Brecon Cathedral

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Brecon Cathedral

The Cathedral Church of
St John the Evangelist

Brecon, Brecknockshire

Status: Cathedral
Brecon-Aberhonddu Cathedral - geograph.org.uk - 524362.jpg
Brecon Cathedral
Church in Wales
Diocese of Swansea and Brecon
Location
Grid reference: SO044289
Location: 51°57’4"N, 3°23’31"W
History
Information
Website: breconcathedral.org.uk

Brecon Cathedral stands in the heart of Brecon, the county town of Brecknockshire. It is the cathedral of the Diocese of Swansea and Brecon in the Church in Wales and the seat of the Bishop of Swansea and Brecon.

Brecon Cathedral was built as the church of Brecon Priory and then served as the Parish Church of St John the Evangelist. It became Brecon Cathedral following the disestablishment of the Church in Wales in 1920 and the creation of the diocese in 1923.

History

Because of the characteristic round shape of its churchyard, the cathedral is thought to be on the site of an earlier Celtic church, of which no trace remains. A new church, dedicated to St. John, was built on the orders of Bernard de Neufmarché, the Norman knight who conquered the kingdom of Brycheiniog in 1093. He gave the church to one of his followers, Roger, a monk from Battle Abbey, who founded a priory on the site as a daughter house of Battle. The first prior at Brecon was Walter, another monk from Battle. Bernard de Neufmarché also endowed the priory with lands, rights and tithes from the surrounding area, and, after his death, it passed to the Earls of Hereford, so giving it greater prosperity.

The church was rebuilt and extended in the Gothic style in about 1215, during the reign of King John.[1] In the Middle Ages, the church was known as the church of Holy Rood or Holy Cross, because it owned a great 'golden rood' which was an object of pilgrimage and veneration until it was destroyed in the Dissolution of the Monasteries in the sixteenth century.[2]

In 1538 the Prior was pensioned off, and the priory church became the parish church. Some of the surrounding buildings were adapted for secular use and others, such as the cloisters, were left to decay and later demolished. By the nineteenth century, the church was in poor repair and only the nave was in use. Some restoration took place in 1836, but major renovation of the church did not start until the 1860s. The tower was strengthened in 1914.[2]

The cathederal is a grade I listed building.[3]

In recent years, some of the buildings in the Cathedral close have been converted into a Diocesan Centre, a Heritage Centre and exhibition, as well as a shop and Pilgrims restaurant.

Charles Lumley (1824–1858), awarded the Victoria Cross during the Crimean War, was buried in the cathedral churchyard [1]

Outside links

References

Cathedrals of the Church in Wales

Bangor  • Brecon  • Llandaff  • Newport  • St Asaph  • St David's