St Cuthberts Way from Soppit Farm Holiday Cottages. St Cuthberts Way 61 Mile Path & St Oswalds Way connecting Path
St Cuthbert was a much Loved Saint of Northumberland, celebrated as a Healer, Monk, Hermit & Bishop. The 61 mile St Cuthberts Way from Scotland Borders to Northumberlands Holy Island. Starting at St Cuthberts studying place at Melrose Abbey Scotland to Holy Island Lindisfarne where he was a Monk and later Bishop. The Path Passes through Northumberland National Park where you can visit Wooler and further on St Cuthberts Cave before stopping at Holy Island, check the causeway times. Soppitt Farm Holiday Cottages is a 50 minute drive to Wooler, you can join a popular part of The St Cuthberts Trail to Holy Island.
St Oswalds Way is near by and will take you on the path from Soppitt Farm Holiday Cottages to Rothbury, past Elsdon, the Deer Park, and Scottish Wild Cattle. St Oswalds Way takes you to Warkworth and you can follow the coastal path along to Holy Island. Its over 50 miles so you’ll need an OS map and overnight stay/s https://www.stoswaldsway.com/


The Story of St Cuthbert
Born not far from Melrose in about 635AD, Cuthbert’s early years were filled with events pointing to his future as the greatest of the Anglo-Saxon saints. After seeing a vision of the soul of Saint Aidan being escorted to heaven by angels, Cuthbert decided to become a monk and entered Melrose Abbey. Sometime later, he went to Ripon and became guest-master there, with the special duty of welcoming and tending to strangers and other visitors. When Saint Wilfrid was made abbot of Ripon, Cuthbert returned to Melrose and, surviving an outbreak of plague, became Prior. After several years, Cuthbert was appointed as Prior of Lindisfarne (pictured above), a much larger community. As Prior, Cuthbert governed gently and faithfully but yearned to be alone with God and so was given permission to go to the Inner Farne, a few miles off-shore from Lindisfarne, to devote himself to prayer and contemplation. However, his holiness continued to be spoken of throughout the country and, following a meeting of bishops, King Ecgfrith persuaded a reluctant Cuthbert to leave his island retreat and to become Bishop of Lindisfarne. He fulfilled his ministry with great tenderness and energy, but the Farnes called to him again.

After two years as Bishop, Cuthbert resigned and retired into solitude, devoting himself to prayer and preparing himself for his own death. When death came, on 20th March 687AD, he was buried in the monastery at Lindisfarne, where he remained for nearly 200 years before the monks fled from the invading Vikings, taking Cuthbert’s body with them on their journey. After spending over 100 years at Chester-le-Street, the monks eventually brought the body of Cuthbert to Durham, where it remains to this day in the Cathedral built as his shrine.
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