Dunfermline Abbey has a special place in the nation’s heart. Laid to rest here are some of Scotland’s great kings and queens – including Robert the Bruce. The abbey’s great nave is also the most ...
There is currently no visitor access to the east tower and doocot.
Explore one of four great abbeys established in the Scottish Borders in the 1100s. Built over more than 70 years, Jedburgh is striking for its unusual mix of Romanesque and early Gothic architecture.
An Explorer Pass, valid for 14 consecutive days, is a great way to explore our iconic sites.
Please note there is currently no access to the top of the tower. 1 Apr to 30 Sept: Daily, 10am to 4.30pm (last entry 3.30pm) 1 Oct to 31 Mar: Daily except Thur & Fri, 10am to 3pm (last entry 2pm) ...
Once a majestic royal residence of the Stewarts, Linlithgow Palace today lies roofless and ruined. Yet entering the palace gates still inspires awe in visitors. James I ordered work on a palace to ...
Urquhart Castle overlooks Loch Ness from the rocky promontory that it dominates and upon which some famous names have set foot. St Columba may have visited around AD 580. Adomnan, his biographer, ...
Stirling Castle has been likened to ‘a huge brooch clasping Highlands and Lowlands together’. From high on a volcanic outcrop, the castle guarded the lowest crossing point of the River Forth for ...
In line with best practice in the visitor attractions industry, visitors with disabilities are treated on an equal basis with all other visitors and entry is charged at the appropriate admission ...
Edinburgh Castle has witnessed many of the defining events in Scotland’s history. Sieges were fought over the mighty stronghold. Royalty lived and died within its walls. Just the sight of the Castle ...
Fort George is the finest example of 18th-century military engineering anywhere in the British Isles, though the army base never fired a shot in anger. Today, the fort would cost nearly £1 billion to ...
Arbroath Abbey shows how Scotland’s medieval monarchs mixed piety and politics. William I – also known as William the Lion – founded the abbey in 1178. He asked the Tironensian monks from Kelso Abbey ...