Tomen yr Allt

Coordinates: 52°46′49.33″N 3°17′45.71″W / 52.7803694°N 3.2960306°W / 52.7803694; -3.2960306
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Tomen yr Allt
Tomen yr Allt is located in Wales
Tomen yr Allt
Tomen yr Allt within Wales
LocationNear Llanfyllin
RegionPowys, Wales
Coordinates52°46′49.33″N 3°17′45.71″W / 52.7803694°N 3.2960306°W / 52.7803694; -3.2960306
TypeMotte and Bailey Castle
Part ofKingdom of Powys until 1160, then Principality of Powys Wenwynwyn.
Length40 m
Width40 m
History
MaterialEarthwork and timber
FoundedPossibly 10th century
Abandoned1257 (keep destroyed)
PeriodsMedieval
Satellite ofCantref of Mechain
Associated withLords of commote of Mechain Uwch Coed
EventsPut under siege by Llywelyn ap Gruffudd in 1257
Site notes
Excavation dates1978
ArchaeologistsClwyd-Powys Archaeological Trust
ConditionRuin - only earthworks remaining and very overgrown
DesignationCadw scheduled monument

Tomen yr Allt (or Domen yr Allt) was a Medieval motte and bailey defensive castle near Llanfyllin in Powys, Wales.[1][2] "Tomen ar hallt" is modern Welsh for "mound on the wooded hillside."

Motte and Bailey castle

Description[edit]

The site is over 40 m (130 ft) in diameter; the central man-made earthwork mound (motte) is about 13 by 10 m (43 by 33 ft) and nearly 10 m (33 ft) high. There is a continuous stony ditch, which is doubled on the north-east side, away from the natural slope of the hill.[3][4] The bank is flattened where it joins fields on the south-east side and no bailey is apparent in that section. Most of the earthworks remain and the keep of the castle was probably timber, as CPAT (Clwyd-Powys Archaeological Trust) found a piece of daub and the remains of a burnt layer in 1978.[1][3][5] The site is a Cadw scheduled monument.[2]

History[edit]

Tomen↓
View from Bodfach Hall towards Tomen yr Allt (peak one third of the way across the skyline from the left)

Tomen yr Allt was the caput of the commote of Mechain Uwch Coed in the cantref of Mechain.[6]

In 1160, when the Kingdom of Powys was divided, Mechain became part of the principality which later came to be known as Powys Wenwynwyn. By 1208, the region was controlled by Llywelyn the Great. After his death in 1241, his heir had to come to terms with Henry III of England, which resulted in Powys Wenwynwyn passing to the rule of Gruffydd ap Gwenwynwyn who was allied to Henry III.

Llywelyn ap Gruffudd, the grandson of Llywelyn the Great and the Prince of Gwynedd, began to expand his territory after 1255. In May 1257, Llywelyn ap Gruffudd was reported to have put the "castle of Bodyddon" under siege (Tomen yr Allt is less than 1 km east of Bodyddon and overlooks it). The intention was likely to bring the lords of Mechain to submission, and by 1258 they were indeed allied to Llywelyn.[7] Presumably Tomen yr Allt is the "castle of Bodyddon" to which the reports refer, which was destroyed in 1257.[1][3][4]

The site overlooks Bodfach Hall approximately 1 km south-east in the hamlet of Bodfach near Llanfyllin. Tomen yr Allt and the wooded area around it, known as Coed yr Allt, is on land which belonged to the historical estate of the hall.[8] The original building on the site of the hall may have been constructed to replace the castle.[9]

References[edit]

  1. ^ a b c "Tomen yr Allt Motte, Llanfyllin". Gatehouse. Retrieved 23 April 2015.
  2. ^ a b "Scheduled Ancient Monuments". Excel spreadsheet: SAMs by UA.xls: SAM MG027
  3. ^ a b c "Tomen Yr Allt Motte". CPAT. See also PDF file linked on this summary page
  4. ^ a b "DOMEN-YR-ALLT/TOMEN-YR-ALLT". Coflein. Coflein.
  5. ^ "POWYS Archaeological Record Site No. 1476". CPAT. 1976.
  6. ^ Richards, Robert (1949). "Y domen Gastell". Montgomeryshire Collections Relating to Montgomeryshire and Its Borders. 51: 72. Retrieved 15 April 2015.
  7. ^ Smith, J Beverley (2014). Llywelyn Ap Gruffudd: Prince of Wales. University of Wales Press. p. 99. ISBN 9781783160075.
  8. ^ An Inventory of the Ancient Monuments in Wales and Monmouthshire: I - County of Montgomery. Royal Commission on the Ancient and Historical Monuments of Wales. 1913.
  9. ^ "BODFACH HALL". Coflein. Archived from the original on 4 March 2016. Retrieved 22 April 2015.