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Canongate Kirkyard

The Canongate Kirkyard (English: Churchyard) stands around Canongate Kirk on the Royal Mile in Edinburgh, Scotland. The churchyard was used for burials from the late 1680s until the mid-20th century.

Canongate Kirk, seen from Calton Hill, with the churchyard in the foreground, and Salisbury Crags behind

The most celebrated burials at the kirkyard are the economist Adam Smith and the poet Robert Fergusson, but many other notable people were interred in the cemetery. It has been claimed that David Rizzio, the murdered private secretary of Mary, Queen of Scots, lies here, although it is highly unlikely that an Italian Catholic would be reinterred in a Protestant graveyard 120 years after his death.

History edit

 
The Canongate Kirk

The Canongate was, until the 19th century, a separate parish from Edinburgh. This separate parish was formerly served by Holyrood Abbey at the foot of the Royal Mile, and Lady Yester's Church on High School Wynd. In 1687 King James VII adopted the abbey church as a Royal Chapel,[1] and the general population worshipped in Lady Yester's Kirk (built in 1647) until 1691. Both of these sites formerly served as burial grounds to the parish.

The new Canongate Kirk was founded in 1688 and completed in 1691.[1] A large area of ground was purchased beyond that required for the erection of the church, and this appears to have been used for burial immediately from the church's foundation in 1688. This area is now fully occupied as a burial ground.

Due to peculiarities in the parish boundaries, the parish also included some properties on the Nor Loch and, due to an ancient charter linking the castle to Holyrood, also Edinburgh Castle, which saw itself as separate from the parish of Edinburgh, under St Giles'. This led to many burials of soldiers from the castle within the section to the north of the churchyard.

In 1952 the old Church Hall to the east, facing the Canongate, was demolished. This area was reformed as a sunken garden and the Burgh Cross, dating from 1128, was relocated here as a centre-piece, having formerly stood in the roadway in front of the church. The cross was restored in 1888, when it was moved from its temporary home in front of the Canongate Tolbooth to in front of the church, before its transition to the sunken garden in 1953.

The Canongate Kirkyard has been calculated to have 62 tombs, 140 monuments and 150 wall plaques, ledgers, etc.[1]

Monuments and burials of interest edit

18th-century burials edit

 
The Coachman's Stone
 
Detail from the grave of John Frederick Lampe, Canongate Kirkyard

Very Rev Thomas Wilkie (1645–1711) first minister of Canongate Kirk and twice Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland.

James Campbell of Tofts (1684–c. 1750) landowner.

The Coachman's Stone, dating to around 1770, displays a skull and the motto "memento mori". It is inscribed "This stone is for the society of Coachdrivers In the Canongate It was chiefly erected by Thomas Jamieson and Robert Maving, treasurer, 1734–65".[2] Below this inscription is a relief sculpture of a coach and horses crossing a bridge. The drivers operated the Edinburgh to London route from White Horse Close, around 200 metres (660 ft) to the east. Several of the Company are interred at this spot.

John Frederick Lampe (1703–1751) was a composer, conductor and writer of hymn-tunes for Charles Wesley and others. His stone, just to the north of the Fettes tomb, is now badly eroded and for the most part illegible. At the base of the stone is a skull and two crossed bones, and at the top two figures hold a small book with some of his composition inscribed. The stone formerly read:

"Here lye the mortal remains of John Frederick Lampe whose harmonious composing shal out live Monumental register"

Bishop Robert Keith (1681–1757) authored A History of the Church and State in Scotland from the Reformation to 1568.

Sir Thomas Calder (1682–1760), stone erected by his grandson Admiral Robert Calder.

Professor Charles Alston (1683–1760), lecturer in Botany and Medicinal Plants at Edinburgh University, was co-founder of the Edinburgh School of Medicine in 1726.

George Drummond (1688–1766) was six times Lord Provost of Edinburgh, and the founder of Edinburgh New Town. He was responsible for the redevelopment of Edinburgh, founding the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary; co-founding the Medical School; draining the Nor’ Loch; founding the Royal Exchange in 1753; and most importantly, initiating and founding the New Town and the first North Bridge (1763).

John Gregory MD (1724–1773) and his son James Gregory MD (1753–1821) were from a long line of Gregorys from Aberdeen, eminent in both medicine and science. John was Professor of Medicine in Aberdeen from 1755 to 1766, and at Edinburgh University from 1766 until his death. James was a doctor and publisher, who succeeded his father in the chair of Medicine at Edinburgh University in 1776, and also had a separate chair in the Practice of Medicine from 1790. He was the inventor of "Gregory's Powder" a mixture of magnesia, rhubarb and ginger, used in the treatment of stomach complaints for around 150 years. His son Dr James Gregory and grandsons Donald Gregory and James Crawford Gregory lie nearby.

