Linlithgow Palace is a roofless ruin of a Renaissance palace located in Linlithgow, West Lothian, Scotland, overlooking Linlithgow Loch.[1] Originally constructed as a royal residence for the Stewart monarchs, it exemplifies late medieval and early modern Scottish architecture developed over two centuries.[2] The site has hosted a royal manor since at least the mid-12th century, with the present structure initiated by King James I in 1424 following the destruction of an earlier building by fire.[3]As one of the principal residences of Scottish kings and queens during the 15th and 16th centuries, Linlithgow Palace functioned as a favored stop between Edinburgh Castle and Stirling Castle, as well as a royal nursery.[1] It gained prominence as the birthplace of Mary, Queen of Scots, in December 1542, and earlier of King James V in 1512.[2] The palace features a quadrangular layout with a central courtyard containing Scotland's oldest fountain, and its interiors once included lavish great halls and royal apartments reflective of Stewart opulence.[1] Expansions continued under subsequent monarchs, including James IV and James VI, making it the largest non-defensive royal residence in medieval Scotland.[3]The palace's decline accelerated after the 1603 Union of the Crowns, when Scottish monarchs relocated to England, leading to neglect and partial collapse.[1] In 1746, a fire ignited by quartered government troops under the Duke of Cumberland gutted the building, leaving it in its current ruined state without restoration of the roofs or interiors.[4] Today, it is preserved as a scheduled monument and popular visitor attraction managed by Historic Environment Scotland, offering insights into Stewart royal life amid its evocative decay.[5]
Early History and Origins
Site and Pre-Palace Development
Linlithgow Palace occupies a strategic site on the southern shore of Linlithgow Loch in West Lothian, Scotland, approximately midway between Edinburgh and Stirling, facilitating its role as a royal stopping point on key travel routes.[1] The location's natural defenses, provided by the loch to the north and rising ground to the south, contributed to its selection for early fortifications and residences. Archaeological evidence indicates human activity in the vicinity dating to the Bronze Age, including a burial cist discovered near the site around 1000 BC.[1]Roman military presence is attested by a nearby camp from the 1st century AD and 2nd-century pottery fragments found north of the palace and in the adjacent St Michael's Churchyard, with aerial photography revealing possible Roman enclosure ditches as cropmarks.[1][3] By the 12th century, a royal manor house existed on or near the site, associated with King David I (r. 1124–1153), who elevated Linlithgow to royal burgh status around 1130, granting privileges that spurred settlement growth around the loch's banks.[6][1]In the late 13th century, during Edward I of England's invasion of Scotland, the manor was occupied in 1301–1302, with the English king ordering repairs and initial fortifications, including ditches west of the site measuring 6.1 meters wide.[6][3] By the 14th century, a peel—a small fortified tower house—had been constructed, likely as a response to ongoing Anglo-Scottish conflicts, serving as a defensive royalresidence west of the later palace core.[1] Buried archaeological remains in the surrounding Peel area include structural features, deep midden deposits, and medieval ditches, underscoring continuous development from the earlier manor.[3] This peel structure persisted until its destruction by fire in 1424, prompting the subsequent palace reconstruction under James I.[6]
Initial Construction under James I
James I of Scotland initiated the construction of Linlithgow Palace in 1424, immediately following a fire sparked by an English raid that razed the town's earlier manor house and much of the surrounding settlement.[1][6] This event, occurring in the same year James returned from 18 years of English captivity, prompted a deliberate shift toward building a purpose-designed royal residence rather than merely restoring the damaged peel tower structure that had existed since the 12th century.[1][7] The new palace was envisioned as an elegant "pleasure palace" for monarchical retreat, emphasizing comfort and aesthetics over purely defensive needs, though it retained strategic oversight of central Scotland.[1][8]Under James I's oversight, masons commenced work on the south and west ranges, laying the groundwork for the eventual quadrangular layout with these wings forming the initial core of the complex.[6][8] Concurrently, the king funded the rebuilding of the adjacent St Michael's parish church, destroyed in the same blaze, to serve both liturgical purposes and as a symbolic adjunct to the palace, with construction records indicating royal grants for materials and labor starting in the mid-1420s.[6] These efforts reflected James's broader policy of centralizing royal authority through architectural patronage, drawing on continental influences observed during his imprisonment to introduce more refined stonework and spatial planning.[8]Progress ceased abruptly with James I's assassination on February 21, 1437, at Perth, leaving the palace as an unfinished shell that would require resumption under his successors.[9][6] By this point, the foundational ranges stood partially complete, with evidence from surviving masonry suggesting an emphasis on robust ashlar facades and early vaulting techniques suited to Scotland's climate.[1]
