Mary King's Close
17th century streets hidden under Edinburgh were once a breeding ground for the black deathLife in 17th-century Mary King's close (neighborhood) in Edinburgh was less than sanitary. Inhabitants lived in narrow winding streets crammed into packed tenements up to seven stories high. Without a proper sewer system, tenants simply dumped waste into the streets below. Rats ran wild in the close and carried fleas with them everywhere they went. When the fleas became infected with the bacterium Yersinia pestis, better known as the bubonic plague or black death, it spelled disaster for the residents of Mary King's close.
When the black death first appeared on the British Isles, it appeared to be a problem only in then English territories. The Scots delighted in calling it "the foul death of the English." Soon, however, the rats, fleas, and bacteria had made their way to Scotland. The country soon lost a quarter of it's population to the plague. The disease was particularly devastating in the tight quarters of Mary King's Close.
There is a persistent myth that in an effort to quarantine the victims, Edinburgh city officials sealed off Mary King's Close in 1644, leaving some 600 inhabitants to perish inside without hope.
In reality, the plague victims were well cared for, and the town council managed the outbreak efficiently and compassionately. Families healthy enough to be moved were taken to Burgh Muir. Those who weren't able to be moved let the workers know by putting up white flags in their windows so that food and coal could be delivered to their doorsteps. The plague doctor George Rae, then came into the town wearing leather from head to toe and a bizarre bird shaped masks to help protect him from the disease. (It worked, the leather kept the fleas from biting Rae and he survived the outbreak.) To save a plague victim, Rae would slice off the top of the victim's sore and jam a red hot poker into the wound to cauterize it. While no doubt horrible, the technique did indeed save lives.
After the plague had passed, tenants continued to live in Mary Kings close until the 19th century, when it was emptied and sealed up. The Royal Exchange was built on top of it and the close was forgotten. It wasn't rediscovered until workmen digging on the street above accidentally punched down into the winding streets.
Today, Mary King's Close is a popular tourist site, with guided tours by historical reenactors, and attracts those interested in it's macabre history and many ghost stories. One of the most famous ghosts supposed to live here is a 10 year old girl named Annie who died of the plague. Believers report temperature changes and feeling a strange presence in her room. Many have left toys, dolls, and sweets for her in the close.
Tours are given seven days a week, all year long (excluding Christmas Day) with special events throughout the year, including a look into what Christmas would be like in the close's prime.
Read more about Mary King's Close on Atlas Obscura...
Category: Incredible Ruins, Subterranean Sites
Location: Edinburgh, United Kingdom
Edited by: Delireus, mrobscurity, martofkukuf, Rachel