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Holyrood Palace

Coordinates:55°57′09″N3°10′21″W/ 55.95250°N 3.17250°W/55.95250; -3.17250
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Palace of Holyroodhouse
The Palace of Holyroodhouse viewed from the Forecourt
Holyrood Palace is located in Edinburgh
Holyrood Palace
Location in Edinburgh, Scotland
Holyrood Palace is located in the United Kingdom
Holyrood Palace
Holyrood Palace (the United Kingdom)
General information
TypeOfficial residence
Architectural styleClassical
LocationRoyal Mile,Edinburgh, Scotland
Coordinates55°57′09″N3°10′21″W/ 55.95250°N 3.17250°W/55.95250; -3.17250
Construction started1671 (north-west tower, 1528)
Completed1678 (north-west tower, 1536)
OwnerKingCharles IIIin right ofthe Crown

ThePalace of Holyroodhouse(/ˈhɒlɪrd/or/ˈhlɪrd/),[1]commonly referred to asHolyrood PalaceorHolyroodhouse,is theofficial residenceof theBritish monarchinScotland.Located at the bottom of theRoyal MileinEdinburgh,at the opposite end toEdinburgh Castle,Holyroodhouse has served as the principal royal residence in Scotland since the 16th century, and is a setting for state occasions and official entertaining.

The Palace adjoinsHolyrood Abbey,and the gardens are set withinHolyrood Park.TheKing's Gallerywas converted from existing buildings at the western entrance to the Palace and was opened in 2002 to exhibit works of art from theRoyal Collection.

King Charles IIIspends one week in residence at Holyroodhouse at the beginning of summer, where he carries out a range of official engagements and ceremonies. The 16th-century historic apartments ofMary, Queen of Scots,and the State Apartments, used for official and state entertaining, are open to the public throughout the year, except when members of theroyal familyare in residence. The Palace also serves as the official residence of theLord High Commissioner to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotlandduring the annual meeting of theGeneral Assembly.

History[edit]

12th–15th centuries[edit]

The ruined nave ofHolyrood Abbey

TheruinedAugustinianHolyrood Abbeythat stands next to the Palace of Holyroodhouse was founded in1128at the order ofKing David I.The name derives either from a legendary vision of the cross witnessed by David I, or from a relic of theTrue Crossknown as the Holy Rood or Black Rood, and which had belonged toSaint Margaret,David's mother.[2]As a royal foundation, and sited close toEdinburgh Castle,it became an important administrative centre. A Papal legate was received here in 1177, while in 1189 a council of nobles met to discuss a ransom for the captiveWilliam the Lion.[3]TheParliament of Scotlandmet at the abbey seven times between 1256 and 1410, and in 1328 theTreaty of Edinburgh–Northamptonwas signed byRobert the Brucein the 'King's Chamber' at the abbey, indicating that it may already have been in use as a royal residence. In 1371,David IIbecame the first of several kings to be buried at Holyrood Abbey, andJames IIwas born, crowned, married, and buried there.[3]James IIIandMargaret of Denmarkwere married at Holyrood in 1469.[2]The early royal residence was in the abbey guesthouse, and by the later 15th century the king occupied dedicated royal lodgings.[3][2]

16th century[edit]

The gatehouse built by James IV, with the palace's James V's Tower behind, in a 1746 drawing byThomas Sandby.
Detail of a sketch made by an English soldier in 1544, showing the palace and abbey in front ofArthur's Seat.TheRoyal Mileis at right.

Between 1501 and 1505,James IVconstructed aGothicpalace adjacent to the abbey. The impetus for the work probably came from the marriage of James IV toMargaret Tudor,which took place in the abbey in August 1503 while work was still ongoing.[2]The Palace of Holyroodhouse was built around aquadrangle,situated west of the abbey cloister. It contained a chapel, gallery, royal apartments, and a great hall. The chapel occupied the north range of the quadrangle, with the queen's apartments occupying part of the south range.[3]The west range contained the king's lodgings and the entrance to the palace. The master masonWalter Merliounbuilt a two-storey gatehouse, which was demolished in 1753, although fragments of it remain in the 19th-century Abbey Court House which stands on Abbey Strand. The upper floor of the gatehouse was a workshop for the glazierThomas Peeblesuntil 1537, when it was converted into a space for mending theroyal tapestries.[4]In 1512 a lion house and menagerie were constructed in the palace gardens to house the king's lion, civet, tigers, lynx, and bears.[5][6]James IV held tournaments of theWild Knight and the Black Ladyin Edinburgh in 1507 and 1508. These events concluded with banquets in the great hall. As the final act of these theatrical events, the Black Lady came into the hall with her Spanish page "Little Martin".[7]A cloud descended from the roof and swept them both away.[8]

