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Holy Island or Lindisfarne

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HOLY ISLAND or LINDISFARNE, an irregularly shaped island in the North Sea, 2 m. from the coast of Northumberland, in which county it is included. Pop. (192 1) 586. It is joined to the mainland at low water by flat sands, over which a track, marked by wooden posts and practicable for vehicles, leads to the island. There is a station on the N.E. railway at Beal, 9 m. south-east of Berwick, opposite the island, but I4 m. inland. Its total area is 1,o51 acres. On the N. it is sandy and barren, but on the S. very fertile and under cultivation. Large numbers of rab bits have their warrens among the sands, and, with fish, oysters and agricultural produce, are exported. There are several fresh springs on the island, and in the north-east is a lake of 6 acres. At the south-west angle is the little fishing village (formerly much larger) which is now a favourite summer watering-place. Here is the harbour, offering good shelter to small vessels. The ruins, care fully preserved, of the monastery once here justify Scott's de scription, "solemn, huge and dark-red pile." An islet, lying off the S.W. angle, has traces of a chapel upon it, and is believed to have offered a retreat to St. Cuthbert and his successors. The castle, situated east of the village, on a basaltic rock about 90 ft. high, dates from c. I Soo.

When St. Aidan came at the request of King Oswald to preach to the Northumbrians he chose the island of Lindisfarne as the site of his church and monastery, and made it the head of the diocese which he founded in 635; hence its name. For some years the see continued in peace, numbering among its bishops St. Cuth bert, but in 793 the Danes landed on the island and burnt the settlement, killing many of the monks. The survivors, however, rebuilt the church and continued to live there untill 883, when, through fear of a second invasion of the Danes, they fled inland.

taking with them the body of St. Cuthbert and other holy relics. The church and monastery were again destroyed and the bishop and monks, on account of the exposed situation of the island, de termined not to return to it, and settled first at Chester-le-Street and finally at Durham. With the fall of the monastery the island appears to have become again untenanted, and probably continued so until in 1082 the prior and convent of Durham established there a cell of monks from their own house. The inhabitants of Holy Island were governed by two bailiffs at least as early as the 14th century, and, according to J. Raine in his History of North Dur ham (1852), are called "burgesses or freemen" in a private paper dated 1728. Towards the end of the i6th century the fort on Holy Island was garrisoned for fear of foreign invasion. During the Civil Wars the castle was held for the king until 1646, when it was taken and garrisoned by the parliamentarians. The only other historical event connected with the island is the attempt made by two Jacobites in 1715 to hold it for the Pretender. The island has two life-boat stations.

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