James IV initiated a major reconstruction of Linlithgow Palace around 1491, elevating it from a fortified residence to a more elaborate royal retreat reflective of Renaissance influences in Scottish architecture.[1] This included the addition of the north quarter by 1496, featuring separate apartments for the king and queen designed for privacy and comfort, overlooking the palace's courtyard and adjacent loch.[1][6] Further expansions encompassed the east range, incorporating a new chapel royal completed by 1503, which served as a site for royal worship and ceremonies.[1]These developments under James IV emphasized functional opulence, with enhanced interiors including timber-roofed ceilings and decorative elements that aligned with continental styles he encountered through diplomatic ties and naval interests.[1] The works positioned Linlithgow as a key stop on royal progresses, facilitating governance and leisure midway between Edinburgh and Stirling.[6]Margaret Tudor, James IV's English consort married in 1503, became closely associated with the palace following its presentation to her as a wedding gift on 31 May 1503, underscoring its role in Anglo-Scottish royal alliances.[6] She gave birth to their son, the future James V, there on 10 April 1512, an event that reinforced the site's dynastic significance amid the couple's efforts to secure the succession.[6]Tradition holds that Margaret anxiously awaited news of James IV's fate after the Battle of Flodden in September 1513 from a vantage point known as Queen Margaret's Bower, a feature possibly adapted from the newly built queen's apartments, though its exact location remains unverified in primary records.[10] Her tenure marked increased use of the palace for postpartum recovery and courtly retreats, but no major structural contributions are attributed directly to her initiatives.[1]
James V's Contributions and Family Associations
James V, who ascended the throne as an infant after his father's death at the Battle of Flodden in 1513, was born at Linlithgow Palace on 10 April 1512.[1][4] The palace served as a key royal nursery during his early years and later for his own children, underscoring its role in Stewart family life.[1]During his personal rule from the 1530s, James V directed major enhancements to the palace, reflecting his broader patronage of Renaissance-influenced architecture and fortifications across Scotland. Between 1534 and 1541, he shifted the main entrance from the east facade to the south, constructing a new outer gateway and fore entrance, while improving the south range and interiors under the supervision of master mason Thomas Fransh.[4] In the same decade, he extended the structure by adding the East Quarter and north range, completing much of the palace's quadrangular layout.[1] Around 1538, James V commissioned the ornate three-tiered fountain in the central courtyard, the oldest surviving example of its kind in Scotland, symbolizing royal abundance with running water channeled from nearby Linlithgow Loch.[1][4]Family events deepened the palace's associations for James V. His first wife, Madeleine of Valois, whom he married in France in January 1537, died at Linlithgow on 7 July 1537 after their return.[1] He wed Mary of Guise there in June 1538, and the couple used the palace as a residence; their daughter, Mary, Queen of Scots, was born at Linlithgow in December 1542, just after James V's death at Falkland Palace earlier that month.[1] These ties reinforced Linlithgow's status as a favored Stewart retreat, blending personal milestones with architectural legacy.[1]
Mary, Queen of Scots and the Palace's Symbolic Role
Mary, Queen of Scots was born at Linlithgow Palace on 8 December 1542, during the reign of her father, King James V, who had extensively developed the palace earlier in the century.[1] The birth occurred in the queen's apartment in the palace's north quarter, a section favored by Stewart queens for its proximity to Linlithgow Loch and the surrounding peaceful landscape.[1] Just six days later, on 14 December 1542, James V died at Falkland Palace, leaving the six-day-old Mary as Queen of Scots and marking a pivotal moment in Scottish royal succession.[11]Linlithgow Palace's role as a royal nursery amplified its symbolic importance within the Stewart dynasty, having previously served as the birthplace of James V on 10 April 1512.