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Edinburgh

Edinburgh (/ˈɛdɪnbərə/ (listen)[8][9][10] Scots: [ˈɛdɪnbʌrə]; Scottish Gaelic: Dùn Èideann [ˌt̪un ˈeːtʲən̪ˠ]) is the capital city of Scotland and one of its 32 council areas. The city was historically part of the county of Midlothian (formally called the "county of Edinburgh" or Edinburghshire until 1947), but was administered separately from the surrounding county from 1482 onwards. It is located in Lothian on the southern shore of the Firth of Forth. Edinburgh is Scotland's second-most populous city, after Glasgow, and the seventh-most populous city in the United Kingdom.

Edinburgh
Dùn Èideann
City of Edinburgh
From top, left to right: An aerial view of Edinburgh city centre, Skyline of Edinburgh, city skyline with Edinburgh Castle in the distance, Scott Monument, Calton Hill, the National Gallery of Scotland, The Scottish Parliament Building and the front facade of Edinburgh Castle
Nicknames: 
"Auld Reekie", "Edina", "Athens of the North"
Motto(s): 
Nisi Dominus Frustra (Latin)
Without the Lord, all is in vain
Edinburgh
Location within Scotland
Edinburgh
Location within the United Kingdom
Edinburgh
Location within Europe
Coordinates: 55°57′12″N 03°11′21″W / 55.95333°N 3.18917°W / 55.95333; -3.18917Coordinates: 55°57′12″N 03°11′21″W / 55.95333°N 3.18917°W / 55.95333; -3.18917
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
CountryScotland
Council areaCity of Edinburgh
Lieutenancy areaEdinburgh
FoundedBefore 7th century AD
Burgh Charter1125
City status1633
Government
 • TypeUnitary authority
 • Governing bodyCity of Edinburgh Council
 • Lord Provost of EdinburghRobert Aldridge
 • MSPs
  •   Ash Denham (SNP)
  •   Angus Robertson (SNP)
  •   Daniel Johnson (Lab)
  •   Gordon MacDonald (SNP)
  •   Ben Macpherson (SNP)
 • MPs
Area
 • Capital city and council area102 sq mi (264 km2)
 • Urban
46 sq mi (119 km2)
Elevation154 ft (47 m)
Population
 (mid-2020 est.)
 • Capital city and council area506,520 (City)[1]
518,500 (Council area)[2]
 • Density4,730/sq mi (1,828/km2)
 • Urban
530,990[1]
 • Metro
901,455[3]
 • Language(s)
English
Scots
DemonymEdinburgher[5][6]
Time zoneUTC±0 (GMT)
 • Summer (DST)UTC+1 (BST)
Postcode areas
Area code0131
ISO 3166-2GB-EDH
ONS codeS12000036
OS grid referenceNT275735
NUTS 3UKM25
Primary AirportEdinburgh Airport
GDP$33 billion[7]
GDP per capita$58,000[7]
Websitewww.edinburgh.gov.uk
Official nameOld and New Towns of Edinburgh
CriteriaCultural: ii, iv
Reference728
Inscription1995 (19th Session)
Official nameThe Forth Bridge
CriteriaCultural: i, iv
Reference1485
Inscription2015 (39th Session)

Recognised as the capital of Scotland since at least the 15th century, Edinburgh is the seat of the Scottish Government, the Scottish Parliament and the highest courts in Scotland. The city's Palace of Holyroodhouse is the official residence of the British monarchy in Scotland. The city has long been a centre of education, particularly in the fields of medicine, Scottish law, literature, philosophy, the sciences, and engineering. It is the second-largest financial centre in the United Kingdom, and the city's historical and cultural attractions have made it the UK's second-most visited tourist destination attracting 4.9 million visits, including 2.4 million from overseas in 2018.[11][12] Time Out magazine rated Edinburgh the best city in the world in 2022.[13]

Edinburgh's official population estimates are 506,520 (mid-2020) for the locality,[1] 518,500 (mid-2019) for the City of Edinburgh council area, which takes in some outlying villages in the western part of its territory,[2] and 1,384,950 (2019) for the wider Edinburgh and South East Scotland city region[14] which also includes East Lothian, Fife, Midlothian, the Scottish Borders and West Lothian.[15]

The city is the annual venue of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland. It is home to national cultural institutions such as the National Museum of Scotland, the National Library of Scotland and the Scottish National Gallery. The University of Edinburgh, founded in 1582 and now one of three in the city, is considered one of the best research institutions in the world, most recently placing 15th in the QS World University Rankings for 2023.[16] The city is also known for the Edinburgh International Festival and the Fringe, the latter being the world's largest annual international arts festival. Historic sites in Edinburgh include Edinburgh Castle, the Palace of Holyroodhouse, the churches of St. Giles, Greyfriars and the Canongate, and the extensive Georgian New Town built in the 18th/19th centuries. Edinburgh's Old Town and New Town together are listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site,[17] which has been managed by Edinburgh World Heritage since 1999.

Etymology

"Edin", the root of the city's name, derives from Eidyn, the name for this region in Cumbric, the Brittonic Celtic language formerly spoken there. The name's meaning is unknown.[18] The district of Eidyn is centred on the stronghold Din Eidyn, the dun or hillfort of Eidyn.[18] This stronghold is believed to have been located at Castle Rock, now the site of Edinburgh Castle. Eidyn was conquered by the Angles of Bernicia in the 7th century and later occupied by the Scots in the 10th century.[19] As the language shifted to Northumbrian Old English, which evolved into Scots, the Brittonic din in Din Eidyn was replaced by burh, producing Edinburgh. Similarly, din became dùn in Scottish Gaelic, producing Dùn Èideann.[18][20]

Nicknames

 
Surgeons' Hall, one of the Greek Revival buildings that earned Edinburgh the nickname "Athens of the North"

The city is affectionately nicknamed Auld Reekie,[21][22] Scots for Old Smoky, for the views from the country of the smoke-covered Old Town. A remark on a poem in an 1800 collection of the poems of Allan Ramsay said, "Auld Reeky. A name the country people give Edinburgh from the cloud of smoke or reek that is always impending over it."[23]

Thomas Carlyle said, "Smoke cloud hangs over old Edinburgh,—for, ever since Aeneas Silvius's time and earlier, the people have the art, very strange to Aeneas, of burning a certain sort of black stones, and Edinburgh with its chimneys is called 'Auld Reekie' by the country people."[24]

A character in Walter Scott's The Abbot says, "... yonder stands Auld Reekie—you may see the smoke hover over her at twenty miles' distance."[25]

Robert Chambers, who said that the sobriquet could not be traced before the reign of Charles II, attributed the name to a Fife laird, Durham of Largo, who regulated the bedtime of his children by the smoke rising above Edinburgh from the fires of the tenements. "It's time now bairns, to tak' the beuks, and gang to our beds, for yonder's Auld Reekie, I see, putting on her nicht -cap!"[26]

Edinburgh has been popularly called the Athens of the North since the early 19th century.[27] References to Athens, such as Athens of Britain and Modern Athens, had been made as early as the 1760s. The similarities were seen to be topographical but also intellectual. Edinburgh's Castle Rock reminded returning grand tourists of the Athenian Acropolis, as did aspects of the neoclassical architecture and layout of New Town.[27] Both cities had flatter, fertile agricultural land sloping down to a port several miles away (respectively, Leith and Piraeus). Intellectually, the Scottish Enlightenment, with its humanist and rationalist outlook, was influenced by Ancient Greek philosophy.[28] In 1822, artist Hugh William Williams organized an exhibition that showed his paintings of Athens alongside views of Edinburgh, and the idea of a direct parallel between both cities quickly caught the popular imagination.[29] When plans were drawn up in the early 19th century to architecturally develop Calton Hill, the design of the National Monument directly copied Athens' Parthenon.[30] Tom Stoppard's character Archie of Jumpers said, perhaps playing on Reykjavík meaning "smoky bay", that the "Reykjavík of the South" would be more appropriate.[31]

The city has also been known by several Latin names, such as Edinburgum, while the adjectival forms Edinburgensis and Edinensis are used in educational and scientific contexts.[32][33]

Edina is a late 18th-century poetical form used by the Scots poets Robert Fergusson and Robert Burns. "Embra" or "Embro" are colloquialisms from the same time,[34] as in Robert Garioch's Embro to the Ploy.[35]

Ben Jonson described it as "Britaine's other eye",[36] and Sir Walter Scott referred to it as "yon Empress of the North".[37] Robert Louis Stevenson, also a son of the city, wrote that Edinburgh "is what Paris ought to be."[38]

History

Early history

 
Edinburgh, showing Arthur's Seat, one of the earliest known sites of human habitation in the area

The earliest known human habitation in the Edinburgh area was at Cramond, where evidence was found of a Mesolithic camp site dated to c. 8500 BC.[39] Traces of later Bronze Age and Iron Age settlements have been found on Castle Rock, Arthur's Seat, Craiglockhart Hill and the Pentland Hills.[40]

When the Romans arrived in Lothian at the end of the 1st century AD, they found a Brittonic Celtic tribe whose name they recorded as the Votadini.[41] The Votadini transitioned into the Gododdin kingdom in the Early Middle Ages, with Eidyn serving as one of the kingdom's districts. During this period, the Castle Rock site, thought to have been the stronghold of Din Eidyn, emerged as the kingdom's major centre.[42] The medieval poem Y Gododdin describes a war band from across the Brittonic world who gathered in Eidyn before a fateful raid; this may describe a historical event around AD 600.[43][44][45]

In 638, the Gododdin stronghold was besieged by forces loyal to King Oswald of Northumbria, and around this time control of Lothian passed to the Angles. Their influence continued for the next three centuries until around 950, when, during the reign of Indulf, son of Constantine II, the "burh" (fortress), named in the 10th-century Pictish Chronicle as oppidum Eden,[46] was abandoned to the Scots. It thenceforth remained, for the most part, under their jurisdiction.[47]

The royal burgh was founded by King David I in the early 12th century on land belonging to the Crown, though the date of its charter is unknown.[48] The first documentary evidence of the medieval burgh is a royal charter, c. 1124–1127, by King David I granting a toft in burgo meo de Edenesburg to the Priory of Dunfermline.[49] The shire of Edinburgh seems to have also been created in the reign of David I, possibly covering all of Lothian at first, but by 1305 the eastern and western parts of Lothian had become Haddingtonshire and Linlithgowshire, leaving Edinburgh as the county town of a shire covering the central part of Lothian, which was called Edinburghshire or Midlothian (the latter name being an informal, but commonly used, alternative until the county's name was legally changed in 1947).[50][51]

Edinburgh was largely in English hands from 1291 to 1314 and from 1333 to 1341, during the Wars of Scottish Independence. When the English invaded Scotland in 1298, King Edward I chose not to enter the English controlled town of Edinburgh but passed by with his army.[52]

In the middle of the 14th century, the French chronicler Jean Froissart described it as the capital of Scotland (c. 1365), and James III (1451–88) referred to it in the 15th century as "the principal burgh of our kingdom".[53] In 1482 James III granted the burgh the right to appoint its own sheriff and coroner, making the burgh administratively independent from the surrounding county, with it becoming a county of itself.[54][55] Despite the destruction caused by an English assault in 1544, the town slowly recovered,[56] and was at the centre of events in the 16th-century Scottish Reformation[57] and 17th-century Wars of the Covenant.[58] In 1582, Edinburgh's town council was given a royal charter by King James VI permitting the establishment of a university;[59] founded as Tounis College (Town's College), the institution developed into the University of Edinburgh, which contributed to Edinburgh's central intellectual role in subsequent centuries.[60]

17th century

 
Edinburgh in the 17th century
 
Edinburgh, around 1690.

In 1603, King James VI of Scotland succeeded to the English throne, uniting the crowns of Scotland and England in a personal union known as the Union of the Crowns, though Scotland remained, in all other respects, a separate kingdom.[61] In 1638, King Charles I's attempt to introduce Anglican church forms in Scotland encountered stiff Presbyterian opposition culminating in the conflicts of the Wars of the Three Kingdoms.[62] Subsequent Scottish support for Charles Stuart's restoration to the throne of England resulted in Edinburgh's occupation by Oliver Cromwell's Commonwealth of England forces – the New Model Army – in 1650.[63]

In the 17th century, Edinburgh's boundaries were still defined by the city's defensive town walls. As a result, the city's growing population was accommodated by increasing the height of the houses. Buildings of 11 storeys or more were common,[64] and have been described as forerunners of the modern-day skyscraper.[65][66] Most of these old structures were replaced by the predominantly Victorian buildings seen in today's Old Town. In 1611 an act of parliament created the High Constables of Edinburgh to keep order in the city, thought to be the oldest statutory police force in the world.[67]

18th century

 
A painting showing Edinburgh characters (based on John Kay's caricatures) behind St Giles' Cathedral in the late 18th century

Following the Treaty of Union in 1706, the Parliaments of England and Scotland passed Acts of Union in 1706 and 1707 respectively, uniting the two kingdoms in the Kingdom of Great Britain effective from 1 May 1707.[68] As a consequence, the Parliament of Scotland merged with the Parliament of England to form the Parliament of Great Britain, which sat at Westminster in London. The Union was opposed by many Scots, resulting in riots in the city.[69]

By the first half of the 18th century, Edinburgh was described as one of Europe's most densely populated, overcrowded and unsanitary towns.[70][71] Visitors were struck by the fact that the social classes shared the same urban space, even inhabiting the same tenement buildings; although here a form of social segregation did prevail, whereby shopkeepers and tradesmen tended to occupy the cheaper-to-rent cellars and garrets, while the more well-to-do professional classes occupied the more expensive middle storeys.[72]

During the Jacobite rising of 1745, Edinburgh was briefly occupied by the Jacobite "Highland Army" before its march into England.[73] After its eventual defeat at Culloden, there followed a period of reprisals and pacification, largely directed at the rebellious clans.[74] In Edinburgh, the Town Council, keen to emulate London by initiating city improvements and expansion to the north of the castle,[75] reaffirmed its belief in the Union and loyalty to the Hanoverian monarch George III by its choice of names for the streets of the New Town: for example, Rose Street and Thistle Street; and for the royal family, George Street, Queen Street, Hanover Street, Frederick Street and Princes Street (in honour of George's two sons).[76]

In the second half of the century, the city was at the heart of the Scottish Enlightenment,[77] when thinkers like David Hume, Adam Smith, James Hutton and Joseph Black were familiar figures in its streets. Edinburgh became a major intellectual centre, earning it the nickname "Athens of the North" because of its many neo-classical buildings and reputation for learning, recalling ancient Athens.[78] In the 18th-century novel The Expedition of Humphry Clinker by Tobias Smollett one character describes Edinburgh as a "hotbed of genius".[79] Edinburgh was also a major centre for the Scottish book trade. The highly successful London bookseller Andrew Millar was apprenticed there to James McEuen.[80]

From the 1770s onwards, the professional and business classes gradually deserted the Old Town in favour of the more elegant "one-family" residences of the New Town, a migration that changed the city's social character. According to the foremost historian of this development, "Unity of social feeling was one of the most valuable heritages of old Edinburgh, and its disappearance was widely and properly lamented."[81]

19th and 20th centuries

 
Edinburgh Castle from the Grassmarket, photographed by George Washington Wilson circa 1875
 
Edinburgh, c. 1920

Despite an enduring myth to the contrary,[82] Edinburgh became an industrial centre[83] with its traditional industries of printing, brewing and distilling continuing to grow in the 19th century and joined by new industries such as rubber works, engineering works and others. By 1821, Edinburgh had been overtaken by Glasgow as Scotland's largest city.[84] The city centre between Princes Street and George Street became a major commercial and shopping district, a development partly stimulated by the arrival of railways in the 1840s. The Old Town became an increasingly dilapidated, overcrowded slum with high mortality rates.[85] Improvements carried out under Lord Provost William Chambers in the 1860s began the transformation of the area into the predominantly Victorian Old Town seen today.[86] More improvements followed in the early 20th century as a result of the work of Patrick Geddes,[87] but relative economic stagnation during the two world wars and beyond saw the Old Town deteriorate further before major slum clearance in the 1960s and 1970s began to reverse the process. University building developments which transformed the George Square and Potterrow areas proved highly controversial.[88]

Since the 1990s a new "financial district", including the Edinburgh International Conference Centre, has grown mainly on demolished railway property to the west of the castle, stretching into Fountainbridge, a run-down 19th-century industrial suburb which has undergone radical change since the 1980s with the demise of industrial and brewery premises. This ongoing development has enabled Edinburgh to maintain its place as the United Kingdom's second largest financial and administrative centre after London.[89][90] Financial services now account for a third of all commercial office space in the city.[91] The development of Edinburgh Park, a new business and technology park covering 38 acres (15 ha), 4 mi (6 km) west of the city centre, has also contributed to the District Council's strategy for the city's major economic regeneration.[91]

In 1998, the Scotland Act, which came into force the following year, established a devolved Scottish Parliament and Scottish Executive (renamed the Scottish Government since September 2007[92]). Both based in Edinburgh, they are responsible for governing Scotland while reserved matters such as defence, foreign affairs and some elements of income tax remain the responsibility of the Parliament of the United Kingdom in London.[93]

21st century

In 2022, Edinburgh was affected by the 2022 Scotland bin strikes.[94]

Geography

Cityscape

Situated in Scotland's Central Belt, Edinburgh lies on the southern shore of the Firth of Forth. The city centre is 2+12 mi (4.0 km) southwest of the shoreline of Leith and 26 mi (42 km) inland, as the crow flies, from the east coast of Scotland and the North Sea at Dunbar.[95] While the early burgh grew up near the prominent Castle Rock, the modern city is often said to be built on seven hills, namely Calton Hill, Corstorphine Hill, Craiglockhart Hill, Braid Hill, Blackford Hill, Arthur's Seat and the Castle Rock,[96] giving rise to allusions to the seven hills of Rome.[97]

Occupying a narrow gap between the Firth of Forth to the north and the Pentland Hills and their outrunners to the south, the city sprawls over a landscape which is the product of early volcanic activity and later periods of intensive glaciation. [98]: 64–65  Igneous activity between 350 and 400 million years ago, coupled with faulting, led to the creation of tough basalt volcanic plugs, which predominate over much of the area.[98]: 64–65  One such example is the Castle Rock which forced the advancing ice sheet to divide, sheltering the softer rock and forming a 1 mi-long (1.6 km) tail of material to the east, thus creating a distinctive crag and tail formation.[98]: 64–65  Glacial erosion on the north side of the crag gouged a deep valley later filled by the now drained Nor Loch. These features, along with another hollow on the rock's south side, formed an ideal natural strongpoint upon which Edinburgh Castle was built.[98]: 64–65  Similarly, Arthur's Seat is the remains of a volcano dating from the Carboniferous period, which was eroded by a glacier moving west to east during the ice age.[98]: 64–65  Erosive action such as plucking and abrasion exposed the rocky crags to the west before leaving a tail of deposited glacial material swept to the east.[99] This process formed the distinctive Salisbury Crags, a series of teschenite cliffs between Arthur's Seat and the location of the early burgh.[100] The residential areas of Marchmont and Bruntsfield are built along a series of drumlin ridges south of the city centre, which were deposited as the glacier receded.[98]: 64–65 

