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Holy Island Lindisfarne

Attraction • North East • TD15 2RX
Holy Island Lindisfarne

Holy Island, or Lindisfarne, lies off the Northumberland coast connected to the mainland by a tidal causeway that is covered by the sea twice daily, its isolation defining both the practical experience of visiting and the spiritual character that has made it one of the most significant sacred sites in the whole of Britain. The island was the cradle of Celtic Christianity in England, the home of St Cuthbert and the place where the Lindisfarne Gospels were created in the late seventh century, and the combination of the priory ruins, the castle, the wildlife and the tidal causeway gives it a quality of concentrated significance rare even among the great heritage destinations of Northumbria.

The monastery on Lindisfarne was founded by St Aidan from Iona in 635 at the invitation of the Northumbrian king Oswald, establishing it as the primary mission station from which Christianity spread across the north and east of England. The island became a centre of learning, manuscript production and religious life of international importance, and it was here that the Lindisfarne Gospels were produced around 715, an illuminated manuscript of supreme quality and beauty that is now in the British Library and is considered one of the greatest works of art of the early medieval period.

The ruins of the Benedictine priory, built in the twelfth century on the site of the earlier monastery that had been destroyed in Viking raids, are among the most evocative in Northumberland, their red sandstone arches and walls standing against the wide Northumberland sky in a setting that preserves the island's quality of separation from the mainland. Lindisfarne Castle, perched on a rocky outcrop above the harbour and converted by Edwin Lutyens in the early twentieth century from a Tudor fort into a small country house, provides an architectural counterpoint to the priory ruins.

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