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Lindisfarne and Castle
Lindisfarne Castle from the harbour
Lindisfarne also has the small Lindisfarne Castle, based on a Tudor fort, which was refurbished in the Arts and Crafts style by Sir Edwin Lutyens for the editor of Country Life, Edward Hudson.
The final episode of second series of the TV series Cold Feet was filmed in Lindisfarne Castle.
Robson Green manages to swim from the mainland to Lindisfarne Castle.
* Images of Lindisfarne Castle
* Lindisfarne Castle
Hudson was a great admirer of Lutyens ' style and commissioned Lutyens for a number of projects, including Lindisfarne Castle and the Country Life headquarters building in London, at 8 Tavistock Street.
Lutyens also refurbished Lindisfarne Castle for its wealthy owner.
She was a frequent visitor to Lindisfarne Castle in northern England, where a cello now rests in the Music Room in commemoration of her time spent there.
* Lindisfarne Castle, on Lindisfarne, Northumberland
About to the south on a point of coastal land is the ancient fortress of Dunstanburgh Castle and about to the north is Lindisfarne Castle on Holy Island.
Lindisfarne Castle in England and Muchalls Castle ( 14th century ) in Scotland are among many examples of buildings with surviving flagstone floors.
At this time it was owned by Edward Hudson, the owner of Lindisfarne Castle and various Lutyens-designed houses including The Deanery in Sonning.
Lindisfarne Castle, which served as the home in the film, is now a National Trust property and can be toured by the public ; despite the passage of forty years, the building and its surroundings are largely unchanged.
In 1565 Lee viewed the site of Lindisfarne Castle on Beblowe Crag.
* Lindisfarne Castle
Lindisfarne Castle has provided a shooting location for a number of films.
Image: Lindisfarne Castle. jpg | Lindisfarne Castle

Lindisfarne and is
Bede also travelled to the monastery of Lindisfarne, and at some point visited the otherwise unknown monastery of a monk named, a visit that is mentioned in a letter to that monk.
Lindisfarne is a tidal island off the north-east coast of England.
In 793, a Viking raid on Lindisfarne caused much consternation throughout the Christian west, and is now often taken as the beginning of the Viking Age.
The more popularly accepted date for the Viking raid on Lindisfarne is 8 June ; Michael Swanton, editor of Routledge's edition of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicle, writes " vi id Ianr, presumably an error for vi id Iun ( June 8 ) which is the date given by the Annals of Lindisfarne ( p. 505 ), when better sailing weather would favour coastal raids.
The Holy Island of Lindisfarne is well known for mead.
Lindisfarne mead is produced at St Aidan's Winery, and sold throughout the UK and elsewhere.
Tourism grew steadily throughout the twentieth century, and Lindisfarne is now a popular place with visitors.
Lindisfarne ( particularly the castle ) is the setting of the Roman Polanski film Cul-de-Sac ( 1966 ) with Donald Pleasence and Lionel Stander, shot entirely on location there.
The island is semi-fictionalised into " Lindisfarne Island " and the castle is " Rob Roy ".
* Lindisfarne is referred to as The Holy Isle in Nancy Farmer's book " The Sea of Trolls ," which also references the Norse invasion of Lindisfarne.
* Lindisfarne is where the main character of Harry goes to on pilgrimage in the book " Kingdom by the Sea " by Robert Westall.
* A thinly disguised version of Lindisfarne is the setting for the Lyndesfarne Bridge quartet of modern fantasy novels by Trevor Hopkins.
* Lindisfarne is known as Holy Island and The New Beginning in " Brother in the Land " by Robert Swindells, 1984.
* The sack of Lindisfarne monastery by a fleet of opportunistic Vikings is a pivotal event in Charles Barnitz ' historical fantasy / adventure, The Deepest Sea ( 1996 )
* Wells Tower's short story, " Everything Ravaged, Everything Burned ," is centred around a Viking raid on Lindisfarne.
* Freddie Frobisher, the flatulent hermit of Lindisfarne, is featured in Blackadder the second, episode Beer.
For instance, the carriage of the remains of St Cuthbert from Lindisfarne to Durham is the subject of " The Road from Lindisfarne ", the third movement of the Durham Concerto ( 2007 ) by Jon Lord.
is: Lindisfarne
Oswald's head was interred in Durham Cathedral together with the remains of Cuthbert of Lindisfarne ( a saint with whom Oswald became posthumously associated, although the two were not associated in life ; Cuthbert became bishop of Lindisfarne more than forty years after Oswald's death ) and other valuables in a quickly made coffin, where it is generally believed to remain, although there are at least four other claimed heads of Oswald in continental Europe.

Lindisfarne and castle
The castle was built in 1550, around the time that Lindisfarne Priory went out of use, and stones from the priory were used as building material.
At this time the castle was still garrisoned from Berwick and protected the small Lindisfarne Harbour.

Lindisfarne and located
Lindisfarne, also known as “ Holy Island ,” is located off the coast of Northumberland in northern England ( Chilvers 2004 ).
In 2003, the Willowburn Sports and Leisure Centre was opened on the southern outskirts of the enlarged town ( replacing the old sports centre located by the Lindisfarne Middle School and the now-demolished Youth Centre ).
A site was located in bushland above Lindisfarne and a small area was set aside for the campus.
Lindisfarne is a suburb of Hobart's Eastern Shore, located approximately 6 kilometres from the City Centre and is part of the municipal City of Clarence.
Geilston Bay is a small suburb of Hobart near Lindisfarne, in the City of Clarence located on the Eastern Shore of the Derwent River.

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