Difference between revisions of "Wentloog Hundred"

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[[File:Wentloog hundred.png|thumb|240px|right|Wentloog hundred shown within Monmouthshire]]
 
[[File:Wentloog hundred.png|thumb|240px|right|Wentloog hundred shown within Monmouthshire]]
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[[File:Percoed Reen - geograph.org.uk - 1298794.jpg|thumb|right|The Wentloog Level]]
 
'''Wentloog''' (also spelled '''Wentlloog''' or '''Wentllooge''' or known as '''Newport''') is a [[Hundred]] of [[Monmouthshire]].  
 
'''Wentloog''' (also spelled '''Wentlloog''' or '''Wentllooge''' or known as '''Newport''') is a [[Hundred]] of [[Monmouthshire]].  
  

Revision as of 11:14, 9 October 2014

Wentloog hundred shown within Monmouthshire
The Wentloog Level

Wentloog (also spelled Wentlloog or Wentllooge or known as Newport) is a Hundred of Monmouthshire.

It is situated in the western part of the county, bounded to the north by Brecknockshire; on the east by the hundreds of Abergavenny, Usk and Caldicot; on the south by the Bristol Channel, and on the west by Glamorganshire. Wentloog is an anglicisation of the Welsh Gwynllŵg, the name of the early kingdom and mediæval cantref.

Of all the hundreds of Monmouthshire, Wentloog surely encompasses the most contrasting scenery, from the flat Roman levels reclaimed from the Severn, to the upland valleys of Mynyddislwyn and Aberystruth. It comprises the most urbanised and industrialised parts of the county and indeed the urbanised upland continues across the border into the arguably more famous Glamorgan valleys. On the southern coastal belt are to be found portions of two cities: The western parts of Monmouthshire's own Newport and the eastern suburbs of Glamorgan's Cardiff.

It contains the following ancient parishes:

Outside links

Hundreds of Monmouthshire

Abergavenny • Caldicot • Raglan • Skenfrith • Usk • Wentloog