St Anthony's Chapel ruins on Arthur's Seat overlooking Duddingston Loch, Edinburgh

The Edinburgh village hiding beneath Arthur’s Seat — and why its 660-year-old pub is unlike any other in Scotland

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St Anthony's Chapel ruins on Arthur's Seat overlooking Duddingston Loch, Edinburgh
Image: Shutterstock

Most visitors to Edinburgh spend their days on the Royal Mile, peer down from Calton Hill, and perhaps climb Arthur’s Seat. Very few ever find what’s waiting on the other side. Tucked into a hollow just beyond the volcano’s eastern slope, Duddingston Village is Edinburgh’s best-kept secret — a genuine community of whitewashed cottages, a 12th-century kirk, and a loch where herons stand perfectly still in the reeds. And at its heart, a pub that has been pouring drinks since before Columbus sailed to America.

This is not a tourist attraction. This is just Edinburgh, quietly existing as it always has.

A village that time forgot — deliberately

Duddingston sits inside Holyrood Park, which means it’s protected by law. There are no new developments, no chain restaurants, no souvenir shops. The same stone walls that lined this village in the 18th century still stand today. Horses once worked these lanes. The blacksmith’s forge is long gone, but the shape of the village remains exactly as it was painted by Henry Raeburn in 1784, when the Reverend Robert Walker famously skated on the frozen loch below.

You’ll feel it the moment you arrive: a distinct shift in pace. The city noise drops away. Even on a busy Saturday, Duddingston stays calm.

The Sheep Heid Inn — Scotland’s oldest licensed pub

There is a reasonable argument that The Sheep Heid Inn is the most remarkable pub in Scotland. Licensed since 1360 — that’s more than 660 years of continuous trading — it has served Mary Queen of Scots, hosted James VI, and witnessed more of Edinburgh’s history than almost any building still standing in the city today.

The pub takes its name from the sheep’s skull gifted to it by James VI in the late 16th century. It still hangs inside. The interior is exactly what a centuries-old Scottish inn should feel like: low ceilings, stone walls, open fires in winter, and a garden that spills out towards the loch in summer.

But the real draw — one almost no visitors know about — is the skittles alley at the rear. Dating from around 1870 (though the skittles tradition here is far older), it’s one of only two remaining skittles alleys in Scotland. You can actually book a lane. It’s the most unexpected thing you’ll do in Edinburgh.

Duddingston Loch and the bird sanctuary

The loch stretching out beyond the inn is the oldest bird sanctuary in Britain, designated in 1925. Tufted ducks, coots, and great crested grebes nest here year-round. In winter, flocks of migratory geese arrive from Iceland and Greenland. If you’re lucky with timing, you’ll hear them before you see them — a sound that carries right across the water.

The ruins of St Anthony’s Chapel are visible on the hillside above, perched dramatically on the crags of Arthur’s Seat. Nobody knows exactly when the chapel was built or who built it — it simply appears in records, unexplained. That mystery feels entirely appropriate for this corner of Edinburgh.

Duddingston Kirk — older than the pub

Hard to believe, but Duddingston Kirk pre-dates even the Sheep Heid. The church was founded in the 12th century, built in the Romanesque style that Norman monks brought to Scotland. Its doorway is one of the finest surviving examples of Norman architecture in the country.

The churchyard wraps around the loch side, and from here you get the view that Raeburn painted: the water, the reeds, Arthur’s Seat rising behind. It’s an almost impossibly beautiful spot. Even in grey Edinburgh weather — perhaps especially then — it’s the kind of place that stays with you.

How to reach Duddingston — and why the approach matters

You could take a bus to Duddingston Road and walk in from the south. But the better way — the way that makes the village feel like a discovery rather than a destination — is to approach on foot through Holyrood Park.

From the main park entrance near the Palace of Holyroodhouse, follow the path that curves east behind Arthur’s Seat. You’ll pass the ruins of the chapel above you, then drop down towards the loch. The village appears almost suddenly, stone walls rising from the path. The whole walk takes around 25 minutes and feels nothing like being inside a capital city.

Alternatively, combine it with the Innocent Railway path — the old Victorian railway tunnel that connects Holyrood Park to Duddingston — for a genuinely memorable Edinburgh afternoon.

Is Duddingston Village worth visiting?

Absolutely. It’s one of the most complete historic villages in Scotland, set inside a living city. The combination of the loch, the 12th-century church, Scotland’s oldest pub, and the walks through Holyrood Park makes it unlike anything else in Edinburgh.

When is the best time to visit Duddingston?

All year. Spring brings wildflowers along the loch path. Summer means the pub garden fills up and the light lasts until 10pm. Autumn turns the surrounding hills golden. In winter, the loch sometimes freezes — and on those rare mornings, you’ll understand exactly why Raeburn painted what he did.

Can you book the skittles alley at the Sheep Heid Inn?

Yes — and you absolutely should. The skittles alley can be reserved for groups and includes refreshments from the bar. Contact the pub directly to book. It fills up at weekends. This is not a tourist gimmick; it’s a genuine piece of Scottish social history still very much in use.

Duddingston has outlasted empires, survived plagues, and watched Edinburgh grow up around it — all while staying exactly itself. That alone feels worth the walk.

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