Hen Domen | |
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![]() The motte at Hen Domen | |
Type | motte-and-bailey |
Location | Powys, Wales |
Coordinates | 52°34′30″N 3°09′43″W / 52.575°N 3.162°W |
OS grid reference | SO 213 980 |
Official name | Hen Domen Mound & Bailey Castle |
Designated | 1926[1] |
Reference no. | MG013 |
Hen Domen Welsh, meaning "old mound", is the site of a medieval timber motte-and-bailey castle in Powys, Wales. It is the site of the original Montgomery Castle, and was built by Roger de Montgomery in 1070. From 1105 the castle was the home of the de Boulers (Bowdler) family, and it is from Baldwin de Boulers that Montgomery gets its Welsh name, Trefaldwyn "The Town of Baldwin". When the castle was rebuilt in stone (1223–1234), it was decided to rebuild it on a rocky promontory a mile to the southeast—the location of the current town of Montgomery, Powys. The Hen Domen site has been extensively excavated.[2][3]
There are permanent exhibitions relating to both the medieval Hen Domen and Norman Montgomery Castles and their archaeological excavations (with scale models of both castles) in The Old Bell Museum in Montgomery.
London Gazette Scheduling 1926
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