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Laleston
LALESTON, a parish, in the union of Bridgend and Cowbridge, hundred of Newcastle,
county of Glamorgan, in South Wales, 1½ mile
(W.) from Bridgend; comprising the Upper and
Lower hamlets, and containing 507 inhabitants, of
which number 293 are in the Upper, and 214 in the
Lower, hamlet. This parish derives its name from
Lalys, a native of Palestine, and an eminent architect, whom Richard de Granville brought over with
him on his return from the Holy Land, and employed to build the abbey of Neath in this county.
As a reward for the ability which he displayed in his
erection of that magnificent structure, Richard bestowed on him this manor, to which Lalys gave his
name, and on which he resided, until, after erecting
several churches and castles in the principality, he
was appointed architect to Henry I., and removed to
London. In 1226 the "town of Lagelstune" was
burned by the Welsh. The village bears every appearance of antiquity; the windows of the houses
are square, and the doorways arched with stone:
near the church is a handsome residence. In the
Upper division of the parish are extensive collieries,
in full operation: iron-ore also abounds, but it is
not worked to any great extent. A fair for cattle
is annually held in the village on the second Monday
in March. The living is consolidated with the
vicarage of Newcastle: the church, dedicated to St.
Illtyd, is a spacious and venerable structure, the
tower of which was built by Lalys. There is a place
of worship for Calvinistic Methodists; and one or
two Sunday schools are held. Thomas Bennet, of
Laleston House, Esq., in 1762, bequeathed the sum
of £52. 10., vested in the Bridgend turnpike trust,
the interest of which is distributed annually at Christmas among the poor not receiving parochial relief;
and £600, to be appropriated in equal portions to
repairing and beautifying the churches of Laleston,
Newton, and Pyle, which was carried into effect by
his executors.
Lambston
LAMBSTON, a parish, in the union of Haverfordwest, hundred of Rhôs, county of Pembroke,
South Wales, 3½ miles (W. N. W.) from Haverfordwest; containing 319 inhabitants. This parish,
which is situated in the western part of the county,
and at no great distance from St. Bride's bay, is
bounded on the north by the parish of Camrhôs, on
the south by Steynton, on the west by Nolton, and
on the east by St. Martin's, Haverfordwest. It comprises by recent measurement 1760a. 2r. 5p., the
greater portion being arable. The surface is undulated, and the soil for the most part rests on a rabby
substratum; the chief agricultural produce is wheat,
barley, and oats: there is a very small quantity of
woodland. A small rivulet intersects the parish,
and falls into the Western Cleddau. The former
mansion of the principal landowner is now a farmhouse. There are two villages, the larger of which
is called Sutton, and the smaller Portfield Gate.
The living is a perpetual curacy, endowed with £200
royal bounty, and in the patronage of the Master and
Fellows of Pembroke College, Oxford; net income,
£164. The tithes have been commuted for a rentcharge of £140, and there is a glebe of above thirteen
acres and a half, valued at £10 per annum. The
church is a plain structure, affording accommodation
to about ninety persons. There are places of worship
for Baptists and Wesleyans; a Church school; and
two Sunday schools, one of them in connexion with
the Church, the other belonging to the Baptists.
Lampeter (Llan-Bedr) Pontstephen
LAMPETER (LLAN-BEDR) PONTSTEPHEN, a borough, market-town, and parish,
and the head of a union, partly in the Upper division
of the hundred of Troedyraur, but chiefly in that
of the hundred of Moythen, county of Cardigan,
South Wales, 27 miles (E.) from Cardigan, and
203 (W. by N.) from London; containing, with the
hamlet of Trêvycoed, 1507 inhabitants. The name
signifies "the church of St. Peter," the distinguishing appellation of Pont-Stephen having been added
from a bridge over the river Teivy, at the distance of
about half a mile, erected, as has been vaguely conjectured, by King Stephen, in one of his inroads into
Wales. That monarch is also said to have encamped
in a meadow near the river, thence called "The
King's Meadow;" and in an adjoining field was formerly a subterraneous apartment, called "The King's
Cellar," to which led a curious flight of stone steps,
removed some time ago by a farmer, for the sake of
the materials. But from ancient Welsh pedigrees,
the bridge appears to have been the work of an inferior manorial proprietor in this neighbourhood,
called Stephen, whose name was used to designate
this useful erection, and thus became conjoined with
that of the adjacent town and parish.
This seems to have been formerly a place of greater
extent and importance than it is at present, "the
men of Llan-Bedr" being repeatedly mentioned in
terms of distinction in the Welsh Chronicle. To
the south-west of the town is a plot of ground still
called Mynwent Twmas, "St. Thomas' churchyard,"
where fragments of leaden coffins have been frequently dug up; the street leading towards it is also
called St. Thomas' street, and tradition reports the
ruins of the edifice to have been visible about 200
years ago. The ancient lords of the place are represented to have been men of great wealth: their mansion was delightfully situated on the declivity of an
eminence to the west of the town; and some remains
yet exist of a causeway which, according to tradition,
led from it to the western door of the church. The
castle of Lampeter is stated to have been demolished,
towards the middle of the twelfth century, by Owain
Gwynedd, Prince of North Wales, in an expedition
against the Normans and Flemings in Cardiganshire
and the parts adjacent; it is supposed to have stood
in a meadow on the right of the road leading to
Aberystwith, the site being marked by a lofty artificial mound, surrounded by an intrenchment. In
1188, Baldwin, Archbishop of Canterbury, Giraldus
Cambrensis, John, abbot of Whitland, and Sisillus,
abbot of the monastery of Strata-Florida, here successively exerted their eloquence in preaching the
crusades.
The town, which is small, has been much improved by the erection of many good houses on
leases granted by J. S. Harford, Esq., of Peterwell,
who is lord of the manor. It is pleasantly situated
in the beautiful Vale of Teivy, on the northern bank
of that river, which here forms the boundary between
the counties of Cardigan and Carmarthen, and in a
cultivated tract of small extent, surrounded on every
side by mountains of considerable elevation. The
town is amply supplied with water from the river,
and also from springs in the neighbourhood. Its
principal architectural ornament is the College of
St. David, the establishment of which has greatly
tended to promote the prosperity of the place. A
new bridge has been built across the Teivy, and an
act of parliament was obtained some years ago for
the construction of a new line of road from the town
to Llandovery. The inhabitants procure grocery
and various other articles of domestic consumption
from Bristol, which are brought by sea to Aberaëron,
and thence by land carriage a distance of thirteen
miles; coal of a bituminous quality from Newport
and Llanelly, which is brought to the same port; and
stone-coal and culm by land from Llandebie and
Llandyvaen, a distance of about thirty miles. An
agricultural society is supported. The market is on
Saturday: three principal fairs, in addition to others
of inferior note, are held annually on the Wednesday
in Whitsun-week, July 10th, and October 19th. The
parish comprises an area of 5200 acres.
The earliest charter of incorporation of which
there is a copy extant, is that of Henry VI., whose
grant, however, recites others as far back as the reign
of Edward II. That under which the borough is now
governed was granted by George III., in the 54th
year of his reign. It recites that Lampeter was a
very ancient borough, in possession, as well by prescription and custom as by grants and charters, of
numerous liberties, which it had enjoyed from time
beyond memory; and that, as the records and early
documents of the place had been for the greater part
lost, it was necessary to confirm to the burgesses all
their fairs, markets, and other immunities. This the
charter accordingly did, re-constituting the corporation under the title of "The Burgesses of the
borough of Llampeter-Pont-Stephen," and enacting
various regulations for the due election of officers,
and the proper management of the affairs of the town.
The members of the corporation are a portreeve,
town-clerk, beadle or bailiff, and an indefinite number of burgesses. Two courts leet are held for the
borough on days appointed by the steward of the
lord of the manor, the one at Michaelmas, and the
other at Easter; at the former of which the jury, who
are selected by the steward, present to him a portreeve and beadle from among the burgesses: the
office of town-clerk is generally filled by the steward.
The portreeve, by virtue of his office, acts as a
magistrate for the borough, concurrently with the
justices of the peace for the county. The town-clerk
is entitled to a fee of half-a-crown on the admission
of a freeman; and the privileges of the burgesses include the right of common on certain waste lands
comprising about twenty acres, and freedom from the
tolls within the borough, which belong to the owner
of the Peterwell estates. In order to become a
burgess, it is necessary to be presented by the jury
to the steward.
Lampeter is contributory with Cardigan, Aberystwith, and Atpar, in the return of a member to parliament. The right of election was formerly in the
burgesses at large; it is now, by the act of 1832,
for "Amending the Representation of the People,"
vested in the old resident burgesses only, if duly
registered according to the provisions of the act, and
in every male person of full age occupying, either as
owner, or as tenant under the same landlord, a house
or other premises in the borough of the annual value
of £10 and upwards, provided he be capable of registering as the act directs: the number of tenements
of the annual value of not less than £10 is about
fifty, and the total number of voters about 150. This
is one of the polling-places in the election of a knight
for the shire. The powers of the county debt-court
of Lampeter, established in 1847, extend over the
registration-districts of Lampeter and Trêgaron.
