremony in the Reign of Robert Bruce
title_fullStr Projecting Dynastic Majesty: State Ceremony in the Reign of Robert Bruce
title_full_unstemmed Projecting Dynastic Majesty: State Ceremony in the Reign of Robert Bruce
title_sort projecting dynastic majesty: state ceremony in the reign of robert bruce
publisher Scottish Studies Foundation
series International Review of Scottish Studies
issn 1923-5755
1923-5763
publishDate 2015-07-01
description Following the murder of his rival John Comyn on 10 February at Greyfriars in Dumfries, and the crisis this act incited, Robert the Bruce’s inaugural ceremony took place at Scone in late March 1306. Much about this ceremony is speculative; however, subsequent retrospective legitimisation of the Bruce claims to the royal succession would suggest that all possible means by which Robert’s inauguration could emulate his Canmore predecessors and outline his right to rule on a level playing field with his contemporaries were amplified, particularly where they served the common purpose of legitimising Robert’s highly questioned hold on power. Fourteenth-century Scottish history is inextricably entwined in the Wars of Independence, civil strife and an accelerated struggle for autonomous rule and independence. The historiography of this period is unsurprisingly heavily dominated by such themes and, while this has been offset by works exploring subjects such as the tomb of Bruce and the piety of the Bruce dynasty, the ceremonial history of this era remains firmly in the shadows. This paper will address three key ceremonies through which a king would, traditionally, make powerful statements of royal authority: the inauguration or coronation of Bruce; the marriage of his infant son to the English princess Joan of the Tower in 1328, and his extravagant funeral ceremony in 1329. By focusing thus this paper hopes to shed new light on the ‘dark and drublie days’ of fourteenth-century Scotland and reveal that glory, dynastic majesty and pleasure were as central to the Scottish monarchy in this era as war and political turbulence.
url https://www.irss.uoguelph.ca/index.php/irss/article/view/3042
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