Penterry

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Penterry
Monmouthshire
St Marys, Penterry, Churchyard cross - geograph - 2126838.jpg
St Marys, Penterry, Churchyard cross
Location
Location: 51°41’6"N, 2°41’50"W
Data
Post town: Chepstow
Postcode: NP16
Dialling code: 01291
Local Government
Council: Monmouthshire
Parliamentary
constituency:
Monmouth

Penterry is a small rural ecclesiastical parish of 479 acres in Monmouthshire. It is located between the villages of St Arvans and Tintern, about four miles north of Chepstow, within the Wye Valley Area of Outstanding Natural Beauty and about two miles from the border with Gloucestershire. It now contains an isolated parish church adjoining the site of a deserted village, and a few farms.

History

The first evidence of human habitation in the parish is a hill fort at Gaer Hill.[1] This provides a panoramic and strategically important view towards the Severn estuary, and is believed to have been an Iron Age base and lookout point for the Silures.[2] Because of its similarities with another monument on Holyhead Mountain in Anglesey, it is thought possible that the inner earthwork is a Roman signal station lying within an earlier defensive enclosure.[3][4]

Although the area is now quite remote, Penterry was originally located beside the Roman road (locally called Piccadilly) between the Severn estuary in the south and the small fort at Blestium, now Monmouth. The ancient road was superseded in later centuries, other than for local traffic, by that through Devauden to the west (now the B4293), and in the 19th century by the turnpike road through Tintern to the east (now the A466).

The church at Penterry is dedicated to St. Mary, and is located in an isolated position within a field. It was first mentioned in a charter in AD 955. By the 13th century part of the parish had become a grange of nearby Tintern Abbey.[5] In some documents the grange is described as a Secular Firmary, suggesting that it either housed or maintained a hospital for local people.[6] Its distance from the abbey - about a mile - may have been to guard against the spread of infection.[5] The present church was largely rebuilt in the mid-19th century, but retains two mediæval windows and the base of a stone cross.[4]

The area is believed to have been severely affected by the Black Death, and a grove of trees near the church has been identified as a plague pit. The remains of house platforms and gardens can still be seen under the turf in the field south of the church.[7]

The local population again declined during the 19th century, because of a fall in demand for labour to work in the nearby woods.[2] The parish had 60 residents in 1821, but only 20 in 1911.[8]

References

  1. The toponym pen— in the British Isles signifies "hill".
  2. 2.0 2.1 Joseph Bradney, A History of Monmouthshire: The Hundred of Caldicot, 1933
  3. Wye Valley AONB
  4. 4.0 4.1 John Newman, The Buildings of Wales: Gwent/Monmouthshire, 2000, ISBN 0-14-071053-1
  5. 5.0 5.1 D. H. Williams, The Welsh Cistercians
  6. Tintern to Penterry Circular Walk, Monmouthshire County Council, n.d.
  7. The Cistercian Way
  8. Raymond Howell, Fedw Villages: A Lower Wye History, 1985, ISBN 0-946043-10-8

Outside links