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The Taking of the Stone of Destiny

The Exciting True Story of How the Stone of Scone Was Returned to Scotland

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On Christmas Eve 1950 four young Scottish students broke into Westminster Abbey and stole the Stone of Destiny, for centuries the symbol of English authority over Scotland, from its place beneath the Coronation Chair. The even sparked off a nationwide manhunt, captured news headlines for weeks and made the leader of the group, Ian Hamilton, a national hero in his homeland. Though the four escaped detection for more than three months, in the end the Stone was given up and no charges were brought. The Stone is now back in its place in Westminster Abbey, but the day that four young Scots led the English authorities a merry dance has gone down in legend. Exactly how the escapade was planned and how it nearly went disastrously, sometimes hilariously wrong, is as gripping to read as the best adventure fiction. But The Taking of the Stone of Destiny,/i> is the truth, and a truth told with all the spirit, frankness, humour and warmth of a man who is as defiant and unapologetic today as he was on the night, more than forty years ago, when he and his friends set out to right an ancient wrong.

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The Taking of the Stone of Destiny, Ian Robertson Hamilton

Language
Released
1991
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(Paperback)
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Title
The Taking of the Stone of Destiny
Subtitle
The Exciting True Story of How the Stone of Scone Was Returned to Scotland
Language
English
Publisher
Corgi Books
Released
1991
Format
Paperback
Pages
203
ISBN10
0552138983
ISBN13
9780552138987
Series
Rating
4.25 out of 5
Description
On Christmas Eve 1950 four young Scottish students broke into Westminster Abbey and stole the Stone of Destiny, for centuries the symbol of English authority over Scotland, from its place beneath the Coronation Chair. The even sparked off a nationwide manhunt, captured news headlines for weeks and made the leader of the group, Ian Hamilton, a national hero in his homeland. Though the four escaped detection for more than three months, in the end the Stone was given up and no charges were brought. The Stone is now back in its place in Westminster Abbey, but the day that four young Scots led the English authorities a merry dance has gone down in legend. Exactly how the escapade was planned and how it nearly went disastrously, sometimes hilariously wrong, is as gripping to read as the best adventure fiction. But The Taking of the Stone of Destiny,/i> is the truth, and a truth told with all the spirit, frankness, humour and warmth of a man who is as defiant and unapologetic today as he was on the night, more than forty years ago, when he and his friends set out to right an ancient wrong.