CityVisitGuide.com
Edinburgh

City Visit Guide Updates Australia Canada Europe  UK   USA  Travel Store Travel Deals Travel Directory

  

UK Car Hire    Worldwide Hotels    British Airways Holidays    City Breaks    lastminute.com exclusive deals

AA Hotel Guide 2008

The AA Hotel Guide 2008

This is the UK's best-selling "Hotel Guide". It is a full colour guide to over 4,000 AA inspected Hotels in Britain and Ireland, fully updated for 2008. All of the establishments featured have been officially inspected and rated for quality by the AA's professional inspectors, each graded with 1 to 5 stars, with AA red stars highlighting top hotels. It contains more establishments offering more choice than competing guides. Over 800 budget hotels are featured, ideal for overnight stops. Plus, there are up-to-date details of room prices, credit cards, parking, directions and leisure facilities throughout. Central reservation telephone numbers are featured for the major hotel groups. The hotels featured are arranged in county order with prices, opening times, directions and websites. The special features include the AA Hotel of the Year Awards and AA Top Hotels in Britain and Ireland.
More information and prices from:
Amazon.com - US dollars
Amazon.ca - Canadian dollars
Amazon.co.uk - British pounds
Amazon.de - Euros
Amazon.fr - Euros


The Rough Guide to Britain
by Robert Andrews, Jules Brown, Rob Humphreys, Phil Lee, Donald Reid
  If ever a nation were both hostage to and beneficiary of its history, it’s Britain. The single most important thing to remember when travelling here is that you’re visiting not one country, but three: England, Wales and Scotland. For visitors foreign and domestic, that means contending with three capital cities (London, Cardiff and Edinburgh) and three sets of national identity - not to mention the myriad accent shifts as you move between them. More information and prices from:
Amazon.com - US dollars
Amazon.ca - Canadian dollars
Amazon.co.uk - British pounds
Amazon.de - Euros
Amazon.fr - Euros

Edinburgh: Scotland's
festival capital

by Ann Sharkley

The location of Edinburgh - capital of Scotland and a World Heritage Site - is spectacular, with the castle high on its rock, views over the River Forth, elegant architecture and its own extinct volcano, Arthur’s Seat - described by thriller writer Ian Rankin as "a natural wonder, a wilderness in the middle of a city." A favourite Edinburgh pastime, beloved of students and others, is to climb to its summit to see the sun rise over the sea.

But one need not be so energetic to enjoy Edinburgh. For this is a city that is attractive - and easy - to walk around. Arriving in the city centre, visitors will be captivated by the Old Town skyline, which forms a stunning backdrop for Princes Street. Not many cities can boast a high street with shops on one side and an ancient castle and beautiful gardens on the other. Princes Street and its gardens provide the unique setting for a number of events throughout the year, such as the Edinburgh International Festival and Fringe Festival, the Edinburgh Book Festival, the Edinburgh International Jazz and Blues Festival (all taking place in August), and Edinburgh’s Winter Festivals (from November to January). Edinburgh is proud to host the world’s largest street party at New Year, with spectacular fireworks, live music concerts and dancing.

A few minutes away is the historic Royal Mile, cobbled and atmospheric, leading down from the castle to the Palace of Holyroodhouse, Queen Elizabeth II’s official residence when in Scotland, and whose new Queen’s Gallery shows items from the Royal Collections. Next door, Scotland’s first custom-built Parliament building opened in 2004.

Along the Royal Mile is an eclectic range of museums which portray different aspects of Edinburgh’s and Scotland’s heritage, starting at the Castle itself with the National War Museum telling stories of the Scot in battle at home and abroad. At the other end, the Museum of Edinburgh, in its 16th century house, provides historical context - as well as the story of Greyfriar’s Bobby, the faithful dog whose statue is on the George IV Bridge by the kirkyard where his master is buried and by whose grave he remained for 14 years.

Other attractions include The Scotch Whisky Heritage Centre, where research into whisky making can finish with a sampling one of 270 varieties at the bar; the Camera Obscura, where one can experience a panoramic view of Edinburgh from inside a giant Victorian camera; the crammed and evocative Museum of Childhood and the Writers’ Museum, devoted to Scotland’s literary heroes, Robert Burns, Robert Louis Stevenson and Sir Walter Scott - who also has a monument, a famous landmark, on Princes Street.

