First phase of project ‘Monumentally Grieg!’ gets underway

Over two bright, but bracing January days, our Honorary Director made a special visit to the Aberdeenshire village of Rathen to set the Society’s project Monumentally Grieg! in motion. Though the weather was chill, the welcome could not have been warmer.

Day 1 was set aside to meet informally with representatives of Banff and Buchan Community Council and Aberdeenshire Council, to chat and scope out ideas for the local community’s participation in both conservation and interpretation aspects of the project. We were delighted to find that word had spread, and as we gathered for our conversation in the kirkyard, our meeting with three, grew to a gathering with seven interested individuals, including two members of the local kirk session, plus one of the two head teachers and the pupil support assistant at Rathen Primary School.

The Grieg Society of Scotland meets the local community at Rathen, Aberdeenshire
Left to right: Frances Kelly (Pupil Support Asst, Rathen Primary School), David Bellany (Chair, Banff & Buchan Community Council), Ian Campbell (Session Clerk, Rathen West Church), Cllr Charles Buchan (Aberdeenshire Council), Linda Walker (Sec, Banff & Buchan Community Council), Kathleen Catto (Dep Session Clerk, Rathen West Church), Dr Sally LK Garden (Hon Director, Grieg Society of Scotland). Out of shot: Jacqueline Geddes (Head Teacher, Rathen Primary School).

The meeting generated a number of productive themes the Society can help develop with the input of the community. These include: education and language-learning, local heritage and family history, tourism, and community participation in conservation workshop activity.

We learned too, that composer Edvard Grieg is ‘aye ca’d’ – always called, in the lilting Doric tongue of his ancestors, simply ‘Edward Greig’ – a fine compliment, and sure sign that his spirit is alive in the community!

Day 2 we welcomed our conservation expert Clara Molina Sanchez of Spectrum Heritage, to make a site visit to assess the condition of the gravestone. This, in the midst of a snell wind, brought a surprise, and puzzle. Beneath the grass, lay a layer of mortar. A discovery, from our conservation point of view, which will need some thought!

Spectrum Heritage at Rathen
Conservation expert Clara Molina Sanchez of Spectrum Heritage assesses the condition of the Grieg ancestral gravestone.

A lot now has to be done to develop our formal plans and submissions to relevant authorities, a process that will take us into early spring. But looking round the kirkyard, maybe that’s not so far off – isn’t there a change of season in the air?

First snowdrops at Rathen
Snowdrops at Rathen Old Kirkyard, a gentle sign of spring close by the grave of Edvard Grieg’s great great grandparents John Greig and Anne Milne.

Above our heads the corbies cawed and circled, settling softly on the winter-bare branches, curious perhaps to see such a gathering below. And round our feet, the first shy snowdrops, sheltering among the stones, listened to our chatter and laughter. With these first hints of Spring, finally, gently, the first phase of Monumentally Grieg! was underway!

Author: Dr Sally LK Garden

Monumentally Grieg!

A project of the Grieg Society of Scotland to conserve and interpret the ancestral gravestone of Norwegian composer Edvard Grieg at Rathen Old Kirkyard, Aberdeenshire, Scotland

The gravestone of composer Edvard Grieg’s great great grandparents John Greig and Anne Milne, which lies in Rathen kirkyard, near Fraserburgh, has been deteriorating fast in recent years and is now in a poor state of preservation. The stone has sunk so far into the ground, that its outline is now obscured by grass and its lettering almost illegible. Work urgently needs to be done to conserve it from further deterioration, and to give a new generation of visitors to the site a means to interpret this key physical symbol, both of Edvard Grieg’s connection with Scotland, and of Scottish-Norwegian cultural friendship and exchange.

Grieg ancestral gravestone today

In its original state, the gravestone made an elegant monument – gracefully understated, crisply inscribed and raised on beautifully carved stone supports. But today, searched out here by the Grieg Society of Scotland, it looks sad, forlorn and almost forgotten.

Grieg ancestral gravestone in 1930s
Grieg ancestral gravestone 1930s

The gravestone was erected in the 1770s by the children of John and Anne to commemorate, first, their father who tenanted the nearby farm of Mosstoun of Cairnbulg, and later, in the 1780s, their widowed mother.  Continue reading “Monumentally Grieg!”