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
31/05/1962
Date of Amendment
20/01/2005
Name of Property
Church of St David
Location
In a churchyard above and on the W side of the main road through the hamlet.
Broad Class
Religious, Ritual and Funerary
History
A medieval church, of which the nave is possibly C13, but the chancel is later. The church was restored in 1903 and repaired in 1958 by G Pace, architect, who rendered the exterior.
Exterior
A simple Gothic style church comprising nave with a wider chancel, of whitened roughcast walls and slate roof with overhanging eaves. The nave has a medieval pointed S doorway with continuous chamfer, and a boarded door. To its R is a 2-light Decorated window. The chancel S wall has 2 pointed lights and a boarded door R of centre. Three stepped cusped lights form the E window. On the N side are 3 pointed lights, one to the chancel and 2 to the nave. The W wall has a plain 2-light square-headed window. The gabled W bellcote stands in line with the nave. It has a roughcast W side, but the remainder is weatherboarded.
Interior
The 4-bay nave roof has 3 arched-brace trusses with tie beams, of which the E is plastered above the collar and the tie beam acted as the rood beam, and a queen-post truss at the W end supporting the bellcote. The roof has 2 tiers of diagonal braces. The chancel has a similar 3-bay arched-brace roof, with 2 tiers of uncusped windbraces and cambered tie beams. In the S wall is a simple corbelled piscina.
A rood screen is reconstructed and does not quite span the width of the nave. It has a central doorway flanked by slender pinnacled shafts, but the intricate tracery above the doorway is mostly missing. To the L and R are 3 bays retaining delicate cusped tracery heads, and boarded dado. The coving is missing, but a moulded beam was probably the original bressumer.
The plain round tub font, C12 or C13, stands on a later plinth. Pews, choir stalls, polygonal pulpit and communion rail on iron uprights are simple early C20 work. In the S wall is a tablet commemorating Thomas Sheen (d 1822) on a corbelled apron.
Reason for designation
Listed grade II* for its special architectural interest as a well-preserved small medieval parish church with an especially fine interior.
Cadw : Full Report for Listed Buildings [ Records 1 of 1 ]