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Edinburgh Castle overlooking Princes Street Gardens in the spring.
02/29/2024 | 2 MINUTES READ

12 Facts About Edinburgh

WorldStrides

Educational Travel

Edinburgh Castle overlooking Princes Street Gardens in the spring.

Every August, Edinburgh, Scotland welcomes Festival Fringe, the world’s largest arts festival. This past year the festival spanned 25 days and featured 50,459 performances of 3,314 shows in 313 venues!

Our American High School Theatre Festival and International Collegiate Theatre Festival programs are gearing up to join the performers in Scotland. When we aren’t performing or attending other performances, we’ll be exploring beautiful Edinburgh.

Ahead of our ICTF and AHSTF programs’ journeys to Scotland, here are 12 facts about Edinburgh:

  • Edinburgh Castle is built on an extinct volcano.
  • The Royal Mile is actually one mile and 107 yards long.
  • Edinburgh was the first city in the entire world to have its own fire service.
  • Edinburgh has 112 parks and more trees per head of population than any other city in the U.K.
  • J.K. Rowling wrote some of Harry Potter in an Edinburgh café (The Elephant) and took inspiration from the landscape for her characters and locations.
  • The Encyclopedia Britannica was first produced in Edinburgh
  • St. Margaret’s Chapel, located within the walls of Edinburgh Castle, is the oldest building in Edinburgh. It was built in memory of Queen Margaret, who is said to have died from a broken heart after the death of her husband.
  • “You’ll have had your tea?” was once a common Edinburgh greeting and is still used today as a way to avoid putting on a kettle; its believed the phrase originated in the 18th century with a nobleman named Mackintosh of Borlum who didn’t like the sound of tea-slurping at social gatherings.
  • The “Stone of Destiny” is the traditional coronation stone of Scottish and English royalty and is kept at Edinburgh Castle with the crown jewels of Scotland; according to legend, the real stone was secretly swapped for a fake one at some point in its history.
  • Edinburgh Castle’s Great Hall has a small window high above the fireplace known as “laird’s lug” which translates into “the Lord’s ear.” The window allowed castle residents to eavesdrop on conversations taking place in the Great Hall.
  • The National Monument on Calton Hill is known as “Edinburgh’s Folly” or “Edinburgh’s Shame.” It was modeled after the Parthenon in Athens, but funding for the build ran out and it was never completed.
  • Edinburgh has more listed buildings than anywhere in the world.
Scenic view of Edinburgh from Calton Hill, featuring the Dugald Stewart Monument in the foreground, and Edinburgh Castle among other landmarks in the distance.

Edinburgh’s Folly

The National Monument on Calton Hill is known as “Edinburgh’s Folly” or “Edinburgh’s Shame.” It was modeled after the Parthenon in Athens, but funding for the build ran out and it was never completed.

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