Holyrood Palace was developed from the 14th century onwards as successive monarchs made increasing use of the Abbey for political events such as parliaments and royal councils. The word "Pallais" appears in a reference to the royal lodgings in the reign of
James IV, but they were first converted to palace buildings by
James V in 1525. Archaeological excavations in 1999 and 2000 found part of the medieval boundary ditch. It is thought to run underneath and follow the route of Holyrood road. There appears to have been one created in the 12th century that was then filled in and a new one created in the 13th/14th century with
palisade added to it. The archaeologists also found evidence of the 'city walls' that were built in 1513. Those walls were meant be boundaries but not defensive. Those attacking Edinburgh generally stormed through the Water-Yett (Water Gate) and took possession of the Canongate. They then would attempt to assault Edinburgh through the Netherbow Port.
Rough Wooing In May 1544, during the
Rough Wooing, the English army under
Lord Hertford attacked and burnt Edinburgh. The English Master of Ordnance,
Christopher Morris, brought artillery up the Canongate to assault Edinburgh's Netherbow Gate. During this operation some of the English gunners were killed. The English infantry attacked the gate and, according to the English narrative, pulled one of the Scottish artillery pieces through its gunloop. The Scots could not retaliate due to heavy small arms fire and archery, during which Morris placed a cannon close to the gate. After three or four rounds, the gate was breached and the English army stormed through killing 300 or 400 defenders. The Scottish heavy guns were withdrawn from the High Street into the Castle. According to a report sent to
Charles V, Holy Roman Emperor, the English troops were unused to urban warfare and fought amongst each other on the High Street, and
William Howard, a brother of the
Duke of Norfolk, was hurt in the cheek by an English arrow.
Marian civil war , erected in 1591 In the 1560s, several French servants of
Mary, Queen of Scots and
archers of the royal guard including Captain Belloc, formed relationships with women in the Canongate. The church authority, the Kirk Session, disapproved of them as fornicators, as they mostly had no plans for marriage. Some of the women were made to stand at the burgh cross with bared heads for three hours. After Mary was
forced to abdicate, there was
civil war in Scotland. Her supporters in Scotland took control of
Edinburgh Castle, and the king's party resided in the Canongate and at Leith.
Regent Lennox lodged in the Canongate house of Cuthbert Ferguson in 1571. The house was protected from cannon shot with bags of wool and animal skins.
Tennis courts and lodging houses There were several
tennis courts in Edinburgh and the Canongate. One was close to the Palace, at the lodging of
Henry Kinloch, and another was built nearby in 1623 by Alexander Peiris. Kinloch and Peiris also kept lodging houses, Kinloch hosted the French ambassador
Rambouillet in February 1566. Rambouillet was entertained at the Palace by
Mary, Queen of Scots in "maskrie and mumschance" during which her ladies were dressed in men's clothes. Kinloch subsequently hosted a banquet to celebrate the wedding of the
Earl of Bothwell and
Jean Gordon.
Anne Halkett, the religious writer, stayed with Peiris at the foot of the Canongate in 1650. She was told that it was a "civil house, and the best quality lay there that had not houses of their own".
Merchants and craftsmen Goldsmiths including
John Acheson,
Elias Le Tellier,
James Gray who sold pearls to Mary, Queen of Scots, and pistol-makers like John Kello had shops on the street, and in the 1590s there was a Flemish clockmaker, Abraham Wanweyneburgh. The mason
Gilbert Cleuch had a house in the Canongate. When
James VI returned to Edinburgh in 1579 after spending his childhood at
Stirling Castle, some courtiers including the master of his wine cellar,
Jerome Bowie, acquired houses in the Canongate. == 17th and 18th centuries ==