The historic built environment
The foundations of the earliest-known buildings within
the Cambrian Mountains are Roman, and have been excavated within the
fort at Pumsaint. For the thousand years thereafter, little is known
of settlements in the area, let alone buildings, probably due to the
very hostile soil conditions and still limited archaeological methods.
Strata
Florida Abbey is the best-known mediaeval building, and has inspired
poetry in both national languages since its foundation by the Cistercian
order in the mid-twelfth century. The Abbey's great west doorway
invariably attracts attention, as does the collection of original
mediaeval tiles in the chapels of the south transept.
House platforms believed to date from mediaeval times
are commonplace throughout the area. Because there is some documentation,
the best-known settlements occupied Monastic grange lands. They
probably date from the later twelfth century, and it is likely that
a number of the house platforms surviving in the Cambrian Mountains
relate to the early granaries and subsequent sheep farms administered
from Strata Florida and possibly Abbey Cwmhir before the Dissolution
of the monasteries in the mid-sixteenth century.
Evidence from the surviving buildings on either side of
the main east-west watershed suggests slightly differing mediaeval and
later building traditions. On the western side, stone and mud were the
main materials for buildings roofed with a minimum of timber. Conversely,
the eastern side had a relatively timber-rich construction industry,
notable for its skilled employment of hardwoods in elaborate house-frames
as well as extremely durable roof structures. Many have survived, particularly
in or on the edge of the uplands, owing to economic regression, and
the need to 'make-do-and-mend' rather than improve or demolish/rebuild.
A recent study of Radnorshire houses shows how peasant
hall-houses probably developed into animal-sharing timber-framed long-houses
during the sixteenth century, how some grew into minor gentry houses
thereafter, and the relationships between socio-economic functions of
dwellings on lower ground with 'summer houses' on the upland pastures.
A particularly good example is Nannerth-Ganol and its historically-related
holdings in Cwmddeudwr.
There are relatively few eighteenth-century houses
within the area, but the sites of Cwm Elan, Dderw, Dolaucothi, Hafod,
Llwyn Madoc, Nantgwyllt, Neuadd Fawr (Cilycwm) and Rhydoldog deserve
mention. Although five are now derelict or demolished, three (Dderw,
Dolaucothi and Hafod) are registered as gardens or historic landscapes
on the Cadw/ICOMOS Register*.
The important Wilderness Picturesque landscape movement
grew in the Cambrian Mountains after 1783, from the vision of Thomas
Johnes at Hafod. This landscape philosophy is probably best seen as
a major antecedent to the wilderness vision underlying John Muir's imperative
to establish American National Parks.
Lying
largely outside major settlement nuclei, the Cambrian Mountains
encompass only a handful of parish churches. The earliest of these
is most spectacularly mediaeval, at Cilycwm. Those at Abergwesyn,
Ysbyty Ystwyth, Caeo, and Ysbyty Cynfyn are all either nineteenth
century re-modellings, or Victorian erections on new sites. Eglwys
Newydd is notable for its Hafod associations, and for Chantrey's
poignant monument to Mariamne Johnes. Neglect has already effected
considerable damage to the graveyards at Abergwesyn and Ysbyty Cynfyn,
where the most spectacular pebble graves which survived complete
until about 1980 are now rapidly disintegrating through plant growth
and tree root invasion.
There is also a sprinkling of chapels here, some only
just surviving in quite remote areas; Soar y Mynydd is remotest and
best-known; it has become a place of pilgrimage for its Sunday afternoon
services in the summer season. Founded by Ebenezer Richard, father of
the "Apostle of Peace", this homely chapel was built to serve
the scattered pastoral community that has farmed in these mountains
for generations. Capel Ystrad Ffin, near Llyn Brianne, once belonged
to Strata Florida abbey. A neglected chapel-of-ease at the county border,
it made a convenient meeting place for the early Welsh Methodists.
Most surviving chapels are under threat of total abandonment
as attendances drop, and there are particular problems about adaptation
for re-use, since residential conversion may be disallowed, either by
covenants or by the feelings of their communities.
Finally,
the architectural value of the vernacular and industrial houses
and farm buildings of the Cambrian Mountains should not be underestimated.
Sadly, many of mid-Wales's protagonists (in both local and national
government) have, over the last century, seen the Welsh peasant
and farmers' built vernacular past as something to be swept away
in the name of 'progress'.
The future survival of the varied and important historic
built environment of the Cambrian Mountains is largely dependent
on the survival of their communities, and of the skills they possess
to maintain these buildings and their settings.
*Register of Landscapes of Special
Historic Interest in Wales, CCW/Cadw/ICOMOS UK 1998 ISBN 1857601874
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