The Mysteries of Rosslyn Chapel
A medieval chapel filled with mysterious symbolism attracts supernatural phenomena.
The Mysteries of Rosslyn Chapel
Rosslyn Chapel in Midlothian, made famous by “The Da Vinci Code,” is filled with mysterious carvings and has been linked to the Knights Templar, the Holy Grail, and ancient secrets. It also generates reports of supernatural phenomena that continue to the present day.
The Chapel
William Sinclair, Earl of Orkney, built Rosslyn Chapel between 1446 and 1484. The ornate stone carvings are unparalleled in Scotland. The chapel’s purpose and the meaning of its symbols have been debated for centuries.
The Mysteries
Rosslyn’s carvings include pre-Columbian plants, mysterious cubes believed to encode music, and dense symbolic imagery. Theories connect the chapel to the Knights Templar, Freemasonry, and hidden treasures including the Holy Grail itself.
The Phenomena
Visitors report unusual experiences: feelings of presence, sudden emotions, unexplained sounds, and glimpses of figures in medieval dress. The atmosphere in the chapel is widely described as otherworldly.
The Lady in White
A woman in white has been seen in the chapel and the surrounding glen. Her identity is unknown, though some connect her to the legend that a Sinclair lady cursed the chapel’s enemies.
The Sleeping Knights
Legend holds that knights in armor sleep in a vault beneath the chapel, awaiting a trumpet call to ride again. Strange sounds have been reported from beneath the floor. The vault has never been opened.
Assessment
Rosslyn Chapel concentrates mystery, legend, and spiritual power in a small space. Whether genuine supernatural phenomena occur there or the setting simply inspires such experiences, the chapel remains one of Scotland’s most fascinating places.