Cribinau: Difference between revisions

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The island is joined to the Isle of Anglesey at low tide and can be reached on foot at low water.
The island is joined to the Isle of Anglesey at low tide and can be reached on foot at low water.


On Cribinau stands the 13th-century [[Church in Wales]] church of St Cwyfan, called in Welsh “’’eglwys bach y mor’’” ("the little church in the sea").
On Cribinau stands the 13th-century [[Church in Wales]] church of St Cwyfan, called in Welsh "''eglwys bach y mor''" ("the little church in the sea").


==Church==
==Church==

Latest revision as of 16:42, 3 September 2015

Cribinau

Anglesey


Cribinau and St Cwyfan's church from the air
Location
Location: 53°11’6"N, 4°29’35"W
Grid reference: SH336682
Data

Cribinau is a small tidal island off the south west coast of the Isle of Anglesey, between Porth China and Porth Cwyfan. The island is half a mile from Aberffraw, and it its parish.

The island is joined to the Isle of Anglesey at low tide and can be reached on foot at low water.

On Cribinau stands the 13th-century Church in Wales church of St Cwyfan, called in Welsh "eglwys bach y mor" ("the little church in the sea").

Church

St Cwyfan's church was in existence by 1254 and was enlarged in the 14th and 15th centuries.[1] The building later fell into disrepair, and in the 19th century parts of the church were demolished.[1] By 1891 the surviving part was roofless, so an appeal was launched which paid for the building of a new roof.[1] In about the 1970s all the windows were restored, but now the building is deteriorating again and a new restoration appeal has been launched.[1]

Sea erosion

A Jacobean map dated 1636 shows the church standing on the mainland of Anglesey.[2] Written evidence submitted in 1770 in the case against Dr Thomas Bowles (see below) says that the road from Aberffraw to Llangwyfan was bad, but makes no mention of the tide restricting access to the church.[3] Therefore it seems to be after that date that sea erosion of the boulder clay cliffs turned Cribinau into an island. By the 19th century, erosion was causing graves in the churchyard to fall into the sea, so a seawall was built around the island to protect the remaining graves and the church.[1]

Welsh language controversy

Cribinau and its Little Church in the Sea

By 1766 St Cwyfan, Llangwyfan was a chapelry of the parish of St Beuno, Trefdraeth.[3] In that year John Egerton, Bishop of Bangor, appointed an elderly priest, Dr Thomas Bowles, to the parish and chapelry, though Bowles could speak no Welsh.[3][4] Between them the parish and chapelry had about 500 parishioners, of whom all but five spoke only Welsh, while Bowles spoke only English.[3][4]

The parishioners and churchwardens of Trefdraeth petitioned against Bowles' appointment, with the Honourable Society of Cymmrodorion supporting and helping to fund their case.[3][4] The Court of Arches heard evidence in the case in May 1770 but did not hear the prosecution and defence arguments until January 1773.[3][4]

The prosecution argued that Bowles' inability to minister in Welsh contravened Article XXV of the Articles of Religion, the Act for the Translation of the Scriptures into Welsh 1563 and the Act of Uniformity 1662.[3] The defence argued that the prosecution would have to prove that Bowles was totally incapable of speaking any Welsh at all, and even if they did so Bowles had lawfully been granted the living and therefore could not be deprived of it.[3]

The case was judged by Dean of Arches, George Hay.[3] In January 1773 he ruled that only clergy who could speak Welsh should be appointed to Welsh-speaking parishes, and Bowles should not have been appointed, but he now held the ecclesiastical freehold of the benefice and the case to deprive him of it had not been proved.[3] He therefore let Bowles stay in post, which he did until he died in November of that year.[3] Bowles was then replaced in the parish and chapelry with Richard Griffith, a priest who spoke Welsh.[3]

Current use

The church remains in use and is popular for weddings and baptisms.

Outside links

References