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See also: island in the See also: North See also: Sea, 2 M. from the See also: coast of See also: Northumberland, in which county it is included
.
Pop
.
(19or) 405
.
It is joined to the mainland at low See also: 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 North-Eastern railway at Beal, 9 m
.
S.E. of See also: Berwick, opposite the island, but 14 m. inland
.
The island See also: measures 3 M. from E. to W. and 12 N. to S., extreme distances
.
Its See also: total See also: area is 1051 acres
.
On the N. it is sandy and barren, but on the S. very fertile and under cultivation
.
Large numbers of rabbits have their warrens among the sands, and, with See also: fish, oysters and agricultural produce, are exported
.
There are several fresh springs on the island, and in the north-See also: east is a lake of 6 acres
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At the See also: south-west angle is the little fishing See also: village (formerly much larger) which is now a favourite summer watering-place
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Here is the harbour, offeringSee also: good shelter to small vessels
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See also: Holy Island derives its name from a monastery founded on it by St See also: Aidan, and restored in 2082 as a cell of the See also: Benedictine monastery at Durham
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Its ruins, still extensive and carefully preserved, justify See also: Scott's description of it as a " solemn, huge and dark-red See also: pile." An islet, lying off the S.W. angle, has traces of a See also: chapel upon it, and is believed to have offered a retreat to St See also: Cuthbert and his successors
.
The See also: castle, situated east of the village, on a basaltic See also: rock about 90 ft. high, See also: dates from c
.
1500
.
When St Aidan came at the See also: request of See also: King
See also: Oswald to preach to the Northumbrians he See also: chose the island of Lindisfarne as the site of his See also: church and monastery, and made it the
See also: head of the diocese which he founded in 635
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For some years the see continued in See also: peace, numbering among its bishops St Cuthbert, but in 793 the Danes landed on the island and burnt the See also: settlement, killing many of the monks
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The survivors, however, rebuilt the church and continued to live there until 883, when, through fear of a second invasion of the Danes, they fled inland, taking with them the See also: body of St Cuthbert and other holy See also: relics
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The church and monastery were again destroyed and the See also: bishop and monks, on account of the exposed situation of the island, determined not to return to it, and settled first at See also: 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 the See also: prior and convent of Durham .stablished there a cell of monks from their own See also: house
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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 See also: History of North Durham (1852), are called " burgesses or freemen " in a private paper dated 1728
.
In 1323 the bailiffs and community of Holy Island were commanded to cause all See also: ships of the burthen of See also: thirty tons or over to go to Ereswell with their ships provisioned for a See also: month at least and underdouble See also: manning to be ready to set out on the king's service
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Towards the end of the 16th century the fort on Holy Island was garrisoned for fear of See also: foreign invasion by See also: Sir See also: William Read, who found it very much in need of repair, the guns being so decayed that the gunners " dare not give fire but by trayne," and the master
See also: gunner had been." miserably slain " in discharging one of them
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During the See also: Civil See also: Wars the castle was held for the king until 1646, when it was taken and garrisoned by the parliamentarians
.
The only other See also: historical event connected with the island is the attempt made by two See also: Jacobites in 1715 to hold it for the Pretender
.
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