Episode 23
Paid a brief visit to Loch Lomond: We only went up along the eastern shore for a short distance and stopped in one place where there is a National Park office, not open, and did a walk up a hill and got a wonderful view over the lake: It was just about sunset when we got to the top but the sun disappeared behind a cloud before actually setting and we didn’t get any colourful sunset. On the south-western shore there is a large town that is almost a suburb of Glasgow now. Many islands dot the lake but I think that now there are many other lochs around Scotland that are just as nice and certainly less populated.
Went into Edinburgh for a few hours, it was a Saturday and the place was packed. All the locals seemed to be out shopping in the city centre and there were hoards of tourists too. We really didn’t see much just wandered along Princes Street, that’s the main street, there are shops on one side and for the most part parks and gardens on the other that descend the slope. The railway line is at the bottom then the steep slope up the other side that becomes high cliffs topped with the castle battlements. It has a foreboding appearance with the dark rainclouds behind as there was today.
Walked along the Royal Mile that leads to the castle entrance and gave away any idea we might have harboured about visiting there, the queue for tickets was so long it would have taken at least a half hour just to reach the ticket booth. No way was I about to battle that crowd to look around any castle; I’ve seen plenty of them anyway. Goodness knows what it must be like in the summer:
We did however go and see the small state of ‘Greyfriars Bobby’ the little dog that spent all his latter years on his master’s grave. The graveyard is just a few metres from the statue. The only other site we saw of any note was St Giles Church that we passed along the way. After three hours we’d had enough so when we got back to the car we left the city. Far too crowded for me, perhaps a Sunday would be quieter but I somehow doubt it.
We headed south from Edinburgh and came to the small town of Selkirk where Sir Walter Scott spent many years, first as a child when he was recuperation from Polio and later when he was a magistrate and presided over the court here. The courthouse is on the cobbled Market Square in the centre of the town with the bus stop right outside and plenty of roadworks all around. Fortunately for us it was a Sunday morning and no traffic but the bus had just deposited some passengers on the court house steps when we wanted to take a photo.
From here we turned east and somewhere or other we crossed back into England but it was an unmarked crossing. Now we headed to Bamburgh where David spent his childhood summer holidays.
It was quite a bright sunny day with a bitter wind blowing and it had brought out a lot of people to enjoy the sunshine. From a distance we could see Bamburgh castle sitting on a prominent hilly headland with the Farne Islands just offshore. Holey Island where there is another castle was clearly visible too. Just south of Bamburgh there are grass covered sand dunes and wide sandy beaches and it was on these beaches that David used to play in those holidays. He thinks he recognizes the place as there is an old building on top of the dunes that used to be the coast guard lookout.
As we drove down the coast we passed many more castles, it was a popular spot to build one back in the 13th and 14th centuries. The small village of Seahouses is no longer a small village, its quite a large town. Continued on south taking the motorway through Newcastle and Middlesbrough: Then we headed to Whitby the home town of Captain James Cook and also another famous seafarer William Scoresby and his son William Jnr:
William Scoresby explored the east coast of Greenland in the early 1800’s, we had been in Scoresby Sound back in August when we did the cruise on the Polar Pioneer. Both William Senior and William Junior had innovative ideas to help make seamen’s lives safer and better that were soon adopted by others. William Junior did a lot of experiments with magnetic compasses that improved the way they worked.
David and I had last been to Whitby in 1994 when we had my mother with us so we were sort of vaguely familiar with the place but it has grown enormously since then and a new road bypasses the old village centre and takes you straight around to the new car park beside the Abby. A great 6ft high stone fence surrounds the place now so that you can’t see it properly unless you pay to go in and at the time we visited it was closed apparently it would open later in the day.
The old town is much as we remember it with the swing bridge that encloses the small boat harbour crammed with pleasure and fishing craft. Could have taken a 3 hour fishing trip for £15 which we thought was quite good value.
