According to tradition preserved in the
ballad, Richeldis experienced a series of three
visions in which the Virgin Mary appeared to her. In these visions, Richeldis was shown the house of the
Annunciation in
Nazareth and was commissioned to build a replica in Walsingham as a place of pilgrimage where people could honour the Virgin Mary. According to tradition, Mary is said to have promised, 'Whoever seeks my help there will not go away empty-handed,' in connection with the shrine at Walsingham. According to the same tradition, the construction initially faced difficulties. One night, Richeldis heard singing and stepped into her garden, where she discovered that the little house had been miraculously completed about from the original site. As she looked on, she saw what she believed to be angels departing from the newly finished building. The original Holy House was a simple wooden structure, measuring approximately 24 ft. by 13 ft., with four small turrets and a central tower. To protect it from the elements, the structure was later encased in stone. According to Dickinson's research, the noblewoman Lady Richeldis de Faverches, traditionally credited with founding the shrine, died in 1145, leaving her estate to her son, Lord Geoffrey de Faverches. Before departing to join the
Second Crusade, Lord Geoffrey entrusted the Holy House and its grounds to his chaplain, Edwy, with the intention of establishing a religious order to care for the chapel of Our Lady of Walsingham. During the time of the
Crusades, travel to holy sites abroad became increasingly difficult. As a result, Walsingham emerged as a major pilgrimage destination, recognized alongside
Jerusalem,
Rome, and
Santiago de Compostela. Devotees flocked to the shrine, believing it to be a faithful replica of the Holy House of Nazareth, traditionally built with divine intervention. The historian
Henrietta Leyser also disputes the traditionally accepted date of 1061, asserting that Richeldis flourished around 1130. Furthermore, she notes that the family does not appear in the
Domesday Book, which was compiled in 1086 and records landowners and holdings at that time. Since the book serves as a comprehensive survey of land ownership following the
Norman Conquest, the absence of the family suggests that they did not hold land in the area during that period. ==References==