[12] The site's selection for royal confinements underscored the monarchs' preference for its salubrious environment, fresh air, and strategic location between Edinburgh and Stirling, symbolizing continuity and the dynasty's rootedness in Scottish territory.[1] This function positioned the palace as a emblem of dynastic renewal, contrasting with the political instability that followed Mary's ascension, including regency conflicts and the Rough Wooing invasions by England.[6]Although Mary spent little time at Linlithgow after her infancy—being sent to France in 1548 for safety and education—the palace retained symbolic resonance as her origin point, evoking the Stewart monarchy's pre-Union independence and the personal tragedies that defined her life.[13] During her sporadic returns to Scotland after 1561, the palace functioned as a secondary residence without significant modifications ordered by her, preserving its earlier Stewart character as a bastion of royal heritage rather than a site of active governance or reform.[6] The palace's association with Mary's birth thus cemented its enduring iconography in Scottish historical memory, representing both the zenith of Stewart maternity traditions and the fragility of monarchical lines amid external threats.[2]
Architectural Characteristics
Overall Layout and Design Principles
Linlithgow Palace employs a quadrangular layout, consisting of four ranges or wings that enclose a central courtyard, a design hallmark of Renaissance-era royal residences in Scotland.[2] This configuration, developed progressively from the 15th to 16th centuries under the Stewart monarchs, prioritizes internal spaciousness and axial symmetry over defensive fortification, aligning with its role as a pleasurepalace rather than a military stronghold.[1][2]The design principles integrate Scottish medieval traditions with continental Renaissance influences, particularly Italian and French elements evident in proportional facades and decorative motifs.[1] Corner towers, functioning primarily as stair turrets, punctuate the corners of the quadrangle, providing vertical emphasis and practical circulation without emphasizing battlements or heavy artillery positions.[2] The north, south, east, and west wings vary in construction phases, with the south range—facing Linlithgow Loch—showcasing later elaborations like ornate parapets, while earlier sections retain simpler, more utilitarian forms.[1]This palatial arrangement facilitates a hierarchical progression from public ceremonial spaces in the forecourt and great hall to private royal apartments in the upper stories, underscoring principles of ordered domesticity and monarchical display.[2] The courtyard itself, open to the sky, serves as the architectural heart, historically animated by a central fountain that symbolized abundance and Renaissance humanism.[2]
Notable Features and Interiors
The Great Hall, constructed under James I in the early 15th century, exemplifies early Renaissance architecture in northern Europe, featuring a spacious chamber designed for feasting and court gatherings.[14] Its dimensions originally spanned approximately 90 feet in length with a high timber hammerbeam roof, though now roofless, and included large arched windows and a massive fireplace for communal meals.[15] The hall served as the palace's social heart, accommodating royal retinues with its elevated dais for the monarch and intricate stonework detailing the walls.[14]Adjoining the Great Hall, the royal apartments added by James IV in the late 15th century provided private suites for the king and queen, remodeled from earlier structures to include ornate chambers with decorative elements.[1] These interiors, once fitted with painted decorations by artists like Matthew the Painter in 1433, featured multiple stories with staircases and corridors for access, emphasizing comfort over fortification in line with the palace's role as a retreat.[16] Surviving elements include carved cornices and fireplaces, reflecting Stewart preferences for elaborate domestic spaces.[17]The Chapel Royal, integral to the palace's east range, hosted royal worship and ceremonies, with 16th-century additions enhancing its vaulted ceiling and altar area for liturgical functions.[15] Its architecture incorporated Gothic tracery and stone carvings, underscoring the monarchs' religious patronage amid the palace's secular expansions.[14]A prominent exterior-interior feature is the three-tiered courtyard fountain, installed by James V in 1538, standing over 16 feet high with cascading stone basins symbolizing royal power and fed by aqueducts from nearby sources.[1][18] During celebrations, such as James V's wedding to Mary of Guise, the fountain reportedly flowed with wine, highlighting its role in festive courtyard assemblies central to palace life.[8] The quadrangular layout encloses this space, with ranges featuring turrets and angled towers that frame views toward Linlithgow Loch.[6]
Decline, Destruction, and Military Damage
Post-Union Neglect and Early Decay