 
Robert Fergusson's grave

Poet Robert Fergusson (1750–1774) was trained as a minister, but abandoned this to take up poetry at the age of 22, supplementing his income by working as a clerk. His career was short-lived, and he died in the Edinburgh lunatic asylum, then called Darien House, on Bristo Street.[2] Robert Burns was inspired to be a poet by reading Fergusson's work. It is likely that Burns left monies in his will to erect a monument in grateful memory, penning the inscription himself. After a visit to Edinburgh in 1787, Burns wrote a letter explaining his disappointment that Fergusson’s grave in Canongate Kirkyard was still unmarked, thirteen years after his death.[3] The year of birth on the stone is incorrect, though the day and month are correct. The monument was erected in June 1828, after Burns’ own death, but at his express wish. The grave was fully restored in 2010, replacing the enclosing ironwork and chains, and cleaning the stone. The gravestone reads:

"Here lies Robert Fergusson, Poet Born September 5th 1751 Died October 16th 1774 No sculptured marble here, nor pompous lay No storied urn, nor animated bust This simple stone directs pale Scotia's way To pour her sorrows o’er her poet's dust"

The reverse is inscribed:

"By special grant of the managers to Robert Burns, who erected this stone, This burial place is to remain ever sacred To the memory of Robert Fergusson"

A further plaque within the front enclosure explains how Robert Louis Stevenson was going to re-inscribe the stone in the mid-19th century. A statue was erected to Fergusson on the pavement at the churchyard entrance in 2004.[2]

Daniel Dow (1732–1783), fiddler and composer of vernacular music.

Rev William Lothian (1740–1783) minister of Canongate Kirk and joint founder of the Royal Society of Edinburgh.[4]

Alexander Runciman (1736–1785) and his brother John Runciman (1744–1766) were painters. Their bronze plaque on the outer west wall of the church bears their heads, and was erected in 1866 by the Royal Scottish Academy near the then unmarked grave of Alexander. John died in Naples during his grand tour, and is buried there.

John Mackenzie, Lord MacLeod (1727–1789), the son of George Mackenzie, 3rd Earl of Cromartie and like his father a Jacobite. He captured Dunrobin Castle in 1746 during the second Jacobite rising and was subsequently convicted of high treason, but pardoned in 1748. He went on to become a Swedish Count, and later a major-general in the British army.

 
Adam Smith's tombstone

Adam Smith LLD (1723–1790), economist and author of The Wealth of Nations, founded the study of political economics. His house was very close by, at the head of Panmure Close, and it survived until 1889. He lived here from 1778 until his death in 1790, having moved from his native town of Kirkcaldy. The grave is a place of pilgrimage for economists of the world. Although an imposing railed monument, it may have been altered in the 1930s, as it was then described as "too small to notice". It is understood that Dr Joseph Black, the chemist and physicist, and James Hutton, the founder of geology, were both at his funeral, being his executors, as would have been David Douglas (see below).

Rev. Thomas Hardy (1748–1798) was Professor of Church History and Divinity, Chaplain to the King, Advocate of Church Unity, and one of the ministers of St Giles.

19th-century burials edit

David Smythe, Lord Methven FRSE (1746–1806) judge.

Benjamin Bell (1749–1806) and his son Joseph Bell, (1787–1848), both surgeons, are buried in the same plot. Benjamin Bell was one of the few men to have declined a Baronetcy. He was related to Wiliam Paterson, the Scots founder of the Bank of England and was the great-grandfather of Joseph Bell, tutor to Arthur Conan Doyle, J. M. Barrie and Robert Louis Stevenson, and the inspiration for the character Sherlock Holmes. A small stone to the north of Bell's stone is of interest due to its unusual Greek inscription, taken from The Persians by Aeschylus and translated as "Dear the mound for it hides a loved heart."

Prof Very Rev Alexander Brunton (1772–1854), Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland 1823. Professor of Hebrew and Oriental Languages at Edinburgh University. His wife, the author Mary Brunton (1778–1818) lies with him.

James Clark (1732–1808) founded of the James Clark Vet School in Edinburgh. His monument was erected by "members of the veterinary profession in Great Britain and America 1950".

Luke Fraser (1736–1821) was a teacher of Sir Walter Scott at the Royal High School. Fraser said of Scott that he was "a good Latin scholar, and very worthy man."