The town-hall is a commodious edifice, erected in
1818, at the expense of Richard Hart Davis, Esq.,
lord of the manor: the lower part is appropriated to
the market.
The foundation of St. David's College, at this
place, is to be attributed to the benevolent and indefatigable exertions of the late Dr. Burgess, Bishop
of Salisbury, whose pious exertions for a period of
upwards of twenty years as Bishop of St. David's,
were at length crowned with complete success by the
erection of this noble college, and by securing for
it a respectable endowment. Having represented to
His Majesty George IV. the necessity that existed
for such a foundation, as many of the persons intended and best qualified for the ministry in Wales
could not incur the expenses of a suitable education
at Oxford or Cambridge, he induced that monarch
to enter heartily into the project, by aiding it with
his purse, by bestowing on it several advowsons, and
by granting it a charter, which secured to the college
numerous advantages. The foundation-stone was
laid by the bishop on the 12th of August, 1822, and
the building was completed and opened for the reception of students in 1827, at the expense of about
£20,000. Of this amount, £6000 were contributed
by the government, £1000 by the king, and the
remainder was produced from collections made by
the bishop among the clergy of his diocese and the
public during many preceding years. The site of
the edifice, containing nearly three acres, was purchased for £100; to this above four and a half acres
were subsequently added, at a cost of £400, and the
whole area, with the exception of the ground occupied by the college itself and the house of the viceprincipal, is laid out in pleasure-grounds and walks.
The building, which was erected from a design by
Mr. C. R. Cockerell, is a handsome quadrangular
structure, containing a house for the principal, apartments for the visiter and four professors, rooms for
above seventy students, a chapel, hall, and library,
with the usual collegiate offices; the vice-principal
occupying a detached residence. The library
already presents a collection of 18,000 volumes, of
which half were the gift of the bishop, and is always
accessible to the students under very moderate restrictions.
The charter is dated the 6th of February, 1829,
and after reciting the motives under which the
college was founded, grants to the establishment, in
pursuance of an act previously passed, the advowsons
of the rectories of Llangoedmore in the county of
Cardigan, and Llanedy in the county of Carmarthen,
the vicarage of St. Peter's in the town of Carmarthen,
and the sinecure rectories of Llangeler in the same
county, and Llandewi-Velvrey in Pembrokeshire,
together with all the rights belonging to them. It
declares the college shall be perpetual, for the education of persons destined for holy orders, and shall
consist of a principal, two or more tutors, and the
same number of professors. It appoints the Lord
Bishop of St. David's for the time being, visiter, and
declares that the principal, &c., and their successors,
shall be a body corporate, under the name of the
"Principal, Tutors, and Professors of St. David's
College in the county of Cardigan and principality
of Wales," having a common seal, with license to
hold the above advowsons, and to purchase lands and
advowsons for the use of the college, so that the value
of the further advowsons and lands thus held in
mortmain shall not exceed £4000 annually above all
charges; also to possess charitable bequests and benefactions, and other contributions and gifts; and to
sue and be sued under the said name. The charter
next grants the advowsons to the heads of the college
and their successors, upon trust, to present to the
livings as they shall become vacant, such persons,
being members of the college, as the visiter shall
appoint. It also ordains that the principal, &c., shall
act according to statutes, rules, and ordinances
framed by the visiter for the good government of
the college, with power to the latter to alter the same
so far as the changes shall be in accordance with the
charter, and the laws of the realm. The charter
recites that His Majesty had appointed the Rev. L.
Lewellin, of Jesus' College, Oxford, to be the first
principal, and other persons named, as first tutors and
professors; and declares that on the first vacancy in
the headship, the Regius professor of Divinity, the
Margaret professor of Divinity, and the Greek Professor, in the university of Oxford, shall nominate
two masters of arts either of Oxford or Cambridge,
whom they deem fit to supply the office, and that the
visiter shall select one of them as the principal; that,
on the succeeding vacancy, the like duties shall be
exercised by the same professors in the university of
Cambridge, and so on alternately on every vacancy;
and on their neglect, that the visiter shall appoint a
qualified person. No statutes have been yet drawn
up according to the charter, but provisional regulations, comprising general principles, have been framed
preparatory to the others. The visiter attends annually either in person or by his sub-visiters, of whom he
has the appointment, and who report to him the state
and condition of the college. The establishment at
present consists of a principal, who is also treasurer,
professor of Greek, and senior professor of theology,
with a salary and emoluments amounting to £850;
a vice-principal, who is professor of Hebrew and
junior professor of theology, and has a salary and
emoluments amounting to £650; a professor of
Welsh, with salary, &c., £250; a professor of mathematics, and a professor of natural philosophy. The
two last professorships are merely honorary, or sinecures, the funds not admitting at present of any
salaries. The number of students is about fifty.
Several scholarships have been founded by friends
of the institution. During the lifetime of Dr. Burgess, he paid £40 per annum for the support of four
scholarships of £10 each, chiefly derived from funds
supplied by individuals who selected the bishop as
the channel of their bounty. The principal source
of these was, a bequest of £100 and a share in the
Regent's canal, by Francis Burton, Esq., and £179
bequeathed to the bishop by Mrs. Martha More, for
"his charities in Wales;" the remainder was supplied
from his own purse. At his decease, Dr. Burgess left
£3000 three per cent. consols., of the interest of which,
£40 were to be allotted to the continued maintenance
of the four scholarships above-mentioned, and, after
Mrs. Burgess's death, the residue to be applied in
the endowment of new scholarships, or for such other
purposes as the visiter should think proper. Of
these four scholarships, the bishop directed that two
should be named the Eldon, out of compliment to
the peer of that name, who at the bishop's request
had obtained the benefices connected with the college, from the crown; that the third should be called
the Burton, and be adjudged, like the two first, to
students natives of the principality, who should pass
the best examination in Hebrew, the classics, the
Welsh language, and the evidences of Christianity;
and that the fourth should be called Mrs. Martha
More's, and be open to all the members of the college
for the best examination in the history and contents
of the Bible, and in the evidences of Christianity.
The Van Mildert is an open scholarship, arising from
a grant of £500 by the late Bishop of Durham, now
vested in £545. 14. three per cent. consols., and producing £16 per annum. Another open one of £10,
called the Harford scholarship, proceeds from an
annual grant of that sum, by John S. Harford, Esq.
A further one of similar amount, named the Derry
Ormond scholarship, is the result of a bequest of
£333. 6. 8. three per cent. consols., by the late John
Jones, Esq., of Derry Ormond, in 1832; and another
has been founded bearing the name of the benefactress, from a bequest of £400 three per cent.
consols., by Mrs. Hannah More, in 1830. The
Butler scholarships, of £20 each, arose from a bequest of £2000 three per cent. reduced, by the Rev.
Robert Butler, the interest to be applied to the
general use of the college. The heads of the college
have likewise founded another scholarship, named
the Coity, after the parish in Glamorganshire containing an estate yielding £23 per annum for the
scholarship, purchased for £621, a portion of a larger
amount of £1403, the total of various sums placed at
the disposal of the college. From the same fund a
college scholarship has been formed of £10 per annum, the interest of a sum of £200 lent on the bond
of two individuals, to be adjudged to such student as
exhibits most proficiency. There is a premium for
the best essay in Welsh on any proposed doctrine of
the Gospel, named the "Creaton Essay," arising
from a gift of £200 by the Rev. Thomas Jones, of
Creaton, Northampton; and recently, some scholarships have been founded by Thomas Phillips, Esq.,
of Brunswick-square, London, to whom the college
is also indebted for part of its library.
The funds of the college are aided by a grant from
government of £400 per annum, to continue until
the six livings presented to the college shall produce
£950, which it was calculated would, with the fees,
meet the yearly expenditure of the college: the total
annual receipts are about £3000. A sum of £500
has been presented to the college by Mrs. Burgess,
the lady of the late bishop, towards the erection of a
suitable room, connected with the library, to receive
the 9000 volumes bequeathed to it by her husband.
Of the funds yet unappropriated, but which it is intended shall form a fund for repairs, are, a sum of
£1296 consols., the balance remaining of the buildingfund, after the erection of the college; and a bequest
of £500 by the late Lord de Dunstanville, for the
use of the institution.
Students may obtain a testimonial after a residence
of four years, the first two and a half of which are
chiefly devoted to classical learning, logic as read
at Oxford, and the six books of Euclid; after this
the students undergo an examination, when, if found
to have acquired a sufficient proficiency, they are advanced to the divinity class, in which they continue
for the remainder of the term, employed in theological reading and the study of Hebrew, but at
the same time attending the lectures of the first
division to preserve their classical acquirements.
Each member of the divinity class is required every
week to furnish an analysis of some portion of
Bishop Burnett's work on the Articles, and the students from Wales to compose themes in the Welsh
language; and all in succession are expected to deliver an essay in English on a subject furnished by
the principal, before the whole of the members on
Saturdays, in the college hall. The course of chapel
service is performed alternately in Welsh and English, by the divinity students in rotation, being
limited to a selection from the prayers of the liturgy,
and a chapter of the Bible, morning and evening;
on Sundays two full services are read, and a sermon
preached after each by one of the heads of the college.
