Old Church of St Nidan, Llanidan

Old Church of St Nidan, Llanidan
Old Church of St Nidan, Llanidan

The surviving western section of St Nidan's and the central arcade

Old Church of St Nidan, Llanidan is located in Anglesey
Old Church of St Nidan, Llanidan
Location in Anglesey
Coordinates: 53°10′40″N 4°15′13″W / 53.177857°N 4.253480°W / 53.177857; -4.253480
OS grid reference SH 494 669
Location Llanidan, Anglesey
Country Wales, United Kingdom
Denomination Church in Wales
History
Founded 616
Founder(s) St Nidan
Dedication St Nidan
Architecture
Status Church
Functional status Closed and partly demolished in the 19th century; occasionally open to the public
Heritage designation Grade II*
Designated 30 January 1968
Style Medieval
Specifications
Length 78 ft (24 m) (pre-demolition)
Width 38 ft (12 m)
Materials Rubble masonry dressed with sandstone

The Old Church of St Nidan, Llanidan is a medieval church, closed and partly in ruins, in the community of Llanidan, in Anglesey, north Wales. The first church on this site, close to the Menai Strait, was established in the 7th century by St Nidan, the confessor of the monastery at Penmon, Anglesey. The oldest parts of the present structure date from the 14th century. In about 1500, the church was enlarged when a second nave was added on the north side; an arcade of six arches was also built between the two naves. Between 1839 and 1843, a new church was built nearby to serve the local community, partly because of the cost of repairing the old church; much of the old church was thereafter demolished, leaving only part of the western end and the central arcade. The decision was condemned at the time by Harry Longueville Jones, a clergyman and antiquarian, who lamented the "melancholy fate" of what he called "one of the largest and most important [churches] in the island of Anglesey".[1] Other appreciative comments have been made about the church both before and after its partial demolition.

After the new church was opened, the old church was used as a chapel for funerals for a time. It has been restored by the owners of the adjoining house, Plas Llanidan, and is occasionally open to the public. The remaining parts of the church are a Grade II* listed building, a national designation given to "particularly important buildings of more than special interest",[2] in particular because St Nidan's is regarded as "a good example of a simple medieval rural church, enriched by 15th-century additions".[3]

In the 12th century, Gerald of Wales said that the church possessed a curious stone shaped like a thigh that would always return by the next day no matter how far away it was taken. A Norman earl, he said, had chained it to a large rock and thrown it into the sea, only for the stone to return to the church by the following morning. A sandstone chest containing bone fragments, possibly relics of a saint, was found buried underneath the altar. The reliquary and the church's 13th-century font are now to be found in the new church.

Contents

History and location

Foundation and construction

St Nidan's Church is in the south of Anglesey, Wales, about a quarter of a mile (400 m) from the Menai Strait and near the village of Brynsiencyn.[4] The authors of a 2009 guide to the buildings of north-west Wales record the tradition that a church was first established at this site in 616.[5] St Nidan, who founded the church here, was associated with St Seiriol's monastery at Penmon, on the eastern tip of Anglesey in north Wales, and was the monastery's confessor.[6] The area takes its name from the church: the Welsh word llan originally meant "enclosure" and then "church", and "‑idan" is a modified form of the saint's name.[7]

The church and rectory are mentioned in a charter of 1360 as being owned by the priory at Beddgelert, Gwynedd; earlier records have been lost and so the date when the priory acquired them is unknown.[3] The historian Antony Carr has written that "we shall never know" how the "distant community" of Augustinians in Beddgelert came to possess Llanidan and three other churches in Anglesey, but thought that it might be significant that the priory also controlled two churches on the mainland, on the other side of the Menai Strait.[8] Ownership of the church passed to Henry VIII at the dissolution of the monasteries in 1535. His successor, Elizabeth I, granted the advowson (the right of a patron to choose the parish priest) and the grounds surrounding the church, including the estate house called Plas Llanidan, to an Edward Downam and a Peter Ashton; thereafter, in the following centuries, they passed by sale, on marriage and by bequest into the hands of the Boston family.[9]

