Pen y Bryn
Pen y Bryn | |
---|---|
General information | |
Type | Manor House |
Location | Abergwyngregyn, Aber, in Gwynedd, north Wales |
Coordinates | 53°14′05″N 4°00′42″W / 53.234676°N 4.011712°WCoordinates: 53°14′05″N 4°00′42″W / 53.234676°N 4.011712°W |
Construction started | before the early 1600s |
Pen y Bryn is a two-storey manor house, in Abergwyngregyn, Gwynedd, in north-west Wales, adjacent to the A55, five miles east of Bangor, eight miles west of Conwy. It is constructed mainly of broken stone, with roughly dressed quoins and a slate roof. The house is situated within Garth Celyn, a double bank and ditch, overlooking the Menai Strait to Anglesey. A smaller house was immediately adjacent in 1811 when Sir Richard Colt-Hoare recorded it; this was demolished by 1815. The present structure incorporates a four-storey stone tower. The present roof timbers were dated by dendrochronology to 1624, when the house was refurbished. There is evidence of long use with multiple rebuildings before 1624, but there is disagreement on the duration and nature of its mediaeval use.
Construction history
In 1303–06 building works at "Aber" were carried out on a large scale, including the importation of broken stone and of lime for mortar. The remains of the other candidate for such work, the high-status early mediaeval site, on and near the mound known as the Mŵd, do not now have masonry of broken stone and may not have been large enough to justify the quantities of material recorded.[1] In 1553 Rhys Thomas and his wife Jane acquired the house from the Crown. The present roof timbers were felled between 1619 and 1624.[2] Six phases of the building have been identified, suggesting a long history before the present roof timbers were put on.[3] The tower may be a slightly later addition, and there were further additions in the early eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.
Garth Celyn
The modern Garth Celyn is defined by the Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales (RCAHMW) as a series of features, including the house Pen y Bryn itself, a large 'barn', and earthen terraces and scarps, collectively interpreted as an enclosure 90–100 metres across.[4] The name "Garth Celyn" may be translated as "Holly Enclosure" or "Holly Hill"[5] in Welsh. "Celyn" is also an element of local field names and of Hafod Celyn up the valley.[6][7] The use of the term "Aber Garthcelyn" has changed through time; as late as 1725, it could refer to the entire parish.[8]
Modern Garth Celyn has been scheduled by the Ancient Monuments Board as 'a site of National Importance'. An excavation was undertaken in 1993 by the Gwynedd Archaeological Trust. The complex included other structures, including a barn or gatehouse (possibly rebuilt about 1700 on earlier stonework) and the present tower.[9]
Claims that the early mediaeval royal palace was located on this site
The Garth Celyn Trust exists to "protect and preserve Garth Celyn for the benefit of present and future generation (sic), to create a lasting memorial to the Princes and their achievements".[10] The Trust identifies modern Garth Celyn as the site of the royal llys (palace) in the 13th century and the centre of government before the Conquest, and suggests that many notable events in Welsh history occurred here.[11][12][13] There are local traditions pointing to Pen y Bryn / modern Garth Celyn / Bryn Llywelyn as the site of the royal llys.[14] These claims are part of a local disagreement.[15][16][17]
A royal llys of the Welsh princes was located at Abergwyngregyn; in November 1282 Prince Llywelyn ap Gruffudd dated letters to the archbishop of Canterbury at "Garth Kelyn".[18] In 1537 John Leland reported "The Moode, in the paroche of Aber otherwise Llan Boduan, wher Tussog Lluelin uab Gerwerde Trundon (sic) had a castel or palace on a hille by the Chirch, wherof yet parte stondith."[19] Remfry argues from this that the site of the llys was supposed in 1537 to be on the nearby hill where Pen y Bryn now stands, some 185 metres from the church and the Mŵd in the centre of the village.[20]
A high-status structure, associated with 13th and 14th century material and thought to be the royal llys with its domestic and administrative buildings, has been found in the valley bottom, on the other side of the river and some 185 metres from Pen y Bryn.[21][22][23] It is by the mound known as y Mŵd, near which in 1811 visible remains were locally supposed to be the palace of the Welsh Princes.[24]
References
- ↑ A Brief Report on Pen y Bryn and Aber, Gwynedd. Paul Martin Remfry. Castle Studies Research & Publishing Astudiaethau Castell Ymchwil A Cyhoeddi. 2012. page 110-112. http://www.castles99.ukprint.com/PenyBryn.pdf accessed 5 November 2012
- ↑ Main range tree-ring dated 1619–24. Tree-ring dating commissioned by the North-west Wales Dendrochronological Project in association with RCAHMW, and reported in Vernacular Architecture 41 (2010), p. 114: ABER, Pen-y-bryn (Garth Celyn) (SH 6582 7273) Felling date range: 1619–24.
