Take a hike up to Arthur’s Seat or stroll in the beautiful Holyrood Park, west of here is the legendary Royal Mile, a fascinating street full of history. The Edinburgh International Festival and the Edinburgh Fringe Festival are two events that bring many visitors from around the world.
Rising up in medieval splendour
from its base atop an ancient, extinct volcano, Edinburgh Castle stands
at the head of the Royal Mile in Old Town, the original city centre with
winding lanes and dark alleys. Opposite, the Georgian New Town provides
a contrast with its ordered grid of elegant 18th-century architecture.
While Edinburgh has a rich,
cultural heritage and is home to many of Scotland’s museums and
galleries, it is perhaps most famous for the Edinburgh International
Festival, which runs for three weeks during August. During the festival
the town comes alive with street performers advertising their shows, and
visitors are sure to be entertained by comedians, and may even see one
or two of their favourite actors sampling a barrel at the Scotch Whisky
Heritage Centre.
Edinburgh is unique among Scotland’s
cities. Tourism, its proximity to England, and its multicultural
population set it apart. There’s up-to-the-nanosecond dance clubs in
15th-century buildings and firebreathers outside Georgian mansions: this
is a place that knows how to blend ancient and modern.
Its superb architecture ranges from
ancient churches to monumental Victorian masterpieces – all centred
around the castle on a precipitous crag in the city’s heart. Pick any
street to stroll – you’ll be wowed by sudden vistas of looming
battlements, cold volcanic peaks and hills steeped in memory.
Edinburgh’s summer streets are
enlivened by the buzz and high jinks surrounding the world’s biggest
arts festival. The flipside is grim council housing estates, dubious
weather and tartan kitsch; but don’t let that stop you. Edinburgh is a
mixed bag but it struts an identity that extends much further than
heroin addicts and the occasional display of kilts and bagpipes. In
traditional Scottish fashion, it will leave you feeling whisky-warm
inside.
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