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The Great Britain Guide

Castles · Mid Wales

Aberedw Castle

Norman & medieval♿ Wheelchair: limited

Aberedw Castle — scheduled monument in Wales.

Aberedw Castle, castles in Mid Wales

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Plan your visit

Typical visit
1.5 h–3 h
Nearest railway station
Builth Road · 7.8 km
  • Family-friendly
  • Limited wheelchair access

About

Aberedw Castle is a castle in the United Kingdom — fortified architecture from the medieval, Tudor, or Victorian-revival period. Records date its origin to 1093. Heritage designation: scheduled monument. Wikidata describes it as: "scheduled monument in Wales". Coordinates: 52.1171°, -3.3502°.

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From the Wikipedia article

The remains of Aberedw Castle, also known as 'Castle in Elfael Uwch Mynydd', are located at the small village of Aberedw in the county of Powys, Mid-Wales. It was built in the late twelfth century and probably replaced the motte and bailey castle a few hundred metres away.

Excerpt from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0. See the source article linked in Sources below.

Background

History

The castle was signed to Walter Heckelutel, as a Licence of the Crenellate, by King Edward I of England on 24 November 1284. This licence to crenellate was thought of as a way for central authority to exert power over the lords, although this is not confirmed. It is also suggested however, that the castle dates back to 1093 when the Normans invaded South Wales. Aberedw is more famously known to be the residence of Llewelyn ap Gruffydd. This man is very well known as the last native Prince of Wales. Aberedw was the last retreat Llewelyn made before he was killed and beheaded by Adam Francton, who then had his head sent to the King of England, in 1282.

Description

It was a rectangular stone castle with circular towers 6 m in diameter at the angles, surrounded by a moat approximately 10 to wide. It stands to the east of the River Wye floodplain and remains of the moat are visible on the other three sides. It was entered via a causeway across the ditch on the east side and there are some signs of internal buildings. The eastern towers show some signs of latrine chutes. Today it is a ruin, as most of the west side was destroyed by railway construction in the 19th century. Many stones from the castle were used in the construction of the foundations of the track. The ruins are in poor shape and there is active erosion that is damaging the site.

Sourced from Wikipedia under CC BY-SA 4.0.

Coordinates
52.1171, -3.3502
District
Powys
Parish
Aberedw
Postcode
LD2 3UH
Parliamentary constituency
Brecon, Radnor and Cwm Tawe
Established
1093
Nearest railway station
Builth Road7.8 km

Sources

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Frequently asked questions

Where is Aberedw Castle?
Aberedw Castle is in Mid Wales, United Kingdom (postcode LD2 3UH), in the parish of Aberedw.
When was Aberedw Castle built?
Built or established in 1093.
Is Aberedw Castle a listed building?
Aberedw Castle is officially recognised as scheduled monument listed.
Does Aberedw Castle charge admission?
Aberedw Castle typically charges admission. Check the official site for current ticket prices and opening hours.
How do I get to Aberedw Castle?
The nearest railway station is Builth Road, about 7.8 km away. Drivers can navigate to postcode LD2 3UH.