Bleddfa Castle

Bleddfa Castle (sometimes referred to as Bledeach or Bledvach Castle) was a motte and bailey structure near Llangunllo in modern-day Powys, Wales. It is believed to have been built before 1195 and is said to have been abandoned by 1304. What remains today is described as a "mutilated oval mound" containing some traces of masonry surrounded by a rectangular bailey.

The first record of Bleddfa appears in 1195, when Hugh de Say received from King Richard I licence to fortify the castle and a square tower. In 1262 the castle was captured and razed by Llewelyn ap Gruffydd, who wrested it from the control of the Mortimers. In 1304, Edward I began allowing material from the castle, which had long since been destroyed, to be used to build a church tower nearby, which was itself destroyed by the Welsh in 1403.

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Coordinates: 52°18′26″N 3°09′44″W / 52.3072°N 3.1623°W / 52.3072; -3.1623


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