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.

Summary Description


Reference Number
25526
Building Number
 
Grade
II  
Status
Designated  
Date of Designation
18/07/2001  
Date of Amendment
18/07/2001  
Name of Property
Church of St Catwg  
Address
 

Location


Unitary Authority
Caerphilly  
Community
Gelligaer  
Town
 
Locality
Gelligaer  
Easting
313562  
Northing
196931  
Street Side
 
Location
Fronting the main crossroads in the village centre, within a churchyard which backs onto the site of Gaer Fawr, a Roman Fort.  

Description


Broad Class
Religious, Ritual and Funerary  
Period
 

History
Medieval church adjacent to an important Roman fort; a Roman building is reported from the churchyard. St Catwg c 500-570 is an Early Christian saint and is believed to have occupied the nearby Capel Gwladys (Gwladys traditionally his mother) in c 530 and a C10 stone from here is housed in the church. First priest for this church recorded 1266. Jasper Tudor, uncle of Henry VII and Lord of Glamorgan, donated a peal of bells to church which survived until C17. Parish at one time provided richest income from tithes in the Llandaff diocese. Edward Lewis (d 1728), commemorated here, left fortune to charities which led to the foundation of Lewis School. Roof collapsed 1866. Building restored by Charles Buckeridge for the Revd Gilbert Harries, rector, in 1867-8 and timber came from the latter's estate He promoted immersion fonts in churches to offer an alternative to the locally popular Baptist rite. He was also responsible for building Pontlottyn church near Rhymney. Windows are all believed to have been restored at this time except at N nave. Plaster removed 1903. Further vestry added 1931; existing Lady Chapel was formerly clergy vestry. Gelligaer is one of a group of large northern Glamorgan parishes with medieval hilltop churches, the pattern surviving the later industrialisation of the valleys: original extent of parish was 16,000 acres (6,475.2 hectares).  

Exterior
Parish Church. Plan of W tower, nave with S porch and N aisle, slightly narrower chancel, N vestry and organ chamber. Built of rubble with ashlar dressings, stone slate roof with shallow coping, terracotta ridge tiles, decorative to chancel, and apex crosses. Tower of 2-storeys has embattled parapet with string course with small gargoyles; below are the small paired, arched, louvred belfry lights; clock face to S with string course below; small square lights to tower chamber below; further plinth string course at base; W elevation shows the fomer line of a steep pitched porch roof; pointed arched chamfered W opening with broach stops under a relieving arch, unused since ground level is now substantially lower. SW window of 2 trefoil-headed lights. S porch has kneelers, a wide four-centred chamfered arched doorway with broach stops, no side windows; inside is a flag floor, stone benches to sides, renewed barrel roof, earlier pointed-arched S doorway which is chamfered with broach stops and voussoirs. S nave has 3 windows with narrow trefoil-headed lights, triple either side of porch and 4-light at SE to light former rood screen; buttresses with offsets are at each corner and separate the two easterly bays; attached to wall at SW is a monument to William Phillips died 1807. Chancel has two similar smaller 2-light windows and a blocked priests' door to S; E window is 3-light with geometric tracery under a hoodmould; C18 and C19 slabs against or attached to chancel wall; similar 2-light window to N chancel. Later vestry attached at NE has matching windows; N nave with two 2-light windows, one left unrestored, and similar buttresses, one overlapping a blocked arch; low pitched roof to later NW wing with matching windows; offset to the tower above.  

Interior
Interior has been stripped of plaster. Tower has a vaulted rubble roof; benefaction boards; single bell of 1760 by William Evans of Chepstow; glazed screen with tower chamber opening above. Tiled baptismal pool inside W door installed 1866; plain octagonal font adjacent and on the wall an oval monument to Thomas Williams (d 1782). Celtic cross from Capel Gwladys moved here in 1906, against W wall; nearby at NW are the village stocks. Nave pews have doors. Narrow moulded pointed chancel arch without capitals; on N side is the blocked former doorway to rood screen. Chancel has an elaborate wooden roof with windbraces and scissor trusses, C19. Monument to Rector Revd Gilbert Harris (d 1879) who restored church - a large brass in the sanctuary depiciting a priest carrying the model of a church (possibly Pontlottyn). Tablet to Edward Lewis (see history section). Mosaic reredos commemorating Eleanor Harries (d 1871); wooden chancel panelling incorporating piscina with copper backplate. Stained glass in chancel E window 1867 by Clayton and Bell, in S nave by R J Newberry 1895, in nave N window by Frank Roper later C20. A number of wall monuments mostly from mid C19 on.  

Reason for designation
Listed as a restored medieval church on an important historic site.  

Cadw : Full Report for Listed Buildings [ Records 1 of 1 ]





Export