Part Three of Six in Edinburgh Information Story Travel Guides.
Walk through Princes Street Gardens, past the Scott Monument and arrive at 'The Mound'; a road linking Edinburgh's medieval old with her neo-classical new.
When this road was first considered, Edinburgh's New Town was residential, and its residents still worked in their old town. The earth, from excavating the new town, was dumped, in the valley between; over the drained remnants of a no longer required defensive and offensive smelling North Loch. The mounds of earth formed a handy thoroughfare for the resident's daily commute.
There are two buildings at the foot of The Mound which are an art lovers dream; or a good place for the rest of us to go when it's raining. Both are part of 'The National Gallery Complex', one of Scotland's top free visitor attractions.
'The Royal Scottish Academy' now occupies the building that a young Victoria sits atop. Her husband Prince Albert laid the foundation stone for the building behind; now 'The National Gallery of Scotland'.
The Playfair steps running up the side of these galleries, takes you from architect William Henry Playfair's two neo-classical structures, to his Gothic styled 'New College' above, now the University of Edinburgh's, School of Divinity.
'New College' was originally built to house the headquarters of four hundred and fifty displaced ministers, who broke away from The Church of Scotland and went on to form their own Free Church of Scotland, (free as in the congregation is free to choose its own minister) an event known as 'The Disruption'.
Such was their cunning; unable to hide from view the church that stood behind, they got Playfair to incorporate its spire between the Gothic towers of their building. With a trick of the eye, at certain angles, the spire can look like part of the New College building.
Move down from New College, to the building with all flags flying:
This was 'The Bank of Scotland on the Mound'. During recent global financial problems, 'The Bank of Scotland' was hastily incorporated into 'Lloyds Banking Group', and a bit of Scottish history disappeared overnight, 'The Bank on the Mound', as it's known, still houses a museum that traces the history of the building, and banking in Scotland. They have examples of old Scottish coins and notes, also how money was mode, (legally and illegally). There's a variety of other displays, such as, what one million pounds looks like. With no admission charge, 'The Museum on the Mound' is another good place to go on a rainy day.
Part Four of Six in Edinburgh Information Story Travel Guides
Before we leave our view from the Mound, look down the valley, past Waverley Station and the North Bridge, and glimpse the edges of two hills; more