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Sciennes (pronounced sheenz, /ˈʃnz/) is a district of Edinburgh, Scotland, situated approximately 2 kilometres (1.2 miles) south of the city centre. It is a mainly residential district, although it is also well-known as the site of the former Royal Hospital for Sick Children. Most of its housing stock consists of terraces of four-storey Victorian tenements. The district is popular with students, thanks to its proximity to the University of Edinburgh. Its early history is linked to the presence in the area of the 16th-century Convent of St Catherine of Scienna, from which the district derives its name.

Sciennes

A house in Sciennes Gardens
Sciennes
Location within Edinburgh
PopulationUnknown
OS grid referenceNT258723
Council area
  • City of Edinburgh
CountryScotland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townEdinburgh
Postcode districtEH9
Dialling code0131
PoliceScotland
FireScottish
AmbulanceScottish
UK Parliament
  • Edinburgh South
Scottish Parliament
  • Edinburgh Southern
List of places
UK
Scotland
Edinburgh
55°56′18.65″N 3°11′12.75″W

Location


Sciennes is located approximately 2 kilometres (1.2 miles) south of Princes Street in Edinburgh's city centre, and immediately south of The Meadows. The district is not an administrative unit or electoral ward and therefore has no formal boundaries, but it is generally considered to be the area that lies between Melville Drive to the north, Argyle Place to the west, Sciennes Road to the south, and Causewayside to the east, with an extension to the south east which takes in Sciennes Hill Place and Sciennes Gardens.[1]

Sciennes shares a community council with Marchmont[2] and lies partly within the Marchmont, Meadows and Bruntsfield Conservation Area.[3]

Sciennes is also the name of a road which runs north to south in the eastern part of the district.


History


St. Catherine's Convent plaque
St. Catherine's Convent plaque

The recorded history of Sciennes starts in the early 16th century, with the establishment of two religious houses. In 1512, Sir John Crawfurd, canon of St Giles, erected a chapel dedicated to St John the Baptist and St John the Evangelist on land that had been part of the ancient Burgh Muir, this being common ground that was given to Edinburgh by David I in the first half of the 12th century.[4]

The name is a corruption of Sienna in Italy, and comes from the Dominican Convent of St Catherine of Scienna. This was founded by a group of women, led by Lady Janet Seton, whose husbands and other relatives had been killed at the Battle of Flodden in 1513. The convent, which was completed in 1518, was built on land acquired from Sir John Crawfurd, and incorporated his chapel. It stood on the south side of the present Sciennes Road, roughly where St Catherine's Place now stands. It was the only Dominican Nunnery in Scotland. In 1567, the convent was destroyed and the community dispersed as a result of the Reformation.[5]

A plaque on the wall of No 16 St Catherine's Place marks the site of the convent.[6]

Up until the early 19th century, much of the area of present-day Sciennes was occupied by just a few mansions and large villas, each set in its own grounds. By the end of the century, these had largely been replaced by terraces of Victorian tenements. In contrast to neighbouring Marchmont, where the tenements had been developed according to an overall design, those in Sciennes grew up in a more piecemeal fashion.[7]

The area also included some industrial development, notably the extensive engineering works and foundry of Bertrams Ltd, an international manufacturer of paper-making machinery. The works stood on the corner of Sciennes Road and (the street named) Sciennes.[8] They were demolished in 1985, the site now being occupied by residential flats.


Origins of street names


The Convent of St Catherine of Scienna gives its name to Sciennes itself and to several of its streets (such as Sciennes Road and Sciennes Gardens) as well as to St Catherine's Place. Other streets in the district, especially those that were developed in the 19th century, are named after notable figures of the day. These include Livingstone Place, for the explorer, David Livingstone;[9] Gladstone Terrace, for William Ewart Gladstone, the Liberal Prime Minister;[10] and Lord Russell Place, for Lord John Russell, a Whig and Liberal Prime Minister.[11]


Notable buildings


Old Jewish burial ground
Old Jewish burial ground
Former Royal Hospital For Sick Children
Former Royal Hospital For Sick Children
Sciennes Primary School
Sciennes Primary School

Built around 1741, Sciennes Hill House was originally a substantial three-story town house set in a large garden. It was partly demolished in 1868, the remaining parts of the structure being incorporated into a terrace of Victorian tenements which now make up the north side of Sciennes House Place. The north elevation was the original front of the house. This still contains some of the original architectural features but these are not visible from the street. The street frontage was originally the back of the house. The interior of the building was sympathetically restored in 1988. In the winter of 1786–87, the house was the location of the only recorded meeting of Robert Burns and Walter Scott, at a literary dinner hosted by the philosopher Professor Adam Ferguson. A bronze plaque on the outside of the building commemorates the event.[12][13]

Sciennes House Place is also the location of the Old Jewish Burial Ground, the first Jewish cemetery in Scotland. It was opened in 1816 by the Edinburgh Hebrew Congregation and closed to burials in 1870. Some of the memorials, inscribed in Hebrew, show up to four generations of some families buried here.[14]

Also in Sciennes House Place is the Old Braid Fire Station, a Category C listed building which was designed in 1885 by Robert Morham, the City Architect.[15] This was one of four fire stations established in the 1820s by Edinburgh's first firemaster James Braidwood.[citation needed] It is now an architect's office.

