The Sheep Heid Inn is a public house in Duddingston, Edinburgh, Scotland. There has reputedly been a pub on this spot selling liquor and victuals since 1360. If this foundation date was proved correct it would make The Sheep Heid Inn perhaps the oldest surviving licensed premises in Edinburgh, if not Scotland. The Sheep Heid Inn also possesses an old fashioned bowling alley, built around 1870, which is reputedly the last such alley in Scotland. The Royal Company of Archers, the City Sheriffs, and the local regiments based at the nearby Piershill Barracks and Duddingston training camps, were all once regulars. The last of the old clubs to survive are the Trotters Club, founded in 1882 and who still meet in the alley once a month.
Avenue de la Plage : Wartburg 1000 et Ford Taunus 15 M.
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The Sheep Heid Inn is famously known as the oldest surviving public house in Scotland having been established in 1360. From the medieval period, sheep were reared in the nearby Holyrood Park and then brought to Duddingston for slaughter. It is believed that many of the residents of Duddingston became experts at using the head …