From Whitby we drove up onto the Moors and stopped to take in the brilliant view back over Whitby and the coast, then continued on. Saw some more standing stones in the distance but didn’t bother walking right up to them. We were trying to find something called Mallyn Spout, whatever it was, when we came into the small village of Goathland that looked sort of familiar. Then we saw the Aidensfield Garage and we realized it was the village where Heartbeat had been filmed.
The only place with an Aidensfield sign was the garage and beside it were a few of the old vehicles that were used in the filming; now they are quietly rusting away. The village is making sure its getting some return from its TV fame with a car park that charges £2 whether you park for 10mins or 10 hours. We went and parked outside the village on the grass verge with several other cars. As it turned out Mallyn Spout was just near here too, it’s a small waterfall that you come to after about a 1k walk downhill and along the river. It is quite pretty but no Iguazu.
From another viewpoint a few miles further on we got a terrific panoramic view of much of the moors and they really looked pretty in the bright sunshine. Early in the morning they had been covered with white frost.
Spent some time in the large coastal town of Bridlington south of Scarborough: It has a lovely old Church Priory; although it was closed we had a look around the outside and saw some very odd looking sculptures: They were humans but two looked a bit like clowns and another I though was a lion till I looked more closely and saw it was meant to be human, yet another was a monkey but its head was more like a skul; weird: We didn’t take any photos cause David had left the camera battery on charge in the car. Here too we saw the old Baile Gate, a gate in the old city wall but only the gate is left, no sign of the wall. It too was all closed up.
We walked around the old town and saw that several of the shops had closed down and there were very few people on the streets but later on we drove through the thriving and bustling modern city centre. Came to a small harbour full of boats and a lovely sandy beach with the gently lapping waves; it would have been very inviting except for the temperature. Next time we saw the coast there were cliffs and a very murky looking sea below. The cliffs were soil not rock and look to be eroding badly, the sand was full of soil from the cliffs and the sea appeared to be muddy too.
We crossed the magnificent Humber Bridge from Kingston-on-Hull to the south bank of the Humber River. This bridge is a single span suspension bridge, one of the largest of its kind in the world. Not as large as the Golden Gate but still very impressive. From a view point on the south bank we could appreciate its full size. It has a toll of £2.70 which isn’t too bad really as it would cost more than that in fuel to drive upstream to the next bridge and then back again on the other side.
As we continued south along the coast and came to Grimbsy: This seems to be a big port with no special attractions. It did however, have one of the largest undercover shopping malls we have come across for a long time. Two shopping streets have been made into precincts and roofed over then multi story car parks built with direct access into the precinct.
Further south we came back to better beaches where they were lined with beach huts on a high levee bank. They looked quite pretty, each painted a different colour and all had slightly upturned corners on the roofs that gave them a somewhat oriental look, this was heightened by the presence of a pavilion between some of them with the same oriental shaped roof. A large holiday camp was along here too. The sun was still shining so that helped make things look cheerful too.
Went into the small city of Lincoln: It has a population of around 80,000 and has the third largest cathedral in England, and a very beautiful cathedral it is too: As it isn’t on any of the major roads that cross the country not a great many tourists come here so that there were very few of us in the cathedral for the 11am tour today, just 3 in fact. Our guide was a local man who really seemed to know the building well and pointed out several things that you would never notice on your own.
To start with the first church was built here soon after William the Conqueror invaded England. It was begun in 1072; it burnt down a few years later or at least the roof burnt as it was built of wood. The next church was rebuilt very shortly after then in 1185 most of it was destroyed when it was rocked by an earthquake. The following year a monk named Hugh became the Bishop and he decided to rebuild the church and make it his seat so that it became a cathedral. It was begun in 1192 and Hugh died in 1200 so he didn’t see it completed. Over the following 150 years more was added and that is what we see now. The lower part of the western entrance is the original 11th century part with 3 Norman arches. It is possible that there were earlier churches on this site from around the 5th century AD but any trace of them is under this building.
