Llanegryn is a village and a community in Gwynedd, north-west Wales. It was formerly part of the historic county of Merionethshire (). It is located within Snowdonia (Eryri) national park, south of the mountain range of the same name. Travelling by road, it is around north-east of Tywyn and south-west of Dolgellau. The nearest railway stations are at Tonfanau and Llwyngwril, both less than away.
Llanegryn is named for St Egryn, with llan meaning church or parish – a common feature in Welsh language place names. The village lies in the Dysynni Valley (Dyffryn Dysynni).
History of the area
The Dysynni Valley, originally a river delta of the
Afon Dysynni, was largely drained from the late 1700s on – notably by the Corbet family at
Ynysymaengwyn – creating a flat, fertile valley, several miles in width. There is likely to have been much earlier settlement on surrounding high ground for sheep rearing and agriculture. An
Iron Age Hill fort is located towards the east end of the valley.
The village's Methodist chapel was built in 1811, enlarged in 1848 and rebuilt 30 years later in the simple Gothic style with gable entry.
Samuel Lewis's 1833 Topographical Dictionary of Wales records 764 inhabitants in Llanegryn, also noting the free school founded in 1650. The 1868 National gazetteer lists the parish population as 652 in 149 houses.
Llanegryn Church
There has been a recorded settlement around St Mary and St Egryn church at Llanegryn since the 13th century, with the first record of the church being in 1253/4.
This notable
medieval Grade I
Listed building building contains a fine carved
rood screen, dating from about 1520 – considered to be among the finest in Wales. It has been suggested this may come from
Cymer Abbey.
It also contains a 12th-century font and a surviving medieval window on the north wall of the nave, although the church underwent substantial restoration during the 19th century.
Peniarth Estate
To the east of the village stands the Peniarth Estate. In the 19th century, the house was the home of William Watkin Edward Wynne. A wealthy
antiquarian, Wynne inherited and augmented a collection of historic Welsh manuscripts, the Peniarth Manuscripts, which is now held by the National Library of Wales and considered its most important such collection.
The house is a
Listed building and its gardens are designated, also at Grade II* on the Cadw/ICOMOS Register of Parks and Gardens of Special Historic Interest in Wales.
The village today
Today, the population of Llanegryn is approximately 300, including outlying houses and farms. Primary sources of income are farming and tourism, with several caravan parks being located throughout the Dysynni valley, particularly on the Peniarth estate. The village attracts
Hiking and walkers, due to its location near to
Cadair Idris mountain (Cader Idris in the local Welsh language) and Craig yr Aderyn (meaning "Bird Rock"), which is notable as an inland site where
breed.
Other local landmarks include Castell y Bere, constructed by Llywelyn the Great in the 1220s.
The village has one school: Ysgol Craig y Deryn, a Welsh-medium primary school. In 2024, over 39 per cent of pupils came from Welsh-speaking homes.
Notable people
-
Hugh Owen (ca.1639 – 1700), a Welsh independent minister.
-
Edward Anwyl (1786–1857), a Welsh Wesleyan minister and school teacher, born in Ty'nllan
-
Meredydd Evans (1919–2015), singer, TV producer, academic, Welsh-language activist, music collector and editor
-
Gwilym Prys Davies, Baron Prys-Davies (1923–2017), a Welsh Labour politician
-
Ifan Davies (born ca.1980), singer and guitarist with Sŵnami & Yws Gwynedd
External links