Skip to content

Lourdes of Wales Traditional Cache

This cache has been archived.

Team Marzipan: TM

More
Hidden : 2/16/2011
Difficulty:
2 out of 5
Terrain:
2 out of 5

Size: Size:   regular (regular)

Join now to view geocache location details. It's free!

Watch

How Geocaching Works

Please note Use of geocaching.com services is subject to the terms and conditions in our disclaimer.

Geocache Description:

This cache is just up the lane from the recommended parking coords.
The building near GZ is an old air-raid shelter.

Please bring a pen/pencil and a pair of tweezers to this cache.

St Winefride's Well


There's an atmosphere of peace in this place, a place of pilgrimage for 1300 years. A place where people come in faith to ask for God's favours.
This is St Winefride's Well.
This holy place began with a legend. In 660AD the town of Holywell, located in North Wales , was a cluster of huts centered around a church. Caradoc, the son of a prince living in the area, pursued Winefride, the daughter of a local prince. Refusing to marry him, she sought sanctuary in the church, but, before she reached it, Caradoc caught her. Angry at her refusal to marry him, he beheaded her.

It is said a spring of water rose where Winefride's severed head came to rest, a spring with healing powers. St Winefride's uncle placed her head next to her body. He then prayed over her, and she rose to her feet, head attached, became a nun and was eventually made Abbess of a convent . She died 15 years later.

As the fame of the well's healing power spread, pilgrims journeyed to the spring to pray for healing, passing through the cold, clear, bluish water three times. Walking down limestone steps, they kneeled and kissed a stone cross. An ancient carving of one pilgrim carrying another is etched into the worn stone.

Royalty visited the site. Henry V , who relied on the Saint's aid at the
battle of Agincourt in 1415 , made a pilgrimage of thanksgiving to the well the year following his victory. In the 15th century, Lady Margaret, Countess of Richmond, and the mother of Henry VII , commissioned an elaborate arched crypt to be built above the spring. Emblems of the family are found in the stained glass. Carvings of St Winefride and her legend adorn the weathered stone. High in the crypt ceiling St Winefride is seated with a staff in her hand and a crown over her head.

Five hundred years of graffiti on the walls of the crypt attest to the years of unbroken faith in the well's healing powers. Thousands of visitors continue to come today. Candles of hope still shine. St Winefride's Well is a place of pilgrimage, the Lourdes of Wales .

Note: The legend of St Winefride is the basis for Ellis Peter's,
"A Morbid Taste for Bones", the first book in the Brother Cadfael mystery series.

Further information

Holy wells are numerous around Tremeirchion and Cwm as many natural springs emerge at the foot of the hills, where the porous limestone meets the water-resistant valley clay. Life-giving water was held sacred by early peoples who believed gods with healing and fortune-telling powers dwelt in wells. With the conversion to Christianity many wells were re-dedicated to Christian saints and worship continued with Christian approval. Medieval pilgrims travelled miles to seek cures at these Holy wells.The Well of
St Mael and Sulien , whose well trough can still be seen in
Cwm vicarage wall , reputed lycured eye inflammation.
The spring, Ffynnon Asa,was strong enough to power nearby Marion Mills and its waters were used to combat rheumatism.
At Ffynnon Beuno the water flows from the mouth of a human figure. The large stone bath with steps leading down suggests it was a healing pool of some importance.
It is one of several named after
St Beuno who may have used the well of baptisms.

Clipart


This cache used to be Lourdes of Wales (multi)

THIS IS A DRIVE-BY CACHE


Additional Hints (Decrypt)

Onfr bs fghzc, npebff qvgpu!!

Decryption Key

A|B|C|D|E|F|G|H|I|J|K|L|M
-------------------------
N|O|P|Q|R|S|T|U|V|W|X|Y|Z

(letter above equals below, and vice versa)