- St Winefride's Well
St Winefride's Well is a
holy well located inHolywell , inFlintshire inNorth Wales . It is the oldest continuously operating pilgrimage site inGreat Britain . [ [http://www.visitflintshire.com/winefrides/index.htm VisitFlintshire.com] ]History
The healing waters have been said to cause miraculous cures, The legend of St
Winefride tells how in 660AD, an enraged local chieftain severed the head of the young Winefride after she spurned his advances, how a spring rose from the ground at the spot where her head fell and how she was later restored to life by her uncle, St Beuno [ [http://www.holywell-town.co.uk/tourism1.htm Holywell Tourist site] ]The holy well is known as "the
Lourdes ofWales " and is mentioned in an old rhyme as one of theSeven Wonders of Wales . It has been a pilgrimage site since the7th century . [ [http://www.bbc.co.uk/wales/northeast/sites/seven_wonders/pages/st_winefrides.shtm BBC - Seven wonders of Wales] ] After ashrine was established inShrewsbury around1138 , it and St Winefride's Well became importantpilgrimage destinations. Some of the structures at the well date from the reign of King Henry VII, or earlier. Later King Henry VIII caused the shrine and saintlyrelic s to be destroyed, but some have been recovered to be housed at Shrewsbury and Holywell.James II is known to have visited the well with his wife
Mary of Modena , after several failed attempts to produce an heir to the throne. Shortly after this visit, Mary became pregnant with a son, James.The Jesuits have traditionally supported the holy well. In fact in 1605, many of those involved with the
Gunpowder plot visited here with FatherEdward Oldcorne to give thanks for his deliverance from cancer, or as some said, to plan the plot. [http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=OaqWAEry-wkC&pg=PA55&dq=%22Edward+Oldcorne%22+jesuit&lr=&ei=WKxuSPChEJjSigGK4ZUV&sig=ACfU3U0gAVzV9akH-TH-U-r8Wu2rEoG5Nw Lives of the Saints] By Alban Butler, Peter Doyle, ISBN:0860122530] It is also believed to be connected to St Mary's well and chapel in Cefn Meiriadog,Denbighshire .As one of the few locations mentioned by name in the anonymous medieval alliterative poem
Sir Gawain and the Green Knight , it is interesting to compare the site's beheading history with the beheading game in the poem.References
External links
* [http://www.holywell-town.co.uk/tourism1.htm Holywell Tourism: St Winefride's Well]
* [http://easyweb.easynet.co.uk/~dylanwad/StWinefride/ St Winefride's Holy Well]
* [http://www.castlewales.com/winifred.html St. Winifred's Well information at Castlewales.com]
* Notes on the site's [http://people.bath.ac.uk/liskmj/living-spring/sourcearchive/ns1/ns1tgh2.htm history including souvenir postcards] featuring heaped pilgims' crutches left behind after miraculous cures
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