Skip to content
The Great Britain Guide

Historic houses · Central Scotland

Moubray House

Paid admission♿ Wheelchair: limited

Moubray House — house in City of Edinburgh, Scotland, UK.

Moubray House, historic houses in Central Scotland

Wikimedia Commons contributors — see linked file page for photographer and licence licence

Plan your visit

Typical visit
1 h–2 h
Nearest railway station
Edinburgh Waverley · 0.3 km
  • Paid entry
  • Family-friendly
  • Limited wheelchair access

About

Moubray House is a historic house in the United Kingdom — typically a country seat, manor, or town house with notable architecture or history. Heritage designation: category A listed building. Wikidata describes it as: "house in City of Edinburgh, Scotland, UK". Coordinates: 55.9507°, -3.1852°.

Photo gallery

From the Wikipedia article

Moubray House, 51 and 53 High Street, is one of the oldest buildings on the Royal Mile, and one of the oldest occupied residential buildings in Edinburgh, Scotland. The façade dates from the early 17th century, built on foundations laid c. 1477. The tenement is noted for its interiors, including a Renaissance board-and-beam painted ceiling discovered in 1999, a plaster ceiling with exotic fruit and flower mouldings with the arms of Pringle of Galashiels (five escallops on a saltire) dated 1650 painted on the wall, and a wooden barrel-vaulted attic apartment which is expressed on the roofline. Persons associated with the house include Scotland's first eminent portrait painter George Jamesone, the English spy and writer Daniel Defoe, who was instrumental in the passing of the 1707 Act of Union with England, and Archibald Constable, proprietor of the Encyclopædia Britannica. Moubray House is designated a Category A listed building by Historic Scotland.

Excerpt from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0. See the source article linked in Sources below.

Background

Description

Moubray House lies on the north side of the High Street, between Trunk's or Turing's Close and the John Knox House, near the site of Edinburgh's Netherbow Port, the main gate into Edinburgh before its demolition in 1764. On the pavement in front of the property survives the Netherbow Well, one of the wells which formerly supplied water for the Old Town. In its origins, the tenement is a rare survivor of the Burning of Edinburgh in 1544, when Henry VIII of England ordered the Earl of Hertford to "put all to fire and sword, burn Edinburgh town". In Trunk's close, over a stone vaulted basement, can be seen "massive corbelled projections" which contained straight flights of stairs serving the…

Sourced from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Coordinates
55.9507, -3.1852
Postcode
EH1 1SR
Parliamentary constituency
Edinburgh East and Musselburgh
Established
1477
Nearest railway station
Edinburgh Waverley0.3 km

Sources

Other places nearby

Loading nearby places…

Nearby

More historic houses in this region

Frequently asked questions

Where is Moubray House?
Moubray House is in central Scotland, United Kingdom (postcode EH1 1SR).
When was Moubray House built?
Built or established in 1477.
Who owns Moubray House?
Moubray House is owned by Debra Stonecipher.
Is Moubray House a listed building?
Moubray House is officially recognised as category A listed building listed.
How do I get to Moubray House?
The nearest railway station is Edinburgh Waverley, about 0.3 km away. Drivers can navigate to postcode EH1 1SR.