Cemitério de Warriston (em inglês: Warriston Cemetery) é um cemitério em Warriston, um dos subúrbios ao norte de Edimburgo, Escócia. Foi construído pela então recém-formada Edinburgh Cemetery Company, e ocupa cerca de 14 acres (5,7 ha) de terra em um local levemente inclinado. Contém dezenas de milhares de sepulturas, incluindo pessoas notáveis vitorianas e eduardianas, sendo o mais eminente o médico Sir James Young Simpson.
Projetado em 1842 pelo arquiteto de Edimburgo David Cousin, o cemitério foi aberto em 1843: o primeiro sepultamento foi de Margaret Barker, sepultada em 3 de junho de 1843.
Sepultamentos
George Aikman (1830–1905) artist and engraver
Joseph Anderson (antiquarian) (1832–1916) keeper of the National Museum of Antiquities, and his son David Anderson, Lord St Vigeans[2]
Adam Black (1784–1874), publisher, Lord Provost and Member of Parliament for Edinburgh
Samuel Blackburn (1813–1856) portrait artist
Hippolyte Blanc (1844–1917), arquiteto
William Graham Boss (1883–1927) stained glass designer
John Crawford Brown (1805–1867) landscape artist
William Alexander BrysonFRSE (died 1906) creator of the public electric lighting system in Leith in 1897 (one of the first in the world) - stone vandalised
Alexander Buchan (meteorologist) (1829–1907), creator of the map-based weather forecast
Sir John James Burnet (1857–1938), arquiteto
William Archibald CadellFRSE (1775–1855) historiador, matemático e proprietário da Carron Company
James Cadenhead (1858–1927) artist
Dr Colin Cadman (1916–1971), plant pathologist and micologista
Sir Thomas Clark (1823–1900), Lord Provost of Edinburgh (1865–1888)
Prof Arthur Connell (1794–1863), FRSE
Alexander Hunter Crawford (1865–1945) arquiteto
Mary Crudelius (1839-1877) early campaigner for female education
John Cumming (artist) (1824–1908) pai de William Skeoch Cumming
John Cunningham (architect) (1799–1873)
James Currie (shipowner) (1863–1930), proprietário da Currie Line
Commodore James Dalgleish (1891–1964)
Sir David Deas (1807–1876), médico naval, com seu filho arquiteto, Francis William Deas (1862–1951)
George Deas, Lord Deas (1804–1887)
William H. Dowbiggin (1780–1848) veteran of the Battle of Waterloo, son-in-law of William Maule, 1st Baron Panmure
Sir David Dumbreck (1805–1876) memorial only
John Gillison Dunbar (1874–1958) creator of Dunbar's lemonade
Thomas Duncan (painter) (1807–1845)
David Dundas, Lord Dundas (1854–1922) law lord
Robert William Dundas, MC, Legion of Honour, (1881–1928) military hero and solicitor, co-founder of Dundas & Wilson
Elizabeth Marianne Erskine (1871–1942) early female cirurgiã
David Taylor Fish FRHA (1824–1901) botânico and author
William Flockhart (1809–1871) chemist, joint founder of Duncan Flockhart & Co
Robert Gavin (1827–1883) artist
Robert Gibb (1845–1932), artist, most remembered for the painting The Thin Red Line (unmarked grave)
Robert Fleming Gourlay (1778–1863) político escocês-canadense
Frederick Richard Graham-Yooll (died 1931) inventor
Andrew Grant (MP) (1830–1924) político liberal
Very Rev James Grant DD FRSE (1800–1890) Director of Scottish Widows 1840 to 1890 and Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland in 1854, father of above Andrew Grant
Prof John Russell GreigFRSE (1889-1963) veterinarian and creator of "clean milk"
Sir Louis Stewart Gumley (1870–1941), Lord Provost of Edinburgh 1935–38
Samuel Halkett (1814–1877) librarian and author
Sir George Harrison (1812–1885), Lord Provost of Edinburgh 1882-5
Sir George Harvey (1805–1876) artist.
