Monymusk Reliquary
The Monymusk Reliquary is an 8th century Scotish reliquary made of wood and metal characterised by a Hiberno-Saxon fusion of Irish and Pictish design and Saxon metalworking, probably by Ionan monks. Believed to be the Brecbennoch of St. Columba, a sacred battle ensign of the Scottish army, it was used for saintly assistance by Scots in battle. Also known in modern Gaelic as Breac Bannoch or "embossed peaked-thing".
It is characterised by a mixture of Gaelic and Pictish artistic designs fused with Anglo-Saxon metalworking techniques, an artistic tradition now classified as Hiberno-Saxon art. The casket is wooden, but is covered with silver and copper-alloy. It was made around 750, probably by Ionan monks. It shows a combination of the Pictish and Gaelic styles which appear in later manuscripts such as the Lindisfarne Gospels. The silver plates on the front and lid of the casket are decorated with beasts leaping and twisting, and biting at their tails on a spotted field, characeristic of animal style in Celtic art. The stippled punch marks are characteristically Gaelic.
It was significant because it was said to have contained a bone, or bones, of Columba, the most popular saint in medieval Scotland, and believed to be the "Brecbennoch of St. Columba", a sacred battle ensign of the Scottish army. It may have been handed to the abbot of Arbroath Abbey in the reign of William I (r. 1165 - 1214), who in turn passed it to someone else's care at Forglen. The custodian was charged with the care of the reliquary, so that it could be used for saintly assistance by the Scots in battle. It was carried by the Gaelic army who were victorious against the army of king Edward II of England at the Battle of Bannockburn (1314). It stayed at Forglen until the sixteenth century, when both Forglen and Monymusk came into the hands of the Forbes family. In 1712 it was transfered to Sir Francis Grant of Cullen. It stayed in the Grant collection until 1933, when it was acquired by the people. It is now in the care of the Museum of Scotland, where it is arguably the most important piece in the Museum's entire collection.
Bibliography
- Wormald, Jenny (ed.), Scotland: A History, (Oxford, 2005), Plate 2, opp. p. 42
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