Other prominent landforms such as Calton Hill and Corstorphine Hill are also products of glacial erosion.[98]: 64–65  The Braid Hills and Blackford Hill are a series of small summits to the south of the city centre that command expansive views looking northwards over the urban area to the Firth of Forth.[98]: 64–65 

 
View of Edinburgh from Blackford Hill

Edinburgh is drained by the river named the Water of Leith, which rises at the Colzium Springs in the Pentland Hills and runs for 18 miles (29 km) through the south and west of the city, emptying into the Firth of Forth at Leith.[101] The nearest the river gets to the city centre is at Dean Village on the north-western edge of the New Town, where a deep gorge is spanned by Thomas Telford's Dean Bridge, built in 1832 for the road to Queensferry. The Water of Leith Walkway is a mixed-use trail that follows the course of the river for 19.6 km (12.2 mi) from Balerno to Leith.[102]

 
Panorama of Edinburgh from Edinburgh Castle, with the New Town in the centre and Calton Hill to the right

Excepting the shoreline of the Firth of Forth, Edinburgh is encircled by a green belt, designated in 1957, which stretches from Dalmeny in the west to Prestongrange in the east.[103] With an average width of 3.2 km (2 mi) the principal objectives of the green belt were to contain the outward expansion of the city and to prevent the agglomeration of urban areas.[103] Expansion affecting the green belt is strictly controlled but developments such as Edinburgh Airport and the Royal Highland Showground at Ingliston lie within the zone.[103] Similarly, suburbs such as Juniper Green and Balerno are situated on green belt land.[103] One feature of the Edinburgh green belt is the inclusion of parcels of land within the city which are designated green belt, even though they do not connect with the peripheral ring. Examples of these independent wedges of green belt include Holyrood Park and Corstorphine Hill.[103]

 
Edinburgh Old Town skyline panorama

Areas

Edinburgh includes former towns and villages that retain much of their original character as settlements in existence before they were absorbed into the expanding city of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.[104] Many areas, such as Dalry, contain residences that are multi-occupancy buildings known as tenements, although the more southern and western parts of the city have traditionally been less built-up with a greater number of detached and semi-detached villas.[105]

 
Map showing the areas of central Edinburgh

The historic centre of Edinburgh is divided in two by the broad green swathe of Princes Street Gardens. To the south, the view is dominated by Edinburgh Castle, built high on Castle Rock, and the long sweep of the Old Town descending towards Holyrood Palace. To the north lie Princes Street and the New Town.

The West End includes the financial district, with insurance and banking offices as well as the Edinburgh International Conference Centre.

Edinburgh's Old and New Towns were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1995 in recognition of the unique character of the Old Town with its medieval street layout and the planned Georgian New Town, including the adjoining Dean Village and Calton Hill areas. There are over 4,500 listed buildings within the city,[17] a higher proportion relative to area than any other city in the United Kingdom.

The castle is perched on top of a rocky crag (the remnant of an extinct volcano) and the Royal Mile runs down the crest of a ridge from it terminating at Holyrood Palace. Minor streets (called closes or wynds) lie on either side of the main spine forming a herringbone pattern.[106] Due to space restrictions imposed by the narrowness of this landform, the Old Town became home to some of the earliest "high rise" residential buildings. Multi-storey dwellings known as lands were the norm from the 16th century onwards with ten and eleven storeys being typical and one even reaching fourteen or fifteen storeys.[107] Numerous vaults below street level were inhabited to accommodate the influx of incomers, particularly Irish immigrants, during the Industrial Revolution. The street has several fine public buildings such as St Giles' Cathedral, the City Chambers and the Law Courts. Other places of historical interest nearby are Greyfriars Kirkyard and Mary King's Close. The Grassmarket, running deep below the castle is connected by the steep double terraced Victoria Street. The street layout is typical of the old quarters of many Northern European cities.

The New Town was an 18th-century solution to the problem of an increasingly crowded city which had been confined to the ridge sloping down from the castle. In 1766 a competition to design a "New Town" was won by James Craig, a 27-year-old architect.[108] The plan was a rigid, ordered grid, which fitted in well with Enlightenment ideas of rationality. The principal street was to be George Street, running along the natural ridge to the north of what became known as the "Old Town". To either side of it are two other main streets: Princes Street and Queen Street. Princes Street has become Edinburgh's main shopping street and now has few of its Georgian buildings in their original state. The three main streets are connected by a series of streets running perpendicular to them. The east and west ends of George Street are terminated by St Andrew Square and Charlotte Square respectively. The latter, designed by Robert Adam, influenced the architectural style of the New Town into the early 19th century.[109] Bute House, the official residence of the First Minister of Scotland, is on the north side of Charlotte Square.[110]

The hollow between the Old and New Towns was formerly the Nor Loch, which was created for the town's defence but came to be used by the inhabitants for dumping their sewage. It was drained by the 1820s as part of the city's northward expansion. Craig's original plan included an ornamental canal on the site of the loch,[76] but this idea was abandoned.[111] Soil excavated while laying the foundations of buildings in the New Town was dumped on the site of the loch to create the slope connecting the Old and New Towns known as The Mound.

In the middle of the 19th century the National Gallery of Scotland and Royal Scottish Academy Building were built on The Mound, and tunnels for the railway line between Haymarket and Waverley stations were driven through it.

The Southside is a residential part of the city, which includes the districts of St Leonards, Marchmont, Morningside, Newington, Sciennes, the Grange and Blackford. The Southside is broadly analogous to the area covered formerly by the Burgh Muir, and was developed as a residential area after the opening of the South Bridge in the 1780s. The Southside is particularly popular with families (many state and private schools are here), young professionals and students (the central University of Edinburgh campus is based around George Square just north of Marchmont and the Meadows), and Napier University (with major campuses around Merchiston and Morningside). The area is also well provided with hotel and "bed and breakfast" accommodation for visiting festival-goers. These districts often feature in works of fiction. For example, Church Hill in Morningside, was the home of Muriel Spark's Miss Jean Brodie,[112] and Ian Rankin's Inspector Rebus lives in Marchmont and works in St Leonards.[113]

 
The Shore, Leith

Leith was historically the port of Edinburgh, an arrangement of unknown date that was confirmed by the royal charter Robert the Bruce granted to the city in 1329.[114] The port developed a separate identity from Edinburgh, which to some extent it still retains, and it was a matter of great resentment when the two burghs merged in 1920 into the City of Edinburgh.[115] Even today the parliamentary seat is known as "Edinburgh North and Leith". The loss of traditional industries and commerce (the last shipyard closed in 1983) resulted in economic decline.[116] The Edinburgh Waterfront development has transformed old dockland areas from Leith to Granton into residential areas with shopping and leisure facilities and helped rejuvenate the area. With the redevelopment, Edinburgh has gained the business of cruise liner companies which now provide cruises to Norway, Sweden, Denmark, Germany, and the Netherlands.

The coastal suburb of Portobello is characterised by Georgian villas, Victorian tenements, a beach and promenade and cafés, bars, restaurants and independent shops. There are rowing and sailing clubs and a restored Victorian swimming pool, including Turkish baths.

The urban area of Edinburgh is almost entirely within the City of Edinburgh Council boundary, merging with Musselburgh in East Lothian. Towns within easy reach of the city boundary include Haddington, Tranent, Prestonpans, Dalkeith, Bonnyrigg, Loanhead, Penicuik, Broxburn, Livingston and Dunfermline. Edinburgh lies at the heart of the Edinburgh & South East Scotland City region with a population in 2014 of 1,339,380.[117][14]

Climate

Like most of Scotland, Edinburgh has a cool, temperate, maritime climate which, despite its northerly latitude, is milder than places which lie at similar latitudes such as Moscow and Labrador.[118] The city's proximity to the sea mitigates any large variations in temperature or extremes of climate. Winter daytime temperatures rarely fall below freezing while summer temperatures are moderate, rarely exceeding 22 °C (72 °F).[118] The highest temperature recorded in the city was 31.6 °C (88.9 °F) on 25 July 2019[118] at Gogarbank, beating the previous record of 31 °C (88 °F) on 4 August 1975 at Edinburgh Airport.[119] The lowest temperature recorded in recent years was −14.6 °C (5.7 °F) during December 2010 at Gogarbank.[120]

Given Edinburgh's position between the coast and hills, it is renowned as "the windy city", with the prevailing wind direction coming from the south-west, which is often associated with warm, unstable air from the North Atlantic Current that can give rise to rainfall – although considerably less than cities to the west, such as Glasgow.[118] Rainfall is distributed fairly evenly throughout the year.[118] Winds from an easterly direction are usually drier but considerably colder, and may be accompanied by haar, a persistent coastal fog. Vigorous Atlantic depressions, known as European windstorms, can affect the city between October and May.[118]

Located slightly north of the city centre, the weather station at the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh (RBGE) has been an official weather station for the Met Office since 1956. The Met Office operates its own weather station at Gogarbank on the city's western outskirts, near Edinburgh Airport.[121] This slightly inland station has a slightly wider temperature span between seasons, is cloudier and somewhat wetter, but differences are minor.

Temperature and rainfall records have been kept at the Royal Observatory since 1764.[122]

Climate data for Edinburgh (RBGE),[a] elevation: 23 m (75 ft), 1991–2020 normals, extremes 1960–present
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Record high °C (°F) 15.0
(59.0)
15.2
(59.4)
20.0
(68.0)
22.8
(73.0)
29.0
(84.2)
27.8
(82.0)
31.6
(88.9)
31.4
(88.5)
26.7
(80.1)
24.4
(75.9)
20.6
(69.1)
15.4
(59.7)
31.6
(88.9)
Average high °C (°F) 7.3
(45.1)
8.0
(46.4)
9.7
(49.5)
12.2
(54.0)
14.9
(58.8)
17.4
(63.3)
19.3
(66.7)
19.1
(66.4)
16.9
(62.4)
13.4
(56.1)
9.9
(49.8)
7.3
(45.1)
13.0
(55.4)
Daily mean °C (°F) 4.5
(40.1)
4.8
(40.6)
6.3
(43.3)
8.4
(47.1)
11.0
(51.8)
13.7
(56.7)
15.4
(59.7)
15.3
(59.5)
13.3
(55.9)
10.0
(50.0)
6.8
(44.2)
4.5
(40.1)
9.5
(49.1)
Average low °C (°F) 1.7
(35.1)
1.7
(35.1)
2.9
(37.2)
4.7
(40.5)
7.1
(44.8)
9.9
(49.8)
11.6
(52.9)
11.5
(52.7)
9.7
(49.5)
6.7
(44.1)
3.8
(38.8)
1.6
(34.9)
6.1
(43.0)
Record low °C (°F) −15.5
(4.1)
−11.7
(10.9)
−11.1
(12.0)
−6.1
(21.0)
−2.4
(27.7)
1.1
(34.0)
4.4
(39.9)
2.2
(36.0)
−1.1
(30.0)
−3.7
(25.3)
−8.3
(17.1)
−11.5
(11.3)
−15.5
(4.1)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 64.7
(2.55)
53.1
(2.09)
48.5
(1.91)
40.8
(1.61)
47.6
(1.87)
66.2
(2.61)
72.1
(2.84)
71.6
(2.82)
54.9
(2.16)
75.7
(2.98)
65.3
(2.57)
67.4
(2.65)
727.7
(28.65)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1.0 mm) 12.4 9.8 9.8 8.6 9.6 10.4 11.5 10.4 9.9 11.7 11.7 12.3 128.3
Mean monthly sunshine hours 55.2 82.2 117.3 157.3 194.7 161.8 169.9 160.0 130.1 99.4 72.1 49.2 1,449.1
Average ultraviolet index 0 1 2 3 5 6 5 5 3 1 1 0 3
Source: Met Office,[123] KNMI[124] and Weather Atlas[125]
Climate data for Edinburgh (Gogarbank),[b] elevation: 57 m (187 ft), 1991–2020 normals
Month Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec Year
Average high °C (°F) 6.9
(44.4)
7.5
(45.5)
9.3
(48.7)
12.0
(53.6)
14.9
(58.8)
17.5
(63.5)
19.4
(66.9)
19.2
(66.6)
16.9
(62.4)
13.2
(55.8)
9.5
(49.1)
7.0
(44.6)
12.8
(55.0)
Daily mean °C (°F) 4.2
(39.6)
4.6
(40.3)
6.0
(42.8)
8.2
(46.8)
10.8
(51.4)
13.4
(56.1)
15.2
(59.4)
15.1
(59.2)
13.1
(55.6)
9.8
(49.6)
6.6
(43.9)
4.2
(39.6)
9.3
(48.7)
Average low °C (°F) 1.5
(34.7)
1.6
(34.9)
2.7
(36.9)
4.3
(39.7)
6.7
(44.1)
9.4
(48.9)
11.0
(51.8)
11.0
(51.8)
9.4
(48.9)
6.5
(43.7)
3.6
(38.5)
1.4
(34.5)
5.8
(42.4)
Average precipitation mm (inches) 73.0
(2.87)
61.1
(2.41)
52.5
(2.07)
45.9
(1.81)
50.2
(1.98)
68.8
(2.71)
71.9
(2.83)
74.7
(2.94)
55.2
(2.17)
82.7
(3.26)
73.7
(2.90)
74.9
(2.95)
784.3
(30.88)
Average precipitation days (≥ 1.0 mm) 13.3 10.7 10.3 9.2 10.8 11.1 11.4 11.2 10.5 13.0 12.9 13.1 137.4
Mean monthly sunshine hours 47.4 77.5 111.0 147.7 189.5 159.4 160.9 145.7 125.5 94.1 66.9 37.8 1,363.4
Source: Met Office[126]
  1. ^ Weather station is located 0.9 mi (1.4 km) from the Edinburgh city centre.
  2. ^ Weather station is located 5.9 mi (9.5 km) from the Edinburgh city centre.

Demography

 
Population pyramid of Edinburgh (local authority area) in 2020

Current

 
Population density map

The most recent official population estimates (2020) are 506,520 for the locality (includes Currie),[1] 530,990 for the Edinburgh settlement (includes Musselburgh)[1] and 518,500 for the local authority area.[2]

Edinburgh has a high proportion of young adults, with 19.5% of the population in their 20s (exceeded only by Aberdeen) and 15.2% in their 30s which is the highest in Scotland. The proportion of Edinburgh's population born in the UK fell from 92% to 84% between 2001 and 2011, while the proportion of White Scottish-born fell from 78% to 70%. Of those Edinburgh residents born in the UK, 335,000 or 83% were born in Scotland, with 58,000 or 14% being born in England.[127]

Ethnic Group 1991[128][129] 2001[130][131] 2011[130][131]
Number % Number % Number %
White: Total 409,044 97.64% 430,369 95.9% 437,167 91.7%
White: Scottish - - 354,053 78.9% 334,987 70.2%
White: Other British - - 51,407 11.4% 56,132 11.7%
White: Irish 5,518 1.31% 6,470 1.4% 8,603 1.8%
White: Gypsy/Traveller[note 1] - - - - 388 -
White: Polish[note 1] - - - - 12,820 2.68%
White: Other - - 18,439 4.1% 24,237 0.5%
Asian, Asian Scottish or Asian British: Total 6,979 1.66% 11,600 2.5% 26,264 5.5%
Asian, Asian Scottish or Asian British: Indian 1,176 0.28% 2,384 0.53% 6,470 1.35%
Asian, Asian Scottish or Asian British: Pakistani 2,625 0.62% 3,928 0.87% 5,858 1.22%
Asian, Asian Scottish or Asian British: Bangladeshi 328 - 636 0.14% 1,277 0.26%
Asian, Asian Scottish or Asian British: Chinese 1,940 0.46% 3,532 0.78% 8,076 1.69%
Asian, Asian Scottish or Asian British: Asian Other 910 0.21% 1,201 0.26% 4,583 0.96%
Black, Black Scottish or Black British[note 2] - - 174 - - -
African: Total 603 - 1,285 0.2% 4,474 0.9%
African: African, African Scottish or African British 603 - 1,285 0.2% 4,364 0.91%
African: Other African - - - - 110 -
Caribbean or Black: Total 568 - 292 - 1,031 0.2%
Caribbean 175 - 292 - 505 0.1%
Black - - - - 403 -
Caribbean or Black: Other 393 - - - 123 -
Mixed or multiple ethnic groups: Total - - 2,776 0.6% 4,087 0.8%
Other: Total 1,720 0.41% 2,047 0.45% 3,603 0.8%
Other: Arab[note 1] - - - - 2,500 0.52%
Other: Any other ethnic group 1,720 0.41% 2,047 0.45% 1,103 0.23%
Total: 418,914 100% 448,624 100% 476,626 100%

Some 13,000 people or 2.7% of the city's population are of Polish descent. 39,500 people or 8.2% of Edinburgh's population class themselves as Non-White which is an increase from 4% in 2001. Of the Non-White population, the largest group by far are Asian, totalling 26,264 people. Within the Asian population, people of Chinese descent are now the largest sub-group, with 8,076 people, amounting to about 1.7% of the city's total population. The city's population of Indian descent amounts to 6,470 (1.4% of the total population), while there are some 5,858 of Pakistani descent (1.2% of the total population). Although they account for only 1,277 people or 0.3% of the city's population, Edinburgh has the highest number and proportion of people of Bangladeshi descent in Scotland. Over 7,000 people were born in African countries (1.6% of the total population) and nearly 7,000 in the Americas. With the notable exception of Inner London, Edinburgh has a higher number of people born in the United States (over 3,700) than any other city in the UK.[127]

The proportion of people born outside the UK was 15.9% compared with 8% in 2001.