The grave of John Ballantyne (1774–1821), and his brother James Ballantyne (1772–1833), publishers and friends of Sir Walter Scott, has no headstone, reflecting their poverty at the end of their lives. A small bronze plaque on the base of the Fettes tomb marks their final resting place. It is inscribed:

"Here in June 1821 Sir Walter Scott, Bart, stood by the open grave of his publisher and friend John Ballantyne (1774–1821) and said "I feel as if there would be less sunshine for me this day forth" And here too lies buried his friend and printer James Ballantyne (1772–1833) Brother of the above. Erected by the Edinburgh Walter Scott Club"

The brothers were from a long-standing family of publishers in the Canongate. James, having moved to Edinburgh from Kelso in 1802, was the printer of the Waverley novels and these were first read in his house, prior to their printing. John, though partly to blame for Scott's loss of his fortune in the midst of his career, was a very dear friend to Scott, who is said to have openly wept at his funeral and whispered the above words on the plaque to John Gibson Lockhart. Scott had nicknames for both men: John was "Rigdumfunnidos"; James was "Aldiboronti-phoscophornio".

 
Mausoleum of Dugald Stewart

Dugald Stewart (1753–1828) was Professor of Moral Philosophy at Edinburgh University from 1785 until 1820. The son of Matthew Stewart, Professor of Mathematics, Dugald is principally remembered as author of Philosophy of the Human Mind (1792). His sealed tomb stands in the north section of the churchyard, notable as the only sealed tomb in the churchyard. The Dugald Stewart Monument erected to him on the south-west edge of Calton Hill is just out of sight from the tomb.

Hugh William Williams (1773–1829), a watercolorist and landscape artist, was known as "Grecian Williams" for his foreign studies. It was allegedly Williams who coined the term "the modern Athens" in reference to Edinburgh, therefore his resting place, with Edinburgh's "Acropolis" (Calton Hill) standing to the right, is fittingly appropriate.

 
Mausoleum of Sir William Fettes

Sir William Fettes (1750–1836), a former merchant on the High Street, served as Lord Provost of Edinburgh in the early 19th century. His bequests funded the building of Fettes College (opened 1870). The monument is a large sandstone mausoleum with gilded, grey marble tablets, inscribed:

"Sacred to the memory of Sir William Fettes of Comely Bank, Baronet, Lord Provost of Edinburgh in 1801 and 1802 and a second time in 1805 and 1806 Born 25 June 1750. Died 27 May 1836... over the grave of its founder, the trustees of the Fettes Endowment have erected this monument, in grateful recognition of the enlightened benevolence which devoted the acquisitions of an honourable life to the useful purpose of providing for the children of his less fortunate fellow countrymen the elegance of a sound and liberal education"

George Chalmers (1773–1836) was a master plumber and founder of Chalmers Hospital, Edinburgh. He had lived at 208 Canongate.[5]

 
Grave of 'Clarinda'

Mrs Agnes Maclehose (1759–1841) was born in Glasgow. She separated from her husband and subsequently befriended Robert Burns, carrying on a correspondence with him under the name "Clarinda". She lived at 14 Calton Hill, and is buried in the tomb of Lord Craig. Burns wrote several poems to her (not published until 1843, after her death). The most famous of these is "Ae Fond Kiss", which includes the lines "Had we never lo’ed sae kindly, had we never lo’ed sae blindly, never met, or never parted, we’d hae ne’er been broken-hearted".

Euphemia Amelia Murray (1768–1845) was called "the Flower of Strathmore" by Robert Burns. She is interred in the ground of David Smyth of Methven.

Sir John Watson Gordon R.A. (1788–1864) was a portrait artist, and a close friend and neighbour of Henry Raeburn. He exhibited from 1821, and was a member of the Royal Scottish Academy (RSA) from 1829, exhibiting there from 1830. He was elected president to the RSA in 1850. His most famous work is the portrait of Sir Walter Scott in the National Gallery. Other subjects include Sir David Brewster and Thomas De Quincey. His brother and sister, who founded the Watson-Gordon Fine Art chair at Edinburgh University in his memory in 1879, are also buried here.

Horatius Bonar (1808–1889), a preacher and prodigious hymn-writer, was minister in Kelso from 1837, and took part in the Disruption of 1843. He was minister of Chalmers’ Memorial Church in Grage Road, Edinburgh from 1866.

Edinburgh Castle monument edit

 
Memorial Cross for soldiers of Edinburgh Castle

A red granite cross, 26-foot (7.9 m) commemorates the soldiers of Edinburgh Castle. It was erected in May 1880, by Mr Ford of the Holyrood Glass Works, and inaugurated in the presence of General Hope and the 71st Highlanders. The dead lie in the wide open green area all around the cross, which is inscribed:

"To the memory of the soldiers who died in Edinburgh Castle, situated in the parish of Canongate, interred herewith military honours from the year 1692 to 1880. "Death called them away from the martial ranks and sad was each comrade's tread as they bore them along to the march in Saul Midst crowds to their lonely bed But their country's sons will around this stone Oft speak of the deeds of the brave And gratefully look on the grassy sod That grows o’er the soldiers grave"

Verses from the Biblical Epistles to Timothy are inscribed on the reverse.