David Ramsay Hay (1798–1866) artist and author
Alfred Trevor Haynes (1907-1969) President of the Faculty of Actuaries 1962-64
Alexander Henry (1818–1894), gunsmith, First Edinburgh Rifle Volunteer, JP and Edinburgh Town Councillor
James Howie (1845–1910) fotógrafo
John Howkins (civil engineer) (1840–1966)
Edith Hughes (architect) (1888–1971) primeira arquiteta da Escócia
William Hurst (civil engineer) (1810–1890) Scottish engineer linked to the early development of railways
Cosmo Innes (1798–1874) judge, author and antiquarian. A member of the Edinburgh Calotype Club one of the world's first photographic societies
Professor Robert Jameson (1774–1854), naturalist and mineralogista
Feliks Janiewicz (1762–1848), Polish composer and violinist in exile
James Jardine (1776–1858) engenheiro civil
Alexander Karley RN (1785-1859) Royal Navy Commander of ships such as HMS Apollo
Alexander Keiller (1811–1892), médico and obstetrician; introduced gynaecological teaching into the Edinburgh Medical School
Philip Kelland (1808–1879), matemático inglês
John Falconer King FIC FCS (1846–1919) Edinburgh city analyst
Count Walerian Krasiński (1795–1855), Polish Calvinist politician, nationalist and historian
Robert Scott Lauder (1803–1869), artist (monument by John Hutchison)
James Eckford Lauder (1811–1869), artist, buried with his older brother Robert Scott Lauder
Rev Prof Alexander Lawson DD (1852–1921) professor of English Literature at St Andrews University
Thomas Livingstone Learmonth (1818-1903) político da Tasmânia, nephew of John Learmonth
Charles LeesRSA (1800–1880) artist
John Allan Lindsay (1865–1942) the final Provost of Leith 1917–1920
Hilda Lockhart Lorimer (1873–1954) classical scholar, and her brother John Gordon Lorimer (1870-1914)
Professor David Low (1786–1859), agriculturalist
Charles Somerville MacAlester (1797–1891) - grave vandalised
Horatio McCulloch (1806–1867), artist (monument by John Rhind)
Very Rev Robert MacDonald (1813-1893) Moderator of the General Assembly of the Free Church of Scotland in 1882
Robert MacFarlane, Lord Ormidale (1802–1880) law lord
Stewart McGlashan (1807–1873) sculptor
Gillian Maclaine (1798–1840) adventurer, memorial only - lost at sea with his family
Sir John Lorne MacLeod (1873-1946) Lord Provost of Edinburgh 1916 to 1919
The Very Rev John McMurtrie DD (1831–1912) Moderator of the General Assembly of the Church of Scotland in 1904
Prof William Ramsay McNab (1844–1889), botânico (memorial on parents' grave)
Duncan McNeill, 1st Baron Colonsay and Oronsay (1793–1874), advocate and Tory politician; Lord Justice General and Lord President of the Court of Session (1852–1867)
Sir Richard Mackie (1851–1923) Provost of Leith, 1899 to 1908
Very Rev Thomas Main (1813-1881) Moderator of the General Assembly of the Free Church of Scotland
Sir James David Marwick (1826–1908)
Very Rev Alexander Martin DD LLD (1857–1946) Principal of New College, Edinburgh
John Menzies (1808–1879), founder of the national newsagent chain bearing his name
Thomas Menzies (1847–1901), major shipbuilder in Leith
Prof Thomas Hugh Milroy LLD FRSE (1869–1950) physiologist, organic chemist and Vice President of the Royal Society of Edinburgh
Hugh Morton (1812–1878) engenheiro civil
Claud Muirhead (1835–1910) proprietário e editor do Edinburgh Advertiser
Charles Murray, Lord Murray (1866–1936) law lord, and his son, Keith Anderson Hope Murray (1903–1993)
George Waterston (1808–1893) stationer, founder of Waterstons Bookshop
William Williams (1832–1900), Welsh veterinary cirurgião, principal of the Dick Vet College
Dr Andrew Wood (1810-1881) President of the Royal College of Surgeons of Edinburgh
Cremações
The crematorium is on a separate site, east of the main cemetery. It has several areas of remembrance, the oldest being the oak panelled rooms in the basement. To the north there is both a Rose Garden and Water Garden holding memorials. The Book of Remembrance is opened to the date each day, for those marking the anniversary of a death. A computerised version of the Book of Remembrance is also available, enabling other dates to be viewed.
Alfred Adler (1870–1937), Austrian psychotherapist and founder of the school of individual psychology. Moved April 2011 to Austria[3][4]
Ebenezer James MacRae (1881–1951), City Architect for Edinburgh
Sir Frank Mears (1880–1953) arquiteto and town planner
Don Revie (1927–1989), English footballer and manager
Captain Henry Peel Ritchie (1879–1958), Royal NavyCruz Vitória recipiente, East Africa, World War I[5]
Drum-Major Walter Potter Ritchie (1892–1965), Cruz Vitória recipiente, Battle of the Somme, World War I[5]
Prof James Lorrain Smith (1862-1931) anatomist
Sir Charles Laing Warr (1892–1969), Minister of The High Church of St Giles, Edinburgh, and Dean of the Thistle and Chapel Royal Scotland (1926–1969)
Warriston Cemetery contains 100 graves of Commonwealth service personnel, 72 from World War I and 27 from World War II, besides a grave of a Belgian soldier.[7] The cemetery also contains a CWGC memorial, at the end of the columbarium, in the form of panels listing 142 Commonwealth service personnel of World War II who were cremated here.[8]