The Tradition of Her Flight from Ireland
By tradition Beya was the daughter of an Irish king who had arranged her marriage to a Norse (Viking) prince. The Life relates that she had received from an angel a bracelet marked with a cross, taken as a token of her betrothal to Christ, and that on the eve of the wedding she fled with its help. According to the legend she was carried across the Irish Sea, in one telling seated upon a clod of earth, and came ashore on the Cumbrian coast in the district of Copeland, south of present-day Whitehaven.
There she is said to have lived in seclusion as an anchoress, sustained by food brought to her by wild birds. When marauders or Viking pirates threatened the area, the tradition continues, King Oswald of Northumbria advised her to enter a convent; she received the veil from Saint Aidan and established her monastery at the place afterward called St Bees. The synaxarion-style accounts emphasize her devotion to the poor and oppressed during her earthly life.