20th-century burials edit

Architect Robert Hurd (1905–1963) was responsible for the partial redevelopment of the Canongate in the 1950s, and much other work throughout Edinburgh, including the Art Deco Ravelston Garden (1936). He was interred after the official closure of the churchyard to burials, and his was the most recent interment, other than ashes.

Reputed burials edit

David Rizzio (or Riccio) (1533–1566) was an Italian courtier of Mary, Queen of Scots. Born near Turin, he became valet to the Queen in 1561 and was promoted to be her secretary in 1564. He was enormously unpopular and was stabbed to death, in the presence of the Queen, in her chamber in Holyrood Palace. The murderers included Mary's husband, Lord Darnley. The body was interred in Holyrood Abbey but was allegedly moved to Canongate churchyard in 1688.[2] A small bronze plaque on the east wall of the church, above a worn 17th-century flat tombstone, reads:

"Tradition says that this is the grave of David Riccio 1533–1566 Transported from Holyrood."

It is more likely to be a fanciful story to attach to the old but illegible stone (which may be the stone of Bishop James Ramsay or Rev George Leslie). Holyrood was still a royal chapel in 1688, and there would have been little popular support to move this body to the "people's" churchyard. Rizzio being a Catholic, it is also hard to explain why he would be buried in a Protestant churchyard. If the story is true, the stone dates from roughly the time of the re-interment, and is a costly stone for someone who, particularly a century after death, would have no living friends or relatives. The bronze plaque is thought to date from the 1950s.

Unmarked graves edit

Other burials, for which no monument survives, include:

  • James Ramsay, Bishop of Ross (1624–1696)
  • Sir William Hope (1641–1724)
  • David Douglas, Lord Reston (1769–1819), judge, and heir of Adam Smith
  • Nicolo Pasquali (died 1757), musician
  • John Schetky (1740–1824), composer and co-founder of the Boar Club
  • Alexander Campbell (1764–1824), Jacobite, music-teacher and publisher of Scots songs
  • William Wilson (1709–1815), known as "Mortar Willie", having fought with Bonnie Prince Charlie in 1745, rose to the rank of Colonel of the Black Watch
  • James Williamson, (1777–1832), writer in law, buried at plot 49
  • According to some sources, Ebenezer Lennox Scroggie, whose name is said to have inspired Charles Dickens' character Ebenezer Scrooge in A Christmas Carol, is buried here.[6][7] However, this theory is now known to be "a probable Dickens hoax" for which "[n]o one could find any corroborating evidence".[8] There is no evidence of any such grave ever having existed, nor is there a record of anyone named Scroggie in the Edinburgh census returns of the period.[9]

References edit

  1. ^ a b c Staff (March 2018). "Edinburgh Graveyards Project: 1. Documentary Survey For Canongate Kirkyard" (PDF). Edinburgh World Heritage. Retrieved 9 March 2020.
  2. ^ a b c d Gollege, Charlotte (2020). The Graveyards and Cemeteries of Edinburgh. United Kingdom: Amberley Publishing. ISBN 978-1445694245.
  3. ^ Brown, Rhona (2014). "Memorialising the death and legacy of Robert Fergusson: romantic sympathy and enlightened medical improvement". Bottle Imp. 15. ISSN 1754-1514.
  4. ^ (PDF). The Royal Society of Edinburgh. July 2006. ISBN 0 902 198 84 X. Archived from the original (PDF) on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 26 May 2017.
  5. ^ "(70) – Scottish Post Office Directories > Towns > Edinburgh > 1805–1834 – Post Office annual directory > 1832–1833 – Scottish Directories – National Library of Scotland". Retrieved 25 January 2017.
  6. ^ Wilson, Rick (26 December 2016). "How an Edinburgh gravestone inspired Ebenezer Scrooge". Edinburgh Evening News. Retrieved 9 March 2020.
  7. ^ DeVito, Carlo (2017). Inventing Scrooge: The Incredible True Story Behind Charles Dickens. United Kingdom: Cider Mill Press. ISBN 978-1604337792.
  8. ^ Pelling, Rowan (7 February 2014). "Mr Punch is still knocking them dead after 350 years". The Telegraph. Archived from the original on 11 January 2022. Retrieved 16 June 2017.
  9. ^ Melvin, Eric (2014). A walk through Edinburgh's New Town. Scotland. p. 63. ISBN 9781500122010.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  • Parish Records
  • National Dictionary of Biography
  • This article is based on original research carried out by Stephen Dickson as surveyor of Graveyards and Cemeteries for Edinburgh City Council in 1983, updated and re-edited. Published by CEC in 2008

