The National Monument of Scotland, on Calton Hill in Edinburgh, is Scotland's national memorial to the Scottish soldiers and sailors who died fighting in the Napoleonic Wars. It was intended, according to the inscription, to be "A Memorial of the Past and Incentive to the Future Heroism of the Men of Scotland". The monument dominates the top of Calton Hill, just to the east of Princes Street. It was designed during 1823–1826 by Charles Robert Cockerell and William Henry Playfair and is modeled upon the Parthenon in Athens. Construction started in 1826 and, due to the lack of funds, was left unfinished in 1829. This circumstance gave rise to various nicknames such as "Scotland's Folly", "Edinburgh's Disgrace", "the Pride and Poverty of Scotland" and "Edinburgh's Folly".

1. Proposals

As early as 1816, the Highland Society of Scotland called for the construction of a national monument to commemorate the fallen in the Napoleonic Wars. Initially The Mound was considered as a site, but was rejected in favour of Calton Hill.

In January 1822, a proposal was put forward to 'erect a facsimile of the Parthenon' at a cost of some £42,000. The appeal found support amongst many prominent Edinburgh residents such as Sir Walter Scott, Henry, Lord Cockburn and Francis, Lord Jeffrey. The leading man behind the campaign to model the new monument specifically on the Athenian Parthenon was Thomas Bruce, 7th Earl of Elgin, who had controversially removed many of the temple's sculptures (now known as the Elgin Marbles) a decade earlier and brought them to Britain. In July 1822 the Royal Association of Contributors to the National Monument of Scotland was incorporated by an act of Parliament, the National Monument in Scotland Act 1822 (3 Geo. 4. c. 100). The foundation stone was laid, amid great pomp and ceremony, the following month.

Sixteen months after the initial appeal, only £16,000 had been found with the possibility of a £10,000 grant from Parliament. In 1826, the building was finally commissioned and work began. The builder contracted to execute the work was Messrs William Wallace & Son. Originally, the building was planned to have extensive catacombs in the area supporting the main structure, to provide a burial place for significant figures, intended as a "Scottish Valhalla". A minute of the Royal Association in 1826 stated that the building was:

to adopt the Temple of Minerva or Parthenon of Athens, as the model of the Monument, and to restore to the civilised world that celebrated and justly admired edifice, without any deviation whatever, excepting the adaptation of the sculpture to the events and achievements of the Scottish Heroes, whose prowess and glory it is destined to commemorate and perpetuate, and part of which monument or building must, in terms of the said Act, be appropriated as a church or place of Divine worship, to be maintained in all time coming by the said Association

1. = Laying of the foundation stone =

The foundation stone, which weighs 6 tons, was laid on 27 August 1822, during the visit of George IV to Scotland. The Duke of Hamilton (the most senior non-royal Scottish noble and the Grand Master of Scotland) led a procession of masonic lodges, royal commissioners and other dignitaries from Parliament Square to the top of Calton Hill. The procession was escorted by the Scots Greys and the 3rd Dragoons. The deposition of the inscription plates in the stone was accompanied by cannon salutes from Edinburgh Castle, Salisbury Crags, Leith Fort and the royal squadron on Leith Roads.

1. Ideas for completion

Early proposals for completion work tended to focus on following the original plans; however, during the early 20th century several alternative plans were proposed:

as a monument to Queen Victoria (1901) as a monument commemorating the 1707 Act of Union with England (1907) as a new Scottish National Gallery (1907) as a Scottish Parliament building (1908) as a memorial to those who fell in the Great War (1918, George Washington Browne) Subsequent attempts to 'complete' the National Monument have never borne fruit for reasons of either cost or lack of local enthusiasm. A proposal in 2004 met with a mixed reception. The monument was repaired in December 2008, repositioning one of the stone lintels that had moved out of alignment. The cost was £100,262.

1. Protection

The National Monument was classified as a Category A Listed building in 1966. It is not a scheduled monument.

1. References


1. Further reading

Linning, Michael (1819). Report of the proceedings of a numerous and respectable meeting ... with a view to the erection of a national monument ... J. Ballantyne. p. 39.

1. External links

Archiseek - National Monument Edinburgh Architecture - National Monument 'A Building from which Derived "All that is Good". Observation on the Intended Reconstruction of the Parthenon on Calton Hill' by Marc Fehlmann in the online art magazine Nineteenth-Century Art Worldwide

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Monument national d'Écosse

Le Monument national d'Écosse, à Édimbourg, est érigé à la mémoire des soldats et des marins écossais qui ont trouvé la mort lors des guerres napoléoniennes. Son inscription le définit comme « A Memorial of the Past and Incentive to the Future Heroism of the Men of Scotland ».
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Festival du feu de Beltane

Le Festival du feu de Beltane (anglais : Beltane Fire Festival) est un festival et un rituel d'arts participatifs annuels, qui se tient le 30 avril de chaque année à Calton Hill à Édimbourg pour célébrer l'arrivée de l'été en Écosse.
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Calton Hill

Calton Hill est une colline du centre d'Édimbourg, à l'est de Princes Street, classée au patrimoine mondial de l'Unesco. Son intérêt au sein du patrimoine naturel de l'Écosse lui vaut d'être inscrite au Scottish Natural Heritage. Des fouilles archéologiques ont révélé des traces d'occupation humaine depuis l'Âge du bronze. Calton Hill accueille aujourd'hui le siège du gouvernement écossais, à St Andrew's House, sur son versant sud, avec le bâtiment du Parlement écossais. Le palais de Holyrood s'étend près du pied de la colline, où se trouvent des édifices tels que le Monument national d'Écosse, le Nelson Monument, l'Old Royal High School, le Robert Burns Monument et le City Observatory. Sur le versant sud de la colline, un cairn érigé le 10 avril 1998 par le mouvement Democracy for Scotland commémore la Veillée pour le Parlement écossais qui a duré 1980 jours et s'est achevée le 11 septembre 1997. Le monument surmonté d'un brasero incorpore plusieurs pierres liées à d'autres événements historiques, provenant notamment du cottage de Robert Burns à Mauchline, du château de Robert Ier à Lochmaben, du Ben Nevis, de Paris et du camp de concentration d'Auschwitz en Pologne, en mémoire de Jane Haining qui y est morte en 1944. C'est sur Calton Hill qu'a lieu chaque année, le 30 avril, le festival gaélique de Beltaine. Les vues de la colline sont souvent utilisées dans les photographies et les peintures de la ville.
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