St Aelhaiarn's Church, Guilsfield

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St Aelhaiarn's Church, Guilsfield
St Aelhaiarn's Church, Guilsfield is located in Powys
St Aelhaiarn's Church, Guilsfield
St Aelhaiarn's Church, Guilsfield
Location in Powys
52°41′49″N 3°09′24″W / 52.6969°N 3.1567°W / 52.6969; -3.1567
OS grid referenceSJ 219 116
LocationGuilsfield, Powys
CountryWales
DenominationChurch in Wales
History
Statusactive
DedicationSaint Aelhaiarn
Associated peopleReverend C L Rhodes (vicar)
Architecture
Heritage designationGrade I
Designated25 April 1950
ArchitectGeorge Edmund Street (restoration)
Architectural typeChurch
Groundbreaking14th/15th century
Administration
DioceseSt Asaph
ArchdeaconryMontgomery
DeaneryPool
ParishMission Area of Pool

St Aelhaiarn's Church is an active parish church in the village of Guilsfield, Powys, Wales. The village lies 3 miles to the north of Welshpool. The present church dates mainly from the 14/15th centuries, although parts may date back to the 12th. It was restored by George Edmund Street in 1877–1879. The church is designated by Cadw as a Grade I listed building. Its churchyard, which contains a group of ancient yew trees, is designated at Grade II* on the Cadw/ICOMOS Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in Wales.

Churchyard

St Aelhaiarn's stands in the centre of the village of Guilsfield, which is 3 miles to the north of Welshpool.[1] The present church dates mainly from the 14/15th centuries. There is uncertainty as to the date of the building's original construction. Cadw's listing record ascribes the tower to the 12th or 13th centuries.[2] Robert Scourfield and Richard Haslam, in their Powys volume in the Buildings of Wales series, record the tower as c.1300.[3] Clwyd-Powys Archaeological Trust, which surveyed the church in the 1990s, states that the church is predominantly of the 15th century, with possibly earlier origins.[1] The dedication is to Aelhaiarn, a Welsh saint of the late 6th or early 7th centuries.[1]

In 1877-1879 the church was restored by George Edmund Street at a cost of £6,000, funded by Christ Church, Oxford, then the patron of the living, and the Mytton family, local landowners.[4] The Church in Wales Historic record considers that Street's restoration was undertaken "sympathetically",[4] and Scourfield and Haslam suggest that Street created an interior that is "successfully homogeneous".[3] The Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales (RCAHMW) Coflein nonetheless notes that "many of the original features of the building were swept away".[5]

The church remains an active parish church in the Diocese of St Asaph and regular services are held.[6][7]

The church stands in the centre of a large oval churchyard. This contains a group of ancient yew trees and is designated at Grade II* on the Cadw/ICOMOS Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in Wales.[8]

Architecture and description

St Aelhaiarn's consists of a nave and chancel, a western tower attached, a two-storey south porch and north and south aisles. The building material is mainly local sandstone.[1] The interior contains a font which is thought to be 12th century and stained glass of the 1890s by Heaton, Butler and Bayne.[2] The roof is of particular note; Scourfield and Haslam call it a "very fine Late Perpendicular ceiling",[3] and it contains bosses decorated with Tudor motifs including "circles, triangles and quatrefoils".[5] St Aelhaiarn's is as a Grade I listed building.[2] The churchyard wall and gates are designated at Grade II.[9] A table tomb near to the south gates honours "Richard Jones, gent., who was interred December ye 10th 1707 aged 90" and is also Grade II listed.[a][10]

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