Church of St Oudoceus, Llandogo explained

Church of St Oudoceus, Llandogo
Fullname:Church of St Oudoceus
Pushpin Map:Wales Monmouthshire
Pushpin Mapsize:200
Map Caption:Location in Monmouthshire
Location:Llandogo, Monmouthshire
Country:Wales
Coordinates:51.7334°N -2.6867°W
Denomination:Church in Wales
Founded Date:1859
Dedicated Date:1861
Status:parish church
Functional Status:Active
Heritage Designation:Grade II*
Designated Date:18 July 1997
Architect:John Pollard Seddon
Architectural Type:Church
Style:Gothic revival
Parish:Llandogo with Whitebrook Chapel and Tintern Parva
Deanery:Monmouth
Archdeaconry:Monmouth
Diocese:Monmouth
Priest:The Reverend R A Dagger

The Church of St Oudoceus, Llandogo, Monmouthshire is a parish church built in 1859–1861. The church is dedicated to St Oudoceus (Euddogwy), an early Bishop of Llandaff who retired to Llandogo and was reputed to have died there in about AD 700. Designed by the ecclesiastical architect John Pollard Seddon, the church has a notable painted interior. It is an active parish church and a Grade II* listed building.

History

The site is monastic in origin and is first mentioned as a religious foundation in 625. Oudoceus is recorded as having retired here and a subsequent church was constructed in the Middle Ages. Nothing now remains of the earlier church. The present building was designed by John Pollard Seddon and was built between 1859 and 1861. Further construction, including decoration of the interior, was undertaken in 1869. The church remains an active parish church.[1]

Architecture and description

The church is constructed of Old Red Sandstone with Bath Stone dressings, creating a polychromatic display. It has a nave, roofed in Welsh slate, a chancel with vestry, two porches and a bellcote. The architectural historian John Newmandescribes this as "an extraordinarily elaborate belfry, a sort of pulpit in the sky". The style of the whole is Early French.

The interior is "calmer" but still elaborate, decorated with wall paintings by a German artist to the designs of Coates Carter, Seddon's architectural partner after John Prichard's death.

References

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Benefices. The Church in Wales. 19 April 2022.