15/04/2023
"A Templar chapel probably became more of a necessity than anything else," she wrote in her 1992 book, Royston Cave: Used by Saints or Sinners?, "giving a haven overnight for the Templar marketeers, and… a warehouse for market goods." She interprets the circular design of the cave as a reference to the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Jerusalem, and suggested that the carvings bear hallmarks of Templar art, such as their depiction of heart symbols and the biblical King David.