NU1241 : Lindisfarne Priory
taken 4 years ago, near to Holy Island, Northumberland, England

Durham Priory re-established a monastic house on the island in 1093 as a cell of Durham. The standing remains date from this time (whereas the site of the original priory is now occupied by the parish church). The Benedictine monastery continued until its suppression in 1536 under Henry VIII’s Dissolution of the Monasteries, after which the buildings surrounding the church were used as a naval storehouse. The Lindisfarne Priory (ruin) is a Grade I listed building (List Entry Number 1042304 Link


The Holy Island of Lindisfarne, commonly known as either Holy Island or Lindisfarne, is a tidal island which lies off the northeast coast of England, to the north of Bamburgh and the tidal estuary-like mud flats of Budle Bay. It is only accessible from the mainland at low tide by means of a modern causeway, which can be reached from the village of Beal, and an ancient pilgrims' path that runs over sand and mudflats and which are covered with water at high tide.
The island itself is about 3 miles wide from west to east and about one and a half miles from north to south. At the 2011 census, the island had a population of 180. Which is boosted by the well over 650,000 visitors coming from all over the world every year. Locally the island is rarely referred to by its Anglo-Saxon name of 'Lindisfarne'. Following on from the savage attacks on the monastery by the Vikings in 793AD, it obtained its local name “Holy Island” from the observations made by the Durham monks: 'Lindisfarne - truly a 'Holy Island' baptised in the blood of so many good men....’ But its more appropriate title is, 'The Holy Island of Lindisfarne'.