Sed nullius Sanctorum Dei memoria eis magis innotuit, quam Beati Cuthberti gloriosi Confessoris, cujus venerationi sollemni ecclesiola in eadem villula dedicata fuit.
Infirmantem igitur ad ecclesiam producunt, et pii Confessoris clementiam lacrimosis desideriorum votis exposcunt.
Nunc de fonte, qui Sancti Cuthberti dicitur, aquas exhauriunt, et ori languentis vel manui contractae perfundunt, modo altaris sullimia adeunt,quandoque curvante poplite solotenus prostrati Domini clementiam implorarunt.
Three miracles at Bellingham, connected with the mediaeval cult of St Cuthbert, are recorded in the twelfth century Libellus[1] of Reginald of Durham.
In the second, on the occasion of Eda's marriage, Sproich's cow is seized in payment by a bailiff of the local lord and placed with another tenant.