External links edit

55°57′08″N 3°10′47″W / 55.9523°N 3.1798°W / 55.9523; -3.1798

canongate, kirkyard, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, septem. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Canongate Kirkyard news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2011 Learn how and when to remove this message The Canongate Kirkyard English Churchyard stands around Canongate Kirk on the Royal Mile in Edinburgh Scotland The churchyard was used for burials from the late 1680s until the mid 20th century Canongate Kirk seen from Calton Hill with the churchyard in the foreground and Salisbury Crags behind The most celebrated burials at the kirkyard are the economist Adam Smith and the poet Robert Fergusson but many other notable people were interred in the cemetery It has been claimed that David Rizzio the murdered private secretary of Mary Queen of Scots lies here although it is highly unlikely that an Italian Catholic would be reinterred in a Protestant graveyard 120 years after his death Contents 1 History 2 Monuments and burials of interest 2 1 18th century burials 2 2 19th century burials 2 3 Edinburgh Castle monument 2 4 20th century burials 2 5 Reputed burials 2 6 Unmarked graves 3 References 4 External linksHistory edit nbsp The Canongate Kirk The Canongate was until the 19th century a separate parish from Edinburgh This separate parish was formerly served by Holyrood Abbey at the foot of the Royal Mile and Lady Yester s Church on High School Wynd In 1687 King James VII adopted the abbey church as a Royal Chapel 1 and the general population worshipped in Lady Yester s Kirk built in 1647 until 1691 Both of these sites formerly served as burial grounds to the parish The new Canongate Kirk was founded in 1688 and completed in 1691 1 A large area of ground was purchased beyond that required for the erection of the church and this appears to have been used for burial immediately from the church s foundation in 1688 This area is now fully occupied as a burial ground Due to peculiarities in the parish boundaries the parish also included some properties on the Nor Loch and due to an ancient charter linking the castle to Holyrood also Edinburgh Castle which saw itself as separate from the parish of Edinburgh under St Giles This led to many burials of soldiers from the castle within the section to the north of the churchyard In 1952 the old Church Hall to the east facing the Canongate was demolished This area was reformed as a sunken garden and the Burgh Cross dating from 1128 was relocated here as a centre piece having formerly stood in the roadway in front of the church The cross was restored in 1888 when it was moved from its temporary home in front of the Canongate Tolbooth to in front of the church before its transition to the sunken garden in 1953 The Canongate Kirkyard has been calculated to have 62 tombs 140 monuments and 150 wall plaques ledgers etc 1 Monuments and burials of interest edit18th century burials edit nbsp The Coachman s Stone nbsp Detail from the grave of John Frederick Lampe Canongate Kirkyard Very Rev Thomas Wilkie 1645 1711 first minister of Canongate Kirk and twice Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland James Campbell of Tofts 1684 c 1750 landowner The Coachman s Stone dating to around 1770 displays a skull and the motto memento mori It is inscribed This stone is for the society of Coachdrivers In the Canongate It was chiefly erected by Thomas Jamieson and Robert Maving treasurer 1734 65 2 Below this inscription is a relief sculpture of a coach and horses crossing a bridge The drivers operated the Edinburgh to London route from White Horse Close around 200 metres 660 ft to the east Several of the Company are interred at this spot John Frederick Lampe 1703 1751 was a composer conductor and writer of hymn tunes for Charles Wesley and others His stone just to the north of the Fettes tomb is now badly eroded and for the most part illegible At the base of the stone is a skull and two crossed bones and at the top two figures hold a small book with some of his composition inscribed The stone formerly read Here lye the mortal remains of John Frederick Lampe whose harmonious composing shal out live Monumental register Bishop Robert Keith 1681 1757 authored A History of the Church and State in Scotland from the Reformation to 1568 Sir Thomas Calder 1682 1760 stone erected by his grandson Admiral Robert Calder Professor Charles Alston 1683 1760 lecturer in Botany and Medicinal Plants at Edinburgh University was co founder of the Edinburgh School of Medicine in 1726 George Drummond 1688 1766 was six times Lord Provost of Edinburgh and the founder of Edinburgh New Town He was responsible for the redevelopment of Edinburgh founding the Edinburgh Royal Infirmary co founding the Medical School draining the Nor Loch founding the Royal Exchange in 1753 and most importantly initiating and founding the New Town and the first North Bridge 1763 John Gregory MD 1724 1773 and his son James Gregory MD 1753 