Place of birth Estimated resident population (2011)[132]
  Poland 11,651
  India 4,888
  Ireland 4,743
  Mainland China [A] 4,188
  United States 3,700
  Germany 3,500
  Pakistan 2,472
  Australia 2,100
  France 2,000
  Spain 2,000
  South Africa 1,800
  Canada 1,800
  Hong Kong 1,600

Historical

Historical population
YearPop.±%
180182,560—    
1811102,987+24.7%
1821138,235+34.2%
1831161,909+17.1%
1841166,450+2.8%
1851193,929+16.5%
1901303,638+56.6%
1911320,318+5.5%
1921420,264+31.2%
1931439,010+4.5%
1951466,761+6.3%
Source:
[133]

A census by the Edinburgh presbytery in 1592 recorded a population of 8,003 adults spread equally north and south of the High Street which runs along the spine of the ridge sloping down from the Castle.[134] In the 18th and 19th centuries, the population expanded rapidly, rising from 49,000 in 1751 to 136,000 in 1831, primarily due to migration from rural areas.[98]: 9  As the population grew, problems of overcrowding in the Old Town, particularly in the cramped tenements that lined the present day Royal Mile and the Cowgate, were exacerbated.[98]: 9  Poor sanitary arrangements resulted in a high incidence of disease,[98]: 9  with outbreaks of cholera occurring in 1832, 1848 and 1866.[135]

The construction of the New Town from 1767 onwards witnessed the migration of the professional and business classes from the difficult living conditions in the Old Town to the lower density, higher quality surroundings taking shape on land to the north. [136] Expansion southwards from the Old Town saw more tenements being built in the 19th century, giving rise to Victorian suburbs such as Dalry, Newington, Marchmont and Bruntsfield.[136]

Early 20th-century population growth coincided with lower-density suburban development. As the city expanded to the south and west, detached and semi-detached villas with large gardens replaced tenements as the predominant building style. Nonetheless, the 2001 census revealed that over 55% of Edinburgh's population were still living in tenements or blocks of flats, a figure in line with other Scottish cities, but much higher than other British cities, and even central London.[137]

From the early to mid 20th century, the growth in population, together with slum clearance in the Old Town and other areas, such as Dumbiedykes, Leith, and Fountainbridge, led to the creation of new estates such as Stenhouse and Saughton, Craigmillar and Niddrie, Pilton and Muirhouse, Piershill, and Sighthill.[138]

Religion

 
The High Kirk of Edinburgh, also known as St Giles' Cathedral

In 2018, the Church of Scotland had 20,956 members in 71 congregations in the Presbytery of Edinburgh.[139] Its most prominent church is St Giles' on the Royal Mile, first dedicated in 1243 but believed to date from before the 12th century.[140] Saint Giles is historically the patron saint of Edinburgh.[141] St Cuthbert's, situated at the west end of Princes Street Gardens in the shadow of Edinburgh Castle and St Giles' can lay claim to being the oldest Christian sites in the city,[142] though the present St Cuthbert's, designed by Hippolyte Blanc, was dedicated in 1894.[143]

Other Church of Scotland churches include Greyfriars Kirk, the Canongate Kirk, St Andrew's and St George's West Church and the Barclay Church. The Church of Scotland Offices are in Edinburgh,[144] as is the Assembly Hall where the annual General Assembly is held.[145]

The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St Andrews and Edinburgh has 27 parishes across the city.[146] The Archbishop of St Andrews and Edinburgh has his official residence in Greenhill,[147] the diocesan offices are in nearby Marchmont,[148] and its cathedral is St Mary's Cathedral, Edinburgh. The Diocese of Edinburgh of the Scottish Episcopal Church has over 50 churches, half of them in the city.[149] Its centre is the late 19th-century Gothic style St Mary's Cathedral in the West End's Palmerston Place.[150] Orthodox Christianity is represented by Pan, Romanian and Russian Orthodox churches. There are several independent churches in the city, both Catholic and Protestant, including Charlotte Chapel, Carrubbers Christian Centre, Bellevue Chapel and Sacred Heart.[151] There are also churches belonging to Quakers, Christadelphians,[152] Seventh-day Adventists, Church of Christ, Scientist, The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (LDS Church) and Elim Pentecostal Church.

Muslims have several places of worship across the city. Edinburgh Central Mosque, the largest Islamic place of worship, is located in Potterrow on the city's Southside, near Bristo Square. Construction was largely financed by a gift from King Fahd of Saudi Arabia[153] and was completed in 1998.[154] There is also an Ahmadiyya Muslim community.[155]

The first recorded presence of a Jewish community in Edinburgh dates back to the late 18th century.[156] Edinburgh's Orthodox synagogue, opened in 1932, is in Salisbury Road and can accommodate a congregation of 2000. A Liberal Jewish congregation also meets in the city.

A Sikh gurdwara and a Hindu mandir are located in Leith.[157][158] The city also has a Brahma Kumaris centre in the Polwarth area.[159]

The Edinburgh Buddhist Centre, run by the Triratna Buddhist Community, formerly situated in Melville Terrace, now runs sessions at the Healthy Life Centre, Bread Street.[160] Other Buddhist traditions are represented by groups which meet in the capital: the Community of Interbeing (followers of Thich Nhat Hanh), Rigpa, Samye Dzong, Theravadin, Pure Land and Shambala. There is a Sōtō Zen Priory in Portobello[161] and a Theravadin Thai Buddhist Monastery in Slateford Road.[162]

Edinburgh is home to a Baháʼí community,[163] and a Theosophical Society meets in Great King Street.[164]

Edinburgh has an Inter-Faith Association.[165]

Edinburgh has over 39 graveyards and cemeteries, many of which are listed and of historical character, including several former church burial grounds.[166] Examples include Old Calton Burial Ground, Greyfriars Kirkyard and Dean Cemetery.[167][168][169]

Economy

 
The Bank of Scotland's head office in central Edinburgh

Edinburgh has the strongest economy of any city in the United Kingdom outside London and the highest percentage of professionals in the UK with 43% of the population holding a degree-level or professional qualification.[170] According to the Centre for International Competitiveness, it is the most competitive large city in the United Kingdom.[171] It also has the highest gross value added per employee of any city in the UK outside London, measuring £57,594 in 2010.[172] It was named European Best Large City of the Future for Foreign Direct Investment and Best Large City for Foreign Direct Investment Strategy in the Financial Times fDi magazine awards 2012/13.

In the 19th century, Edinburgh's economy was known for banking and insurance, publishing and printing, and brewing and distilling. Today, its economy is based mainly on financial services, scientific research, higher education, and tourism.[173] In March 2010, unemployment in Edinburgh was comparatively low at 3.6%, and it remains consistently below the Scottish average of 4.5%.[174] Edinburgh is the second most visited city by foreign visitors in the UK after London.

Banking has been a mainstay of the Edinburgh economy for over 300 years, since the Bank of Scotland was established by an act of the Scottish Parliament in 1695. Today, the financial services industry, with its particularly strong insurance and investment sectors, and underpinned by Edinburgh-based firms such as Scottish Widows and Standard Life Aberdeen, accounts for the city being the UK's second financial centre after London and Europe's fourth in terms of equity assets.[175] The NatWest Group (formerly Royal Bank of Scotland Group) opened new global headquarters at Gogarburn in the west of the city in October 2005. The city is home to the headquarters of Bank of Scotland, Sainsbury's Bank,[176] Tesco Bank,[177] and TSB Bank.

Tourism is also an important element in the city's economy. As a World Heritage Site, tourists visit historical sites such as Edinburgh Castle, the Palace of Holyroodhouse and the Old and New Towns. Their numbers are augmented in August each year during the Edinburgh Festivals, which attracts 4.4 million visitors,[174] and generates over £100M for the local economy.[178]

As the centre of Scotland's government and legal system, the public sector plays a central role in Edinburgh's economy. Many departments of the Scottish Government are in the city. Other major employers include NHS Scotland and local government administration.[173] When the £1.3bn Edinburgh & South East Scotland City Region Deal[179] was signed in 2018, the region's Gross Value Added (GVA) contribution to the Scottish economy was cited as £33bn, or 33% of the country's output. The City Region Deal funds a range of "Data Driven Innovation" hubs which are using data to innovate in the region, recognising the region's strengths in technology and data science, the growing importance of the data economy, and the need to tackle the digital skills gap, as a route to social and economic prosperity.[180][181][182]

Culture

Festivals and celebrations

Edinburgh festival

The city hosts a series of festivals that run between the end of July and early September each year. The best known of these events are the Edinburgh Festival Fringe, the Edinburgh International Festival, the Edinburgh Military Tattoo, the Edinburgh Art Festival and the Edinburgh International Book Festival.[183]

 
Pipers emerging from Edinburgh Castle during the Edinburgh Military Tattoo

The longest established of these festivals is the Edinburgh International Festival, which was first held in 1947[184] and consists mainly of a programme of high-profile theatre productions and classical music performances, featuring international directors, conductors, theatre companies and orchestras.[185]

This has since been overtaken in size by the Edinburgh Fringe which began as a programme of marginal acts alongside the "official" Festival and has become the world's largest performing arts festival. In 2017, nearly 3400 different shows were staged in 300 venues across the city.[186][187] Comedy has become one of the mainstays of the Fringe, with numerous well-known comedians getting their first 'break' there, often by being chosen to receive the Edinburgh Comedy Award.[188] The Edinburgh Military Tattoo, occupies the Castle Esplanade every night for three weeks each August, with massed pipe bands and military bands drawn from around the world. Performances end with a short fireworks display.

As well as the summer festivals, many other festivals are held during the rest of the year, including the Edinburgh International Film Festival[189] and Edinburgh International Science Festival.[190]

The summer of 2020 was the first time in its 70-year history that the Edinburgh festival was not run, being cancelled due to the COVID-19 pandemic.[191] This affected many of the tourist-focused businesses in Edinburgh which depend on the various festivals over summer to return an annual profit.[192]

Edinburgh's Hogmanay

 
A Viking longship being burnt during Edinburgh's annual Hogmanay celebrations

The annual Edinburgh Hogmanay celebration was originally an informal street party focused on the Tron Kirk in the Old Town's High Street. Since 1993, it has been officially organised with the focus moved to Princes Street. In 1996, over 300,000 people attended, leading to ticketing of the main street party in later years up to a limit of 100,000 tickets.[193] Hogmanay now covers four days of processions, concerts and fireworks, with the street party beginning on Hogmanay. Alternative tickets are available for entrance into the Princes Street Gardens concert and Cèilidh, where well-known artists perform and ticket holders can participate in traditional Scottish cèilidh dancing. The event attracts thousands of people from all over the world.[193]

Beltane and other festivals

On the night of 30 April the Beltane Fire Festival takes place on Calton Hill, involving a procession followed by scenes inspired by pagan old spring fertility celebrations.[194] At the beginning of October each year the Dussehra Hindu Festival is also held on Calton Hill.[195]

Music, theatre and film

Outside the Festival season, Edinburgh supports several theatres and production companies. The Royal Lyceum Theatre has its own company, while the King's Theatre, Edinburgh Festival Theatre and Edinburgh Playhouse stage large touring shows. The Traverse Theatre presents a more contemporary repertoire. Amateur theatre companies productions are staged at the Bedlam Theatre, Church Hill Theatre and King's Theatre among others.[196]

The Usher Hall is Edinburgh's premier venue for classical music, as well as occasional popular music concerts.[197] It was the venue for the Eurovision Song Contest 1972. Other halls staging music and theatre include The Hub, the Assembly Rooms and the Queen's Hall. The Scottish Chamber Orchestra is based in Edinburgh.[198]

Edinburgh has one repertory cinema, The Cameo, and formerly, the Edinburgh Filmhouse as well as the independent Dominion Cinema and a range of multiplexes.[199]

Edinburgh has a healthy popular music scene. Occasionally large concerts are staged at Murrayfield and Meadowbank, while mid-sized events take place at smaller venues such as 'The Corn Exchange', 'The Liquid Rooms' and 'The Bongo Club'. In 2010, PRS for Music listed Edinburgh among the UK's top ten 'most musical' cities.[200] Several city pubs are well known for their live performances of folk music. They include 'Sandy Bell's' in Forrest Road, 'Captain's Bar' in South College Street and 'Whistlebinkies' in South Bridge.

Like many other cities in the UK, numerous nightclub venues host Electronic dance music events.[201]

Edinburgh is home to a flourishing group of contemporary composers such as Nigel Osborne, Peter Nelson, Lyell Cresswell, Hafliði Hallgrímsson, Edward Harper, Robert Crawford, Robert Dow and John McLeod. McLeod's music is heard regularly on BBC Radio 3 and throughout the UK.[202]

Media

Newspapers

The main local newspaper is the Edinburgh Evening News. It is owned and published alongside its sister titles The Scotsman and Scotland on Sunday by JPIMedia.[203]

Radio

The city has two commercial radio stations: Forth 1, a station which broadcasts mainstream chart music, and Forth 2 on medium wave which plays classic hits.[204] Capital Scotland and Eklipse Sports Radio also have transmitters covering Edinburgh. Along with the UK national radio stations, BBC Radio Scotland and the Gaelic language service BBC Radio nan Gàidheal are also broadcast. DAB digital radio is broadcast over two local multiplexes. BFBS Radio broadcasts from studios on the base at Dreghorn Barracks across the city on 98.5FM as part of its UK Bases network. Small scale DAB started October 2022 with numerous community stations onboard

Television

Television, along with most radio services, is broadcast to the city from the Craigkelly transmitting station situated in Fife on the opposite side of the Firth of Forth[205] and the Black Hill transmitting station in North Lanarkshire to the west.

There are no television stations based in the city. Edinburgh Television existed in the late 1990s to early 2003[206] and STV Edinburgh existed from 2015 to 2018.[207][208]

Museums, libraries and galleries

Edinburgh has many museums and libraries. These include the National Museum of Scotland, the National Library of Scotland, National War Museum, the Museum of Edinburgh, Surgeons' Hall Museum, the Writers' Museum, the Museum of Childhood and Dynamic Earth. The Museum on The Mound has exhibits on money and banking.[209]

Edinburgh Zoo, covering 82 acres (33 ha) on Corstorphine Hill, is the second most visited paid tourist attraction in Scotland,[210] and home to two giant pandas, Tian Tian and Yang Guang, on loan from the People's Republic of China.

Edinburgh is also home to The Royal Yacht Britannia, decommissioned in 1997 and now a five-star visitor attraction and evening events venue permanently berthed at Ocean Terminal.

Edinburgh contains Scotland's three National Galleries of Art as well as numerous smaller art galleries.[211] The national collection is housed in the Scottish National Gallery, located on The Mound, comprising the linked National Gallery of Scotland building and the Royal Scottish Academy building. Contemporary collections are shown in the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art which occupies a split site at Belford. The Scottish National Portrait Gallery on Queen Street focuses on portraits and photography.

The council-owned City Art Centre in Market Street mounts regular art exhibitions. Across the road, The Fruitmarket Gallery offers world-class exhibitions of contemporary art, featuring work by British and international artists with both emerging and established international reputations.[212]

The city hosts several of Scotland's galleries and organisations dedicated to contemporary visual art. Significant strands of this infrastructure include Creative Scotland, Edinburgh College of Art, Talbot Rice Gallery (University of Edinburgh), Collective Gallery (based at the City Observatory) and the Edinburgh Annuale.

There are also many small private shops/galleries that provide space to showcase works from local artists.[213]

Shopping

The locale around Princes Street is the main shopping area in the city centre, with souvenir shops, chain stores such as Boots the Chemist, Edinburgh Woollen Mill, H&M and Jenners.[214] George Street, north of Princes Street, is the preferred location for some upmarket shops and independent stores.[214] At the east end of Princes Street, the redeveloped St James Quarter opened its doors in June 2021,[215] while next to the Balmoral Hotel and Waverley Station is Waverley Market. Multrees Walk, adjacent to the St. James Centre, is a recent addition to the central shopping district, dominated by the presence of Harvey Nichols. Shops here include Louis Vuitton, Mulberry and Calvin Klein.[214]

Edinburgh also has substantial retail parks outside the city centre. These include The Gyle Shopping Centre and Hermiston Gait in the west of the city, Cameron Toll Shopping Centre, Straiton Retail Park (actually just outside the city, in Midlothian) and Fort Kinnaird in the south and east, and Ocean Terminal in the north on the Leith waterfront.[216]

Governance

Local government

 

Following local government reorganisation in 1996, the City of Edinburgh Council constitutes one of the 32 council areas of Scotland.[217] Like all other local authorities of Scotland, the council has powers over most matters of local administration such as housing, planning, local transport, parks, economic development and regeneration.[218] The council comprises 63 elected councillors, returned from 17 multi-member electoral wards in the city.[219]

Following the 2007 City of Edinburgh Council election the incumbent Labour Party lost majority control of the council after 23 years to a Liberal Democrat/SNP coalition.[220]

After the 2017 election, the SNP and Labour formed a coalition administration, which lasted until the next election in 2022.

The 2022 City of Edinburgh Council election resulted in the most politically balanced council in the UK, with 19 SNP, 13 Labour, 12 Liberal Democrat, 10 Green and 9 Conservative councillors. A minority Labour administration was formed, being voted in by Scottish Conservative and Scottish Liberal Democrat councillors. The SNP and Greens presented a coalition agreement, but could not command majority support in the Council. This caused controversy amongst the Scottish Labour Party group for forming an administration supported by Conservatives and led to the suspension of two Labour councillors on the Council for abstaining on the vote to approve the new administration.[221]

The city's coat of arms was registered by the Lord Lyon King of Arms in 1732.[222]

Scottish Parliament

 
The debating chamber of the Scottish Parliament

Edinburgh, like all of Scotland, is represented in the Scottish Parliament, situated in the Holyrood area of the city. For electoral purposes, the city is divided into six constituencies which, along with 3 seats outside of the city, form part of the Lothian region.[223] Each constituency elects one Member of the Scottish Parliament (MSP) by the first past the post system of election, and the region elects seven additional MSPs to produce a result based on a form of proportional representation.[223]

As of the 2021 election, the Scottish National Party have four MSPs: Ash Denham for Edinburgh Eastern, Ben Macpherson for Edinburgh Northern and Leith and Gordon MacDonald for Edinburgh Pentlands and Angus Robertson for Edinburgh Central constituencies. Alex Cole-Hamilton, the Leader of the Scottish Liberal Democrats represents Edinburgh Western and Daniel Johnson of the Scottish Labour Party represents Edinburgh Southern constituency.