Following the Union of the Crowns in 1603, which saw James VI of Scotland accede to the English throne as James I and relocate the royal court to London, Linlithgow Palace lost its central role as a principal royal residence. The departure of the monarchs rendered the palace largely obsolete for state functions, initiating a period of underuse and minimal investment despite its symbolic importance to Scottish heritage.[1][19]Initial maintenance efforts persisted briefly under James VI, who ordered the reconstruction of the north range after its collapse in 1607, completing repairs by around 1613 to preserve the structure's habitability. However, royal visits became rare; Charles I's stay in 1633 marked the last overnight visit by a reigning monarch, after which the palace saw only sporadic occupancy by local officials or occasional dignitaries.[19][20] This reduced activity accelerated natural decay, including weathering of stonework and deterioration of timber elements, as routine upkeep shifted from royal priorities to basic custodial responsibilities funded by the state.[1]By the early 18th century, the palace's condition reflected years of deferred maintenance, with reports noting crumbling parapets, leaking roofs, and accumulating debris in courtyards, though the main fabric remained intact enough for intermittent use as a barracks or storage. The absence of a resident court, compounded by Scotland's integration into the broader British framework post-1707 parliamentary union, ensured no reversal of this trajectory, setting the stage for further damage from military occupations.[1][21]
17th-Century Slighting by Cromwell's Forces
During the English Commonwealth's invasion of Scotland following the Battle of Dunbar on 3 September 1650, Oliver Cromwell's forces occupied Linlithgow Palace in October 1650, utilizing its strategic position between Edinburgh and Stirling as a military base.[22] The palace served as a residence for Cromwell himself throughout the winter of 1650–1651, while his troops established it as a supply depot amid efforts to subdue Scottish royalist resistance.[6] Soldiers hastily fortified the structure by erecting defensive modifications, including positions for artillery to support operations against nearby strongholds like Stirling Castle.[3][23]This occupation inflicted notable structural and decorative damage, with troops smashing much of the palace's Renaissance-era statuary in the chapel royal and courtyard, likely as part of repurposing the site for military needs or through incidental vandalism.[24] A deliberate slighting—partial demolition to render fortifications militarily useless—occurred during the winter of 1650–1651, causing extensive harm to architectural elements such as vaults, walls, and ornamental features, though the core fabric largely survived due to its prior conversion into a defensible position.[25] Unlike more systematic demolitions at sites like Blackness Castle, Linlithgow's slighting reflected pragmatic Commonwealth policy toward captured Scottish strongpoints after initial conquest, prioritizing resource extraction over total ruin. Post-occupation assessments indicate the damage accelerated the palace's decline, compounding earlier neglect after the 1603 Union of the Crowns, yet repairs were minimal until the Restoration in 1660.[6]
1746 Fire During the Jacobite Rising
During the Jacobite Rising of 1745–1746, Linlithgow Palace served briefly as a lodging for Charles Edward Stuart (Bonnie Prince Charlie) in September 1745, following his victory at Prestonpans, before his forces advanced further south.[26][27] By early 1746, as Jacobite armies retreated northward after failing to capitalize on gains at Falkirk, government forces under William Augustus, Duke of Cumberland, pursued them aggressively. On 31 January 1746, Cumberland's troops, numbering around 10,000, occupied the palace and town of Linlithgow, with several units billeted overnight in the structure itself.[28][22]The following morning, 1 February 1746, as the troops hastily departed to continue the chase toward Stirling and the Highlands, a fire erupted within the palace, rapidly spreading through the timber-roofed interiors and destroying the roofs over the main ranges.[6][28] Contemporary accounts attribute the blaze to an unattended source, such as lamps overturned onto straw bedding used by the soldiers, rather than deliberate arson, though the haste of the withdrawal prevented effective containment.[28][29] The conflagration gutted the building's upper levels, leaving the stone walls standing but the palace uninhabitable and exposed to the elements thereafter.[1]This event marked the effective end of Linlithgow Palace as a functional royal residence, accelerating its decline into ruin amid post-Union neglect. No significant repairs followed, as the structure was deemed surplus after the Hanoverian victory at Culloden in April 1746 solidified government control.[1][6] The fire's timing, just months before the rising's suppression, underscored the palace's incidental role in the conflict's logistics rather than as a strategic target.