The time for residence each year embraces between
seven and eight months, forming two terms, one
commencing on the 1st of March, and the other on
the Friday before Michaelmas. The fees for tuition
are £12. 12. per annum, for rent £5, and the general
annual expense seldom exceeds £48, but each student is expected to make a deposit of £15 at the
commencement as caution money; to pay a guinea
as a matriculation fee; to provide himself with an
academic dress, and to furnish his apartment. The
college is open to all who can pass a certain examination, but it is intended to benefit peculiarly the
inhabitants of the principality. In connexion with it
is a good grammar-school.
The living is a discharged vicarage, rated in the
king's books at £6. 13. 4.; present net income,
£240; patron, the Bishop of St. David's. The impropriate tithes have been commuted for a rentcharge of £229 a year. The church, dedicated to St.
Peter the Apostle, has been entirely rebuilt; it is a
very handsome edifice, consisting of a nave and
chancel, and when the tower shall be completed it
will add greatly to the beauty of the surrounding
landscape. In the chancel are some fine old monuments of the Millfield family; and from it is an
opening to the vault, where repose several of the
Lloyds, of Peterwell. The churchyard commands a
fine view of the Vale of Teivy. There are places of
worship for Independents, Wesleyans, and Calvinistic Methodists; and four Sunday schools, one of
them in connexion with the Church. The poor-law
union of which this town is the head, was formed
May 15th, 1837, and comprises the following fourteen parishes and townships; namely Lampeter-PontStephen, Bettws, Cellan, Llangyby, Llanvair-Clydogau, Llanwenog, Llanwnnen, Silian, and Trêvilan,
in the county of Cardigan; and Llanybyther, Llanycrwys, Llanllwny, Llanmihangel-Rhôsycorn, and
Pencarreg, in the county of Carmarthen. It is
under the superintendence of eighteen guardians,
and contains a population of 9866.
In the town and its vicinity are numerous remains
of military intrenchments, and other works of early
date, monuments of the fortitude and persevering opposition which the Welsh displayed in defending their
territory from the inroads of invading armies. A
little northward of the church is an artificial mound
of earth, supposed to be either a sepulchral tumulus,
or the site of a fortress; and near Olwen is another
artificial elevation, the site of a Roman encampment,
where part of a Roman mill was discovered some time
ago. Eastward of this, on the summit of a hill called
Alltgôch, are the prostrate stones of a Druidical
temple, on one side of which is a Roman camp of
considerable extent, and on the other a British, or
Flemish, encampment, of an oval form, and much
larger. There are traces of other fortifications, and
also of a Roman road which led from Loventium, at
Llanio, to Menevia, at or near St. David's. A house
in the town, called the Priory, is supposed to occupy
the site of a conventual establishment, of which no
record has been preserved; there are some low ruined
walls in the garden belonging to it. In the vicinity
are some mineral springs, but they are not much resorted to.
Lampeter-Velvrey (Llan-Bedr-Felfre)
LAMPETER-VELVREY (LLAN-BEDR-FELFRE), a parish, in the union and hundred of
Narberth, county of Pembroke, South Wales,
3 miles (E.) from Narberth; containing 1025 inhabitants. This parish, which is situated in the rich
and fertile Vale of Lampeter, and on the south side
of the river Marlais, extends for nearly six milesk
from east to west, and about three miles from north
to south. The surrounding scenery is pleasingly
varied; and the place, which is of considerable antiquity, contains several objects of historical interest.
Limestone is found in abundance, and is quarried for
building purposes, and also burnt into lime as a
manure for the supply of the neighbouring country.
The living is a rectory, rated in the king's books at
£10, and in the patronage of the Lord Chancellor:
the tithes have been commuted for a rent-charge of
£470; the glebe comprises 33a. 2r. 28p., valued at
£30 per annum, and there is a glebe-house. The
church, dedicated to St. Peter, is a very ancient
structure, consisting of two aisles separated by plain
pointed arches; in the north aisle is an altar-tomb to
a member of the Philipps family, of Lampeter House.
There are places of worship for Baptists and Independents, with a Sunday school held in each of them;
also a very handsome building erected as a day school
through the exertions of the Rev. William Seaton,
the rector, in 1845. John Jones, M.D., in 1698,
bequeathed certain lands and tenements for the relief
of poor families, and for apprenticing children of the
parishes of Lawrenny, Cosheston, St. David's, and
Lampeter-Velvrey, now producing a considerable
sum annually, which is distributed in proportion to
the number of deserving objects in the different parishes; the ratio for this place being two-sevenths,
and the sum for distribution among the poor generally, £30, which is partly divided between decayed
farmers and poor widows not receiving parochial relief,
in sums of from £4 to £10, and partly applied to apprenticing children, the usual premium being £4.
A posting-inn at the entrance of the county from
Carmarthen, distinguished by the name Tavern Spite,
occupies the site of the ancient "Tavarn y Spytty,"
an hospitium that belonged to Whitland Abbey, upon
the bank of the river Tâf; and Blaengwyddno, now
a farmhouse, was the grange of that religious establishment. To the south-west of the latter place are
some very extensive earthworks, called Castell Meherin, on the summit of a high ridge commanding a
full view of the sea, and forming one of a chain of
forts continued in a north-western direction along
this part of the coast; and in a field adjoining the
turnpike-road, a little to the north-east, are two semicircular embankments, commanding the passage of
three several valleys.
Lamphey
LAMPHEY (called by the Welsh LLANFFYDD), a parish, in the hundred of Castlemartin, union and county of Pembroke, South Wales,
2 miles (E.) from Pembroke, on the road to Tenby;
containing 407 inhabitants. This place, commonly
called Lampha, and so spelled on a communion
salver bearing date 1743, seems to owe its name to
the title of the church; the compound Welsh word
Llanffydd, "the church of the faith," having been
perhaps corrupted by the Flemings to Lanfoi, and
gradually to the modern orthography Lamphey. It
was probably among the earliest of the settlements
of the Normans in South Wales: according to Buck,
as quoted by Grose, it was the head of a lordship
marcher; and it anciently contained one of the
princely residences of the bishops of St. David's, of
which there are considerable remains. At what
period it first became the property of the archiepiscopal, and subsequently episcopal, church of St.
David's is not precisely known; but a deed dated at
Lamphey, in the middle of the thirteenth century,
by Bishop Carew, is still extant; and, according to
Giraldus Cambrensis, it appears to have been the
residence of a bishop in the time of Arnulph de
Montgomery, who possessed himself of this part of
the principality in the reign of Henry I. At least
a great part of the episcopal palace (even the whole
of it, according to some writers) was built by Bishop
Gower, in 1335. The various styles of architecture
which characterize its ruins show plainly that it was
the work of successive periods, and that it did not
attain the splendour for which it was remarkable, but
by the accumulated additions and improvements of
its successive proprietors, of whom Gower probably
built the great hall and the square tower, distinguished for their beautiful open parapets.
This portion of the possessions of the see of St.
David's was alienated to the crown in the time of
Bishop Barlow, by Henry VIII., who granted Lamphey to Devereux, Viscount Hereford, father of the
unfortunate Earl of Essex, whose youth was passed
in this place. After the attainder of the earl, in
the reign of Elizabeth, the estate was purchased by
Sir Hugh Owen, of Orielton, by whose descendant
Sir John Owen, Bart., it was sold to Charles Matthias, Esq., who in 1823 erected a handsome mansion, called Lamphey Court, with a fine portico of
four Ionic columns, near the ruins of the ancient
episcopal palace. Besides this seat, the parish contains
several genteel residences belonging to other families.
Portclew, a mansion rebuilt some years ago, is beautifully situated on an eminence overlooking Freshwater bay, where the fine smooth and firm sands are
alike inviting for walking or riding. Lamphey Park
occupies a pleasant situation on the north side of the
valley, in grounds which contain some pleasing
scenery and are tastefully disposed; and North Down
is also a genteel residence. The house of Lamphey
Park is situated in the midst of what was formerly
the deer-park, of which the boundary wall remains:
the view hence westward is singularly fine, embracing
within half a mile both the venerable ruins of the
palace and the adjacent modern mansion of Lamphey
Court, and further on, the town of Pembroke, its
magnificent castle towering over it, and the river,
as an expansive lake, stretching beyond it in the
distance.
The parish, which in form is nearly a parallelogram,
is washed by the sea on the south side, where is the
picturesque little bay called Freshwater bay, with a
good bathing place. It comprises about 2000 acres
of meadow and arable land in nearly equal quantities.
The village, with its lofty-steepled church built by
the Flemings, stands in a fine valley, screened on the
south from the Atlantic storms by gradually rising
ground, whence a noble view is obtained of the
Bristol Channel, and in tolerably clear weather, of
the opposite coast of Somerset and Devon, together
with Lundy Island: steamers and coasting-vessels
pass close by the rocky promontory forming the west
side of the bay. Limestone of excellent quality is
quarried to a considerable extent for building purposes, and also burnt into lime.