There are numerous stained glass windows; on the north wall they depict stories from the New Testament whilst those on the south wall it is the Old Testament that is represented. There are several large round windows too. All the stained glass is from Victorian times but two big round windows with coloured glass are earlier than that. There is one at each end of the Transept, on the northern side is the Deans Eye, and it is 13th century and has just been restored at a cost of £2 million. The one on the southern end is the Bishops Eye and is 14th Century. It can be seen from the Bishops Palace.
When they rebuilt the cathedral in the 13th century they built the central transept first and then built the Nave going back 40m to adjoin the original facade that was left standing but somehow it got a bit out of alignment and the vaulting centre is about 600mm (2FT) out of kilter.
During the years of the Civil War when Oliver Cromwell raged about the land much damage was done to the sculptures. The heads of many were broken off. In the 17th or 18th century when some restoration was carried out a new sculptor replaced many of those heads but he just made men’s head and didn’t bother to look if the statue was that of a man or a woman with the result that many of the sculptures have male heads on female bodies. Cromwell had the bronze removed from the grave slabs and this was used to make cannons. In the reformation of 1560 much looting and damage was done too. Originally there would have been much gold and silver and gems used in the decoration but this was taken and destroyed during the this time.
Some of the other sculptures around are two lovely little owls, a man ramming a sword down the throat of a dragon, and out the front are some erotic nude sculptures. In the choir stall there are many wooden sculptures, many added over the centuries and one of them is of Queen Victoria. Also a famous one is the Lincoln Imp that can be seen in the Angles Choir. He became famous when a copy of him was made as an ornament and presented to some famous visitor to the cathedral.
The choir stalls and the Chapter house were both used for the filming of ‘The DiVinci Code a few years ago. Many of the specially made props and some of the false walls that were put in around the Chapter house are still there. There is also a cloister attached but there was never a monastery here.
In a small side chapel there is an area for each of the armed services. Also in that chapel is a special stained glass window depicting the Australian Explorers, it has Banks, Bass, Flinders, and Franklin. All of these people came from around this area.
In the afternoon we had the opportunity to do a roof tour that took us up part of the front tower and out onto the parapet where we could look down 40m to the ground and see where the buttresses were built that support the 4m thick walls at 5m intervals. Where they couldn’t be built right beside the walls there are flying buttresses that adjoin the wall where the support is required. There was once spires atop the three towers. The one central tower that is approximately 80m high had a spire about the same height again that made it the highest structure in Europe, probably the world from 1311 to 1549 when it fell down doing a lot of damage to the north Transept. The two spires on the front towers were taken down later.
Our guide took us inside the roof where we could see the huge oak ‘A’ frame beams that support the roof. Most of them are not standing up vertical as they should be, they have quite a lean and one of the towers has quite a lean too. Many of these wooden beams have been replaces because the ‘death watch’ beetle has been merrily feeding on them for centuries. Bach in the early 20th century there was a lot of shoring up and new buttressing added to the towers to stop them from falling.
At present it costs about £30,000 per week to keep up the maintenance on the place. They certainly aren’t making that from the few visitors who seem to be around at present but of course there are many more in the summer. Most of the materials used in the original construction were local except for the marble that came from Dorset. The limestone for repairs and replacement still comes from the same quarries it did originally.
There are several old gates around this high part of town that were once part of a city wall. Some Roman ruins including a well are visible in one area; they date from the 1st century AD. Going down the very steep hill that leads to the modern city centre there are some more lovely old places. The Jews house and the Norman house both date from the same time in the 12th century. A few old Tudor style buildings that would date from the 15th or early 16th century I expect are along here too. Most of the other buildings in this street would be 18th or 19th century.
We thought we might as well visit the castle too, especially seeing that it has one of the 4 original ‘copies’ of the Magna Charta still in existence.
