Castles in Wales

Wales possesses perhaps the most concentrated and awe-inspiring array of medieval fortresses in Europe, monuments in stone to conquest, resistance, and the iron will of a king bent on subduing a proud nation. Edward I’s “iron ring” of castles—Caernarfon, with its imperial grandeur echoing the walls of Constantinople; Conwy, perched above the river like an unbreakable sentinel; Harlech, dramatic on its crag, defiant even in ruin; Beaumaris, the unfinished masterpiece of concentric perfection—were built not merely to defend but to proclaim English dominion after the fall of Llywelyn ap Gruffudd. Yet these same strongholds witnessed Welsh defiance, from Owain Glyndŵr’s brief flame to earlier native princes who raised their own towers. Scattered across the landscape stand older Welsh castles too—Manorbier, Cardiff, the stark motte-and-baileys of the March—each telling its own tale of power, siege, and survival.

At Histories and Castles we walk their ramparts through chronicle, plan, and the enduring testimony of the stones themselves, showing how these great fortresses forged the very identity of Wales.