Hexham Abbey originated as a
monastery founded by
St Wilfrid in 674. The
crypt of the original monastery survives, and incorporates many stones taken from nearby Roman
ruins, probably
Corbridge or
Hadrian's Wall. The
Anglo-Saxon Chronicle (Manuscript D:
Cotton Tiberius B IV) records the murder of King
Ælfwald by
Sicga at
Scythlecester (which may be modern
Chesters) on 23 September 788: This year Alfwald, king of the Northumbrians, was slain by Siga, on the ninth day before the
calends of October; and a heavenly light was often seen on the spot where he was slain. He was buried at Hexham in the church.
Her wæs Alfwald Norðhymbra cyning ofslægen fram Sigan on .viiii. Kalendas Octobris, 7 heofonlic leoht wæs lome gesewen þær þær he ofslægen wæs, 7 he wæs bebyrged on Hagustaldesee innan þære cyrican. Like many towns in the
Anglo-Scottish border area and adjacent regions, Hexham suffered from the
border wars between the
kingdoms of
Scotland and
England, including attacks from
William Wallace who burnt the town in 1297. In 1312,
Robert the Bruce, King of Scotland, demanded and received £2000 from the town and monastery in order for them to be spared a similar fate. In 1346 the monastery was sacked in a later invasion led by King
David II of Scotland. In 1464, during the
Wars of the Roses, the
Battle of Hexham was fought somewhere to the south of the town; the actual site is disputed. The defeated Lancastrian commander,
Henry Beaufort, 3rd Duke of Somerset, was executed in Hexham marketplace. There is a legend that Queen
Margaret of Anjou took refuge after the battle in what is known as The Queen's Cave, where she was accosted by a robber; the legend formed the basis for an 18th-century play by
George Colman the Younger (
The Battle of Hexham); but it has been established that Queen Margaret had fled to France by the time the battle took place. The Queen's Cave in question is on the south side of the West Dipton Burn, to the southwest of Hexham. Until 1572, Hexham was the administrative centre of the former Liberty or Peculiar of
Hexhamshire. In 1715,
James Radclyffe, 3rd Earl of Derwentwater, raised the standard for
James Francis Edward Stuart in Hexham Market place. "Hexham" was used in the Borders as a
euphemism for "
Hell". Hence the term "To Hexham wi' you an' ye’r whussel!", recorded in 1873, and the popular expression "Gang to Hexham!".
Hexham riot In 1761, the
Hexham Riot took place in the Market Place when a crowd protesting about changes in the criteria for serving in the
militia were fired upon by troops from the
North York Militia. Some 45 protesters were killed, earning the Militia the
sobriquet of The Hexham Butchers. == Notable buildings ==