The living is a discharged vicarage, rated in the
king's books at £5. 8. 11½., and endowed with £600
royal bounty; present income, £115; patron, the
Bishop of St. David's. No tithes are payable from
the land in that part of the parish which was alienated
from the see in the reign of Henry VIII., and which
constitutes a large portion of it, including the park,
which alone contains many hundred acres of fine
land. The titheable portion, under the Commutation Act, is subject to a rent-charge of £60 payable
to the bishop, and one of £73 to the vicar, who has
also a glebe of four acres, valued at £12 per annum.
The church was thoroughly repaired in 1826, partly
by subscription, and partly by an additional churchrate, aided by a grant of £100 from the Incorporated
Society for promoting the erection and enlargement
of churches and chapels. Two hundred additional
sittings were obtained, of which, in consideration of
the gift from the society, 135 are for ever free and
unappropriated. A National day and Sunday school
has been established, for which a commodious room,
with a neat cottage for the master, was erected in
1828, by means of a grant from the National Society
of £70, and £50 given by Mr. Matthias, the deficiency being made up by the vicar.
The remains of the ancient palace, nearly adjoining the village, amply display its former splendour.
They consist of the great hall, seventy-six feet in
length and twenty in width, the walls of which are
surmounted by an elegant open parapet of delicate
tracery; another apartment, sixty feet long and
twenty-six wide; the chancel of the chapel, of which
the east window, still entire, is a beautiful composition, enriched with elegant tracery; the grand entrance on the west; and the square tower above
noticed, now inclosed within the gardens of the new
mansion, in which it forms an interesting object. The
greatest attention is paid to the preservation of these
fine ruins, and every precaution has been taken by
the proprietor of Lamphey Court to arrest the decay
into which this venerable pile was rapidly falling
from previous neglect.
Lamva (Llamphy)
LAMVA (LLAMPHY), a hamlet, in the parishes of St. Bride's Major and Ewenny, union of
Bridgend and Cowbridge, hundred of Ogmore,
county of Glamorgan, South Wales, 3 miles (S. E.
by S.) from Bridgend; containing 149 inhabitants in
St. Bride's Major, and 25 in Ewenny parish.
Lantwit-Major, or Llanilltydvawr
LANTWIT-MAJOR, or LLANILLTYDVAWR, a parish, in the union of Bridgend and
Cowbridge, hundred of Cowbridge, county of
Glamorgan, South Wales, 5 miles (S. by W.)
from Cowbridge; containing 1027 inhabitants. This
place, originally called by the Welsh Caer-Wrgan,
derived its subsequent name of Llan-Illtyd, of which
its more general appellation Lantwit is only a modification, from the dedication of its church to St.
Illtyd, or Iltutus; and its distinguishing adjunct Vawr,
or Major, from its pre-eminence over other places of
the same name. The parish, which is of considerable
extent, comprises one of the most interesting districts in South Wales, and appears to have been inhabited from a very remote period; but whether
originally by the ancient Britons or the Romans
cannot be satisfactorily ascertained. Modern writers
are of opinion that the small village of Boverton,
in the parish, was the site of the Roman station
Bovium, placed in the Itineraries on the line of the
Julia Via Maritima, between the stations of Isca
Silurum (now Caerleon) and Nidum (Neath). This
opinion derives weight, not only from the affinity
between the names, and the coincidence of its situation between those two stations, but also from the
course of a Roman road, which has been distinctly
traced, leading to some camps of Roman construction
near that village, where also other relics of Roman
antiquity have been discovered.
In the fifth century, a college was established
here, or rather revived, on the ruins of a more ancient
institution, said to have been founded by the Roman
Emperor Theodosius, which, after his name, was
called by the Welsh "Bangor Tewdws," and in which
the heresiarch Pelagius is said to have been educated.
This more ancient institution was destroyed by a
band of Irish pirates, who, landing on this part of
the coast, are said to have carried away by violence
its principal, Maenwyn, better known as St. Patrick,
the apostle and tutelar saint of Ireland. Soon afterwards, St. Germanus, who was sent into Britain by
the Gallican bishops, to suppress the Pelagian heresy,
is supposed to have been hospitably entertained at
Boverton, where the native reguli continued to reside
occasionally till the overthrow of their power by
Robert Fitz-Hamon; and, associating the old college
of Theodosius with the name of Pelagius, Germanus
selected the site of that institution at Lantwit, then
called Caer-Wrgan, for the foundation of one of those
seminaries for the education of the British clergy,
which he deemed it expedient to erect, as a powerful
means of eradicating this heresy. In the establishment of the institution he was greatly assisted by
the king of the country; and, on its completion, he
placed it under the superintendence of Illtyd, or
Iltutus, who had accompanied him into Britain, and
under whose management it flourished exceedingly,
and was amply endowed by Meuric, Arthur, and
Morgan, successive reguli of this part of Wales.
Scholars flocked to the seminary from all parts
of Christendom, among whom were the sons of British nobles and of foreign princes, besides numerous
others, amounting at one time to more than 2000
pupils. For the accommodation of this large number
there were not less than 400 lodging apartments and
seven halls, or colleges. The course of instruction
adopted by Iltutus embraced not only such sacred and
profane literature as was requisite for clerical education, but also husbandry and other useful arts; and
the common plough now in use in some parts of
Wales is still called St. Illtyd's plough, in honour of
Iltutus, who was regarded as the inventor of it. For
many generations this seminary continued to be the
university of Britain, and to be frequented by illustrious persons of all countries, till its revenue was
transferred to the abbey of Tewkesbury, soon after
the Norman Conquest, when the universities of
England acquired the ascendancy, and that of Iltutus sank into comparative obscurity. That holy
and learned man is said to have presided over the
institution for the protracted term of ninety years;
and among the eminent persons who were his pupils
may be enumerated Gildas, the historian; David,
who removed the episcopal see from Caerleon to
St. David's, and who ultimately became the patron
saint of Wales; Paulinus, Bishop of Leon in Spain;
Samson, successor to David in the see, and afterwards Bishop of Dôl in Brittany; Talhaiarn, a
celebrated bard and a distinguished saint; and Taliesin, an eminent bard. According to Sir Henry
Spelman, a large assembly was convened in the
church of the establishment here, in 560, to negotiate a treaty of peace between Morgan, regulus
of this part of the country, and his uncle Trioc,
whom the former most treacherously slew, afterwards
making his peace with the Church by paying to
this establishment the annual tribute of a pot of
honey and an iron kettle. The school lingered for
a long period in comparative insignificance, and was
not finally closed till the reign of Henry VIII.,
when the remaining portion of its tithes, and an
annual payment called the abbot's rent, being all
that was left to it of its ancient endowments, were
seized by that monarch, and, together with the revenue of the dissolved monastery of Tewkesbury, conferred on the Dean and Chapter of St. Peter's, in
the city of Gloucester, which that sovereign had
recently erected into a bishopric.
The parish is situated on the coast of the Bristol
Channel, in the Vale of Glamorgan, and comprises a
large tract of arable and pasture land, inclosed, and
in a high state of cultivation. The soil, of which
the substratum is a blue limestone, is, for richness
and fertility, almost unequalled in any part of South
Wales; and the surrounding scenery, though not in
general distinguished by any striking peculiarity of
character, is occasionally diversified by features of
picturesque beauty and romantic grandeur. A long
range of hills, running in a direction from east to
west, separates the mountainous parts of the county
from the level districts of the spacious and fertile
Vale of Glamorgan, which is enlivened with numerous villages and churches, and enriched with thriving
plantations embowering some of the seats and villas
of the gentry.
The village, which is situated in the south of this
pleasing Vale, displays obvious indications of its
original extent and importance, and has in every
respect the appearance of a considerable, dilapidated
town. It occupies a large extent of ground, but presents several chasms in its streets, some of which are
nearly choked up with the ruins of decayed houses,
and others are scarcely distinguishable, except by
their situation within the limits of the town, from the
different roads that appear to converge towards this
place, as a common point. The town-hall is still
remaining, and in a state of good repair. It resembles in its appearance those ancient buildings
which in some places are called court-houses, and
church-houses, though of much larger dimensions:
the ascent to it is by a double flight of steps at one
end. Over it is a bell on which the clock strikes,
said to have been presented to St. Iltutus by the pope,
and by Holinshed to have been taken, among other
spoils, by an army which King Edgar, towards the
latter end of his reign, brought into Glamorganshire,
to chastise the Welsh, who had rebelled against him:
on removing this bell, in the year 1815, it was found
to bear the inscription "Ora pro nobis, Sancte Iltute."
The bell itself, however, and the style of its inscription, says a recent writer, prove that it is not the bell
of the saint, but that it was cast at a later period,
when his name had become reverenced. The ancient
gaol has been demolished only within the last seventy
years; and the name of "Gallows way" is still retained in the road where executions usually took
place, and where human skeletons have been found
at various times. But whatever municipal privileges
Lantwit may appear, from these circumstances, to
have formerly possessed, have long been lost, even,
according to some authorities, since the time of
Henry VII. That it formerly carried on a considerable trade with the coasts of Somersetshire appears
evident; and the dialect of that county is said to have
been prevalent here within the memory of men living
at the commencement of the present century. A fair
is held annually on June 22nd. In the vicinity is
the ancient port of Colhow, near Colhugh, where,
during the reign of Henry VIII., vessels frequently
sheltered; though now, by the changes which have
taken place on this part of the coast, it is avoided by
mariners as dangerous. The remains of the ancient
harbour may still be traced, and, notwithstanding
the great encroachment made by the sea, the foundation of the pier, and the piles of wood by which it
was defended on the western side, are still visible at
low water.
