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History and heritage on Anglesey

UNESCO-listed castles, Neolithic burial chambers, and Norman priories — Anglesey's 6,000 years of history are written into its landscape.

Beaumaris Castle's concentric walls and water-filled moat History

Beaumaris, Anglesey

Beaumaris Castle

The last and most technically accomplished of Edward I's Iron Ring of castles, Beaumaris was begun in 1295 and — despite never being fully completed — is considered the finest example of concentric castle design in Britain.

The entrance passage of Bryn Celli Ddu Neolithic burial chamber in Anglesey farmland at dawn History

Llanddaniel Fab, Anglesey

Bryn Celli Ddu Burial Chamber

A Neolithic passage tomb dating to around 3000 BC, Bryn Celli Ddu — 'the mound in the dark grove' — is the best-preserved prehistoric monument on Anglesey and one of the most important in Wales.

Penmon Priory medieval dovecote and 12th-century Norman church at Anglesey's eastern tip History

Penmon, Anglesey

Penmon Priory & Dovecote

At the far eastern tip of Anglesey, Penmon Priory is a remarkably intact complex of Norman and Early Christian religious buildings — a 12th-century church, the remains of a priory, and one of the finest medieval dovecotes in Wales, built around 1600 to house 1,000 pigeons.

Din Lligwy ancient village stone enclosure walls near Moelfre on the Anglesey coast History

Near Moelfre, Anglesey

Din Lligwy Ancient Village

A late-Roman and early post-Roman enclosed settlement on the northeast coast near Moelfre, Din Lligwy preserves the stone walls of a 4th-century village in remarkable condition — enclosures and the footprints of both round and rectangular houses still legible on the ground after 1,700 years.

Oriel Môn gallery and museum exterior in Llangefni with modern architecture History

Llangefni, Anglesey

Oriel Môn Gallery & Museum, Llangefni

Anglesey's principal museum and art gallery, Oriel Môn in Llangefni holds the most comprehensive collection of material relating to Anglesey's history anywhere on the island — from Neolithic artefacts and Bronze Age metalwork to the story of the Parys Mountain Copper Kingdom and a permanent tribute to Charles Tunnicliffe, the wildlife artist who painted Anglesey for 30 years.

The famous long Llanfairpwll station name sign on the platform with visitors photographing it History

Llanfairpwll, Anglesey

Llanfairpwll Station Name Sign

The railway station at Llanfairpwllgwyngyllgogerychwyrndrobwllllantysiliogogogoch — the longest place name in Europe at 58 characters — is the only place in the world where the full name appears in its officially correct form, on the original platform sign.

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