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Penhow Castle

Penhow
Penhow is located in Newport, Wales
Penhow
Penhow
Penhow shown within Newport
Population 770  (2001 census)
Principal area
Country Wales
Sovereign state United Kingdom
Post town NEWPORT
Postcode district NP18 2
Dialling code 01633
Llanwern and Penhow exchanges
Police Gwent
Fire South Wales
Ambulance Welsh
EU Parliament Wales
List of places
UK
Wales
Newport
51°36′54″N 2°50′06″W / 51.61513°N 2.83497°W / 51.61513; -2.83497Coordinates: 51°36′54″N 2°50′06″W / 51.61513°N 2.83497°W / 51.61513; -2.83497

Penhow (Welsh: Pen-hŵ) is a small village and community (parish) just inside the eastern edge of the boundary of the city of Newport, South Wales, within the historic county of Monmouthshire. The name Penhow is believed to be derived from the Welsh word Pen meaning head or top and How derived from the Old Norse word Haugr meaning hill or mound.

Fragments of Roman building material have been found in the area.

Penhow is best known for Penhow Castle, which has claims to be the oldest inhabited castle in Wales. It was built by Sir Roger de St Maur, one of the Norman knights who served the Norman Lord of Striguil at Chepstow Castle. He built a tower house, and documentary evidence shows that he was at Penhow by 1129. It is the first known British home of the St Maur alias Seymour family which rose to national prominence in the 16th century in the person of Queen Jane Seymour, the third wife of King Henry VIII, represented today by the Duke of Somerset. Later the Seymour family, which moved to Hatch Beauchamp in Somerset and Wulfhall in Wiltshire, sold Penhow Castle to the Lewis family of St. Pierre, who converted the castle to a modern residence in 1674. Thomas Lewis' son Thomas was High Sheriff of the county, and married the daughter of Sir Richard Levett, Lord Mayor of London. The Lewis family retained ownership of Penhow Castle for several centuries.


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