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Llanwynno

Llanwonno
St Gwynno's Church, Llanwonno - geograph.org.uk - 340261.jpg
Looking down on St Gwynno's Church
Llanwonno is located in Rhondda Cynon Taf
Llanwonno
Llanwonno
Llanwonno shown within Rhondda Cynon Taf
OS grid reference ST029955
Principal area
Ceremonial county
Country Wales
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town Mountain Ash
Postcode district CF45
Dialling code 01443
Police South Wales
Fire South Wales
Ambulance Welsh
EU Parliament Wales
UK Parliament
Welsh Assembly
List of places
UK
Wales
Rhondda Cynon TafCoordinates: 51°39′04″N 3°24′11″W / 51.651°N 3.403°W / 51.651; -3.403

Llanwonno (Welsh: Llanwynno) is a hamlet high up in the mountains between the historic mining valleys of the Rhondda and Cynon Valleys in Rhondda Cynon Taf deep in the heart of the South Wales Valleys. Llanwonno consists of a church, Eglwys Sant Gwynno and an inn – The Brynffynon Hotel.

Welsh writer and broadcaster Gwyn Thomas immortalised Llanwonno in his 1968 autobiography A Few Selected Exits, in which he recounted how every Sunday he and his father would begin a journey from their home in Porth to visit family in Mountain Ash. They never completed their journey, the pub in Llanwonno being the only place that would serve Gwyn's father on a Sunday. When Gwyn Thomas died in 1981 his ashes were scattered in the churchyard. Later, Llanwonno was used for location filming of the 1993 BBC film adaptation of Thomas' autobiography Selected Exits starring Sir Anthony Hopkins as Thomas.

The church, Eglwys Sant Gwynno, is where legendary athlete Guto Nyth Brân is buried. The story of the life, and death, of Guto Nyth Brân is remembered and celebrated in the centre of the nearby town of Mountain Ash every New Year's Eve, with an event known as the Nos Galan Road Races, in which runners hailing from all parts of the world race through the local streets, with the finishing-line placed at the point of the bronze statue of the legendary figure, which sits in the centre of a public seating area known as 'Guto Square' on Oxford Street.

The ancient parish of Llanwynno (or Llanwonno) included Abercynon, Penrhiwceiber Ynysybwl, most of Mountain Ash/Aberpennar, part of Pontypridd (the area north of the River Rhondda and west of the River Taff), Porth, Stanleytown, Ynyshir, Wattstown and Blaenllechau in the Rhondda. The mountainous area is easily reached on foot or by car, using mountain roads, which lead to Penrhiwceiber, Aberpennar, Ferndale, Ynysybwl, and Pontypridd.


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