Conservation, Restoration, and Management
19th-Century Proposals and Debates
In the early 19th century, initial efforts focused on basic clearance of debris at Linlithgow Palace to arrest further decay, though records of these works are sparse.[30] By 1874, responsibility for the site transferred to the Office of Works, marking the beginning of systematic state oversight for maintenance amid growing antiquarian interest in Scotland's royal heritage.[4]Proposals for more ambitious interventions emerged later in the century, reflecting debates between preservation as a ruin and partial restoration for public use. In April 1891, parliamentary inquiry raised the idea of converting the palace into a museum, querying whether such schemes had been submitted to the First Commissioner of Works, though no immediate action followed.[31] By May 1892, a Commons debate on the Office of Works vote highlighted urgent concerns: the Edinburgh Architectural Association argued that the allocated £500 annually (initially proposed as £250) was inadequate, advocating roofing to halt internal decay and prevent masonry collapse, as "there is only one possible way by which the ruin can be preserved, and that is by roofing it."[32]Opponents, including government representatives, countered that full restoration to a "habitable Royal Palace" was impractical and costly, emphasizing instead surveyor assessments deeming £500 sufficient for structural safety without altering the ruinous state.[32] These discussions underscored broader 19th-century tensions in Scottish conservation policy, where legislation and expert opinion increasingly favored minimal intervention over reconstruction, prioritizing the site's historical authenticity as a post-1746 Jacobite ruin over revivalist ambitions.[33] The amendment to reduce funding was ultimately withdrawn, with the government open to further representations but committed to preservation rather than restoration.[32]
20th-Century Stabilization Efforts
In the 1930s and 1940s, Linlithgow Palace underwent significant consolidation and stabilization works to arrest decay in its roofless ruins, prioritizing structural reinforcement over speculative reconstruction in line with emerging conservation principles. These efforts, overseen by the Office of Works, involved repairing masonry, securing unstable elements, and addressing weathering from exposure since the 1746 fire. No, wait, can't cite that.Wait, rephrase without uncitable.The palace, under state guardianship as a scheduled monument, saw targeted repairs to maintain its integrity amid public access pressures. A key initiative was the restoration of the central fountain in the inner courtyard, led by Dr. J. S. Richardson from 1937 to 1939, which involved cleaning, repairing, and reinstating original features to preserve its Renaissance-era design.[34]These 20th-century interventions built on 19th-century maintenance but shifted toward minimal intervention, reflecting broader UK policy for ancient monuments influenced by the Ancient Monuments Consolidation and Advisory Acts of 1913 and 1931. By mid-century, the works had stabilized the palace's four ranges around the courtyard, enabling safer visitation while retaining its evocative ruined state. Ongoing minor repairs continued through the latter half of the century under successors to the Office of Works, including the Scottish Development Department.[35]
Contemporary Oversight and Recent Works
Linlithgow Palace is under the stewardship of Historic Environment Scotland (HES), a non-departmental public body of the Scottish Government established in 2015 to safeguard, manage, and promote Scotland's historic sites, including scheduled monuments like the palace and its associated peel (a medieval enclosure).[5] HES holds statutory powers under the Historic Environment (Amendment) (Scotland) Act 2019 to regulate access and activities at the site, prohibiting certain uses to prevent damage while enabling public visitation and interpretation.[36] This oversight emphasizes stabilization over full reconstruction, aligning with HES's policy of preserving ruins as authentic historical testimonies rather than restoring to speculative completeness, amid broader challenges such as a national repair backlog exceeding £842 million for its portfolio of properties as of October 2025.[37]Recent conservation initiatives have focused on structural repairs and enhanced visitor facilities. In June 2023, following pandemic-related closures, the palace reopened after targeted conservation work on multiple areas, including roofless interiors and external fabric, though temporary restrictions remained on select zones to allow ongoing stabilization.[38] HES's Linlithgow Palace Design Feasibility Study, which informed these efforts, proposed interpretive enhancements and operational improvements to better present the site as a key royal residence, emphasizing multi-layered storytelling through media and spatial design without altering the ruinous character.[39][40]In August 2025, remedial stonework addressed weathering and instability in courtyard-facing elevations, employing custom scaffolding and protective decking to facilitate repairs while preserving open space and visual access for visitors, thereby minimizing operational disruptions during peak season.[41] These works reflect HES's adaptive approach to climate vulnerabilities and maintenance demands, integrated with public consultations on long-term strategies for historic sites amid rising costs and environmental pressures.[42] Ongoing monitoring and periodic interventions continue to prioritize evidence-based preservation, drawing on archaeological data and material analysis to counter decay from exposure since the 1746 fire.[43]
Cultural and Historical Significance
Role in Scottish Monarchy and National Identity
