Standing in isolation at the end of its raised grassy causeway, and said to have been founded by St Peulan himself in the 6th century, Llanbeulan church dates from the 12th century and retains a rectangular Norman stone font of great significance – and much scholarly debate.
Llanfigael
St Figael (St Migael) would not be here now but for the Reverend Edgar Jones. Edgar adopted the building when it closed and saw it through the thick and thin of Welsh weather before we were able to take it into permanent care in 2007.
Llantrisant
Accessible only by foot, off a remote country road, Llantrisant dates from the 14th century, and is surrounded by a boundary wall so high it feels defensive. Maybe it is this sense of mystery that makes it one of the most remote but at the same time one of the most visited of all our churches.
Tal y Llyn
St Mary’s is decidedly religion without pretension – simple massively structured walls (recently limewashed by Ned Scharer) sheltering a space in which there seems to be no differentiation by wealth. Everybody sits on a backless plank trenched at one end into a low stone wall and supported at the other by a timber paddle.