1821 were from a long line of Gregorys from Aberdeen eminent in both medicine and science John was Professor of Medicine in Aberdeen from 1755 to 1766 and at Edinburgh University from 1766 until his death James was a doctor and publisher who succeeded his father in the chair of Medicine at Edinburgh University in 1776 and also had a separate chair in the Practice of Medicine from 1790 He was the inventor of Gregory s Powder a mixture of magnesia rhubarb and ginger used in the treatment of stomach complaints for around 150 years His son Dr James Gregory and grandsons Donald Gregory and James Crawford Gregory lie nearby nbsp Robert Fergusson s grave Poet Robert Fergusson 1750 1774 was trained as a minister but abandoned this to take up poetry at the age of 22 supplementing his income by working as a clerk His career was short lived and he died in the Edinburgh lunatic asylum then called Darien House on Bristo Street 2 Robert Burns was inspired to be a poet by reading Fergusson s work It is likely that Burns left monies in his will to erect a monument in grateful memory penning the inscription himself After a visit to Edinburgh in 1787 Burns wrote a letter explaining his disappointment that Fergusson s grave in Canongate Kirkyard was still unmarked thirteen years after his death 3 The year of birth on the stone is incorrect though the day and month are correct The monument was erected in June 1828 after Burns own death but at his express wish The grave was fully restored in 2010 replacing the enclosing ironwork and chains and cleaning the stone The gravestone reads Here lies Robert Fergusson Poet Born September 5th 1751 Died October 16th 1774 No sculptured marble here nor pompous lay No storied urn nor animated bust This simple stone directs pale Scotia s way To pour her sorrows o er her poet s dust The reverse is inscribed By special grant of the managers to Robert Burns who erected this stone This burial place is to remain ever sacred To the memory of Robert Fergusson A further plaque within the front enclosure explains how Robert Louis Stevenson was going to re inscribe the stone in the mid 19th century A statue was erected to Fergusson on the pavement at the churchyard entrance in 2004 2 Daniel Dow 1732 1783 fiddler and composer of vernacular music Rev William Lothian 1740 1783 minister of Canongate Kirk and joint founder of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 4 Alexander Runciman 1736 1785 and his brother John Runciman 1744 1766 were painters Their bronze plaque on the outer west wall of the church bears their heads and was erected in 1866 by the Royal Scottish Academy near the then unmarked grave of Alexander John died in Naples during his grand tour and is buried there John Mackenzie Lord MacLeod 1727 1789 the son of George Mackenzie 3rd Earl of Cromartie and like his father a Jacobite He captured Dunrobin Castle in 1746 during the second Jacobite rising and was subsequently convicted of high treason but pardoned in 1748 He went on to become a Swedish Count and later a major general in the British army nbsp Adam Smith s tombstone Adam Smith LLD 1723 1790 economist and author of The Wealth of Nations founded the study of political economics His house was very close by at the head of Panmure Close and it survived until 1889 He lived here from 1778 until his death in 1790 having moved from his native town of Kirkcaldy The grave is a place of pilgrimage for economists of the world Although an imposing railed monument it may have been altered in the 1930s as it was then described as too small to notice It is understood that Dr Joseph Black the chemist and physicist and James Hutton the founder of geology were both at his funeral being his executors as would have been David Douglas see below Rev Thomas Hardy 1748 1798 was Professor of Church History and Divinity Chaplain to the King Advocate of Church Unity and one of the ministers of St Giles 19th century burials edit David Smythe Lord Methven FRSE 1746 1806 judge Benjamin Bell 1749 1806 and his son Joseph Bell 1787 1848 both surgeons are buried in the same plot Benjamin Bell was one of the few men to have declined a Baronetcy He was related to Wiliam Paterson the Scots founder of the Bank of England and was the great grandfather of Joseph Bell tutor to Arthur Conan Doyle J M Barrie and Robert Louis Stevenson and the inspiration for the character Sherlock Holmes A small stone to the north of Bell s stone is of interest due to its unusual Greek inscription taken from The Persians by Aeschylus and translated as Dear the mound for it hides a loved heart Prof Very Rev Alexander Brunton 1772 1854 Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland 1823 Professor of Hebrew and Oriental Languages at Edinburgh University His wife the author Mary Brunton 1778 1818 lies with him James Clark 1732 1808 founded of the James Clark Vet School in Edinburgh His monument was erected by members of the veterinary profession in Great Britain and America 1950 Luke Fraser 1736 1821 was a teacher of