Full Report for Listed Buildings
            
            
         
        
        
            
                The list description is not intended to be a complete inventory of what is listed: it is principally intended to aid identification. By law, the definition of a listed building includes the entire building (i) and any structure or object that is fixed to the said building and ancillary to it and (ii) any other structure or object that forms part of the land and has done so since before 1 July 1948, and was within the curtilage of the building, and ancillary to it, on the date on which said building was first included in the list, or on 1 January 1969, whichever was later.
            
         
        
        
        
        
        
            
            
            
            
            
                
                    Date of Designation
                    
19/10/1971  
                    
                 
             
            
                
                    Date of Amendment
                    
26/06/1998  
                    
                 
             
         
        
            
                
                    Name of Property
                    
                        Church of St Hywyn  
                    
                 
             
            
         
        
        
        
        
        
            
                
                    Unitary Authority
                    
                        Gwynedd  
                    
                 
             
            
            
            
            
            
         
        
            
            
                
                    Location
                    
                        Situated in Aberdaron village, the graveyard running to the cliff edge.  
                    
                 
             
         
        
        
        
        
        
            
                
                    Broad Class
                    
                        Religious, Ritual and Funerary  
                    
                 
             
            
         
        
        
            
                
                    History
                    
                        Anglican parish church.  Nave possibly originally C12, lengthened in C14 and probably raised to match new S aisle in late C15 or early C16.  A Celtic clas church founded by St Hywyn in the C5 to C7, it was probably rebuilt by Gryffydd ap Cynan of Gwynedd in the early C12.  First recorded in 1115, it was still a clas church served by secular canons in 1252, but the collegiate status disappeared c1500, and at the Reformation the church was subordinate to the Abbey of Bardsey.  A long period of decline and non-resident vicars led to decay and in 1841 a new church being built inland.  The old one was saved as part of the S aisle had been a school from 1835, and by 1848 its restoration was already proposed, to plans by Henry Kennedy, but completed only in 1868.  Further restoration was done in 1906 by John Williams of Bangor.  The tracery of the two big E windows appears mostly renewed, the 1849 engraving in Archaeologia Cambrensis, shows the northern one entirely blocked.  
  
                    
                 
             
         
        
        
            
                
                    Exterior
                    
                        Parish church, rubble stone with slate roofs, coped gables and nave W bellcote.  Two equal aisles, the N one the original nave with plain flat-topped bellcote and single pointed arch, with bell of 1901.  Both W gables and N wall are windowless.  Rainwater spout inscribed HP 1760 between W gables.  Nave W fine arched doorway of 3 chamfered orders and hoodmould, the triple jambs also chamfered but with ogee-moulded capitals.  Bases hidden.  Doorway is said to be C12 but chamfered detail and capital form suggests C15 alteration or replacement.  N wall has blocked low arched doorway, possibly C12.  Big nave E window was blocked in 1848 and said to be 'Early Pointed', jambs appear original, but C15-style 3-light tracery is C19.  Relieving arch for earlier, possibly C14, narrower window above.  It is suggested that the small size of this window compared to the S aisle E window indicates that it was inserted into a lower gable, raised when the S aisle was built.  S aisle is of one build, c1500, big 5-light E window, Perp tracery, partly renewed.  S wall has c1500 windows, 4-centred arches with hoodmoulds and 3 plain uncusped lights.  2 windows, third to W, is a former door now similar 2-light.
   
                    
                 
             
         
        
        
            
                
                    Interior
                    
                        Plastered walls, arch-braced collar roof of nave probably C19, that of S aisle on hammerbeams is restored but with much original timber.  6 bays.  Fine arcade of c1500, five 4-centred arches of 2 orders with central ogee fillet on octagonal piers with moulded caps and base.  N wall has blocked round arched doorway, possibly C12.  Plain octagonal font on octagonal shaft, c1500.  In chancel 2 inscribed stones found near Gors, Anelog, one inscribed 'Veracius pbr hic iacit' the other 'Senacus prsb hic iacit cwm multitudinem fratrem'.  Ornate timber pulpit and litany desk 1911, altar-rails, lectern, stalls, wood-block floors and chancel marble steps all of 1906.  S aisle has large hanging iron corona with ten candle-branches, C19 or early C20.
  
                    
                 
             
         
        
        
            
                
                    Reason for designation
                    
                        Listed grade I as a medieval church with fine W door and arcade, one of the major churches of the Lleyn.
  
                    
                 
             
         
        
        
        
            
                
 Cadw : Full Report for Listed Buildings  [ Records 1 of 1 ]