The church was established to house the body of
Cuthbert of Lindisfarne,
Bishop of Lindisfarne from 684 to 687. After his death he became one of the most venerated saints of the time, with a significant
cultus and the
Venerable Bede writing both a verse and prose biography of him. So when driven out of
Lindisfarne by
Viking raids in 875 the monks took
St Cuthbert's coffin along with other valuable items. They wandered for seven years before eventually settling at
Chester-le-Street (then called Cunecaster or Conceastre), at the site of the old Roman fort of
Concangis, in 883, on land granted to them by
Guthred. They built a wooden church and shrine for St Cuthbert's relics, dedicating it to St Mary and St Cuthbert. Though there was no shortage of stone in the ruins of Concangis they did not build a stone church; it has been suggested they did not intend to stay for as long as they eventually did. It was built within the Roman fort, which although abandoned over five hundred years before may have still offered some protection, as well as access north and south along
Cade's Road and to the sea by the
River Wear. This was also a
cathedral as it contained the seat of the bishop, for the
diocese (sometimes known as Lindisfarne and sometimes as
Cuncacestre the Latin name for Chester-le-Street) stretching between the boundaries of
Danelaw at Teesside in the south, of
Alba at Lothian in the north and the
Irish Sea in the west. The bishop's authority was confirmed by
Alfred the Great, and for the next 112 years the community was based here, visited by kings
Æthelstan and
Edmund, who both left gifts for the community, to add to the treasures brought from Lindisfarne. Most notable among their treasures were the
Lindisfarne Gospels, created in Lindisfarne around 715. While here they were translated from
Latin into English, sometime between 947 and 968, by
Aldred writing a
gloss in
Old English above the text, making them the oldest surviving English translation of the Gospels. The Gospels and St Cuthbert's coffin were here until 995, when renewed Viking raids drove the monks out, to
Ripon before returning to the more easily defended
Durham, where they eventually built a
stone cathedral around St Cuthbert's remains. The wooden church remained in place until replaced by a stone church in the mid 11th century. ==Church building==