DescriptionSt Ishmaels 1 is an incomplete cross-slab. It is located at the west end of St Ishamel's Church (NPRN 414087), standing against the south wall. It was discovered during the 1884 church restoration, half-buried in the churchyard.
The stone is the lower part of a thick rectangular slab of quartz-rich siltstone. It is carved on one of its broad faces, but the upper part is missing. In the centre is the shaft of a deeply-incised outline cross, expanding to a triangular foot at the bottom. In the centre of the shaft is the stem of a deeply-incised linear cross with a triangular terminal. Directly below the cross-shaft is a finely incised, three-sided square panel. The panel is empty but may have been intended to contain an inscription. The carving is thought to be 9th- to 10th-century in date.
Sources include:
Edwards, N. 2007, Corpus of Early Medieval Inscribed Stones and Stone Sculpture in Wales
N Vousden, 6 November 2018