St Peter's Church, Carmarthen

St Peter's Church
Eglwys San Pedr

St Peter's Church, Carmarthen

St Peter's Church (2005)
Location Carmarthen
Country Wales
Denomination Church in Wales
Website www.stpeterscarmarthen.org.uk
Architecture
Heritage designation Grade I
Clergy
Vicar(s) The Revd Canon Leigh Richardson [1]

St Peter's Church (Welsh: Eglwys San Pedr) is the Church in Wales parish church for the town of Carmarthen, Wales. Though founded much earlier, the present building dates from at least the 14th century. It is the largest church in the Diocese of St David's[1] and is a listed building.[2]

History

St Peter's Church c. 1860

St Peter's Church is recorded as being transferred to Battle Abbey between 1107 and 1125.[3] The current church building probably dates from later than this, with the nave and chancel dating to the 13th or 14th-century. The south aisle and north transept possibly date to the late 14th-century. The tower was rebuilt a century after that and a porch added at the same time.[2] The nave and chancel were raised and largely rebuilt during the 16th-century.[3]

During the Tudor dissolution of the 1500s St Peter's became the property of the Crown. The Consistory Courts of the Chancellor of the Diocese of St Davids took place at the church and Bishop Robert Ferrar was tried here in 1555.[3] In 1816 the church came under the patronage of St David's College, Lampeter until it passed into the ambit of the Bishop of St Davids in the early 1900s.[1]

Repairs and restorations took place during the 19th-century and the current clock, by E. V. Collier, was added to the tower in 1903/4.[2]

In 1954 the church received a heritage listing[2] as Grade I (though this is contradicted by the RCAHMW and the church's own website, who describe it as Grade II).[1][3]

Description

St Peter's is claimed to be the largest church in Wales[1] and the longest nave in the diocese. The church walls are built from rubble stone with slate roofs. The "landmark" tower at the western end has a square stair turret to its northeast corner and was lime washed in 2001.[2] The south porch was coverted into a war memorial chapel in 1969, its door replaced with a pointed window.[3] The main entrance to the church is via the door at the base of the tower.

Looking east along the nave towards the chancel

The main body of the church consists of a long nave and chancel, separated from the south aisle by five arched bays.[3] Altogether the interior is 52 metres in length from the west tower door to the east window of the chancel, with the nave and south aisle 15 metres in total width.[4] The hammerbeam roofs was replaced by Buckingham Palace architect, John Nash (architect) in 1785, but these were replaced again in 1861 as part of the mid-nineteenth century restorations.[2] Many of the windows were replaced in 1846, or altered during the 1860s. The decorative floor tiling in the chancel and aisles dates from 1866/76 and is by Maw & Co.[2]

There are a large number of important tombs and memorials inside the church.[1] The tomb of Rhys ap Thomas, reputed to have made the fatal blow to King Richard III, is located inside the church.[5][6]

Lychgate viewed from the churchyard

The northwest entrance to the churchyard (in front of the church tower) is via a red sandstone neo-Gothic lychgate and a set of iron gates. The lychgate was designed by Francis E. Jones of London and built in 1879 in memory of the Reverend Latimer M. Jones, vicar of the parish 1863-1877. The gate is Grade II listed.[7]

Closure threat

In 2014 the vicar, Reverend Leigh Richardson, announced that the church had very little financial reserves to draw on and, with running costs of £50,000 per year it was under threat of closure. The church had recently had to pay £20,000 to repair the main stained glass window after damage by vandalism. One possible source of additional visitors and income could be a display about the Black Book of Carmarthen.[8]

In 2015 a fund raising concert was organised, with proceeds shared between the church and charities supported by the Welsh Guards.[5]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "St Peter's Parish Church, Carmarthen – Its History". Net Ministries. Retrieved 2016-01-02.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 "Parish Church of St Peter, Carmarthen". BritishListedBuildings. Retrieved 2016-01-02.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 "St Peter's Church, Carmarthen". Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales. Retrieved 2016-01-02.
  4. Joyce and Victor Lodwick (2002) [1970], St. Peter's Parish Church, Carmarthen: A Guide Book, St Peter's Carmarthen, pp. 5–6
  5. 1 2 Rachael Misstear (8 September 2015). "Descendant of knight who slew Richard III to help save church where his tomb is housed". Wales Online. Retrieved 2016-01-02.
  6. Christopher Wilson (26 March 2015). "Richard III? It's his killer we should really be honouring". The Telegraph (London). Retrieved 2016-01-02.
  7. "Lychgate to St Peter's Churchyard, Carmarthen". BritishListedBuildings. Retrieved 2016-02-11.
  8. "Carmarthen church needs to find £50k to stay open". Carmarthen Journal. 16 April 2014. Retrieved 2016-01-02.

External links

Coordinates: 51°51′29″N 4°18′10″W / 51.8580°N 4.3027°W / 51.8580; -4.3027

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