In addition, the city is also represented by seven regional MSPs representing the Lothian electoral region: The Conservatives have three regional MSPs: Jeremy Balfour, Miles Briggs and Sue Webber, Labour have two regional MSPs: Sarah Boyack and Foysol Choudhury and Scottish Greens had two regional MSP elected: Green's Co-Leader Lorna Slater and Alison Johnstone. However, following her election as the Presiding Officer of the 6th Session of the Scottish Parliament on 13 May 2021, Alison Johnstone has abided by the established parliamentary convention for speakers and renounced all affiliation with her former political party for the duration of her term as Presiding Officer. So she presently sits as an independent MSP for the Lothians Region.[citation needed]

UK Parliament

Edinburgh is also represented in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom by five Members of Parliament. The city is divided into Edinburgh North and Leith, Edinburgh East, Edinburgh South, Edinburgh South West, and Edinburgh West,[224] each constituency electing one member by the first past the post system.

Since the 2019 UK General election, Edinburgh is represented by three Scottish National Party MPs (Deirdre Brock, Edinburgh North and Leith/Tommy Sheppard, Edinburgh East/Joanna Cherry, Edinburgh South West), one Liberal Democrat MP in Edinburgh West (Christine Jardine) and one Labour MP in Edinburgh South (Ian Murray).

Transport

Air

Edinburgh Airport is Scotland's busiest airport and the principal international gateway to the capital, handling over 14.7 million passengers; it was also the sixth-busiest airport in the United Kingdom by total passengers in 2019.[225][226] In anticipation of rising passenger numbers, the former operator of the airport BAA outlined a draft masterplan in 2011 to provide for the expansion of the airfield and the terminal building. In June 2012, Global Infrastructure Partners purchased the airport for £807 million.[227] The possibility of building a second runway to cope with an increased number of aircraft movements has also been mooted.[228]

Buses

 
A Lothian Bus on North Bridge

Travel in Edinburgh is undertaken predominantly by bus. Lothian Buses, the successor company to Edinburgh Corporation Transport Department, operate the majority of city bus services within the city and to surrounding suburbs, with the most routes running via Princes Street. Services further afield operate from the Edinburgh Bus Station off St Andrew Square and Waterloo Place and are operated mainly by Stagecoach East Scotland, Scottish Citylink, National Express Coaches and Borders Buses.

Lothian Buses and McGill's Scotland East operate the city's branded public tour buses. The night bus service and airport buses are mainly operated by Lothian Buses link.[229] In 2019, Lothian Buses recorded 124.2 million passenger journeys.[230]

To tackle traffic congestion, Edinburgh is now served by six park & ride sites on the periphery of the city at Sheriffhall (in Midlothian), Ingliston, Riccarton, Inverkeithing (in Fife), Newcraighall and Straiton (in Midlothian). A referendum of Edinburgh residents in February 2005 rejected a proposal to introduce congestion charging in the city. [231]

Railway

 
A train preparing to depart from Edinburgh Waverley Station

Edinburgh Waverley is the second-busiest railway station in Scotland, with only Glasgow Central handling more passengers. On the evidence of passenger entries and exits between April 2015 and March 2016, Edinburgh Waverley is the fifth-busiest station outside London; it is also the UK's second biggest station in terms of the number of platforms and area size.[232] Waverley is the terminus for most trains arriving from London King's Cross and the departure point for many rail services within Scotland operated by ScotRail.

To the west of the city centre lies Haymarket station, which is an important commuter stop. Opened in 2003, Edinburgh Park station serves the Gyle business park in the west of the city and the nearby Gogarburn headquarters of the Royal Bank of Scotland. The Edinburgh Crossrail route connects Edinburgh Park with Haymarket, Edinburgh Waverley and the suburban stations of Brunstane and Newcraighall in the east of the city.[233] There are also commuter lines to Edinburgh Gateway, South Gyle and Dalmeny, the latter serving South Queensferry by the Forth Bridges, and to Wester Hailes and Curriehill in the south-west of the city.

Trams

 
Edinburgh Trams in Shandwick Place

Edinburgh Trams became operational on 31 May 2014. The city had been without a tram system since Edinburgh Corporation Tramways ceased on 16 November 1956.[234] Following parliamentary approval in 2007, construction began in early 2008. The first stage of the project was expected to be completed by July 2011[235] but, following delays caused by extra utility work and a long-running contractual dispute between the council and the main contractor, Bilfinger SE, the project was rescheduled.[236][237][238] The completed line is 8.7 mi (14.0 km) in length, running from Edinburgh Airport, west of the city, to its terminus at York Place in the city centre's East End. Phase two of the tram project, which sees the existing section of Line 1 (Airport to York Place) tram line extended down Leith Walk to Ocean Terminal and terminate at Newhaven, adding an additional eight new tram stops and connecting Leith and the waterfront to the tram system. As of August 2022 this project is currently nearing completion, and is scheduled to open to passenger use in spring 2023.[239]

Should the original plan be taken to completion, trams will also run from Haymarket through Ravelston and Craigleith to Granton Square on the Waterfront Edinburgh.[240] Long-term proposals envisage a line running west from the airport to Ratho and Newbridge and another connecting Granton Square to Newhaven via Lower Granton Road, thus completing the Line 1 (North Edinburgh) loop.[241] A further line serving the south of the city has also been suggested.

 
Edinburgh tramway map

Lothian Buses and Edinburgh Trams are both owned and operated by Transport for Edinburgh.

Despite its modern transport links, Edinburgh has been named the most congested city in the UK for the fourth year running. [242]

Education

There are three universities in Edinburgh: the University of Edinburgh, Heriot-Watt University and Edinburgh Napier University.

Established by royal charter in 1583, the University of Edinburgh is one of Scotland's ancient universities and is the fourth oldest in the country after St Andrews, Glasgow and Aberdeen.[243] Originally centred on Old College the university expanded to premises on The Mound, the Royal Mile and George Square.[243] Today, the King's Buildings in the south of the city contain most of the schools within the College of Science and Engineering. In 2002, the medical school moved to purpose built accommodation adjacent to the new Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh at Little France. The university is placed 16th in the QS World University Rankings for 2022.[244]

Heriot-Watt University is based at the Riccarton campus in the west of Edinburgh. Originally established in 1821, as the world's first mechanics' institute, it was granted university status by royal charter in 1966. It has other campuses in the Scottish Borders, Orkney, United Arab Emirates and Putrajaya in Malaysia. It takes the name Heriot-Watt from Scottish inventor James Watt and Scottish philanthropist and goldsmith George Heriot. Heriot-Watt University has been named International University of the Year by The Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide 2018. In the latest Research Excellence Framework, it was ranked overall in the Top 25% of UK universities and 1st in Scotland for research impact.

Edinburgh Napier University was originally founded as the Napier College, which was renamed Napier Polytechnic in 1986 and gained university status in 1992.[245] Edinburgh Napier University has campuses in the south and west of the city, including the former Merchiston Tower and Craiglockhart Hydropathic.[245] It is home to the Screen Academy Scotland.

Queen Margaret University was located in Edinburgh before it moved to a new campus just outside the city boundary on the edge of Musselburgh in 2008.[246]

Until 2012, further education colleges in the city included Jewel and Esk College (incorporating Leith Nautical College founded in 1903), Telford College, opened in 1968, and Stevenson College, opened in 1970. These have now been amalgamated to form Edinburgh College. Scotland's Rural College also has a campus in south Edinburgh. Other institutions include the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh and the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh which were established by royal charter in 1506 and 1681 respectively. The Trustees Drawing Academy of Edinburgh, founded in 1760, became the Edinburgh College of Art in 1907.[247]

There are 18 nursery, 94 primary and 23 secondary schools administered by the City of Edinburgh Council.[248] Edinburgh is home to The Royal High School, one of the oldest schools in the country and the world. The city also has several independent, fee-paying schools including Edinburgh Academy, Fettes College, George Heriot's School, George Watson's College, Merchiston Castle School, Stewart's Melville College and The Mary Erskine School. In 2009, the proportion of pupils attending independent schools was 24.2%, far above the Scottish national average of just over 7% and higher than in any other region of Scotland.[249] In August 2013, the City of Edinburgh Council opened the city's first stand-alone Gaelic primary school, Bun-sgoil Taobh na Pàirce.[250]

Healthcare

 
The Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh is the main public hospital for the city.

The main NHS Lothian hospitals serving the Edinburgh area are the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh, which includes the University of Edinburgh Medical School, and the Western General Hospital,[251] which has a large cancer treatment centre and nurse-led Minor Injuries Clinic.[252] The Royal Edinburgh Hospital in Morningside specialises in mental health. The Royal Hospital for Children and Young People, colloquially referred to as the Sick Kids, is a specialist paediatrics hospital.

There are two private hospitals: Murrayfield Hospital in the west of the city and Shawfair Hospital in the south; both are owned by Spire Healthcare.[251]

Sport

Football

Men's

Edinburgh has three football clubs that play in the Scottish Professional Football League (SPFL): Heart of Midlothian, founded in 1874, Hibernian, founded in 1875 and F.C. Edinburgh, founded in 1966.

Heart of Midlothian and Hibernian are known locally as "Hearts" and "Hibs", respectively. Both play in the Scottish Premiership.[253] They are the oldest city rivals in Scotland and the Edinburgh derby is one of the oldest derby matches in world football. Both clubs have won the Scottish league championship four times. Hearts have won the Scottish Cup eight times and the Scottish League Cup four times. Hibs have won the Scottish Cup and the Scottish League Cup three times each. Edinburgh City were promoted to Scottish League Two in the 2015–16 season, becoming the first club to win promotion to the SPFL via the pyramid system playoffs.

Edinburgh was also home to four other former Scottish Football League clubs: the original Edinburgh City (founded in 1928), Leith Athletic, Meadowbank Thistle and St Bernard's. Meadowbank Thistle played at Meadowbank Stadium until 1995, when the club moved to Livingston and became Livingston F.C. The Scottish national team has very occasionally played at Easter Road and Tynecastle, although its normal home stadium is Hampden Park in Glasgow. St Bernard's' New Logie Green was used to host the 1896 Scottish Cup Final, the only time the match has been played outside Glasgow.[254]

The city also plays host to Lowland Football League clubs Civil Service Strollers, Edinburgh University and Spartans, as well as East of Scotland League clubs Craigroyston, Edinburgh United, Heriot-Watt University, Leith Athletic, Lothian Thistle Hutchison Vale, and Tynecastle.

Women's

In women's football, Hearts, Hibs and Spartans play in the SWPL 1.[255] Hutchison Vale and Boroughmuir Thistle play in the SWPL 2.[256]

Rugby

The Scotland national rugby union team play at Murrayfield Stadium, and the professional Edinburgh Rugby team play at the nextdoor Edinburgh Rugby Stadium; both are owned by the Scottish Rugby Union and are also used for other events, including music concerts. Murrayfield is the largest capacity stadium in Scotland, seating 67,144 spectators.[257] Edinburgh is also home to Scottish Premiership teams Boroughmuir RFC, Currie RFC, the Edinburgh Academicals, Heriot's Rugby Club and Watsonians RFC.[258]

The Edinburgh Academicals ground at Raeburn Place was the location of the world's first international rugby game on 27 March 1871, between Scotland and England.[259]

Rugby league is represented by the Edinburgh Eagles who play in the Rugby League Conference Scotland Division. Murrayfield Stadium has hosted the Magic Weekend where all Super League matches are played in the stadium over one weekend.

Other sports

The Scottish cricket team, which represents Scotland internationally, play their home matches at the Grange cricket club.[260]

The Edinburgh Capitals are the latest of a succession of ice hockey clubs in the Scottish capital. Previously Edinburgh was represented by the Murrayfield Racers (2018), the original Murrayfield Racers (who folded in 1996) and the Edinburgh Racers. The club play their home games at the Murrayfield Ice Rink and have competed in the eleven-team professional Scottish National League (SNL) since the 2018–19 season.[261]

Next door to Murrayfield Ice Rink is a 7-sheeter dedicated curling facility where curling is played from October to March each season.

Caledonia Pride are the only women's professional basketball team in Scotland. Established in 2016, the team compete in the UK wide Women's British Basketball League and play their home matches at the Oriam National Performance Centre. Edinburgh also has several men's basketball teams within the Scottish National League. Boroughmuir Blaze, City of Edinburgh Kings and Edinburgh Lions all compete in Division 1 of the National League, and Pleasance B.C. compete in Division 2.

The Edinburgh Diamond Devils is a baseball club which won its first Scottish Championship in 1991 as the "Reivers." 1992 saw the team repeat the achievement, becoming the first team to do so in league history. The same year saw the start of their first youth team, the Blue Jays. The club adopted its present name in 1999.[262]

Edinburgh has also hosted national and international sports events including the World Student Games, the 1970 British Commonwealth Games,[263] the 1986 Commonwealth Games[263] and the inaugural 2000 Commonwealth Youth Games.[264] For the 1970 Games the city built Olympic standard venues and facilities including Meadowbank Stadium and the Royal Commonwealth Pool. The Pool underwent refurbishment in 2012 and hosted the Diving competition in the 2014 Commonwealth Games which were held in Glasgow.[265]

In American football, the Scottish Claymores played WLAF/NFL Europe games at Murrayfield, including their World Bowl 96 victory. From 1995 to 1997 they played all their games there, from 1998 to 2000 they split their home matches between Murrayfield and Glasgow's Hampden Park, then moved to Glasgow full-time, with one final Murrayfield appearance in 2002.[266] The city's most successful non-professional team are the Edinburgh Wolves who play at Meadowbank Stadium.[267]

The Edinburgh Marathon has been held annually in the city since 2003 with more than 16,000 runners taking part on each occasion.[268] Its organisers have called it "the fastest marathon in the UK" due to the elevation drop of 40 m (130 ft).[269] The city also organises a half-marathon, as well as 10 km (6.2 mi) and 5 km (3.1 mi) races, including a 5 km (3 mi) race on 1 January each year.

Edinburgh has a speedway team, the Edinburgh Monarchs, which, since the loss of its stadium in the city, has raced at the Lothian Arena in Armadale, West Lothian. The Monarchs have won the Premier League championship five times in their history, in 2003[270] and again in 2008,[271] 2010, 2014 and 2015.

People

Edinburgh has a long literary tradition, which became especially evident during the Scottish Enlightenment. This heritage and the city's lively literary life in the present led to it being declared the first UNESCO City of Literature in 2004.[272][273] Prominent authors who have lived in Edinburgh include the economist Adam Smith, born in Kirkcaldy and author of The Wealth of Nations,[274] James Boswell, biographer of Samuel Johnson; Sir Walter Scott, creator of the historical novel and author of works such as Rob Roy, Ivanhoe, and Heart of Midlothian; James Hogg, author of The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner; Robert Louis Stevenson,[275] creator of Treasure Island, Kidnapped, and Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde; Sir Arthur Conan Doyle, the creator of Sherlock Holmes; Muriel Spark, author of The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie; Irvine Welsh, author of Trainspotting, whose novels are mostly set in the city and often written in colloquial Scots; [276] Ian Rankin, author of the Inspector Rebus series of crime thrillers, Alexander McCall Smith, author of the No. 1 Ladies' Detective Agency series,[277] and J. K. Rowling, author of Harry Potter, who wrote much of her first book in Edinburgh coffee shops and now lives in the Cramond area of the city.[278]

 
Statue of James Clerk Maxwell, George Street, Edinburgh

Scotland has a rich history of science and engineering, with Edinburgh producing a number of leading figures. John Napier, inventor of logarithms, was born in Merchiston Tower and lived and died in the city.[279] His house now forms part of the original campus of Napier University which was named in his honour. He lies buried under St. Cuthbert's Church. James Clerk Maxwell, founder of the modern theory of electromagnetism, was born at 14 India Street (now the home of the James Clerk Maxwell Foundation) and educated at the Edinburgh Academy and the University of Edinburgh,[274] as was the engineer and telephone pioneer Alexander Graham Bell.[274] James Braidwood, who organised Britain's first municipal fire brigade, was also born in the city and began his career there.

Other names connected with the city include physicist Max Born, a principle founder of Quantum mechanics and Nobel laureate;[280] Charles Darwin, the biologist who propounded the theory of natural selection;[274] David Hume, philosopher, economist and historian;[274] James Hutton, regarded as the "Father of Geology";[274] Joseph Black, the chemist who discovered Magnesium and Carbon Dioxide, and one of the founders of Thermodynamics;[274] pioneering medical researchers Joseph Lister and James Young Simpson;[274] chemist and discoverer of the element nitrogen Daniel Rutherford; Colin Maclaurin, mathematician and developer of the Maclaurin series,[281] and Ian Wilmut, the geneticist involved in the cloning of Dolly the sheep just outside Edinburgh, at the Roslin Institute.[274] The stuffed carcass of Dolly the sheep is now on display in the National Museum of Scotland.[282] The latest in a long line of science celebrities associated with the city is theoretical physicist, Nobel laureate and Professor Emeritus at the University of Edinburgh Peter Higgs, born in Newcastle but resident in Edinburgh for most of his academic career, after whom the Higgs boson particle has been named.[283]

 
Deacon Brodie on Edinburgh's Royal Mile

Edinburgh has been the birthplace of actors like Alastair Sim and Sir Sean Connery, known for being the first cinematic James Bond,[284] the comedian and actor Ronnie Corbett, best known as one of The Two Ronnies,[285] and the impressionist Rory Bremner. Famous artists from the city include the portrait painters Sir Henry Raeburn, Sir David Wilkie and Allan Ramsay.

The city has produced or been home to some very successful musicians in recent decades, particularly Ian Anderson, front man of the band Jethro Tull, The Incredible String Band, the folk duo The Corries, Wattie Buchan, lead singer and founding member of punk band The Exploited, Shirley Manson, lead singer of the band Garbage, the Bay City Rollers, The Proclaimers, Boards of Canada and Idlewild.

Edinburgh is the birthplace of former British Prime Minister Tony Blair who attended the city's Fettes College.[286]

Notorious criminals from Edinburgh's past include Deacon Brodie, head of a trades guild and Edinburgh city councillor by day but a burglar by night, who is said to have been the inspiration for Robert Louis Stevenson's story, the Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde,[287] and murderers Burke and Hare who delivered fresh corpses for dissection to the famous anatomist Robert Knox.[288]

Another well-known Edinburgh resident was Greyfriars Bobby. The small Skye Terrier reputedly kept vigil over his dead master's grave in Greyfriars Kirkyard for 14 years in the 1860s and 1870s, giving rise to a story of canine devotion which plays a part in attracting visitors to the city.[289]

International relations

Twin towns and sister cities

The City of Edinburgh has entered into 14 international twinning arrangements since 1954.[290] Most of the arrangements are styled as Twin Cities but the agreement with Kraków is designated as a Partner City,[290] and the agreement with Kyoto Prefecture is officially styled as a Friendship Link, reflecting its status as the only region to be twinned with Edinburgh.[290]

City Since
  Munich, Germany 1954
  Nice, France 1958[291][292]
  Florence, Italy 1964
  Dunedin, New Zealand 1974
  Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada 1977[293]
  San Diego, California, United States 1977
  Xi'an, China 1985
  Segovia, Spain 1985[294]
  Kyiv, Ukraine 1989
  Aalborg, Denmark 1991[295]
  Kyoto Prefecture, Japan 1994
  Kathmandu, Nepal 1994
  Kraków, Poland 1995[296]
  Saint Petersburg, Russia 1995[297][298]
  Shenzhen, China 2019[299]

For a list of consulates in Edinburgh, see List of diplomatic missions in Scotland.