The remaining part of the south nave, the oldest section of the present structure, dates from medieval times, with the north doorway and tracery (patterns of stonework in the windows) pointing to the 14th century. In about 1500, the church was enlarged by the addition of a second nave to the north with an arcade (row of arches) between the two naves, and a south porch.[3][5] Enlargement by adding a second nave was not as common in Anglesey as elsewhere in Wales. Llanidan is one of three examples on the island (the others being St Beuno's Church, Aberffraw and St Cwyfan's Church, Llangwyfan).[10]

Replacement and demolition

The exposed central arcade, which "rises from the graveyard like an abstract sculpture", in the words of a 1990 book.[11]

A new church nearer Brynsiencyn (St Nidan's Church, Llanidan) was built to replace the old one between 1839 and 1843.[12] This was because the old church required significant repair, and also because the growing population in Brynsiencyn needed a church closer to their village.[9] In 1844, much of the structure was demolished, leaving only the western end (with a new wall at the east to enclose it) and the arcade. Parish worship transferred to the new church, along with some of the fittings.[3] The old church was thereafter used as a mortuary chapel for a time.[4] In modern times, the owners of Plas Llanidan have restored the church, and it is used by them as a private chapel. The churchyard is kept locked, but St Nidan's and the gardens of Plas Llanidan are occasionally opened to the public.[4][13]

The 19th-century clergyman and antiquarian Harry Longueville Jones disputed the need to replace the old church and condemned its "melancholy fate", describing the reasons for its demise as "pretexts".[1] In his view, the only part of the church that need repair was the western end (which he thought had been "badly constructed in the first instance") and yet it was that "ruinous" part of the church that was saved when the "good portions of the building" were destroyed.[1] Furthermore, the cost of the new church (which he said was only a little larger than the old, and was built in a "debased barbarous style") was more than double the cost of repairs to the medieval church, which could have "endure[d] for ages to come".[1] He added that it might have been thought to be safe, as it was so close to Lord Boston’s house and thus "under the shadow of the lord of the domain", and he condemned the "evil hour" in which "the ruthless hand of the destroyer was allowed to be lifted against it by those whose first duty it was to see that it took no harm".[1] He stated that "when buildings, dedicated to God's service by the piety of former ages, are allowed to be treated in this manner by the constituted authorities of the land ... the institutions to which they are attached cannot be expected to find greater favour at the hands of the fickle and ignorant multitude."[1]

People

People associated with the church include Henry Rowlands, a clergyman and antiquarian. He was the vicar of St Nidan's from 1696 until his death in 1723, and wrote a history of Anglesey, Mona Antiqua Restaurata.[5][14] Thomas Williams of Llanidan, a politician and businessman who became wealthy through copper mining on Anglesey, was buried in the churchyard in 1802, but was reburied at St Tegfan's Church, Llandegfan, in the 1830s.[4]

Architecture and fittings

Structure

The east window of the southern aisle, which reuses some 15th-century tracery

Before its partial demolition, St Nidan's consisted of two naves or aisles that were 78 feet (23.8 m) long with a central arcade, a chapel projecting from the south side and a porch in the south-west corner. It is 38 feet (11.6 m) wide, the northern nave being about 3 feet (0.9 m) wider than the other. The demolished chapel was 12 by 19 feet (3.7 by 5.8 m).[1] The walls, about 2 feet 10 inches (1 m) thick, are built from local rubble masonry with a covering of sandstone.[1][3] The wall at the east end was added after the rest of church was demolished. The western wall has been rebuilt and buttresses added (to help support the structure) to the south side and north-west corner;[3] Jones thought that they dated from the 16th century.[1] The roof above the remaining western section is made from slates. At the top of the west end of the roof above the south aisle, there is a stone bellcote with two bells.[3]

The south porch contains a water stoup which was said miraculously never to dry up, and the water was regarded traditionally as having healing powers.[4] There is another entrance on the north side through a 15th-century arched doorway decorated with carved human heads.[15] Two verses from Psalm 84 (in Welsh) are written on the wall above the doorway, the only surviving portions of the Biblical texts that once decorated the internal walls.[3]

