St. Abbs is a small fishing village located in Berwickshire in the Scottish Border region. The village dates back to the 7th century when a Northumbrian princess was shipwrecked off the coast. She became a nun in the convent there and later went on to become the Mother Superior and a saint. Her name was Abbess Æbbe and the name of St. Abbs is thought to come from the lady’s name. In 679, the abbey was struck by lightning and burned to the ground. Many believed that this was the wrath of God for the immodest behaviour of the nuns and monks. In fact, St. Abbs was originally called Coldingham Shore. It was a place that the fishermen used for fishing and they carried their fishing gear along a one-mile path to the water’s edge. It was not until the 1800’s that the first houses were built here in the traditional Scottish style of a central fire and a wide chimney. By 1832, there were sixteen families living here and fishermen from Coldingham still continued to make the trip back and forth for fishing purposes.
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