Twelve thousand miles from the grey stone tenements of Edinburgh, there is a city where the streets share names with Scottish places, where a statue of Robert Burns stands in the central square, and where the locals celebrate Hogmanay with a fervour that would make any Scot weep. That city is Dunedin â and it was built, deliberately and lovingly, to be Scotland made new.

A City Named After Edinburgh
The very name tells the story. Dunedin comes from DĂšn Ăideann â the ancient Scottish Gaelic name for Edinburgh. When the settlers of the Free Church of Scotland sailed to the bottom of the world in 1848, they were not simply emigrating. They were transplanting an entire civilisation.
They named their streets after Scottish places: Princes Street, George Street, Moray Place. They established a university modelled on Edinburgh’s own. They laid out a central Octagon â a deliberate echo of Edinburgh’s elegance â and planted their faith, their education, and their fierce love of Scottish tradition in the red-soiled hills of Otago.
Why They Left
Many of those first settlers came because they had little choice. The Highland Clearances had driven thousands from their ancestral lands â evicted from glens their families had farmed for generations. Others followed the Free Church split of 1843, seeking a place where they could worship without compromise.
Some had simply run out of road at home. The potato famine, the collapsing linen trade, the brutal mathematics of poverty. For all of them, the ship was not an adventure. It was a grief made of salt water and oakwood. They carried Scotland in their chests like a wound that never quite healed.
The Scottish City at the World’s Edge
Go deeper into Scotland
Explore our Scotland planning guides to turn your curiosity into your next adventure. Or join 43,000+ readers who get a daily Scotland story delivered free.
Walk through Dunedin’s Octagon today and you will find Robert Burns â or rather, his statue â gazing thoughtfully over the city that reveres him. Unveiled in 1865, it is one of the oldest Burns statues in the world outside Scotland, and it stands at the very heart of the city.
The Otago Settlers Museum tells the whole story: the ships that creaked south through the Southern Ocean, the families who squinted through salt spray at an unfamiliar shore. What they built in Otago was not a pale imitation of Scotland. It was an act of defiance against forgetting.
The Highland Games That Never Stopped
Every year, Dunedin hosts Highland Games â pipe bands, caber tossing, heavy athletics, Highland dancing performed on grass as green as any Scottish meadow. The caber toss carries a weight that goes far beyond sport for communities shaped by displacement and longing.
Across New Zealand, Scottish clan societies have flourished for more than a century. Clans that still gather in Scotland every summer to honour their ancient bonds have their mirror communities in Dunedin, Wellington, and Christchurch.
Scotland Preserved in Amber
There is something deeply moving about Dunedin’s Scottishness. It is not the Scotland of today â it is the Scotland of 1848, caught in amber. The accents are long gone, softened into a New Zealand lilt over six generations, but the stone architecture, the civic institutions, and the stubborn pride remain.
The University of Otago, founded in 1869, was the first university in New Zealand. Its sandstone buildings could sit comfortably in St Andrews or Glasgow. Its founders insisted on the Scottish tradition of universal education â rigorous, principled, open to all.
The Longing That Built a City
What Dunedin teaches us is something profound about the nature of home. When you strip people of their land â or when poverty and faith drive them to a ship’s hold â they do not forget where they came from. They rebuild it, stone by stone, name by name, tradition by tradition.
The settlers of Otago looked at their strange new hills and saw the Highlands they had left. They named things after home not because they expected to return, but because they needed to carry Scotland with them into the unknown.
That longing is still there, if you know where to look. In the bagpipes at the Highland Games. In the Burns Night suppers held in midsummer. In the Scottish surnames on plaques and gravestones across Otago. In a city that still celebrates a homeland most of its residents have never seen.
Scotland did not disappear when those ships sailed south. It arrived somewhere new â and it has never left.
If you want to understand how deep Scottish identity runs â how far it travels, how stubbornly it survives â walk the glens and shores that inspired a city twelve thousand miles away. You will never see Scotland the same way again.
Ready to experience this yourself?
43,000 Scotland lovers can’t be wrong.
Every week, our free newsletter delivers hidden Highland gems, seasonal travel guides, local stories, and practical tips â straight to your inbox. Join the community that loves Scotland as much as you do.
FREE GUIDE: 25 Hidden Gems of Scotland That Most Tourists Never Find (PDF)
Download our free Scotland Travel Guide (PDF)
Love Scotland?
Get the best of Scotland delivered to your inbox every week â free.
Join 43,000+ readers. No spam, unsubscribe anytime.
🏴️ Join 43,000+ Scotland Lovers
Every week, get Scotland’s hidden castles, whisky secrets, and Highland travel inspiration — the kind you won’t find in any guidebook.
Love more? Join 65,000 Ireland lovers → · Join 30,000 Italy lovers → · Join 7,000 France lovers →
Free forever · One email per week · Unsubscribe anytime
Secure Your Dream Scottish Experience Before Itâs Gone!
Planning a trip to Scotland? Donât let sold-out tours or packed attractions dampen your adventure. Iconic experiences like exploring Edinburgh Castle, cruising along Loch Ness, or wandering through the mystical Isle of Skye often fill up fastâespecially during peak travel seasons.

Booking in advance guarantees your place and ensures you can fully immerse yourself in the rich culture and breathtaking scenery without stress or disappointment. Youâll also free up time to explore Scotland's hidden gems and savour those authentic moments that make your trip truly special.
Make the most of your journeyâstart planning today and secure those must-do experiences before theyâre gone!
***************************************************
DISCLAIMER Last updated May 29, 2023
WEBSITE DISCLAIMER
The information provided by Love to Visit LLC ('we', 'us', or 'our') on https:/loveotvisitscotland.com (the 'Site') is for general informational purposes only. All information on the Site is provided in good faith, however we make no representation or warranty of any kind, express or implied, regarding the accuracy, adequacy, validity, reliability, availability, or completeness of any information on the Site.
UNDER NO CIRCUMSTANCE SHALL WE HAVE ANY LIABILITY TO YOU FOR ANY LOSS OR DAMAGE OF ANY KIND INCURRED AS A RESULT OF THE USE OF THE SITE OR RELIANCE ON ANY INFORMATION PROVIDED ON THE SITE. YOUR USE OF THE SITE AND YOUR RELIANCE ON ANY INFORMATION ON THE SITE IS SOLELY AT YOUR OWN RISK.
EXTERNAL LINKS DISCLAIMER
The Site may contain (or you may be sent through the Site) links to other websites or content belonging to or originating from third parties or links to websites and features in banners or other advertising. Such external links are not investigated, monitored, or checked for accuracy, adequacy, validity, reliability, availability, or completeness by us.
WE DO NOT WARRANT, ENDORSE, GUARANTEE, OR ASSUME RESPONSIBILITY FOR THE ACCURACY OR RELIABILITY OF ANY INFORMATION OFFERED BY THIRD-PARTY WEBSITES LINKED THROUGH THE SITE OR ANY WEBSITE OR FEATURE LINKED IN ANY BANNER OR OTHER ADVERTISING. WE WILL NOT BE A PARTY TO OR IN ANY WAY BE RESPONSIBLE FOR MONITORING ANY TRANSACTION BETWEEN YOU AND THIRD-PARTY PROVIDERS OF PRODUCTS OR SERVICES.
AFFILIATES DISCLAIMER The Site may contain links to affiliate websites, and we receive an affiliate commission for any purchases made by you on the affiliate website using such links. Our affiliates include the following:
- Viator
We are a participant in the Amazon Services LLC Associates Program, an affiliate advertising program designed to provide a means for us to earn advertising fees by linking to Amazon.com and affiliated websites.
