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Tour Scone Palace

Located
1½ miles (2 km) N of Perth and 2 miles (3 km) W of New Scone,
Scone
Palace is the family home of the Earls of Mansfield. Despite
its historic setting, the Palace we see today was only built in
1802 by English architect William Atkinson, who went on to create
Abbotsford for Sir Walter Scott. Originally the site of a 6th
C. Celtic church, replaced in the 12th C. by an Augustinian Abbey
and a Bishop's Palace which provided lodgings for the Kings of
Scotland. Both Palace and Abbey were destroyed in 1559 by a Perth
mob, incited by a sermon by John Knox (1505-72), and the lands
passed to the Earl of Gowrie, who built a new house. However,
after the Gowrie Conspiracy (1600), an attempt to kidnap James
VI (1566-1625), the estates were forfeit and given to Sir David
Murray (1604), who was also created Lord Scone, in return for
his loyalty to James.
Murray
built a new Palace in 1618 and it was here that Charles II (1630-85)
stayed before being the last King crowned on Moot Hill in the
palace grounds (1651), where Kings had been crowned since the
time of Kenneth MacAlpin (d.858). Other visitors included the
Old Pretender (1715) and his son Bonnie Prince Charlie (1745).
Murray's descendants became the Viscounts Stormont (1602) and
then Earls of Mansfield (1776). The 1st Earl spent his time in
London and the 2nd Earl found the old palace too damp. Thus it
was David Murray, becoming the 3rd Earl at only 19, who commissioned
the rebuilding of the palace as the splendid castellated gothic
edifice in red sandstone which we see today. It houses fine collections
of furniture, paintings, ivory and porcelain, together with historically-important
royal heirlooms belonging to James VI and his mother Mary. The
fine grounds include a fir tree planted in 1825 from seeds sent
back by botanist David Douglas (1799-1834), who had been a gardener
at the palace and ruins of the historic village of Scone, dismantled
to permit a larger estate around the new palace in 1805.
Return
to Perthshire
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