Edinburgh/Related Articles: Difference between revisions
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===Academics and Scientists=== | ===Academics and Scientists=== |
Revision as of 17:07, 29 January 2011
- See also changes related to Edinburgh, or pages that link to Edinburgh or to this page or whose text contains "Edinburgh".
Subtopics - Places
- Arthur's Seat: The plug of a long extinct volcano that forms the largest hill in Edinburgh. [e]
- Royal Palace of Holyroodhouse: An official residence of the monarch, located in Edinburgh, Scotland. [e]
- John Knox House: 15th century town house in Edinburgh, it displays exhibits about John Knox. [e]
- Greyfriars Bobby: Nineteenth-century Syke Terrier in Edinburgh, Scotland who became famous for keeping vigil by his master's grave every day (barring extreme weather) for fourteen years. [e]
- Greyfriars Kirk: Now 'Greyfriars Tolbooth & Highland Kirk', is a parish kirk (church) of the Church of Scotland and one of the oldest surviving buildings in Edinburgh outside the Old Town, built between 1602 and c.1620. [e]
- Scottish Parliament: Legislative body of Scotland, having authority over many aspects of Scottish political life including Health and Education; re-created by the Act of Devolution 1997. [e]
- The Forth Bridge: Cantilever railway bridge, built in 1883-1890, that connects Edinburgh to Fife [e]
- Royal Mile: The streets in Edinburgh's Old Town that run from Holyrood Palace to Edinburgh Castle. [e]
- University of Edinburgh: Founded in 1582, one of the leading academic institutions in the UK. [e]
- Auld Reekie: Old nickname for Edinburgh, Scotland, meaning old smokey. [e]
Subtopics - Societies
- The Edinburgh Phrenological Society: Established in 1820, became the leading phrenological society of the U.K. and established Edinburgh as a major centre of phrenology in the 19th century. [e]
- The Royal Society of Edinburgh: Scotland's National Academy of Science & Letters; created in 1783 by Royal Charter for “the advancement of learning and useful knowledge.” [e]
- The Edinburgh Mathematical Society: Founded in 1883 for "the mutual improvement of its members in the Mathematical Sciences, pure and applied." [e]
- The Old Edinburgh Club: Local history society, founded in 1908 with the aim of recording the vanishing evidence of Edinburgh's history, its buildings and its past inhabitants. [e]
- The Edinburgh Bibliographical Society: The oldest continuing Society of its kind, founded in 1890. [e]
- The Edinburgh Geological Society: Founded in 1834 with the aim of stimulating public interest in geology and the advancement of geological knowledge. [e]
- Edinburgh Free Thinkers' Zetetic Society: Formed in 1820 to provide support for the republican and freethinking publisher Richard Carlile and his family after Carlile had been imprisoned for blasphemy. [e],
Subtopics - People
- Thomas Aikenhead: The last person to be executed for blasphemy in the UK. [e]
- John Knox: Scottish clergyman (1514-1572), leader of the Scottish Reformation and founder of Scottish Presbyterianism. [e]
- William Brodie: (1741 - 1788) Respectable Edinburgh citizen who led a gang of burglars and died on a gallows that he himself had designed. [e]
- William Burke: (1792 - 1829) Prisoner hanged in Edinburgh's Lawnmarket in 1829 for his role in the West Port Murders. [e]
- Mary, Queen of Scots: (8 December 1542 – 8 February 1857) Mary Stuart (or Stewart), Queen of Scotland (1542–67) and queen consort of France (1559–60); forced to flee to England after a rebellion among Scottish nobles, she was finally beheaded as a Roman Catholic threat to the English throne. [e]
- Helen Duncan: (1897 – 1956), a Scottish medium who became the last person to be imprisoned in the United Kingdom under the Witchcraft Act of 1735. [e]
- Thomas Muir: (1765 – 1799) Scottish political reformer, and the most notable victim of political repression in the years after the French Revolution. [e]
- Earl Haig: (Sir Douglas Haig, 1861–1928); during World War I, commander-in-chief of the British Expeditionary Forces in France and Flanders from December 1915 until the Armistice. [e]
