Bodysgallen Hall

Bodysgallen Hall
Bodysgallen Hall is located in Wales
Bodysgallen Hall
Bodysgallen Hall
Location within Wales
General information
LocationConwy county borough, United Kingdom
Coordinates53°17′47.85″N 3°48′10.05″W / 53.2966250°N 3.8027917°W / 53.2966250; -3.8027917
Website
www.bodysgallen.com

Bodysgallen Hall is a manor house in Conwy county borough, north Wales, near the village of Llanrhos. Since 2008 the house has been owned by The National Trust. It is a Grade I listed building, currently used as a hotel. This listed historical building derives primarily from the 17th century, and has several later additions. Bodysgallen was constructed as a tower house[citation needed] in the Middle Ages to serve as defensive support for nearby Conwy Castle. According to tradition, the site of Bodysgallen was the 5th century AD stronghold of Cadwallon Lawhir, King of Gwynedd,[1] who had wide-ranging exploits as far as Northumberland.

The ruins of Cadwallon Lawhir's residence are on a woodland knoll above the present Bodysgallen Hall.[1] By 1835 it was a ruin totally overgrown by thorns. According to the ancient record of Caernarvon,[2] Bod Caswallon (Bodysgallen) was one of the townships called Tre Welyog, meaning it was a unit of hereditary land (gwely) held in common by members of a wider family unit in medieval Wales,[3] which was often divided and subdivided among heirs to the fourth generation; with the passage of time some of the smaller landholders might be "bought out" and become tenants of a larger estate. This possibly might have been one of three gwelyau, originally belonging to Gloddaeth.

  1. ^ a b Rev. Robert Williams, The History and Antiquities of the Town of Aberconwy and its Neighbourhood, (1835)
  2. ^ Record of Caernarvon, Bibl. Litt. 19–21
  3. ^ Geiriadur Prifysgol Cymru (University of Wales Dictionary), vol. II, p. 1629