See also

Notes

  1. ^ a b c New category created for the 2011 census
  2. ^ Category restructured for the 2011 census
  1. ^ This figure does not include Hong Kong and Macau.

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edinburgh, this, article, about, capital, scotland, other, uses, disambiguation, listen, scots, ˈɛdɪnbʌrə, scottish, gaelic, dùn, Èideann, ˈeːtʲən, capital, city, scotland, council, areas, city, historically, part, county, midlothian, formally, called, county,. This article is about the capital of Scotland For other uses see Edinburgh disambiguation Edinburgh ˈ ɛ d ɪ n b er e listen 8 9 10 Scots ˈɛdɪnbʌre Scottish Gaelic Dun Eideann ˌt un ˈeːtʲen ˠ is the capital city of Scotland and one of its 32 council areas The city was historically part of the county of Midlothian formally called the county of Edinburgh or Edinburghshire until 1947 but was administered separately from the surrounding county from 1482 onwards It is located in Lothian on the southern shore of the Firth of Forth Edinburgh is Scotland s second most populous city after Glasgow and the seventh most populous city in the United Kingdom Edinburgh Dun EideannCapital city and council areaCity of EdinburghFrom top left to right An aerial view of Edinburgh city centre Skyline of Edinburgh city skyline with Edinburgh Castle in the distance Scott Monument Calton Hill the National Gallery of Scotland The Scottish Parliament Building and the front facade of Edinburgh CastleFlagCoat of armsNicknames Auld Reekie Edina Athens of the North Motto s Nisi Dominus Frustra Latin Without the Lord all is in vainEdinburghLocation within ScotlandShow map of ScotlandEdinburghLocation within the United KingdomShow map of the United KingdomEdinburghLocation within EuropeShow map of EuropeCoordinates 55 57 12 N 03 11 21 W 55 95333 N 3 18917 W 55 95333 3 18917 Coordinates 55 57 12 N 03 11 21 W 55 95333 N 3 18917 W 55 95333 3 18917Sovereign stateUnited KingdomCountryScotlandCouncil areaCity of EdinburghLieutenancy areaEdinburghFoundedBefore 7th century ADBurgh Charter1125City status1633Government TypeUnitary authority Governing bodyCity of Edinburgh Council Lord Provost of EdinburghRobert Aldridge MSPs6 Ash Denham SNP Angus Robertson SNP Daniel Johnson Lab Gordon MacDonald SNP Ben Macpherson SNP Alex Cole Hamilton LD MPs5 Joanna Cherry SNP Tommy Sheppard SNP Ian Murray Lab Deidre Brock SNP Christine Jardine LD Area Capital city and council area102 sq mi 264 km2 Urban46 sq mi 119 km2 Elevation 4 154 ft 47 m Population mid 2020 est Capital city and council area506 520 City 1 518 500 Council area 2 Density4 730 sq mi 1 828 km2 Urban530 990 1 Metro901 455 3 Language s EnglishScotsDemonymEdinburgher 5 6 Time zoneUTC 0 GMT Summer DST UTC 1 BST Postcode areasEH1 17 EH28 30Area code0131ISO 3166 2GB EDHONS codeS12000036OS grid referenceNT275735NUTS 3UKM25Primary AirportEdinburgh AirportGDP 33 billion 7 GDP per capita 58 000 7 Websitewww wbr edinburgh wbr gov wbr ukUNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial nameOld and New Towns of EdinburghCriteriaCultural ii ivReference728Inscription1995 19th Session UNESCO World Heritage SiteOfficial nameThe Forth BridgeCriteriaCultural i ivReference1485Inscription2015 39th Session Recognised as the capital of Scotland since at least the 15th century Edinburgh is the seat of the Scottish Government the Scottish Parliament and the highest courts in Scotland The city s Palace of Holyroodhouse is the official residence of the British monarchy in Scotland The city has long been a centre of education particularly in the fields of medicine Scottish law literature philosophy the sciences and engineering It is the second largest financial centre in the United Kingdom and the city s historical and cultural attractions have made it the UK s second most visited tourist destination attracting 4 9 million visits including 2 4 million from overseas in 2018 11 12 Time Out magazine rated Edinburgh the best city in the world in 2022 13 Edinburgh s official population estimates are 506 520 mid 2020 for the locality 1 518 500 mid 2019 for the City of Edinburgh council area which takes in some outlying villages in the western part of its territory 2 and 1 384 950 2019 for the wider Edinburgh and South East Scotland city region 14 which also includes East Lothian Fife Midlothian the Scottish Borders and West Lothian 15 The city is the annual venue of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland It is home to national cultural institutions such as the National Museum of Scotland the National Library of Scotland and the Scottish National Gallery The University of Edinburgh founded in 1582 and now one of three in the city is considered one of the best research institutions in the world most recently placing 15th in the QS World University Rankings for 2023 16 The city is also known for the Edinburgh International Festival and the Fringe the latter being the world s largest annual international arts festival Historic sites in Edinburgh include Edinburgh Castle the Palace of Holyroodhouse the churches of St Giles Greyfriars and the Canongate and the extensive Georgian New Town built in the 18th 19th centuries Edinburgh s Old Town and New Town together are listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site 17 which has been managed by Edinburgh World Heritage since 1999 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Nicknames 3 History 3 1 Early history 3 2 17th century 3 3 18th century 3 4 19th and 20th centuries 3 5 21st century 4 Geography 4 1 Cityscape 4 2 Areas 4 3 Climate 5 Demography 5 1 Current 5 2 Historical 5 3 Religion 6 Economy 7 Culture 7 1 Festivals and celebrations 7 1 1 Edinburgh festival 7 1 2 Edinburgh s Hogmanay 7 1 3 Beltane and other festivals 7 2 Music theatre and film 7 3 Media 7 3 1 Newspapers 7 3 2 Radio 7 3 3 Television 7 4 Museums libraries and galleries 7 5 Shopping 8 Governance 8 1 Local government 8 2 Scottish Parliament 8 3 UK Parliament 9 Transport 9 1 Air 9 2 Buses 9 3 Railway 9 4 Trams 10 Education 11 Healthcare 12 Sport 12 1 Football 12 1 1 Men s 12 1 2 Women s 12 2 Rugby 12 3 Other sports 13 People 14 International relations 14 1 Twin towns and sister cities 15 See also 16 Notes 17 References 18 Further reading 19 External linksEtymology EditMain article Etymology of Edinburgh Edin the root of the city s name derives from Eidyn the name for this region in Cumbric the Brittonic Celtic language formerly spoken there The name s meaning is unknown 18 The district of Eidyn is centred on the stronghold Din Eidyn the dun or hillfort of Eidyn 18 This stronghold is believed to have been located at Castle Rock now the site of Edinburgh Castle Eidyn was conquered by the Angles of Bernicia in the 7th century and later occupied by the Scots in the 10th century 19 As the language shifted to Northumbrian Old English which evolved into Scots the Brittonic din in Din Eidyn was replaced by burh producing Edinburgh Similarly din became dun in Scottish Gaelic producing Dun Eideann 18 20 Nicknames Edit Surgeons Hall one of the Greek Revival buildings that earned Edinburgh the nickname Athens of the North The city is affectionately nicknamed Auld Reekie 21 22 Scots for Old Smoky for the views from the country of the smoke covered Old Town A remark on a poem in an 1800 collection of the poems of Allan Ramsay said Auld Reeky A name the country people give Edinburgh from the cloud of smoke or reek that is always impending over it 23 Thomas Carlyle said Smoke cloud hangs over old Edinburgh for ever since Aeneas Silvius s time and earlier the people have the art very strange to Aeneas of burning a certain sort of black stones and Edinburgh with its chimneys is called Auld Reekie by the country people 24 A character in Walter Scott s The Abbot says yonder stands Auld Reekie you may see the smoke hover over her at twenty miles distance 25 Robert Chambers who said that the sobriquet could not be traced before the reign of Charles II attributed the name to a Fife laird Durham of Largo who regulated the bedtime of his children by the smoke rising above Edinburgh from the fires of the tenements It s time now bairns to tak the beuks and gang to our beds for yonder s Auld Reekie I see putting on her nicht cap 26 Edinburgh has been popularly called the Athens of the North since the early 19th century 27 References to Athens such as Athens of Britain and Modern Athens had been made as early as the 1760s The similarities were seen to be topographical but also intellectual Edinburgh s Castle Rock reminded returning grand tourists of the Athenian Acropolis as did aspects of the neoclassical architecture and layout of New Town 27 Both cities had flatter fertile agricultural land sloping down to a port several miles away respectively Leith and Piraeus Intellectually the Scottish Enlightenment with its humanist and rationalist outlook was influenced by Ancient Greek philosophy 28 In 1822 artist Hugh William Williams organized an exhibition that showed his paintings of Athens alongside views of Edinburgh and the idea of a direct parallel between both cities quickly caught the popular imagination 29 When plans were drawn up in the early 19th century to architecturally develop Calton Hill the design of the National Monument directly copied Athens Parthenon 30 Tom Stoppard s character Archie of Jumpers said perhaps playing on Reykjavik meaning smoky bay that the Reykjavik of the South would be more appropriate 31 The city has also been known by several Latin names such as Edinburgum while the adjectival forms Edinburgensis and Edinensis are used in educational and scientific contexts 32 33 Edina is a late 18th century poetical form used by the Scots poets Robert Fergusson and Robert Burns Embra or Embro are colloquialisms from the same time 34 as in Robert Garioch s Embro to the Ploy 35 Ben Jonson described it as Britaine s other eye 36 and Sir Walter Scott referred to it as yon Empress of the North 37 Robert Louis Stevenson also a son of the city wrote that Edinburgh is what Paris ought to be 38 History EditMain article History of Edinburgh Early history Edit Edinburgh showing Arthur s Seat one of the earliest known sites of human habitation in the area The earliest known human habitation in the Edinburgh area was at Cramond where evidence was found of a Mesolithic camp site dated to c 8500 BC 39 Traces of later Bronze Age and Iron Age settlements have been found on Castle Rock Arthur s Seat Craiglockhart Hill and the Pentland Hills 40 When the Romans arrived in Lothian at the end of the 1st century AD they found a Brittonic Celtic tribe whose name they recorded as the Votadini 41 The Votadini transitioned into the Gododdin kingdom in the Early Middle Ages with Eidyn serving as one of the kingdom s districts During this period the Castle Rock site thought to have been the stronghold of Din Eidyn emerged as the kingdom s major centre 42 The medieval poem Y Gododdin describes a war band from across the Brittonic world who gathered in Eidyn before a fateful raid this may describe a historical event around AD 600 43 44 45 In 638 the Gododdin stronghold was besieged by forces loyal to King Oswald of Northumbria and around this time control of Lothian passed to the Angles Their influence continued for the next three centuries until around 950 when during the reign of Indulf son of Constantine II the burh fortress named in the 10th century Pictish Chronicle as oppidum Eden 46 was abandoned to the Scots It thenceforth remained for the most part under their jurisdiction 47 The royal burgh was founded by King David I in the early 12th century on land belonging to the Crown though the date of its charter is unknown 48 The first documentary evidence of the medieval burgh is a royal charter c 1124 1127 by King David I granting a toft in burgo meo de Edenesburg to the Priory of Dunfermline 49 The shire of Edinburgh seems to have also been created in the reign of David I possibly covering all of Lothian at first but by 1305 the eastern and western parts of Lothian had become Haddingtonshire and Linlithgowshire leaving Edinburgh as the county town of a shire covering the central part of Lothian which was called Edinburghshire or Midlothian the latter name being an informal but commonly used alternative until the county s name was legally changed in 1947 50 51 Edinburgh was largely in English hands from 1291 to 1314 and from 1333 to 1341 during the Wars of Scottish Independence When the English invaded Scotland in 1298 King Edward I chose not to enter the English controlled town of Edinburgh but passed by with his army 52 In the middle of the 14th century the French chronicler Jean Froissart described it as the capital of Scotland c 1365 and James III 1451 88 referred to it in the 15th century as the principal burgh of our kingdom 53 In 1482 James III granted the burgh the right to appoint its own sheriff and coroner making the burgh administratively independent from the surrounding county with it becoming a county of itself 54 55 Despite the destruction caused by an English assault in 1544 the town slowly recovered 56 and was at the centre of events in the 16th century Scottish Reformation 57 and 17th century Wars of the Covenant 58 In 1582 Edinburgh s town council was given a royal charter by King James VI permitting the establishment of a university 59 founded as Tounis College Town s College the institution developed into the University of Edinburgh which contributed to Edinburgh s central intellectual role in subsequent centuries 60 17th century Edit Edinburgh in the 17th century Edinburgh around 1690 In 1603 King James VI of Scotland succeeded to the English throne uniting the crowns of Scotland and England in a personal union known as the Union of the Crowns though Scotland remained in all other respects a separate kingdom 61 In 1638 King Charles I s attempt to introduce Anglican church forms in Scotland encountered stiff Presbyterian opposition culminating in the conflicts of the Wars of the Three Kingdoms 62 Subsequent Scottish support for Charles Stuart s restoration to the throne of England resulted in Edinburgh s occupation by Oliver Cromwell s Commonwealth of England forces the New Model Army in 1650 63 In the 17th century Edinburgh s boundaries were still defined by the city s defensive town walls As a result the city s growing population was accommodated by increasing the height of the houses Buildings of 11 storeys or more were common 64 and have been described as forerunners of the modern day skyscraper 65 66 Most of these old structures were replaced by the predominantly Victorian buildings seen in today s Old Town In 1611 an act of parliament created the High Constables of Edinburgh to keep order in the city thought to be the oldest statutory police force in the world 67 18th century Edit A painting showing Edinburgh characters based on John Kay s caricatures behind St Giles Cathedral in the late 18th century Following the Treaty of Union in 1706 the Parliaments of England and Scotland passed Acts of Union in 1706 and 1707 respectively uniting the two kingdoms in the Kingdom of Great Britain effective from 1 May 1707 68 As a consequence the Parliament of Scotland merged with the Parliament of England to form the Parliament of Great Britain which sat at Westminster in London The Union was opposed by many Scots resulting in riots in the city 69 By the first half of the 18th century Edinburgh was described as one of Europe s most densely populated overcrowded and unsanitary towns 70 71 Visitors were struck by the fact that the social classes shared the same urban space even inhabiting the same tenement buildings although here a form of social segregation did prevail whereby shopkeepers and tradesmen tended to occupy the cheaper to rent cellars and garrets while the more well to do professional classes occupied the more expensive middle storeys 72 During the Jacobite rising of 1745 Edinburgh was briefly occupied by the Jacobite Highland Army before its march into England 73 After its eventual defeat at Culloden there followed a period of reprisals and pacification largely directed at the rebellious clans 74 In Edinburgh the Town Council keen to emulate London by initiating city improvements and expansion to the north of the castle 75 reaffirmed its belief in the Union and loyalty to the Hanoverian monarch George III by its choice of names for the streets of the New Town for example Rose Street and Thistle Street and for the royal family George Street Queen Street Hanover Street Frederick Street and Princes Street in honour of George s two sons 76 In the second half of the century the city was at the heart of the Scottish Enlightenment 77 when thinkers like David Hume Adam Smith James Hutton and Joseph Black were familiar figures in its streets Edinburgh became a major intellectual centre earning it the nickname Athens of the North because of its many neo classical buildings and reputation for learning recalling ancient Athens 78 In the 18th century novel The Expedition of Humphry Clinker by Tobias Smollett one character describes Edinburgh as a hotbed of genius 79 Edinburgh was also a major centre for the Scottish book trade The highly successful London bookseller Andrew Millar was apprenticed there to James McEuen 80 From the 1770s onwards the professional and business classes gradually deserted the Old Town in favour of the more elegant one family residences of the New Town a migration that changed the city s social character According to the foremost historian of this development Unity of social feeling was one of the most valuable heritages of old Edinburgh and its disappearance was widely and properly lamented 81 19th and 20th centuries Edit Edinburgh Castle from the Grassmarket photographed by George Washington Wilson circa 1875 Wikisource has original text related to this article Edinburgh 1914 by Robert Louis Stevenson Edinburgh c 1920 Despite an enduring myth to the contrary 82 Edinburgh became an industrial centre 83 with its traditional industries of printing brewing and distilling continuing to grow in the 19th century and joined by new industries such as rubber works engineering works and others By 1821 Edinburgh had been overtaken by Glasgow as Scotland s largest city 84 The city centre between Princes Street and George Street became a major commercial and shopping district a development partly stimulated by the arrival of railways in the 1840s The Old Town became an increasingly dilapidated overcrowded slum with high mortality rates 85 Improvements carried out under Lord Provost William Chambers in the 1860s began the transformation of the area into the predominantly Victorian Old Town seen today 86 More improvements followed in the early 20th century as a result of the work of Patrick Geddes 87 but relative economic stagnation during the two world wars and beyond saw the Old Town deteriorate further before major slum clearance in the 1960s and 1970s began to reverse the process University building developments which transformed the George Square and Potterrow areas proved highly controversial 88 Since the 1990s a new financial district including the Edinburgh International Conference Centre has grown mainly on demolished railway property to the west of the castle stretching into Fountainbridge a run down 19th century industrial suburb which has undergone radical change since the 1980s with the demise of industrial and brewery premises This ongoing development has enabled Edinburgh to maintain its place as the United Kingdom s second largest financial and administrative centre after London 89 90 Financial services now account for a third of all commercial office space in the city 91 The development of Edinburgh Park a new business and technology park covering 38 acres 15 ha 4 mi 6 km west of the city centre has also contributed to the District Council s strategy for the city s major economic regeneration 91 In 1998 the Scotland Act which came into force the following year established a devolved Scottish Parliament and Scottish Executive renamed the Scottish Government since September 2007 92 Both based in Edinburgh they are responsible for governing Scotland while reserved matters such as defence foreign affairs and some elements of income tax remain the responsibility of the Parliament of the United Kingdom in London 93 21st century EditIn 2022 Edinburgh was affected by the 2022 Scotland bin strikes 94 Geography EditCityscape Edit Situated in Scotland s Central Belt Edinburgh lies on the southern shore of the Firth of Forth The city centre is 2 1 2 mi 4 0 km southwest of the shoreline of Leith and 26 mi 42 km inland as the crow flies from the east coast of Scotland and the North Sea at Dunbar 95 While the early burgh grew up near the prominent Castle Rock the modern city is often said to be