Dwygyfylchi

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Dwygyfylchi
Caernarfonshire

Dwygyfylchi from above Capel Horeb
Location
Grid reference: SH736773
Location: 53°16’37"N, 3°53’46"W
Data
Population: 1,485  (2011[1])
Post town: Penmaenmawr
Postcode: LL34
Dialling code: 01492
Local Government
Council: Conwy
Parliamentary
constituency:
Aberconwy

Dwygyfylchi is a village and ancient parish in the Uchaf hundred of Caernarfonshire. It is part of the civil community of Penmaenmawr which has a population of 4,353.[1] The electoral ward of Capelulo which includes Dwygyfylchi had a population of 1,485 in 2011.

Name

The name Dwygyfylchi is derived from the dwy, "two", and cyfylchi, a word used almost exclusively in placenames meaning a "circular fortress"; it was first recorded as "Dwykyvelchy" in 1287.[2] There are several old fortifications on the surrounding hills.[2] The origin of the name Capelulo, the original settlement, lies in its association with Saint Ulo.

Geography

Approximately half of Dwygyfylchi forms the most northern tip of the Snowdonia National Park. Half a mile to the south-east of the main village lies Capelulo, which lies at the foot of the picturesque Sychnant Pass, which connects Dwygyfylchi to Conwy. The Pensychnant Conservation Centre and Nature Reserve is nearby.[3] Two headlands separate Dwygyfylchi & Penmaenmawr from its neighbours. Towards the east Penmaenbach divides Dwygyfylchi from the neighbouring town of Conwy Morfa and the Conwy Valley leading up to Betws-y-Coed. To the west the larger headland of Penmaenmawr divides them from the town of Llanfairfechan and the wider coastal plain extending to Bangor. To the south an arc of hills and uplands extends east to west from the latter to Penmaen Mawr, beginning with Yr Allt Wen above Dwygyfylchi, Bwlch Sychnant (the old road crosses this pass to Conwy) and Pen-sychnant at Capelulo. The rounded hill of Foel Lys, Gwddw Glas (Green Gorge), Bryn Derwydd and the head of Cwm Graiglwyd and finally Penmaenmawr itself. The coastal plain itself is nearly divided by Trwyn-yr-Wylfa, which also marks the boundary between the "Hen Bentra" or "Old Village" of Dwygyfylchi and Capelulo in the east and Pant-yr-afon and Penmaenan in the west . Finally two small rivers flow through the area. The first and larger, Afon Gyrrach, runs for about 4 miles from the northern slopes of Tal-y-Fan to the sea near Penmaenbach, passing through Nant Ddaear-y-llwynog ("Fairy Glen") and the old villages of Dwygyfylchi and Capelulo. The second, Afon Pabwyr, runs down from wooded Cwm Graiglwyd then under the town centre, Pant-yr-afon, to the beach.

History

The surrounding landscape is dotted with palaeolithic, mesolithic, neolithic, Bronze Age and Iron Age structures, including cromlechs, standing stones, stone circles and hill forts. Notable Iron Age hill forts in the area are Caer Seion, at the summit of Conwy mountain, and nearby Braich-y-Dinas, one of the largest Iron Age hill-forts in Europe (and comparable with Tre'r Ceiri near Trefor on the Llŷn Peninsula), at the summit of Penmaenmawr. Nothing remains of Braich-y-Dinas, however, as the last remnants were destroyed in the 1920s. The 1868 National Gazetteer of Great Britain and Ireland notes: "In this neighbourhood are a great number of antiquities, consisting of cromlechs and single upright stones, the remains of a British camp, with ditches and ramparts, &c."[4]

About a mile or so north of Dwygyfylchi & Penmaenmawr lies Llys Helig. This has been said to have been the palace of Prince Helig ap Glanawg or Glannog who lived in the 6th century Prince Helig ap Glanawg owned a large area of land between the Great Orme's Head near Llandudno and the Menai Strait off the north coast of Gwynedd. This area was inundated by the sea which has given rise to the legend of the drowned kingdom. The legend states the remains of Llys Helig, said to be his palace, can be seen at exceptionally low tides, this being near the Conwy channel, about a mile or so off the coast at Penmaenmawr. The earliest known use of the name Llys Helig regarding this rock formation is the Halliwell Manuscript which is believed to date to around the beginning of the 15th century, nine centuries later.[5] The Llys Helig rock formation is a glacial moraine left behind by previous subsequent ice ages.[5][6][7] There is a fish weir south of this which tradition dates to the beginning of the 6th century which was used up until the early 20th century.[8] The sea level was low enough around 1600 AD to make the claims of Sir John Wynne of Gwydir feasible.[5][6][8]

