Rahul Sharma (Editor)

Knucklas

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Population
  
220 [1]

Principal area
  
Sovereign state
  
United Kingdom

Local time
  
Thursday 12:43 PM

Ceremonial county
  
UK parliament constituency
  
Brecon and Radnorshire

OS grid reference
  
SO251742

Country
  
Wales

Postcode district
  
LD7

Dialling code
  
01547

Post town
  
Knucklas

Weather
  
9°C, Wind SW at 19 km/h, 85% Humidity

Knucklas (Welsh: Cnwclas, "green hillock") is a village in Powys, Wales. It lies off the B4355 road and is served by Knucklas railway station on the Heart of Wales Line. It is approximately 2 miles (3.2 km) from Knighton and lies in the upper valley of the River Teme.

Contents

Map of Knucklas, Knighton, UK

The Castle Mound

A protected ancient monument in the care of Knucklas Castle Community Land Project KCCLP and listed by Cadw, it is the site of a castle believed to have been built by the Mortimers in c.1220-25. It consisted of a keep – a square stone fortification with four round towers on top of a steep hill. There is some evidence that there may have been further outer walls. It was captured by a Welsh army in 1262 which destroyed the defences. Below the castle lies the battlefield of the Battle of Beguildy fought between the Welsh and the Mortimer family of Norman Marcher Lords in 1146. The castle was attacked and destroyed by the forces of Owain Glyndŵr in 1402 during his rebellion. Whilst there is a romantic story associating the castle location with the marriage of Guinevere and King Arthur, this probably developed from an earlier story which suggested that a marriage took place between Gwenhwyfar, the daughter of Ogrfan Gawr (also called 'Gogrfan Gawr "the Giant" of Castell y Cnwclas' (Knucklas Castle)) and Arthur the warrior – there being no reference to Arthur as a king in the early Welsh texts.

The Viaduct

A spectacular 13-arch span completed by the Central Wales Railway in 1865 and recorded in an engraving from the Illustrated London News.

Historic Heyope

Three Bronze Age torcs were found here and declared treasure in 1991. They are now housed in the National Museum, Cardiff.

The parish church of St David was built in 1882, on the site of a medieval church; the font is 15th century.

The longest-burning tyre fire in British history occurred in Heyope, lasting 13 years from 1989 to 2001.

Further reading

  • Noble, F (1955) The Bronze Age gold torcs from Heyope, Transactions of the Radnorshire Society 25, 34-8.
  • References

    Knucklas Wikipedia


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