Though the village of Boverton is far inferior in
extent and population to Lantwit-Major, yet, as the
seat of the ancient reguli of this portion of the principality, and also as the principal place prior to the
establishment of the schools of Iltutus, it has in all
ancient documents held the precedence, and given
title to the manor, which is to this day in the court
rolls styled the "Lordship of Boviarton and Lantwit." After the conquest of this part of Wales by
the Normans, the manor was held by Robert FitzHamon, from whom it passed to the succeeding lords
paramount of Glamorgan, as part of his great lordship.
It became vested in the crown in the reign of Henry
VII., who granted it to his uncle, Jasper, Duke of
Bedford, by whom it was given to Grufydd Voss,
whose daughter and heiress conveyed it by marriage
to Roger Seys, Esq., from which family it passed by
marriage to Robert Jones, Esq., of Fonmon Castle,
who sold it to the late Elias Vanderhorst, of Bristol.
From him it passed into the possession of John Tunno,
Esq., and in 1838 was purchased by Sir J. J. Guest,
Bart., its present proprietor.
The living is a discharged vicarage, rated in the
king's books at £14. 13. 9., and having the rectory
of Llysworney annexed; present net income, £410;
patrons, the Dean and Chapter of Gloucester. The
tithes of the parish have been commuted for £771.
7. 11., of which a sum of £481. 7. 11. is payable to
the Dean and Chapter, who have also a glebe of
twelve acres, valued at £25 per annum; £220 are
payable to the vicar, and £70 to an impropriator.
The advowson belonged to Iestyn ab Gwrgan, and,
together with the rest of his property, was seized by
Robert Fitz-Hamon, and conveyed with the lordship
of Glamorgan, by marriage of his only daughter,
Mabel, or Mabli, to Robert Fitz-Henry, by whom it
was conferred on the newly-founded abbey of Tewkesbury, upon the dissolution of which it was granted
by Henry VIII. to the Dean and Chapter of Gloucester.
The present church, dedicated to St. Illtyd, is a spacious and venerable pile of building, erected, according to an old manuscript, by Richard Neville, Earl of
Warwick, and lord of Glamorgan, in the reign of
Henry VI., and comprising, in addition to that portion
of it in which divine service is performed, a more
ancient structure, separated from the former by the
tower, to the west of which it is situated. From
this latter a door opened into a dilapidated building,
in a line with it, called the Lady Chapel, the walls
of which were ornamented with busts and figures of
saints, now destroyed; this chapel, which is almost
a ruin, was forty feet and a half in length. The
old church, which was sixty-four feet and a half long,
is said to have been deserted on account of the
dampness of its situation; but this would have
equally operated against the erection of a contiguous structure of larger dimensions. Nearly in the
centre of it are two monumental stones, brought, as
it is said, in 1730, by Mr. Thomas Morgan, schoolmaster and parish-clerk, from a place called the
"Great House," where it is supposed there was formerly a church: these are minutely described in the
sixth volume of the Archæologia Londinensis, accompanied with plates. One of them bears the following inscription: NE PETRA CALCETUR QUE SUB
JACET ISTA TUETUR. In a room behind the altar,
probably that used for the vestry, is a gigantic figure
of a man in the costume of the time of Henry VIII.,
elaborately sculptured in freestone (of the kind found
near the river side at Bridgend, in this county), with
an English inscription, simply stating it to be the
statue of "Prince Richard Hopkins:" this is described
in the same publication. Near the statue is the bust
of a child, sculptured in alto-relievo; and in a niche
near the altar is the figure of a person kneeling,
rudely sculptured, and habited in a costume similar to
that of Hopkins. The more modern church, which
is ninety-eight feet in length and fifty-three in
breadth, consists of a nave, with a north and south
aisle, and a chancel, and has a very handsome altarpiece.
In the churchyard, near the south entrance, is a
stone placed flat in the ground, which appears to
have been part of an ancient cross, carved with knots
and other devices; it is about six feet in length, and
is said to have been placed there by Morgan, who
removed it also from the "Great House." On the
north side of the church, likewise in the churchyard,
is a curious stone called St. Illtyd's Cross, noticed
by Gough in his Additions to Camden, which was
erected in the sixth century, in honour of that saint,
by Archbishop Samson. Upon the western side of
it is inscribed, in the several compartments, "Crux
Iltuti," "Samson redis," and "Samuel egisar" (for
excisor), Samuel being the name of the sculptor; and
on the eastern side is "Samson posuit hanc crucem pro
anmia (instead of anima) ejus." The stone is elaborately carved, and was once the pedestal of a cross;
its height above the ground is six feet three inches,
and its breadth is two feet six inches at the bottom,
and one foot ten inches at the top. A very curious
monumental stone of about the ninth century, forming originally the shaft of a cross, which anciently
stood near the porch of the church, and which, on
the interment of a corpse of extraordinary size, having
been undermined in digging the grave, fell down
upon the coffin, and was covered with earth in filling
up the grave, was, in 1789, discovered by Mr.
Edward Williams, who was led to search for it by a
traditional story relating to it, at that time current
in the neighbourhood. This stone, which is nine feet
in height, two feet four inches broad at the base, and
one foot seven inches at the upper end, and about
one foot three inches in thickness, bears the following
inscription: "In nomine Dî Summi incipit crux Salvatoris, quæ preparavit Samsoni Apati pro anima sua
et pro anima Juthahelo rex et Artmali Tegat crux me."
It appears, from the old register of Llandaf, that
Juthahel, King of Glamorgan, and Artmael, King of
Gwent, bestowed lands and conferred great privileges
on the churches of St. Illtyd. This ancient stone
must have been buried before the continuator of
Camden copied the inscriptions on St. Illtyd's monument, as he makes no mention of it, which he doubtless would have done had it been then visible. After
it had been raised out of the grave in 1789, it lay on
the ground till 1793, when Mr. Williams obtained
assistance and placed it in an erect position against
the east side of the church porch. Close to the wall
of the lower or old church is another stone worthy of
notice, of a pyramidal form, about seven feet high,
and curiously carved, having a deep groove on the
inside, next the wall; it has been supposed to have
formed part of a heathen altar, but how or for what
purpose it was placed there has not been satisfactorily
explained.
There are places of worship in the parish for
Wesleyans, Baptists, Independents, and Calvinistic
Methodists. A Church school, established in 1831,
is supported chiefly by voluntary contributions; and
five Sunday schools are held, one of them in connexion with the Church, and the others with the dissenters. The only charity is a bequest of a rentcharge of £3. 10., by Robert Powell, in 1726, for a
distribution of bread weekly among poor widows not
receiving parochial aid: this amount is disposed of
according to the will of the donor. Two other charities have been discontinued for a number of years;
one, a bequest of £200 by Margaret Seys, in 1700,
for teaching ten children and apprenticing one; and
the other, a bequest by Iltid Nicholas of £20, for the
use of the poor.
About a mile and a half from the village of Boverton, on the lofty cliffs overhanging the Bristol
Channel, are the remains of two Roman camps.
That on the eastern cliff, which defends one side of
the valley of Colhugh, is called the "Castle Ditches;"
it is a very strong post, accessible on one side only:
the other, which is also upon the sea-coast, is about
two miles distant from Castle Ditches. In many of
the gardens and small inclosures at Boverton, and in
its vicinity, human skeletons have been discovered,
and Roman coins dug up. Of the latter, several
were found in November 1798, which were sold to the
Rev. Robert Nicholl and others; those in the possession of that gentleman are coins of Nero, Vespasian, Domitian, Nerva, Trajan, Adrian, Antoninus
Pius, and other Roman emperors. They were found
by some labourers employed in filling up an old
quarry not far from Eglwys-Brewis, near Boverton,
and are of silver. There are several remains of the
ancient collegiate buildings in different parts of the
parish: the house in connexion with the rectorial
tithes, which were severed from the monastery of
Iltutus soon after the Norman Conquest, is still a
respectable edifice, with hanging gardens descending towards the church, and having several spacious
rooms.
Lantwit-juxta-Neath, or Lantwit, Lower (Llan-Illtyd)
LANTWIT-juxta-NEATH, or LANTWIT,
LOWER (LLAN-ILLTYD), a parish, comprising
the three townships of Clyne, Lantwit, and Resolvend, which separately maintain their own poor, in
the union and hundred of Neath, county of Glamorgan, South Wales; adjoining the borough of
Neath, and containing 1532 inhabitants, of whom
879 are in the township of Lantwit. This parish is
situated on the river Neath, and comprises a considerable extent of country, which is richly wooded,
and enlivened with much beautiful and pleasingly
diversified scenery. The surface is finely varied,
and from the higher grounds are obtained some extensive views. The soil is various; coal and ironore are found in different parts, and there are some
large quarries of paving-stone of good quality. In
the parish are Penrose and Evans's colliery, Lions'
colliery at Ynys Vâch, Melingryddan foundry,
Forchdwm colliery, and Ynys Neath colliery. The
living is consolidated with the rectory of Neath: the
church is dedicated to St. Illtyd, from which circumstance the parish derives its name, properly "LlanIlltyd," but contracted into "Lantwit." There was
formerly a chapel in the parish, called Ynys Vâch,
but it was never consecrated, and was suffered many
years since to fall into decay. The Independents
have a place of worship at Melin-y-Cwrt, and the
Calvinistic Methodists one at Ynys Vâch: a Sunday
school is held in each of them. Morgan Jenkins, in
1692, bequeathed a small portion of land for the
benefit of the poor, but this charity has long been
unproductive, as in like manner has been a gift of
£5, by Mary Jones, or Gwillim, in 1743.
