He wrote to Eleanor asking her to join him in
the north, but she was taken ill on the journey and died in a little
village called Harby in Nottinghamshire.
Edward was devastated and rushed back south to
make arrangements for her funeral. Her body had to be taken back to
Westminster in stages, and Edward had a beautiful memorial cross
erected in each of the stopping places. In all there were twelve of
these: Lincoln, Grantham, Stamford, Geddington, Northampton, Stony
Stratford, Woburn, Dunstable, St. Albans, Waltham, Cheapside, and
the best known of all, Charing, then a little village near
Westminster and nowadays named after the cross, Charing Cross.
Today only those at Geddington,
Hardingstone and Waltham Cross still remain.
In London, in the forecourt of the Charing
Cross railway station the tall monument is nowadays surrounded by
taxis and parked cars. This monument (pictured right) is a Victorian replica
of the
one that originally stood at the top of Whitehall. The site in
Whitehall is now occupied by a statue of Charles I on horseback.
The Eleanor Cross in the village of Geddington,
just off the A43 between Corby and Kettering, is original and
maintained by English Heritage. The cross is situated off the main
road by the church and close to the pretty 12th century
bridge and ford over the River Ise.
It appears that Edward really loved his wife,
as he ordered that two wax candles were to burn for all time beside
her tomb in Westminster Abbey. They burned for two and half
centuries, and were extinguished only at the time of the
Reformation.
Now that sounds like love in any language.