Baldred of Tyninghame

Balthere of Tyninghame (later Baldred) was a Northumbrian hermit and abbot, resident in East Lothian during the 8th century.

Saint Baldred of Tyninghame
Abbot and Confessor
BornUnknown
Died(757-03-06)6 March 757
Bass Rock, East Lothian
Venerated inRoman Catholicism; Anglicanism; Eastern Orthodoxy
Major shrineTyninghame, later removed to Durham Cathedral (destroyed)
Feast6 March

Dating

According to Hovendeus the date of Baldred's death is given as 756. Symeon of Durham says "the twentieth year of King Eadberht of Northumbria "[1] and Turgot of Durham "the seventeenth year of the episcopate of Cynulf", that is 756. As his feast is given as 6 March, by the modern calendar, this would be 6 March 757. Although the 8th century date is now generally accepted,[2] due to a passage in the 16th century Breviary of Aberdeen, he has, in the past, often been associated with the 6th century Saint Kentigern.[3]

Life

Baldred's Cave, Seacliff

Baldred is commonly referred to as "the Apostle of the Lothians" [4] and Simeon of Durham says that "the boundaries of his pastorate embraced the whole land which belongs to the monastery of Saint Balther, which is called Tyninghame - from Lammermuir to Inveresk, or, as it was called, Eskmouthe."[1] His cult was certainly centred on the four churches of Auldhame, Whitekirk, Tyninghame and Prestonkirk, between East Linton and North Berwick in East Lothian.[5]

Baldred is believed to have founded a monastery at Tyninghame.[5] However, at times, he preferred to retire from the spiritual government of the Lothian Britons and he selected the Bass Rock as the spot to build himself a small hermitage and associated chapel,[1] although he also sometimes resided in 'St Baldred's Cave' on Seacliff Beach.[5]

Nationality

Baldred is said to have lived in the diocese of Lindisfarne, and was therefore a Northumbrian,[6] a not improbable association since, at that time, the Lothians were a part of the kingdom of Northumbria. However, most sources assert an Irish connection. He was probably born in Ireland before joining the Northumbrian mission. Hector Boece says he exercised his office in a district which then formed a part of Pictland.[7]

Veneration

About halfway up the Bass Rock are the ruins of an old chapel or, strictly speaking, the parish church of The Bass, said to mark the spot where Saint Baldred occupied his humble cell. The approximate date of the erection (or re-erection) of the chapel may be found in a papal bull dated 6 May 1493, mentioning this building as being then novita erecta. A further reconsecration (indicating more building work) took place in 1542 when the chapel was dedicated it to Saint Baldred.

Ruins of St Baldred's Church

Following Baldred's death on the site of this chapel, there was a dispute between the parishes of Auldhame, Tyninghame and Prestonkirk, as to which should have his body. The story goes that by the advice of a holy man, they spent the night in prayer. In the morning three bodies were found, in all respects alike, each in its winding sheet, prepared for burial. The story was probably invented to explain the claims of each church to house the shrine of Saint Baldred.[5]

Lying in the grounds of Tyninghame House is the 12th century St Baldred's Church. It traditionally stands on the site of his monastery which, according to the Melrose Chronicle, was eventually sacked by the Danes in 941. The Tyninghame body of Saint Baldred was removed to Durham Cathedral, by Alfred Westow, in the early 11th century.[6] The church continued as the parish church until the village of Tyninghame was relocated to the west in 1761. Today, the ruins of church form little more than an architectural folly amongst the gardens of the house. At the parish church of Prestonkirk there existed, until 1770, when it was damaged by a builder, a statue of the saint much venerated by the local population.[2] St Baldred's Well stands nearby which was "famed for its...healing qualities".[5] Whitekirk parish church, celebrated in ancient times as a place of pilgrimage, also lays claim to this saint as the scene of his ministry, but A.E. Ritchie finds this doubtful.[8]

See also

References

  1. Stephenson, Joseph (trans.) (1988). Simeon of Durham's A History of the Church of Durham. Felinfach: Llanerch.
  2. Towill, Edwin Sprott (1983). Saints of Scotland. Edinburgh: St Andrew’s Press.
  3. Jackson, Kenneth H (1958). "The Sources for the Life of St. Kentigern". Studies in the Early British Church.
  4. Ritchie, A E (1880). The Churches of Saint Baldred. Edinburgh.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link)
  5. Yeoman, Peter (1999). Pilgrimage in Medieval Scotland. London & Edinburgh: B T Batsford & Historic Scotland.
  6. Farmer, David Hugh (2004). The Oxford Dictionary of Saints. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-860629-1.
  7. Boece, Hector (1527). Historia Gentis Scotorum.
  8. Ritchie, A.E., The Churches of St. Baldred: Auldhame, Whitekirk, Tyninghame, Prestonkirk, p.26, J. Moodie Miller, Edinburgh, (1883)
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