St Llibio's Church, Llanllibio

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Locationnear Bodedern, Anglesey
CountryWales
Previous denominationChurch of England
St Llibio's Church, Llanllibio
Site of the former church
St Llibio's Church, Llanllibio is located in Anglesey
St Llibio's Church, Llanllibio
St Llibio's Church, Llanllibio
Location in Anglesey
53°18′20″N 4°30′30″W / 53.305590°N 4.508232°W / 53.305590; -4.508232
OS grid referenceSH331816
Locationnear Bodedern, Anglesey
CountryWales
Previous denominationChurch of England
History
StatusChapel of ease
Founded6th century
FounderLlibio
DedicationLlibio
Architecture
Functional statusDemolished
Closed17th century

St Llibio's Church, Llanllibio is a demolished church in Anglesey, north Wales. Founded by Llibio in the sixth century, the church served a small community of bondmen as a chapel of ease. The population of Llanllibio declined substantially during the Middle Ages as a result of the Black Death and changes in farming practice, amongst other factors, and the community that the church served effectively disappeared. As a result, St Llibio's closed in the seventeenth century; the remaining worshippers moved to another local church.

Plans in the nineteenth century to rebuild the church, which was in ruins by 1776, came to nothing. Except for a memorial stone, nothing more than "tiny traces" of St Llibio's can now be seen.[1]

St Llibio's was the church for Llanllibio in Anglesey, north Wales. A survey of Anglesey conducted in 1352 records Llanllibio as a tir cyfrif township, a Welsh form of land tenure in which the inhabitants, who were generally few in number, were bondmen working for the lord in return for a small arable holding and some grazing rights.[2] It was the only tir cyfrif township in Anglesey to have a church.[3] Like many other communities in Anglesey, and elsewhere in medieval Wales, Llanllibio's population decreased substantially during the Middle Ages, and the settlement effectively disappeared. Communities such as Llanllibio were affected by the Black Death, the destruction resulting from the revolt of Owen Glyndwr, by changes in land tenure, and by new farming practices that reduced the need for tied labour.[4]

The parish was on the old road between London and the Anglesey port town of Holyhead, and about 0.8 miles (1.3 km) from Bodedern.[5] The church was dedicated to St Llibio, a sixth-century monk, confessor, and disciple of the Anglesey saint Cybi.[6][7] Llibio himself is recorded as having founded a church on the site, and his feast day was celebrated on 28 February.[6][7] The area took its name from the church: the Welsh word "llan" originally meant "enclosure" and then "church".[8]

St Llibio's was used as a chapel of ease to the Church of St Afran, St Ieuan and St Sannan, Llantrisant, about 1.5 miles (2.4 km) away.[5]

Closure

References

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