Edinburgh Castle raises the standard

Edinburgh Castle and the New Town
New flags have been hoisted at Edinburgh Castle to mark the improvement of the visitor experience at Scotland’s premier attraction thanks to a major investment programme to improve services and facilities for visitors.

The flags bear Edinburgh Castle’s distinctive and recently launched logo of a mighty lion perched on a rock. This was created as part of Historic Scotland’s strategy to heighten the Castle’s status as a world-class attraction by strengthening its unique identity and conveying its character and importance in history and as an national symbol and cultural resource.

The raising of the new flags signals the culmination of the Edinburgh Castle Visitor Reception Project, a £2.7 million scheme designed to achieve a series of significant enhancements to visitor services and ensure every one of the iconic heritage property’s 1.2 million visitors a year enjoys an unrivalled and unforgettable experience of it.

The project’s priorities were to provide a warmer welcome for visitors, cut queues and make entry and exit to the castle quicker and easier. Project milestones have included the removal of the old ticket office on the Esplanade to give visitors uninterrupted views of the stunning Castle on arrival, the creation of a contemporary new ticket office and visitor reception area - designed by one of Scotland’s leading architectural practices and offering stunning views of the capital - the introduction of a streamlined new ticketing system to enable fast-track admissions, the development of the Castle’s new branding and logo, the launch of Edinburgh Castle’s own official website, and the introduction of striking new uniforms for visitor services staff featuring the new, exclusive Edinburgh Castle Tartan.


Edinburgh Castle, built on the 340 million-year-old remains of an extinct volcano, dominates the Scottish capital city’s skyline just as it has dominated Scotland’s history. The ‘stronghold of Eidyn’ was first recorded before 600AD and by the Middle Ages, it had become a mighty fortification and the favoured royal residence of Scotland’s kings and queens. Many defining moments of Scottish history have taken place there. In 1140, the castle became the first recorded meeting place of the assembly we now know as the Scottish Parliament. In 1566, it was the birthplace of the only child of Mary Queen of Scots; a son who grew up to unite the crowns of Scotland and England. And in 1689, it endured its last full siege when the garrison became the last defenders of the Stewart king James VII and II.


The castle’s top attractions are:
The Honours of Scotland – the nation’s crown jewels.
- The Stone of Destiny – the coronation stone of the ancient kings of Scots.
- The Great Hall, Laich Hall, King’s Dining Room and St Margaret’s Chapel, somen of the remarkable medieval rooms and buildings where kings,
queens and great nobles wined, dined and worshipped.
- The Prisons of War Experience – thousands of military prisoners were held in the castle over the centuries. There is now a major recreation of what it was like at the end of the 18th century.
- National War Memorial - an impressive building commemorating those who have died in conflict from World War I onwards. There are also three military museums at the castle.
- Mons Meg – a huge medieval siege gun that fired stones weighing 150kg
(330lbs) for 3.2km (two miles).
- The One O’clock Gun – fired daily, except the Sabbath and certain holidays, as a time signal.
- The Dog Cemetery – the last resting place of regimental mascots and the
faithful friends of many officers.