The ancient name of the town was
Liston, may be derived from the
Brythonic llys meaning court or manor, and the
Old English tun meaning town or farmstead.
Brythons would have been the earliest inhabitants of the area, with Angles later arriving from
Northumberland. In the 13th century the name was recorded as
Temple Liston, referring to the
Knights Templar, who possessed the Barony of Liston at the heart of the parish. The prefix
Kirk (church) first appears in the 14th century, after the Knights Templar had been disbanded and their lands given to the
Knights Hospitaller. The Hospitallers are commemorated by the
Maltese Cross in the arms of the community council, which were granted in 1991. Kirkliston was the location of the first recorded parliament in Scottish history; the
Estates of Scotland met there in 1235, during the reign of
Alexander the Second. In June 1298
Edward Longshanks made camp at the town on his way to fight
Sir William Wallace at the
Battle of Falkirk. Tradition states that he planted his standard at Greig's Hill, now within the Gateside housing estate. Archaeological digs in the area have uncovered evidence of the camp, most recently in 2005. A violent quarrel broke out in the camp between Edward's English and Welsh forces, and eighteen ecclesiastics were killed. Clerics' Hill is named in commemoration of them. When the Welshmen announced their intention to defect to the Scots, Edward replied "let my enemies go and join my enemies; I trust that in one day I shall chastise them all." The barony of Kirkliston, including the village, church, mill, glebe, and demesne, was acquired by the
Archbishop of St Andrews in the 15th century. Kirkliston became the site of the court from which the archbishop's lands south of the
Forth were administrated, a fact commemorated by the mitre and crozier in the council arms. The
Setons of
Niddry, whose symbol, a red crescent on gold, is also represented, were hereditary bailies of the barony. The court hall, situated at the head of The Square, became the village school before being demolished in the 1930s. In July 1543, there was controversy about a plan for
Mary, Queen of Scots to marry
Prince Edward of England. The two sides met for
negotiations at Kirkliston and held a peace making ceremony in the fields. The oldest house in the town is Castle House, which has a
marriage stone dated 1682.
Robert Burns stayed there in the summer of 1787 and inscribed this verse on a window pane, now in a
Vancouver museum: The ants about their clod employ their care, And think the business of the world is theirs; Lo: Waxen combs seem palaces to bees. And mites conceive the world to be a cheese. The eastern section of the Main Street was added as a toll road to
Linlithgow around 1800 and buildings developed along it from that time. The construction of a M9 Spur extension in 2003 led to the excavation of a 19th-century terraced cottages by CFA Archaeology. The results shed light the cramped and unsanitary conditions that large families lived in at that time and that the houses were cheaply built, poorly maintained and overcrowded throughout much of their existence. The memorial on the northeast corner of the crossroads was built in 1920 to the memory of the men who died in the war. Until May 1975 Kirkliston was within the old county of
West Lothian. Under the
Local Government (Scotland) Act 1973 it then became part of the
Lothian Region and the City of Edinburgh District.
Further local government reorganisation saw the town become part of the City of Edinburgh Council area in 1996. Edinburgh Council has a small office in the local library, as well as running the library, primary school, and leisure centre. From 1959 to 2001, Kirkliston was the site of the
Drambuie liqueur factory. There had also been a whisky distillery in the south of the town since 1795, which in later years this became a malt factory. The distillery contained a tower-style patent still house, one of only two in Scotland, which housed a
Coffey still. Both factories have been demolished, although the original patent still house remains and has been converted to housing. ==Parish church==