The north wall has a window with two lights (sections of window separated by mullions) topped with trefoils (a pattern of three overlapping circles). The two arched east windows, one in each aisle, are decorated with tracery (patterns of stonework within the window frame); the southern window reuses some tracery from the 15th century.[3] The demolished southern chapel had a two-light window similar to that at St Peter’s Church, Newborough (although Jones thought it was of "very rude workmanship") and three-light square-headed windows in the east and west walls.[1] Jones also noted the loss of the original window at the end of the northern aisle, which was from the 14th century in his view, and some windows in the north wall "of excellent workmanship".[1] The southern aisle, he said, had had “a small circular headed window, filled up from a pointed one" at the eastern end, whilst the east window "was of a design more remarkable for its singularity than its beauty."[1]

Internally, two of the six arches in the arcade can be seen; the other four project beyond the east wall, which has been built around one of the octagonal piers that support the arches. The 15th-century roof has exposed internal woodwork.[3] A 1937 survey by the Royal Commission on Ancient and Historical Monuments in Wales and Monmouthshire noted 20 memorials from the 17th and 18th centuries. It also recorded the presence of a sundial on a pedestal, dated 1768, and some stone shields that were not attached to the building, bearing dates of 1561 and 1563.[15] Most of the fittings that are now in St Nidan's are not original to the building, and come from other churches in north-west Wales; the granite altar is modern.[3]

Thigh stone and reliquary

The 19th-century antiquarian Angharad Llwyd, who wrote a history of Anglesey in 1833, recorded the story noted by Gerald of Wales in the late 12th century that the church once possessed a stone "resembling a human thigh" which would return "of its own accord" however far away it was carried.[16] It was sometimes known as the "homing stone".[11] Gerald said that Hugh d'Avranches, 1st Earl of Chester (who died in 1101) had tested this story by throwing the stone into the sea, chained to a large rock, only to discover that the stone had returned by the next morning. As a result, the Norman earl issued an order that no-one was to attempt to move it. It was popularly believed that if a couple had sexual intercourse near the stone (something that Gerald said happened "frequently"), it would "sweat large drops of water" and the woman would not become pregnant.[11] Henry Rowlands wrote that the stone had been stolen from the wall of the churchyard (into which it had been set) during his time at St Nidan's.[16][11]

When Rowlands was vicar of St Nidan's, a small chest was found buried about 2 feet (60 cm) under the altar, containing some bone pieces. His view was that it contained the relics of a saint from one of the churches in the region, and that the chest had placed in St Nidan's during the time of Edward VI for safe keeping.[16] The sandstone reliquary is now kept at the new church, where local tradition maintains that it holds the remains of St Nidan.[17] Jones said that it was "unique, as far as Wales is concerned."[18] The 13th-century font, which Jones described as "a singularly beautiful specimen", was moved to the new church in about 1860.[1][17]

Assessment

Listing

John Skinner's drawing of the church from 1802; Plas Llanidan is on the left.

St Nidan's has national recognition and statutory protection from alteration as it has been designated as a Grade II* listed building – the second-highest of the three grades of listing, designating "particularly important buildings of more than special interest".[2] It was given this status on 30 January 1968 and has been listed because it is regarded as "a good example of a simple medieval rural church, enriched by 15th-century additions."[3] Cadw (the Welsh Government body responsible for the built heritage of Wales and the inclusion of Welsh buildings on the statutory lists) also notes that although it was partly demolished in the middle of the 19th century, "what remains can be considered a well preserved and important survival of a double-naved church, retaining many 15th-century features such as the central arcade."[3]

The wall around the churchyard is also a listed building, at Grade II – the lowest of the three grades of listing, designating "buildings of special interest, which warrant every effort being made to preserve them".[2] According to Cadw, the wall probably dates from the 15th century, from around the time that the church was extended.[19]