James Vadded to the palace between 1528 and 1536, beginning with the present James V's Tower, which is the oldest surviving part of the palace.[9]This huge rectangular tower, rounded at the corners, provided new royal lodgings at the north-west corner of the palace. Originally equipped with adrawbridgeleading to the main entrance (protected with ayett) on the first floor, it may also have been protected by amoat,and provided a high degree of security. The south range was remodelled, and the old queen's apartments were converted into a new chapel, and the former chapel in the north range was converted into the Council Chamber, where ceremonial events normally took place.[3]James IV's west range was demolished and a new west range in theRenaissancestyle was built to house new state rooms, including the royal library.[10][11]The symmetrical composition of the west range suggested that a second tower at the south-west was planned, though this was never executed at the time.[12]Around a series of lesser courts were ranged the Governor's Tower, the armoury, the mint, a forge, kitchens, and other service quarters.[12]James V's first wife,Madeleine of Valois,died at Holyroodhouse in 1537.[13]

The English armies of theEarl of Hertfordsacked Edinburghand caused extensive damage to the palace and the abbey in 1544 and 1547 during theWar of the Rough Wooing.Repairs were made byMary of Guise,and in May 1559 she had a new altarpiece installed in the chapel royal,[14]featuring paintings from Flanders set in a frame made by a French carpenterAndrew Mansioun.[15]The altars were destroyed by a Protestant mob later in the same year, and after theScottish Reformationwas formalised, the abbey buildings were neglected. Thechoirand transepts of the abbey church were pulled down in 1570. The nave was retained as the parish church of theCanongate.[11] The royal apartments in James V's Tower were occupied byMary, Queen of Scotsfrom her return to Scotland in 1561 to her forced abdication in 1567.[16]The palace was heated with coal fromWallyfordinEast Lothian.[17]The queen hadarchery buttserected in the south gardens to allow her to practise, and she hunted deer inHolyrood Park.There was also a flock of sheep in the park which were managed for the queen by the keeper,John Huntar.[18]Some of her French servants formed relationships with women in the Canongate. TheKirk authoritiesdisapproved and made five of these unmarried women stand with bared heads at the cross near the palace for three hours in December 1564.[19]The series of famous audiences Mary gave toJohn Knoxtook place in her audience chamber at Holyroodhouse, and shemarriedher second husband,Henry Stewart, Lord Darnley,in her private chapel in July 1565.[20]It was in the royal apartments that Mary witnessed the murder ofDavid Rizzio,her private secretary, on 9 March 1566. Darnley and several nobles entered the queen's apartments via the private stair from Darnley's own apartments below. Bursting in on the queen, Rizzio and four other courtiers, who were at supper, they dragged Rizzio through the bedchamber and into the outer chamber, where he was stabbed to death, allegedly receiving fifty-seven dagger wounds.[21]Mary married her third husband, James Hepburn, 4th Earl of Bothwell, at the palace in May 1567.[20]

The Murder of David Rizzio,painted in 1833 byWilliam Allan

During the subsequentMarian civil war,on 25 July 1571,William Kirkcaldy of Grangebombarded the king's men garrisoned inside the palace with cannon positioned in the Black Friar Yard, nearthe Pleasance.[22]James VItook upresidence at the Palace of Holyroodhousein 1579 when he began his personal rule. The palace was refurbished byWilliam MacDowallwith a new north gallery painted byWalter Binning,and an apartment for the king's favourite,Esmé Stewart.[23]Thecoronationof James's queen,Anne of Denmark,took place in Holyrood Abbey in 1590, at which time the royal household at the palace numbered around 600 persons.[20]

James VI kept amenagerieof animals at Holyrood including a lion, a tiger, and a lynx.[24]The palace was not however secure enough to prevent the king and queen being surprised in their lodgings duringtwo raids in December 1591 and July 1593byFrancis Stewart, 5th Earl of Bothwell,a nobleman implicated by theNorth Berwick Witch Trials.[25]Three of James VI's children,Elizabeth,Margaret,andCharles,were baptised in the chapel royal. The Parliament of Scotland met at the Palace of Holyroodhouse on 29 occasions between 1573 and 1630.

