
Within this churchyard is a 7ft tall spotted dolerite stone inscribed with 5th century Ogham markings as well as a cross, which was thought to have been added around the 9th or 10th centuries CE. A few people have also suggested there are prehistoric cup marks on one side of the stone. The Ogham is…

Efessangus stone Ogham inscribed stone.Glandwr – Pembrokeshire, Wales The stone was visited by John Rhys, who reports in 1913 in the Archaeologia Cambrensis: `On the next day Dr. Owen motored me to Trehowel Farm, near Rhydowen Station, on the Whitland and Cardigan line of railway, to see an Ogam inscribed stone. We had with us…

A few days ago we went for a little explore around Boncath in Pembrokeshire, Wales.. Starting at Maen Colman, or The Colman’s stone and following the public footpath to The Cilwendeg Shell House Hermitage. Maen Colman is a stone bearing multiple carvings, etched over different periods of time.. This boulder of dolerite sits on a…

Standing stones between Hermon and Llanfyrnach. There is a third stone in these fields which we couldn’t access due to cows. We will update photos when we visit there next. Grid References for the stones: Llanfyrnach Standing Stone A – SN20753141Llanfyrnach Standing Stone B – SN20793121Llanfyrnach Standing Stone C (Parc y Maen) – SN21163105 Antiquarian…

Otherwise known as Trellys.. All that stands today of this neolithic monument is a capstone perched upon two uprights. The following is a very short description quoted from ‘A Historical Tour Through Pembrokeshire’, published in 1810 by Richard Fenton:“..just above the village of Trellys, is a cromlech, and, what is not commonly seen in a…

This collapsed neolithic monument is a fascinating site estimated to be at least 6,000 years old. It features ancient rock art and has yielded important finds relating to the earliest evidence of dairy production in Wales.. It also has some very old legends attached to it!Trellyffaint is on private land (and a busy working farm)…

Llech y Drybedd is an impressive Neolithic cromlech near Moylegrove in Pembrokeshire. Coflein describes the site as.. “A free standing megalithic chamber, with earthfast stones supporting a substantial capstone: no traces of a mound are mentioned.” There is no designated parking at this site, so we park in Moylegrove and walk along the road. Here…

This site sits in a field overlooking the coast near Newport in Pembrokeshire, Wales.. It’s been a site of great interest to antiquarians and archaeologists for hundreds of years and we had been been eager to visit for some time! In Pembrokeshire we have a large concentration of dolmens that survive today. From the classic…

Bedd-yr-Afanc is a Neolithic ‘gallery chamber’ situated in a boggy moorland in the Preseli Hills. Information on how to get there will be posted below.. The following is quoted from ‘The last Dragon. A Book of Pembrokeshire Folk Tales’ written by Brian John [1992]: “Not far from Brynberian there is a most unusual burial chamber…

‘The Hanging Stone’ – Neolithic Cromlech in Burton, Pembrokeshire – Wales In 1872, British antiquarian Edward Barnwell visited this site and provided illustrations which were drawn by James Tomb and his sister Miss Grace. The following is from the Archaeologia Cambrensis (Fourth Series No. X April 1872): “.. in the parish of Burton, near Haverfordwest,…