Lantwit-Vairdre (Llan-Illtyd-Faerdre)
LANTWIT-VAIRDRE (LLAN-ILLTYD-FAERDRE), a parish, in the union of Cardiff,
hundred of Miskin, county of Glamorgan, South
Wales, 2 miles (E. N. E.) from Llantrissent; comprising the Higher and Lower divisions, and containing 2192 inhabitants. This parish is bordered
on the east by the river Tâf, and abounds with coal,
which is worked for exportation: a tramroad from
the collieries communicates with the Glamorganshire
canal. There are several smaller collieries, worked
by shaft, for home consumption. At Treforest, near
the river, are the tin-works of Messrs. Crawshay,
said to be the largest in the kingdom; and higher up
the Tâf, in the north-eastern part of the parish, at
Newbridge, are some very extensive works for the
manufacture of patent wrought-iron railway-plates.
The river is crossed by two bridges, over one of
which is a tramroad, connecting the iron-works with
the canal, which passes within a few yards on the
other side of the river. The Tâf-Vale railway, also,
runs through or near the parish. The living is a
perpetual curacy, endowed with £1000 royal bounty,
and £1400 parliamentary grant; net income, £100;
patron, the Vicar of Llantrissent, to whom the vicarial
tithes belong; impropriators, the Dean and Chapter
of Gloucester. The impropriators' tithe rent-charge
is £150, and the vicar's £21; the impropriators have
also a glebe of 105½ acres, valued at £60 per annum.
The church, dedicated to St. Illtyd, is situated in a
sequestered spot, and surrounded only by a few cottages; having become exceedingly dilapidated, it
some time ago underwent a thorough repair. There
are places of worship for Calvinistic Methodists, Independents, Baptists, and Wesleyans. A National
school is held in a schoolroom in the churchyard, and
seven Sunday schools are supported, one of them in
connexion with the Established Church. Morgan
Griffith, in 1644, gave by will a rent-charge of £2
for the benefit of four poor families who should inhabit four houses, towards the erection of which on
the waste ground near the church, he bequeathed
twenty marks, at the same time recommending his
friends to aid the work with the timber and stones upon
their lands: an almshouse with several rooms was
accordingly built, which is occupied by four persons
in the receipt of parochial relief.
Laugharne, otherwise Tàlycharn
LAUGHARNE, otherwise TÀLYCHARN,
an incorporated sea-port and market-town, and a
parish, in the Higher division of the hundred of
Derllŷs, union and county of Carmarthen, South
Wales, 12½ miles (S. W.) from Carmarthen, and
228 (W.) from London; containing 2010 inhabitants,
of whom 1389 are in the township of Laugharne.
The ancient British name of this place, Tàlycharn,
or Tàlycoran, from which was derived its subsequent
appellation of Llacharn, since modernised into Laugharne, is supposed to have originated in its situation
above the mouth of the river Coran, which here falls
into the Tâf, near the influx of the latter river into
Carmarthen bay: from this circumstance, also, it is
not unfrequently called in the Welsh histories Abercoran. It appears to have attained a considerable
degree of importance at a very early period, and to
have been distinguished as a fortified place prior to
the Norman invasion. Of the original foundation
of the castle nothing satisfactory has been recorded:
it is, however, supposed, that the Princes of Dynevor
had either a palace or a fortress at this place, which
subsequently fell into the hands of the Norman
invaders, who, for the greater security of the territories which they usurped in this part of the principality, replaced it with a castle of greater strength.
Frequent mention of this castle occurs in the Welsh
annals. During the continued struggles between the
Normans and the Welsh, who were ever upon the
alert to recover the territories of which they had been
dispossessed, and also in the numerous contests that
arose between the native chieftains, for the extension
of their dominions, it was, from its strength and importance, an object of frequent contention, and alternately in the possession of the belligerent parties.
Henry II., on his return from a fruitless expedition
into Ireland, in 1172, passed through this place,
where he was met by Rhŷs ab Grufydd, the last
sovereign prince of South Wales, who entertained
him in the castle, paid him homage as his vassal, and
received from him his son Howel, whom that monarch
had long held as a hostage. In the year 1215, the
castle, together with several other fortresses, at that
time in the hands of the Normans, was taken and
destroyed by Llewelyn ab Iorwerth, Prince of North
Wales; but was rebuilt in the following reign, by
Sir Guido de Brian, who, having espoused one of the
daughters of Prince Rhŷs, obtained the lordship of
Tàlycharn, and procured for the town a charter of
incorporation, with many valuable privileges, conferring on the burgesses an extensive grant of land,
of which they still retain possession. On the death
of Sir Guido, the lordship of Tàlycharn descended
to one of his two daughters and coheiresses, who
married Owen Laugharne, of St. Bride's, in the
county of Pembroke. The castle is said to have been
again destroyed, by the forces under Llewelyn ab
Grufydd, Prince of North Wales, in 1256; from
which time few particulars of its history are recorded
till the reign of Henry VII., though it was probably
rebuilt within that period, as that monarch, among
other grants, in compensation for his great services,
gave the castle and its dependencies to Sir Rhŷs ab
Thomas, who had attended him to Bosworth Field,
and by his valour and influence had contributed
materially to the success of the enterprise which
placed him on the throne. On the attainder of the
grandson of Rhŷs, the castle reverted to the crown.
During the civil war in the reign of Charles I., it
was first garrisoned for the king, but was taken, in
1644, by the parliamentarian forces, under General
William Laugharne. Subsequently, when this commander had embraced the royal cause, it was besieged by Cromwell; it held out for three weeks,
but several breaches having been made in the walls,
the garrison surrendered upon honourable terms, and
the castle was soon afterwards dismantled.
The town is beautifully situated on a level plot
of ground, inclosed on every side, except towards
the sea, by lofty eminences richly clothed with timber.
It consists principally of one long and spacious street,
intersected at right angles by a shorter thoroughfare,
leading to that part of it called the Cors, in which
are some new buildings. The houses are in general
well built, and of respectable appearance; the streets
are partially paved, and the inhabitants are amply
supplied with water. Its sheltered situation protects
it from the keenness of the winds, and renders it
peculiarly desirable as a residence for persons of delicate health; whilst on the eminences by which it is
immediately encircled are several neat cottage residences, adapted to those whose constitutions may require the influence of the sea-breeze and a bracing
atmosphere. The surrounding scenery is pleasingly
diversified, and from the higher grounds are obtained
extensive prospects over the bay of Carmarthen, and
the adjacent country, which abounds with picturesque
beauty. The appearance of the town, which is considered one of the cleanest and best built in South
Wales, embosomed in an amphitheatre of verdant
hills, and ornamented with the venerable remains of
its ancient castle, is truly romantic; and the advantages of good society and retirement which it affords,
with the abundance and moderate price of provisions,
are among the attractions that it offers to families
who may be desirous of combining economy with
comfort. A reading-room has been established.
The port is a creek to that of Llanelly; its trade
is very small, being almost confined to the exportation of butter and corn, which it shares with St.
Clear's. The haven, formed by the river Tâf, at a
short distance from the town, is accessible to vessels
of considerable burthen. The parish is divided into
two portions, called respectively the Town Hamlet
and the Parish, and comprises a large tract of arable
and pasture land, nearly all of which is inclosed and
in a good state of cultivation: in the Parish portion
are 5185 acres. The soil, though varying with the
surface, is in general fertile and productive; and the
labouring inhabitants, with the exception only of
such few as are connected with the small extent of
trade carried on at the port, are principally employed
in agriculture. The market, which is abundantly
supplied with corn and with provisions of all kinds, is
on Friday; and fairs are held annually on May 6th
and September 28th.
The borough was first incorporated by Sir
Guido de Brian, who granted to his burgesses of
"Tallacharn" all the good laws and customs which
those of "Karmardin" enjoyed, together with liberty
to choose two competent burgesses "for one portreeveship" twice a year, namely at Michaelmas and
Easter; and other privileges, including free common
in his forest of Coed Bâch, all the common pasture
in the marsh of Tàlycharn, called Menetors, and all
the free common of Makerells. The charter which
contained the grant of these immunities was confirmed by Henry III., and ratified and enlarged by
Edward VI.; but the regulations laid down by these
monarchs do not appear to have been acted upon, as
in the appointment of a portreeve the corporation
acknowledges only the authority of the original
charter, and in all other matters proceeds according
to custom and to bye-laws, which latter, commencing
in the tenth year of Queen Anne, are entered from
time to time in the corporation books. The members
and officers of the corporation are, a portreeve, a
recorder or town-clerk, two common-attornies, a
bailiff, four constables, and an indefinite number of
burgesses; the principal governing body consists of
the portreeve and a jury of burgesses. Two principal courts are held at the town-hall on the first
Monday after Michaelmas, and the first Monday
after Easter-Monday, in every year; at which the
bailiff appoints from eighteen to twenty-one of the
burgesses as a jury for the ensuing half-year; and
these burgesses, upon being sworn, elect a portreeve,
who, with twelve of the jury, constitutes a court.