17th century[edit]

James VI was in residence at Holyroodhouse on 26 March 1603 whenSir Robert Careyarrived at the palace to inform the King of Scots thatElizabeth Ihad died two days earlier, and that James was now King ofEnglandandIreland.With James's accession to the English throne and his move south to reside inLondon,the palace was no longer the seat of a permanentroyal court.James visited in 1617, and the Chapel Royal was redecorated for the occasion. The west front was remodelled in 1633 in preparation for the coronation ofCharles Iat Holyrood Abbey, and Charles resided at the palace again from August to November 1641.[11]In 1646 he conferred onJames Hamilton, 1st Duke of Hamiltonand his descendants the office of Hereditary Keeper of the palace.[26]In November 1650, the palace was damaged extensively by fire while it was occupied byOliver Cromwell's troops. After this, much of the palace was abandoned.

The west range of the palace drawn around 1649 by James Gordon of Rothiemay, prior to reconstruction in the 1670s.

Following therestorationofCharles IIin 1660, the Palace of Holyroodhouse once again became a royal palace and the meeting place of the reconstitutedPrivy Council.[27]Repairs were put in hand to allow use of the palace by theEarl of Lauderdale,theSecretary of State,and a full survey was carried out in 1663 byJohn Mylne.[27]In 1670, the Privy Council decided to almost completely rebuild the palace. Apart from Holyroodhouse andWindsor Castle,Charles II failed to complete any of his palace modernisation schemes, largely due to lack of money.[27][28]The reason that the Palace of Holyroodhouse was seen as a priority and was completed was that the rebuilding of the palace was paid for by the Privy Council.[27][28]Following the failure of proposals for political union with England in 1669, the Council wanted to emphasise Edinburgh's position as a royal capital and seat of government. At the time, it seemed unlikely that Charles II would ever visit Edinburgh. In practice, the royal apartments would be occupied by theLord High Commissioner,and the other apartments were to be given over as lodgings for various officers of state.[27][28]

As Lord High Commissioner from 1669 to 1678, John Maitland, 1st Duke of Lauderdale wasvicegerentin Scotland and, as the principal occupant of the new palace, he closely supervised the building operations. Plans for complete reconstruction were drawn up bySir William Bruce,theSurveyor General of the King's Works,andRobert Mylne,the King's Master Mason. The design included a gothic south-west tower to mirror the existing north-west tower, a plan which had existed since at least Charles I's time. Following criticism of Bruce's initial plans for the internal layout from Charles II, Bruce redesigned the layout to provide suites of royal apartments on the first floor, with the Queen's Apartments (built forCatherine of Braganza) in the west range and the King's Apartments in the south and east ranges. The two were linked by the Great Gallery to the north, and the Council Chamber occupied the south-west tower.[28]

Construction began in July 1671, starting at the north-west, which was ready for use by Lauderdale the following year, and by 1674 much of the work was complete. In 1675Lord Haltounbecame the first of many nobles to take up agrace-and-favourapartment in the palace. A second phase of work started in 1676, when the Duke of Lauderdale ordered Bruce to demolish and rebuild the main west façade, resulting by 1679 in the present west front which forms the main entrance. Bruce also constructed a kitchen block to the south-east of the Quadrangle. By 1679 the palace had been reconstructed, largely in its present form. Craftsmen employed included the Dutch carpenters Alexander Eizat and Jan van Santvoort, and their compatriotJacob de Wetwho painted several ceilings. The elaborate plasterwork was carried out by the English plasterers John Houlbert and George Dunsterfield.[29]In November 1679,James, Duke of Albany,the future James VII, and his wife,Mary of Modena,took up residence at Holyroodhouse following James's appointment as Lord High Commissioner.[30]They resided at the palace until February 1680, and then again from October 1680 to May 1682, and during this period culture flourished in Edinburgh under the patronage of James's vice-regal court. His daughterAnnealso resided at Holyroodhouse between 1681 and 1682.[31]When James acceded to the throne in 1685, the Catholic king set up aJesuitcollege in the Chancellor's Lodging to the south of the palace. James VII founded theOrder of the Thistlein May 1687 and Holyrood Abbey was designated as the chapel for the new order. The interiors of the chapel, and the Jesuit College, were subsequently destroyed by an anti-Catholic mob in December 1688, following the beginning of theGlorious Revolution.[30]

