Din Lligwy Hut Group (Cadw)Historic SiteDin Lligwy conjures up a romantic image of a Celtic settlement hidden in a wooded grove. Well-preserved stone-built huts in an enclosure dating from the Romano-British period. Sadly the trees surrounding the site are relatively recent. When it was lived in it would have been quite open, with a fine view across the Lligwy Bay.
Excavation in the early twentieth century recovered coins and pottery, mainly of the third and fourth centuries A.D., showing that the enclosed settlement had been occupied during the later Roman period. The people who lived here would have been local Britons who lived in roundhouses but adopted much of the lifestyle of the invading Romans. Excavation has revealed a variety of buildings, including roundhouses and rectangular barns or workshops. Smelting hearths and iron slag found in some of these buildings suggest that the site was used for metalworking. Finds included Roman coins of the third and fourth centuries, pottery, glass and a small silver ingot. MoelfreIsle of AngleseyLL72 8NHUnited Kingdom53.351089270342-4.253854751587https://www.showmewales.co.uk/?dms=3&venue=1164580
Din Lligwy Hut Group (Cadw)
Historic Site, free entry
Moelfre, Isle of Anglesey, LL72 8NH
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Details
Din Lligwy conjures up a romantic image of a Celtic settlement hidden in a wooded grove. Well-preserved stone-built huts in an enclosure dating from the Romano-British period. Sadly the trees surrounding the site are relatively recent. When it was lived in it would have been quite open, with a fine view across the Lligwy Bay.
Excavation in the early twentieth century recovered coins and pottery, mainly of the third and fourth centuries A.D., showing that the enclosed settlement had been occupied during the later Roman period. The people who lived here would have been local Britons who lived in roundhouses but adopted much of the lifestyle of the invading Romans. Excavation has revealed a variety of buildings, including roundhouses and rectangular barns or workshops. Smelting hearths and iron slag found in some of these buildings suggest that the site was used for metalworking. Finds included Roman coins of the third and fourth centuries, pottery, glass and a small silver ingot.
Opening Details
Open all the time
Daily 10.00am - 4.00pm. Closed 24, 25, 26 December and 1 January. Last admission 30 minutes before closing.
Map reference: SH 500861 Lat: 53.35109 Long: -4.25385
At the roundabout south-west of Moelfre at the junction of the A5025 and the A5108, take the minor road north signed for Din Lligwy. Continue on this lane and pass the turn for Plas Lligwy; layby, kissing gate & footpath to Din Lligwy on left.
Accessible by Public Transport: 12 miles from Llanfairpwll station