The jury, who may vote by a mere majority, make
bye-laws for the government of the borough, elect
the officers, grant leases, and dispose of the rents of
the corporation; subject, however, to the approval of
the portreeve, by whom all presentments "must be
confirmed and signed before they can take effect."
The recorder, who officiates as clerk of the court,
is chosen for life by the jury at any court or adjournment. The bailiff, who is crier and keeper of the
market-place, is appointed by the portreeve at the
Michaelmas court, for a year; and the commonattornies, who collect rents and superintend repairs,
are, with the constables, elected by the jury at the
same time and for the same period as the bailiff.
The burgesses who have become such by right, consist of sons and sons-in-law of burgesses, and apprentices that have served seven years with a burgess in
the town; but others may be admitted by favour of
the jury.
The property of the corporation, which is of considerable value, consists of lands and buildings, the
waste land throughout the township, and tolls of corn.
Of the lands the principal portion, amounting to
about 330 acres lying near the town, is divided into
seventy-six shares, varying in value from £2 to £5
a year each, and of which twenty shares are at Haydon, sixteen at Moor, and forty at Undercliff; the
Haydon shares containing about ten acres each, the
Moor four or five, and the Undercliff one acre and a
half; and the whole being in the occupation of the
seventy-six senior burgesses, who hold upon payment
of nominal rents, and are entitled to vote for the
county member. Other property is let in about 170
parcels, in most instances to different tenants, and
produces an income of £70. The toll of corn
brought into the town for sale, to which the corporation claims the right, has been relinquished in consequence of a dispute; and the portreeve, by whom the
produce, which was of very small amount, was received, has now a salary in lieu of his former privilege. The boundaries of the borough are co-extensive with those of the township of Laugharne, which
is bordered on the north by the parish of the same
name, on the north-west by the parish of Llandawke,
on the west by that of Llansadwrnen, on the south
by Carmarthen bay, and on the east by the river Tâf.
The town-hall is a neat building of ordinary dimensions, with a small square tower, situated at the point
of intersection of the principal street with the smaller
one, where is a commodious market-place.
The living is a vicarage, rated in the king's
books at £6, with the rectory of Llansadwrnen annexed; present net income of the benefice, £411,
with a glebe-house; patrons, the Dean and Chapter
of Winchester; impropriators of the parish, Lord
Kensington, and G. Watkins, Esq. The church, dedicated to St. Martin, is a spacious and venerable
cruciform structure, in the early style of English
architecture, with a square embattled tower, supported on pointed arches: it occupies a picturesque
situation on an eminence under a richly wooded
bank, by which it is partly concealed from view. The
walls of the building are strengthened with projecting buttresses, and within are covered by numerous
tablets. At the west end is a handsome organ, presented to the church at an expense of above £400,
by the late Vice-Admiral Laugharne. Among the
monuments contained in the church is a large mural
tablet, bearing a long inscription, to the memory of
Sir John Powell, one of the judges who presided at
the trial of the seven bishops, in the reign of James
II.; he resided at Broadway House, a little to the
west of the town, and, dying at the age of sixtythree, was interred here in 1696. A richly embroidered mantle is still preserved in it, supposed by
some to have belonged to Sir Guido de Brian; but
it has been suggested that it is rather a priest's vestment, as there are saints' effigies represented on the
sides. The chapels of Kifig and Marrôs, formerly
dependent on the church, were endowed with £8 per
annum each by the Vicar of Laugharne, and subsequently by the Governors of Queen Anne's Bounty,
the former with £600 and the latter with £800, and
are now united into one benefice, in the patronage
of the Vicar of Laugharne. There are places of
worship for Baptists, Independents, and Calvinistic
and Wesleyan Methodists. National schools for
boys, girls, and infants, are supported; and several
Sunday schools are held, one of them in connexion
with the Established Church.
Matthew Warren, in 1656, granted a rent-charge
of £2. 12. upon the Black Horse inn, Thomas-street,
Bristol, for the purpose of distributing a shilling's
worth of bread in penny loaves on each Sunday
among twelve poor widows or old maids of the town;
and Jane Morgan, and Mary Griffiths, in 1811, gave
each £52 to be applied in a similar manner. In
1681, Zacharias Thomas granted a rent-charge of £4
for the use of the poor, two-thirds to be appropriated
to the relief of those in the town, and one-third to
that of persons in the rural district. In 1731, Letitia
Cornwallis gave £100, the interest to be annually
distributed on the 6th of January among the most
necessitous cottagers: this charity remained dormant for some years, but being, with other bequests
of the benefactress, placed in Chancery, an order was
made after the report of the master in 1782, that
the funds had accumulated to £358. 15. Bank Annuities, the dividends on which were regularly distributed according to the directions of the donor
until 1821, when it was found necessary to make
other applications to the Court of Chancery, through
the death of trustees. Theodosia, sister to Admiral
Laugharne, in the year 1822, among other benefactions, bequeathed £1800, in trust to the vicar and
churchwardens, who, after the payment of certain
annuities to one or two servants, were to appropriate
the proceeds to the payment of £30 the salary of the
organist, and to keeping the stove of the church in
repair, and well supplied with fuel; the residue to
be disposed of among the aged and infirm poor at
Christmas. The same lady left £300 to establish a
school of industry in the town, after the termination
of a certain annuity. It also appears that Elizabeth
Foster bequeathed £150, the interest to be applied to
the instruction of children in reading, and the Christian religion; the proceeds go towards the support
of the infants' school.
The remains of the ancient castle, on the summit
of a cliff at the mouth of the river Tâf, near the
southern extremity of the town, are extensive, and
in an excellent state of preservation, forming an
interesting and prominent feature in the scenery of
the place: near the gateway is a handsome modern
edifice, which was the residence of the late Col.
Starke, by whom the interior of the castle and the
adjoining ground were tastefully laid out. About a
mile from the town are some remains of an ancient
building, called Roche's Castle, which, according to
local tradition, are said to be the vestiges of an
ancient monastery, though by whom founded, or for
what order of brethren, is not known.
The family of Laugharne have been settled at this
place ever since the marriage of their ancestor, Owen
Laugharne, with the daughter of Sir Guido de Brian,
Lord High Admiral of England, and anciently lord
of Tàlycharn. Descended from this family, and
probably a native of this town, was Lieutenant-General William Laugharne, who first distinguished himself as an officer in the parliamentarian army, but
who, afterwards joining the royalist party, garrisoned
Laugharne, Tenby, and Pembroke, for the king, and
at the last-named place was taken prisoner. He was
tried for his life, together with Colonels Powell and
Poyer, who had also been made prisoners by Cromwell; and they were all found guilty of high treason.
After sentence of death had been passed upon these
three officers, Cromwell was induced to consent that
it should be carried into execution only upon one of
them, and gave orders to determine by lot which
should be the victim. Three papers were folded up
for this purpose, on two of which was written "Life
given by God," and the third was left blank. According to an arrangement agreed upon by the
prisoners, the lots were drawn by a child, and the
fatal blank was assigned to Colonel Poyer, who was
shot in Covent Garden, on the 25th of April, 1649.
Dr. Josiah Tucker, Dean of Gloucester, an eminent
divine and a celebrated literary and political writer,
was born in this parish in the year 1712, and died at
the advanced age of eighty-seven, in the year 1799.
His writings were chiefly on subjects connected with
the times in which he lived, and, though masterpieces
of the kind, possess little interest at present. He
was the liberal patron of that premature and extraordinary genius, John Henderson, who, under his
auspices, prosecuted his studies at Oxford, where he
took his degree of B. A., and died at the age of
thirty-one, in 1788. Reynal Pecock, of whom little
more is stated than that he was a very learned man,
was also a native of this parish. Mrs. Bevan, who
left a large sum of money for the support of schoolmasters to travel from place to place, was a resident
at Laugharne.
Lavar, Above
LAVAR, ABOVE, a division, in the parish
of Llansantfraid-Glynn-Ceriog, poor-law union
of Corwen, hundred of Chirk, county of Denbigh,
North Wales, 3 miles (S. S. W.) from Llangollen:
the population is included in the return for the parish.
It takes the adjunct from its situation on the river
Ceiriog, which passes through the division.
Lavar, Below
LAVAR, BELOW, a division, in the parish
of Llansantfraid-Glynn-Ceriog, poor-law union
of Corwen, hundred of Chirk, county of Denbigh,
North Wales, 4½ miles (S.) from Llangollen: the
population is returned with the parish. The adjunct
to its name is derived from its being situated in the
lower part of the Vale of Ceiriog. Several of the
inhabitants are employed in the manufacture of
flannel.
