Heart of Midlothian (Royal Mile): Difference between revisions
The Heart is in the "pavement" part of West Parliament Square i.e. in line with the pavements east and west. |
|||
Line 2: | Line 2: | ||
{{Coord|55|56|58.5|N|3|11|29.5|W|region:GB_type:landmark|display=title}} |
{{Coord|55|56|58.5|N|3|11|29.5|W|region:GB_type:landmark|display=title}} |
||
[[File:The Heart of Midlothian.JPG|thumb|The Heart of Midlothian]] |
[[File:The Heart of Midlothian.JPG|thumb|The Heart of Midlothian]] |
||
The '''Heart of Midlothian''' is a heart-shaped mosaic built into the |
The '''Heart of Midlothian''' is a heart-shaped mosaic, formed in coloured granite setts, built into the pavement near the West Door of [[St Giles High Kirk]] in the High Street section of the [[Royal Mile]] in [[Edinburgh]]. It is situated close to [[Parliament House, Edinburgh|Parliament House]], which formerly housed the [[Parliament of Scotland]] and is now the site of the [[Court of Session]] and [[Writers to the Signet|Signet Library]]. |
||
Together with brass markers bearing building dates, it records the position of the 15th-century [[Old Tolbooth, Edinburgh|Old Tolbooth]], demolished in 1817, which was the administrative centre of the town, prison and one of several sites of public execution. The building features in Sir [[Walter Scott]]'s novel, ''[[The Heart of Midlothian]]'', published in 1818. |
Together with brass markers bearing building dates, it records the position of the 15th-century [[Old Tolbooth, Edinburgh|Old Tolbooth]], demolished in 1817, which was the administrative centre of the town, prison and one of several sites of public execution. The building features in Sir [[Walter Scott]]'s novel, ''[[The Heart of Midlothian]]'', published in 1818. |
Revision as of 00:16, 29 January 2013
55°56′58.5″N 3°11′29.5″W / 55.949583°N 3.191528°W
The Heart of Midlothian is a heart-shaped mosaic, formed in coloured granite setts, built into the pavement near the West Door of St Giles High Kirk in the High Street section of the Royal Mile in Edinburgh. It is situated close to Parliament House, which formerly housed the Parliament of Scotland and is now the site of the Court of Session and Signet Library.
Together with brass markers bearing building dates, it records the position of the 15th-century Old Tolbooth, demolished in 1817, which was the administrative centre of the town, prison and one of several sites of public execution. The building features in Sir Walter Scott's novel, The Heart of Midlothian, published in 1818.
Although falling within the historic county of Midlothian, which exists today as a registration county, the Heart is no longer within the local authority area of Midlothian. The City of Edinburgh, the historic county town of Midlothian, also known as the County of Edinburgh or Edinburghshire, is now a unitary local authority area which incorporates former sections of West and East Lothian within it. The crest of the Edinburgh football team Heart of Midlothian is based upon this Heart.
Spitting
Visitors to Edinburgh will often notice people spitting on the Heart. A tolbooth (prison) stood on the site, where executions used to take place. The heart marks its doorway: the point of public execution.[1] Some people spit on the Heart. Although it now said to be done for good luck, it was originally done as a sign of disdain for the former prison. The spot lay directly outside the prison entrance, so the custom may have been begun by debtors on their release.
References
- ^ Monuments and Statues of Edinburgh, Michael T.R.B. Turnbull (Chambers) p.17
- A short documentary with both locals and tourists giving their differing views about the origin of spitting on The Heart.
- Picture of the Tolbooth in Edinburgh City Libraries' Capital Collections