Templar and Masonic connections
The chapel, built 150 years after the dissolution of the Knights
Templar, supposedly has many Templar symbols, such as the "Two
riders on a single horse" that appear on the Seal of the
Knights Templar. The layout of the chapel is cited as echoing
the layout of the Temple of Solomon. 
With
regards to a possible connection between the St. Clairs and
the Knights Templar, the family testified against the Templars
when that Order was put on trial in Edinburgh in 1309. Historian
Dr. Louise Yeoman, along with other mediaeval scholars, says
the Knights Templar connection is false, and points out that
Rosslyn Chapel was built by William Sinclair so that Mass could
be said for the souls of his family.
It
is also claimed that other carvings in the chapel reflect Masonic
imagery, such as the way that hands are placed in various figures.
One carving may show a blindfolded man being led forward with
a noose around his neck -- similar to the way a candidate is
prepared for initiation into Freemasonry. However, the carving
has been eroded by time and pollution and is difficult to make
out clearly. The chapel was built in the 15th century, and the
earliest records of Freemasonic lodges date back only to the
late 16th and early 17th centuries.
William
Sinclair 3rd Earl of Orkney, Baron of Roslin and 1st Earl of
Caithness, claimed by novelists to be a hereditary Grand Master
of the Scottish stone masons, built Rosslyn Chapel. A later
William Sinclair of Roslin became the first Grand Master of
the Grand Lodge of Scotland and, subsequently, several other
members of the Sinclair family have held this position.
These
connections, to both the Templars and the Freemasons, means
that Rosslyn features prominently in romantic conjectures that
the Freemasons are direct descendants of the Knights Templar,
though, as scholars point out, there is absolutely no historical
connection between the two.
Click
On: Rosslyn
Chapel for photographs
Rosslyn
Chapel, properly named the Collegiate Church of St Matthew,
was founded on a small hill above Roslin Glen as a Roman Catholic
collegiate church (with between 4 and 6 ordained canons and
two boy choristers) in the mid-15th century. After the Scottish
Reformation (1560) Roman Catholic worship in the Chapel was
brought to an end, although the Sinclair family continued to
be Roman Catholics until the early 18th century. From that time
the Chapel was closed to public worship until 1861 when it was
opened again as a place of worship according to the rites of
the Scottish Episcopal Church.
The
purpose of the college was to celebrate the Divine Office throughout
the day and night and also to celebrate Holy Mass for all the
faithful departed, including the deceased members of the Sinclair
family. During this period the rich heritage of plainsong (a
single melodic line) or polyphony (vocal harmony) would be used
to enrich the singing of the liturgy. An endowment was made
that would pay for the upkeep of the priests and choristers
in perpetuity and they also had parochial responsibilities.
Rosslyn
Chapel and the nearby Rosslyn Castle are located at the village
of Roslin, Midlothian, Scotland. The chapel was founded by William
Sinclair, 1st Earl of Caithness (also spelled "Sainteclaire/Saintclair/Sinclair/St.
Clair") of the Sinclair family, a noble family descended
from Norman knights, using the standard designs the medieval
architects made available to him. Rosslyn Chapel is the third
Sinclair place of worship at Roslin - the first being in Rosslyn
Castle and the second (whose crumbling buttresses can still
be seen today) in what is now Roslin Cemetery. - Wikipedia
Click
On: Rosslyn
Chapel for photographs