Brecon Cathedral started life in 1093 as the Benedictine Priory of St John the Evangelist, built by the Normans on the site of an earlier Celtic church. At the dissolution of the monasteries in 1538 it became Brecon’s Parish Church. It became a Cathedral only in 1923, on the establishment of the Diocese of Swansea and Brecon.
The Cathedral is at the heart of a Diocese which stretches from Beguildy in the North to the beautiful Gower Peninsula in the South, including most of the Brecon Beacons National Park and the City of Swansea.
The Cathedral is the Mother Church of the Diocese and offers a ministry of worship and welcome to all who visit. Although a building of relatively modest proportions, the Cathedral is set in a walled Close, unique in Wales. The remains of the former monastic buildings today provide the administrative centre for the Diocese as well as housing for the Cathedral clergy and a Heritage Centre and Restaurant. This remarkable collection of buildings is the finest of its kind in Wales.
Every weekday Morning Prayer is said here at 8.30 am and Evening Prayer is said or sung at 6 pm (Monday evenings is Orthodox Vespers).
The Daily Eucharist is at 5 pm on Mondays, 9 am on Tuesdays, 11 am on Wednesdays, 9 am on Thursdays, 12 noon on Fridays and 9 am on Saturdays.
There is also a Eucharist at St Mary’s on Tuesdays at 11 am and at Llanddew on Thursdays at 11.30 am followed by lunch.
Evensong will be sung on both Thursday and Friday this week at 6 pm.
Opening Times
Usual Opening Hours: 8.30 am – 6.30 pm (often longer)
Craig y Nos Country Park has been temporarily…