Lastingham

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A place of wild beasts and men who lived like wild beasts

Bede’s description of the wilderness of Farndale as a place of dragons and wild beasts

 

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A small monastic community was founded at Lastingeau in 655 CE, by Cedd. Lastingham is only a couple of miles from Farndale. This is a place at the heart of our ancestral lands.

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Directions

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Head for Hutton-le-Hole and take the road eastwards which leads to Lastingham. Before you drive into Lastingham, stop at the edge of the moors which stretch northwards and take in the remoteness of this place. Imagine how remote it must have been in the seventh century when the Vale of York was well settled, but the moors and the dales were wild and unsettled places.

 

The land of wild beasts

Now let Bede take you to a Lord of the Rings world when he described these lands, stretching from this place up through Farndale and Rosedale to the high moors as a world of dragons and wild men.

Cedd chose himself a site for the monastery amid some steep and remote hills which seemed better fitted for the haunts of robbers and the dens of wild beasts than for human habitation; so that, as Isaiah says, “In the habitation where once dragons lay, shall be grass with reeds and rushes”, that is, the fruit of good works shall spring up where once beasts dwelt or where men lived after the manner of beasts.

It was in this place that Cedd built his monastery, near to the entrance to Farndale, ‘vel bestiae commorari vel hommines bestialiter vivere conserverant, ‘a land fit only for wild beasts, and men who live like wild beasts’.

Cedd was on a mission to civilise this wild place.

 

The Church at Lastingham

As you read the history of Lastingham, you can visit the church of St Mary at Lastingham. It is not of course the same building as the seventh century monastery, but if you take the steep steps down into the extraordinary Crypt you will enter this ancient world. The crypt dates to 1078 but the site dates back to a much earlier era. This is the only Norman Crypt in England with a nave, apse and side aisles. The walls are nearly 3 feet thick.

In the crypt are pieces of a Saxon preaching cross found in the 1800’s and believed to be part of Cedd’s original church. The cross may have been over six metres high. There are Celtic carved stones believed to also date back to Cedd’s time and which would have been part of a shrine. Although the crypt is Norman, the space might link us more directly to the early history of the church. The crypt was built possibly on or near the vicinity of the earlier 7th century structure.   

Before leaving Lastingham, look across to the fields to the south of the road which joins Lastingham to Hutton le Hole. Within these fields, including around Grange Farm at Spaunton, Roman remains have been found which suggest that remote farmsteads were the homes of smallholder families cultivating lands on the approach to Lastingham in Roman times, and there is evidence of small scale farming here back to the Bronze Age through to the Neolithic.

These were remote lands at the very edge of civilisation, where small isolated families had worked the land for millennia. To the north were forested dales and bare moorland tracts. A little further south, at Kirkdale and beyond across the Vales of York and Pickering, larger communities cultivated more promising land.

 

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