By the first half of the 18th century, rising prosperity was evidenced by the growth of the
Bank of Scotland,
Royal Bank of Scotland and
British Linen Bank, all based in the city. However Edinburgh was one of the most densely populated, overcrowded and unsanitary towns in the whole of Europe.
Daniel Defoe's remark was typical of many English visitors, "... though many cities have more people in them, yet, I believe, this may be said with truth, that in no city in the world [do] so many people live in so little room as at Edinburgh". was the close proximity and social interaction of the various social classes. Tradesmen and professionals shared the same buildings. In the flats of the lofty houses in
wynds or facing the High Street the populace dwelt, who reached their various lodgings by the steep and narrow 'scale' staircases [stair-towers] which were really upright streets. On the same building lived families of all grades and classes, each in its flat in the same stair—the sweep and
caddie in the cellars, poor mechanics in the garrets, while in the intermediate stories might live a noble, a
lord of session, a doctor or city
minister, a
dowager countess, or
writer; higher up, over their heads, lived shopkeepers, dancing masters or clerks. in 1850 One historian has ventured to suggest that Edinburgh's living arrangements may themselves have played a part in engendering the spirit of social inquiry associated with the thinkers of the
Scottish Enlightenment: "Its tall lands (
tenements) housed a cross-section of the entire society, nobles, judges and
caddies rubbing shoulders with each other on the common stair. A man of inquiring mind could not live in old Edinburgh without becoming a sociologist of sorts." During the
Jacobite rising of 1745, Edinburgh was briefly occupied by the Jacobite "Highland Army" before its march into England. After its eventual defeat at
Culloden, there followed a period of reprisals and pacification, largely directed at the rebellious
clans. In Edinburgh, the Town Council, keen to emulate
Georgian London, stimulate prosperity and re-affirm its belief in the
Union, initiated city improvements and expansion north and south of the castle. Although the idea of a northwards expansion had been first mooted around 1680, during the
Duke of York's residence at
Holyrood, the immediate catalyst for change was a decision by the
Convention of Royal Burghs in 1752 to propose improvements to the capital for the benefit of commerce. The Convention issued a pamphlet entitled
Proposals for carrying on certain Public Works in the City of Edinburgh, believed to have been authored by the classical scholar
Sir Gilbert Elliot and heavily influenced by the ideas of Lord Provost George Drummond. Elliot described the existing town as follows, Placed upon a ridge of a hill, it admits but of one good street, running from east to west, and even this is tolerably accessible only from one quarter. The narrow lanes leading to the north and south, by reason of their steepness, narrowness and dirtiness, can only be considered as so many unavoidable nuisances. Confined by the small compass of the walls, and the narrow limits of the royalty, which scarcely extends beyond the walls, the houses stand more crowded than in any other town in Europe, and are built to a height that is almost incredible. , the young architect who won the competition to design a plan for the New Town. Portrait by
David Allan The proposals for improvement envisaged the building of a new Exchange for merchants (now the
City Chambers), new
law courts and an
advocates' library, expansion north and southwards, and the draining of the
Nor Loch. As the
New Town to the north took shape, the Town Council expressed its loyalty to the Union and the
Hanoverian monarch
George III in its choice of street names, for example,
Rose Street and
Thistle Street, and for the royal family: George Street, Queen Street, Hanover Street, Frederick Street and
Princes Street (in honour of George's two sons). The profession of architect flourished, as did the prestige of builders, engineers, and surveyors. Some of the best known specialists in Edinburgh successfully brought their reputations to practice in London. From the late-1760s onwards, the professional and business classes gradually deserted the Old Town in favour of the more desirable "one-family" residences of the New Town, with separate attic or basement accommodation for domestic servants. This migration changed the social character of Edinburgh, which
Robert Chambers, writing in the 1820s, described as a kind of double city—first, an ancient and picturesque hill-built one, occupied chiefly by the humbler classes; and second, an elegant modern one, of much regularity of aspect, and possessed almost as exclusively by the more refined portion of society. According to Youngson, the foremost historian of this development, "Unity of social feeling was one of the most valuable heritages of old Edinburgh, and its disappearance was widely and properly lamented." The Old Town became an abode of the Poor. Observing conditions there in the 1770s, a widely travelled English visitor already reported that, "No people in the World undergo greater hardships, or live in a worse degree of wretchedness and poverty, than the lower classes here." From 1802 onwards a 'Second New Town' developed north of James Craig's original New Town. ==Scottish Enlightenment==