built on seven hills namely Calton Hill Corstorphine Hill Craiglockhart Hill Braid Hill Blackford Hill Arthur s Seat and the Castle Rock 96 giving rise to allusions to the seven hills of Rome 97 Occupying a narrow gap between the Firth of Forth to the north and the Pentland Hills and their outrunners to the south the city sprawls over a landscape which is the product of early volcanic activity and later periods of intensive glaciation 98 64 65 Igneous activity between 350 and 400 million years ago coupled with faulting led to the creation of tough basalt volcanic plugs which predominate over much of the area 98 64 65 One such example is the Castle Rock which forced the advancing ice sheet to divide sheltering the softer rock and forming a 1 mi long 1 6 km tail of material to the east thus creating a distinctive crag and tail formation 98 64 65 Glacial erosion on the north side of the crag gouged a deep valley later filled by the now drained Nor Loch These features along with another hollow on the rock s south side formed an ideal natural strongpoint upon which Edinburgh Castle was built 98 64 65 Similarly Arthur s Seat is the remains of a volcano dating from the Carboniferous period which was eroded by a glacier moving west to east during the ice age 98 64 65 Erosive action such as plucking and abrasion exposed the rocky crags to the west before leaving a tail of deposited glacial material swept to the east 99 This process formed the distinctive Salisbury Crags a series of teschenite cliffs between Arthur s Seat and the location of the early burgh 100 The residential areas of Marchmont and Bruntsfield are built along a series of drumlin ridges south of the city centre which were deposited as the glacier receded 98 64 65 Other prominent landforms such as Calton Hill and Corstorphine Hill are also products of glacial erosion 98 64 65 The Braid Hills and Blackford Hill are a series of small summits to the south of the city centre that command expansive views looking northwards over the urban area to the Firth of Forth 98 64 65 View of Edinburgh from Blackford Hill Edinburgh is drained by the river named the Water of Leith which rises at the Colzium Springs in the Pentland Hills and runs for 18 miles 29 km through the south and west of the city emptying into the Firth of Forth at Leith 101 The nearest the river gets to the city centre is at Dean Village on the north western edge of the New Town where a deep gorge is spanned by Thomas Telford s Dean Bridge built in 1832 for the road to Queensferry The Water of Leith Walkway is a mixed use trail that follows the course of the river for 19 6 km 12 2 mi from Balerno to Leith 102 Panorama of Edinburgh from Edinburgh Castle with the New Town in the centre and Calton Hill to the right Excepting the shoreline of the Firth of Forth Edinburgh is encircled by a green belt designated in 1957 which stretches from Dalmeny in the west to Prestongrange in the east 103 With an average width of 3 2 km 2 mi the principal objectives of the green belt were to contain the outward expansion of the city and to prevent the agglomeration of urban areas 103 Expansion affecting the green belt is strictly controlled but developments such as Edinburgh Airport and the Royal Highland Showground at Ingliston lie within the zone 103 Similarly suburbs such as Juniper Green and Balerno are situated on green belt land 103 One feature of the Edinburgh green belt is the inclusion of parcels of land within the city which are designated green belt even though they do not connect with the peripheral ring Examples of these independent wedges of green belt include Holyrood Park and Corstorphine Hill 103 Edinburgh Old Town skyline panorama Areas Edit Edinburgh includes former towns and villages that retain much of their original character as settlements in existence before they were absorbed into the expanding city of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries 104 Many areas such as Dalry contain residences that are multi occupancy buildings known as tenements although the more southern and western parts of the city have traditionally been less built up with a greater number of detached and semi detached villas 105 Map showing the areas of central Edinburgh The historic centre of Edinburgh is divided in two by the broad green swathe of Princes Street Gardens To the south the view is dominated by Edinburgh Castle built high on Castle Rock and the long sweep of the Old Town descending towards Holyrood Palace To the north lie Princes Street and the New Town The West End includes the financial district with insurance and banking offices as well as the Edinburgh International Conference Centre Edinburgh s Old and New Towns were listed as a UNESCO World Heritage Site in 1995 in recognition of the unique character of the Old Town with its medieval street layout and the planned Georgian New Town including the adjoining Dean Village and Calton Hill areas There are over 4 500 listed buildings within the city 17 a higher proportion relative to area than any other city in the United Kingdom The castle is perched on top of a rocky crag the remnant of an extinct volcano and the Royal Mile runs down the crest of a ridge from it terminating at Holyrood Palace Minor streets called closes or wynds lie on either side of the main spine forming a herringbone pattern 106 Due to space restrictions imposed by the narrowness of this landform the Old Town became home to some of the earliest high rise residential buildings Multi storey dwellings known as lands were the norm from the 16th century onwards with ten and eleven storeys being typical and one even reaching fourteen or fifteen storeys 107 Numerous vaults below street level were inhabited to accommodate the influx of incomers particularly Irish immigrants during the Industrial Revolution The street has several fine public buildings such as St Giles Cathedral the City Chambers and the Law Courts Other places of historical interest nearby are Greyfriars Kirkyard and Mary King s Close The Grassmarket running deep below the castle is connected by the steep double terraced Victoria Street The street layout is typical of the old quarters of many Northern European cities The New Town was an 18th century solution to the problem of an increasingly crowded city which had been confined to the ridge sloping down from the castle In 1766 a competition to design a New Town was won by James Craig a 27 year old architect 108 The plan was a rigid ordered grid which fitted in well with Enlightenment ideas of rationality The principal street was to be George Street running along the natural ridge to the north of what became known as the Old Town To either side of it are two other main streets Princes Street and Queen Street Princes Street has become Edinburgh s main shopping street and now has few of its Georgian buildings in their original state The three main streets are connected by a series of streets running perpendicular to them The east and west ends of George Street are terminated by St Andrew Square and Charlotte Square respectively The latter designed by Robert Adam influenced the architectural style of the New Town into the early 19th century 109 Bute House the official residence of the First Minister of Scotland is on the north side of Charlotte Square 110 The hollow between the Old and New Towns was formerly the Nor Loch which was created for the town s defence but came to be used by the inhabitants for dumping their sewage It was drained by the 1820s as part of the city s northward expansion Craig s original plan included an ornamental canal on the site of the loch 76 but this idea was abandoned 111 Soil excavated while laying the foundations of buildings in the New Town was dumped on the site of the loch to create the slope connecting the Old and New Towns known as The Mound In the middle of the 19th century the National Gallery of Scotland and Royal Scottish Academy Building were built on The Mound and tunnels for the railway line between Haymarket and Waverley stations were driven through it The Southside is a residential part of the city which includes the districts of St Leonards Marchmont Morningside Newington Sciennes the Grange and Blackford The Southside is broadly analogous to the area covered formerly by the Burgh Muir and was developed as a residential area after the opening of the South Bridge in the 1780s The Southside is particularly popular with families many state and private schools are here young professionals and students the central University of Edinburgh campus is based around George Square just north of Marchmont and the Meadows and Napier University with major campuses around Merchiston and Morningside The area is also well provided with hotel and bed and breakfast accommodation for visiting festival goers These districts often feature in works of fiction For example Church Hill in Morningside was the home of Muriel Spark s Miss Jean Brodie 112 and Ian Rankin s Inspector Rebus lives in Marchmont and works in St Leonards 113 The Shore Leith Leith was historically the port of Edinburgh an arrangement of unknown date that was confirmed by the royal charter Robert the Bruce granted to the city in 1329 114 The port developed a separate identity from Edinburgh which to some extent it still retains and it was a matter of great resentment when the two burghs merged in 1920 into the City of Edinburgh 115 Even today the parliamentary seat is known as Edinburgh North and Leith The loss of traditional industries and commerce the last shipyard closed in 1983 resulted in economic decline 116 The Edinburgh Waterfront development has transformed old dockland areas from Leith to Granton into residential areas with shopping and leisure facilities and helped rejuvenate the area With the redevelopment Edinburgh has gained the business of cruise liner companies which now provide cruises to Norway Sweden Denmark Germany and the Netherlands The coastal suburb of Portobello is characterised by Georgian villas Victorian tenements a beach and promenade and cafes bars restaurants and independent shops There are rowing and sailing clubs and a restored Victorian swimming pool including Turkish baths The urban area of Edinburgh is almost entirely within the City of Edinburgh Council boundary merging with Musselburgh in East Lothian Towns within easy reach of the city boundary include Haddington Tranent Prestonpans Dalkeith Bonnyrigg Loanhead Penicuik Broxburn Livingston and Dunfermline Edinburgh lies at the heart of the Edinburgh amp South East Scotland City region with a population in 2014 of 1 339 380 117 14 Climate Edit Like most of Scotland Edinburgh has a cool temperate maritime climate which despite its northerly latitude is milder than places which lie at similar latitudes such as Moscow and Labrador 118 The city s proximity to the sea mitigates any large variations in temperature or extremes of climate Winter daytime temperatures rarely fall below freezing while summer temperatures are moderate rarely exceeding 22 C 72 F 118 The highest temperature recorded in the city was 31 6 C 88 9 F on 25 July 2019 118 at Gogarbank beating the previous record of 31 C 88 F on 4 August 1975 at Edinburgh Airport 119 The lowest temperature recorded in recent years was 14 6 C 5 7 F during December 2010 at Gogarbank 120 Given Edinburgh s position between the coast and hills it is renowned as the windy city with the prevailing wind direction coming from the south west which is often associated with warm unstable air from the North Atlantic Current that can give rise to rainfall although considerably less than cities to the west such as Glasgow 118 Rainfall is distributed fairly evenly throughout the year 118 Winds from an easterly direction are usually drier but considerably colder and may be accompanied by haar a persistent coastal fog Vigorous Atlantic depressions known as European windstorms can affect the city between October and May 118 Located slightly north of the city centre the weather station at the Royal Botanic Garden Edinburgh RBGE has been an official weather station for the Met Office since 1956 The Met Office operates its own weather station at Gogarbank on the city s western outskirts near Edinburgh Airport 121 This slightly inland station has a slightly wider temperature span between seasons is cloudier and somewhat wetter but differences are minor Temperature and rainfall records have been kept at the Royal Observatory since 1764 122 Climate data for Edinburgh RBGE a elevation 23 m 75 ft 1991 2020 normals extremes 1960 presentMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearRecord high C F 15 0 59 0 15 2 59 4 20 0 68 0 22 8 73 0 29 0 84 2 27 8 82 0 31 6 88 9 31 4 88 5 26 7 80 1 24 4 75 9 20 6 69 1 15 4 59 7 31 6 88 9 Average high C F 7 3 45 1 8 0 46 4 9 7 49 5 12 2 54 0 14 9 58 8 17 4 63 3 19 3 66 7 19 1 66 4 16 9 62 4 13 4 56 1 9 9 49 8 7 3 45 1 13 0 55 4 Daily mean C F 4 5 40 1 4 8 40 6 6 3 43 3 8 4 47 1 11 0 51 8 13 7 56 7 15 4 59 7 15 3 59 5 13 3 55 9 10 0 50 0 6 8 44 2 4 5 40 1 9 5 49 1 Average low C F 1 7 35 1 1 7 35 1 2 9 37 2 4 7 40 5 7 1 44 8 9 9 49 8 11 6 52 9 11 5 52 7 9 7 49 5 6 7 44 1 3 8 38 8 1 6 34 9 6 1 43 0 Record low C F 15 5 4 1 11 7 10 9 11 1 12 0 6 1 21 0 2 4 27 7 1 1 34 0 4 4 39 9 2 2 36 0 1 1 30 0 3 7 25 3 8 3 17 1 11 5 11 3 15 5 4 1 Average precipitation mm inches 64 7 2 55 53 1 2 09 48 5 1 91 40 8 1 61 47 6 1 87 66 2 2 61 72 1 2 84 71 6 2 82 54 9 2 16 75 7 2 98 65 3 2 57 67 4 2 65 727 7 28 65 Average precipitation days 1 0 mm 12 4 9 8 9 8 8 6 9 6 10 4 11 5 10 4 9 9 11 7 11 7 12 3 128 3Mean monthly sunshine hours 55 2 82 2 117 3 157 3 194 7 161 8 169 9 160 0 130 1 99 4 72 1 49 2 1 449 1Average ultraviolet index 0 1 2 3 5 6 5 5 3 1 1 0 3Source Met Office 123 KNMI 124 and Weather Atlas 125 Climate data for Edinburgh Gogarbank b elevation 57 m 187 ft 1991 2020 normalsMonth Jan Feb Mar Apr May Jun Jul Aug Sep Oct Nov Dec YearAverage high C F 6 9 44 4 7 5 45 5 9 3 48 7 12 0 53 6 14 9 58 8 17 5 63 5 19 4 66 9 19 2 66 6 16 9 62 4 13 2 55 8 9 5 49 1 7 0 44 6 12 8 55 0 Daily mean C F 4 2 39 6 4 6 40 3 6 0 42 8 8 2 46 8 10 8 51 4 13 4 56 1 15 2 59 4 15 1 59 2 13 1 55 6 9 8 49 6 6 6 43 9 4 2 39 6 9 3 48 7 Average low C F 1 5 34 7 1 6 34 9 2 7 36 9 4 3 39 7 6 7 44 1 9 4 48 9 11 0 51 8 11 0 51 8 9 4 48 9 6 5 43 7 3 6 38 5 1 4 34 5 5 8 42 4 Average precipitation mm inches 73 0 2 87 61 1 2 41 52 5 2 07 45 9 1 81 50 2 1 98 68 8 2 71 71 9 2 83 74 7 2 94 55 2 2 17 82 7 3 26 73 7 2 90 74 9 2 95 784 3 30 88 Average precipitation days 1 0 mm 13 3 10 7 10 3 9 2 10 8 11 1 11 4 11 2 10 5 13 0 12 9 13 1 137 4Mean monthly sunshine hours 47 4 77 5 111 0 147 7 189 5 159 4 160 9 145 7 125 5 94 1 66 9 37 8 1 363 4Source Met Office 126 Weather station is located 0 9 mi 1 4 km from the Edinburgh city centre Weather station is located 5 9 mi 9 5 km from the Edinburgh city centre Demography Edit Population pyramid of Edinburgh local authority area in 2020 Current Edit Population density map The most recent official population estimates 2020 are 506 520 for the locality includes Currie 1 530 990 for the Edinburgh settlement includes Musselburgh 1 and 518 500 for the local authority area 2 Edinburgh has a high proportion of young adults with 19 5 of the population in their 20s exceeded only by Aberdeen and 15 2 in their 30s which is the highest in Scotland The proportion of Edinburgh s population born in the UK fell from 92 to 84 between 2001 and 2011 while the proportion of White Scottish born fell from 78 to 70 Of those Edinburgh residents born in the UK 335 000 or 83 were born in Scotland with 58 000 or 14 being born in England 127 Ethnic Group 1991 128 129 2001 130 131 2011 130 131 Number Number Number White Total 409 044 97 64 430 369 95 9 437 167 91 7 White Scottish 354 053 78 9 334 987 70 2 White Other British 51 407 11 4 56 132 11 7 White Irish 5 518 1 31 6 470 1 4 8 603 1 8 White Gypsy Traveller note 1 388 White Polish note 1 12 820 2 68 White Other 18 439 4 1 24 237 0 5 Asian Asian Scottish or Asian British Total 6 979 1 66 11 600 2 5 26 264 5 5 Asian Asian Scottish or Asian British Indian 1 176 0 28 2 384 0 53 6 470 1 35 Asian Asian Scottish or Asian British Pakistani 2 625 0 62 3 928 0 87 5 858 1 22 Asian Asian Scottish or Asian British Bangladeshi 328 636 0 14 1 277 0 26 Asian Asian Scottish or Asian British Chinese 1 940 0 46 3 532 0 78 8 076 1 69 Asian Asian Scottish or Asian British Asian Other 910 0 21 1 201 0 26 4 583 0 96 Black Black Scottish or Black British note 2 174 African Total 603 1 285 0 2 4 474 0 9 African African African Scottish or African British 603 1 285 0 2 4 364 0 91 African Other African 110 Caribbean or Black Total 568 292 1 031 0 2 Caribbean 175 292 505 0 1 Black 403 Caribbean or Black Other 393 123 Mixed or multiple ethnic groups Total 2 776 0 6 4 087 0 8 Other Total 1 720 0 41 2 047 0 45 3 603 0 8 Other Arab note 1 2 500 0 52 Other Any other ethnic group 1 720 0 41 2 047 0 45 1 103 0 23 Total 418 914 100 448 624 100 476 626 100 Some 13 000 people or 2 7 of the city s population are of Polish descent 39 500 people or 8 2 of Edinburgh s population class themselves as Non White which is an increase from 4 in 2001 Of the Non White population the largest group by far are Asian totalling 26 264 people Within the Asian population people of Chinese descent are now the largest sub group with 8 076 people amounting to about 1 7 of the city s total population The city s population of Indian descent amounts to 6 470 1 4 of the total population while there are some 5 858 of Pakistani descent 1 2 of the total population Although they account for only 1 277 people or 0 3 of the city s population Edinburgh has the highest number and proportion of people of Bangladeshi descent in Scotland Over 7 000 people were born in African countries 1 6 of the total population and nearly 7 000 in the Americas With the notable exception of Inner London Edinburgh has a higher number of people born in the United States over 3 700 than any other city in the UK 127 The proportion of people born outside the UK was 15 9 compared with 8 in 2001 Place of birth Estimated resident population 2011 132 Poland 11 651 India 4 888 Ireland 4 743 Mainland China A 4 188 United States 3 700 Germany 3 500 Pakistan 2 472 Australia 2 100 France 2 000 Spain 2 000 South Africa 1 800 Canada 1 800 Hong Kong 1 600Historical Edit Historical populationYearPop 180182 560 1811102 987 24 7 1821138 235 34 2 1831161 909 17 1 1841166 450 2 8 1851193 929 16 5 1901303 638 56 6 1911320 318 5 5 1921420 264 31 2 1931439 010 4 5 1951466 761 6 3 Source 133 A census by the Edinburgh presbytery in 1592 recorded a population of 8 003 adults spread equally north and south of the High Street which runs along the spine of the ridge sloping down from the Castle 134 In the 18th and 19th centuries the population expanded rapidly rising from 49 000 in 1751 to 136 000 in 1831 primarily due to migration from rural areas 98 9 As the population grew problems of overcrowding in the Old Town particularly in the cramped tenements that lined the present day Royal Mile and the Cowgate were exacerbated 98 9 Poor sanitary arrangements resulted in a high incidence of disease 98 9 with outbreaks of cholera occurring in 1832 1848 and 1866 135 The construction of the New Town from 1767 onwards witnessed the migration of the professional and business classes from the difficult living conditions in the Old Town to the lower density higher quality surroundings taking shape on land to the north 136 Expansion southwards from the Old Town saw more tenements being built in the 19th century giving rise to Victorian suburbs such as Dalry Newington Marchmont and Bruntsfield 136 Early 20th century population growth coincided with lower density suburban development As the city expanded to the south and west detached and semi detached villas with large gardens replaced tenements as the predominant building style Nonetheless the 2001 census revealed that over 55 of Edinburgh s population were still living in tenements or blocks of flats a figure in line with other Scottish cities but much higher than other British cities and even central London 137 From the early to mid 20th century the growth in population together with slum clearance in the Old Town and other areas such as Dumbiedykes Leith and Fountainbridge led to the creation of new estates such as Stenhouse and Saughton Craigmillar and Niddrie Pilton and Muirhouse Piershill and Sighthill 138 Religion Edit The High Kirk of Edinburgh also known as St Giles Cathedral In 2018 the Church of Scotland had 20 956 members in 71 congregations in the Presbytery of Edinburgh 139 Its most prominent church is St Giles on the Royal Mile first dedicated in 1243 but believed to date from before the 12th century 140 Saint Giles is historically the patron saint of Edinburgh 141 St Cuthbert s situated