Pre-demolition comments

In 1802, the clergyman and antiquarian John Skinner visited Anglesey to see the island's Celtic remains, and began his tour by rowing across the Menai Strait to land at Llanidan. His view was that the church "seems superior to the generality of Welsh buildings of the kind", with its double roof and two bells, but he also said that "the interior of the building has little to attract notice".[20] Angharad Llwyd described it in 1833 as "a spacious structure, containing several good monuments".[16]

Commenting in 1846 on the church as it had been before demolition started, Harry Longueville Jones said that St Nidan's was "one of the largest and most important [churches] in the island of Anglesey" for its varied architecture, fittings and traditions.[1] He noted the "rather curious" position of the church, in a "nearly circular enclosure" with tall trees around it, and said that "the effect of the western end with the porch, overgrown by an enormous quantity of ivy, was picturesque in the extreme".[1]

Post-demolition comments

The interior, looking from the south-west corner, showing two of the arches separating the aisles

The Welsh politician and church historian Sir Stephen Glynne visited the church in 1850. He said that St Nidan's, which he described as "now abandoned and in great measure ruinated", was "a larger and better structure than most of the Anglesey churches."[21] At the time he saw it, the walls were still largely in place but the only roofed section was the western end; he commented that most of the church was "open to the skies."[21]

The historian and clergyman Edmund Tyrrell Green, writing a survey of Anglesey church architecture and contents in 1929, described the arcade as "good" and some of the tracery in the windows as "very good".[22] His view was that the "excellence of the work" at St Nidan's was because of its link with Beddgelert Priory.[22]

The authors of a 1990 book about the "lost" churches of Wales said that St Nidan's was "now an evocative shell decorously mantled with ivy and enclosed by an overgrown graveyard".[11] They described it as "a dark, dusty and empty place", but said that the "elegant” arcade "rises from the graveyard like an abstract sculpture."[11] The quality of the stone carving of the doors and windows, they said, was evidence of "the vanished splendour of Llanidan."[11]

A 2002 book about Welsh churchyards comments that "a pilgrimage undertaken to this churchyard is rewarding", since there is "little to distract and much to suggest the quiet years of Nidan's ministry in this secluded spot."[23] Noting how the site can be reached from the Menai Strait yet hidden from it, the author added that "some stillness still remains in secret places like Llanidan."[23] A 2005 guide to Wales said that "the romantic yew-encircled ruin" of St Nidan's "should not be missed."[24]

