© Copyright Andrew Curtis and licensed for reuse
under this Creative Commons Licence.
Scarcely can an ancient site have attracted so much in the
way of historical speculation than that of the Lady’s Well, a little to the
north of Holystone, Northumberland. For such a well-known site, incredibly
little is known of the origins of its fame, save that it has been there for a
very long time and that folk never tire of making up tales about the place.
Essentially, of course, it is a natural feature of the
landscape: a spring. And it is an abundant one at that, issuing forth an
astonishing 560 gallons per minute. Clean, fresh water being such a precious
commodity in the old days, these sorts of places were very important to our
ancestors. This particular spot has gone by a number of names in its time:
St.Ninian’s Well, Paulinus’ Well and (Old) Lady’s Well being the best known. It
has given rise to all sorts of stories over the centuries, too, the most famous
being that the early Christian missionary, Paulinus, baptised King Edwin and
3,000 of his followers there in 627AD. A flat stone which once lay near the
spring was even said to have been the platform upon which the mass ceremony was
conducted.
Nobody even seems to know the sequence of events which took
the originally natural site through to its present look. Circumstantial
evidence would suggest that it was revered from the earliest days of human
habitation of the region. The Roman road that passes almost over the spot would
suggest that the invaders made much use of the watery facilities, too, in the
early centuries AD (the NE-SW orientation of the pool matches the course of the
ancient road). It may well have been the Romans who tidied and paved the area,
and it probably acted as a shrine of some sort, too, to the passing legions.
There can be no doubt that the early Christian leaders thereafter
made use of the spring, though any links to the likes of Paulinus and St.Ninian
are purely speculative. However, when the nearby nunnery (originally
Benedictine, then Augustinian) was built at Holystone around 1124 the legends
came crawling out of the woodwork – an attempt, of course, to attract attention
and funds to the impoverished institution. In all likelihood, the legend of
Paulinus and the baptising of the 3,000 probably took place in York, in fact.
By the time the nunnery was dissolved in the days of Henry
VIII the lies and legend surrounding Holystone’s Lady’s Well had become well
established ‘fact’. The local catholic gentry in particular latched on to the
stories and propagated them in the ensuing centuries. Then, at some point in
the 1780s, the site was restructured along the lines we see today, supplemented
by a little Victorian tinkering during 1861-2 (when the statue of St.Paulinus
was moved and the cross erected to replace it).
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