Show Navigation

National Heroes

Robert (I) the Bruce

Robert the Bruce, cast of his skull

Period:
Medieval
Description:

This plaster cast model is of Robert the Bruce's skull.

 

After his death in 1329 Bruce’s body was interred in Dunfermline Abbey.  The site of the tomb was lost, possibly when the abbey was damaged by Protestant religious demonstrations in the 1500s.  In 1818 workmen making repairs to the Abbey discovered a skeleton that had been wrapped in gold cloth within a stone tomb.  This was examined by Robert Liston, an Edinburgh surgeon.  Bruce had wanted his heart to be taken to the Holy Lands, or Palestine, in order to fulfill his ambition to take part in the Crusades.  After his death his breastbone had been sawn away so that the heart could be removed.  Liston identified the skeleton as that of Bruce because of damage to the breastbone.

 

A cast of the skull was made by the sculptor, William Scoular, and is now kept in the Anatomy Department of the University of Edinburgh.  Further casts were taken from this original cast.  No portraits were made of Robert the Bruce during his lifetime.  Perhaps the most accurate likeness of him can be reconstructed from his skull?  Recently this was attempted by a team of forensic scientists. The skull shows damage to the left eye socket and cheek bone, possibly from injuries received in battle.  There is bone missing from the upper jaw and nose.  It has long been suggested that Bruce suffered from leprosy, although there is no evidence for this in historical records.  However, the erosion of the bone of the skull supports this conclusion.  It could be that Bruce's status as king meant that his illness was not made public.  People with leprosy had to live apart from others and this would not have been possible for a king.

 

The cast of the skull, along with fragments of bone material said to have been taken from the skeleton of Robert the Bruce in 1818, was presented to Dumfries Museum in 1996.  It had belonged to Wallace Black, a Dumfries man. Family tradition has it that he was given the cast and the bone material by a friend who was present when the skeleton was discovered.

Materials/Media:
plaster
Dimensions:
height 200mm, diameter 575mm
Source:
Dumfries Museum & Camera Obscura
Accession number:
DUMFM:1996.39.1
Digital Number:
DMBC001a; DMBC001b
Copyright:
Dumfries & Galloway Council


Alternative Views:

alternative small picturealternative small picture