Norham

Norham (/ˈnɒrəm/ NORR-əm) is a village and civil parish in Northumberland, England, on the south side of the River Tweed where it is the border with Scotland.

Norham

Norham Village Green
Norham
Location within Northumberland
Population579 (2011 census)[1]
OS grid referenceNT900471
Civil parish
  • Norham
Unitary authority
Ceremonial county
Region
CountryEngland
Sovereign stateUnited Kingdom
Post townBERWICK-UPON-TWEED
Postcode districtTD15
Dialling code01289
PoliceNorthumbria
FireNorthumberland
AmbulanceNorth East
UK Parliament

History

Its ancient name was Ubbanford. Ecgred of Lindisfarne (d.845) replaced a wooden church with one of stone, translated the relics of St. Ceolwulf here.[2] Norham is mentioned as the resting-place of St Cuthbert in the early eleventh century text On the Resting-Places of the Saints, and recent research has suggested the possibility that Norham (rather than Chester-le-Street or Durham) may have been the centre of the diocese of Lindisfarne from the ninth century until some time between 1013 and 1031.[3]

It is the site of the 12th-century Norham Castle, and was for many years the centre for the Norhamshire exclave of County Durham. It was transferred to Northumberland in 1844.

It was on the Tweed here that Edward I of England met the Scots nobility in 1292 to decide on the future king of Scotland.

Sir Walter Scott gained fame as a poet, particularly with Marmion set around the Battle of Flodden in 1513. It begins:

Day set on Norham's castled steep,
And Tweed's fair river, broad and deep,
And Cheviot's mountains lone:
The battled towers, the donjon keep,
The loophole grates where captives weep,
The flanking walls that round it sweep,
In yellow lustre shone.

The 19th-century Ladykirk and Norham Bridge is a late stone road bridge that connects the village with Ladykirk in the Scottish Borders.

J. M. W. Turner always tipped his hat to Norham Castle, as it was the place which brought him fame as an artist. The picture of the castle which hangs in Tate Britain, luminously near-abstract, is one of the great treasures of the collection.

Norham railway station, built 1851, closed in 1965 and was turned into a museum by its final station master, Peter Short. In 2013 it was up for sale at an asking price of £420,000.[4]


Governance

An electoral ward in the name of Norham and Islandshires exists. This ward stretches south east to just short of Bamburgh and has a total population taken at the 2011 Census of 4,438.[5]

gollark: It seems like *you're* interpreting things uncharitably at this point.
gollark: > the entire discussion broke out due to misunderstanding; and you claimed to purposefully understand me wrong: https://discord.com/channels/346530916832903169/348702212110680064/809474809301827595I do not think this is what they meant; presumably, they're more willing to charitably interpret things from people for whom that has been accurate in the past.
gollark: And you regularly insult Rust programmers similarly.
gollark: https://discord.com/channels/346530916832903169/348702212110680064/815547980886573076 isn't evidence, you just said "trolling".
gollark: I am *not* joking about considering "anti-advertising" things anticompetitive and thus bad.

See also

References

  1. "Parish population 2011". Retrieved 30 June 2015.
  2. Hodges, Charles Clement. "The Pre-Conquest Churches of Northumbria", The Reliquary, April 1893, p. 84
  3. Woolf, Alex (2018), "The Diocese of Lindisfarne: Organization and Pastoral Care", in McGuigan, Neil; Woolf, Alex (eds.), The Battle of Carham: A Thousand Years On, Edinburgh: John Donald, pp. 231–39, ISBN 978-1910900246, at pp. 232-33,
  4. The Daily Telegraph 1 November 2013
  5. "Norham and the Islandshires ward population 2011". Retrieved 30 June 2015.
  • GENUKI (Accessed: 20 November 2008)



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