18th century[edit]

A view of the palace and abbey in 1789

After theUnion of Scotland and Englandin 1707 the palace lost its principal functions. The office of Lord High Commissioner ceased to exist, and with the abolition of the Privy Council in 1708 the Council Chamber became redundant.[32]TheDukes of Hamilton,as Hereditary Keepers, had already taken over the Queen's Apartments in James V's Tower 1684, while the King's Apartments were neglected, and various nobles occupied the grace-and-favour apartments in the palace.[33][30]

Holyroodhouse briefly became a royal palace once again whenCharles Edward Stuart,as 'Prince Regent' for hisfather,set up court at the palace for six weeks in September and October 1745, during theJacobite Rising.Charles occupied the Duke of Hamilton's apartments rather than the King's Apartments, and held balls and other entertainments in the Great Gallery. In January 1746, following their defeat by the Jacobite army at theBattle of Falkirk Muir,the government troops ofHenry Hawleywho were billeted in the palace damaged the royal portraits in the Gallery. TheDuke of Cumberlandalso occupied the apartments in James V's Tower during his march north toCulloden.[34]The potential of the palace as a tourist attraction was already being recognised, with the Duke of Hamilton allowing paying guests to view Mary, Queen of Scots´ apartments in James V's Tower.[35]The precincts of Holyrood Abbey, extending to the whole ofHolyrood Park,had been designated as a debtors' sanctuary since the 16th century. Those in debt could escape their creditors, andimprisonment,by taking up residence within the sanctuary, and a small community grew up to the west of the palace. The residents, known colloquially as "AbbeyLairds",were able to leave the sanctuary on Sundays, when no arrests were permitted. The area was controlled by abaillie,and by several constables, appointed by the Keeper of Holyroodhouse. Theconstablesnow form a ceremonial guard at the palace.[36]

19th century[edit]

Engraving ofHoly Rood PalacebyThomas Hearne,drawn in 1778, engraving published 1800.
19th-century view of the Palace of Holyroodhouse fromCalton Hill.

Following theFrench Revolution,George IIIallowed theComte d'Artois,the exiled younger brother ofLouis XVI of France,to live at the Palace of Holyroodhouse.[36]Artois – who would accede to the French throne in 1824 as Charles X – resided at Holyroodhouse from 1796 to 1803. He occupied the King's Apartments, and during this period the palace was refurbished. Artois took advantage of the sanctuary provided by the abbey to avoid his creditors. His sons,Louis AntoineandCharles Ferdinand,also spent periods at Holyroodhouse with their father.[36]

Holyrood Palace, waxed-paper negative by Thomas Keith, c. 1856.Department of Image Collections,National Gallery of Art Library, Washington DC

William Murray Nairne, 5thLord Nairne,was appointed Assistant Inspector-General of Barracks in Scotland in 1806 and he and his wife, the song-writer and avid JacobiteCarolina Oliphant,enjoyed the use of the Royal Appartments as one of the perks of the post.[37]

During hisvisit to Scotland in 1822,King George IVbecame the first reigning monarch since Charles I in 1641 to visit the Palace of Holyroodhouse. Although he was lodged atDalkeith Palace,the king held alevéeat Holyroodhouse, received addresses, and was shown the historic apartments of Mary, Queen of Scots. He ordered repairs to the palace but declared that Queen Mary's rooms should be protected from any future changes. Between 1824 and 1834,Robert Reidoversaw works including the demolition of all the outlying buildings to the north and south of the quadrangle, and the refacing of the south front. Following theJuly Revolutionof 1830, Charles X of France went into exile again, and he arrived to reside at Holyroodhouse again in October, along with his grandson and heir,Henri, Count of Chambord,the Duke andDuchess of Angoulême,theDuchess of Berry,Louise Marie Thérèse d'Artois,and their household. TheBourbonsremained in Edinburgh until September 1832, when they moved toPrague.[36]In 1834William IVagreed that theLord High Commissioner to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotlandcould make use of the palace during theGeneral Assembly's annual meeting, and this tradition continues today.