Sir Walter Scott at the Royal High School Fraser said of Scott that he was a good Latin scholar and very worthy man The grave of John Ballantyne 1774 1821 and his brother James Ballantyne 1772 1833 publishers and friends of Sir Walter Scott has no headstone reflecting their poverty at the end of their lives A small bronze plaque on the base of the Fettes tomb marks their final resting place It is inscribed Here in June 1821 Sir Walter Scott Bart stood by the open grave of his publisher and friend John Ballantyne 1774 1821 and said I feel as if there would be less sunshine for me this day forth And here too lies buried his friend and printer James Ballantyne 1772 1833 Brother of the above Erected by the Edinburgh Walter Scott Club The brothers were from a long standing family of publishers in the Canongate James having moved to Edinburgh from Kelso in 1802 was the printer of the Waverley novels and these were first read in his house prior to their printing John though partly to blame for Scott s loss of his fortune in the midst of his career was a very dear friend to Scott who is said to have openly wept at his funeral and whispered the above words on the plaque to John Gibson Lockhart Scott had nicknames for both men John was Rigdumfunnidos James was Aldiboronti phoscophornio nbsp Mausoleum of Dugald Stewart Dugald Stewart 1753 1828 was Professor of Moral Philosophy at Edinburgh University from 1785 until 1820 The son of Matthew Stewart Professor of Mathematics Dugald is principally remembered as author of Philosophy of the Human Mind 1792 His sealed tomb stands in the north section of the churchyard notable as the only sealed tomb in the churchyard The Dugald Stewart Monument erected to him on the south west edge of Calton Hill is just out of sight from the tomb Hugh William Williams 1773 1829 a watercolorist and landscape artist was known as Grecian Williams for his foreign studies It was allegedly Williams who coined the term the modern Athens in reference to Edinburgh therefore his resting place with Edinburgh s Acropolis Calton Hill standing to the right is fittingly appropriate nbsp Mausoleum of Sir William Fettes Sir William Fettes 1750 1836 a former merchant on the High Street served as Lord Provost of Edinburgh in the early 19th century His bequests funded the building of Fettes College opened 1870 The monument is a large sandstone mausoleum with gilded grey marble tablets inscribed Sacred to the memory of Sir William Fettes of Comely Bank Baronet Lord Provost of Edinburgh in 1801 and 1802 and a second time in 1805 and 1806 Born 25 June 1750 Died 27 May 1836 over the grave of its founder the trustees of the Fettes Endowment have erected this monument in grateful recognition of the enlightened benevolence which devoted the acquisitions of an honourable life to the useful purpose of providing for the children of his less fortunate fellow countrymen the elegance of a sound and liberal education George Chalmers 1773 1836 was a master plumber and founder of Chalmers Hospital Edinburgh He had lived at 208 Canongate 5 nbsp Grave of Clarinda Mrs Agnes Maclehose 1759 1841 was born in Glasgow She separated from her husband and subsequently befriended Robert Burns carrying on a correspondence with him under the name Clarinda She lived at 14 Calton Hill and is buried in the tomb of Lord Craig Burns wrote several poems to her not published until 1843 after her death The most famous of these is Ae Fond Kiss which includes the lines Had we never lo ed sae kindly had we never lo ed sae blindly never met or never parted we d hae ne er been broken hearted Euphemia Amelia Murray 1768 1845 was called the Flower of Strathmore by Robert Burns She is interred in the ground of David Smyth of Methven Sir John Watson Gordon R A 1788 1864 was a portrait artist and a close friend and neighbour of Henry Raeburn He exhibited from 1821 and was a member of the Royal Scottish Academy RSA from 1829 exhibiting there from 1830 He was elected president to the RSA in 1850 His most famous work is the portrait of Sir Walter Scott in the National Gallery Other subjects include Sir David Brewster and Thomas De Quincey His brother and sister who founded the Watson Gordon Fine Art chair at Edinburgh University in his memory in 1879 are also buried here Horatius Bonar 1808 1889 a preacher and prodigious hymn writer was minister in Kelso from 1837 and took part in the Disruption of 1843 He was minister of Chalmers Memorial Church in Grage Road Edinburgh from 1866 Edinburgh Castle monument edit nbsp Memorial Cross for soldiers of Edinburgh Castle A red granite cross 26 foot 7 9 m commemorates the soldiers of Edinburgh Castle It was erected in May 1880 by Mr Ford of the Holyrood Glass Works and inaugurated in the presence of General Hope and the 71st Highlanders The dead lie in the wide open green area all around the cross which is inscribed To the memory of the soldiers who died in Edinburgh Castle situated in the parish of Canongate interred herewith military honours from the year 1692 