Google Maps and the Isle of Lindisfarne

Earlier today I was reading some of Magnus Magnusson’s Scotland: Story of a Nation, which led me off on a bit of a peculiar web path. In the text, Lindisfarne Island was mentioned a few times, which is the site of the first Viking Age invasion in England. They attacked on June 8th of 793AD, sacking the abbey there.

I realized that while I was very familiar with the tale of the Viking’s attack, I wasn’t sure where exactly Lindisfarne Island was. I had it in my head that it was on the west coast of the England, but this ended up being wrong. Wikipedia informed me that it’s actually on the northeast coast of England. The article also told me that Lindisfarne is a tidal island. I wanted to get a better overall feel of the area, so I looked up the island on Google Maps, and in playing around with the zoom, I realized that one shot that was in use had caught the island during high tide; the other, during low tide. It’s actually pretty neat to see:


Lindisfarne at high tide

Lindisfarne island, minus the surrounding water
Lindisfarne at low tide

While you can see the differences here, it’s actually easier to see it at Google Maps, where you can zoom in and out to see the transition. Just punch in these coords at Google Maps: 55.679°N, 1.808°W (or just click here).

Comments 6

  1. Tom wrote:

    I thought it was 795….

    Anyway, very cool. Isn’t there a town on that island? At high tide it looks like the town disappeared underwater. Or is that only cloud cover?

    I like how you slipped in the new WP theme. Real sly like.

    Posted 09 May 2008 at 5:21 pm
  2. Joe Anderson wrote:

    I’ve never been to Lindisfarne but it’s only about an hour’s drive away. Holy Island is not covered at high tide (it has a permenant population of 160ish), just the road connecting it to the mainland is.

    Posted 09 May 2008 at 5:37 pm
  3. Josh wrote:

    Tom: I just checked 3 of my Viking books, and it’s definitely 793AD.

    Regarding the WP theme – indeed, very sly of me. ;) I was quite tired of Tarski, and am also going to roll it out of use on my language blog soon.

    Joe: Thanks for the clarification on that.

    I found a video of the causeway being covered by the incoming tide, which I thought was cool to see:
    http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4rrxDZoLxuc

    Posted 09 May 2008 at 8:41 pm
  4. Nils Geylen wrote:

    That *is* pretty cool. I often look up stuff like this, but forget to post about it. You didn’t and that makes you the Viking king! Good post.

    Posted 21 May 2008 at 8:19 am
  5. Josh wrote:

    Nils: I forget about a fair share of things that I plan on posting, so perhaps I could just be a Norse jarl, rather than a king. But thanks for the vote of confidence. ;)

    Posted 21 May 2008 at 8:44 pm
  6. Donna Farley wrote:

    Cool images. Google maps are great. Even better for getting the feel of any UK location though is the geograph.org site. Here is the page for approximately the same location– loads of photos, draggable map from the Ordnance Survey!

    http://www.geograph.org.uk/mapper/?t=tolJ5oOXXJ0oOXJFoOXXJfobNNJqobVMJL5405ohltZXVZltXhhXh8l&gridref_from=NU1242

    Posted 01 Apr 2009 at 2:39 pm

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