Registered Historic Park & Garden


Details


Reference Number
PGW(Gt)27(MON)
Name
Llangibby House  
Grade
II  
Date of Designation
01/02/2022  
Status
Designated  

Location


Unitary Authority
Monmouthshire  
Community
Llangybi  
Easting
336927  
Northing
197303  

Broad Class
Gardens, Parks and Urban Spaces  
Site Type
Terraced garden, walled garden, avenue.  
Main phases of construction
Late seventeenth to early eighteenth century.  

Description


Summary Description and Reason for Designation
Registered for the survival of a late seventeenth/early eighteenth century formal layout of terraces, walled garden and avenue associated with Llangybi Castle House (demolished 1951) situated in a former deer park. The registered area has important group value with the grade II listed stable ranges (LB: 26228 & 26229) and scheduled monuments Llangibby Castle and Llangibby Castle Mound (MM109 and MM110). The deer park is described by the Glamorgan-Gwent Archaeological Trust as an extensive 14th century deer park centred on Llangibby Castle and the site of the later Llangibby House containing extensive tracts of woodland bounded by a minor lane and in places by an embanked boundary (GGAT, PRN: 03516). The drive to the house runs west through the park from the park entrance gates and lodge (the lodge is a late nineteenth century addition to the estate) on the Usk-Llangibby road. The axis of the drive is continued east from the road to the River Usk by a great Scots pine avenue known as Llangibby Walks. This was originally planted in about 1707 by Sir Hopton Williams and stretches from the road all the way to the River Usk, a distance of about 1.3km. Continual replacement has retained its original line and character. The gardens lie to the west, south and east of the house site, to the west of the stables and kennels, and to the south of the track leading to Llangibby Castle. To the south and south-east of the house the site has been levelled into two rectangular earthwork terraces. To the east is a sloping grass area planted with ornamental trees and shrubs, and to the west is a natural grass slope bounded by a wall at its west end, and to its north a walled garden with all but its east wall standing. Above this, to its west, is a small area of formal beds on small terraces, and beyond that the wooded hill on which Llangibby Castle stands. The gardens are now derelict. It is assumed that the gardens are contemporary with the late seventeenth to early eighteenth century rebuilding of the house. A map of 1758 refers to orchards, fishponds, garden, fir trees (to the west of the garden), and coneygre, but does not show them in any detail. In 1796 Williams (The History of Monmouthshire, p.294) states that 'the gardens or grounds ... are not assimilated with the country. They are formal, compared with those in England, by Kent, Brown and their disciples.’ The tithe map of 1838 shows the garden layout around the house (parcel 719) much as described above. By the time of the 1880s six-inch Ordnance Survey map, the garden was laid out with straight paths, with an orchard to the south and with the east boundary of the garden nearer to the house site than at present. The drive (now track) takes a straighter course from the stables to the house site than it does now. This would suggest that the eastern part of the garden, informally planted with specimen trees and shrubs (mainly rhododendrons) was created after the 1880s. Planting of trees and shrubs appears to have continued into the twentieth century: ornamental conifers and rhododendrons in particular have been planted on and below the terraces. The 1880s six-inch Ordnance Survey map also shows the layout of the park including the drive, walks, gardens, parkland, woodland, orchards and the fine Scots pine avenue of Llangibby Walks to the east. The walled garden lies immediately to the west of the house site. North, south and west stone walls remain, enclosing a rectangular area. As the house stood to the east there may never have been a wall on this side. There are round-arched doorways in the north and south walls. Above the west retaining wall of the garden is a small area laid out in shallow rectangular terraces, with brick-edged paths. At the south end of this area the south wall of the walled garden continues west for a short distance and there is a door in it leading to the area to the west of the pleasure garden. The motte (MM110) to the east of the stables and kennels is considered as an outlier of the garden, as it was planted with yews, pines and rhododendrons (probably in the nineteenth century) and Bradney (1921) records its flat top as having been used 'for many generations' as a bowling green. The ruins of the masonry castle to the west (MM109) also seem to have been incorporated into the garden as a folly (Wessex Archaeology 2009). By the nineteenth century, the tithe map (dated 1838) records the interior of the castle as Castle Orchard (parcel 368) and the track up to the castle from behind the house is recorded as ‘Road, Plantation and shrubberies, castle’ (parcel 718). Setting: Situated to the north of the village of Llangibby in rural Monmouthshire with the woodlands of Llangibby Park to the west. Significant View: Facing east along Llangibby Walks. Sources: Cadw 1994: Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in Wales: Gwent, 73-74 (ref: PGW (Gt) 27). Williams D, A History of Monmouthshire (1796), p.294, PLXI. Wessex Archaeology (2009) Llangibby Castle, near Usk, Monmouthshire Archaeological Evaluation and Assessment of Results  

Cadw : Registered Historic Park & Garden [ Records 1 of 1 ]




Export