On the first visit ofQueen Victoriato Scotland in 1842, she also stayed at Dalkeith Palace, and was prevented from visiting Holyroodhouse due to an outbreak ofscarlet feverin the vicinity.[38]Renovations were carried out byRobert Mathesonof theOffice of Worksin preparation for the queen andPrince Albert's 1850 residence at the palace, and the King's Apartments were refurbished byDavid Ramsay Hay:the King's Closet was used as the queen's breakfast room, the King's Ante-Chamber as the queen's bedroom, and the King's Bedchamber became Prince Albert's dressing room.[39][40]A statue of Victoria was erected in the Forecourt in 1851 (it was replaced by the fountain in 1858), and in 1855–56 the King's Drawing Room (the present Throne Room) was refitted by Robert Matheson.[41]Over the next few years, the lodgings of the various nobles were gradually repossessed and, in 1871, Victoria was able to take possession of the second-floor apartments formerly occupied by theDukes of Argyll(by virtue of their position asMasters of the Household) as her private apartments, freeing up the King's Apartments to be used as public apartments. From 1854 the historic apartments in James V's Tower were formally opened to the public.[42]Victoria last resided at the palace in November 1886.[43]

20th century to the present day[edit]

AlthoughEdward VIIvisited briefly in 1903, it wasGeorge Vwho transformed Holyroodhouse into a modern palace, with the installation of central heating, electric lighting, the modernisation of the kitchens, and the addition of new bathrooms and a lift. In 1922 the palace was selected as the site of the Scottish National Memorial to Edward VII and a statue of Edward was erected on the Forecourt, facing the Abbey. As part of the memorial, the Forecourt was also enclosed with boundary walls, richly decorated wrought-iron railings and gates. The palace was formally designated as the monarch'sofficial residencein Scotland and became the location for regular royal ceremonies and events.[44]

TheRoyal Standardused in Scotland is flown when the monarch is in residence.

The British monarch spends one week (known as 'Royal Week') at the Palace of Holyroodhouse each summer.[45]While serving asDuke of Rothesay,Charles IIIalso stayed at Holyroodhouse for one week a year, carrying out official duties.[46]Following the death ofQueen Elizabeth IIatBalmoral Castlein September 2022, her coffin was transported to the palace, where it lay in repose in the Throne Room from 11 to 12 September, before being taken in procession toSt Giles' Cathedral.These were the first obsequies held in Scotland for a monarch since the burial of James V at Holyrood Abbey in January 1543.[47][48]

Investituresand banquets are held in the palace's Great Gallery,audiencesare held in the Morning Drawing Room, lunch parties and receptions take place in the Throne Room, dinner parties are held in the State Dining Room, and annual garden parties are hosted in the gardens. When the King is in residence, the Scottish version of theRoyal Standard of the United Kingdomis flown; at all other times, theRoyal Banner of Scotlandis displayed. During the King's visits, theRoyal Company of Archersform his ceremonial bodyguard and theHigh Constables of Holyroodhouseprovide aguard of honour.TheCeremony of the Keys,in which the King is formally presented with the keys of Edinburgh by theLord Provost of Edinburgh,is held on the Forecourt on his arrival. The wedding reception ofZara PhillipsandMike Tindallwas held in the palace following their wedding at theCanongate Kirkin 2011.[49]

In its role as the official residence of the monarch in Scotland, the Palace of Holyroodhouse has hosted a number of foreign visitors and dignitaries, including kingsOlav VandHarald Vof Norway,King Carl XVI Gustaf of Sweden,Mikhail Gorbachev,François Mitterrand,Helmut Kohl,Nelson Mandela,Vladimir Putin,Mary McAleese,Pope Benedict XVI,andJustin Trudeau.[50][51][52][53][54][55][56]A meeting of theEuropean Councilwas held at the palace in December 1992 during the British presidency of the council.[57]Queen Elizabeth II gave a dinner at Holyroodhouse for the Commonwealth heads of government in October 1997 during theCommonwealth Heads of Government Meetingin Edinburgh.[58]Since 1834 theLord High Commissioner to the General Assembly of the Church of Scotlandresides at the palace for a week each year while theGeneral Assemblyis meeting.[59]

