[4] He is credited with securing the buildings of St. Finan’s wooden church with lead, making them more durable.
[5] He is also notable as having founded the holy shrine of his predecessor Saint Cuthbert on the island of Lindisfarne, a place that was to become a centre of great pilgrimage in later years.
It is said that Eadberht favoured poverty and long periods of solitude and devotion as part of his service in the bishopric.
[8] When he died he was buried in the same location from which Cuthbert's body had been exhumed earlier the same year.
When the monks withdrew from the Island in 875 Eadberht's relics were eventually moved to Durham.