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Died 756. Saint Baldred, a Scottish bishop said to have succeeded Saint Kentigern (Mungo) at Glasgow.

He ended his life as a hermit on the coast of the Firth of Forth. Like a sentinel at the entrance of the Firth of Forth, just over a mile from North Berwick the great Bass Rock rises 460 ft out of the sea. To the east, towering over the cliffs of East Lothian, is Tantallon Castle, seemingly an impregnable stronghold for the Doublas family and there is an old proverb "Ding down Tantallon - Mak a brig to the Bass" showing that it was thought it to be as difficult to bring down the castle as it would to throw a bridge across to the rock. On this inhospitable island Baldred, who had once been a disciple of St. Kentigern, made his hermitage devoting himself to penance and prayer, with only the gannets for company.

The missionary zeal that Baldred had learned in his years with St. Kentigern did not completely leave him and it is evident that he crossed over to the mainland and evangelized the areas round Aldham in Haddington and Tyningham where he had churches and there is a well that bears his name. His sanctity earned him a reputation for miraculous powers and there is a boulder near Aldham which it was believed that he used as a boat to cross to the rock. The Aberdeen Breviary recounts how he removed a dangerous reef, that had caused numerous wrecks, by standing on it and sailing it like a ship to a position where it would do no harm. His cave is near to the sea shore and on the Bass Rock the remains of his chapel are still visible. At Tantallon there are ruins of another chapel dedicated to him.

St. Baldred died at Tyningham and was buried there but the monastery was destroyed by the Danes in 951. His relics were lost until they were discovered by Elfrid, a priest from Durham, in the twelfth century, who caused them to be enshrined with those of St. Bilfrid, a monk from Lindisfarne, and these two share March 6th as the commemoration of their translation (Bowen).

Some identify him with Saint Balther, the hermit of Tinningham (Benedictines).



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