Scotland has modern literary heroes too, such as J.K. Rowling - who wrote her first Harry Potter book in a café in the Old Town and Ian Rankin, whose ‘Rebus’ crime novels have made the streets of Edinburgh familiar to readers all over the world: a tour takes visitors to some of their locations.

One effective setting used by him is the brace of national museums: the Royal Museum, its stunning entrance hall with light flooding in through the glass roof modelled on Crystal Palace, linked to the striking modern building of the Museum of Scotland, opened in 1999, the first filled with treasures from around the world, the second gathering together artefacts from the history of Scotland - and with a magnificent restaurant looking over the rooftops of Edinburgh.

When it is not so easy to walk, there’s a bus - open topped buses tour the city regularly offering a ‘hop on, hop off’ facility and a free bus connects four of the city’s galleries: the refurbished National Gallery of Scotland with its world-class exhibitions, the Scotish Portrait Gallery, a magnificent baronial building in red sandstone peopled with figures from Scotland’s history, and - at the other end of town - the Scottish Gallery of Modern Art and Dean Gallery, with its Dada and surrealist collections.

But Edinburgh is not just about history and heritage - there’s a vibrant, modern culture and a cosmopolitan buzz around the city. Many new and contemporary shops (Harvey Nichols, Zara), restaurants (Oloroso, The Living Room) and hotels (The Glasshouse, The Scotsman) provide an interesting mix, to combine modern with traditional.

And another recent development is the regeneration of Leith - Edinburgh’s historic port -- with Ocean terminal a stylish waterfront leisure development. This is the new berth for the former Royal Yacht, Britannia, floating holiday home of the Royal Family for 44 years. Returned to Scotland (it was launched at Clydebank in the year of the coronation) in 1998, it is one of the biggest attractions of recent years. One way of discovering the distinctive character of this town is from visiting its residences: the Georgian House, in Charlotte Square to the other extreme, Gladstone’s Land, a 17th century tenement. The New Town, built on the east side of Princes Street for the middle classes of the 18th century, to Mary King’s Close - a warren of hidden streets beneath the City Chambers, which was ravaged by the plague in the 1600’s and sealed off for centuries, but now open to visitors. It is, as always, a city of contrasts. And those contrasts continue outwith the city – in only a matter of minutes some of Scotland’s best coastlines, woodlands, hills and wilderness are easy to reach, proof that Edinburgh provides the perfect gateway to Scotland.

Getting to Edinburgh

Edinburgh Zoo

Edinburgh Book Festival

Edinburgh International Festival

Edinburgh Hotels - Lastminute.com

The Scotsman - 5* in Edinburgh
The Balmoral - 5* in Edinburgh
Sheraton Grand Hotel & Spa - 5* in Edinburgh
Roxburghe Hotel - 4* in Edinburgh
Holiday Inn Edinburgh - 4*

More travel articles

Seabritain 2005
Island-hopping to Scotland’s far north
Scotland's New Attractions
Staying in London for Less
Dylan Thomas Trail

 

The Rough Guide to Scotland - Edition 7
by Rob Humphreys, Donald Reid
From the glens of Loch Lomand to the lively Edinburgh festival, the "Rough Guide to Scotland" tells you all there is to know about this stunning and varied country. The 24-page, full-colour section introduces all of the Scotland's highlights, from the spectacular wildlife of the Hebrides to the deserted golden beaches in South Harris, with three additional 4-page, full-colour inserts: 'Festivals', 'Architecture' and 'Great Outdoors/Activities'.
  More information and prices from:
Amazon.com - US dollars
Amazon.ca - Canadian dollars
Amazon.co.uk - British pounds
SeekBooks.com.au - Australian Dollars
Amazon.de - Euros
Amazon.fr - Euros

Northern Isles


Papa Westray is one of the most northerly of the Orkney islands. Orkney is located to the north of mainland Scotland. Papa Westray has been described as Orkney in miniature. It has archaeology, including the Knap of Howar (the oldest standing domestic building in north-west Europe), an RSPB site where thousands of birds breed in early summer, beaches and seal colonies, cliff walks and just 60 inhabitants. It is also famous for the shortest scheduled flight in the world.

A quiet place for walking, thinking, photography, relaxation. For more information go to: Papa Westray



Contact
Privacy Policy
Island Guide
BestBooks.biz
Garden Guide
Island-Guide.com
City Visit Guide
The Best Books
JobSkills.info
Copyright © Alan Price and City Visit Guide contributors. All rights reserved.