Latitude: 52.047 / 52°2'49"N
Longitude: -4.6604 / 4°39'37"W
OS Eastings: 217661
OS Northings: 242072
OS Grid: SN176420
Mapcode National: GBR CZ.FBNV
Mapcode Global: VH2MW.5TL5
Plus Code: 9C4Q28WQ+QR
Entry Name: Church of Saint David
Listing Date: 16 January 1952
Last Amended: 15 April 1994
Grade: II
Source: Cadw
Source ID: 14533
Building Class: Religious, Ritual and Funerary
ID on this website: 300014533
Location: Situated on W side of A478 some 800m S of Penybryn.
County: Pembrokeshire
Community: Cilgerran
Community: Cilgerran
Locality: Bridell
Traditional County: Pembrokeshire
Tagged with: Church building
The church before restoration had 2 pointed Georgian sashes on S side, the big W buttress and the bellcote, and was said to have been rebuilt only 80 years before. The restoration plan proposed retaining the walls, W front, base of the buttress externally, the base of the chancel arch, and the font, and reusing the roof trusses. The contractors were Griffiths & Thomas of Cilgerran.
In the churchyard, standing stone (Scheduled Ancient Monument Pe 143) with small incised quatrefoil or round-armed cross set in a circle, and Ogham inscription interpreted as NEQA SAGROM MAQI MUCOI NECI.
Medieval origins, rebuilt 1812 and again 1886-7 by H Prothero of Middleton, Prothero and Philott, of Cheltenham. Small and low, in rubble stone with Doulting stone dressings and slate roofs. Nave and chancel with bellcote and 1887 N porch and N vestry. Coped shouldered gables. W end big centre buttress with 1887 moulded plinth and coping, and gabled bellcote with two arched openings. N porch with coped gable, Tudor-arched entry and 1887 plaque. One nave 3-light flat-headed Perp style window. Nave S has two similar 4-light windows, and chancel S one similar 3-light. Chancel has 2-light E window, flat-headed with ornate reticulated tracery, and N vestry. Two slate plaques inset into the S walls, one of 1815 the other of 1808.
C20 roughcast cladding, plain chancel arch. Plain wishbone-truss roofs, reused from previous church. Fittings all of 1887 including pews, panelled oak pulpit, tiled floors, with encaustic tiles in chancel, two high-backed chancel stalls given by the architect, H. Prothero, and lectern. Medieval square font with bead moulding to angles, the lower corners slightly rounded. Circular short shaft. No stained glass.
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