Stow Hill Motte
Has been described as a Certain Timber Castle (Motte)
There are no visible remains
Name | Stow Hill Motte |
Alternative Names | Newport; Casnewydd; Twyn Gwnlliw; Ywyn Gwynlliw; Castleton |
Historic Country | Monmouthshire |
Modern Authority | Newport |
1974 Authority | Gwent |
Community | Stow Hill |
Motte, supposedly of 1100 buried in tunnel spoil in the 1840's. 'it was a circular mound with a flat top some 50 feet in diameter and surrounded by a ditch' (Banks quoted in Phillips)
Twyn Gwynlliw stood very near the church of St. Wollos; the extension of the town of Newport in that direction has, I believe, occasioned its removal. (Wakeman)
According to tradition, Newport developed following St. Gwynllyw’s foundation of a church at the top of Stow Hill in the late fifth or early sixth century, though there is no evidence to support this claim. It appears that there was a Welsh settlement, with some Saxon influences, on the site by the tenth century, and following the Norman Conquest of England Robert de Hay is believed to be responsible for the construction of the motte on Stow Hill around which the town grew at the lowest point on the River Usk. Newport Castle was completed in the mid- to late-fourteenth century, and a town charter of 1427 confirmed its status as a market town which controlled the river crossing. (Coflein)
Not scheduled
Not Listed
The National Monument Record (Coflein) number(s)
County Historic Environment Record
OS Map Grid Reference | ST304874 |
Latitude | 51.5813484191895 |
Longitude | -3.00572991371155 |
Eastings | 330400 |
Northings | 187400 |