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Goodbye Lindisfarne Gospels
The Lindisfarne Gospels have been on display in Durham for three months.
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Report: Last chance to see the Lindisfarne Gospels
Today is the last chance to see the Lindisfarne Gospels at Durham Cathedral. It brings to an end a three month exhibition in the centre of Durham City.
Almost 100,000 people have been to see the gospels, which will be returned to the British Library later this week.
They attracted visitors from across the world and have brought in millions of pounds to the region.
Frances Read reports.
Lindisfarne Gospels' return: Your reaction
We sent our reporter Frances Read to find out what the public thought on the opening day of the Lindisfarne Gospels exhibition.
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Full Report: Lindisfarne Gospels go on display
The Lindisfarne Gospels have gone on display in Durham at the start of a three month exhibition.
The book was created by monks on Holy island more than a thousand years ago, and it is still in perfect condition.
The Gospels will be on show until the end of September.
You can watch the full report from Frances Read below.
- ITV Report
Ancient manuscript returns to the region
The Lindisfarne Gospels: What do you think about them?
An exhibition of the Lindisfarne Gospels has opened to the public in Durham.
We asked schoolchildren - who had been some of the first to see the ancient manuscript on display - what they thought about seeing the book up close.
Lunchtime Report: Lindisfarne Gospels back in the region
The Lindisfarne Gospels have gone on display in Durham at the start of a three month exhibition.
The book was created by monks of Holy Island more than a thousand years ago and it is still in perfect condition.
Frances Read sent this lunchtime report.
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Lindisfarne Gospels go on display in Durham
The new exhibition opened at 10am with schoolchildren among the first visitors. The Gospels were last on display in the North East in 2000 and will remain at Durham University's Palace Green Library until September.
Lindisfarne Gospels on display in Durham
Some of the region's schoolchildren are among the first visitors to see the Lindisfarne Gospels go on display at a new exhibition in Durham.
The manuscript, which was written by monks on Holy Island in 700 AD, is spending the next three months at Durham University's Palace Green Library . It is usually on display in London.
20, 000 tickets have been sold for the exhibition, with 100,000 expected to be sold before the end of September.
The exhibition, which also features other Anglo-Saxon artefacts, is open from 10am to 10pm every day from 1st July to 30th September.
Gospels to enter Durham Cathedral
The historic Lindisfarne Gospels will be carried into Durham Cathedral during a special procession this afternoon.
The book, which was written by a monk on Holy Island in 700 AD, is spending the next three months in Durham as part of a new exhibition.
More than 700 choristers will also be singing at today's event.
St Cuthbert's journey retraced
A photographic exhibition has opened in Durham as part of events to mark the return of the Lindisfarne Gospels.
It traces the route taken by the monks of Lindisfarne across ancient Northumbria, as they escaped Viking invadors.
The free display is being held at 3, Millennium Place and is separate to the Gospels exhibition itself.
Richard Hardwick is a writer in residence at Durham University. He explains the thought behind the photo exhibition:
Latest ITV News reports
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Ancient manuscript returns to the region
Hundreds of people have visited an exhibition showcasing the Lindisfarne Gospels on its first day since returning to the region.