This castle dates for the latter part of the 11th century though only a very tiny part of the existing structure if from that era. Like most castles it has been altered, added to, and partially destroyed over its lifetime. It has been built on the site of previous fortifications built by the Romans and possibly others over the intervening centuries.
In the 18th and 19th century it was a prison and during the middle part of that century it was decided that prisoners would be more likely to reform if they were in an individual cell and not allowed contact with other prisoners so the place was altered to accommodate all these solitary cells. The solitary cell was quite large and contained a bed, a basin and tap and a latrine. There was a separate area for women prisoners and another area for the debtors prison. Debtors were considered not so bad so they didn’t have solitary cells. This solitary business extended to the chapel too where each seat was separated from the next one by a wooden partition with a little door in it. The prisoner could see the Chaplain at the pulpit but not his neighbour. Those prisoners who were condemned to death could all sit together at the back as they were considered to be beyond redemption. The debtors could sit together in the front.
During the time the prison was in use a great many prisoners were executed. These were public executions on one of the towers where the townsfolk could see the condemned receive his punishment. The body would then be taken down and buried in the unconsecrated ground inside the Lucy Tower. A small stone bearing only the initials of the deceased was then placed at the foot of the grave.
King John agreed to the provisions of the Magna Charta (great charter) in 1215. He placed his seal on 41 copies of it on a day in June of that year after the Barons of England banded together and wrote the charter as they could no longer tolerate the demands of the King. Each copy was written by a different scribe so that they are not identical because the writing is different and sometimes a word is spelt different of a slightly different wording is used. They are written in Latin, the official language of the time. King John didn’t sign the document with a quill but a wax impression of his seal was attached with silk ribbons to each copy. Then they were despatched each to a separate county and to the cinq ports.
The clauses within the charter are really quite basis and it’s a bit of a myth that it’s the basis of our democratic parliamentary system; that was really to come later. The Americans claim that it’s the basis for their constitution and Bill of Rights and certainly many of those things would have had their origins in the Magna Charta.
The real document was there in a glass case together with a translation for us to peruse if we so desired. There are only 3 other copies now in existence, one is in Salisbury Cathedral and two in the British Museum in London.
After this we climbed up the Observatory Tower for a look over the city. It was a cold and bright sunny day and we expected a clear view but were disappointed to see that a thick layer of smog hung over the whole river valley. The cold air has pushed it low and looking back up the valley we believe that it has come from the industrial cities of the Midlands as there is not much heavy industry around here to produce such pollution. We strolled along the top of the wall and got a good view of the Cathedral then went and had a look at the grave yard in the Lucy Tower where the executed prisoners are buried. At least one of them was innocent, a woman accused of poisoning her husband. The lodger, on his own deathbed, admitted to doing the deed.
The last place we visited was the Bishops Palace. This was built at the same time as the Cathedral under the instructions of the same Bishop, Hugh. It too has been added to and altered over the centuries. Some of the rooms still exist though it suffered badly in the civil war years of Oliver Cromwell and his band of merry men. Captain Berry, one of Cromwell’s men lived here for some years and converted some of the rooms into stables for his horses. Still visible are the hearths of the five big ovens that were in the kitchen where all the food was prepared for the Bishops household and any guests that were being entertained. Big feasts were quite common apparently. I read on one sign that each member of the household was given 7 pints, that’s about 4litres of beer and 2 lbs (nearly 1kg) of bread each day as well as the normal meals. They should have been quite fat these people, if they ate all that.
One room downstairs that is in reasonable shape used to be a communal room with a large fireplace and a well. You can see the brick work in the vaulted ceiling but it was once plastered over and the whole room was painted in bright colours. What used to be the gardens still exist but with just some lawn and trees now. A lot of fresh produce used in the kitchen was grown here and herbs for medicinal as well as culinary purposes. All that beer that was consumed was made on the premises too.
© Lynette Regan 16th November 2007