Country: | Wales |
Official Name: | Llanddeiniolen |
Area Total Km2: | 41.03 |
Static Image: | Llanddeiniolen - geograph.org.uk - 227602.jpg |
Static Image Caption: | Llanddeiniolen, from Pen Dinas Hill |
Coordinates: | 53.1737°N -4.1744°W |
Cardiff Distance Mi: | 124.4 |
Cardiff Distance Km: | 200.2 |
London Distance Mi: | 206.0 |
London Distance Km: | 331.5 |
Unitary Wales: | Gwynedd |
Community Wales: | Llanddeiniolen |
Post Town: | CAERNARFON |
Postcode District: | LL55 |
Post Town1: | BANGOR |
Postcode District1: | LL57 |
Postcode Area: | LL |
Postcode Area1: | LL |
Os Grid Reference: | SH 5476 6627 |
Population: | 5072 |
Llanddeiniolen (in Welsh ɬanðɛinɪˈɔlɛn/;) is a community in the county of Gwynedd, Wales, and is from Cardiff and from London. It comprises the hamlet also called Llanddeiniolen, and the villages of Deiniolen, Bethel, Dinorwig, Rhiwlas, Brynrefail and Penisarwaun. It is the third-largest community by population in Gwynedd, with 5072 people in the 2011 census.[1] Also in the community is the dispersed settlement of Fachwen, located on the north shore of Llyn Padarn. The name derives from the Welsh saint Deiniol, first bishop of Bangor (who died 572 or 584) or from his son, saint Deiniolen (also known as saint Deiniol Fab).[2]
Castell Llanddeiniolen, some 900m west of Rhiwlas, is a hill of glacial drift whose sides have been dug away to give a steeper slope. It has been identified as a Norman motte but is not a typical one. It may be a medieval ringwork – approximately, a motte and bailey without a motte – but may also be a small Iron Age fort.[3]
The hill-fort Dinas Dinorwig, enclosing about a hectare of land, lies 1 km south-east of the hamlet centre and 3.5 km from the Menai Strait. It has an inner wall, surrounded by two massive ramparts of earth and rubble, surrounded in turn by a ditch some 4 metres wide.[4]
It is thought that it was part of the territory of the Ordovices tribe, and the element -orwig, -orweg has been derived from the tribal name Ordovices;[5] although this idea was rejected by the linguist Melville Richards for lack of a sufficiently early record of a form *Orddwig..[6]
In 77 CE, at some unknown location in the territory of the Ordovices, the Roman governor Agricola led his troops up a hill to a decisive victory. He collected a force of veterans and a small body of auxiliaries; then as the Ordovices would not venture to descend into the plain, he put himself in front of the ranks to inspire all with the same courage against a common danger, and led his troops up a hill. The tribe was all but exterminated. He went on to conquer Anglesey, sending cavalry recruited in other parts of Britain swimming over the Menai Strait before the defenders of Anglesey were ready.[7]