Stone of Destiny

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The Stone of Destiny

The Stone of Destiny is a great stone upon which the Kings of Scotland, including Constantine III in 995 and Macbeth in 1040, were traditionally crowned.

History

According to legend, the Stone of Destiny was used by Jacob as a pillow when he camped at Bethel, while fleeing from Esau after tricking the latter out of his birthright; as he slept, he had a vision of stairs leading up to Heaven and angels ascending and descending. The stone became a sacred object to the Hebrews, and entered their keeping until the time of the Exodus, when Moses entrusted it to the Athenian prince Gathelus and his wife Scota, urging them to flee Egypt in order to escape the Ten Plagues. They took the Stone with them on their various journeys, first to Samothrace, then Portugal (where Gathelus died), and finally Ireland, where Scota was slain in battle with the inhabitants; her eldest son, Eremon, was crowned upon the Stone at Tara.

Later on, King Arthur drew Excalibur from the Stone of Destiny in order to become King of Britain. In 1296, it was captured by King Edward I of England (1272-1307) in his invasion of Scotland, and removed to Westminster Abbey in London, where it was placed underneath the Coronation Chair. In 1950, on Christmas Day, a group of Scotsmen, including Macbeth, stole the Stone from Westminster Abbey (it was soon afterwards recovered).

When King Arthur came to London in early 1996, following his awakening upon Avalon, he and Griff encountered the Stone of Destiny at Westminster Abbey. The Stone told Arthur that he must prove himself once more worthy of Excalibur, and sent him and Griff to New York for that task. Later on that year, in November, the Stone was officially returned to Scotland, an event that involved Macbeth, Hudson, Lexington, Xanatos, Coldsteel, Coyote 5.0, Arthur, Griff, and other members of the London clan.

Real World History

The Stone of Destiny, more commonly known as the Stone of Scone, is a real object. Legend claims that it originally came from Ireland, where it was known as the Lia Fail and kept at Tara, the traditional stronghold of the Irish High Kings. It would scream aloud whenever the rightful High King of Ireland stepped upon it. Some legends state that it was first discovered by the legendary King Conn of the Hundred Battles; others, influenced by Christianity, make it Jacob's pillow-stone at Bethel - as per the account given in Gargoyles #7 - brought to Ireland either by Scota - also as per the account in the comic book - or by an eastern princess named Tea in 585 B.C.

The Stone of Destiny was removed from Ireland, according to legend, in the early 6th century, when it was loaned to the rulers of Dalriada, a kingdom established by Irish settlers in what is now Argyll, Scotland, who never returned it. They kept it at Iona, their sacred center, until 843, when Kenneth mac Alpin, then King of the Scots of Dalriada, seized control of Scotland from the Picts and became the first King of Scotland. Kenneth then moved the Stone to Scone, where it remained until King Edward I took it to England in 1296. It remained in Westminster Abbey until 1996, when it was returned to Scotland.

The Stone of Scone was indeed part of the coronation ritual of the Kings of Scotland, as per the series.

The Stone of Destiny's identification with the very stone that King Arthur pulled his sword from is an invention of the series, although many Arthurian scholars believe that the two stones could well be thematically linked. In view of the Stone's history above, the equation is puzzling, since Arthur's feat is traditionally placed in London, which the Stone of Destiny did not reach until Edward I's reign, eight hundred years after the traditional dating of Arthur. Quite possibly the Stone of Destiny episode planned for the never-made Pendragon spin-off would have answered this question.

See also

Production Background

Voice Actor: Frank Welker