Wern-ddu Farmhouse, Llantilio Pertholey | |
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Type | Farmhouse |
Location | Llantilio Pertholey, Monmouthshire |
Coordinates | 51°49′55″N 2°59′14″W / 51.8319°N 2.9871°W |
Built | 17th century |
Architectural style(s) | Vernacular |
Listed Building – Grade II* | |
Official name | Wern-ddu Farmhouse |
Designated | 6 May 1952 |
Reference no. | 1927 |
Location of Wern-ddu Farmhouse, Llantilio Pertholey in Monmouthshire |
Wern-ddu farmhouse, Llantilio Pertholey, Monmouthshire is a farmhouse of 17th century origins. It has been significantly altered in the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries and the Monmouthshire antiquarian, Sir Joseph Bradney recorded that it had "suffered so much by continual alterations that it shows but little of its antiquity". It is a Grade II* listed building.
History
Sir Joseph Bradney described Wern-ddu as "in its origins one of the oldest in the county".[1] He ascribed the original building to the Herbert family. Cadw considers the current building to date from the early 17th century,[1] while the architectural historian John Newman places it somewhat later, in the late 17th century.[2] Sir Cyril Fox and Lord Raglan, in the second of their three-volume history of vernacular architecture Monmouthshire Houses, give a date of c.1675.[3] Wern-ddu was reconstructed in the 18th, 19th and 20th centuries and Bradney recorded in the early 20th century that "it shows but little of its antiquity".[1] It remains a private house.
The historical importance of the house was long recognised. The American journalist and diplomat Wirt Sikes, United States consul at Cardiff in the 1870s and 1880s, recorded an encounter between its last hereditary owner, Roger ap Probert, and a stranger, in his Rambles and Studies in Old South Wales, published in 1881. Questioned as to the history of the house, Probert replied; "Werndu (is) a very ancient house. Out of it came the Earls of Pembroke, the Lords Herbert of Cherbury, the Herberts of Coldbrook, the Joneses of Treowen and Llanarth and all the Powells; also, by the female line, came the Dukes of Beaufort".[4]
Architecture and description
John Newman describes the farmhouse as being of a "semi-double-pile plan".[2] It is built of rendered Old Red Sandstone rubble and is of two storeys with attics, and a three-storey stair turret.[1] The roof is of Welsh slate.[1] It contains an important staircase, which Newman considers "a fine piece"[2] and a "coffered wooden ceiling with bold mouldings".[3] It is a Grade II* listed building.[1]
Notes
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Cadw. "Wern-ddu Farmhouse (Grade II*) (1927)". National Historic Assets of Wales. Retrieved 18 April 2022.
- 1 2 3 Newman 2000, p. 357.
- 1 2 Fox & Raglan 1994, p. 160.
- ↑ Sikes 1992, p. 91.
References
- Fox, Cyril; Raglan, Lord (1994). Sub-Medieval Houses, c. 1550–1610. Monmouthshire Houses. Vol. 2. Cardiff: Merton Priory Press Ltd & The National Museum of Wales. ISBN 0952000989. OCLC 277251975.
- Newman, John (2000). Gwent/Monmouthshire. The Buildings of Wales. London: Penguin. ISBN 0-14-071053-1.
- Sikes, Wirt (1992). Alan Roderick (ed.). Travels in Gwent. Newport, Wales: Handpost Books. ISBN 9780951521328. OCLC 26549951.