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The protective Castle walls dissolve into the exposed
bedrock as if they are one entity. For the settlement of Edinburgh,
there has always been a protective monument watching over the town
so the rock and defence have always gone hand in hand.
 Edinburgh
Castle today
The
settlement built up around the site of Din Eidyn; a fortress on the
rock and thriving roman settlement. It wasn’t until an invasion by
the Angles in AD 638 that the rock became known by its English name;
Edinburgh. Edinburgh town grew out from the castle with the first
houses built on the area now called Lawnmarket and then down the
slope of the rock, forming a single street, the Royal Mile. The
street is so called because it was the route that royalty would take
when travelling to the castle, and many did tread this path.
It
became Scotland’s chief royal castle in the Middle Ages, taking the
role as headquarters for the sheriff of Edinburgh; military troops
were stationed there, along with the royal gun train, and the crown
jewels were stored. It was King David I who in 1130 first
constructed some of the impressive and formidable buildings we see
today. The chapel, dedicated to his mother, Queen Margaret, still
stands as the oldest building in Edinburgh! It survived a continual
series of damage during the Wars of Independence with the “auld
enemy”, the English.

As
previously mentioned, the Royal Mile is so called as it is the path
of royalty travelling up to the castle. This is true but some,
however, were not approaching with amiable intentions. The walls
have endured siege after siege at the hands of the English, and the
leadership of the castle has changed hands almost enumerable times.
The first to capture the castle from the Scots was Edward I after a
three day siege in 1296. But then, after the King’s death in 1307,
the English stronghold weakened and Sir Thomas Randolph, Earl of
Moray, acting on behalf of
Robert the Bruce, famously reclaimed it in
1314. His was a surprise attack under the cover of darkness, by
only thirty men who scaled the north cliffs. Twenty years later it
was recaptured by the English but only seven years after that, Sir
William Douglas, a Scottish nobleman and knight, claimed it back
with a surprise attack by his men disguised as merchants.

David’s Tower (built in 1370 by David II, Robert the Bruce’s son who
had returned to Scotland after 10 years in captivity in England) was
built as part of the reconstruction of the castle site after the
devastation during the Wars of Independence. It was enormous for a
building of the time, three stories high and functioning as the
entrance to the castle. It was therefore the barrier between the
attack and defence of any battle.
It was the “Lang Siege” that
caused the downfall of this tower. The year long battle was
triggered when Catholic
Mary Queen of Scots married James Hepburn,
Earl of Bothwell and a surge of rebellion against the union rose up
amongst the noblemen of Scotland. Mary was forced eventually to
flee to England but there were still loyal supporters who remained
in Edinburgh, holding the castle for her and supporting her claim
for the throne. One of the most notable was Sir William Kirkcaldy,
Governor of the castle. He held the castle for a year against the
“Lang Siege” until David’s Tower was destroyed, cutting off the one
and only water supply to the castle. The inhabitants managed only a
few days under these conditions before they were forced to
surrender. The tower was replaced by the Half Moon Battery that
exists today.
 The
abdication of Mary Queen of Scots 1568
Before she became married, Mary gave birth to James IV (in 1566) who
also became James I of England in the “Union of the Crowns”. It was
then that the Scottish court departed from Edinburgh for London,
which left the castle with only a military function. The final
monarch to reside at the castle was Charles I in 1633 before his
coronation as King of the Scots.
But
even this did not protect the castle walls from further bombardment
in years to come! The
Jacobite rebellions in the 18th
Century caused much unrest. Jacobitism was the political movement
fighting to reinstate Stuart monarchs to their thrones in England,
Scotland and Ireland. In Edinburgh it was to return James VII of
Scotland and II of England. The 1715 rebellion saw the Jacobites
come dramatically close to claiming the castle in the same style
that Robert the Bruce’s men did over 400 years before; by scaling
the north facing cliffs. The 1745 rebellion saw the capture of
Holyrood Palace (at the opposite end of the Royal Mile to the
castle) but the castle remained unbroken.

(above left) The 'discovery' of the Honours of Scotland by Sir
Walter Scott in 1818 ~ (above right) The Crown Jewels
No
such action has been seen at Edinburgh castle since. The castle now
serves as a military station and is home to the Scottish National
War Memorial. It is also host to the famous Edinburgh Military
Tattoo. It is home to the Crown Jewels (the Honours of Scotland)
and also the Stone of Destiny since its return to Scotland from
Westminster, in 1996.
No visit to Edinburgh is complete without an
excursion to this historic and awe inspiring building that has
shaped Edinburgh to be the capital city it is today.
 View
from Edinburgh Castle
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© K.E. Struthers
Historic UK Ltd
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