Long Mountain
Long Mountain is a hill located east of Welshpool in on the borders of Montgomeryshire and Shropshire. It is a Marilyn, having a prominence of 1,000 feet. It rises to a height of 1,339 feet at Beacon Ring, where there is a hillfort.
Location
Long Mountain extends from Forden in Montgomeryshire, in the south-west to Vennington near Westbury in Shropshire to the north-east. It is sometimes considered to include the Breidden Hills to the north although the latter are separated from Long Mountain's main body by a valley through which run a railway line and a major trunk road (the A458) connecting Welshpool with Shrewsbury.
History
There was a Roman road along Long Mountain, part of a route from Uriconium (Wroxeter) to Lavobrinta (Forden Gaer).[1] At the southern end of the hill there are traces of Offa's Dyke, and the Offa's Dyke Path traverses the Welsh area of the hill. Within the English area, in Long Mountain's eastern foothills, are the remains of Caus Castle, which was built in Norman times upon an earlier Iron Age hillfort.
In AD 630 the hill was the scene of the Battle of Cefn Digoll, between Northumbria and an alliance of Gwynedd and Mercia.
References
Outside links
("Wikimedia Commons" has material about Long Mountain) |
- Location map: 52°39’-0"N, 3°4’1"W