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Church Micro 4299…Winchester-Hyde Abbey Traditional Geocache

This cache has been archived.

La Lunatica: Cache is missing. This has caused extensive damage to the wall from searchers still looking. Caches should not be hidden in walls for this reason. No option but to archive this cache.

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Hidden : 6/9/2013
Difficulty:
1 out of 5
Terrain:
1.5 out of 5

Size: Size:   micro (micro)

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Geocache Description:

Cache is situated not far from Winchester's historic Hyde Abbey, last resting place of St Alfred The Great.

To find the cache, you go along a public path beside a small stream, near the Abbey.

Public car parking is available in the nearby Leisure Centre in River Park.

Hyde Abbey was a medieval Benedictine monastery just outside the walls of Winchester, Hampshire, England. It was dissolved and demolished in 1538.

At the time Alfred the Great refounded the royal city of Winchester about 880 AD, the Saxon cathedral and the royal palace stood at the heart of the city. As the city grew, land was purchased in the city in the last year of Alfred's reign, and work was begun on the New Minster, beside the Old Minster, under the direction of Edward the Elder; when it was sufficiently complete, about 903, it was consecrated and fully endowed, the abbot Grimbald (died 8 July 901), a learned monk of St. Bertin at St. Omer in Flanders, was instated and the body of Alfred was re-interred in the new structure. Several further members of the royal house were also interred in the New Minster.

The gift in 1041 by Queen Emma, widow of Cnut, of the head of Saint Valentine was cherished as one of the most valuable possessions of the now-reformed Benedictine house. In 1109 Henry I ordered the New Minster to be removed to the suburb of Hyde Mead, to the north of the city walls, just outside the gate; when the new abbey church of Hyde was consecrated in 1110, the bodies of Alfred, his wife Ealhswith, and his son Edward the Elder were carried in state through Winchester to be interred once more before the high altar.

Their royal presence made Hyde Abbey a popular pilgrimage destination. In 1141 the church suffered damage when Winchester was burned during The Anarchy between supporters of King Stephen and Matilda, and it had to be substantially rebuilt. Henceforward the abbey prospered and acquired considerable land in the area, until it was dissolved in 1539 by Henry VIII at the dissolution of the monasteries and the surviving monks pensioned. The buildings were rapidly disassembled for their building materials and anything else of value. Lucky survivors from the lost library are the cartulary (conserved in the British Library), the late-13th or early-14th century breviary and the Liber vitae, the book of the men and women this Benedictine community remembered in prayer.

Today all that remains is the gatehouse that commanded the entrance between inner and outer precincts of the Abbey, an arch that used to span the abbey millstream and the church built for use of pilgrims and lay-brothers (now the nave and chancel of St Batholomew's Parish Church).

Cache lies some distance back behind a bench. Please note that the GPS co-ordinates point to the bench, not the cache itself.

When you are sitting on the right hand side of the bench facing the stream, the cache is behind you.

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For full information on how you can expand the Church Micro series by sadexploration please read the Place your own Church Micro page before you contact him.

See also the Church Micro Statistics and Home pages for further information about the series.
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Additional Hints (Decrypt)

Vs lbh ner abg fher jurgure be abg lbh unir gur evtug orapu, guvax bs gur ahzore bs gebzobarf gung yrq gur ovt cnenqr. Ybbx ybj-qbja.

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)