St Levan's Church, St Levan | |
St Levan's Church
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OS grid reference | SW380222 |
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Denomination | Church of England |
Churchmanship | Broad Church |
History | |
Dedication | Selevan, or Salomon |
Administration | |
Parish | St Levan |
Deanery | Penwith |
Archdeaconry | Cornwall |
Diocese | Truro |
Province | Canterbury |
St Levan's Church, St Levan is a parish church in the Church of England located in St Levan, Cornwall, UK. Until 1864 the church was a chapelry of the Royal Peculiar of the Deanery of St Buryan. It is now part of the united benefice of St Buryan and St Sennen.
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The church of St Levan is medieval.[1] It was heavily rebuilt in the twelfth century and extended in the fifteenth century.[2] It was restored by J. D. Sedding. St Levan (properly Selevan, a Celtic form of Solomon) according to the Life of St Kybi was a Cornishman and the father of Kybi. In the department of Morbihan are four places probably connected to the same saint, who probably lived in the 6th or 7th century. On the cliff at St Levan is St Levan's Well and below it the probable remains of his chapel, which were described by William Borlase in his Antiquities.[3] For more information on the saint see Salomon of Cornwall.
The tower contains three bells dating from 1641, 1754 and 1881.
Langdon (1896) records six stone crosses in the parish, of which two are in the churchyard.