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Carmarthen Castle

Carmarthen Castle
Carmarthen, Wales
Prif borth Castell Caerfyrddin 03.JPG
Carmarthen Castle is located in Wales
Carmarthen Castle
Carmarthen Castle
Coordinates 51°51′20″N 4°18′17″W / 51.8556°N 4.3046°W / 51.8556; -4.3046
Type Castle
Site information
Condition Ruins
Site history
Built 1190s
Battles/wars

Captured by Gruffydd ap Rhys (1116)
Captured by Cadell ap Gruffydd (1146)
Destroyed by Rhys ap Gruffydd (1195)
Captured by Llywelyn the Great (1215)
Captured by the Earl of Pembroke (1223)
Captured by Owain Glyndwr (1405)
Captured by William Herbert of Raglan (1456)
Captured by Colonel Laugharne (1640s)

Type Grade I listed
Designated 1954

Captured by Gruffydd ap Rhys (1116)
Captured by Cadell ap Gruffydd (1146)
Destroyed by Rhys ap Gruffydd (1195)
Captured by Llywelyn the Great (1215)
Captured by the Earl of Pembroke (1223)
Captured by Owain Glyndwr (1405)
Captured by William Herbert of Raglan (1456)
Captured by Colonel Laugharne (1640s)

Carmarthen Castle (Welsh: Castell Caerfyrddin) is a ruined castle in Carmarthen, West Wales, UK. First built by Walter, Sheriff of Gloucester in the early 1100s, the castle was captured and destroyed on several occasions before being rebuilt in stone during the 1190s. The castle was captured by Owain Glyndwr in 1405. Henry VII's father died at Carmarthen Castle in 1456. During the Wars of the Roses the castle fell to William Herbert and, during the Civil War, was captured by Parliamentary forces. It was dismantled by order of Oliver Cromwell in the mid 1600s.

It has been used as the site of Carmarthen's gaol until the 1920s. The remains of the castle were given a Grade I heritage listing in 1954 and is currently a tourist attraction and site of the town's Tourist Information Centre.

The castle is in the county town of Carmarthen located 20 metres (66 ft) above sea level on a high terrace overlooking the tidal River Towy.Carmarthen Bridge lies below the castle, at what was the lowest bridging point of the river 17 kilometres (11 mi) from the sea. While it is described today as "arguably the biggest disappointment among the plethora of medieval ruins in Wales" it has, in fact, dominated the layout and orientation of the town with its streets and property boundaries radiating out from the site.


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