Register today! | Already registered? Sign in

traveldk.com

from Eyewitness Travel Guides: the world's bestselling travel guides
Member image
1. Empty guide

' Untitled'
includes 0 highlights.

  • Organize
Why register?
  1. Organize and personalize your very own tailor-made Travel Guide. Made by you, for you, with a little help from us.
  2. Publish these guides online to share your trip ideas with fellow travelers.
  3. When you return, add your own discoveries to the site and rate any of the attractions you visited.
Already Registered?

Scotland : Royal Museum and Museum of Scotland

Submit an attraction

Make sure your favorite shops, restaurants, hotels and more are listed.

Submit an attraction illustration
Win a trip to Bolivia & Peru
Win a trip to Bolivia & Peru

Enter to win

Competition open to UK residents only

Join our free monthly newsletter

Advertisement

Royal Museum and Museum of Scotland

No one has rated this yet.
Rate it
  • Review this attraction
  • The best and rarest of Scotland’s antiquities have been brought together in two treasure troves. Although they occupy adjacent buildings on Edinburgh’s Chambers Street, they maintain separate identities: the Royal Museum concentrates on international artifacts, while the modern Museum of Scotland is dedicated to the story of this land and its people.

Top 10 Highlights
  • 1. Lewis Chessmen

    These enchanting ivory figures – an anxious king, a pious bishop, glum warriors – were made by Viking invaders in the 12th century.

  • 2. Monymusk Reliquary

    Reliquaries were containers for storing holy relics. This one is linked to St Columba and Robert the Bruce, hero of Bannock-burn (see Battle of Bannockburn & Bannockburn Heritage Centre) . It dates back to the 8th century, and although it’s tiny, the craftsmanship is exceptional. It is one of the museum’s most prized possessions.

  • 3. St Fillan’s Crozier

    Serving as a badge of office, this curved handle was once mounted on a staff carried by St Fillan, an 8th-century Irish monk, active in Perthshire. The filigree ornamentation exemplifies the level of artistry flourishing 1,200 years ago.

  • 4. The Maiden

    A grizzly relic to put a shiver down your spine. The Maiden was a Scottish beheading machine, similar to the French guillotine, with a weighted blade that descended from on high. It was used in the 16th century.

  • 5. Bonnie Prince Charlie’s Canteen

    The Prince’s cutlery, corkscrew, bottles, cup, and condiments set. Picture the fugitive (see Isle of Skye) in the wild with this lustruous travelling canteen.

  • 6. Natural History

    The blue whale skeleton is an ever-popular exhibit, while a glance at the poor dodo shows it to have been, not plump and lazy, but rather athletic, in fact.

  • 7. Miss Crowford’s Shopping

    The collection of an Edinburgh typist, who spent her lunch breaks browsing for trinkets of glass, shell and plastic.

  • 8. Egyptian Toy Mouse

    It makes you realize how little in the world is new. This pull-along mouse is moulded from brown clay with a stick for a tail. As it moves, the underjaw pivots on pegs and “snaps”, while the tail wags from side to side. A treasured toy, and a mere 3,500 years old.

  • 9. Egyptian Mummy Cases

    Mummy cases , or cartonnages, were made of linen reinforced with resin or plaster and used to contain the embalmed body. Those on display have individually crafted faces and are decorated with ancient Egypt’s complex symbolism of death and the afterlife. The cases themselves have already survived 3,000 years.

  • 10. The Buildings

    The Royal Museum first opened in 1866 and has been a city landmark ever since. Its cavernous interior and marvellous roof create an extraordinary feeling of light and space. The Museum of Scotland was a custom-built adjunct and has been heralded as one of the most important buildings constructed in post-war Scotland.

Practical Information
Free guided tours daily – check at the main desk. The museum’s Tower restaurant (see Restaurants & Places to Eat) has fantastic views, or slip round the corner to The Elephant House on 21 George IV Bridge for exotic coffees. Chambers St Royal Museum (0131) 247 4219 Museum of Scotland (0131) 247 4422 www.nms.ac.uk 10am–5pm Mon–Sat (to 8pm Tue), noon–5pm Sun (for both museums) Free
[No picture supplied]
jean

Make sure you are there when the Millenium Clock"strikes"- an experience not to be missed - for all ages !

about 2 years ago

Write a review

If you were signed in, you could write a review here. Register for a free account, or if you're already a member, sign in.

Advertisement

 Latest guides