Girish Mahajan (Editor)

Hen Domen

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Type
  
motte-and-bailey

OS grid reference
  
SO 213 980

Reference no.
  
MG013

Principal area
  
Location
  
Powys, Wales

Designated
  
1926

Community
  
Montgomery

Hen Domen Coflein Mapping

Hen Domen Welsh, meaning "old mound", is the site of a medieval timber motte-and-bailey castle in Powys, Wales. It is the site of the original Montgomery Castle, and was built by Roger de Montgomery in 1070. From 1105 the castle was the home of the de Boulers (Bowdler) family, and it is from Baldwin de Boulers that Montgomery gets its Welsh name, Trefaldwyn "The Town of Baldwin". When the castle was rebuilt in stone (1223–1234), it was decided to rebuild it on a rocky promontory a mile to the south-east – the location of the current town of Montgomery, Powys. The Hen Domen site has been extensively excavated.

Contents

Hen Domen ClwydPowys Archaeological Trust site map

There are permanent exhibitions relating to both the medieval Hen Domen and Norman Montgomery Castles and their archaeological excavations (with scale models of both castles) in The Old Bell Museum in Montgomery.

Hen Domen Coflein Mapping

Location

Hen Domen httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

Hen Domen lies on the western edge of the small village of Hendomen roughly 1.6 km (1 mile) northwest of the town of Montgomery, and 2 km (1.2 miles) west of Offa's Dyke. The castle was built on a low hill, only 0.7 km (0.4 miles) east of the Ford of Rhydwhymanan (an important shallow crossing of the River Severn), and offered good views of the Severn Valley to the north and west, and of the Vale of Montgomery to the east.

Description

Hen Domen ClwydPowys Archaeological Trust Education Guides Hen Domen

The site of the Hen Domen motte and bailey castle comprises a roughly oval area of 50 metres (160 ft) by 40 metres (130 ft) lying in a south-west to north-east direction. The site is surrounded by a roughly oval ditch with a depth of 2.7 metres (8.9 ft). The motte is in the south west corner and is 8 metres (26 ft) high, and steeply sided with a flat summit with a diameter of 6.7 metres (22 ft). The bailey occupies an area of roughly 0.13 hectares (13 acre).

Hen Domen Reconstruction model of Hen Domen a Norman motte and bailey castle

Excavations from the 1960s until the 1990s have revealed traces of a series of grand and complex buildings including a towering timber building on the motte, connected by a bridge to the bailey with a large hall, 5 metres (16 ft) by 6 metres (20 ft). Other evidence and remains include a wooden palisade which stood on the bailey defences, a wooden tower, a gatehouse, a granary and a possible chapel.

History

Hen Domen HEN DOMEN CASTLE

Hen Domen was built sometime soon after 1071 when Roger de Montgomery, the first Earl of Shrewsbury, was given extensive areas of Shropshire by William the Conqueror. Archaeological evidence suggests that it was completed before 1100. Roger de Montgomery named the castle Montgomery after the town in France where he came from.

Access

The site can be viewed from a nearby lane off the B4385, but the site itself is on private land and can only be visited with the permission of the owner.

References

Hen Domen Wikipedia