Robert Morham also designed, in 1884, the former 'A' Division Police Station on the corner of Causewayside. This is a four-storey building in the Scottish Baronial style. It closed in the early 1980s and has since been converted to flats.[16] The building stands opposite the shop of the antique dealer and police historian T W Archibald who wrote a history of the Lothians and Borders Police.[17]

The former Royal Hospital for Sick Children (commonly referred to as the Sick Kids) is an imposing neo-Jacobean building, designed by George Washington Browne. It operated at its site in Sciennes Road from 1895 to 2021.[18] It is a listed building with murals by Phoebe Anna Traquair in its mortuary chapel.[19] In 2017, the hospital was due to move to Petty France, but this was delayed because of technical and financial problems.[20] In February 2019, planning permission was given to the Downing Group to convert the main hospital building to 126 residential units and to replace other buildings on the site with student flats.[21] The hospital finally closed on 23 March 2021 when its facilities moved to the new Royal Hospital for Children and Young People at Little France.[22][23] The Downing Group started work on the redevelopment of the site in June 2021.[24]

Sciennes Primary School stands next to the former hospital. It was designed in 1889 by Robert Wilson, the architect for the Edinburgh Board of Education, and opened in 1892.[25]


Notable residents



References


  1. "Natural Neighbourhoods". City of Edinburgh Council. Retrieved 30 September 2020.
  2. "Map of the MSCC boundaries". Marchmont and Sciennes Community Council. Retrieved 30 September 2020.
  3. "Review of the Marchmont, Meadows and Bruntsfield Conservation Area Character Appraisal". Planning Edinburgh. 8 November 2019.
  4. Cant, Malcolm (1990). Sciennes and the Grange. Edinburgh: John Donald Publishers. pp. 34–35. ISBN 0-85976-253-X.
  5. "Edinburgh, Sciennes, Dominican Convent". Canmore. Historic Environment Scotland. Retrieved 30 October 2022.
  6. Cant (1990), pp. 36–38.
  7. Cant (1990), pp. 55–63.
  8. Smith, Charles J (1978). Historic South Edinburgh Volume 1. Edinburgh: Charles Skilton Ltd. p. 160.
  9. Harris, Stuart (2002). The Place Names of Edinburgh: Their Origins and History. Steve Savage Publishers. p. 271. ISBN 1-904246-06-0.
  10. Harris (2002), p. 106.
  11. Harris (2002), pp. 376–7.
  12. Smith (1978), pp. 12–13.
  13. Cant (1990), pp. 48–51.
  14. "Jewish Cemetery". Gazetteer for Scotland. Retrieved 24 September 2020.
  15. "Sciennes House Place, Fire Station and Gatepiers". British Listed Building. Retrieved 24 September 2020.
  16. "86-92 (Even Nos) Causewayside And 10 Sciennes House Place". Historic Environment Scotland. Retrieved 24 September 2020.
  17. Archibald, T. W. (1990). A history of the Lothian and Borders police. T.W. Archibald. ISBN 0951611909.
  18. "Royal Hospital for Sick Children". NHS Lothian. Retrieved 24 September 2020.
  19. "Mortuary Chapel, Royal Hospital For Sick Children". Historic Environment Scotland. Retrieved 24 September 2020.
  20. Snead, Florence (1 May 2017). "New Edinburgh's Sick Kids hospital changes 150-year-old name". The Scotsman. Retrieved 16 January 2018.
  21. "Student accommodation and housing plans approved at Edinburgh Sick Kids' site". Scottish Construction News. Retrieved 28 September 2020.
  22. "Edinburgh's new Sick Kids hospital will open fully on March 23". edinburghnews.scotsman.com. Edinburgh Evening News. 10 March 2021. Retrieved 26 March 2021.
  23. "Children's A&E at Sciennes closes, as services move to NHS Lothian's Royal Hospital for Children and Young People". news.nhslothian.scot. Retrieved 21 May 2021.
  24. Swanson, Ian (19 June 2021). "Work begins on redeveloping site of Edinburgh's former Sick Kids hospital into student accommodation and private homes". Edinburgh Evening News. Retrieved 18 August 2021.
  25. Cant (1990), p. 160.
  26. Melvin, Eric (2021). The Fresh Air of The Summer Morning. Eric Melvin. p. 208. ISBN 978-1527290082.
  27. Edwards, Owen Dudley (2017). "Doyle, Sir Arthur Ignatius Conan". Oxford Dictionary of National Biography (online ed.). Oxford University Press. doi:10.1093/ref:odnb/32887. (Subscription or UK public library membership required.)
  28. Daiches, David (1971). Two Worlds: An Edinburgh Jewish Childhood. Sussex University Press. ISBN 9780856210013.
  29. Smith, Charles (2000). Looking Back. Malcolm Cant Publications. p. 4. ISBN 0-952-60994-0.





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