2011-01-01

Edinburgh's Hogmanay

Bearing in mind the Scottish propensity for old-fashioned revelry, one would expect a few choruses of Auld Lang Syne on New Year's Eve. In this spirit Edinburgh hosts four days of festivities including processions, concerts and a world-famous street party.

The showpiece concert in Princes Street Gardens is always eagerly anticipated and has counted such names as Kasabian, Madness, Groove Armada and The Proclaimers among former headliners. Other highlights include the Torchlit Procession and Fire Festival on 29 December.

The focal point of all festivities is the Edinburgh's Hogmanay Street Party (admission by pass only) on New Year's Eve, which attracts around 100,000 revellers. Other events include the grand Seven Hills Firework Display and, for those seeking a more sedate preamble into the New Year, a candlelight concert in the tranquil setting of St Giles Cathedral.

Scotland has celebrated New Year more enthusiastically than the rest of Britain since the 16th century, when the Reformation meant that the suspiciously Catholic-sounding festival of Christmas was more or less banned. The pre-Christian traditions associated with New Year celebrations were tolerated much more, which meant that Hogmanay soon became the country's main winter festival.

The solemn Calvinists of the Reformation period would probably be surprised to learn that they had inadvertently founded one of Europe's biggest parties. The present-day form of Edinburgh's Hogmanay extravaganza is much more recent, though; effectively founded in 1992, the civic festivities grew so much over the 1990s that more than half a million visitors now attend the four-day celebrations every year (five if you count the extra Bank Holiday the Scots have on 2 January, simply to recover!).

When: 29 Dec 2010 - 1 Jan 2011

Where: Edinburgh, Scotland

From: whatsonwhen.com

last modification: 2010-12-03
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