at the west end of Princes Street Gardens in the shadow of Edinburgh Castle and St Giles can lay claim to being the oldest Christian sites in the city 142 though the present St Cuthbert s designed by Hippolyte Blanc was dedicated in 1894 143 Other Church of Scotland churches include Greyfriars Kirk the Canongate Kirk St Andrew s and St George s West Church and the Barclay Church The Church of Scotland Offices are in Edinburgh 144 as is the Assembly Hall where the annual General Assembly is held 145 The Roman Catholic Archdiocese of St Andrews and Edinburgh has 27 parishes across the city 146 The Archbishop of St Andrews and Edinburgh has his official residence in Greenhill 147 the diocesan offices are in nearby Marchmont 148 and its cathedral is St Mary s Cathedral Edinburgh The Diocese of Edinburgh of the Scottish Episcopal Church has over 50 churches half of them in the city 149 Its centre is the late 19th century Gothic style St Mary s Cathedral in the West End s Palmerston Place 150 Orthodox Christianity is represented by Pan Romanian and Russian Orthodox churches There are several independent churches in the city both Catholic and Protestant including Charlotte Chapel Carrubbers Christian Centre Bellevue Chapel and Sacred Heart 151 There are also churches belonging to Quakers Christadelphians 152 Seventh day Adventists Church of Christ Scientist The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter day Saints LDS Church and Elim Pentecostal Church Muslims have several places of worship across the city Edinburgh Central Mosque the largest Islamic place of worship is located in Potterrow on the city s Southside near Bristo Square Construction was largely financed by a gift from King Fahd of Saudi Arabia 153 and was completed in 1998 154 There is also an Ahmadiyya Muslim community 155 The first recorded presence of a Jewish community in Edinburgh dates back to the late 18th century 156 Edinburgh s Orthodox synagogue opened in 1932 is in Salisbury Road and can accommodate a congregation of 2000 A Liberal Jewish congregation also meets in the city A Sikh gurdwara and a Hindu mandir are located in Leith 157 158 The city also has a Brahma Kumaris centre in the Polwarth area 159 The Edinburgh Buddhist Centre run by the Triratna Buddhist Community formerly situated in Melville Terrace now runs sessions at the Healthy Life Centre Bread Street 160 Other Buddhist traditions are represented by groups which meet in the capital the Community of Interbeing followers of Thich Nhat Hanh Rigpa Samye Dzong Theravadin Pure Land and Shambala There is a Sōtō Zen Priory in Portobello 161 and a Theravadin Thai Buddhist Monastery in Slateford Road 162 Edinburgh is home to a Bahaʼi community 163 and a Theosophical Society meets in Great King Street 164 Edinburgh has an Inter Faith Association 165 Edinburgh has over 39 graveyards and cemeteries many of which are listed and of historical character including several former church burial grounds 166 Examples include Old Calton Burial Ground Greyfriars Kirkyard and Dean Cemetery 167 168 169 Economy EditMain article Economy of Edinburgh The Bank of Scotland s head office in central Edinburgh Edinburgh has the strongest economy of any city in the United Kingdom outside London and the highest percentage of professionals in the UK with 43 of the population holding a degree level or professional qualification 170 According to the Centre for International Competitiveness it is the most competitive large city in the United Kingdom 171 It also has the highest gross value added per employee of any city in the UK outside London measuring 57 594 in 2010 172 It was named European Best Large City of the Future for Foreign Direct Investment and Best Large City for Foreign Direct Investment Strategy in theFinancial TimesfDi magazine awards 2012 13 In the 19th century Edinburgh s economy was known for banking and insurance publishing and printing and brewing and distilling Today its economy is based mainly on financial services scientific research higher education and tourism 173 In March 2010 unemployment in Edinburgh was comparatively low at 3 6 and it remains consistently below the Scottish average of 4 5 174 Edinburgh is the second most visited city by foreign visitors in the UK after London Banking has been a mainstay of the Edinburgh economy for over 300 years since the Bank of Scotland was established by an act of the Scottish Parliament in 1695 Today the financial services industry with its particularly strong insurance and investment sectors and underpinned by Edinburgh based firms such as Scottish Widows and Standard Life Aberdeen accounts for the city being the UK s second financial centre after London and Europe s fourth in terms of equity assets 175 The NatWest Group formerly Royal Bank of Scotland Group opened new global headquarters at Gogarburn in the west of the city in October 2005 The city is home to the headquarters of Bank of Scotland Sainsbury s Bank 176 Tesco Bank 177 and TSB Bank Edinburgh Park Tourism is also an important element in the city s economy As a World Heritage Site tourists visit historical sites such as Edinburgh Castle the Palace of Holyroodhouse and the Old and New Towns Their numbers are augmented in August each year during the Edinburgh Festivals which attracts 4 4 million visitors 174 and generates over 100M for the local economy 178 As the centre of Scotland s government and legal system the public sector plays a central role in Edinburgh s economy Many departments of the Scottish Government are in the city Other major employers include NHS Scotland and local government administration 173 When the 1 3bn Edinburgh amp South East Scotland City Region Deal 179 was signed in 2018 the region s Gross Value Added GVA contribution to the Scottish economy was cited as 33bn or 33 of the country s output The City Region Deal funds a range of Data Driven Innovation hubs which are using data to innovate in the region recognising the region s strengths in technology and data science the growing importance of the data economy and the need to tackle the digital skills gap as a route to social and economic prosperity 180 181 182 Culture EditFestivals and celebrations Edit Edinburgh festival Edit Main article List of Edinburgh festivals The city hosts a series of festivals that run between the end of July and early September each year The best known of these events are the Edinburgh Festival Fringe the Edinburgh International Festival the Edinburgh Military Tattoo the Edinburgh Art Festival and the Edinburgh International Book Festival 183 Pipers emerging from Edinburgh Castle during the Edinburgh Military Tattoo The longest established of these festivals is the Edinburgh International Festival which was first held in 1947 184 and consists mainly of a programme of high profile theatre productions and classical music performances featuring international directors conductors theatre companies and orchestras 185 This has since been overtaken in size by the Edinburgh Fringe which began as a programme of marginal acts alongside the official Festival and has become the world s largest performing arts festival In 2017 nearly 3400 different shows were staged in 300 venues across the city 186 187 Comedy has become one of the mainstays of the Fringe with numerous well known comedians getting their first break there often by being chosen to receive the Edinburgh Comedy Award 188 The Edinburgh Military Tattoo occupies the Castle Esplanade every night for three weeks each August with massed pipe bands and military bands drawn from around the world Performances end with a short fireworks display As well as the summer festivals many other festivals are held during the rest of the year including the Edinburgh International Film Festival 189 and Edinburgh International Science Festival 190 The summer of 2020 was the first time in its 70 year history that the Edinburgh festival was not run being cancelled due to the COVID 19 pandemic 191 This affected many of the tourist focused businesses in Edinburgh which depend on the various festivals over summer to return an annual profit 192 Edinburgh s Hogmanay Edit Main article Edinburgh s Hogmanay A Viking longship being burnt during Edinburgh s annual Hogmanay celebrations The annual Edinburgh Hogmanay celebration was originally an informal street party focused on the Tron Kirk in the Old Town s High Street Since 1993 it has been officially organised with the focus moved to Princes Street In 1996 over 300 000 people attended leading to ticketing of the main street party in later years up to a limit of 100 000 tickets 193 Hogmanay now covers four days of processions concerts and fireworks with the street party beginning on Hogmanay Alternative tickets are available for entrance into the Princes Street Gardens concert and Ceilidh where well known artists perform and ticket holders can participate in traditional Scottish ceilidh dancing The event attracts thousands of people from all over the world 193 Beltane and other festivals Edit On the night of 30 April the Beltane Fire Festival takes place on Calton Hill involving a procession followed by scenes inspired by pagan old spring fertility celebrations 194 At the beginning of October each year the Dussehra Hindu Festival is also held on Calton Hill 195 Music theatre and film Edit Edinburgh Festival Theatre Outside the Festival season Edinburgh supports several theatres and production companies The Royal Lyceum Theatre has its own company while the King s Theatre Edinburgh Festival Theatre and Edinburgh Playhouse stage large touring shows The Traverse Theatre presents a more contemporary repertoire Amateur theatre companies productions are staged at the Bedlam Theatre Church Hill Theatre and King s Theatre among others 196 The Usher Hall is Edinburgh s premier venue for classical music as well as occasional popular music concerts 197 It was the venue for the Eurovision Song Contest 1972 Other halls staging music and theatre include The Hub the Assembly Rooms and the Queen s Hall The Scottish Chamber Orchestra is based in Edinburgh 198 Traverse Theatre Edinburgh has one repertory cinema The Cameo and formerly the Edinburgh Filmhouse as well as the independent Dominion Cinema and a range of multiplexes 199 Edinburgh has a healthy popular music scene Occasionally large concerts are staged at Murrayfield and Meadowbank while mid sized events take place at smaller venues such as The Corn Exchange The Liquid Rooms and The Bongo Club In 2010 PRS for Music listed Edinburgh among the UK s top ten most musical cities 200 Several city pubs are well known for their live performances of folk music They include Sandy Bell s in Forrest Road Captain s Bar in South College Street and Whistlebinkies in South Bridge Like many other cities in the UK numerous nightclub venues host Electronic dance music events 201 Edinburgh is home to a flourishing group of contemporary composers such as Nigel Osborne Peter Nelson Lyell Cresswell Haflidi Hallgrimsson Edward Harper Robert Crawford Robert Dow and John McLeod McLeod s music is heard regularly on BBC Radio 3 and throughout the UK 202 Media Edit Newspapers Edit The main local newspaper is the Edinburgh Evening News It is owned and published alongside its sister titles The Scotsman and Scotland on Sunday by JPIMedia 203 Radio Edit The city has two commercial radio stations Forth 1 a station which broadcasts mainstream chart music and Forth 2 on medium wave which plays classic hits 204 Capital Scotland and Eklipse Sports Radio also have transmitters covering Edinburgh Along with the UK national radio stations BBC Radio Scotland and the Gaelic language service BBC Radio nan Gaidheal are also broadcast DAB digital radio is broadcast over two local multiplexes BFBS Radio broadcasts from studios on the base at Dreghorn Barracks across the city on 98 5FM as part of its UK Bases network Small scale DAB started October 2022 with numerous community stations onboard Television Edit Television along with most radio services is broadcast to the city from the Craigkelly transmitting station situated in Fife on the opposite side of the Firth of Forth 205 and the Black Hill transmitting station in North Lanarkshire to the west There are no television stations based in the city Edinburgh Television existed in the late 1990s to early 2003 206 and STV Edinburgh existed from 2015 to 2018 207 208 Museums libraries and galleries Edit National Gallery of Scotland Edinburgh has many museums and libraries These include the National Museum of Scotland the National Library of Scotland National War Museum the Museum of Edinburgh Surgeons Hall Museum the Writers Museum the Museum of Childhood and Dynamic Earth The Museum on The Mound has exhibits on money and banking 209 Edinburgh Zoo covering 82 acres 33 ha on Corstorphine Hill is the second most visited paid tourist attraction in Scotland 210 and home to two giant pandas Tian Tian and Yang Guang on loan from the People s Republic of China Edinburgh is also home to The Royal Yacht Britannia decommissioned in 1997 and now a five star visitor attraction and evening events venue permanently berthed at Ocean Terminal Edinburgh contains Scotland s three National Galleries of Art as well as numerous smaller art galleries 211 The national collection is housed in the Scottish National Gallery located on The Mound comprising the linked National Gallery of Scotland building and the Royal Scottish Academy building Contemporary collections are shown in the Scottish National Gallery of Modern Art which occupies a split site at Belford The Scottish National Portrait Gallery on Queen Street focuses on portraits and photography National Museum of Scotland The council owned City Art Centre in Market Street mounts regular art exhibitions Across the road The Fruitmarket Gallery offers world class exhibitions of contemporary art featuring work by British and international artists with both emerging and established international reputations 212 The city hosts several of Scotland s galleries and organisations dedicated to contemporary visual art Significant strands of this infrastructure include Creative Scotland Edinburgh College of Art Talbot Rice Gallery University of Edinburgh Collective Gallery based at the City Observatory and the Edinburgh Annuale There are also many small private shops galleries that provide space to showcase works from local artists 213 Shopping Edit The locale around Princes Street is the main shopping area in the city centre with souvenir shops chain stores such as Boots the Chemist Edinburgh Woollen Mill H amp M and Jenners 214 George Street north of Princes Street is the preferred location for some upmarket shops and independent stores 214 At the east end of Princes Street the redeveloped St James Quarter opened its doors in June 2021 215 while next to the Balmoral Hotel and Waverley Station is Waverley Market Multrees Walk adjacent to the St James Centre is a recent addition to the central shopping district dominated by the presence of Harvey Nichols Shops here include Louis Vuitton Mulberry and Calvin Klein 214 Edinburgh also has substantial retail parks outside the city centre These include The Gyle Shopping Centre and Hermiston Gait in the west of the city Cameron Toll Shopping Centre Straiton Retail Park actually just outside the city in Midlothian and Fort Kinnaird in the south and east and Ocean Terminal in the north on the Leith waterfront 216 Governance EditMain article Politics of Edinburgh Local government Edit Edinburgh City Chambers is the headquarters of the City of Edinburgh Council Main article City of Edinburgh Council Following local government reorganisation in 1996 the City of Edinburgh Council constitutes one of the 32 council areas of Scotland 217 Like all other local authorities of Scotland the council has powers over most matters of local administration such as housing planning local transport parks economic development and regeneration 218 The council comprises 63 elected councillors returned from 17 multi member electoral wards in the city 219 Following the 2007 City of Edinburgh Council election the incumbent Labour Party lost majority control of the council after 23 years to a Liberal Democrat SNP coalition 220 After the 2017 election the SNP and Labour formed a coalition administration which lasted until the next election in 2022 The 2022 City of Edinburgh Council election resulted in the most politically balanced council in the UK with 19 SNP 13 Labour 12 Liberal Democrat 10 Green and 9 Conservative councillors A minority Labour administration was formed being voted in by Scottish Conservative and Scottish Liberal Democrat councillors The SNP and Greens presented a coalition agreement but could not command majority support in the Council This caused controversy amongst the Scottish Labour Party group for forming an administration supported by Conservatives and led to the suspension of two Labour councillors on the Council for abstaining on the vote to approve the new administration 221 The city s coat of arms was registered by the Lord Lyon King of Arms in 1732 222 Scottish Parliament Edit The debating chamber of the Scottish Parliament Main article Scottish Parliament Edinburgh like all of Scotland is represented in the Scottish Parliament situated in the Holyrood area of the city For electoral purposes the city is divided into six constituencies which along with 3 seats outside of the city form part of the Lothian region 223 Each constituency elects one Member of the Scottish Parliament MSP by the first past the post system of election and the region elects seven additional MSPs to produce a result based on a form of proportional representation 223 As of the 2021 election the Scottish National Party have four MSPs Ash Denham for Edinburgh Eastern Ben Macpherson for Edinburgh Northern and Leith and Gordon MacDonald for Edinburgh Pentlands and Angus Robertson for Edinburgh Central constituencies Alex Cole Hamilton the Leader of the Scottish Liberal Democrats represents Edinburgh Western and Daniel Johnson of the Scottish Labour Party represents Edinburgh Southern constituency In addition the city is also represented by seven regional MSPs representing the Lothian electoral region The Conservatives have three regional MSPs Jeremy Balfour Miles Briggs and Sue Webber Labour have two regional MSPs Sarah Boyack and Foysol Choudhury and Scottish Greens had two regional MSP elected Green s Co Leader Lorna Slater and Alison Johnstone However following her election as the Presiding Officer of the 6th Session of the Scottish Parliament on 13 May 2021 Alison Johnstone has abided by the established parliamentary convention for speakers and renounced all affiliation with her former political party for the duration of her term as Presiding Officer So she presently sits as an independent MSP for the Lothians Region citation needed UK Parliament Edit Main article Parliament of the United Kingdom Edinburgh is also represented in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom by five Members of Parliament The city is divided into Edinburgh North and Leith Edinburgh East Edinburgh South Edinburgh South West and Edinburgh West 224 each constituency electing one member by the first past the post system Since the 2019 UK General election Edinburgh is represented by three Scottish National Party MPs Deirdre Brock Edinburgh North and Leith Tommy Sheppard Edinburgh East Joanna Cherry Edinburgh South West one Liberal Democrat MP in Edinburgh West Christine Jardine and one Labour MP in Edinburgh South Ian Murray Transport EditMain article Transport in Edinburgh Air Edit Edinburgh Airport Edinburgh Airport is Scotland s busiest airport and the principal international gateway to the capital handling over 14 7 million passengers it was also the sixth busiest airport in the United Kingdom by total passengers in 2019 225 226 In anticipation of rising passenger numbers the former operator of the airport BAA outlined a draft masterplan in 2011 to provide for the expansion of the airfield and the terminal building In June 2012 Global Infrastructure Partners purchased the airport for 807 million 227 The possibility of building a second runway to cope with an increased number of aircraft movements has also been mooted 228 Buses Edit A Lothian Bus on North Bridge Travel in Edinburgh is undertaken predominantly by bus Lothian Buses the successor company to Edinburgh Corporation Transport Department operate the majority of city bus services within the city and to surrounding suburbs with the most routes running via Princes Street Services further afield operate from the Edinburgh Bus Station off St Andrew Square and Waterloo Place and are operated mainly by Stagecoach East Scotland Scottish Citylink National Express Coaches and Borders