Righteous Unknown

Lythan of Wales

Also known as Llythaothaw

An early saint of Wales to whom two churches are dedicated; little else is recorded

Feast Day
September 1
Draft
Draft — pending review. Not yet verified for publication.

Life

Lythan is an early saint of Wales remembered chiefly through church dedications rather than through any surviving account of his life. Two churches in Wales are dedicated to him, and he is commemorated on September 1. He is also recorded under the alternate names Llythaothaw and Thaw.

No biographical record of the saint has been preserved. His dates, era, and the events of his life are unknown, and he is named among the early, locally venerated saints of Wales whose memory endures only in the places and churches that bear their dedication. Reference works that list him, such as the Book of Saints compiled by the Monks of Ramsgate, note plainly that no information about him has survived.

Contributions & Legacy

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An Early Welsh Saint Known Only by Dedication

The saint belongs to the broad company of early Welsh and Celtic saints who are attested today almost entirely through church dedications and place-names rather than through written vitae. In Lythan's case, the surviving evidence amounts to the two churches dedicated to him and the September 1 commemoration; the hagiographical sources that record him candidly state that nothing further about his life is known.

The identity of such early dedicatory saints is sometimes uncertain. In the Vale of Glamorgan, the former parish of St Lythans (Welsh Llwyneliddon), about four miles west-southwest of Cardiff, carries a parish church now known under the dedication of St Bleddian, and some topographical accounts associate the place-name with other figures. The hagiographical tradition followed here treats Lythan as a saint of Wales to whom two churches are dedicated, while acknowledging that the underlying historical record is lost.

Sources: Latin Saints of the Orthodox Patriarchate of Rome