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St and Cuthbert's
This manuscript was given to St. Cuthbert's shrine in 934.
Viking raids in 875 led to the monks fleeing the island with St Cuthbert's bones ( The bones of St Cuthbert are now buried at the Cathedral in Durham ).
Crinoid columnals extracted from the quarried stone and threaded into necklaces or rosaries became known as St Cuthbert's beads.
Connery's first job was as a milkman in Edinburgh with St. Cuthbert's Co-operative Society.
Before emerging at Wookey Hole the water enters underground streams and passes through other caves such as Swildon's Hole and St Cuthbert's Swallet.
* October 25 – St. Cuthbert's Society, University of Durham is founded after a general meeting, chaired by the Reverend Hastings Rashdall.
He is also said to have founded St Cuthbert's Church in Edinburgh.
The St Cuthbert Gospel is among the objects later recovered from St Cuthbert's coffin, which is also an important artefact.
" In 698 Cuthbert was reburied at Lindisfarne in the decorated oak coffin now usually meant by St Cuthbert's coffin, though he was to have many more coffins.
St Cuthbert's Tomb in Durham Cathedral.
Also a damaged statue of St Cuthbert, holding the head of the king St Oswald ( whose head was reputed to have been buried with Cuthbert's body )
In 875 the Danes took the monastery of Lindisfarne and the monks fled, carrying with them St Cuthbert's body around various places including Melrose.
After seven years ' wandering it found a resting-place at the still existing St Cuthbert's church in Chester-le-Street until 995, when another Danish invasion led to its removal to Ripon.
The University of Newcastle upon Tyne, formerly King's College in the University of Durham, features St Cuthbert's Cross on its arms, originally granted in 1937, too.
Worksop College, founded as St Cuthbert's in 1895, was the last of the Woodard Schools to be opened.
St Cuthbert's Society, a college of Durham University, is named after him and is located only a short walk from the coffin of the saint at Durham Cathedral.
The Society celebrates St Cuthbert's Day on or around each 20 March with a magnificent feast.
St Cuthbert is also the namesake of St Cuthbert's College in Epsom, New Zealand, which celebrates St Cuthbert's Day on 21 March as a day of school celebration.

St and Way
More recently, a discovery of Roman artefacts in Kings Norton close to Metchley Camp has suggested another possibility, and a thorough examination of a stretch of Watling Street between St. Albans, Boudica's last known location, and the Fosse Way junction has suggested the Cuttle Mill area of Paulerspury in Northamptonshire, which has topography very closely matching that described by Tacitus of the scene of the battle.
* Way of St. James ( Camiño de Santiago )
The city has its origin in the shrine of Saint James the Great, now the city's cathedral, as destination of the Way of St. James, a leading Catholic pilgrimage route originated in the 9th century.
Tourism is very important thanks to the Way of St. James, particularly in Holy Compostelan Years ( when 25 July falls on a Sunday ).
Way of St. James
The 1, 000 year old pilgrimage to the shrine of St. James in the Cathedral of Santiago de Compostela is known in English as the Way of St. James and in Spanish as the Camino de Santiago.
Category: Way of St. James
* San Adrian ( tunnel ) and hermitage, a landmark in the Way of St. James
A statue of Gladstone stands prominently in the front grounds of the eponymous Gladstone's Library ( formerly known as St. Deiniol's ), near the commencement of Gladstone Way at Hawarden.
* St. Cuthbert's Way
The course begins at three separate points: the ' red start ' in southern Greenwich Park on Charlton Way, the ' green start ' in St John's Park, and the ' blue start ' on Shooter's Hill Road.
The abbey church at Cluny, the largest in Europe, had become wealthy from rents, tithes, feudal rights and pilgrims who passed through Cluniac houses on the Way of St. James.
Another of the major spiritual legacies of the Asturian kingdom is the creation of one of the most important ways of cultural transmission in European history: The Way of St. James.
In later centuries, many Central European cultural influences travelled to Iberia through the Way of St. James, from the Gothic and Romanesque styles, to the Occitan lyric poetry.
This led to the establishment of new cultures via Way of St James hailing from north of the Pyrenees, starting in 1083.
Cultural pilgrims may also travel on religious pilgrimage routes, such as the Way of St. James, with the perspective of making it a historic or architectural tour rather than a religious experience.
The town lies along the French route of the Way of St. James ().
Category: Way of St. James
Similar disorder surrounding the St Catherine ’ s Hill Fair, held just outside the town on the Pilgrims ' Way, was suppressed around the same time.
There is Declaration Ave., America Way, Liberty Bell St., Paul Revere Dr., Founder's Dr., Bon Homme Rd., etc.
* Regordane Info-The independent portal for The Regordane Way or St Gilles Trail The Regordane Trail runs north-south through Languedoc-Roussillon.
St. George's Church, located on Bloomsbury Way in the south of the area, was built by Nicholas Hawksmoor between 1716 and 1731.
A daughter church called Little St. Peter's was opened in 1958 on Claremont Way and closed in 1983.
Of Deptford's two important houses, Sayes Court no longer exists, but the Stone House in St Johns, built around 1772 by the architect George Gibson the Younger, and described by Pevsner as " the one individual house of interest in this area ", still stands by Lewisham Way.

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