Buses Lothian Buses and McGill s Scotland East operate the city s branded public tour buses The night bus service and airport buses are mainly operated by Lothian Buses link 229 In 2019 Lothian Buses recorded 124 2 million passenger journeys 230 To tackle traffic congestion Edinburgh is now served by six park amp ride sites on the periphery of the city at Sheriffhall in Midlothian Ingliston Riccarton Inverkeithing in Fife Newcraighall and Straiton in Midlothian A referendum of Edinburgh residents in February 2005 rejected a proposal to introduce congestion charging in the city 231 Railway Edit A train preparing to depart from Edinburgh Waverley Station Edinburgh Waverley is the second busiest railway station in Scotland with only Glasgow Central handling more passengers On the evidence of passenger entries and exits between April 2015 and March 2016 Edinburgh Waverley is the fifth busiest station outside London it is also the UK s second biggest station in terms of the number of platforms and area size 232 Waverley is the terminus for most trains arriving from London King s Cross and the departure point for many rail services within Scotland operated by ScotRail To the west of the city centre lies Haymarket station which is an important commuter stop Opened in 2003 Edinburgh Park station serves the Gyle business park in the west of the city and the nearby Gogarburn headquarters of the Royal Bank of Scotland The Edinburgh Crossrail route connects Edinburgh Park with Haymarket Edinburgh Waverley and the suburban stations of Brunstane and Newcraighall in the east of the city 233 There are also commuter lines to Edinburgh Gateway South Gyle and Dalmeny the latter serving South Queensferry by the Forth Bridges and to Wester Hailes and Curriehill in the south west of the city Trams Edit Edinburgh Trams in Shandwick Place Edinburgh Trams became operational on 31 May 2014 The city had been without a tram system since Edinburgh Corporation Tramways ceased on 16 November 1956 234 Following parliamentary approval in 2007 construction began in early 2008 The first stage of the project was expected to be completed by July 2011 235 but following delays caused by extra utility work and a long running contractual dispute between the council and the main contractor Bilfinger SE the project was rescheduled 236 237 238 The completed line is 8 7 mi 14 0 km in length running from Edinburgh Airport west of the city to its terminus at York Place in the city centre s East End Phase two of the tram project which sees the existing section of Line 1 Airport to York Place tram line extended down Leith Walk to Ocean Terminal and terminate at Newhaven adding an additional eight new tram stops and connecting Leith and the waterfront to the tram system As of August 2022 this project is currently nearing completion and is scheduled to open to passenger use in spring 2023 239 Should the original plan be taken to completion trams will also run from Haymarket through Ravelston and Craigleith to Granton Square on the Waterfront Edinburgh 240 Long term proposals envisage a line running west from the airport to Ratho and Newbridge and another connecting Granton Square to Newhaven via Lower Granton Road thus completing the Line 1 North Edinburgh loop 241 A further line serving the south of the city has also been suggested Edinburgh tramway map Lothian Buses and Edinburgh Trams are both owned and operated by Transport for Edinburgh Despite its modern transport links Edinburgh has been named the most congested city in the UK for the fourth year running 242 Education Edit New College of the University of Edinburgh There are three universities in Edinburgh the University of Edinburgh Heriot Watt University and Edinburgh Napier University Established by royal charter in 1583 the University of Edinburgh is one of Scotland s ancient universities and is the fourth oldest in the country after St Andrews Glasgow and Aberdeen 243 Originally centred on Old College the university expanded to premises on The Mound the Royal Mile and George Square 243 Today the King s Buildings in the south of the city contain most of the schools within the College of Science and Engineering In 2002 the medical school moved to purpose built accommodation adjacent to the new Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh at Little France The university is placed 16th in the QS World University Rankings for 2022 244 Heriot Watt University is based at the Riccarton campus in the west of Edinburgh Originally established in 1821 as the world s first mechanics institute it was granted university status by royal charter in 1966 It has other campuses in the Scottish Borders Orkney United Arab Emirates and Putrajaya in Malaysia It takes the name Heriot Watt from Scottish inventor James Watt and Scottish philanthropist and goldsmith George Heriot Heriot Watt University has been named International University of the Year by The Times and Sunday Times Good University Guide 2018 In the latest Research Excellence Framework it was ranked overall in the Top 25 of UK universities and 1st in Scotland for research impact Edinburgh Napier University was originally founded as the Napier College which was renamed Napier Polytechnic in 1986 and gained university status in 1992 245 Edinburgh Napier University has campuses in the south and west of the city including the former Merchiston Tower and Craiglockhart Hydropathic 245 It is home to the Screen Academy Scotland Queen Margaret University was located in Edinburgh before it moved to a new campus just outside the city boundary on the edge of Musselburgh in 2008 246 Until 2012 further education colleges in the city included Jewel and Esk College incorporating Leith Nautical College founded in 1903 Telford College opened in 1968 and Stevenson College opened in 1970 These have now been amalgamated to form Edinburgh College Scotland s Rural College also has a campus in south Edinburgh Other institutions include the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh and the Royal College of Physicians of Edinburgh which were established by royal charter in 1506 and 1681 respectively The Trustees Drawing Academy of Edinburgh founded in 1760 became the Edinburgh College of Art in 1907 247 There are 18 nursery 94 primary and 23 secondary schools administered by the City of Edinburgh Council 248 Edinburgh is home to The Royal High School one of the oldest schools in the country and the world The city also has several independent fee paying schools including Edinburgh Academy Fettes College George Heriot s School George Watson s College Merchiston Castle School Stewart s Melville College and The Mary Erskine School In 2009 the proportion of pupils attending independent schools was 24 2 far above the Scottish national average of just over 7 and higher than in any other region of Scotland 249 In August 2013 the City of Edinburgh Council opened the city s first stand alone Gaelic primary school Bun sgoil Taobh na Pairce 250 Healthcare Edit The Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh is the main public hospital for the city See also List of hospitals in Edinburgh The main NHS Lothian hospitals serving the Edinburgh area are the Royal Infirmary of Edinburgh which includes the University of Edinburgh Medical School and the Western General Hospital 251 which has a large cancer treatment centre and nurse led Minor Injuries Clinic 252 The Royal Edinburgh Hospital in Morningside specialises in mental health The Royal Hospital for Children and Young People colloquially referred to as the Sick Kids is a specialist paediatrics hospital There are two private hospitals Murrayfield Hospital in the west of the city and Shawfair Hospital in the south both are owned by Spire Healthcare 251 Sport EditFootball Edit Men s Edit Edinburgh has three football clubs that play in the Scottish Professional Football League SPFL Heart of Midlothian founded in 1874 Hibernian founded in 1875 and F C Edinburgh founded in 1966 Heart of Midlothian and Hibernian are known locally as Hearts and Hibs respectively Both play in the Scottish Premiership 253 They are the oldest city rivals in Scotland and the Edinburgh derby is one of the oldest derby matches in world football Both clubs have won the Scottish league championship four times Hearts have won the Scottish Cup eight times and the Scottish League Cup four times Hibs have won the Scottish Cup and the Scottish League Cup three times each Edinburgh City were promoted to Scottish League Two in the 2015 16 season becoming the first club to win promotion to the SPFL via the pyramid system playoffs Edinburgh was also home to four other former Scottish Football League clubs the original Edinburgh City founded in 1928 Leith Athletic Meadowbank Thistle and St Bernard s Meadowbank Thistle played at Meadowbank Stadium until 1995 when the club moved to Livingston and became Livingston F C The Scottish national team has very occasionally played at Easter Road and Tynecastle although its normal home stadium is Hampden Park in Glasgow St Bernard s New Logie Green was used to host the 1896 Scottish Cup Final the only time the match has been played outside Glasgow 254 The city also plays host to Lowland Football League clubs Civil Service Strollers Edinburgh University and Spartans as well as East of Scotland League clubs Craigroyston Edinburgh United Heriot Watt University Leith Athletic Lothian Thistle Hutchison Vale and Tynecastle Women s Edit In women s football Hearts Hibs and Spartans play in the SWPL 1 255 Hutchison Vale and Boroughmuir Thistle play in the SWPL 2 256 Rugby Edit The Scotland national rugby union team play at Murrayfield Stadium and the professional Edinburgh Rugby team play at the nextdoor Edinburgh Rugby Stadium both are owned by the Scottish Rugby Union and are also used for other events including music concerts Murrayfield is the largest capacity stadium in Scotland seating 67 144 spectators 257 Edinburgh is also home to Scottish Premiership teams Boroughmuir RFC Currie RFC the Edinburgh Academicals Heriot s Rugby Club and Watsonians RFC 258 The Edinburgh Academicals ground at Raeburn Place was the location of the world s first international rugby game on 27 March 1871 between Scotland and England 259 Rugby league is represented by the Edinburgh Eagles who play in the Rugby League Conference Scotland Division Murrayfield Stadium has hosted the Magic Weekend where all Super League matches are played in the stadium over one weekend Tynecastle Park Easter Road Stadium Murrayfield Stadium Meadowbank Stadium Edinburgh Marathon Murrayfield Ice RinkOther sports Edit The Scottish cricket team which represents Scotland internationally play their home matches at the Grange cricket club 260 The Edinburgh Capitals are the latest of a succession of ice hockey clubs in the Scottish capital Previously Edinburgh was represented by the Murrayfield Racers 2018 the original Murrayfield Racers who folded in 1996 and the Edinburgh Racers The club play their home games at the Murrayfield Ice Rink and have competed in the eleven team professional Scottish National League SNL since the 2018 19 season 261 Next door to Murrayfield Ice Rink is a 7 sheeter dedicated curling facility where curling is played from October to March each season Caledonia Pride are the only women s professional basketball team in Scotland Established in 2016 the team compete in the UK wide Women s British Basketball League and play their home matches at the Oriam National Performance Centre Edinburgh also has several men s basketball teams within the Scottish National League Boroughmuir Blaze City of Edinburgh Kings and Edinburgh Lions all compete in Division 1 of the National League and Pleasance B C compete in Division 2 The Edinburgh Diamond Devils is a baseball club which won its first Scottish Championship in 1991 as the Reivers 1992 saw the team repeat the achievement becoming the first team to do so in league history The same year saw the start of their first youth team the Blue Jays The club adopted its present name in 1999 262 Edinburgh has also hosted national and international sports events including the World Student Games the 1970 British Commonwealth Games 263 the 1986 Commonwealth Games 263 and the inaugural 2000 Commonwealth Youth Games 264 For the 1970 Games the city built Olympic standard venues and facilities including Meadowbank Stadium and the Royal Commonwealth Pool The Pool underwent refurbishment in 2012 and hosted the Diving competition in the 2014 Commonwealth Games which were held in Glasgow 265 In American football the Scottish Claymores played WLAF NFL Europe games at Murrayfield including their World Bowl 96 victory From 1995 to 1997 they played all their games there from 1998 to 2000 they split their home matches between Murrayfield and Glasgow s Hampden Park then moved to Glasgow full time with one final Murrayfield appearance in 2002 266 The city s most successful non professional team are the Edinburgh Wolves who play at Meadowbank Stadium 267 The Edinburgh Marathon has been held annually in the city since 2003 with more than 16 000 runners taking part on each occasion 268 Its organisers have called it the fastest marathon in the UK due to the elevation drop of 40 m 130 ft 269 The city also organises a half marathon as well as 10 km 6 2 mi and 5 km 3 1 mi races including a 5 km 3 mi race on 1 January each year Edinburgh has a speedway team the Edinburgh Monarchs which since the loss of its stadium in the city has raced at the Lothian Arena in Armadale West Lothian The Monarchs have won the Premier League championship five times in their history in 2003 270 and again in 2008 271 2010 2014 and 2015 People EditMain article List of people from Edinburgh See also List of University of Edinburgh people Sir Walter Scott Edinburgh has a long literary tradition which became especially evident during the Scottish Enlightenment This heritage and the city s lively literary life in the present led to it being declared the first UNESCO City of Literature in 2004 272 273 Prominent authors who have lived in Edinburgh include the economist Adam Smith born in Kirkcaldy and author of The Wealth of Nations 274 James Boswell biographer of Samuel Johnson Sir Walter Scott creator of the historical novel and author of works such as Rob Roy Ivanhoe and Heart of Midlothian James Hogg author of The Private Memoirs and Confessions of a Justified Sinner Robert Louis Stevenson 275 creator of Treasure Island Kidnapped and Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde Sir Arthur Conan Doyle the creator of Sherlock Holmes Muriel Spark author of The Prime of Miss Jean Brodie Irvine Welsh author of Trainspotting whose novels are mostly set in the city and often written in colloquial Scots 276 Ian Rankin author of the Inspector Rebus series of crime thrillers Alexander McCall Smith author of the No 1 Ladies Detective Agency series 277 and J K Rowling author of Harry Potter who wrote much of her first book in Edinburgh coffee shops and now lives in the Cramond area of the city 278 Statue of James Clerk Maxwell George Street Edinburgh Scotland has a rich history of science and engineering with Edinburgh producing a number of leading figures John Napier inventor of logarithms was born in Merchiston Tower and lived and died in the city 279 His house now forms part of the original campus of Napier University which was named in his honour He lies buried under St Cuthbert s Church James Clerk Maxwell founder of the modern theory of electromagnetism was born at 14 India Street now the home of the James Clerk Maxwell Foundation and educated at the Edinburgh Academy and the University of Edinburgh 274 as was the engineer and telephone pioneer Alexander Graham Bell 274 James Braidwood who organised Britain s first municipal fire brigade was also born in the city and began his career there Other names connected with the city include physicist Max Born a principle founder of Quantum mechanics and Nobel laureate 280 Charles Darwin the biologist who propounded the theory of natural selection 274 David Hume philosopher economist and historian 274 James Hutton regarded as the Father of Geology 274 Joseph Black the chemist who discovered Magnesium and Carbon Dioxide and one of the founders of Thermodynamics 274 pioneering medical researchers Joseph Lister and James Young Simpson 274 chemist and discoverer of the element nitrogen Daniel Rutherford Colin Maclaurin mathematician and developer of the Maclaurin series 281 and Ian Wilmut the geneticist involved in the cloning of Dolly the sheep just outside Edinburgh at the Roslin Institute 274 The stuffed carcass of Dolly the sheep is now on display in the National Museum of Scotland 282 The latest in a long line of science celebrities associated with the city is theoretical physicist Nobel laureate and Professor Emeritus at the University of Edinburgh Peter Higgs born in Newcastle but resident in Edinburgh for most of his academic career after whom the Higgs boson particle has been named 283 Deacon Brodie on Edinburgh s Royal Mile Edinburgh has been the birthplace of actors like Alastair Sim and Sir Sean Connery known for being the first cinematic James Bond 284 the comedian and actor Ronnie Corbett best known as one of The Two Ronnies 285 and the impressionist Rory Bremner Famous artists from the city include the portrait painters Sir Henry Raeburn Sir David Wilkie and Allan Ramsay The city has produced or been home to some very successful musicians in recent decades particularly Ian Anderson front man of the band Jethro Tull The Incredible String Band the folk duo The Corries Wattie Buchan lead singer and founding member of punk band The Exploited Shirley Manson lead singer of the band Garbage the Bay City Rollers The Proclaimers Boards of Canada and Idlewild Greyfriars Bobby Fountain Edinburgh is the birthplace of former British Prime Minister Tony Blair who attended the city s Fettes College 286 Notorious criminals from Edinburgh s past include Deacon Brodie head of a trades guild and Edinburgh city councillor by day but a burglar by night who is said to have been the inspiration for Robert Louis Stevenson s story the Strange Case of Dr Jekyll and Mr Hyde 287 and murderers Burke and Hare who delivered fresh corpses for dissection to the famous anatomist Robert Knox 288 Another well known Edinburgh resident was Greyfriars Bobby The small Skye Terrier reputedly kept vigil over his dead master s grave in Greyfriars Kirkyard for 14 years in the 1860s and 1870s giving rise to a story of canine devotion which plays a part in attracting visitors to the city 289 International relations EditTwin towns and sister cities Edit See also List of twin towns and sister cities in Scotland The City of Edinburgh has entered into 14 international twinning arrangements since 1954 290 Most of the arrangements are styled as Twin Cities but the agreement with Krakow is designated as a Partner City 290 and the agreement with Kyoto Prefecture is officially styled as a Friendship Link reflecting its status as the only region to be twinned with Edinburgh 290 City Since Munich Germany 1954 Nice France 1958 291 292 Florence Italy 1964 Dunedin New Zealand 1974 Vancouver British Columbia Canada 1977 293 San Diego California United States 1977 Xi an China 1985 Segovia Spain 1985 294 Kyiv Ukraine 1989 Aalborg Denmark 1991 295 Kyoto Prefecture Japan 1994 Kathmandu Nepal 1994 Krakow Poland 1995 296 Saint Petersburg Russia 1995 297 298 Shenzhen China 2019 299 For a list of consulates in Edinburgh see List of diplomatic missions in Scotland See also Edit Edinburgh portal Scotland portal United Kingdom portalOutline of Edinburgh National Archives of Scotland OPENCities Tourism in ScotlandNotes Edit a b c New category created for the 2011 census Category restructured for the 2011 census This figure does not include Hong Kong and Macau References Edit a b c d e Mid 2020 Population Estimates for Settlements and Localities in Scotland National Records of Scotland 31 March 2022 Retrieved 31 March 2022 a b c Population Estimates for UK England and Wales Scotland and Northern Ireland 2021 Office for National Statistics 2 November 2022 Retrieved 19 December 2022 Metropolitan Area Populations 22 February 2020 Archived from the original on 1 March 2020 Retrieved 1 March 2020 Edinburgh United Kingdom Forecast Weather Underground weather and elevation at Queensferry Road Edinburgh The Weather Underground Inc Archived from the original on 8 October 2013 Retrieved 29 September 2013 Girl About Globe A Scottish Gamble for Macau 9 May 2018 Archived from the original on 18 December 2018 Retrieved 18 January 2019 Simpson Andy 2013 Why Would Anyone Want to Swing a Cat and 499 other questions Constable amp Robinson Ltd p 163 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