Craigentinny (Scottish Gaelic: Creag an t-Sionnaich) is a suburb in the north-east of Edinburgh, Scotland, east of Restalrig and close to Portobello.
Craigentinny
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![]() Craigentinny House | |
![]() ![]() Craigentinny Location within Edinburgh | |
OS grid reference | NT291749 |
Council area |
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Country | Scotland |
Sovereign state | United Kingdom |
Post town | EDINBURGH |
Postcode district | EH7 |
Dialling code | 0131 |
Police | Scotland |
Fire | Scottish |
Ambulance | Scottish |
UK Parliament |
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Scottish Parliament |
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Its name is a corruption of the Scottish Gaelic Creag an t-Sionnaich meaning "Foxrock" but more likely Creag an teine meaning "Fire Crag" or a beacon which is similar to Ardentinny in Argyll[citation needed].
Previously moorland, the first major house was built in 1604. This house, Craigentinny Castle (later renamed Craigentinny House), gives its name to the wider area. It was built by James Nisbet of the Nisbet family associated more strongly with the Dean area of the city, as the occupants of Dean House. The land was bought from the Logan family of Restalrig.[1] Through the Nisbet family it passed to John Nisbet, Lord Dirleton around 1680. Through Lord Dirleton it passed to the Scott-Nisbes.[2] After the death of John Scott-Nisbet in 1765 it was bought by a William Miller, a wealthy seedsman and Quaker, living on the Canongate, who already owned property in the Craigentinny and Fillyside areas. When William was 90 he married a 50 year old woman and allegedly had a son: William Miller MP (whose grave lies nearby). In 1849/50 it was remodelled by David Rhind for Christie Miller, William Miller's great nephew (who gives his name to Christiemiller Avenue).[3]
In 1932 the Council developed part of the area with 520 houses and a block of six shops in three-storey tenements by Ebenezer James MacRae and his team.
The area contains churches and schools from the 1930s, including, Craigentinny Primary School on Loaning Road which was designed by Ebenezer James MacRae (1935), and St Christophers Church which is at the junction of Craigentinny Road and Craigentinny Avenue and was designed by James MacLachlan (1934).
The most distinctive and unique structure in the Craigentinny Marbles, a mausoleum to William Henry Miller (1789–1848) by David Rhind with bas reliefs by Sir Alfred Gatley. The monument was subsumed by bungalows in the 1930s and now stands on Craigentinny Crescent.
![]() | This section does not cite any sources. (March 2021) |
Craigentinny compared | Craigentinny | Edinburgh |
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White | 93.5% | 91.7% |
Asian | 4.3% | 5.5% |
Black | 0.9% | 1.2% |
Mixed | 0.8% | 0.9% |
Other | 0.5% | 0.8% |
Craigentinny Golf Course is an 18-hole par 67 course lying on the north edge of the district close to Seafield and the Firth of Forth.[4]
Craigentinny train maintenance depot is located in the area.
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