Lavernock, otherwise Larnock
LAVERNOCK, otherwise LARNOCK, a parish, in the union of Cardiff, hundred of DinasPowys, county of Glamorgan, South Wales, 7½
miles (S. by W.) from Cardiff; with 85 inhabitants.
The living is a rectory not in charge, consolidated
with the living of Penarth; the church, dedicated
to St. Lawrence, is situated close to the water's edge,
the parish lying on the shore of the British Channel.
Lead-ore has been obtained here, but the works are
now discontinued. The principal substratum is lias
limestone, in which the usual fossils abound; in the
cliffs under this limestone are found tripoli, and lapis
cariosus, or rotten stone, intermingled with a red
marly earth, in which are imbedded blocks of gypseous alabaster.
Lawhaden, or Llewhaden (Llanhauden)
LAWHADEN, or LLEWHADEN (LLANHAUADEN), a parish, in the union of Narberth,
hundred of Dungleddy, county of Pembroke,
South Wales, 3½ miles (N. N. W.) from Narberth;
containing 634 inhabitants. This place, which derives its name from the dedication of its church to
St. Aidan, Bishop of Lindisfarne, who died in the
year 651, was for many years distinguished as the
principal residence of the bishops of St. David's, who
had a magnificent castle or palace here with a very
extensive park, and forest of red deer, noticed by
Leland. This truly splendid structure, which was
built entirely of hewn stone, was the favourite residence of Bishop Beck, who contributed greatly to
its embellishment; it was adapted in every respect
to the purposes of domestic convenience, and had
every appendage of luxury and state. The exact
time of its original foundation is not known; but
from a deed of feoffment, bearing date 1383, it appears that John Fowley was at that time constable of
the castle and master of the board of works to Bishop
Hoton, who conveyed to him and to Ellen his wife
certain lands in the vicinity, which are now the property of his descendants. In the reign of Henry
VIII., Lawhaden Castle, together with the other
episcopal palaces of the diocese, was stripped of its
leaden roof by Bishop Barlow, who subsequently
availed himself of the dilapidation which he had
caused, as a plea for carrying into effect his purpose
of transferring the bishop's seat altogether to Carmarthen. From this period the palace was suffered
to fall into decay; but the ruins, which are still
venerable and majestic in their appearance, afford
imposing evidence of its pristine grandeur.
The parish comprises a large tract of rich arable
and pasture land, which is inclosed and in a good
state of cultivation. The village is situated on the
summit of a lofty ridge overhanging the river
Cleddy, and commanding a fine view of the adjacent
country, which abounds with varied scenery. Within
the parish are some highly interesting and pleasingly
romantic features, among which are, the church,
beautifully situated on the margin of the river, under
a richly wooded eminence; the majestic and venerable ruins of the ancient castle immediately above it;
and Ridgeway, an elegant modern mansion, erected
by the late I. H. Foley, Esq., and occupying a
portion of the lands granted to the ancestor of that
gentleman by Bishop Hoton, in the year 1383. In
the village is also a good family house belonging to
a descendant of the Skyrmes, whose ancestor accompanied Oliver Cromwell into the principality
during the parliamentary war, and obtained a settlement at this place.
Lawhaden until recently constituted a prebend in
the cathedral church of St. David's, rated in the
king's books at £17. 17. 1., and annexed to the chancellorship of the cathedral by Bishop Beck, in 1287.
The living is a discharged vicarage, with the perpetual curacy of Bletherston annexed, rated in the
king's books at £8. 18. 6½.; present net income,
£152, with a glebe-house; patron, the Bishop of St.
David's. The tithes of Lawhaden have been commuted for £315, of which a sum of £210 was payable to the chancellor of St. David's, who had also a
glebe of 170 acres, worth £160 per annum, and
£105 are payable to the vicar, who has a glebe of
forty-five acres, valued at £50 a year. The church,
dedicated to St. Aidan, is an ancient and venerable
edifice, with a handsome tower, and in its retired
and beautiful situation forms an interesting and romantic feature in the scenery around the village.
There are places of worship for Independents and
Calvinistic Methodists; and three Sunday schools,
one of them in connexion with the Church, and the
others belonging to the dissenters.
The remains of the ancient castle form a majestic
and venerable ruin, on the summit of a precipitous
eminence, commanding a magnificent prospect. The
site was originally surrounded by a moat, over which
was a drawbridge leading to the principal entrance, a
noble gateway defended by two circular towers; this
portion of the building is still in a state of tolerable
preservation. There are also the remains of two
octagonal towers, which appear to have contained the
state apartments and rooms of residence; of part of a
small but very elegant chapel; and some portions of
the outer walls. Some fragments of the park walls
are yet remaining, and the land which they now
serve to inclose is some of the richest in the county.
The prevailing character of the architecture is the
early English, and the ruins have a most beautiful
and picturesque appearance from every point of
view. On the roadside are the remains of an ancient
building, covered with ivy, which is said to have
been founded by Bishop Beck, as an hospitium for
pilgrims visiting St. David's shrine. Lawhaden Castle
was the head of the barony in right of which the
Bishops of St. David's claim their seat in the house
of peers.
Lawrence (St.)
LAWRENCE (ST.), a parish, in the union of
Haverfordwest, hundred of Dewisland, county
of Pembroke, South Wales, 8½ miles (N. by W.)
from Haverfordwest; containing 223 inhabitants.
This parish is situated in the north-western part
of the county, and comprehends a moderate extent
of arable and pasture land, of which the greater
portion is inclosed and in a good state of cultivation,
the soil, though varying in different parts, being in
general fertile. The total area is 1328 acres. The
surface is boldly undulated; the scenery, though not
distinguished by any peculiarity of feature, is generally pleasing, and from the higher grounds some
good views are obtained. The great South Wales
railway will pass in this vicinity. The parochial
rates are assessed by the ploughland. The living is
a discharged rectory, rated in the king's books at
£3. 18. 9., endowed with £400 royal bounty, and in
the patronage of the Crown: the tithes have been
commuted for a rent-charge of £80, and there is a
glebe of thirty acres, valued at £20 per annum; also
a glebe-house. The church is dedicated to St.
Lawrence, from which circumstance the parish derives its name: it is not distinguished by any architectural details of importance. There is a place of
worship for Welsh Calvinistic Methodists. A Church
Sunday school was commenced in 1840.
Lawrenny (Lawrenney)
LAWRENNY (LAWRENNEY), a parish, in
the hundred of Narberth, union and county of
Pembroke, South Wales, 5 miles (N. N. E.) from
Pembroke; containing 432 inhabitants. This parish
probably derived its name from the word Llan-yrynys, meaning "the church on the island," as the
church stands on a neck of land almost surrounded
by water. It is situated on a branch of Milford
Haven, over which is a ferry, and comprises a large
portion of inclosed and well-cultivated land; the surrounding scenery is pleasingly diversified, and in
some parts enriched with noble plantations. Lawrenny Hall, now a ruin, the ancient seat of the late
Hugh Barlow, Esq., who represented Pembroke and
its contributory boroughs in eight successive parliaments, is beautifully situated on a point of land between Milford Haven, on the west, and a wide creek
branching from it to the north-east, towards Cresswell Quay. The demesne, which is co-extensive
with the parish, is embellished with a rich variety of
scenery, presenting an agreeable contrast of wood and
water; and the luxuriant groves that shaded the
ancient mansion are still seen in every point of view,
embosoming the venerable church, which formed an
interesting and highly picturesque object in the views
from the Hall. Limestone, both for building and
for manure, abounds in the parish; and the quarrying and burning of it afford employment to a portion of the inhabitants. A number of persons are
also engaged, during the winter season, in dredging
for oysters, which are found here in great abundance,
and conveyed principally to the London market, in
boats from Chatham and Rochester in the county of
Kent, for the loading of which the coast affords every
facility.
The living is a discharged rectory, rated in the
king's books at £13; patrons, the Heirs of the late
Mr. Barlow: the tithes have been commuted for a
rent-charge of £165, and the glebe comprises twenty
acres, valued at £30 per annum. The church, dedicated to St. Caradoc, is a venerable cruciform structure, in the early style of English architecture, with
an elegant square embattled tower, which is seen to
great advantage from almost every side, rising above
the rich foliage by which the body of the church is
concealed. In a sepulchral chapel belonging to the
family is a splendid monument to the memory of
the late Mr. Barlow, consisting of an altar-tomb of
variegated marble, on which is placed an elegant
sarcophagus of white marble, bearing the arms of
Barlow and Crespigny: this monument was erected
by his widow, who was of the latter family, and who
also placed in the chapel two superb vases of alabaster, four feet in height, supported on pedestals of
white marble. There is a place of worship for Wesleyan Methodists. This is one of the four parishes
to which Dr. Jones bequeathed, in 1698, considerable
property for the relief of decayed housekeepers and
the apprenticing of children, with a discretionary
power to his executor and brother, the Rev. William
Jones, to whose memory there is a handsome mural
tablet in the church of this place, to add other parishes. The portion assigned to Lawrenny from the
produce of this charity, is one-seventh, or about £35
per annum, which is appropriated pursuant to the
directions of the testator, £3 being given towards apprenticing a poor boy, and the remainder divided
among widows and housekeepers, in sums varying
from £2 to 5s.