Domen Las, Ysgubor y Coed
Has been described as a Certain Timber Castle (Motte)
There are earthwork remains
Name | Domen Las, Ysgubor y Coed |
Alternative Names | Abereinion; Aberdyfi; Aberdovey; Glan Dyfi; Tomen Las; Domenlas |
Historic Country | Cardiganshire |
Modern Authority | Ceredigion |
1974 Authority | Dyfed |
Community | Ysgubor y Coed |
The medieval castle of Domen Las is represented by a castle mound or motte. This is notable for the way that it is fitted into the natural topography and for the remarkable configuration of its ditch. The castle faces north-east across the upper Dyfi estuary towards Pennal, the court of the Princes of Gwynedd in Merioneth (see NPRN 302965), and was built in 1156 to counter those Princes' ambitions in Ceredigion. It may then have been the sole castle in Geneu'r-glyn commote, as Castell Gwallter at Llandre is not heard of after 1153 (see NPRN 92234). Domen Las is probably the castle of Abereinion mentioned in 1169 and 1206. The castle mound is set near the northern tip of an isolated straggling rocky ridge rising from the marshes. It is a circular flat-topped mound roughly 34m in diameter and 5.0m high. It is ditched around except on the south-east, where the ground falls steeply into the marsh. On the west side a rocky ridge serves is co-opted as a counterscarp. On the north side the ditch has the appearance of a regular basin, closed on the east side by a wall of rock pierced by a narrow gap. This could be a pond or cistern, and is surely an original feature. There are no traces of any further earthworks. The castle mound was probably crowned by a great timber-framed tower and it is likely that a princely hall and associated offices stood nearby. These could have occupied the irregular platform on the northern tip of the spur above the river, although there is a more a more amenable location on the south side of the motte, where a level area is sheltered by the rocky ridge. A little to the south a small bank cuts across the ridge. This was probably a hedge bank and may be comparatively recent. (Coflein–John Wiles 11.02.08)
The monument comprises the remains of a motte and ditch, dating to the medieval period (c. 1066 -1540 AD)
A motte is a large conical or pyramidal mound of soil and/or stone, usually surrounded by either a wet or dry ditch, and surmounted by a tower constructed of timber or stone. Domen Las stands on the end of an outcrop of rock jutting out through the marsh to the bank of the Dovey. The mound is c.7m high and the diameter across the top is c.10m. It is surrounded on the north, west and south by a rock cut ditch c.5m wide and c.1.3m deep, and on the east by the marsh. To the north-east lies a roughly rectangular area bounded by a scarped slope and separated from the motte by a ditch c.1.8m deep. The enclosed area is not very level but it appears to be a bailey, an additional defended area, measuring c.26m by c.18m. (Scheduling Report)
This site is a scheduled monument protected by law
Not Listed
The National Monument Record (Coflein) number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | SN687968 |
Latitude | 52.5537109375 |
Longitude | -3.93711996078491 |
Eastings | 268720 |
Northings | 296870 |