DisgrifiadSt David's Church stands within a roughly triangular churchyard, delineated by a road on its south side. The church lies some 1km south-east of Parc-y-fynwent possible cemetery, Cilrhedyn Isaf (NPRN 423399) and some 600m east-northeast of Parc-yr-eglwys, Clyn Farm findspot and possible chapel site (NPRN 423698). In 1291 the parish had at least one chapelry, referred to as `cum capella?. The churchyard boundary is represented by a bank. Four early Christian inscribed stones (NPRNs 304366, 423400, 423401, 423402) stand in the churchyard. The church was partially excavated by Dyfed Archaeological Trust in 1984-1985, revealing a number of cist burials, one of which was cut by the wall of the medieval church. Human remains within another cist were radiocarbon dated to 890+60 AD. A fifth inscribed stone, of uncertain date, was found in the same soil as the cist grave, as was a fragment of a Roman dolphin brooch.
The church was demolished in 1864 and entirely rebuilt in the 19th century. Both church and churchyard are now in private ownership.
Sources include:
Cambria Archaeology, 2000, Pembrokeshire Churches, gazetteer, 48
Cambria Archaeology, 2003, Early Medieval Ecclesiastical Sites Project, Pembrokeshire gazetteer
Edwards, N. 2007, Corpus of Early Medieval Inscribed Stones and Stone Sculpture in Wales
N Vousden, 04 October 2018