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Visitor information

location

Llanfaglan
Caernarfon
Gwynedd
LL54 5RA

calendar

Open daily

OS grid reference

SH455606

info

St Baglan’s is reached across a field which is part of an active farm. From time-to-time, there may be livestock in this field so please do proceed respectfully and cautiously.

St Baglan's is small and steeped in history. From the circular churchyard, the 6th-century inscribed stone, the "pirate" grave, the cross slabs, medieval roof and Georgian pews, it's a deeply special place.

A clump of gnarled oaks stretch their branches protectively around the church. On the doorstep, the sea breathes rhythmically, slow and deep.

About St Baglan's, Llanfaglan

St Baglan’s church stands in splendid isolation in a wonderfully romantic position overlooking Caernarfon Bay reverberating with echoes of the renowned Mabinogion tales.

The churchyard is well worth exploring – its form suggests pre-Christian origins and there is unpretentious vernacular charm in the boundary wall, the entrance gate with the churchwarden’s inscription and the range of slate headstones and chest tombs – not forgetting the “pirate grave”, popular in local folklore.

In its earliest walling, the church dates from the thirteenth century but it took four more centuries to acquire its present configuration.

As you enter the church do look at the shelf and lintel of the eastern wall of the porch. Here you will find two cross-slabs dating from c. 14th-century. Both stones are carved with crosses, but the lower slab also carries the image of a ship.

On the inside, above the door, you’ll find an extremely early re-used carved stone of the fifth or sixth century that has been reused as a lintel. This is inscribed with “Fili Lovernii Anatemori” these are Latinised forms of the Brythonic names Lovernius and Anatemorus. In its correct upright position, it would read Anatemori Fili Lovernii.

The church interior is evocative of eighteenth-century social life in the mixture of modest open-back seating and the grander box-pews for the wealthier villagers, including one from Ynys Môn (Anglesey), who as you will see often added their own date and signature.

In 2022-23 a Maintenance and Minor Repairs grant from Cadw enabled us to refresh the church’s golden ochre limewash and undertake ironmongery repairs to hinges, pintles and handles on the south door.

St Baglan, Llanfaglan
St Baglan, Llanfaglan

Highlights

  • The arch in the porch formed from shortened medieval roof trusses
  • Cross slabs with ship graffiti in the porch
  • 5th/6th-century inscribed slab reused as a lintel over the south door
  • Seven-sided font
  • A variety of Georgian pews
  • Gravestone with skull and crossbones (memento mori) in the churchyard

Further information

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