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The '''Roaring Meg's Spring''' was a small spring located east of [[Lincoln]] in [[Lincolnshire]], [[England]], connected via a [[Old Lincoln Sewers|network of underground sewers]] beneath the city.
The '''Roaring Meg's Spring''' was a small spring located east of [[Lincoln]] in [[Lincolnshire]], [[England]], connected via a [[Old Lincoln Sewers|network of underground sewers]] beneath the city.


Circa 875, a group of [[Mercia|Mercian]] nobles paid the [[bandit]]s to use their tunnels and the spring opening to smuggle the gravely ill [[ealdorman]] [[Hundbeorht]] out of Lincoln to [[Bolingbroc Castle]]. The bandits ultimately betrayed the nobles after they refused to pay double the amount and a blood bath occured, with only Hundbeorht and a few of his men escaping unharmed.<ref name="ACV">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' – [[In the Absence of an Ealdorman]]</ref>
Circa 875, a group of [[Mercia|Mercian]] nobles paid the [[bandit]]s under the leadership of [[Lucian]] to use their tunnels and the spring opening to smuggle the gravely ill [[ealdorman]] [[Hundbeorht]] out of Lincoln to [[Bolingbroc Castle]]. The bandits ultimately betrayed the nobles after they refused to pay double the amount and a blood bath occured, with only Hundbeorht and a few of his men escaping unharmed.<ref name="ACV">''[[Assassin's Creed: Valhalla]]'' – [[In the Absence of an Ealdorman]]</ref>


==Appearances==
==Appearances==

Latest revision as of 02:08, 26 September 2022

Roaring Meg's Spring

The Roaring Meg's Spring was a small spring located east of Lincoln in Lincolnshire, England, connected via a network of underground sewers beneath the city.

Circa 875, a group of Mercian nobles paid the bandits under the leadership of Lucian to use their tunnels and the spring opening to smuggle the gravely ill ealdorman Hundbeorht out of Lincoln to Bolingbroc Castle. The bandits ultimately betrayed the nobles after they refused to pay double the amount and a blood bath occured, with only Hundbeorht and a few of his men escaping unharmed.[1]

Appearances[edit | edit source]

References[edit | edit source]