On the face of
it, there doesn’t appear to have ever been very much in the way of activity in and
around Garmondsway. The few farm- and home-steads which remains in the
landscape a couple of miles west of Trimdon don’t appear to have seen much
action over the centuries.
A railway line once helped serve the old limestone quarry to the north, the empty expanse of
Garmondsway Moor lies to the south and – going way back – an old Roman road
(now the A177) skirted the area a little to the west.
But look on the
modern-day map and you’ll see the site of the old abandoned medieval village
marked at NZ342348. Nothing much to look at now, maybe, but at one time this
tiny settlement was important enough to receive mention in the history books as
having been visited by King Canute.
For, in 1027, shortly after a slightly more high-profile pilgrimage to Rome , England ’s
then monarch decided to set out on a local mini-pilgrimage to the shrine of
St.Cuthbert at Durham . On the way, the royal retinue passed through Garmondsway; and it
was here – at a distance of some 5 or 6 miles from their destination – that they
decided to complete the remainder of the trip barefoot, as pilgrims are prone
to do. Canute is also rumoured to have shaved his hair and beard clean off for
the occasion.
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