The Palace of Holyroodhouse remains the property ofthe Crown.As the official royal residence in Scotland, building conservation and maintenance work on the Palace and Abbey falls to theScottish Governmentand is delivered on their behalf by the Conservation Directorate ofHistoric Environment Scotland.Public access is managed by theRoyal Collection Trust,with revenues used to support the work of the trust as custodians of theRoyal Collection.[60]In April 2016 the Royal Collection Trust announced it was to fund a £10m project to redevelop the outside space at Holyroodhouse, including Holyrood Abbey, the grounds and forecourt. The project was completed at the end of 2018 in partnership with Historic Environment Scotland, and included the restoration of the Abbey Strand buildings which now house a learning centre.[61]

Architecture[edit]

The Quadrangle, designed by Sir William Bruce, reflects the Palace's monastic origins with its cloister-like layout

The Palace of Holyroodhouse as it stands today was designed bySir William Bruceand built between 1671 and 1678, with the exception of the 16th-century north-west tower built by James V. The palace is laid out round a central,classical-style three-storey plus attic quadrangle layout. The palace extends approximately 230 feet (70 m) from north to south and 230 feet (70 m) from east to west. The 16th-century north-west tower is balanced with a matching south-west tower, each with a pair of circular angle turrets with ball-finialled, conical bell-cast roofs. The towers are linked by a recessed two-storey front, with the central principal entrance framed by giantDoriccolumns and surmounted by the carvedRoyal arms of Scotland.Above the arms a crownedcupolawith a clock rises behind a brokenpedimentsupported by dolphins, on which are two reclining figures.[62]

The north and south fronts have symmetrical three-storey facades that rise behind to far left and right of the two-storey west front with regular arrangement of bays. General repairs were completed by the architectRobert Reidbetween 1824 and 1834 that included the partial rebuilding of the south-west corner tower and refacing of the entire south front inashlarto match that of the east. The east (rear) elevation has 17 bays with lightly superimposedpilastersof the threeclassical orderson each floor. The ruins of the abbey church connect to the palace on the north-east corner. For the internal quadrangle, Bruce designed a colonnaded piazza of nine arches on the north, south and east facades with pilasters, again from the three classical orders, to indicate the importance of the three main floors. The plainDoric orderis used for the services of the ground floor, theIonic orderis used for the State Apartments on the first floor, while the elaborateCorinthian orderis used for the royal apartments on the second floor.[63]

Architectural historianDan Cruickshankselected the palace as one of his eight choices for the 2002BBCbookThe Story of Britain's Best Buildings.[64]

Interior[edit]

The Palace of Holyroodhouse covers 87,120 square feet (8,093 m2) of floor space and contains 289 rooms. The private apartments of the King and the other members of the Royal Family are located on the second floor of the south and east wings. The 17 rooms open to the public include the 17th-century State Apartments, the Great Gallery, and the 16th-century apartments in James V's Tower. The paintingAn Incident in the Rebellion of 1745byDavid Morieris in the lobby of the Palace.[65]

State Apartments[edit]

The lobby of the Great Stair.
The Royal Dining Room.
Sir David Wilkie's portrait of the kilted George IV, which hangs in the Royal Dining Room.

The Great Stair in the south-west corner of the Quadrangle has a 17th-century Baroque ceiling featuring plaster angels holding theHonours of Scotland.The Italian paintings on the walls are fragments offrescoespaintedcirca1550 byLattanzio Gambara,illustrating scenes fromOvid'sMetamorphoses.They were bought byPrince Albertin 1856, and placed here in 1881.[66]At the top of the stair are the entrances to the West Drawing Room - the former Council Chamber - and the Royal Dining Room. The latter was originally the Queen's Guard Chamber and formed part of the Queen's Apartments. The Dining Room'sAdam styledecoration dates from around 1800, when this was part of the Duke of Hamilton's apartments. The room was first used as a dining room at the end of Queen Victoria's reign, and continues to be used as such. The room features portraits of Bonnie Prince Charlie, George IV, Victoria and Elizabeth II, along with the 3,000-piece silver banqueting service commissioned to mark theSilver Jubilee of George Vin 1935.

