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Thursday, 22 December 2016

Gilmerton Cove of Edinburg

Just a few meters beneath the streets of Gilmerton, an ex-mining village on the southern edge of the city of Edinburgh, in Scotland, lies a series of underground passageways and chambers hand-carved from sandstone. The Gilmerton Cove, as it is called, has been known for centuries, but its age and purpose has been baffling people for generations.

The traditional theory is that the Cove was the work of George Paterson, a local blacksmith who is said to have completed this underground dwelling house in 1724 after five years of hard labor. His subterranean home had intricately carved stone tables and benches, skylights, drainage gutters, including a mysterious, deep, vertical pit. It is known that George Paterson used the caverns as a tavern, and many of the town’s gentlemen descended below the ground covertly to drink during Sabbath. But archeological studies conducted at the turn of the last century suggests that Gilmerton Cove was excavated long before George Paterson’s days.



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