Dyfed Archaeological Trust Historic Environment
Record
Use
of this information is subject to the terms and conditions of access to
Welsh HER data published on DAT's website www.dyfedarchaeology.org.uk This information is supplied
for the purposes of personal interest only and may not be used as part
of a commercial project.
Please
contact the HER if you have any further questions regarding this information,
if you would like any of the sources followed up or if you have information
that could improve the record in any way. Primary Reference Numbers (PRNs)
should be quoted in any correspondence.
Penrhos
Primary Reference Number (PRN) : 1196 Trust : Dyfed Community : Llanrhystyd Unitary authority : Ceredigion NGR : SN55206955 Site Type (preferred type first) : Medieval Ringwork / Iron Age Hillfort Status : Scheduled Monument
Summary : Recorded as a medieval castle built by Cadwaladr ap Gruffydd in 1148, Caer Penrhos is a complex site consisting of a ringwork possibly built over an Iron Age fort. It lies at 140m above sea level on a rounded hill. The presumed Iron Age fort is irregular in shape, 230m north - south and 80m east west, with a simple entrance at the northeast tip. It is defended by a bank and ditch with evidence on aerial photographs of a partial outer ditch on the east side. Aerial photographs also show a possible cropmark annexe at the northern end of the fort. The medieval ringwork is more massive and is built across the defences of the fort. It is bounded by a rock-cut ditch on its south and west sides. It measures approximately 44m by 26m internally. The relationship between the two elements is not entirely clear. If the large enclosure is Iron Age in date, then it is very large for the region. The character of its defences is however consistent with known Iron Age sites. It is likely that Iron Age defences were modified in the medieval period. For a full description see T Driver. The site is mainly under improved pasture, but with scrub in some areas, particularly on the banks. K Murphy 16 December 2005 - compiled from several sources.
Description : See also PRN 764.
Feature identified on LiDAR, It is thought that there are additional possible contemporary defensive ditches which are visible at the eastern boundary of the fort. RJ & JS 2019
A possible large and heavily defended hillfort underlying a medieval earthwork castle. K Murphy 2004.
Recorded as a Medieval castle built by Cadwaladr ap Gruffydd in 1148. Rejected as a hillfort by Hogg in the Cardiganshire County History (1994, 270). Hughes (TCAS 1926) described Caer Penrhos as follows: `The ground slopes away in all directions from the earthwork, which consists of a single fosse and vallum. In the south-east is a large motte in the vicnity of which a ditch has been excavated from solid rock. This looks an example of a pre-existing earthwork having been adapted at a later period to form a motte and bailey..' The fort basically comprises two elements. The first is a massive but simple triangular fortification with a simple terminal-defined entrance at the north-east tip. The second is a substantial ringwork built across the south-eastern rampart bounded by a rock-cut ditch on the south and west sides. Hughes in the TCAS 1926, p.26, noted that `This looks an example of a pre-existing earthwork having been adapted at a later period to form a motte and bailey type.' While the relationship between the ringwork and the main rampart is slightly ambiguous on the south side (due to later field boundaries obscuring the medieval gateway), on the north side the ringwork appears to clearly cut through the eastern rampart. The question of whether this is an Iron Age fort, modified during the medieval period, effectively rests with a comparison of the rampart and outer ditch of the main fort, and the ringwork structure. The ditch and rampart of the fort are best visible at the north, flanking the simple entrance, and here they are similar in appearance to other Iron Age earthworks in the region. However, the earthworks of the ringwork are very different, the rock cut ditch being far deeper and with fresh rock edges, and the ringwork earthwork taller. If acceptable as an Iron Age fort in its original phase, the fort is one of the largest and most massively constructed in the region. There are parts of the rampart, particularly at the point at which it meets the ringwork on the north, where the earthwork is broader and taller than at other points on the circuit. It is entirely feasible that the Iron Age rampart was modified in places during the medieval occupation, and quite fresh walling still visible towards the top of the eastern rampart may also date from this period. Original rampart is stonework visible along the south rampart in a sheep scrape. Aerial photography in dry summers has shown parchmarks of a substantial double ditch system defending the eastern flanks of the fort, perhaps a prehistoric defensive feature. Caer Penrhos is not sited on a bold seaward-facing hill above the coastal plain at Llanhrystud (Y Foel would have been an obvious location) but is instead set back slightly in its present position. The sea is still visible and the fort is highly visible from coastal hills to the south; however, it also commands good inland vistas eastwards along the Wyre valley towards Gaer Fawr. Visit date: 15/03/2002. T Driver
Sources :
Cadw , 2015 , Scheduled Ancient Monument Management Plan
K. Murphy, R. Ramsey and M. Page , 2006 , A SURVEY OF DEFENDED ENCLOSURES IN CEREDIGION, 2006: GAZETTEER OF ORDNANCE SURVEY GRID SQUARES SN56, SN57 & SN58
, 1926 , T.Card.AS Vol.4,p.26,27 ,
CADW , 1988 , AM107 ,
Cadw , 2000 , AM107 ,
Ceredigion District Council , Ceredigion's Coastal Heritage ,
Driver T , 2004 , Appendix 1 of thesis by T Driver ,
Griffiths,WE , 1954 ,
Hogg,AHA , 1962 , Bulletin of the Board of Celtic Studies ,
King,DJC , 1956 , Ceredigion ,
Meyrick,SR , 1810 , Hist of Card ,
Murphy,K , 2004 , Assessment of Prehistoric Defended Enclosures 2004-5, Report No 2004-100 ,
Nash-Williams,VE , 1933 , Archaeologia Cambrensis ,
OS , 1974 ,
RAF , 1946 ,
St.Joseph,JK ,
St.Joseph,JK , 1961 , Antiquity ,