© Copyright Mike Quinn and licensed for reuse
under this Creative Commons Licence.
When we think in terms of historical relics, especially
religious ones, we often look towards the big, the beautiful, the imposing or
the imperial. Seldom do we thing of a slightly lop-sided lump of misshapen rock
as anything more than quarry fodder. But not so Hexham’s enigmatic Frith Stool.
Unimpressive it may be, but the tiny throne that sits in the
middle of the Choir of the town’s mighty abbey has captured the imaginations of
visitors for generations. It is made of sandstone and is also known as
St.Wilfrid’s Throne (after the 7th century founder of the abbey) and
the ‘Chair of Peace’ (frith meaning ‘peace’, as in being a place of sanctuary).
So, yes, this was the spot where, during the Middle Ages, wrongdoers made for
as their little area of sanctuary when in flight from authority.
It is generally thought that originally the Frith Stool was
made and used by Bishop Wilfrid himself, based, as it was, on similar items of
furniture he had seen in cathedrals on his continental tours. It was, quite
literally, a throne from which he and succeeding bishops would preside during
religious ceremonies. Remember, Hexham Abbey was a cathedral from 678 to around
821, which would have made the Frith Stool an official cathedra and an item of supreme importance.
It’s likely the stool originally stood on legs and was set
against a wall; but since its construction the original building in which it
was housed has long since gone. The present-day Hexham Abbey is a Norman
creation, but it is interesting that the stool has survived many centuries of
upheaval – it was clearly a treasured relic.
In more recent centuries, though, the stool has been moved
here and there around the abbey with a little less respect. It was during one
of these moves that someone seems to have dropped it and it broke into several
pieces. It was rather clumsily patched up, until, eventually, it rose once
again to reverential status and was placed in its current location in 1910.
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