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Llanrothal

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Region
  
West Midlands

Sovereign state
  
United Kingdom

Fire
  
Hereford and Worcester

Ceremonial county
  
Herefordshire

Country
  
England

Police
  
West Mercia

Ambulance
  
West Midlands

Unitary authority
  
Herefordshire

Llanrothal httpsuploadwikimediaorgwikipediacommonsthu

UK parliament constituency
  
Hereford and South Herefordshire

Llanrothal is a small village and historical parish in Herefordshire, England in the Monnow Valley, on the border with Monmouthshire, Wales. The River Monnow flows near here along the border. The village is located 5 miles by road northwest of Monmouth. It contains a 12th-century church, St John the Baptist's which stands in a remote position close to the Wales–England border overlooking the river.

Contents

Map of Llanrothal, Monmouth, UK

Llanrothal Court, in the village, is an early 14th-century hall house, with cross-wings added in the 15th or 16th century and further additions from the 17th, 19th and 20th centuries. It is a Grade II listed building.

Another historically important building in the village is The Cwm. Originally a shooting box, and subsequently a farmhouse, it is also Grade II listed, together with the terrace in front of the house, and the retaining wall to the side, which contains rare bee boles. The present building, dating from about the 1830s, is on site of and incorporates part of a demolished 17th-century house that was a Jesuit province and college.

History

Llanrothal was once a stronghold of the Jesuits and Papists such as Henry Milbourne, who resided in the village and whose family worshipped at The Cwm in the seventeenth century. In the early 17th century the house became the headquarters of the Jesuit mission in South Wales and remained an important Catholic centre until its discovery and sacking by the Bishop of Hereford in 1678, in the anti-Catholic backlash following the Popish Plot. William Vychan, or William the Younger, also lived at Llanrothal, although he is also associated with Penrhyn, in Caernarvonshire.

Throughout its history, the village has been associated with nearby Welsh Newton, and today the together form the Welsh Newton and Llanrothal Group Parish Council.

References

Llanrothal Wikipedia