Rockfield, Monmouthshire

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Rockfield
Monmouthshire
The war memorial in Rockfield - geograph.org.uk - 249008.jpg
Rockfield village green and war memorial
Location
Grid reference: SO482149
Location: 51°49’49"N, 2°45’14"W
Data
Population: 183
Post town: Monmouth
Postcode: NP25
Dialling code: 01600
Local Government
Council: Monmouthshire
Parliamentary
constituency:
Monmouth

Rockfield is a small village and ancient parish in Monmouthshire about two miles north-west of Monmouth. It is located in the Skenfrith Hundred, beside the River Monnow, at the junction of the B4233 to Abergavenny and the B4347 to Grosmont. Rockfield Studios is situated just south of the village.[1]

The name, Rockfield is first documented in 1566. However, it is believed that the name dates back to the 11th century, being derived from the French, Rocheville.

Church of St Cenedlon

St Cenedlon church

The village church is dedicated to an early Welsh saint, Cenedlon, who may have been the wife of Arthfael ab Ithel, king of Gwent in the 7th century.[2] Some old sources show it as being also dedicated to St. Kenelm, a 9th-century Mercian martyr.[3] However, the Welsh name Llanoronwy appears to derive from a third name, Goronwy.

The church tower is mediæval, but the rest of the church was rebuilt and refitted in 1859-60 by John Prichard and John Pollard Seddon in the Early English and Perpendicular styles. It contains a painted coat of arms of William III, dated 1700.[4]

It also contains, beneath the altar, the grave of Bishop Matthew Pritchard, the Catholic Vicar Apostolic of the Vicar Apostolic of the Western District between 1713 and 1744. In retirement, he lived with a Catholic family in a mediæval mansion, Perthîr, beside the river; the house was demolished around 1830.[5]

Other notable buildings

Several buildings in and around the village were constructed as part of the Rolls estate. One of the entrance lodges to the family home at The Hendre, two miles to the west, is sited immediately north of the village. Almshouses, provided in 1906 by Lord Llangattock for retired estate workers, are located beside the main road south of the village. They were designed by Aston Webb and built in local Old Red Sandstone with half-timbering.[4] To the north of the village, Pentwyn is a house designed and occupied from 1837 by the Monmouth architect George Vaughan Maddox, and later extended as a parsonage.[4]

Gallery

References

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