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The party then visited Llansilin Church, where they were welcomed by the Vicar, the Rev. Daniel Jones. The speaker here was Mr. C. E. V. Owen, who based his account of the church upon the talk given to the Cambrian Archaeological Association by Mr. C. A. R. Radford in 1957 (a full account of the church by Mr. Radford will, it is hoped, appear in a forthcoming number of Arch. Camb.). Llan- silin is now recognised to have been a Clas church: of the early cruciform building, the nave survives as the present north aisle, with the west door blocked; evidence of the incorporation of the south transept can be seen in the present south wall. The church underwent considerable rebuilding in the early 15th century, probably after partial destruction at the time of the burning of Sycharth. Refs.: For the his- tory of the church, see Archdeacon Thomas's St. Asaph. The monuments and fittings are described in a Paper in Arch. Camb., 1894, by Arthur Baker, who was responsible for the sympathetic restoration of the building. At Sycharch, visited by the kindness of Mr. Hughes, Mr. C. E. V. Owen was again the speaker. This motte-and-bailey castle is well-known as the home of Owain Glyndwr, and Mr. Owen gave a summary of the bard Iolo Goch's description of Glyndwr's house which Mr. Owen suggested had stood, not on the summit of the motte (such sites being quite outmoded by 1400) but in the bailey. Members had tea at Bodfach, where votes of thanks were passed to the speakers and to Mr. T. E. Roberts, who had organised the excursion.