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Historic Places in Edinburgh

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Holyrood Palace
Edinburgh • EH8 8DX • Historic Places
The Palace of Holyroodhouse stands at the foot of the Royal Mile in Edinburgh, nestled beneath the dramatic crags of Arthur's Seat, and serves as the official residence of the British monarch in Scotland. It is a place of genuine historical depth and royal significance, the setting for some of the most dramatic episodes in Scottish history, and one of the most rewarding royal palaces in Britain to visit. The palace has its origins in an Augustinian abbey founded by King David I of Scotland in 1128. The abbey ruins that stand beside the palace today are all that remain of that original foundation after centuries of conflict and reformation. The royal lodgings associated with the abbey gradually developed into a proper palace from the fifteenth century onwards under successive Scottish monarchs of the House of Stuart, who found the location outside the confines of Edinburgh Castle more suited to courtly life. The most dramatic chapter in the palace's history belongs to Mary, Queen of Scots, who lived here during her brief reign in Scotland in the 1560s. It was in these rooms that her Italian secretary David Rizzio was stabbed repeatedly by a group of Protestant nobles in the presence of the pregnant queen in 1566, one of the most violent acts of court intrigue in Scottish history. The supper room where the murder took place is one of the most visited spaces in the palace, and a brass plaque in the floor marks the spot where Rizzio fell. Mary's private apartments are remarkably well preserved and provide an intimate connection to this turbulent period. The palace was significantly rebuilt and enlarged by King Charles II after the Restoration of the monarchy in 1660, and the State Apartments created during this period reflect the grand Baroque decorative style fashionable at the time. The Great Gallery, the longest room in the palace, contains 110 portraits of Scottish monarchs by the Dutch artist Jacob de Wet, commissioned to demonstrate the ancient lineage of the Stuart dynasty. The paintings are remarkable for their sheer ambition even if historical accuracy was clearly not always the primary concern. Today the palace is used by the monarch during the annual Royal Week in Scotland each June or July, when a programme of garden parties and investitures takes place. When the royal family is not in residence the State Apartments and Mary Queen of Scots' Tower are open to visitors. The ruined nave of Holyrood Abbey, which adjoins the palace, can also be explored and adds a powerful sense of medieval history to the site. The palace gardens include the dramatic volcanic landscape of Arthur's Seat and Holyrood Park, which provide extraordinary walking and views across Edinburgh.
Seton Collegiate Church East Lothian
Edinburgh • EH32 0QB • Historic Places
Seton Collegiate Church near Longniddry in East Lothian is one of the finest and most complete medieval collegiate churches in Scotland, a late fourteenth-century church of considerable quality that preserves the choir and transepts of the original building in remarkable completeness, including the vaulted choir ceiling and the late medieval stone carvings that make it one of the most rewarding ecclesiastical heritage sites in the Lothians. Historic Environment Scotland manages the church, which is freely accessible to visitors. The church was founded as a collegiate establishment by Lady Janet Seton in 1492, although the fabric includes earlier work from the later fourteenth century when the Seton family first developed the church as a burial place. Collegiate churches, endowed to support a college of priests who sang masses for the souls of the founders and their families, were a major form of late medieval religious patronage in Scotland, and Seton represents one of the most architecturally distinguished examples of this institution. The church's association with Mary Queen of Scots gives it a historical resonance beyond its architectural interest. Mary visited Seton several times, playing golf on the links nearby in recorded accounts that make her one of the earliest named women golfers in history, and the Seton family were among her most loyal supporters. The proximity of the church to the site of Seton Palace, the Seton family seat destroyed in the seventeenth century, makes this corner of East Lothian one of the most layered Mary Queen of Scots landscapes in Scotland. The East Lothian coast near the church provides excellent walking and the nearby Gosford Estate with its Adam house provides further architectural and landscape interest.
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