- Ewyas
Ewyas (Welsh: "Ewias") was a possible early Welsh kingdom which may have been formed around the time of the
Roman withdrawal from Britain in the5th century . The name was later used for a much smallercommote or administrative sub-division, which covered the area of the modernVale of Ewyas (now withinMonmouthshire ,Wales ) and a larger area to the east including the villages ofEwyas Harold andEwyas Lacy (now withinHerefordshire ,England ).A legendary kingdom
According to some sources, early Ewyas may have encompassed much of south-east Wales, including the later kingdoms of Gwent and
Ergyng . However, these early sources are otherwise uncorroborated and their interpretation is disputed. They suggest thatEudaf Hen of Ewyas, supposedly a descendant ofCaratacus who had led theSilures in battle against the Romans, took up a postulated "British High Kingship" after defeatingTrahern , the brother of KingCoel Godhebog , in the late third or early fourth century. [http://www.historyfiles.co.uk/KingListsBritain/CymruGwent.htm Post-Roman Celtic Kingdoms at The History Files] ] An 8th century charter relating to the church atClodock includes an account of its origin at a time when Clydawg, "king in Ewyas" was murdered while on a hunting expedition, and an oratory was built to commemorate his martyrdom. [http://ewyaslacy.org.uk/doc.php?d=nw_ewy_9001 The History of Ewyas Lacy] ]Cantref
It has been suggested that by about 430 AD Ewyas may have become dominated by the
Kingdom of Powys to the north, underVortigern , and the wider kingdom as a whole eventually took the name of Gwent, and later Glamorgan. In Ewyas, north of the present site of Longtown, a religious centre dedicated to St. Beuno was founded at Llanveynoe, where what is probably the oldest stone cross in the modern county of Herefordshire stands, from around 600 AD. At around the same time, a religious centre may have been founded at Llanthony, on the site of the later Priory. [http://www.archenfield.com/Longtown.htm Archenfield Archaeology - Longtown and Clodock ] ] In the mid 10th century there were sevencantref s in Glamorgan, including "Ystradyw and Ewyas".Lordship
In about 1046 Osbern Pentecost, a Norman follower of
Edward the Confessor , built amotte and bailey castle at Ewyas Harold, believed to be one of the first built in Britain. Following theNorman Conquest , Ewyas remained in Welsh hands briefly under Rydderch ap Caradog, apparently a client ruler of Ewyas obeisant to William the Conqueror. It was then granted to the Norman retainerWalter de Lacy By the time of the
Domesday Book in 1086, Ewyas or Ewias was an autonomous area bounded by the Black Mountains in the west,Graig Syfyrddin in the south, the line of theGolden Valley in the east, and Yager Hill and Cefn Hill to the north, just below the village ofClifford Castle nearHay-on-Wye . [http://www.historyfiles.co.uk/FeaturesBritain/CymruGwent.htm The History Files] ] Domesday records that Alfred of Marlborough held the castle of Ewyas of the king; this was presumably the re-built Pentecost Castle. [http://www.archenfield.com/Longtown.htm Archenfield Archaeology - Longtown and Clodock ] ] Land around Ewyas Harold Castle was held by Walter's son Roger de Lacy.Ewyas became a Marcher lordship, largely independent of the English crown. Further motte and bailey castles were built at Walterstone, Llancillo, Rowlestone and Clodock, followed after 1216 by
Longtown Castle , presiding over the newly founded borough of Longtown. The line of de Lacys ended in 1241, when the Lordship of Ewyas Lacy was divided.Into Herefordshire and Monmouthshire
In 1536 the administration of Wales was re-organised, and the border between Herefordshire and Wales took more or less its present form, with the county of Herefordshire assimilating the Welsh territory of Ewyas Lacy. The
Llanthony valley, orVale of Ewyas , became part of thehundred ofAbergavenny , within Monmouthshire. In 1852 the Parishes of Clodock with Longtown, Michaelchurch Escley, Craswall, St Margarets, Ewyas Harold, Rowlestone, Llancillo, Walterstone, Dulas and Llanveynoe were transferred from the diocese ofSt David's to that of Hereford. To the west of Hatterall Ridge, the other old parishes of Ewyas –Llanthony ,Cwmyoy and Oldcastle - were transferred from St David's to thediocese of Llandaff . [ [http://www.hereford.uk.com/history/thetudors.asp Hereford.uk.com - Herefordshire History ] ]References
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