Llanvaches
Llanvaches | |
Monmouthshire | |
---|---|
Church of Saint Dubricius | |
Location | |
Location: | 51°37’0"N, 2°49’0"W |
Data | |
Population: | 365 |
Post town: | Newport |
Postcode: | NP18 |
Dialling code: | 01633 |
Local Government | |
Council: | Newport |
Parliamentary constituency: |
Newport East |
Llanvaches is a village and parish in southern Monmouthshire. It is located roughly midway between the market town of Chepstow and the city of Newport. The village lies just north of the A48 road and below Wentwood, with both Newport city centre and Chepstow about seven miles distant.
History
The village is named after Saint Maches (Latin: Machuta), a daughter of Saint Gwynllyw or Woolos and sister of Saint Cadoc, who according to tradition lived a humble life as a shepherdess in the 5th century but was killed by robbers stealing her finest ram. Saint Tathan, Abbot of nearby Caerwent, to whom the murderers confessed their crime, built a church on the spot where she was killed,[1] which became known as Merthyr Maches and later Llanfaches (the letter mmutating to -f- in the Welsh language).
The parish church largely dates from the 14th century and is dedicated to Saint Dubricius, with Bishops Transcripts dating back to 1725.
Independent Church
The Llanvaches Nonconformist church was founded in 1638 by William Wroth (1576–1642), Rector from 1617. In 1633, King Charles I, advised by the Archbishop of Canterbury, William Laud, reissued the "Declaration of Sports". This listed the sports that were permitted on Sundays and other holy days, and was published to counteract the growing Puritan calls for strict abstinence on the Sabbath day. Wroth defied Charles' instruction to read the Declaration to his congregation, and in 1634 the Bishop of Llandaff reported him to the Court of High Commission, seeking to remove him from his position in the Church. In 1638 Wroth, along with fellow dissenter Walter Craddock, resigned, but continued to preach and gather followers. His preaching became so popular that people travelled from Somerset, Gloucester, Hereford, Radnor and Glamorgan to Llanvaches to hear him, and it became necessary for him to preach in the churchyard because the church was too small to accommodate all those who attended. By 1639, although he had not formally left the Church of England, Wroth is likely to have been ejected from his living. He set up his Congregationalist chapel, "according to the New England pattern", completed in 1639, with the help of the leading Dissenter, Henry Jessey. The historic meeting at Llanvaches in November 1639 marked the real beginning of Non-conformity in Wales.[2] Wroth died shortly before the outbreak of the first English Civil War, and was buried beneath the church porch at Llanvaches.[3] His will, at one time on display in the church vestry, concluded:
- "I leave my body to be buried where ye Lord shall please to call for mee praying him to bring my hoarie-head into the grave in his peace which passeth all understanding"[1]
The original church stood in the neighbouring hamlet of Carrow Hill and was rebuilt in Llanvaches in 1802, when a suitable plot of land was found.[4] In 1854 the great linguist and traveller George Borrow passed the chapel on his walk from Newport to Chepstow, a journey later included in his "Wild Wales".[5] The current Tabernacle United Reformed Church Chapel was built in the 1920s.
Llanvaches Roman coin hoard
In 2006 a hoard of 599 silver denarii, hidden in a locally made cooking pot, was found at Llanvaches by a metal detectorist. The coins, which are dated to about AD 160, are now held at the Roman Legion Museum in Caerleon.[6]
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 Hando, F.J., (1958) "Out and About in Monmouthshire", R. H. Johns, Newport.
- ↑ David Williams, A Short History of Modern Wales (John Murray, 1961).
- ↑ Caerwent Historic Trust
- ↑ "Tabernacle, Llanvaches: Setting the record straight ..." at urc-wales.org.uk
- ↑ The Oldest Nonconformist Chapel in Wales
- ↑ "Llanvaches Coin Hoard at the National Roman Legion Museum". National Museum Wales. http://www.museumwales.ac.uk/en/rhagor/galleries/llanvaches. Retrieved 10 January 2013.