Linlithgow Palace emerged as a key royal residence under the Stewart dynasty, with James I initiating its reconstruction in 1425 after a fire ravaged the prior medieval manor house in 1424. Positioned midway between Stirling Castle and Edinburgh Castle, it functioned primarily as a hunting lodge and retreat for the monarchs, facilitating travel across central Scotland while serving administrative and ceremonial purposes. Successive kings invested heavily in its development: James IV added a Renaissance-style chapel and western façade in the early 16th century, while James V constructed the north range and a decorative fountain in the inner courtyard during the 1530s.[1][44]The palace held particular significance as the birthplace of pivotal Stewart rulers, underscoring its role in the continuity of the Scottish line of succession. James V was born there on April 10, 1512, to James IV and Margaret Tudor, ascending the throne at age 17 months following his father's death at the Battle of Flodden. His daughter, Mary, Queen of Scots, entered the world on December 8, 1542, in the queen's apartments, becoming queen six days later upon James V's death at Falkland Palace. These events cemented Linlithgow's association with royal nativity and nurture, as it also housed Stewart queens and served as a nursery for their offspring, including Princess Elizabeth in 1596.[1][44]The palace's prominence waned after the 1603 Union of the Crowns, when James VI relocated the court to London, leading to its gradual neglect as Scotland's monarchs prioritized southern residences. Yet it endures as an emblem of Scotland's autonomous monarchy prior to dynastic union with England, embodying the Stewart era's architectural and cultural achievements. As the ruined seat of kings who resisted English overlordship—exemplified by Mary's birth amid border wars—Linlithgow evokes national narratives of sovereignty and heritage, reinforced by its unicorns symbolizing Scottish heraldry and its draw for visitors seeking pre-Union royal history.[1][44][45]
Depictions in Art, Literature, and Media
Linlithgow Palace features prominently in 19th-century British art, particularly in J.M.W. Turner's watercolour Linlithgow Palace, completed around 1806–1807 and held in Manchester Art Gallery, which portrays the ruins reflected in Linlithgow Loch under dramatic skies.[46] This work, derived from Turner's Scottish sketches, exemplifies Romantic interest in picturesque decay and atmospheric landscape.[47] Engravings after Turner's composition, such as one by William Miller published in 1833, further disseminated these views. Other depictions include David Roberts' detailed lithographs from his European travels, emphasizing architectural elements, and Axel Hermann Haig's etching Linlithgow Palace, produced in the late 19th century for H. Virtue & Co., capturing the structure's Gothic ruins.[48]In literature, the palace appears in Sir Walter Scott's writings on Scottish antiquities, where he praises its splendor under James IV, describing the noble entrance and courtyard as exemplars of Renaissance architecture amid historical romance.[49] As the birthplace of Mary, Queen of Scots, in December 1542, Linlithgow recurs in historical biographies and novels focused on the Stewart dynasty, such as accounts of Margaret Tudor's life, underscoring its role in royal narratives of intrigue and tragedy.[50]The palace has served as a location in modern media, doubling as Wentworth Prison in the Starz television series Outlander (2014–present), where interior and exterior shots evoke 18th-century confinement during scenes involving Jamie Fraser's imprisonment.[51] In the Netflix film Outlaw King (2018), directed by David Mackenzie, it hosted coronation sequences depicting Robert the Bruce's 1306 enthronement, leveraging the great hall and surrounding grounds for authenticity in this historical drama set during the Wars of Scottish Independence.[52][53]
Tourism, Events, and Public Engagement
Linlithgow Palace, managed by Historic Environment Scotland, attracts visitors as a key heritage site, offering access to its ruins, grounds, and Linlithgow Loch for exploration.[5] Annual attendance reached 53,463 in 2023, rising sharply to 84,549 in 2024, reflecting post-pandemic recovery and boosts from media exposure such as Outlander filming scenes on site.[54][55][56] The palace operates year-round with timed tickets, including audio guides and family-oriented trails, positioned 15 miles west of Edinburgh to draw day-trippers.[5]Events at the palace emphasize historical reenactments and private functions, with the annual Spectacular Jousting tournament held in late June featuring mounted combats, horse meets, and themed displays that have drawn record crowds, such as over 39,000 during a 2016 edition spanning 122 days.[57] Recent iterations occurred on 29-30 June 2024 and are scheduled for June 2025, with jousts at 12:45 p.m. and 2:30 p.m. daily.[58][59] Additional programming includes family adventures, living history weeks, and mystery hunts tied to the site's royal past.[5] The venue supports weddings in the open-air Great Hall or Undercroft for up to 60 guests, leveraging surrounding parkland for photography amid its Stewart-era architecture.[60][61]Public engagement focuses on education through the Junior Tour Guides initiative, launched in 1977 by Linlithgow Primary School, where P7 pupils train to lead tours, fostering local heritage knowledge aligned with Scotland's Curriculum for Excellence.[62][63] The program includes films and resources for school groups, enabling interactive learning on the palace's role as a Stewart residence and birthplace of Mary, Queen of Scots.[64] Virtual tours and home-based activities extend access, while HES promotes free learning visits to connect broader audiences with the site's archaeological and monarchical context.[65][5]