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St Beuno's Church, Aberffraw

St Beuno's Church, Aberffraw
St. Beuno's Church, Aberffraw - geograph.org.uk - 156921.jpg
A view from the south-east
St Beuno's Church, Aberffraw is located in Anglesey
St Beuno's Church, Aberffraw
St Beuno's Church, Aberffraw
Location in Anglesey
Coordinates: 53°11′27″N 4°28′00″W / 53.190715°N 4.466638°W / 53.190715; -4.466638
OS grid reference SH 353 688
Location Aberffraw, Anglesey
Country Wales, United Kingdom
Denomination Church in Wales
History
Founded 7th century
Founder(s) St Beuno
Dedication St Beuno
Architecture
Status Church
Functional status Active
Heritage designation Grade II*
Designated 5 April 1971
Architect(s) Thomas Jones (1840 restoration)
Henry Kennedy (1868 rebuilding)
Style Late Decorated
Specifications
Length 30 ft (9.1 m) (nave)
Nave width 16 ft (4.9 m)
Other dimensions 25 by 16 ft (7.6 by 4.9 m) (chancel)
Materials Rubble masonry dressed with sandstone; slate roof
Administration
Parish Trefdraeth with Aberffraw with Llangadwaladr with Cerrigceinwen
Deanery Malltraeth
Archdeaconry Bangor
Diocese Diocese of Bangor
Province Province of Wales
Clergy
Vicar(s) Vacant

St Beuno's Church, Aberffraw is a 12th-century parish church in Anglesey, north Wales. A church was established in Aberffraw in the 7th century by St Beuno, who became the abbot of Clynnog Fawr, Gwynedd. St Beuno's may have been used as a royal chapel during the early Middle Ages, as the princes of Gwynedd had a court in Aberffraw. The oldest parts of the church date from the 12th century, although it was considerably enlarged in the 16th century when a second nave was built alongside the existing structure, with the wall in between replaced by an arcade of four arches. Restoration work in 1840 uncovered a 12th-century arch in the west wall, which may have been the original chancel arch or a doorway to a western tower that has been lost. The church also has a 13th-century font, some memorials from the 18th century, and two 18th-century copper collecting shovels.

The church is still used for worship by the Church in Wales, one of four in a combined parish. As of 2013, the parish is without an incumbent priest. St Beuno's is a Grade II* listed building, a national designation given to "particularly important buildings of more than special interest", in particular because it is a "rare Anglesey example of a double-naved church", with elements including the "unusually fine" 12th-century arch. A 2009 guide to the buildings of the region says that St Beuno's contains "some of the most significant Romanesque work on the island".

St Beuno's Church is in Aberffraw on the south-west coast of Anglesey, north Wales. It is set within a large churchyard in the south-west of the village, on the south side of Church Street. The first church community was established in Aberffraw in the 7th century by St Beuno (a Welsh holy man who became the abbot of Clynnog Fawr, on the Llŷn Peninsula in Gwynedd). No part of a structure from that period survives; the oldest parts of the present building are the south wall of the nave and some parts of the west wall, which are from the 12th century.


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