- ↑ A Brief Report on Pen y Bryn and Aber, Gwynedd. Paul Martin Remfry. Castle Studies Research & Publishing Astudiaethau Castell Ymchwil A Cyhoeddi. 2012. page 6. http://www.castles99.ukprint.com/PenyBryn.pdf accessed 5 November 2012
- ↑ ENCLOSURE & ASSOCIATED STRUCTURES AT PEN-Y-BRYN, A
- ↑ http://www.aber.ac.uk/~gpcwww/pdf/GPC0018-05.pdf
- ↑ A Brief Report on Pen y Bryn and Aber, Gwynedd. Paul Martin Remfry. Castle Studies Research & Publishing Astudiaethau Castell Ymchwil A Cyhoeddi. 2012. page 94. http://www.castles99.ukprint.com/PenyBryn.pdf accessed 5 November 2012
- ↑ Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales, HAFOD CELYN, SETTLEMENT http://www.coflein.gov.uk/en/site/26568/collection/HAFOD+CELYN,+SETTLEMENT accessed 11 November 2012
- ↑ A Brief Report on Pen y Bryn and Aber, Gwynedd. Paul Martin Remfry. Castle Studies Research & Publishing Astudiaethau Castell Ymchwil A Cyhoeddi. 2012. page 113. http://www.castles99.ukprint.com/PenyBryn.pdf accessed 5 November 2012
- ↑ PEN-Y-BRYN, BARN, ABER
- ↑ Ymddiriedolaeth Garth Celyn / Garth Celyn Trust accessed 11 November 2012
- ↑ Historical background. Ymddiriedolaeth Garth Celyn / Garth Celyn Trust accessed 10 November 2012
- ↑ Pen Y Bryn, The Prince's Tower
- ↑ BBC history team solves riddle of Llywelyn. By Ben Fenton. The Telegraph. 31 Jan 2006. Accessed 12 March 2011.
- ↑ Tystiolaeth Garth Celyn. Gweneth Lilly, Llanfairfechan. Y Traethodydd, Cyf. CLIII (644–647) 1998 pages 145–147. accessed 21 November 2012
- ↑ (free site) , (formal archive, paysite) "It's my duty to Welsh history to prove that Llywelyn the Great lived in my house" Ian Skidmore, Daily Post, Monday, 19 November 2001
- ↑ Keep an open mind on princes’ palace site. Western Mail letters: Wednesday, 28 November 2012. "We believe that the Garth Celyn Trust’s fierce promotion of Pen y Bryn as the site of the “palace” of the Princes of Gwynedd is highly partisan and obstructs historical debate... In the absence of convincing evidence to support the contention that Pen y Bryn is the actual site of the Llywelyns’ “palace”, we and many others believe that the available evidence favours the site in the centre of the village, excavated in the 1990s and 2010–11. We would therefore urge those interested in the history of the Princes of Gwynedd and Abergwyngregyn to keep an open mind." HYWEL THOMAS and GAVIN GATEHOUSE Abergwyngregyn Regeneration Company and Tirwedd Dyffryn Aber, DEWI HOLLAND ROBERTS Abergwyngregyn Community Council http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/letters-to-the-editor/western-mail-letters/2012/11/28/western-mail-letters-wednesday-28-november-2012-91466-32319633
- ↑ Western Mail Letters. A project to share, by John Davies: "I find it sad that three individuals who have refused to visit Garth Celyn and examine the site and the evidence for themselves, continue to hurl invidious remarks in that direction". 30 November 2012. http://www.walesonline.co.uk/news/wales-news/the-evidence-on-princes-palaces-2019345
- ↑ A Brief Report on Pen y Bryn and Aber, Gwynedd. Paul Martin Remfry. Castle Studies Research & Publishing Astudiaethau Castell Ymchwil A Cyhoeddi. 2012. page 3. http://www.castles99.ukprint.com/PenyBryn.pdf accessed 20 November 2012
- ↑ The itinerary of John Leland in or about the years 1535–1543. parts I to [XI] Edited by Lucy Toulmin Smith. With a foreword by Thomas Kendrick. Published 1964 by Southern Illinois University Press in Carbondale. Digitized by Google https://archive.org/stream/itineraryjohnle00lelagoog#page/n100/mode/2up
- ↑ A Brief Report on Pen y Bryn and Aber, Gwynedd. Paul Martin Remfry. Castle Studies Research & Publishing Astudiaethau Castell Ymchwil A Cyhoeddi. 2012. pages 93–94. http://www.castles99.ukprint.com/PenyBryn.pdf accessed 5 November 2012
- ↑ THE LLYS AT ABER, HOUSE EXCAVATED AT PEN Y MWD accessed 21 Feb 2011
- ↑ ABER CASTLE OR PEN-Y-MWD MOUND
- ↑ John Roberts, archaeologist for the Snowdonia National Park Authority. Final viewing for Abergwyngregyn's Welsh princes site at news.bbc.co.uk
- ↑ A topographical dictionary of the Dominion of Wales by Nicholas Carlisle. London, 1811. Pages 1–2. "In the village is an artificial mound of earth about 15 feet high and about 15 yards in diameter nearly circular... A small portion of old building is pointed out near this mound as the only remaining vestige of the palace of Llywelyn ap Jorwerth Drwyndwn, the last prince who resided at Aber." https://archive.org/stream/walestopographic00carluoft#page/1/mode/2up