The Church in Wales parish church, dedicated to St Gwynin or Gwynan, was built between 1888 and 1889. The pews of the present church were made from the roof timbers of the earlier church building constructed in 1760, the foundation stone of which was preserved and mounted on the vestry wall of the present church, where it can still be seen. St Gwynin's gwyl mabsant (Patronal Festival) is December 31. Dwygyfylchi is also associated with Saint Ulo, Capelulo at the foot of Sychnant reputedly having been the site of an early medieval church. In 1851, in addition to the parish church, with a congregation of 80 and 20 scholars, the village had also a Wesleyan Methodist chapel at Penmaenmawr (erected 1841), a Welsh Calvinistic Methodist one at Pen y cae Chapel (erected 1818, rebuilt 1840), and a Horeb Nonconformist (Independent) chapel (erected 1813).[9]

Amenities, clubs and societies

Penmaenmawr Golf Club has a 9-hole course located between Dwygyfylchi and Capelulo. Near to this is Dwygyfylchi Bowling Club. Penmaenmawr Phoenix F.C. plays in the Clwyd Premier League and is located between Dwygyfylchi and Penmaenmawr. This as one of only two roundabouts on the A55.

At the top of the Sychnant Pass is Pen Sychnant Nature Reserve, a conservation area of 12 acres with mature shrubs and woodland.

The parish church of St Gwynin, at the centre of the village

Transport

Bus

Bus services 5 and X5 run every 15 minutes between Caernarfon and Llandudno; eastbound, service X5 serves Deganwy and Maesdu and service 5 serves St Gwynan's (for Dwygyfylchi) and Craig-y-don; westbound, both services serve Bangor and Port Dinorwic.

A Saturday service (service X2) runs direct from Penmaenmawr, eastbound to Llandudno and westbound to Llanberis (via Bangor).

The Conwy Clipa service 75 runs between Llanfairfechan and Llandudno.

Road

Dwygyfylchi lies on the route of the A55 Expressway providing access at Junction 16 and at 16A to Penmaenmawr to and from the rest of the north coast. Junction 16 is one of just two roundabouts on the A55 between Chester and Holyhead and is due to be replaced by a grade separated interchange. A mountain route through Capelulo links the towns to Conwy via Sychnant.

References

  1. 1.0 1.1 "Area: Penmaenmawr (Parish), Key Figures for 2011 Census: Key Statistics". Neighbourhood Statistics. Office for National Statistics. http://www.neighbourhood.statistics.gov.uk/dissemination/LeadKeyFigures.do?a=7&b=11127485&c=Penmaenmawr&d=16&e=62&g=6489329&i=1001x1003x1032x1004&m=0&r=1&s=1402352821581&enc=1. 
  2. 2.0 2.1 Owen, Hywel W. (2015) The place-names of Wales, University of Wales Press
  3. "Pensychnant Conservation Centre and Nature Reserve" at V
  4. Genuki
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 Cyril Fox and Bruce Dickins, ed (1950). The Early Cultures of North-West Europe. Cambridge University Press. p. 230. 
  6. 6.0 6.1 Bird, Eric (2010). Encyclopedia of the World's Coastal Landforms. Springer. ISBN 978-1402086380. 
  7. Steers, J.A. (1969). The Sea Coast. HarperCollins. ISBN 978-0002132046. 
  8. 8.0 8.1 Bannerman, N. V. Campbell. "Flood, Folklore and Fishweirs". http://www.nbannerman.co.uk/Flood_Folklore_and_Fishweirs.pdf. 
  9. Religious census of 1851: A Calendar of the returns relating to Wales, Vol 11, North Wales. Ieuan Gwynedd Jones (ed), UWP, 1981.

Outside links

("Wikimedia Commons" has material
about Dwygyfylchi)