St Saeran's Church, Llanynys
The church was founded in the 6th century, but the site may be of Celtic origin, and was home to a clas or religious community; it was the mother church of southern Dyffryn Clwyd (the Vale of Clwyd). Unusually, it was dedicated to Saint Saeran, a Celtic bishop-saint who also gave his name to Ffynnon Sara.
Saint Saeran
Little is known of Saeran. He is first mentioned in MSE (appendix) of 'Bonedd y Saint', which exists handwritten by Guto'r Glyn in 1455. He was the son of Geraint Saer of Ireland. Saer is the Welsh for "wright" or "carpenter" and the ending "-an" is a diminutive: "Saer the Younger".
The battered tomb effigy of a priest may be Bishop ap Richard of Bangor (who died here in 1267) while the figure of a mitred bishop on the hexagonal stone may represent Saint Saeran himself. Crozier in hand, the little figure is apparently standing on a muzzled bear, and on the stone's reverse is a crucifixion scene. It stood until recently in the churchyard, and perhaps marked the saint's tomb or shrine: said to be of the 14th century, it could be much older.
The wall painting
Directly opposite the door is the most significant work in St Saeran's, a huge 15th-century mural of Saint Christopher. The painting was rediscovered under plaster in 1967; this rare survival is much the finest medieval wall painting in North Wales. The saint – according to legend a giant who served as a ferryman – is shown carrying the infant Christ across a river, with a flowering staff in his hand and a shoal of fish round his feet. The patron saint of travellers, Christopher ("Christ-bearer") was often painted opposite church doorways, where wayfarers could easily glimpse his image and thus (it was believed) be preserved from "fainting or falling" all that day. The belief lives on in the Saint Christophers of modern key-rings and car dashboards.
Other similar paintings include:
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St Nicholas, Piddington, Oxfordshire
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St John the Baptist, Thorpe Mandeville, Northamptonshire
References
- ^ www.britishlistedbuildings.co.uk; accessed 19 July 2015; copied with permission; RTS ticket sought 2014; emails received by user.
- ^ www.medieval-wales.com; accessed 19 July 2015
External links
Media related to St Saeran's Church, Llanynys at Wikimedia Commons