I22 MEMORIALS OF EDINBURGH.
well's time, and, to all appearance, coeval with the battery, but its commanding .position
and extensive view are not unlikely to have arrested his notice. Considerable portions of
the western fortifications, the parapet wall, and port holes of the half-moon battery, and
the ornamental coping and embrazures of the north and east batteries, as well as the
house now occupied by the barrack sergeant, are of a much later date. The building last
mentioned, situated immediately to the north of the grand parade, bears a close resemblance
in its general style to the Darien House, erected in 1698, and the whole may,
with every probability, be referred to nearly the same period, towards the close of William
III.'s reign.
Very considerable alterations have been made from time to time on the approach to the
fortress from the town. The present broad esplanade was formed chiefly with the rubbish
removed from the site of the Royal Exchange, the foundation of which was laid in 1753.
In the very accurate view of the Castle furnished by Maitland, from a drawing by T.
Sandby, which represents it previous to this date, there is only a narrow roadway,
evidently of artificial construction, raised nearly to the present level, which may probably
have been made on the destruction of the Spur, an ancient battery that occupied a
considerable part of the Castle Hill, until it was demolished by order of the Estates of
Parliament, August 2, 1649.l The previous elevation of the ground had evidently been
no higher than the bottom of the present dry ditch. The curious bird's-eye view of the
Castle, taken in 1573 (a fa-simile of which is given in the 2nd volume of the Bannatyne
Miscellany), and all the earlier maps of Edinburgh, represent the Castle as rising abruptly
on the east side, and in that of 1575, from which we have copied a view of the Castle,' the
entrance appears to be by a long flight of steps. It may perhaps be considered as a
confirmation of this, that: in the representations of the fortress, as borne in the arms of
the burgh, a similar mode of approach is generally shown.'
. Immediately within the drawbridge, there formerly stood an ancient and highly ornamental
gateway, near the barrier guard-room. It was adorned with pilasters, and very
rich mouldings carried over the arch, and surmounted with a remarkably curious piece of
sculpture, in basso relievo, set in an oblong panel, containing a representation of the
famous cannon, Mons Meg, with groups of ancient artillery and military weapons. This
fine old port was only demolished in the beginning of the present century, owing to its
being found too narrow to give admission to modern carriages and waggons, when the
preseut plain and inelegant gateway was erected on its site. Part of the curious carving
alluded to has since been placed over the entrance to the Ordnance Office in the Castle,
and the remaining portion is now preserved in the Antiquarian Museum.'
Immediately to the west of this, another ancient ornamented gateway still exists.
Bannatyne Misc., vul. ii. p. 398. dnte, p. 8. ' In the survey of the Caatle, taken for Sir William Drury in 1572, the following detlcription occurs :-" On the fore
parte eatwarde, next the towne, standa like iiij= foote of the hanle, and next unto the same stands Davyes Towre, and
from it a courten, with vj cannons, in loopea of atone, lookingein the atreatwarde ; and behynd thesamestandes another
teare of ordinance, lyke xvj foote clym above the other ; and at the northe ende standa the Couatablea Towre; and in
the bottom of the 8am0, is the way into the Caatle, with XI" steppes." The number of the atepps is in another hand, the
YS. being partially injured.-Bann. Misc., vol. L p. 69.
They were preserved, and placed in their present situations through the
good taate of R. M'Kerlie+ Esq., of the Ordnance Office, to whose recollections of the old gateway, when an officer in
tbe garrison in 1800, we are mainly indebted for the ahove description.
+ Vide pp. 1 and 6, for views of these stones.