Beddgelert is situated were the river Colwyn meets the river Glaslyn. Before the construction of the Cob at Porthmadog the river was tidal and ships sailed all the way to the village centre. The parish church of St Mary's (NPRN 43763) has 12th century origins, it was built on the site of a presumed Celtic Clas and subsequently a late 7th century Augustinian Priory, and is traditionally regarded as one of the oldest religious foundations in Wales.
Beddgelert means the 'grave of Gelert' refering to Gelert, a sixth century saint from the area. The 'Gelert's Grave' situated near the village, was erected c.1802 by David Pritchard, first tenant-manager of the Beddgelert Hotel (now the Royal Goat Hotel, NPRN 16816). Drawing on pre-existing mythology he revived and partly reinvented the story of the loyal hound Gelert, whose master was Llewelyn Fawr.
From the late 18th century there was a marked increase in English visitors and artists to Snowdonia and North Wales as tourists of the 'Picturesque'. Gelert's Grave subsequently played an important role in the history of early Welsh tourism.
Beddgelert was also a mining village and has terraces of workers' housing, providing accommodation for miners at the nearby Sygun Fawr Copper Mine (NPRN 33771) and local slate quarries. A short-lived narrow gauge railway built through Beddgelert from Caernarfon to Porthmadog to transport slate and copper opened in the 1920s, by which time most of the mines and quarries were closing.
RCAHMW, 2009.
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Beddgelert was the site of an Augustinian Priory founded in the early thirteenth century. According to legend, the village takes its name from Gelert, a hound belonging to Llewelyn ap Iorwerth (d.1240), who had saved his baby son from wolves, but before realising his son was still alive, Llewlyn killed the hound. Full of remorse, after discovering his error, the prince buried him near the village. In truth, the memorial stone marking `Gelert's grave? was erected in 1802 by David Prichard, the first manager of the Royal Goat Hotel, as marketing ploy to attract sentimental tourists to his establishment. It appears to have worked as the legend, his name and the hotel feature in numerable travellers? accounts of their visits to Beddgelert throughout the nineteenth century.
Record updated as part of the AHRC-funded project 'Journey to the Past: Wales in historic travel writing from France and Germany'.
R. Singer (Bangor University) and S. Fielding (RCAHMW), 2017.
Resources
DownloadTypeSourceDescription
application/pdfETW - European Travellers to Wales ProjectDescription of a visit to Beddgelert by Johann Georg Kohl from 'Reisen in England und Wales' (1842). Text available in Welsh, English, French and German. Produced through the European Travellers to Wales project.
application/mswordBPC - Beddgelert Parish CollectionDigital copy of an essay entitled, "Beddgelert Priory: 1284-1538 from conquest to dissolution."
application/mswordBPC - Beddgelert Parish CollectionDigital copy of an essay entitled, "Post Reformation Beddgelert: 1538-2003. The changing face of Christianity."
application/mswordBPC - Beddgelert Parish CollectionDigital copy of an essay entitled, "The Christian Community at Beddgelert prior to the conquest of Wales in 1284."
application/mswordBPC - Beddgelert Parish CollectionDigital copy of an essay entitled, "The Parish of Beddgelert: a summary including Impropriators, Queen Anne's Bounty and Chapel of Ease."
application/mswordBPC - Beddgelert Parish CollectionDigital copy of an essay entitled, "Churches appropriated by and lands belonging to Beddgelert Priory, a chapel of ease and farms purchased with Queen Anne Bounty."
application/mswordBPC - Beddgelert Parish CollectionDigital copy of an essay entitled, "Lands owned by the priory of Beddgelert: a summary."
application/mswordBPC - Beddgelert Parish CollectionDigital copy of an introduction to the essays in the collection.
application/mswordBPC - Beddgelert Parish CollectionDigital copy of an essay entitled, "Clergy serving at Beddgelert, Llanfrothen and Penrhyndeudraeth: A summary."