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Every year throughout September, SCTS court and tribunal buildings take part in Doors Open Days. The events give people the chance to explore our buildings and take a peek at some areas usually under restricted access. Visitors can also learn about the history of the buildings and take part in various activities.
Upcoming events will be listed here closer to the dates.
If you can't make it along to a court building, try your hand at some activities on the virtual doors open day.
Lord President of the Court of Session and Lord Justice General, Lord Carloway
What's it like to work in Parliament House? The most senior member of the Scottish judiciary, Lord Carloway reflects on his experience of Parliament House as a workplace for all sectors of the Scottish legal profession.
What unexpected activities were regarded as criminal acts in 1895? Could putting beans in your bread have gotten you in hot water? Was fortune-telling and reading palms a risky business? Would you have been charged with a crime for doing something that seems absolutely ordinary today? And what would have been the penalty for these crimes?
We have created a 10-question quiz on the legal penalties for crimes that year. We’ve also provided a little bit of background information to help explain why certain activities, which we regard as completely normal now, were regarded as criminal actions back then.
Parliament House architecture - Professor Johnny Rodger
Professor Johnny Rodger is a writer, critic, and Professor of Urban Literature at the Glasgow School of Art. He is the co-author of The Spaces of Justice: The Architecture of the Scottish Court and has kindly provided a brief talk exploring the architectural history of Parliament House.
The Scottish Sentencing Council helps to develop policy on sentencing in Scotland and creates sentencing guidelines for the Scottish Courts. The Council aims to promote consistency in sentencing and greater awareness and understanding of sentencing.
Every day in courtrooms across Scotland, people are sentenced for crimes they've committed. This short video helps to explain how judges decide what these sentences should be.
Use the Scottish Sentencing Council's interactive scenarios to follow the court cases of Gillian and Paul. As you go through the cases, you decide what happens next, and then you choose what sentence you would give if you were the Sheriff.
Make your own mace
Maces are the symbol of the authority of the Crown in the courtroom, carried into the room in front of the judiciary by Macers or Court Officers, and placed in a special display place while the court is sitting.
We’ve put together printable kit to construct a paper-craft mace, as well as instructions on how to make one yourself if you don’t have access to a printer.
Test your mettle in our online escape room. After joining one of the librarians for a behind-the-scenes tour of the historic Parliament House building, things start going wrong. Somehow, your tour guide and you end up slipping back through time.
You’ll experience famous legal events of the past firsthand, and see up close some of the unusual spaces and items that can be found behind the doors of the almost 400-year-old building.
Use your logic and observation skills to unlock the puzzles and, if you’re lucky, escape from Parliament House!
Laws, legends and myths
There are lots of 'facts' about odd laws in circulation, but how many of them are actually true? We take a look at some of the stranger ones to find out if they were true, if they're still true, and if any of them applied here in Scotland, which has its own legal system, distinct from the rest of the UK.
Discover what it was like to engage with the legal system in Scotland in years gone by, investigating things like where courts sat, what it was like to be a member of a jury, and when people used to celebrate the start of the new year.
Scots law uses many unique terms, and it also shares many words with other judicial systems.
We’ve pulled together these terms and descriptions which are in daily use in Parliament House and created a word search for you to download and print, or view on your screen.
(We’ve included an answer sheet too, in case you get stuck!)
Women in the Court of Session - Dr Rebecca Mason
Dr Rebecca Mason is a historian of early modern Scotland, with expertise in gender and legal history. She has kindly provided a brief talk titled Women and Law in Early Modern Scotland: The Court of Session, which explores historic Scottish women’s property rights, with a focus on cases heard in the Court of Session in Parliament Hall.
We have created two different stories which work like the old ‘choose your own adventure’ books: 'Library Murder Mystery' and 'The Mystery of the Beast' (links below).
As you journey through the stories, you'll face a range of options and what you choose will determine what happens next!
You can travel back and forth along the different paths, figuring out the clues until you solve the mystery.
Based on a real and rather unusual case from Inverness in the 1950s, you play the role of Detective Brown, tasked with investigating a chaotic scene in a shop in the heart of Inverness.
In thisexciting interactive mystery, you must explore the scene, question the parties involved to examine what they think happened, solve the mystery, then explore some legal questions raised in the courts by the subsequent legal case.
It is often wondered what circumstances caused a person to end up before the court, and what happened to them after their case was concluded?
Delve into historic newspapers and public records to explore what happened before and after the time that the servant Ann Tinman appeared in the High Court of Justiciary in 1874, charged with concealment of pregnancy and child murder.
The Dunecht Murder - Jennifer Findlay
Jennifer is the Library Services Manager for the Scottish Courts and Tribunals Service. She has researched the background to an unusual case heard in the High Court of Justiciary in Edinburgh in 1882, which left behind some unexpected traces in the Parliament House building.
We have taken photos of some of the items or locations you would normally be able to see on Doors Open Day tours, such as Burke’s Cell, Parliament Hall’s Great South Window and our very own coffin (which is a left-over evidence item from a famous legal case 200 years ago) and turned them intojigsaws.
We’ve also shared some images of things you might not normally see if you came to visit us, such as our library cows…
You can change the cut style and difficulty level on the site if they’re proving to be just a bit too tricky, or if you’d like to make them a little bit more challenging.
Judicial work quiz
What’s involved in the daily work of a Justice of the Peace, Sheriff, Senator or Tribunals President? Where do they work, what legal activities are they involved in, and what are the limits of their powers? Find out more about the work of all levels of the Scottish judiciary.
A historic building right in the heart of Edinburgh’s Old Town, Parliament House is well known for the grand space of Parliament Hall, and its imposing stained glass windows and graceful statutes.
However, Parliament house also has many lesser-known elements.