References

  1. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o Longueville Jones, Harry (October 1846). "Mona Mediaeva No. IV". Archaeologia Cambrensis (Cambrian Archaeological Association) IV: 429–434. http://www.archive.org/stream/archaeologiacam03powegoog#page/n554/mode/1up. 
  2. ^ a b c (PDF) What is listing?. Cadw. 2005. p. 6. ISBN 1857602226. http://cadw.wales.gov.uk/docs/cadw/publications/What_Is_Listing_EN.pdf. 
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m Cadw (2009). "St Nidan's Church (Old Church)". Historic Wales. http://jura.rcahms.gov.uk/cadw/cadw_eng.php?id=5538. Retrieved 29 September 2011. 
  4. ^ a b c d e Jones, Geraint I. L. (2006). Anglesey Churches. Gwasg Carreg Gwalch. pp. 106–107. ISBN 1845270894. 
  5. ^ a b c Haslam, Richard; Orbach, Julian; Voelcker, Adam (2009). "Anglesey". The Buildings of Wales: Gwynedd. Yale University Press. pp. 190–191. ISBN 9780300141696. 
  6. ^ Baring-Gould, Sabine; Fisher, John (1913). The lives of the British saints; the saints of Wales and Cornwall and such Irish saints as have dedications in Britain. 4. Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion. pp. 14–16. http://www.archive.org/stream/cu31924092447816#page/n21/mode/2up. 
  7. ^ "Religion and creed in place names". BBC Wales. http://www.bbc.co.uk/wales/whatsinaname/sites/themes/pages/religion.shtml. Retrieved 24 June 2010. 
  8. ^ Carr, Antony (2011). Medieval Anglesey. Studies in Anglesey History (2nd ed.). Anglesey Antiquarian Society. p. 216. ISBN 978-0-9568769-0-4. 
  9. ^ a b Lewis, Samuel (1849). "Llanidan (Llan-Idan)". A Topographical Dictionary of Wales. http://www.british-history.ac.uk/report.aspx?compid=47853#s13. Retrieved 28 September 2011. 
  10. ^ Hughes, Harold (December 1930). "The Ancient Churches of Anglesey". Archaeologia Cambrensis (Cambrian Archaeological Association) LXXXV (Part II): 259. 
  11. ^ a b c d e f g Davis, Paul R.; Lloyd-Fern, Susan (1990). Lost churches of Wales and the Marches. Alan Sutton Publishing. pp. 152–154. ISBN 0862995647. 
  12. ^ Haslam, Richard; Orbach, Julian; Voelcker, Adam (2009). "Anglesey". The Buildings of Wales: Gwynedd. Yale University Press. pp. 118–119. ISBN 9780300141696. 
  13. ^ Steele, Philip; Williams, Robert (2006). Môn Mam Cymru: The Guide to Anglesey. Magma. p. 202. ISBN 1-872773-77-X. 
  14. ^ Wright, Evan Gilbert (2009). "Rowlands, Henry". Welsh Biography Online. National Library of Wales. http://wbo.llgc.org.uk/en/s-ROWL-HEN-1655.html. Retrieved 7 October 2011. 
  15. ^ a b Royal Commission on Ancient and Historical Monuments in Wales and Monmouthshire (1968) [1937]. "Llanidan". An Inventory of the Ancient Monuments in Anglesey. Her Majesty's Stationery Office. pp. 99–100. 
  16. ^ a b c d Llwyd, Angharad (1833). A History of the Island of Mona. R. Jones. pp. 286–291. http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=DMY_AAAAcAAJ&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false. 
  17. ^ a b Cadw (2009). "St Nidan's Church (new church)". Historic Wales. http://jura.rcahms.gov.uk/cadw/cadw_eng.php?id=5539. Retrieved 4 November 2011. 
  18. ^ Longueville Jones, Harry (July 1863). "Mona Mediaeva No. XXIX". Archaeologia Cambrensis. 3rd (Cambrian Archaeological Association) XXXV: 260–261. http://www.archive.org/stream/archaeologiacam01moorgoog#page/n275/mode/1up. 
  19. ^ Cadw (2009). "Wall of circular churchyard, St. Nidan's Church (Old Church)". Historic Wales. http://jura.rcahms.gov.uk/cadw/cadw_eng.php?id=19888. Retrieved 6 November 2011. 
  20. ^ Skinner, John (July 1908). Ten days' tour through the Isle of Anglesea December 1802. Cambrian Archaeological Association. pp. 9, 11, 28. http://www.archive.org/stream/tendaystourthrou00skin#page/9/mode/1up/search/llanidan. 
  21. ^ a b Glynne, Sir Stephen (1900). "Notes on the Older Churches of the Four Welsh Dioceses". Archaeologia Cambrensis. 5th (Cambrian Archaeological Association) XVII: 103. http://www.archive.org/stream/archaeologiacam08assogoog#page/n115/mode/1up. 
  22. ^ a b Green, E. Tyrell (1929). "The Ecclesiology of Anglesey". Y Cymmrodor (Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion) XL: 80–81. http://www.archive.org/stream/ycymmrodor40cymmuoft#page/80/mode/1up. 
  23. ^ a b Gregory, Donald (2002). Country churchyards in Wales. Carreg Gwalch. p. 78. ISBN 0863817661. 
  24. ^ Barnes, David (2005). The companion guide to Wales. Companion Guides. p. 331. ISBN 1900639432. http://books.google.co.uk/books?id=Np_H_j3hXUEC&printsec=frontcover#v=onepage&q&f=false. 

External links

Media related to Old Church of St Nidan, Llanidan at Wikimedia Commons


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