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Sunday, 1 April 2012

Designer Jewellers Display Orkney's Incredible Historical Past

By Adrian Jones


Impressive Collections on Orkney Jewellery Online Stores

Designer jewellers located in the Scottish Orkney Islands produce their delightful collections leaning on the numerous medieval influences to be located there, for example the old Castleyards, which once surrounded Kirkwall's medieval fortress in Orkney. History says how the blacksmith toiled here, pounding out horseshoes and swords where nowadays you can come across designer jewellers developing their far more sophisticated designs in precious metal, featured on various Orkney jewellery web-sites.

In fact, almost everywhere within a hundred yards of Kirkwall's main town square, seemed to be the power base for a awesome Viking earldom. Kirkwall had been a headquarters for the Norse Western Empire. Here the Norse earls ruled and had their very own palace next to the Bishop's Palace along with the grand St Magnus Cathedral, by itself a useful resource of ideas for the designer jewellers craft. These were once waterside houses defended by the sea, however they are now inland as a result of reclaimed areas.

Regrettably now, eventhough a gorgeous Castleyard ring features on some jewellery websites, the great fortress which once shielded the site of these workshops, has long since been destroyed. A plaque remains in modern day Castle Street. What remains of the castle is basically dispersed throughout the foundations for this town's city buildings along with the stretch of street where a multitude of designer jewellers are located

Kirkwall Castle was built by Earl Henry Sinclair, quite often spelled St Clair, around the fourteenth century and stood on the spot of the old junction between Albert Street, Castle Street and Broad Street. The castle was wrecked in 1615 on an orders from the Privy Council following the Sinclair earl along with his son rebelled against King James IV of Scotland. Henry Sinclair Wadsetter (1570-1614) passed away leading 100 men to besiege Kirkwall Castle. He became paralyzed and died at night

In 1742 the Earl of Morton gave the stones to the Town Council for constructing a town house and jail. The very last remaining fragment- a wall 55 ft long 11ft dense and irregular height, was demolished to greatly improve access to the harbour in 1865 along with a stone to remember this, dated 1866, is built into the Castle Hotel.

At various times the Sinclair dynasty built or possessed various castles, in their capacity as earls of Orkney, Caithness and barons of Roslin. Prominent strongholds are the Castle of Mey, later on owned by the late Queen Mother, Roslin, Dunbeath, Keiss along with the Castle of Old Wick.

Designer Jewellers Revel in Colorful History

As Earl Henry Sinclair lived many centuries ago, his alleged colourful exploits have already been metamorphosed into legends with researchers presenting opposite views of what is authentic history. He has been been connected with the Knights Templar, the Holy Grail, the Freemasons and a pre-Columbian transatlantic voyage. What is true is the fact that he was given birth to at Rosslyn Castle, near Edinburgh, in 1345. His grandson, William Sinclair, 1st Earl of Caithness, constructed the Rosslyn Chapel, without doubt one of the most visited sites in Scotland since it became known in Dan Brown's novel The Da Vinci Code; itself based on legends and conspiracy theories.

Earl Henry, also Baron Roslin, managed to secure the earldom of Orkney from two rivals and was awarded the title by the Norwegian King Haakon VI, in 1379. He was charged with ruling Orkney and Shetland and supplying Norway with military support. The castle will need to have been a vital fortress to guard his earldom and was constructed despite the fact that he broke a rule not to create a permanent structure. He was however cruelly slain by his enemies around 1400, somewhere in Orkney. He might have been assaulted during an English invasion.

One of the most fascinating and disputed claims pertaining to Earl Henry is the fact that he made a journey over the Atlantic 94 years prior to Christopher Columbus sailed there in 1492. There exists, of course, proof of Viking settlement in Newfoundland somewhere around the year 1,000 in the region the Norse named Vinland. Evidence of Earl Henry's voyage and what he did there has become misplaced, whether it ever transpired, but is broadly agreed on as legitimate.

Regardless of what the details and whatever the fallacies, the castle has still existed in our street names and also in the local designer jewellers collections. Take a look at Orkney jewellery internet sites to look at the choices inspired by the architectural structures of those ancient times, such as St Magnus.




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