The King's Apartments occupied the whole of the south and east sides of the Quadrangle. Accessed from the Great Stair, the suite of rooms comprised a guard chamber, presence chamber, privy chamber, antechamber, bedchamber and closet. The level of privacy, as well as the richness of decoration, increased in sequence. The Throne Room was originally the King's Guard Chamber, but was used as the King's Drawing Room from the visit of George IV in 1822, when athroneand canopy of state were erected at the west end of the room for theleveeshosted there. Queen Victoria used the room as a dining room, before it became the Throne Room in 1871.[67]The 1822 throne was replaced in 1911 by a pair of throne chairs made for George V and Queen Mary, which sit upon thedaisbeneath the Royal Arms of Scotland. In 1929 a new ceiling was installed that matched the others in the King's Apartments, and oak-panelled walls which incorporate paintings were installed. The paintings include theJohn Michael Wrightportrait of Charles II andPeter Lely's portraits ofCatherine of Braganza,James VII and Mary of Modena.[68]

The Evening Drawing Room was originally Charles II's Presence Chamber, where important visitors would have been received by the king. The ornate plasterwork ceiling is one of the original series designed to mark the processional route to the King's Bedchamber.[69]The Royal Family use the room for receptions. The Morning Drawing Room was Charles II's Privy Chamber. The ceiling is decorated in the corners withcherubsandeaglesbearing the cipher of Charles II and theHonours of Scotland,while the long central panels feature heraldiclionsandunicorns.[70]The French tapestries purchased for Charles II in 1668 tell the story ofDiana,the goddess of the hunt.[71]Charles III uses the Morning Drawing Room to give private audiences to theFirst Minister,thePresiding Officer of the Scottish Parliament,and other visiting dignitaries.

The King's Antechamber, Bedchamber and Closet are laid out along the east side of the palace. The King's Bedchamber, at the centre of the east façade, has the finest of the 17th-century plaster ceilings, augmented by paintings ofHerculesbyJacob de Wet II.The 17th-century State Bed has been in the palace since 1684, and was probably made for the Dukes of Hamilton, although it was long referred to as "Queen Mary's Bed" when it occupied Mary, Queen of Scots' rooms.[72]The King's Closet was designed to be the king's study.[73]

The Great Gallery[edit]

The Great Gallery, at 150 feet (45 m) in length, is the largest room in the palace and connects the King's Closet on the east side with the Queen's Lobby in James V's Tower to the west. The Gallery features a pair of black marble chimneypieces withinDoricsurrounds, framed byIonicpilasters.[74]The most notable decorative features of the gallery are 96 of the 111 original portraits of theScottish monarchs,beginning with the legendaryFergus I,who supposedly ruled from 330 BC.[75]The Dutch painter Jacob de Wet was commissioned by Charles II to paint the portraits, illustrating both real and legendary monarchs, from Fergus I to James VII. The portraits were completed between 1684 and 1686, and celebrate the royal bloodline of Scotland which the Scots upheld for its continuity and antiquity as an important part of their national identity in the seventeenth century.[76]The Great Gallery has served many purposes over the centuries. Following the Union of 1707 it was the venue for the election ofScottish representative peersin theHouse of Lordsuntil 1963.Bonnie Prince Charlieheld evening balls in the Gallery during hisbrief occupation,and following his victory at theBattle of Falkirk Muirin January 1746, the defeated government troops were quartered in the Gallery. While theComte d'Artoiswas in residence it served as a Catholic chapel, and in the early 20th century it was used as the State Dining Room.[74]Today it is used for large functions including investitures and banquets.[77]The Gallery contains the Tam o' Shanter Chair, a Gothic-style oak armchair which celebrates the work ofRobert Burns.It was made by John Underwood of Ayr from a portion of the roof ofAlloway Auld Kirk,which is the setting for much of the poem "Tam o' Shanter".By the time that Burns was at the height of his fame, the Kirk had become a ruin and the timbers of the roof were used to make a number of Burns-related memorabilia and souvenirs. The chair was presented to George IV in 1822.[74]

James V's Tower[edit]

The suite of rooms on the first floor of James V's Tower is accessed from the Queen's Lobby and comprises the Queen's Antechamber and the Queen's Bedchamber, leading from which are two turret rooms or closets.[78]During the 1560s these rooms were occupied byLord Darnleyand, following the rebuilding of the palace in the 1670s, they became part of the Queen's Apartments.[78]TheDuke of Hamiltontook over the rooms in James V's Tower from 1684, and the Ante-Chamber became the Duke's dining room.[78]Much of the decoration of this room dates from the mid nineteenth century, when the historical apartments in James V's Tower were opened to visitors. The room also contains a series of tapestries and portraits ofElizabeth, Queen of Bohemia,the daughter of James VI.[78]

The Queen's Bedroom (also known as Lord Darnley's Bedchamber) is dominated by the so-called 'Darnley' bed. The bed was actually supplied to the Duke of Hamilton in 1682. The Stuart connection was provided by Bonnie Prince Charlie, who occupied the Duke of Hamilton's apartments in 1745, and slept in this bed.[79]The room is linked by a small spiral staircase to Mary, Queen of Scots' Bedchamber on the second floor.

