Cuncacestre was the centre of Christianity for much of the northeast, because it was the seat of the
Bishop of Lindisfarne, making the church a cathedral. The
diocese stretched 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
Athelstan 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. They were bought with the monks after they left Lindisfarne. While here they were translated from
Latin into English, sometime between 947 and 968, by bishop
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 important relics for the diocese and the monks. ==Anglo Saxon Bishops==