When I spent a few months working in Old Town Edinburgh back in 1996, I loved going up to the castle to hang out in the esplanade, the wide paved area in front of the castle on top of the crag, with a lovely view of the city and the Firth of Forth. But my cool modern hangout spot was the site where hundreds of people, mainly women, were killed in the 15th through 18th centuries, executed as witches.
What is now Princes Street Gardens and Waverley Station, in a pretty green vale below the crag, was once full of water and was called the Nor' Loch. Accused witches were often thrown in with their hands and feet bound. You know the story: if they drowned, ah, they must've been innocent. If they survived: must be witches; burn or hang them on the castle hill.
Fortunately people returned to their senses, and much later, in 1894, a small monument called the Witches' Well was installed near the castle to commemorate these victims. You can still visit it today.
https://theculturetrip.com/europe/united-kingdom/scotland/articles/the-haunting-story-behind-the-witches-well-in-edinburgh/?fbclid=IwAR2X8jJ9rJ_16vcfMUnJsY5bfR31O3hJEsH_oWoWGwRDL23O2YC9MaP5SnU















