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The small south door has been built in, and entrance to the building is through the timbered west porch, above which is a turret containing two bells, one of which is of 13th-century date but slightly smaller than those at
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arch as the whole building is contained under one roof; the screen is plain and not of good workmanship, the only ornamentation being slight columns with crocketed pinnacles on each side of the entry. The
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meaning 'bend in a river', and this is an apt description of the site of this village, which stands at the centre of a long bend of consistent radius.
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464:"Kemeys Folly:Grand Designs-featured 18th-century sheriff's hunting lodge in south Wales back on the market after failing to sell for seven years"
317:. A bridge was here as early as the 16th century but was washed away in winter floods in 1690 and was eventually replaced, in 1730, by a solid
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ever held it, and they probably took their name from another Kemeys, Kemeys
Inferior, nine miles (14 km) further down the
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Despite the fact that the family did not actually take their surname from here, it was "farmed" by Edward Kemeys, perhaps as
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is a former hunting lodge built in 1712 by George Kemeys and rebuilt in the early 20th century as a home for the
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Its unusual name is derived from the fact that the patronage of the church was at one time held by the
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and high, and on the south side of the nave is an exceedingly small window which lighted the former
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operates a river monitoring station at Chain Bridge which measures the river's flow rate.
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structure known as Pont Kemeys. This bridge in turn was replaced, in 1829, by a
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arch with green-painted girders which is still referred to as Chain Bridge.
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Chain Bridge, to the north of the village, takes the B4598
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here in early days. It is, however, doubtful whether the
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Kemeys
Commander, 3 miles (4.8 km) north-west of
436:"Geograph:: Chain Bridge © John Thorn cc-by-sa/2.0"
147:. Both of these names are from the Welsh word
485:Monumental Inscriptions for All Saints Church
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282:in the hamlet retains many features of the
215:nearby and has some interesting features.
424:Monmouthshire, Its History and Topography
262:and the wall-plate are of some age. The
181:Coxe also visited the nearby village of
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505:The Bridge And Inn c1955, Chain Bridge
258:. The beams of the slightly flattened
250:in the south wall. The east window is
195:Church of All Saints, Kemeys Commander
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452:. Centre for Ecology and Hydrology.
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495:Kelly's Directory for 1884 entry
490:1891 Census for Kemeys Commander
346:Centre for Ecology and Hydrology
226:, taking the place of the usual
218:A small, low screen divides the
176:Historical Tour in Monmouthshire
91:within a graceful bend of the
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361:High Sheriff of Monmouthshire
500:List of Incumbents 1535–1987
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520:Villages in Monmouthshire
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402:"TROSTREY: ST. DAVIDS"
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450:"Usk at Chain Bridge"
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422:Evans, C.J.O., 1950
209:Church of All Saints
470:. 21 February 2018.
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67:) is a village in
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34:51.7383°N 2.9428°W
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308:Abergavenny
284:Renaissance
260:barrel roof
237:Reformation
89:Abergavenny
37: /
408:22 January
377:References
331:Pontypridd
276:high altar
272:Gwernesney
224:presbytery
189:The church
121:preceptory
117:commandery
115:and was a
101:All Saints
22:51°44′18″N
365:Channel 4
325:built by
315:River Usk
313:over the
256:rood loft
241:trefoiled
222:from the
145:River Usk
137:hermitage
93:River Usk
25:2°56′34″W
514:Category
337:, is an
286:period.
183:Trostrey
156:chaplain
79:Location
248:piscina
228:chancel
160:chantry
158:of the
129:demesne
246:and a
244:aumbry
149:cemais
133:parish
335:Neath
310:road
233:altar
71:, in
61:Welsh
410:2013
344:The
339:iron
264:font
220:nave
207:The
329:of
319:oak
306:to
304:Usk
168:Usk
162:of
119:or
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