Detail of two doorways showing inscribed lintels (postcard, Knox Series)
SC 488194
Description Detail of two doorways showing inscribed lintels (postcard, Knox Series)
Catalogue Number SC 488194
Category On-line Digital Images
Copy of ED 13355
Scope and Content Carved lintels from Advocate's Close, High Street, Edinburgh Advocate's Close, so narrow 'that there is hardly space for fresh air', dates from the 16th century. It led off the High Street down to the Nor' Loch and is one of the most picturesque in the Old Town. The carved lintels from the ground floor of a six-storey tenement built for Clement Cor in 1590 are inscribed: 'BLISSIT.BE GOD.OF.AL.HIS.GIFTS.1616' and 'SPES.ALTERA.VITAE.1590' or 'a second hope of life' and the initials CC and HB. Advocate's Close, named Cant's, Clement Cor's and then Stewart's Close, was named after James Stewart of Goodtrees who was Lord Advocate from 1692-1713. In 1590 Cor, a burgess of the city, built a house in Cant's Close when he married Helen Bellenden. Source: RCAHMS contribution to SCRAN.
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File Format (TIF) Tagged Image File Format bitmap
Attribution: © RCAHMS
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