St Mary and St Bodfan Church, Llanaber
{{Use dmy dates|date=December 2017}}
{{Use British English|date=December 2017}}
{{Infobox church
|name = St Mary's Church
|fullname = Church of Saint Mary and Saint Bodfan, Llanaber
|image = St Mary and St Bodfan Church, Llanaber south side.JPG
|caption = View of the church from the beach
|denomination = Church in Wales
|churchmanship = High Church
|website =
|pushpin map = Wales Gwynedd
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|map caption = Location in Gwynedd
|coordinates = {{coord|52.7416|-4.0763|display=title|region:GB_scale:2000}}
|osgridref = 259930, 318024
|country = United Kingdom
|former name =
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|dedication = St Mary and St Bodfan
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|people =
|status = Active
|functional status = Church building
|heritage designation = Grade I
|designated date = 4 March 1951[http://www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk/wa-4906-parish-church-of-saint-mary-and-saint-bodf British Listed buildings] retrieved 8 June 2013
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|parish = Bro Ardudwy[http://www.churchinwales.org.uk/structure/places/parishes/?id=2149] from Church in Wales retrieved 16 October 2015
|deanery = Meirionydd Synod
|diocese = Bangor
|rector = Rev. Anthony Hodges
}}
St Mary's Church or its full name St Mary and St Bodfan Church is a church located in the village of Llanaber in Wales. St Mary and Bodfan is a Grade I listed building, which despite substantial restoration work in 1860, is a well-preserved 13th-century building with lancet windows and arch-braced collar beams (16th-century) to the chancel roof.[http://www.britainexpress.com/attractions.htm?attraction=539 Llanaber Church] from Britain Express retrieved 1 June 2013
Ancient maps refer to the church as St Bodfan's and an association with the saint is preserved in the name of the nearby Bodfan Farm, but the church is more popularly known as St Mary's.[http://churchinwalesbarmouth.org.uk/index.php/en/history-of-st-mary History of St Mary's] {{webarchive|url=https://archive.today/20130423211236/http://churchinwalesbarmouth.org.uk/index.php/en/history-of-st-mary |date=23 April 2013 }} from Church in Wales Barmouth retrieved 8 June 2013
The current building
The present church dates from the early thirteenth century. One of its great benefactors was Hywel ap Meredydd ap Cynan, the Lord of Ardudwy, the commot which has given its name to the Rural Deanery of Ardudwy in which the Parish of Llanaber is situated. Hywel was a great grandson of Owain Gwynedd and a near relative of Llewelyn the Great.[http://www.mysteriousbritain.co.uk/wales/gwynedd/ancient-sites/saint-mary%E2%80%99s-and-saint-bodfan%E2%80%99s-church-llanaber.html Llanaber Church] {{webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20130703004737/http://www.mysteriousbritain.co.uk/wales/gwynedd/ancient-sites/saint-mary%E2%80%99s-and-saint-bodfan%E2%80%99s-church-llanaber.html |date=3 July 2013 }} from Mysterious Britain retrieved 1 June 2013
File:St.MaryAndBodfanBarmouth14.jpg
The plan of the church consists of a nave, with north and south aisles, and a long narrow chancel. Entering the church by the south porch, rebuilt in the nineteenth century, is the south doorway, a still-standing example of Early English architecture. This doorway, built of yellow sandstone, is deeply recessed and is composed of six shafts on either side. The north door opposite is much narrower and of simple design.
The nave is divided on either side into five arcades. They show the transition from Norman architecture to the Early English Style. The piers are Norman in character with foliated capitals from which spring pointed arches. The four clerestory windows on either side of the nave are examples of Early English lancets, whilst the two long lancets of the west wall are part of the nineteenth-century restoration.
The chancel, which is separated from the nave by an Early English arch, is approached by a flight of steps, necessitated by the sloping nature of the site on which the church is built. The east window is an example of a single Early English lancet with very wide splays and shafts in the inner arch.
The main roof timbers, both in the Nave and Chancel, date from the sixteenth century, whilst the ceiling above the sanctuary is panelled and its bosses and carvings picked out in gilt and colour.
The font is octagonal in shape. The bowl is modern and it stands on a very much older shaft.
=The Calixtus Stones=
In the north west corner of the church will be found two ancient stones. One is the Calixtus Stone, placed in the Church in the 19th century and having been previously used as a footbridge on a neighbouring farm. The inscription has been read as: CAELIXTUS MONEDO REGI, and is thought to mean Calixtus King of Mona.
=Parish Registers=
Extensions
In 1860, extensive work of restoration was carried out. The bell turret was rebuilt as well as most of the west wall with its heavy buttresses. The small vestry adjoining the north side of the chancel was also constructed at the same time on the site of a previous building.
The glass in the windows dates from the latter part of the nineteenth century and is on the whole good with the design in the clerestory windows depicting angels with musical instruments. Most of the monuments date from the nineteenth century.
In 1969, the church was again extensively restored. The timbers of the roofs were treated against woodworm and new timbers inserted where necessary. The seating of the church was also renewed with surplus pews from St John's Church, Barmouth. The Compton Two Manual and Pedal Organ, a memorial gift, was dedicated by the Bishop of Bangor on 1 June 1969 (the eve of the feast of St Bodfan) at the time of the re-hallowing of the church after the restoration.
Churchyard
The churchyard contains twelve Commonwealth war graves; from the First World War, six Royal Navy seamen (four of them unidentified), three Mercantile Marine seamen, a Royal Welsh Fusiliers officer and a Royal Engineers soldier, and from the Second, a Royal Artillery soldier.[http://www.cwgc.org/find-a-cemetery/cemetery/75444/LLANABER%20(ST.%20MARY)%20CHURCHYARD] CWGC Cemetery report, details from casualty record.
Gallery
File:St Mary and St Bodfan Church, Llanaber interior.JPG|Church interior
File:St Mary and St Bodfan Church, Llanaber chancel.JPG|Church chancel
See also
Sources
{{CCBYSASource|sourcepath=http://churchinwalesbarmouth.org.uk/index.php/en/history-of-st-mary|sourcearticle=Benefice of Llanaber with Barmouth and Caerdeon with Bontddu|revision=435274768}}
References
External links
{{commons category|St. Mary and Bodfan in Llanaber, Barmouth}}
- [http://www.churchinwalesbarmouth.org.uk Barmouth Parish site]
{{DEFAULTSORT:Llanaber, Mary Bodfan, Saint, Church}}