St. David's Cathedral (4), Pembrokeshire, Wales
The Chapel of St. Edward the Confessor at the eastern end of the South Aisle. After Cromwell's men were ordered to strip the roof of it's lead in 1648 the chapel fell into disrepair and was finally was reroofed in the early 20th century.
The chapel contains an altar and fittings in alabaster and is the resting place, the tomb on the left, of the Countess of Maidstone who funded the restoration of the south aisle and chapel.
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The fan-vaulted ceiling in the Chapel of the Holy Trinity which dates from the early 16th century.
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The remains of St. David's Shrine.
During the reformation Bishop Barlow, a staunch Protestant, stripped the shrine of its jewels and confiscated the relics of both David and Justinian in order to counteract what he saw as superstition.
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The tomb of Edmund Tudor father of Henry VII between the Quire and the High Altar and adjacent to St. David's Shrine.
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