to 1880 Death called them away from the martial ranks and sad was each comrade s tread as they bore them along to the march in Saul Midst crowds to their lonely bed But their country s sons will around this stone Oft speak of the deeds of the brave And gratefully look on the grassy sod That grows o er the soldiers grave Verses from the Biblical Epistles to Timothy are inscribed on the reverse 20th century burials edit Architect Robert Hurd 1905 1963 was responsible for the partial redevelopment of the Canongate in the 1950s and much other work throughout Edinburgh including the Art Deco Ravelston Garden 1936 He was interred after the official closure of the churchyard to burials and his was the most recent interment other than ashes Reputed burials edit David Rizzio or Riccio 1533 1566 was an Italian courtier of Mary Queen of Scots Born near Turin he became valet to the Queen in 1561 and was promoted to be her secretary in 1564 He was enormously unpopular and was stabbed to death in the presence of the Queen in her chamber in Holyrood Palace The murderers included Mary s husband Lord Darnley The body was interred in Holyrood Abbey but was allegedly moved to Canongate churchyard in 1688 2 A small bronze plaque on the east wall of the church above a worn 17th century flat tombstone reads Tradition says that this is the grave of David Riccio 1533 1566 Transported from Holyrood It is more likely to be a fanciful story to attach to the old but illegible stone which may be the stone of Bishop James Ramsay or Rev George Leslie Holyrood was still a royal chapel in 1688 and there would have been little popular support to move this body to the people s churchyard Rizzio being a Catholic it is also hard to explain why he would be buried in a Protestant churchyard If the story is true the stone dates from roughly the time of the re interment and is a costly stone for someone who particularly a century after death would have no living friends or relatives The bronze plaque is thought to date from the 1950s Unmarked graves edit Other burials for which no monument survives include James Ramsay Bishop of Ross 1624 1696 Sir William Hope 1641 1724 David Douglas Lord Reston 1769 1819 judge and heir of Adam Smith Nicolo Pasquali died 1757 musician John Schetky 1740 1824 composer and co founder of the Boar Club Alexander Campbell 1764 1824 Jacobite music teacher and publisher of Scots songs William Wilson 1709 1815 known as Mortar Willie having fought with Bonnie Prince Charlie in 1745 rose to the rank of Colonel of the Black Watch James Williamson 1777 1832 writer in law buried at plot 49 According to some sources Ebenezer Lennox Scroggie whose name is said to have inspired Charles Dickens character Ebenezer Scrooge in A Christmas Carol is buried here 6 7 However this theory is now known to be a probable Dickens hoax for which n o one could find any corroborating evidence 8 There is no evidence of any such grave ever having existed nor is there a record of anyone named Scroggie in the Edinburgh census returns of the period 9 References edit a b c Staff March 2018 Edinburgh Graveyards Project 1 Documentary Survey For Canongate Kirkyard PDF Edinburgh World Heritage Retrieved 9 March 2020 a b c d Gollege Charlotte 2020 The Graveyards and Cemeteries of Edinburgh United Kingdom Amberley Publishing ISBN 978 1445694245 Brown Rhona 2014 Memorialising the death and legacy of Robert Fergusson romantic sympathy and enlightened medical improvement Bottle Imp 15 ISSN 1754 1514 Biographical Index of Former Fellows of the Royal Society of Edinburgh 1783 2002 PDF The Royal Society of Edinburgh July 2006 ISBN 0 902 198 84 X Archived from the original PDF on 4 March 2016 Retrieved 26 May 2017 70 Scottish Post Office Directories gt Towns gt Edinburgh gt 1805 1834 Post Office annual directory gt 1832 1833 Scottish Directories National Library of Scotland Retrieved 25 January 2017 Wilson Rick 26 December 2016 How an Edinburgh gravestone inspired Ebenezer Scrooge Edinburgh Evening News Retrieved 9 March 2020 DeVito Carlo 2017 Inventing Scrooge The Incredible True Story Behind Charles Dickens United Kingdom Cider Mill Press ISBN 978 1604337792 Pelling Rowan 7 February 2014 Mr Punch is still knocking them dead after 350 years The Telegraph Archived from the original on 11 January 2022 Retrieved 16 June 2017 Melvin Eric 2014 A walk through Edinburgh s New Town Scotland p 63 ISBN 9781500122010 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Parish Records National Dictionary of Biography This article is based on original research carried out by Stephen Dickson as surveyor of Graveyards and Cemeteries for Edinburgh City Council in 1983 updated and re edited Published by CEC in 2008External links editCanongate Kirkyard at Find a Grave nbsp 55 57 08 N 3 10 47 W 55 9523 N 3 1798 W 55 9523 3 1798 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Canongate Kirkyard amp oldid 1221344117, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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