The suite of rooms on the second floor of James V's Tower was occupied by Mary, Queen of Scots from 1561 until 1567. Mary Queen of Scots' Outer Chamber was where Mary, Queen of Scots received her visitors and where her famous audiences withJohn Knoxtook place. It is also the room in whichDavid Rizzio,Mary's private secretary, was stabbed and his alleged bloodstain can be seen in the place where his body was left.[80]The room is now used to display a range ofStuartandJacobiterelics that have been collected by successive monarchs. Among the relics associated with Queen Mary are an embroidery of a cat and a mouse, made whilst she was in captivity in England. This possibly alludes to her relationship with her cousin,Elizabeth I of England,with Mary as the mouse and Elizabeth the cat.[81]The so-called 'Darnley Jewel', was probably made forMargaret, Countess of Lennox,mother of Queen Mary's second husband, Lord Darnley. The emblems and inscriptions refer to the countess's hopes and ambitions for her grandson, the future James VI. The Jewel was purchased by Queen Victoria from the collection of Horace Walpole in 1842. The Memorial to Lord Darnley was also commissioned by Lord Darnley's parents, after his murder, and may implicate Queen Mary in his death. Several of the inscriptions have been removed, possibly by James VI, depicted as a child in the picture, mourning his father.[80]The compartmented oak ceiling in Mary, Queen of Scots' Bedchamber dates from Queen Mary's time, and the monogramsIR(Jacobus Rex) andMR(Maria Regina) refer to her parents, James V andMary of Guise.Below the ceiling is a frieze, painted ingrisaillewith theHonours of Scotland.[82]

Gardens and grounds[edit]

Bird's-eye view of the Palace of Holyroodhouse and Holyrood Abbey, including the western towers

The gardens of the palace extend to some 10 acres (4.0 ha), set within the much largerHolyrood Park.In the 16th century, a privy garden was located to the north of the palace, accessed via a wooden gallery from the north-west tower. This was removed in 1857 when Prince Albert took an interest in the grounds, forming a new carriage drive to the north to avoid the Canongate slums and laying out the garden in its present form.[83]

A small garden building, surviving from the 16th century, is known as Queen Mary's Bath House, although it is not thought to have been used for bathing.[84]The sundial to the north of the palace was carved in 1633 byJohn Mylne,[84]while the sandstone fountain in the centre of the Forecourt was erected in 1858 byRobert Mathesonand is based on the design of the 16th-century fountain atLinlithgow Palace.[45]The ornamental screens and the decorative wrought-iron entrance gates to the north, west and south of the Forecourt were designed byGeorge Washington Browneand were erected in 1920 as a memorial to Edward VII, along with a statue of Edward byHenry Snell Gamleywhich was unveiled by George V in 1922.[62]The buildings to the west of the Forecourt are the Gatehouse and former Guard Rooms (1861) (which replaced the tenements of debtors' sanctuary), the Palace Coach House, the former stables (1861), the Café at the Palace in the Mews Courtyard, and theKing's Gallery.

In 1987 the Holyrood Palace and Park were added to theInventory of Gardens and Designed Landscapes in Scotland.[85]

"Big Royal Dig"[edit]

The Palace of Holyroodhouse, along withBuckingham Palace GardenandWindsor Castle,was excavated on 25–28 August 2006 as part of a special edition ofChannel 4's archaeology seriesTime Team.The archaeologists uncovered part of thecloisterof Holyrood Abbey, running in line with the existing abbey ruins, and a square tower associated with the 15th-century building works of James IV was discovered. The team failed to locate evidence of thereal tenniscourt used by Queen Mary to the north of the palace, as the area had been built over in the 19th century. An area of reddened earth was discovered, which was linked with theEarl of Hertford'sburning of Holyroodduring theRough Wooingof 1544. Among the objects found were aseal matrixused to stamp the wax seal on correspondence or documents,[86]and a Frenchdouble tournoiscoin, minted byGaston d'Orléansin 1634.[87]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

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Bibliography[edit]

External links[edit]