- Marie Stopes: (1880-1958), campaigner for women's rights and pioneer of birth control. [e]
Poets
- Thomas Blacklock: (1721 - 1791) The"blind poet", an early supporter of Robert Burns. [e]
- Robert Burns: The National poet of Scotland (1759-96); writer of Auld Lang Syne. [e]
- Robert Fergusson: (1750 - 1774) Scottish poet whose verse inspired Robert Burns. [e]
- William McGonagall: (1825-1902) Scotland's (and possibly the world's) worst poet. [e]
- Allan Ramsay (1686–1758): Poet who wrote mainly in the Scots vernacular, and is best known for his pastoral verse-play "The Gentle Shepherd". [e]
Writers
- James Boswell: Add brief definition or description
- Robert Chambers: Add brief definition or description
- Arthur Conan-Doyle: Add brief definition or description
- Daniel Defoe: Add brief definition or description
- John Home: Add brief definition or description
- Alexander McCall-Smith: Add brief definition or description
- Ian Rankin: Add brief definition or description
- JK Rowling: Add brief definition or description
- Sir Walter Scott: Add brief definition or description
- Muriel Spark: Add brief definition or description
- Robert Louis Stevenson: Add brief definition or description
- James Tytler: Add brief definition or description
Artists and Musicians
- Allan Ramsay: Add brief definition or description
- Robert Adam: Add brief definition or description
- Alexander Campbell Mackenzie: Add brief definition or description
- Henry Raeburn: Add brief definition or description
- David Wilkie: Add brief definition or description
Academics and Scientists
- Joseph Black: Add brief definition or description
- Hugh Blair: Add brief definition or description
- James Burnet, Lord Monboddo: Add brief definition or description
- James Croll: Add brief definition or description
- William Cullen: Add brief definition or description
- Charles Darwin: Add brief definition or description Darwin began training as a physician in Edinburgh in 1825 at the age of 16; his father, Robert, and grandfather Erasmus had both been trained there, but Charles found the lectures "intolerably dull," and he left after two years.
- Erasmus Darwin: Add brief definition or description
- Peter Higgs: Add brief definition or description
- Henry Home, Lord Kames: Add brief definition or description
- David Hume: Add brief definition or description
- Adam Ferguson: Add brief definition or description
- John Forbes: Add brief definition or description
- Archibald Geikie: Add brief definition or description
- James Geikie: Add brief definition or description
- James Hutton: Add brief definition or description
- James Lind: Add brief definition or description
- James Clerk Maxwell: Add brief definition or description
- Alexander Monro primus: Add brief definition or description
- Alexander Monro secundus: Add brief definition or description
- John Playfair: Add brief definition or description
- William Robertson: Add brief definition or description
- Daniel Rutherford: Add brief definition or description
- Edward Albert Sharpey-Schafer: Add brief definition or description
- James Young Simpson: Add brief definition or description
- Adam Smith: Add brief definition or description
- Dugald Stewart: Add brief definition or description
Politicians
- Tony Blair: Add brief definition or description
- Gordon Brown: Add brief definition or description
- James Connolly: Add brief definition or description Connolly was born in the Cowgate - then a slum area of Edinburgh's Old Town, nicknamed "Little Ireland."
- Sir John Sinclair, 1st Baronet: Add brief definition or description (In The Statistical Accounts of Scotland)
Parent topics
- Scotland: Add brief definition or description
- Great Britain: Add brief definition or description
- United Kingdom: Add brief definition or description
- European Union: Add brief definition or description
Town and cities
- Glasgow: Add brief definition or description
- Inverness: Add brief definition or description
- Dundee: Add brief definition or description
- Aberdeen: Add brief definition or description