© Copyright Peter Brooks and licensed for reuse
under this Creative Commons Licence.
Visitors to
the little village of Simonburn in the North Tyne valley often wonder at the
size of the settlement’s substantial parish church. For sure, it is a big one,
and seemingly out of all proportion to its modest setting. But there is a good
reason for the discrepancy, for Simonburn was once the largest parish in
England.
Prior to an
Act of Parliament of 1811 – which, when enacted in 1814, split the parish into
several splinters – this sparsely populated ecclesiastical unit covered a
whopping 260 square miles! And considering that this huge area has only ever
contained around 1,000 folk, well, that is one long trudge into church every
Sunday for some very lonely people. It was known, for obvious reasons, as ‘The
Great Parish’, and stretched from Hadrian’s Wall in the south to Carter Bar on
the Scottish Border – some 30 miles in length and 14 miles wide.
It is believed that the parish boundaries were established
in 1072 by Bishop Walcher of Durham during the re-organisation of his diocese (which
then included Northumberland). The 1811-14 division saw the creation of Wark,
Bellingham, Greystead, Thorneyburn and Falstone out of the ancient parish –
with Humshaugh & Haughton (a single entity) following in 1832. So, seven
parishes out of one!
At its heart
lies the mother church, St.Mungo’s, with roots stretching back, we think, to
the 6th or 7th century (though the earliest stonework
probably dates from the 9th century). It was then that the
aforementioned St.Mungo was on his travels after having been ousted from his
cell at Glasgow by the pagan King Morken. Some sources even suggest that the
church’s founding may stretch back to St.Ninian, who died in the early 5th
century.
The current church, obviously much altered over the years,
extends over a slope and has a distinct list as a result.
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