'Llandaff Cathedral' is the seat of the
Bishop of Llandaff (of the
Church in Wales), situated in the suburb of
Llandaff in the city of
Cardiff, the capital of
Wales. It is dedicated to
Saint Peter and
Saint Paul, and also to three
Welsh saints:
Dyfrig,
Teilo and
Euddogwy. It is not to be confused with the nearby
Roman Catholic Cardiff Cathedral.
Medieval history
There is evidence for
Celtic Christian worship on the site the
cathedral from the
6th century and the original church is said to have been built by Saint Teilo on the bank of the
River Taff in
560. After his death, his shrine became a place of
pilgrimage. The monastic settlement survived for many centuries before the establishment of the
diocese of Llandaff at some point shortly before the
Norman Conquest.
The
Normans occupied
Glamorgan early, and appointed
Urban their first bishop in
1107. He began construction of the cathedral in
1120 and had the remains of Saint
Dyfrig transferred from
Bardsey, but the work was not completed until
1290. The west front dates from
1220, and contains a statue of Teilo. Bishop
Henry de Abergavenny gave the cathedral its statutes. The Lady Chapel was built by
William de Braose, who was bishop from
1266 to
1287. Damage was done to the church in
1400, during the rebellion of
Owain Glyndŵr, and his forces destroyed the Bishop's Palace at Llandaff. However, most of the other damage was repaired notably by
Bishop Marshall whose reredos partly survives, and the north-east tower was added by
Jasper Tudor, who assumed the lordship of Cardiff after the accession of his nephew, King
Henry VII of England. Late medieval tombs include that of Sir David Mathew.
During the
English Civil War, the cathedral was overrun by Parliamentarian troops, and by
1720 the southwest tower was in a state of collapse. In
1734, work began on a new cathedral, nicknamed the "Italian Temple", which was used for a hundred years but never completed and of which only a few stones remain.
Victorian and modern history
During the
19th century, when the Bishop of Llandaff began, for the first time for centuries, to reside in Llandaff, the cathedral was extensively restored, the tower rebuilt and a spire added. A
triptych by
Dante Gabriel Rossetti was designed for use as a
reredos, and new
stained glass windows were designed by Sir
Edward Burne-Jones and
Ford Madox Brown. The
cathedral school which existed from the time of the Elizabethan
Bishop Blethyn until about
1700 was re-established by Dean Vaughan in
1880.
On the evening of
January 2,
1941 during
World War II a German bomb fell beside the cathedral, causing massive destruction including that of the
organ, only back in service since 1938. Of British cathedrals, only
Coventry Cathedral was damaged more.
Major restorations and reconfigurations were carried out under architect
George Pace of York, and the building was back in use in June
1958. The
Queen attended a service celebrating the completion of the restoration on
August 6,
1960. The
Welch Regiment memorial chapel was constructed, and Sir
Jacob Epstein created the figure of Christ in Majesty which is suspended above the nave on a concrete arch designed by
George Pace.
External links
★
Official Llandaff Cathedral Website.