Tutto su Edimburgo
Città Nuova di Edimburgo
Attrazioni
La New Town di Edimburgo è stata l'idea di Re Giorgio III e il design su cui ha deciso originariamente erano 3 strade principali con 2 piazze una a est e una a ovest a ciascuna estremità di George Street. Con 4 strade che si incrociano verticalmente da Princes Street a Queen Street. Clicca sui pulsanti qui sotto per vedere cosa c'è in ciascuna delle strade.
Città Nuova di Edimburgo
Attrazioni
The naming of “The New Town”
In 1759 King George III had a new town built as an extension of Edinburgh City, as the over population of the old town streets had become unliveable. A bridge was built as an access to where the new town would be built (North Bridge). Where the area of the Nor Loch once covered, now Waverley Rail Station and Princes Street Gardens stand. When the plans for the new town were agreed the King named the streets with the main street after himself (George Street).
The other streets of the new town were named after as follows: Queen Street, named after his wife the Queen: St. Giles Street after the city’s patron saint, St. Giles: St. Andrew Square after the patron saint of Scotland and George Square after the patron saint of England. The smaller street between George Street and Queen Street is named Thistle Street (Scotland’s national emblem) The street between George Street and St. Giles Street named Rose Street
(England’s national emblem). King George, after consideration, rejected the name St. Giles Street as St Giles being the patron saint of lepers and also the name of a slum area on the edge of the City of London. It was renamed Princes Street after his sons, the three Princes. The name of St. George Square was also changed to Charlotte Square after his wife Charlotte the Queen as there was already a George Square just outside the old town. Thistle Street was split into three separate street names, from the west end. It became Young Street then Hill Street after the architects who built the new town with the final part remaining Thistle Street now half the length of Rose Street. The three streets running across the main street completing the new town area, Castle Street named for the view of the castle, Frederick Street after the king’s father Frederick and Hanover Street was after the Royal house of Hanover. The main access to the new town was by the North Bridge. The Nor Loch was drained and the debris from the excavations of the new town were piled up in the middle of the now dry bed of the loch and formed the mound the only other access from the old town to the new town. The gardens were then formed on both sides of the mound in the dry bed where the loch had been at the foot of Edinburgh Castle, running the length of Princes Street. The first buildings in the New Town to be built were in Thistle Court, at the east end of Thistle Street in 1767, this building can still be seen today.